<h2 id='chIV' class='c005'>CHAPTER IV</h2>
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<div>THE CARLSON-BATES MEMORIAL</div>
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<p class='c007'>When Pee-wee spoke about his good turn guest he referred to a sort
of small bank balance which he had standing to his credit up at Temple
Camp.</p>
<p>Once upon a time there was a tragedy at Temple Camp; a scout lost
his life in trying to save the life of a comrade. Both went down in the
shadowy waters of a lake. They had both come from the same town; in
fact, had been members of the same troop. The fathers of these two
scouts resolved to perpetuate their memories at the camp by an
appropriate memorial which should exemplify at once the idea of heroism
and of comradeship. Temple Camp was full of endowments of various
sorts; special privileges could not be bought but could be won. Heroism
bore interest at Temple Camp.</p>
<p>But there was something peculiarly gentle in the idea underlying
this Carlson-Bates Memorial. For it perpetuated not only the strong
quality of heroism but the gentler quality of friendship. And this
quality of friendship was insisted upon. It was quaint and unique
because it was a living memorial. The memory of those two who had gone
was ever perpetuated by the scouts themselves in a continuous
exemplification of scout comradeship.</p>
<p>The actual monument itself was simple enough. It was a little rustic
cabin in a quiet grove, removed from the turmoil of the camp. Birds
sang in the trees about it and squirrels poked their inquisitive eyes
in and about its interior, sometimes even availing themselves,
uninvited, of its open hospitality.</p>
<p>Within its one rustic apartment were two comfortable bunks, a tiny
library with <i>Carlson-Bates Memorial</i> stamped on every book, a rough
writing table, a cupboard for provisions, and even a fireplace of field
stones, with two primitive high-backed chairs facing it. These looked
as if they might have belonged to Daniel Boone.</p>
<p>Flanking this rough fireplace were pictures framed in unbarked wood,
one on either side, of Horace Bates and Danny Carlson, scouts who had
gone down together in Black Lake.</p>
<p>In both of these portraits the boys seemed to be looking straight at
the beholder, and it was customary when showing a visitor over this
tiny, hallowed reservation, to ask him to guess which of the two
pictures was that of the would-be rescuer. There was nothing on either
picture or anywhere else about the spot which hinted at this, for the
place was as much a memorial to friendship as to heroism. Outside was
another rough fireplace, also built of field stone, and intended for
cooking.</p>
<p>The Carlson-Bates Memorial was everything that a rustic abode for
two scouts should be. Money had not been spared to make it so, but care
had been taken that the power of money should not overstep itself by
making the place pretentious and modern. Over the fireplace, between
the portraits, was a rough-hewn board in which were burned the familiar
words which had a certain pathos there, TWO’S A COMPANY. On the center
table were writing paper and envelopes, appropriately coarse and ragged
on the edges, bearing the heading:</p>
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<div>CARLSON-BATES MEMORIAL</div>
<div>TEMPLE CAMP</div>
<div class='c000'>Two’s a Company</div>
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<p>Down at camp there was a rough sign on one of the trees with an
arrow pointing; TO CARLSON-BATES MEMORIAL, it read. You followed a
beaten path up through the woods, across a little brook, to a spot as
dim and solemn and remote as any hermit’s cave. And there you were.
Visitors, whose casual expectations had pictured a marble monument,
were wont to pause in silent astonishment on reaching the spot. Girls
usually said they could live there for the rest of their lives.</p>
<p>Tom Slade, camp assistant, who usually took visitors to the quaint
little outpost, would snap his fingers at the squirrels and whistle at
the birds while the others gazed about captivated and enraptured.
Sometimes a squirrel would scurry up his khaki trousers and perch upon
his shoulder and he would tease it with some morsel or other while he
answered questions.</p>
<p>“Is it ever occupied?” visitors would ask.</p>
<p>“Oh yes, sometimes, but a scout has got to go some to win the
privilege,” Tom would answer. Then to the squirrel he would say in his
offhand way, “How ’bout that, Pete?”</p>
<p>“And does he live here all alone?” they would ask.</p>
<p>“No, he can invite a friend to stay all summer with him here. Can’t
he, Pete? Two’s a company, read that? Only the friend must be some one
who isn’t at camp. Pete usually steals all their food from them. Don’t
you, Pete?”</p>
<p>“And which is the one who tried to rescue the other?” would be
another query as the visitor gazed about.</p>
<p>“You’re not supposed to ask that,” Tom would laugh.</p>
<p>“But it <i>must</i> be <i>known</i>,” a girl was almost sure to ask.</p>
<p>“Oh, it’s known,” Tom would say. “Danny, that one on the left, he
was the boy. But they were friends, that’s the point, hey, Pete?” he
would inquire of the squirrel.</p>
<p>“It isn’t true that the place is haunted, is it?” was another
question. “That colored cook you have says their ghosts come here in
the dead of night.”</p>
<p>“Chocolate Drop?” Tom would smile. “Oh, you’re likely to hear all
sorts of things from him.”</p>
<p>On the way back through the woods, Tom would usually be more
communicative. “You know scouts have to do good turns, don’t you? Well,
if any scout does six good turns, <i>big ones</i>, that are passed on by the
trustees, he can live there for the rest of the summer and invite one
other boy to spend the summer there with him. See? Provisions for two
are sent up from cooking shack—the kids have no expenses. You see it’s
a memorial of one great big good turn that didn’t work out, and of the
friendship those two fellows had for each other.</p>
<p>“Let’s see, this summer it wasn’t occupied at all. Last summer a
scout from Boston was up there and he invited a poor little shaver from
his home town to share it with him. They lived on beans, those two. Did
their own cooking mostly. Summer before that, let’s see—nobody. You
see a scout has got to put over six big ones, then after that he’s got
to be a <i>friend to one particular</i> fellow. He has to be host. Pretty good
idea, huh? Private cabin, stationery, all primeval inconveniences, and
everybody coming up with kodaks to take their pictures.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I should think it would be <i>bliss</i> living there,” one girl
remarked after a visit to the hallowed spot, “and the idea of two’s a
company, I think that’s just <i>wonderful</i>.”</p>
<p>“That’s the idea,” said Tom as they followed the trail down.</p>
<p>“Friendship means just two, don’t you think?” the girl asked, edging
her way into a line of talk which girls delight in. “Just two, alone,
together. Isn’t the idea <i>sweet</i>? <i>Friendship!</i>”</p>
<p>“That’s the dope,” said Tom.</p>
<p>“And is any one going to live there next summer?”</p>
<p>“Oh goodness, yes,” laughed Tom; “very muchly. I suppose I ought to
be very proud, he’s a scout from my own home town in New Jersey.”</p>
<p>“Isn’t that <i>wonderful</i>! And he did six <i>heroic deeds</i>?”</p>
<p>“Good turns,” said Tom; “real ones. He specializes on those. He eats
them raw.”</p>
<p>“Oh, and who is he going to invite up?”</p>
<p>“Now you’ve got me,” said Tom. “All I know is he sprang six stunts
and went home with the Carlson-Bates certificate. He can invite whoever
he pleases. He usually blows in about the Fourth of July; he goes off
on the Fourth, they say home in Bridgeboro.”</p>
<p>“I should think you <i>would</i> be proud,” the girl said. “Is he
tall?”</p>
<p>“Tall? Oh yes, he’s about six feet three inches or three feet six
inches, I forget which. But he’s a great hero, in fact, he’s eight or
ten heroes.”</p>
<p>“I never know whether to believe you or not,” the girl said. “Will
you tell me his name?”</p>
<p>“Positively,” said Tom. “His name is Harris—Walter Harris.”</p>
<p>“Oh, how proud he must be,” said the girl. “Just to think how he’ll
live up there all alone with some poor—oh, I think it’s
<i>wonderful</i>. And his summer will be consecrated to friendship. Do
you know how I picture him? I picture him as tall, and—and—sort of
slender and athletic. Not exactly dignified but—you know—kind of
quiet and reserved. Like a—oh, you know what I mean—like a—kind of
<i>aloof</i> and <i>silent</i>. That’s the word—<i>aloof</i>. I
picture him as being <i>different</i> from other boys. Isolated.”</p>
<p>“Oh, he’s different,” said Tom.</p>
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