Dora. "Mamma can't stand any excitement. She has had more than enough lately."
"You mean because of this affair about the fortune, I suppose," returned Dick. "It was an outrage for Tad Sobber to hold up the money the way he did."
"Yes, Dick, but that is not all," answered Dora. "I was going to tell you of something else the first chance I got." She looked around, to see if anybody else was listening.
"About what, Dora?" he questioned, quickly.
"About old Josiah Crabtree."
"Crabtree!" exclaimed the eldest Rover boy in astonishment. "What about him."
The person mentioned will be well remembered by my old readers. Josiah Crabtree bad once been a teacher at Putnam Hall and had caused the Rover boys a good deal of trouble. When Crabtree had discovered that the widow Stanhope was holding some money in trust for Dora, and also had quite some money of her own, he had done his best to get the widow to marry him. At that time Mrs. Stanhope had been sickly and easily led, and Crabtree had exercised a sort of hypnotic influence over her and all but forced her into a marriage. But his plot had been thwarted by the Rovers, and later on, Josiah Crabtree had