CONTENTS
CHAPTER II -- MRS. FOWLER’S STORY
CHAPTER IV -- THE TOWN AUTOCRAT
CHAPTER V -- A LITTLE MISUNDERSTANDING
CHAPTER VI -- FRANK GETS A PLACE
CHAPTER VII -- THE CASH BOY HAS AN ADVENTURE
CHAPTER VIII -- AN UNEXPECTED ENGAGEMENT
CHAPTER IX -- THE HOUSEKEEPER’S NEPHEW
CHAPTER X -- THE HOUSEKEEPER SCHEMING
CHAPTER XIII -- THE SPIDER AND THE FLY
CHAPTER XIV -- SPRINGING THE TRAP
CHAPTER XV -- FROM BAD TO WORSE
CHAPTER XVI -- AN ACCOMPLICE FOUND
CHAPTER XVII -- FRANK AND HIS JAILER
CHAPTER XVIII -- “OVER THE HILL TO THE POORHOUSE”
CHAPTER XIX -- WHAT FRANK HEARD THROUGH THE CREVICE
“The Cash Boy,” by Horatio Alger, Jr., as the name implies, is a story about a boy and for boys.
Through some conspiracy, the hero of the story when a baby, was taken from his relatives and given into the care of a kind woman.
Not knowing his name, she gave him her husband’s name, Frank Fowler. She had one little daughter, Grace, and showing no partiality in the treatment of her children, Frank never suspected that she was not his sister. However, at the death of Mrs. Fowler, all this was related to Frank.
The children were left alone in the world. It seemed as though they would have to go to the poorhouse but Frank could not become reconciled to that.
A kind neighbor agreed to care for Grace, so Frank decided to start out in the world to make his way.
He had many disappointments and hardships, but through his kindness to an old man, his own relatives and right name were revealed to him.