it. I wouldn't be at all surprised if Gus Montrose were mixed up in the affair in some way or another."
Jack's face flushed.
"I wish I had him here right now. I'd make him talk!"
"Just sit tight," advised Frank. "I know things look pretty bad, but something may turn up. We'll see if perhaps we can't do something for you."
Jack brightened up at this, for he knew that the help of the Hardy boys was not to be despised. The case looked black against him, but with Frank and Joe on his side he did not feel quite so disconsolate.
"Thanks, ever so much," he said gratefully. "I'm glad some one believes me."
"Those city detectives can't see any farther than the end of their noses," Chet Morton declared warmly. "Don't worry about them. If they put you in jail we'll dynamite the place to get you out." He grinned as he said this and his good humor alleviated the tension that had fallen over the group.
"Well, I guess we'll have to be going," said Frank, as he mounted his motorcycle. "Don't think too much about this, Jack. Something will turn up."
"I hope so," answered the boy.
Chet Morton and the Hardy lads said good-