<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XII</h2>
<h3><span class="smcap">The Youngsters’ Great Day</span></h3>
<p class="cap">“Say, fellows,” said Bert, as he lay stretched
out lazily beneath the limbs of a spreading
beech, “isn’t this the finest day ever?”</p>
<p>“You bet it is,” said Tom, “the mould was
broken when this day was made.”</p>
<p>It was, indeed, one of the perfect days that
come sometimes to break the heat of sweltering
midsummer. A brisk wind stirred the branches
through which the sunlight, flecking lazily the
ground beneath, played over the group of boys,
who lay in all sorts of abandoned attitudes on a
bit of rising ground a little removed from the
camp. They had had a splendid morning’s
sport. The coolness of the day and the fine condition
of the roads and meadows had suggested
to them the game of Hare and Hounds. Up hill
and down dale they had raced with occasional intervals
of rest. When the hares had successfully
shaken off their pursuers, still the bewildered
hounds had nosed about, so to speak, seeking
to pick up the lost trail. Bert and Tom had
been the hares and their escape from capture had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</SPAN></span>
added to the delight occasioned by the day and
the game itself. It was only after the rice that
they had carried in their pouches to make a trail
had been almost exhausted, that they thought of
doubling on their tracks and making for camp.</p>
<p>The hounds had trailed in a little later on,
looking a bit discomfited but not disheartened.
As Pete Hart, one of the hounds, said “though
slightly disfigured they were still in the ring.”
And, oh, how that dinner tasted and how impossible
it was almost for the famished boys to wait
while the fish snatched from the brook that morning
were frizzling in the pan and came in tantalizing
whiffs to the nostrils of the boys. Something
more substantial than whiffs, however, did
quickly follow, and now like gorged anacondas
full to the brim, they lay stretched out upon the
grass and talked over the events of the morning.</p>
<p>“I tell you what, boys,” said Frank, “it sure
was the luckiest day in my life when I struck this
camp.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Tom, “I reckon we all say
amen to that. Think of being out in these woods
on such a day as this with a lot of jolly good fellows
and not a thing to do but be happy. When
I think of the people in town roasting under the
summer heat while we are out here under the
trees, you bet I feel sorry for them.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Yes,” said Jim, who, as usual, had eaten
more even than the others and hadn’t before had
energy enough to speak, “the town is all right
in the fall and spring, but when the summer
comes, me for the long hike and the camp in the
woods.”</p>
<p>“It sure does us a lot of good,” said Bert. “I
know that when I go back to the city after a
summer like this I feel so strong that I could
lift a ton.”</p>
<p>“God made the country but man made the
town,” chimed in Dick who was great on quotations.
“I think it does everybody good to get
away somewhere where they can come in contact
with the woods and the brooks and the squirrels
and the birds. Who was it we used to read
about—that fellow in the old Grecian stories—I
think his name was Antaeus, who got into a fight
with one of the old heroes and every time he was
knocked down, refreshed by contact with mother
earth, got up ten times stronger than before. I
guess that is the way we feel after a summer
spent in the woods.”</p>
<p>While they were speaking, Mr. Hollis had
joined the group. The boys quickly moved aside
to make room for him. Although he was so
much older than they, his genial spirit and unfailing
friendliness kept him in touch with every
one of the boys. At heart he was still a boy and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</SPAN></span>
always would be one. He was a stickler for
discipline, but not in the slightest degree a martinet.
With him it was always the “iron hand
in the velvet glove,” and he was so just, so considerate,
he understood boy nature so thoroughly
and in the case of each was able so accurately
to put himself in his place, that the boys
regarded him as a father or rather an older
brother, instead of a commander.</p>
<p>“I heard what you said, Tom,” he said, smiling,
“about not having a thing to do but be
happy. Are you quite sure you have nothing to
do but that?”</p>
<p>Tom stared a moment, “why yes,” he said
slowly, “to make somebody else happy.”</p>
<p>“That’s the thing,” said Mr. Hollis. “You
hit the nail right on the head that time, Tom.
There is no higher aim in life than to make some
one else happy.”</p>
<p>A murmur of assent arose from the boys.</p>
<p>“Now,” said Mr. Hollis, “we ought to do
some one a good turn every day. It doesn’t
matter especially what that good turn is. It may
be a thing so slight as almost to escape notice.
It is just in some way or other to add to the
sweetness of human life. It may be to give
somebody a lift in the automobile—it may be a
word of appreciation to kindle a smile on some
tired face; it may be guiding a blind man across<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</SPAN></span>
the street, or giving your seat to a woman in the
street car, or even so slight a thing as to kick a
banana peel off the sidewalk. The essence of
the whole thing is self-forgetfulness. To lend a
hand, to give a lift, to make life brighter and
easier for someone even in the smallest degree.</p>
<p>“But what I have in mind just now is a sort
of wholesale lift. When I was in town the other
day I passed the orphan asylum. You know the
one I mean. That building just off the Court
House Square with a stone wall around it and a
pretty lawn in front.”</p>
<p>The boys remembered perfectly. Every one
of them at some time or other had passed the
place and seen the childish faces at the windows.</p>
<p>“Now,” said Mr. Hollis, “my idea is this.
There are from forty to fifty children in that
building. It serves as the asylum for all the
towns in the county. I happen to know it is
carried on in a splendid way. The officials at
the head are kind and humane and the matrons
in charge take the best possible care of the little
ones, but after all they need variety. They want
individual attention. In a home of that kind
even with the best intentions there has to be a
certain monotony and uniformity. They have to
rise at a certain hour, sit down at the table at
the same moment, go to the school room at a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</SPAN></span>
given time, and even play under the direction of
somebody else. Now, what a glorious thing it
would be if for one day those children could
come out into the woods and roll in the grass and
chase the squirrels and kick up their heels like
young colts let loose in the pasture. What do
you say boys, to giving up one whole day of this
vacation and make those little ones think they
have had a glimpse of heaven?”</p>
<p>What they said was plenty. As Shorty said,
“it hit them where they lived.”</p>
<p>There was a chorus of excited exclamations,
“Will we?” “You bet!” “Just try us
and see.” “When’s it going to be?” “Why
can’t we have it to-morrow?” “How many kids
are there in the asylum?” “What’s the best
way to get them here?” At last Mr. Hollis,
smiling, had to raise his hand, in order to be
heard.</p>
<p>“Well,” said he, “I haven’t fixed upon the
date. As a matter of fact, I haven’t spoken to
the officers of the institution at all and am not
absolutely sure that they will see their way clear
to make the arrangement. Of course, they have
a great responsibility upon them in caring for so
many little ones and they would have to look at
the question from every side. Still I don’t think
there will be much trouble in arranging it. They
are just as eager to see the children have a good<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</SPAN></span>
time as we are, and I think the idea will strike
them as a capital one. One or two of the people
in charge will, of course, have to come with
them. Ordinarily they might feel a little timid
about letting the children spend a whole day in
the woods in company with a lot of high-spirited
boys who might be reckless, and, even with the
best intentions, lead them into danger. Still,
you boys have established such a good reputation
in this neighborhood,” and here Mr. Hollis
looked about on the eager faces with an expression
of pride, “that I don’t think there will
be any real trouble in arranging the affair.”</p>
<p>“It is a capital idea,” said Dick, warmly.
“How did you come to think about it?”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Mr. Hollis, “it wasn’t original
with me. It’s a custom in the city to set aside a
day each year as ‘Orphans’ Day.’ There are
thousands of well-to-do people, owners of automobiles,
who have the tenderest sympathy with
these little ones deprived, by nature, of their
natural guardians, and on that one day of the
year they give up all thought of selfish enjoyment
and try to give the children the time of their
lives. It’s a splendid sight and warms the heart
to see the long line of automobiles coming down
the avenues decked with flags and overflowing
with the little tots. Off they go to the beach
where all sorts of amusements have been prepared<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</SPAN></span>
for them. They dig in the sand. They
paddle about with bare feet at the edge of the
breakers. They take in every innocent amusement
from one end of the island to another.
They haven’t any money to spend, but they
couldn’t spend it if they had. Everything is free.
The spirit of kindness and good feeling is shared
by all the owners of the different resorts, and
the doors are flung wide open the minute the children
come in sight. They see the moving pictures.
They ride in the merry-go-round. They
hold their breath as they speed up and down the
scenic railways. They watch, with awed admiration,
the wandering artist who moulds tigers and
lions in the sand. The life guards take them in
their boats and row around the different piers.
They go to the great animal shows and see the
big brutes put through their wonderful tricks.
They sit in the weighing machines. They throw
base-balls at the clay figures and the larger boys
are even permitted—supreme pleasure for a boy—to
fire at the target in the shooting galleries.
They watch the great ocean steamers as they go
past at a distance, and the smaller vessels, like
white-winged birds, that hug the shore. And
eat! How they do eat! They are like a flock
of ravenous locusts and the food disappears as
if by magic. It’s a day of days for the poor little
youngsters, to be talked over and dreamed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</SPAN></span>
over for months to come, and when at the end
of the day they pile into the autos, tired, full,
happy as larks, for the swift return journey to
the only place they know as home, it is a question
who are the happier, the little ones to whom
this means so much or the owners of the machines
who, for that one day at least have
spent themselves gladly for the happiness of
others.”</p>
<p>The boys listened with rapt attention, and
when Mr. Hollis had finished they were chock
full of enthusiasm.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Tom, “we haven’t any beach
here, but I am willing to bet that by the time we
get through with those kids they will have had
just as good a time as any youngster in the big
city ever had.”</p>
<p>The boys all chimed assent to this, and Shorty,
who was always impulsive and never could bear
to wait for anything that he greatly desired, suggested,
“Why not fix it up right away?”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Mr. Hollis, “I don’t see any
objection to that. If Bert has the automobile in
shape we will go over at once.”</p>
<p>So many of the boys wanted to go with him
that, to avoid any selection, Mr. Hollis suggested
that they draw lots. Of course it went
without saying that Bert would go to drive the
machine, but in addition fate decreed that Tom,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</SPAN></span>
Frank, Jim, and Shorty should pile in with them.
Off they went along the smooth country roads,
their hearts leaping not only with the delight of
the glorious day and the thrilling swiftness with
which the great machine sped over the turnpike,
but also from the feeling that they were going to
carry gladness and sunshine into a lot of wistful
little hearts to whom father and mother were
only names.</p>
<p>In what seemed only a few minutes from the
time they left the camp, they reached the asylum.
Bert went in with Mr. Hollis while the rest of
the boys stayed outside in the machine of which
they never tired, and where they much preferred
to stay rather than wander about the streets of
the town. The interview with the officers of the
asylum was most cordial. They knew Mr. Hollis
as a courteous gentleman and a capable and
careful ruler of his little kingdom. The matron
in charge was called in at the conference and she
also assented heartily and thankfully.</p>
<p>It was arranged that on the second day thereafter,
provided, of course, the weather was suitable,
the outing should take place. Then arose
the question of transportation. How were they
to get there? The automobile would only carry
a few of the little ones even though they were
packed in like sardines. The superintendent
suggested that no doubt they would be able to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</SPAN></span>
find plenty of the townspeople who would be glad
to furnish teams to carry the rest.</p>
<p>But just before this arrangement was concluded
a thought occurred to Bert. He knew
how much the auto appealed to a youngster.
They were used to seeing horses and wagons and
at times would be taken for a ride in them, but
automobiles were scarce in that locality and
seemed almost like a fairy vehicle to the little
ones, as with faces pressed against the panes they
would see an occasional touring car glide swiftly
along the road in front. “Where were the
horses?” “What made them go?” “Why do
they go so fast?” It seemed to Bert that half the
delight of the little ones would be in the automobile
ride and as he pictured the little wave of
envy and discontent that would inevitably come
over the youngsters who were forced to take the
more prosaic and common place wagons, he
said:</p>
<p>“What’s the matter with taking them all over
in the machine? Of course we would have to
make a good many trips, but what of that? It
only takes a few minutes to get from here to the
camp and turn our load loose in the woods and
then come back for another. The whole thing
could be managed in a couple of hours. Bob and
I could take turns in driving the machine. I am
sure Bob would be glad to, and I know I would,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</SPAN></span>
and as for the kids, there is no question of the
way they would feel about it.”</p>
<p>“All right,” said Mr. Hollis, while the superintendent
and matron greeted gratefully this further
example of Bert’s thoughtfulness and kindness
of heart.</p>
<p>When the machine returned to camp and the
boys who had been left behind learned of the arrangement,
everything was bustle and stir at once.
Although the camp was always kept in first-class
order, this being one of their cardinal principles,
yet there were a good many little things that
needed doing in order that the youngsters should
have the glorious time that the boys had mapped
out for them. Some of them took a long rope
and fixed up a great swing between two oaks at
a little distance from the camp. Others arranged
an archery butt and prepared bows and arrows
for the larger boys to use. A number of fishing
lines with sinkers and hooks were prepared so
that the children might have the rare delight of
trying to catch their own dinner. Then, too, it
was necessary to go to town on several different
occasions to secure supplies. Their own store
had to be replenished, and besides, they wanted
to get a lot of extra dainties that would appeal
especially to the appetites of their little guests.</p>
<p>There had been a heavy rain a day or two before
and the prospects were that nothing in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</SPAN></span>
way of bad weather would mar the outing. This
had been a question of a little anxiety because
their stay in camp was rapidly nearing a close.
Many of the boys had only a limited time to
stay and had to return to their employment in
the city. And even those who could extend the
period had no desire to do so after their fellows
had gone.</p>
<p>In all this rush of preparation the automobile
race was not neglected. Every boy in the camp
felt as though his own personal reputation was
involved in winning. Rumors had filtered in
from different quarters that Ralph Quinby, the
driver of the “Gray Ghost,” was simply burning up
the roads in exercise. It was even said that for
a short distance he had attained the speed of a
mile a minute.</p>
<p>While there was no bitterness in the rivalry
between the two camps, yet their desire to win
was extremely keen.</p>
<p>“You have simply got to get there, old fellow,”
said Dick as he and Bert were tinkering
at the machine on the morning before that set
for the outing. “It would never do to have
those fellows say that the ‘Red Scout’ had to take
the dust of the ‘Gray Ghost.’”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Bert, who, as the driver of the
car, naturally felt a greater weight of responsibility
than anybody else, “there are just three<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</SPAN></span>
things we need in order to come in first. Above
everything else, we’ve got to have the car in
splendid condition. It must be stripped of every
single thing that might furnish wind resistance
and make its work that much harder. Every bolt
and nut must be examined and tightened. The
lever, the clutch, the gear, has to be thoroughly
examined. Many a race is won in advance in
this way, even before the machine leaves the
post. In the next place, we’ve got to have good
judgment. By this I mean judgment of pace. It
isn’t only what the speedometer says, but there
is a little something that tells the man who has
his hand on the wheel just when and just how
hard he should hit it up. Sometimes it is wise to
trail the other fellow. At other times it may be
well to set the pace, but the ability to do either
one or the other is the thing that, other things
being equal, is bound to tell in the long run.
Then, greatest of all, perhaps, is nerve. I don’t
know whether you have ever ridden, Dick, in a
machine that goes a mile a minute, but if you
have, especially on a circular track, you’ll know
something of what I mean. A fellow’s nerves
must be like iron. The least hesitation, the least
doubt, the least shakiness even for the merest
fraction of a second, may be fatal. This is true
even if one were riding without anything especially
at stake, but when we know that all the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</SPAN></span>
fellows will be yelling like Indians, begging us
to win, and know the bitter disappointment that
will come to them if the other fellow shows us
the way over the line, I tell you it is a sure
enough test of a fellow’s nerve.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Dick, “as to that last point I
haven’t any doubt about you having plenty of
nerve, Bert. If that were the only thing in
question I would call the race won just now, but
how about the machines themselves? Don’t they
enter into the calculation?”</p>
<p>“Of course,” said Bert, “that counts for an
awful lot. You can’t make a cart horse beat a
thoroughbred, no matter how well he is ridden.
There’s got to be the speed there or everything
else counts for nothing. But take two machines
of about equal power, and from all I hear the
‘Red Scout’ hasn’t much, if anything, on the ‘Gray
Ghost’ in this particular, it puts the matter right
up to the drivers of the cars. Under those conditions,
nine times out of ten, it’s the best man
and not the best machine that wins.”</p>
<p>While Tom and Bert discussed the thing in
this way soberly, the rest of the troop hadn’t a
doubt in the world that their hero would win.
They idolized Bert. They had seen him under
a variety of circumstances and never once had
he shown the white feather. Never once had
he failed to measure up to an emergency. Never<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</SPAN></span>
once had he failed to use every ounce of energy
and power that he possessed. If he <i>should
lose</i>—and this thought was instantly dismissed as
traitorous—they knew that, although beaten, he
would not be disgraced, and so, with a vast
amount of excitement but with scarcely the
slightest feeling of trepidation, they awaited the
momentous day when the “Gray Ghost” and the
“Red Scout” should battle for supremacy.</p>
<p>“Orphans’ Day” dawned clear and beautiful.
There was just enough breeze to temper the heat
of the sun. The skies were cloudless. Many a
tousled little head up at the asylum had tossed
restlessly on its pillow through that night and
almost all of the expectant youngsters needed no
rising bell to call them from their dreams. Even
breakfast was dispatched more quickly than
usual, and the feverish impatience of the little
tots made it almost impossible to wait for the
coming of that glorious automobile.</p>
<p>As it was necessary to save all possible space
in the auto for the children themselves, Bert
drove the car over alone. When he came in
sight he was hailed with a yell of delight by a
little group of seven or eight gathered on the
lawn, who had been told off, to the envy of their
less fortunate companions, for the first ride. The
matron in charge made a pretense of keeping
order, but she had been a child herself and the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</SPAN></span>
attempt was only half-hearted. In they piled,
one after the other, tumbling over the sides, or
tossed in by the strong arms of Bert, and untangled
themselves somehow, some on the seats,
some on the bottom of the car between the last
and the driver’s seat. Brown heads, black heads,
blond heads, yes, even one little red head—that
of Teddy Mulligan—made what Shorty said
when he saw it was “a sure enough color
scheme.”</p>
<p>As soon as they were safely ensconced, Bert
blew his horn, swung the car around, and then
made off for the camp. Oh, the delight of that
swift trip on that glorious morning. Oh, the
chatter that rose from those eager lips. Oh, the
joy that bubbled in those little, motherless hearts.
It wasn’t earth—it was heaven. On sped the machine,
noiselessly, softly, swiftly as a bird. If it
had not been for the other groups who were eagerly
waiting their turn Bert would surely have
turned off into a side road and given the kids a
good many extra miles; but the others had to be
considered, too, and time was passing, so into the
camp they glided, all alive with eagerness, delight
and anticipation. The ready hands of the
other boys lifted the little ones from the machine,
which instantly turned about for its second
trip. Again and again this was repeated, until
the last little group on the lawn of the asylum<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</SPAN></span>
had melted away, and the woods resounded with
their childish prattle.</p>
<p>The boys had surely spread themselves to give
“the kids” a day that they’d never forget.
Frank took some of the larger boys to the little
glade where the archery practice was on, put the
bows and arrows into their hands that had been
prepared and showed them how to shoot. The
girls were taken to a swing that the boys had
rigged up and swung to and fro to their hearts’
content. Tom showed them how to make jack-o’-lanterns
and told them about the time when
Bert had put one up in a great cave and frightened
him so badly when he caught a first glimpse
of it. A little group under the guidance of Dick
went down to the brook and watched the sunfish
dart to and fro under the gleaming surface and
the great perch and catfish lying lazily under the
reeds that fringed the bank. Shorty, who was
an expert fisherman, threw his line while the boys
looked on with bated breath, and in a few minutes
pulled up a plump catfish.</p>
<p>“Why do they call them that?” said little
Tony Darimo.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Shorty, “maybe it’s because of
the whiskers they have; perhaps because the face
looks something like a cat, or else because of the
noise they make when you take them off the
hook.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Little Billy Jackson seemed unconvinced.</p>
<p>“It doesn’t seem to me like a cat,” he
said.</p>
<p>Just then Shorty, who had turned his head to
put the fish in the basket, uttered a loud
“meow.” Billy jumped.</p>
<p>“I guess you are right after all,” he said.
“It surely does sound like a pussy cat.”</p>
<p>In the shallow part of the brook some of the
little ones under the guidance of the matron were
permitted to take off their shoes and stockings
and paddle about. The water was less than a
foot deep. One of the children slipped and fell.
In a moment Don, who had been racing along
the bank, jumped in and grabbed him by the
collar of his blouse. The child was on his feet
in a minute and had never been in the slightest
danger at all, but Don felt just as proud of his
exploit as though he had saved him from a raging
torrent. The boys laughed and called him a
“fake hero,” and yet every one of them knew in
his heart that, however great might have been
the danger, Don would have jumped just the
same. Don outdid himself that day. He made
the children scream with delight. Under the
guidance of Bert he played soldier, shouldered
the stick and marched, rolled over and played
dead, and did it all with such a keen sense of enjoyment
in his tricks that the children stood<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</SPAN></span>
about and watched him, with endless wonder and
delight.</p>
<p>But the one whom the children remembered
above all the others was Bert. He was everywhere.
He told them stories. He carried them
on his shoulders. He imitated the calls of the
different birds. He summoned the squirrels and
the timid little creatures, who long since had lost
all fear of him, came readily forward, ate out
of his hand and perched upon his finger tips.
The children looked on with wide-eyed amazement,
delight and admiration.</p>
<p>Then came dinner, and such a dinner! The
kids had never seen anything like it before.
Fish caught fresh from the brook, the golden
corn bread made by the boys themselves, the
maple syrup, the cakes, the pies, the countless
goodies that melted away before those famished
youngsters would have filled a dyspeptic’s heart
with envy.</p>
<p>But all things come to an end, and in the late
afternoon, amid the shouted good-byes and waving
of hands from all the boys in the camp, the
“Red Scout” took up its burden—and it had never
borne a happier one—and carried the kids away,
their little hearts full of unspeakable content, at
the end of the best day’s outing they had ever
known.</p>
<p>The boys were tired that night. Even Tom,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</SPAN></span>
who prided himself on never owning up to weariness,
admitted fairly and squarely that he was
“clean tuckered out.” But it was a delightful
weariness. They had forgotten themselves.
They had worked and planned for others. They
had not looked for their own happiness, and just
because they had not, they found it. They had
learned the one supreme lesson of life, “that to
give is better than to receive,” “that he who
seeks pleasure as an end in itself never finds it,”
and that he who bestows happiness upon another
has his own heart flooded with peace.</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</SPAN></span></p>
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