OLIVER OPTIC,

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AUTHOR OF "YOUNG AMERICA ABROAD," "THE ARMY AND NAVY STORIES,"
"THE WOODVILLE STORIES," "THE BOAT-CLUB STORIES,"
"THE RIVERDALE STORIES," ETC.

BOSTON
LEE AND SHEPARD PUBLISHERS

Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1868, by
WILLIAM T. ADAMS,
In the Clerks Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts.

Copyright, 1896, by William T. Adams.
All rights reserved.

MAKE OR BREAK.


TO

My Young Friend

KATE V. AUSTIN

This Book

IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED.


PREFACE.

"Make or Break," is the fifth of the serial stories published in "Our Boys and Girls"—a magazine which has become so much the pet of the author, that he never sits down to write a story for it without being impressed by a very peculiar responsibility. Twenty thousand youthful faces seem to surround him, crying out for something that will excite their minds, and thrill their very souls, while a calmer, holier voice, speaking in the tones of divine command, breathes gently forth, "Feed my lambs."

The lambs will not eat dry husks; they loathe the tasteless morsel which well-meaning sectarians offer them, and hunger for that which will warm their hearts and stir their blood. The heart may be warmed, and the blood may be stirred, without corrupting the moral nature. The writer has endeavored to meet this demand in this way, and he is quite sure that the patient, striving, toiling Leo, and the gentle, self-sacrificing, and devoted Maggie, do nothing in the story which will defile the mind or the heart of the young people. The Bible teaches what they sought to practise. He is satisfied that none of his readers will like Mr. Fitzherbert Wittleworth well enough to make him their model.

The author is willing the story should pass for what it is worth; and there is no danger that it will be over or undervalued, for the young people are even more critical than their elders. But the favor already bestowed upon it has added to the weight of the writer's obligation to the juvenile reading public; and in giving them the story in its present permanent form, he trusts that it will continue to be not only a source of pleasure, but a stimulus to higher aims, and a more resolute striving for what is worth having both in the moral and material world.

William T. Adams.

Harrison Square, Mass.,
July 28, 1868.


CONTENTS.

PAGE
CHAPTER I.
Mr. Wittleworth gets shaved 11
CHAPTER II.
Boy wanted 22
CHAPTER III.
Mr. Checkynshaw is violent 34
CHAPTER IV.
Mr. Checkynshaw rushes 46
CHAPTER V.
Leo Maggimore 57
CHAPTER VI.
Leo's Workshop 69
CHAPTER VII.
Mon Pere 81
CHAPTER VIII.
Make or Break 94
CHAPTER IX.
Mr. Checkynshaw and Family 105
CHAPTER X.
The Wittleworth Family 117
CHAPTER XI.
The Mouse Business 129
CHAPTER XII.
Leo's wonderful Performers 141
CHAPTER XIII.
Wittleworth vs. Checkynshaw 153
CHAPTER XIV.
Mr. Checkynshaw is liberal 166
CHAPTER XV.
A Success in the Mouse Business 179
CHAPTER XVI.
The Letter from Marguerite 192
CHAPTER XVII.
The Letter from France 204
CHAPTER XVIII.
The Quitclaim Deed 217
CHAPTER XIX.
Five Hundred Dollars Reward 229
CHAPTER XX.
An Avalanche of Good Fortune 241
CHAPTER XXI.
Mr. Wittleworth's Wrongs 254
CHAPTER XXII.
The two Marguerites 266
CHAPTER XXIII.
The Gold Locket 279
CHAPTER XXIV.
Me and Choate 291
CHAPTER XXV.
The elegant Young Lady 303
CHAPTER XXVI.
The Rich Man's Daughter 315

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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