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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/26517-8.txt b/26517-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..00bf18e --- /dev/null +++ b/26517-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,4260 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mary Jane's City Home, by Clara Ingram Judson + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Mary Jane's City Home + +Author: Clara Ingram Judson + +Illustrator: Thelma Gooch + +Release Date: September 3, 2008 [EBook #26517] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MARY JANE'S CITY HOME *** + + + + +Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + +[Illustration: And she pointed out the little seal who was a bit too slow. +Frontispiece] + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +MARY JANE'S CITY HOME + +BY +CLARA INGRAM JUDSON + +Author of +"Flower Fairies," "Good-Night Stories," +"Billy Robin and His Neighbors," "Bed Time Tales," +"The Junior Cook Book," and Other Works + +ILLUSTRATED BY +THELMA GOOCH + +NEW YORK +BARSE & HOPKINS +PUBLISHERS + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +Copyright, 1920, +by +Barse & Hopkins + +PRINTED IN THE U. S. A. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +TO +MY MOTHER and FATHER + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +CONTENTS + + PAGE +Finding the New Home 11 +The Folks Around The Corner 22 +Visiting with Betty 35 +Sand Castles 49 +The Beach Supper 64 +Mary Jane Goes Shopping 76 +The Bus Ride 88 +The Birthday Luncheon 100 +Lost--One Doll Cart 115 +A Trip to the Zoo 128 +A Day in the Parks 143 +Visitors--and a Boat Ride 156 +School Begins 171 +Christmas in Chicago 184 +A Summer Home--and a Telegram 201 + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + PAGE + +And she pointed out the little seal who was a bit +too slow. Frontispiece + +And then, sliding in the wet sand, she sat right +down in the lake and sent a wave of ripples right +over her castle 60 + +"But it's all down my dress," said Mary Jane, trying +her very best not to cry 107 + +This year, seeing Mary Jane was such a _very_ old +person, she was allowed to put the gold star on the +top of the tree 188 + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + + + +MARY JANE'S CITY HOME + +FINDING THE NEW HOME + + +The late afternoon sunshine sent its slanting, golden rays through the car +windows on to the map that Mary Jane and her sister Alice had spread out +on the table between the seats of the Pullman in which they were riding. + +"And all that wiggly line is water?" Mary Jane was asking. + +"Every bit water," replied their father, who bent over their heads to +explain what they were looking at; "a lot of water, you see. You remember +I told you that Chicago is right on the edge of Lake Michigan. And Lake +Michigan, so far as looks are concerned, might just as well be the ocean +you saw down in Florida--it's so big you can't see the other side." + +"And does it have big waves?" asked Mary Jane. + +"Just you wait and see," promised Mr. Merrill. "Big waves! I should say it +has!" + +"And all the green part of the map is parks," said Alice, quoting what her +father had told them when he first showed them the map. + +"Then there must be a lot of parks," suggested Mary Jane with interest. "I +think I'd like to live by a park," she added thoughtfully. + +"I think I should too," agreed Mr. Merrill, "and it's near a park we will +make the first hunt for a home." + +"Oh, look!" cried Mary Jane suddenly as she glanced up from the spread-out +map; "what's that, Dadah?" + +"That's the beginning of Chicago," said Mr. Merrill. "Let's fold up the +map now and see what we can of the city. This is South Chicago; and those +great stacks and flaming chimneys are steel mills and foundries and +factories--watch now! There are more!" + +The train on which the Merrill family were traveling went dashing past +factory after factory--past an occasional open space where they could see +in the distance the blue gleam of Lake Michigan and past great wide +stretches where tracks and more tracks on which freight cars and engines +sped up and down showed them something of the whirling industry that has +made South Chicago famous. No wonder it was a strange sight to the two +girls--they had never before seen anything that made them even guess the +big business that they now saw spread out before them. + +They had spent all their lives thus far--Alice was twelve and Mary Jane +going on six--in a small city of the Middle West and though they had had a +fine summer in the country visiting grandma and grandpa and had only the +winter before taken a beautiful trip through Florida, they had never been +to a great city. And now they were not going to visit or to take a trip. +They were going to live there. The great big city of Chicago was to be +their home. + +The pretty little house they had loved so well was sold. The furniture and +books and dolls and clothes were all packed and loaded on a freight car to +follow them to the city and all the dear friends had been given a +farewell. Mary Jane had loved the excitement and muss of packing; the +great boxes and the masses of crinkly excelsior and the workmen around who +always had time for a pleasant joke with an interested little girl. But +when it came time to say good-by to Doris and to her much loved +kindergarten and to all the boys and girls in school and "on her block," +going away wasn't so funny. In fact, Mary Jane felt a queer and +troublesome lump in her throat most of the morning when the good-bys were +said. + +But the ride on the train (and how Mary Jane did love to ride on the +train); and the nice luncheon on the diner (and how Mary Jane did _adore_ +eating on a diner--hashed brown potatoes, a whole order by herself and ice +cream and everything!); and then father's nice talk about all the fun they +were going to have, made the lump vanish and in its place there developed +an eager desire to see the new city and to begin all the promised fun. It +was then that Mr. Merrill showed them the big map of the city and pointed +out the part of the city where they would likely live. + +As the girls watched, the great factories and foundries slipped away into +the distance, and in their place the girls could see houses and occasional +stores and here and there a station, past which their train dashed as +though it wasn't looking for stations to-day, thank you. + +"Don't we stop anywhere?" asked Mary Jane after she had counted three of +these little stations. + +"Those are suburban stations," explained Mr. Merrill, "and a big through +train like ours hasn't time to stop at every one. Pretty soon another +train will come along and stop at each one of those we are now passing so +don't you worry about folks getting left. _This_ train we are on has got +to get us into Chicago in time for dinner." + +And just at that minute, when the big three story apartment buildings that +looked so very queer and strange to Mary Jane, began to fill every block, +the porter came to brush her off and to help her on with her coat. + +"I'm going to live here in Chicago," she said to him as he held the coat +for her, "and it's a big place with lots of lake and parks and--houses, I +guess, and most everything." + +"'Deed it is big, missy," replied the porter, "and I hope you's going to +like it a lot, I do." + +"I'm a-going to," answered Mary Jane confidently, as she picked up +Georgiannamore and Georgiannamore's suit case which at the last moment +couldn't possibly be packed in the trunk, and followed her father and +mother down the aisle, "'cause mother and Dadah and Alice are going to +live here too and we always have fun." + +Mr. and Mrs. Merrill had decided to get off at one of the larger suburban +stations and spend a few days in a near-by hotel; they thought the +comparative quiet of a residence hotel would be better for their girls +than the flurry and hurry of a big down town hotel. But to Mary Jane, +accustomed to the sights and sounds of a small city where street cars went +dignifiedly past every fifteen minutes and where traffic "cops" would have +very few duties, the confusion she found herself in was quite enough to be +very interesting. + +They stepped off the train, walked down some stairs and found themselves +on the sidewalk of a very busy street. Overhead the noise of their own +train rumbling cityward made a terrific din; and as though that were not +enough, still higher up the great elevated car line made a rumble and +roar. Mary Jane craned her neck as they walked from under the trains and +there high in the air, she saw street cars running along as though street +cars always had and always would, run on tracks high up in the air! + +"Can we ride on it, Dadah?" she shouted to her father, "are we going to +ride on that train up on stilts?" + +Mr. Merrill shook his head laughingly and hurried them into a waiting +taxi. + +"We're not going to ride there to-day," he explained when the door of the +car shut out some of the noise, "but some day soon we'll take a long ride +on the elevated and then you can see all the back yards and back porches +and parks and streets and everything about the city, just as plain as +plain can be." + +While he was talking, the Merrills drove through streets lined on both +sides with three-story apartment buildings. But before Mary Jane had time +to ask a question or even think what she would like to say, they whisked +around a corner and out into the beautiful wide driveway on the +Midway--the long, green parkway that stretched, or so it seemed to Mary +Jane, for miles in both directions. The taxi pulled up in front of a +comfortable looking hotel right on the side of the park and Mary Jane +wasn't a bit sorry to get out and take a breath of fresh air and look at +the lovely view before her. + +"Now just as soon as you are washed up," said Mrs. Merrill, briskly, as +they went into the hotel, "you and Alice may come out onto this nice porch +and watch the children play on the Midway and get a little run before +dinner." + +You may be sure that with that promise before her, Mary Jane didn't take +very long to primp. She had spied a group of children about her age, who +seemed to be having a beautiful time playing ball out there on the grass +and she couldn't help noticing that they played just as she and Doris did +and she couldn't help wishing that she too, even though she was a new +little girl just come to town, could play with them. So she stood very +still while Mrs. Merrill tied the fresh hair bow and slipped on a clean +frock and then, holding tight to big sister Alice's friendly hand she went +down the one flight of stairs--she was in far too big a hurry to wait for +the elevator--and out onto the long roomy porch. + +Just across the narrow street in front of the hotel and on the nearest bit +of parkway, three little girls about Mary Jane's age were still playing +ball. One was dainty and small and had yellow curls; one was rather tall +and had long straight dark hair and the third had dark, straight hair +bobbed short, and snapping black eyes. + +"Wouldn't it be funny," said Mary Jane as she looked at them wistfully, +"if I'd get to know those girls and they'd be friends. If I _did_," she +added, "I think she'd be my mostest friend," and Mary Jane pointed to the +little girl with the dark, bobbed hair. + +While they watched and were trying to get up courage to go over and play +too, a pretty girl about Alice's age came along the street. Her hair was +copper colored and curly and very, very pretty. And her smile when she saw +the little girls who were playing, made her seem so friendly and "homey." + +"I've been hunting you, Betty," she said to the little girl Mary Jane +liked best. "It's time to come home for dinner." + +So the four girls, three little folks and one bigger one, went around the +corner toward home, and two strangers, standing on the porch, watched them +till they were quite out of sight. + +"It would be funny," said Alice, "if we'd ever get to know them. I'm sure +I'd like to." + +"Wouldn't it though!" exclaimed Mary Jane. "I hope we do!" + +And all the time they were eating their first dinner in Chicago, and +telling mother and father about the children they had seen and making +plans about what to do to-morrow, they were thinking about those two girls +and wishing to know them better. + +Little did they guess what would really truly happen before the week was +over! + + + + +THE FOLKS AROUND THE CORNER + + +Three whole days of flat hunting! And of all the fun she had ever had in +her more than five years of life, Mary Jane thought flat hunting in +Chicago was the most fun of all! She loved the mystery of each new +apartment; the guessing which room might be hers and which mother's; the +hunting up the door bell and hearing its sound (for as you very well know +each door bell has a sound of its own); the poking into closets and +pantries and porches. It was the most delightful sort of exploring she had +ever come across and she couldn't at all understand why mother and father +got tired and somewhat discouraged. For _her_ part Mary Jane was tempted +to wish that they would never find a flat, well hardly that; but that +finding the right one would take a long, oh, a very long time! + +But by the afternoon of the third day, her legs began to get a little +tired too, and her eyes looked more often to the green of the Midway they +occasionally saw and she thought that flats, even empty flats, really +should have chairs for folks to sit on. So, as a matter of fact, she +wasn't half as sorry as she had thought she would be, when, on the +afternoon of the third day of hunting the Merrill family came across a +charming little apartment. + +It was on the second floor of a very attractive red brick building; it had +five rooms, quite too small, father thought, but then one can't have +everything, they had found, and every room was light and sunny and +cheerful. But the part about it that Mary Jane and Alice liked the best +was the back porch. To be sure there was a front porch, a pretty, little +porch with a stone railing and a view way down the street toward the park +and lake. But off the dining room the girls discovered a small balcony +that overlooked the back yard next door, a back yard that had a garden +laid out and a chicken house and everything so homey and comfortable +looking that the girls immediately wanted to sit out and watch. + +"I think if we'd stay here maybe some children would come out to play," +suggested Mary Jane in a whisper. + +"I think they would, too," agreed Alice. "And I think if we lived here +maybe we could get acquainted and play with them." + +"Let's live here!" exclaimed Mary Jane and she ran back into the house +just at the very minute Mr. and Mrs. Merrill decided to rent the +apartment. + +"So you think you'll like it, do you?" said Mrs. Merrill, smiling; "the +rooms are pretty small." + +"I know we'll love it," said Alice eagerly, "and you should see the back +porch." + +But Mr. Merrill laughed when they showed him the porch. + +"Do you call this a porch," he exclaimed, "why it's not half big enough +for a porch! I'd call it a balcony." + +"Yes," agreed Mrs. Merrill, "and then when you watch folks in the yard +down there,--for you _are_ planning to watch and get acquainted, aren't +you?--then you can pretend that this is your balcony seat and that the +folks down there are in a play for you--wouldn't that be fun?" + +The girls thought it would, but there was so much to plan and think about +that they didn't stay on their little balcony any longer just then, which +was something of a pity, for right after they went indoors, somebody came +out into the yard-- But then, there's no use telling about _her_ for Mary +Jane didn't see her. + +So Mary Jane and Alice went with their father and mother into the room +that was to be theirs and they planned just where each bed should be and +where was the best place for the desk and dressing table and who should +have which side of the closet. And by that time, it was nearly six +o'clock--time to go back to the hotel for dinner. + +Mr. Merrill stopped at the desk for mail as they went up to their room and +there he found a message telling him that their furniture had arrived in +Chicago and that it must be taken out of the freight house the next +morning. + +"Dear me!" exclaimed Mrs. Merrill with a gasp of dismay, "I think it's a +good thing we found that flat! What ever would we have done if we hadn't! +Well, girls, I think we'd better eat a good dinner and then go to bed +early for we'll have to get down there and clean up the flat while father +tends to getting our things delivered." + +So bright and early the next morning everybody started to work. Mr. +Merrill went down town to meet the moving men he had engaged by 'phone and +Mrs. Merrill and the two girls put aprons and cleaning rags and soap, all +of which they had brought in their small trunk, into a little grip and +went down to the new home. + +Mary Jane had lots of fun that morning. First she went down to the +basement and borrowed a broom from the janitor. Then she went back for +clean papers which she folded neatly and spread on the pantry shelves +which Mrs. Merrill with the good help of the janitor's wife had cleaned +and ready. Then she put papers on the shelf of the closet she and Alice +were to share and papers in the drawers near the floor of that same +closet. By that time--it takes pretty long to fold papers neatly and get +every bit of the shelf covered, you know--the door bell rang--a great, +long, hard ring. + +"Oh, dear! Can you go, Mary Jane?" exclaimed Mrs. Merrill, "Alice and I +both have wet hands!" You see, Alice had been washing mirrors that were on +the closet doors while her mother and the janitor's wife did windows and +wood work. + +"Yes, I'm dry," said Mary Jane, "and my papers are done and I'd like to +go." + +To tell the honest truth, Mary Jane had just that very minute been wishing +the door bell would ring. For the janitor's wife had showed her how to +press the buzzer that would release the lock of the front door and let a +person come up the stairs. And of course Mary Jane wanted to try it. So +she hurried over to the house 'phone, took down the receiver and said, +"Who is it?" just as any grown-up person would. + +"Here's your things!" said a gruff voice, "we'll bring 'em up the back!" + +Mary Jane didn't stop to press any buzzer. She dashed over to the window +nearest the alley and there, sure enough, was a great big moving van and +it was piled up full of boxes and barrels and crates--all the things that +Mary Jane had watched the packing of only such a few days before. Talk +about fun! Moving was surely the best sport ever! + +Mary Jane stayed at the window watching till the men brought the first +load up. Then they announced that they were going for lunch and Mrs. +Merrill said she and the girls had better eat while the men were away. So +hastily putting on wraps, they went over to a small tea room only a few +doors away, where they had a tasty little luncheon so quickly served that +they easily got back to their flat before the moving men arrived again. + +How that afternoon went, Mary Jane never quite remembered. It was one long +succession of excitement and fun. The unpacking of boxes and crates, the +piling up of rubbish, the finding of cherished belongings and putting them +where they belonged in the new home, and the gradual change of the living +room from a mess of boxes to a place that might some day really look like +home, all seemed thrillingly interesting to a little girl who had never +moved before. + +But by half past four or thereabouts, even Mary Jane began to get a little +tired. + +"I'll tell you something to do," suggested Mrs. Merrill, when a pause in +her own work gave her a chance to notice that Mary Jane was getting +flushed and tired. "Here is a box of doll things I have just come across. +Suppose you take them out into your own little balcony and sort them over. +Put in this box (and she handed her a little box) all the things you must +surely have upstairs; and leave in the big box all the things you will be +willing to put in the store room. Now take your time, dear, and sit down +while you work." + +Mary Jane was very glad for that advice. For even though moving men are +wonderful to watch, and even though rubbish and boxes and barrels are all +very fascinating, a person _does_ get tired and sitting down isn't at all +a bad idea. + +One of the men who was unpacking gave her her own little chair that he had +just uncrated and so she sat down in state, in her own chair, on her own +balcony and opened the box of doll things. But that's every bit that got +done to those doll things that day, every bit. + +For at that very minute, who should come out of the house around the +corner, the house with the back yard and garden and chickens and +everything, but--yes, you must have guessed it--the same two girls that +Alice and Mary Jane had seen on the Midway the day they arrived in +Chicago. Think of that! Right under Mary Jane's own balcony and, moreover, +it was plain to see that they lived there. + +"Now I guess we'll get to know them," whispered Mary Jane to herself +happily. But of course, she didn't say a thing out loud. She only sat very +still and watched. + +And as she watched, two boys came out on the back porch of the house +around the corner and one of the boys called, "Say, Fran, did you feed the +chickens?" + +The girl who was about Alice's age answered back, "No I didn't, Ed, I +thought it was Betty's turn to-day." + +"Now I know a lot," Mary Jane whispered to herself. "She's Frances, I'm +sure, and he's Ed; and Betty must be the little girl that's 'bout as big +as me." + +Just then, when Mary Jane was wishing and wishing and wishing that she +would come, Alice came to the door of the balcony and looked out. + +"Sh-h-h!" whispered Mary Jane, tensely, "they're here, both of 'em, and +there's more of 'em, too!" + +Alice seemed to understand exactly what Mary Jane meant, even though her +sentence was decidedly mixed up, and she stepped out onto the balcony. + +Frances heard the door shut and looked up. For a long minute the two girls +looked at each other, then Frances, the girl with the auburn hair and the +friendly smile, nodded shyly. + +Little Betty didn't take long deciding what she would do. She called +eagerly, "Moving in?" + +"Yes, we are," laughed Alice, waving her hand toward the piles of boxes +and rubbish stacked up on the back stairs of the building. + +Ed, who had started back into the house, looked around and, seeing his +sisters had made a small start toward conversation, called a question on +his own responsibility. + +"Going to use 'em all?" he asked, pointing to the boxes. + +"Dear me, I guess not," said Alice. "I don't see how we could!" + +"Then will you give me a box?" he asked, running back in the yard till he +stood right under the balcony. "We're going to get some rabbits, John and +I are, and we want a box for their home." + +"Come on over and see which one you want," suggested Alice, "and I'll ask +father." + +Ed and his brother John lost no time climbing over the fence and +inspecting the boxes. By the time Alice brought Mr. Merrill, he had picked +out just the one he wanted and was very grateful when it was given him for +his own. + +"Don't you want to come over and see 'em make the rabbit house?" suggested +Frances shyly. "Oh, maybe you're busy." + +"I'm sure we can come," replied Alice, "because mother just told me she +wished we'd get some fresh air." So Alice and Mary Jane followed the +others to the back yard and helped hold nails and boards and make the +rabbit house. When it was nearly finished the children's mother, who +proved to be very charming Mrs. Holden, came out with a plate of cookies +and a welcome for the two little strangers. + +"Thank you for the cookies," said Mary Jane politely, "but we're not +strange--that is, not any more, we aren't, we know each other--all of us +do!" + +And so it really seemed to all the children. They were friends from the +first day and making the rabbit house was just the beginning of many nice +times in that friendly back yard. + + + + +VISITING WITH BETTY + + +Three days of hard work for everybody and then the little flat into which +the Merrills had moved began to look like a real home. The unpacking was +all done and the rubbish cleared away; the furniture was polished and set +in place; the closets were in order and every cupboard and shelf held just +the right things for comfort. It wasn't such an easy matter to stow away +all the things the Merrills had used in their pretty house--the five room +apartment was much smaller than the house of course--but with everybody's +help the job was done. + +"Now then," said Mrs. Merrill, happily, in the late afternoon of the third +day, "if you'll run the rods in these curtains, Mary Jane, I'll hang them +up where they belong and then we'll all three go to market and then--guess +what? We'll have dinner in our own new home!" + +Mary Jane thought that would be fun, for, much as she loved eating in the +hotel where they had been living while getting the new home fixed, she +liked better to eat her mother's cooking. So it was a very happy little +girl who slipped the rods into the living room curtains and then put on +her hat and hunted up the market basket from the pantry. + +Now many times before this, Mary Jane had been marketing with her mother. +But never had she been to such a market! Before, marketing meant going to +the grocery store about three blocks from their home; it meant talking to +the very interested and friendly grocer who had known Mary Jane ever since +she first appeared at the grocery in her big, well-covered cab--she was +then about two months old; it meant telling Mr. Shover, the grocer, just +what they wanted and picking out the sorts of things they liked best. But +marketing in Chicago was very different. In the first place there wasn't a +person around they had ever seen before; and then everything was so big +and there was so much food. Mary Jane thought there couldn't possibly be +enough folks in Chicago to eat all those good things! But when she and her +mother actually got into the store and began to buy, Mary Jane forgot all +about the strangeness and remembered only the fun. For they didn't get +somebody to wait on them as they used to at Mr. Shover's--not at all! They +waited on themselves! They went through a little turnstile and then +wandered around among the good things all by themselves and they took down +from the well-stocked shelves anything they wanted. It certainly was +queer. + +"Can we just take _anything_?" exclaimed Mary Jane in amazement as her +mother explained what they were to do. + +"Well," laughed Mrs. Merrill, "you must remember we have to pay for things +just the same as we used to at Mr. Shover's. But we can take anything we +want--if we pay for it." + +"Then I'll pick you out some good things to eat, mother!" cried Mary Jane +happily, "don't you worry about thinking what we're going to have!" + +Now Mary Jane really did know how to read, at least a little, but she +didn't stop to read on this important occasion. She looked at the pictures +on the cans of goodies and she picked out a can of all her favorites and +set them in the basket Mrs. Merrill carried on her arm. But that didn't +work, for Mrs. Merrill had a long list and the basket wouldn't hold only +so much. So they decided to let Mrs. Merrill pick out three things from +her list and then Mary Jane could buy one favorite; then three more things +from the list and then another favorite. That proved to be great fun and +it certainly did fill the basket in a hurry! Mary Jane was just trying to +decide between a box of marshmallows and a pan of nice, gooey, sugary +sweet rolls when Mrs. Merrill said, "whichever you decide, Mary Jane, +you'll have to carry the bundle yourself, because this basket won't hold +another parcel--not even a little one." + +Mary Jane decided on the rolls and she took them over to the counter to +have them wrapped up and there she almost bumped into--Betty Holden, no +less! Betty and her mother were shopping too, and their basket was almost +as full as Mrs. Merrill's. + +"We market after school," said Mrs. Holden, "and then Ed brings his wagon +to meet us and hauls the stuff home. We'll get him to give you a lift +too." + +"And then can Mary Jane come over to our house to play?" asked Betty. + +"For a little while," agreed Mrs. Merrill, smilingly, "but she won't want +to stay very long to-day because we're going to have our first dinner in +our new home and she's promised to help me lots--and I need it." + +Just then they spied Ed's face at the door so they hurried through the +second turnstile, paid for their groceries and left the store. Ed's wagon +proved to be very big and he was glad to give them plenty of room for the +Merrill basket. + +"Are you going to start in school to-morrow?" asked Betty as they walked +off toward home. + +"I'm going over to see about that to-morrow morning," said Mrs. Merrill. +"We've been so busy unpacking and settling that we haven't even thought +about it till now. Do you like your school, Betty?" + +"Yes, I do, lots!" exclaimed Betty heartily. "I'm just through +kindergarten this spring, I am, and next fall I'm first year." + +"Then I think you must be just about where Mary Jane will be," said Mrs. +Merrill. + +The two little girls ran skipping ahead, talking about what they would do +and where they would sit and all the things that girls plan for school. + +But when Mrs. Merrill took Alice and Mary Jane over the next morning, it +didn't work out as planned. Alice was entered and found herself in the +very same room and only two seats away from Frances, which seemed perfect. +But there wasn't room for Mary Jane! The kindergarten was crowded, very, +very crowded, and new little folks weren't allowed to come in. Miss +Gilbert, the teacher, talked with Mary Jane a while and Mary Jane told her +all the work she had done and all the things she had learned about. + +"I really think, Mrs. Merrill," said the teacher finally, "that your +little girl is ready for the first grade. She seems very well prepared. +But they don't take new first graders so late in the year. Why don't you +keep her out of school the rest of this term and then next year, enter her +in the first grade?" + +Mrs. Merrill thought that was a fine plan. There would be so many new +sights to see and things to learn in the city that Mary Jane would find +plenty to do. + +But Mary Jane was keenly disappointed. "I wanted to stay in Betty's room," +she explained to the teacher. "She asked me to sit by her this morning, +she did, and I promised yes I would." + +"Then I'll tell you what you may do," suggested the teacher kindly. "Two +of our folks are absent this morning so we have enough chairs to go +around. Wouldn't you like to stay with Betty and visit? And then just a +little before time for school to be out, Betty can take you up to your +sister's room and she can bring you home." + +Mrs. Merrill agreed that that was a fine plan, so Mary Jane went to the +cloak room to hang up her hat and her mother hurried back home. + +At first Mary Jane felt very strange in the new school room. There were so +many children there and the songs were new and the games were new and +everything seemed different. She almost--not really, but _almost_--wished +she had gone home with her mother. And then, after singing three songs +Mary Jane didn't know, the children made a big circle and let Mary Jane +stand in the middle and they sang the song Mary Jane knew so very well, + +"I went to visit a friend to-day, She only lives across the way, She said +she couldn't come out to play Because it was her ----" + +Quick as a flash Mary Jane dropped onto her knees and began to act out +packing things into a box. + +For a minute the children hesitated. That was a strange thing to be +acting; Mary Jane was not washing or ironing or churning or sweeping or +any of the things the children usually acted and they were all puzzled. +Then suddenly Betty remembered the back stairway and all the piles of +boxes and excelsior on Mary Jane's back stairway and she called out the +end of the song--"because it was her moving day!" And everybody finished +the verse with a flourish. + +After that Mary Jane felt more at home and the morning went oh, so very +quickly, till recess time, when they all went out into the big yard to +play in the sunshine. + +Betty and her particular friends were gathering together for a circle game +in the corner of the yard when Mary Jane heard a soft, helpless little +sound close at hand. Without stopping to say anything to any one, she ran +over to the fence and there, caught in between the tall iron bars, was the +tiniest, blackest little dog she had ever seen. He evidently had seen the +children coming out to play, had wanted to play with them and had supposed +he could slip right through between the bars of the fence. + +Mary Jane tried to pull him out but he was stuck fast. So she called +Betty. + +"Here!" shouted one of the boys, "I'll pull him out!" + +"No you don't," cried Betty imperatively, "you let him alone! We'll do +it!" And her snapping black eyes flashed so positively that the boy +obeyed. But Betty couldn't pull the dog through either, the bars were too +close, she couldn't move him either way. + +"I'll tell you what let's do," she said. "Mary Jane, you stay here and +guard him so nobody tries to pull him out and I'll go and get Tom and +he'll know what to do." Tom was the janitor. + +Mary Jane stood close by the dog and patted his head and talked kindly to +him so he would know somebody was trying to help him. And all the girls +and boys who had started to play together gathered around and watched Mary +Jane while Betty ran back to the school building and down into the +basement to fetch the janitor. + +Fortunately, Tom was in his office and came quickly in response to Betty's +call. He saw at once what the trouble was and discovered a way to remedy +it. It seems that the big iron bars that made the fence were heavier at +the bottom than nearer the top, so the space between the bars got wider +higher up. Tom took firm hold of the wiggling little creature and gently +but very firmly pushed him straight up between the bars. That didn't hurt +like trying to pull him out, so the dog stopped barking and whining. And +in a second Tom had him out--half way up the fence there was plenty of +room to lift him right through. + +Poor little doggie! He was so glad to be out and so frightened by his +experience that when Tom laid him down on the grass he looked quite +forlorn. Mary Jane sat down beside him and gathered him up into her arms. + +"Don't you be afraid, doggie," she said softly, "we'll take care of you, +don't you be afraid a bit!" + +"What you going to do with him?" asked one of the girls. + +But Mary Jane didn't have to answer that question. Before she could speak, +a small boy came running along the street, crying as hard as he could cry +and shouting between sobs, "I've lost my dog! I've lost my dog! Somebody's +stole my dog!" + +"No they haven't," called Betty, "maybe this is yours!" + +The little boy rubbed his eyes, looked through the fence--and a look of +happiness spread over his small face. + +"It's him! It's him! It's him!" he shouted happily, "then he isn't +stole!" + +It took only a minute to run around the gate, dash across the school yard +and grab the tiny little dog into his arms. And the children could tell by +the way the little creature snuggled down that the love wasn't all on one +side--evidently the little boy was a good master. + +Right at that minute, before there was a chance to start a game or any +play, a great bell in the school doorway began to ring. Mary Jane was used +to a small school of course--a school so small that the teacher came to +the window and simply called when recess was over. So she stared in +amazement when the great bell rang out so noisily. + +"Come on!" shouted Betty, "recess is over!" + +"Soon as I tell this doggie good-by!" replied Mary Jane. + +Betty didn't hear and, supposing Mary Jane was right behind her, she went +on into her place in line. And Mary Jane, remembering how leisurely folks +went up after recess at her old school, didn't pay any attention to the +rapidly forming lines. She turned around and patted the tiny dog and +nodded and smiled and whispered her good-by. + +When she did turn to go in with Betty, she was amazed to see all the +children had disappeared into the building. She scampered over to the door +as fast as ever she could. And up the stairs--but not a soul did she see! +Only the click of a closing door could be heard--a click that made Mary +Jane feel really shut out and lonely. + +"Now let's see," said Mary Jane to herself, "Betty's room was right around +a corner--" But there wasn't any room around that first corner--only a +long hall. A lump came into Mary Jane's throat. The building was so big, +so very, very big. And she felt so little, so very, very little. She +swallowed twice, determined not to cry and then she said out loud in a +queer frightened little voice, "I guess I'm lost. I'm lost in school!" + + + + +SAND CASTLES + + +"I Guess I'm lost! I'm lost in school!" + +Mary Jane's frightened little whisper sounded like a shout and the doors +and walls and hallways seemed to echo back, "Lost! Little girl lost!" in a +most desolate fashion. Mary Jane was so frightened that she stood +perfectly still--just as still as though her shoes were fastened to the +floor. And she looked straight ahead as though she was trying to see +through the wall at which she was staring. To tell the truth, Mary Jane +wasn't trying to see through the wall. She didn't even know a wall was in +front of her. She couldn't see a single thing, not even a big wall, +because a mist of tears was in her eyes and a great lump was growing in +her throat. + +Now Mary Jane wasn't a baby. And she never cried--or any way, she _hardly_ +ever cried because she was going on six and girls who are going on six +don't cry. But to be lost in a strange school and in a strange city +and--everything; well, it's not much wonder that Mary Jane felt pretty +queer. + +But before the tears had time to fall, there was a heavy footstep behind +her and Mary Jane whirled around to see--the kindly face of Tom the +janitor smiling at her. + +"Aren't you pretty late getting to your room?" he asked. + +Mary Jane couldn't answer. She was so relieved to have someone around that +for a minute she just couldn't get the lump out of her throat enough to +talk. + +Tom must have been used to little girls--maybe he had one of his +own--because he didn't pay any attention to Mary Jane's silence. He took +hold of her hand and said pleasantly, "Now don't you worry a minute. You +just show me which your room is and I'll go with you." + +"I'm looking for it too," said Mary Jane, finding her voice again, "but I +don't know where it is." + +"Don't know where your room is?" asked Tom in surprise. + +"No," replied Mary Jane with a decided shake of her head, "I don't." And +then, for talking was now getting comfortable and easy, she added, "you +see, it isn't really my room. It's Betty's. And I'm just a-visiting her. +I'm just moved to Chicago and they haven't any chair for me only just to +visit in when somebody's absent." + +"That sounds like the kindergarten," said Tom. + +"It is," agreed Mary Jane with a laugh of relief, "I'm kindergarten, I +am." + +"Then here we go, right down this way," said Tom, and off they started in +just the opposite direction. + +Before they got clear up to the kindergarten, though, they met Miss +Gilbert, who was coming in search of the little visitor. "Betty missed +her," she explained, "but I thought you'd find her, Tom." With a thank you +to her janitor friend, Mary Jane took tight hold of the teacher's hand and +they went into the kindergarten room together. + +After that, the morning went very quickly and happily and Mary Jane could +hardly believe her ears when the big whistles began to blow for twelve +o'clock and Miss Gilbert told them to put away their scissors and cut-out +papers and get ready to go home. Mary Jane had cut out two beautiful +tulips and she was very happy when she was told they might be taken home +as a souvenir of her visit. + +On the way home they met Frances and Alice and Ed so they had plenty of +company. + +"What you doing Saturday?" asked Ed as they neared their own corner. + +"I don't know," replied Alice, "is there anything nice to do--special?" + +"Well," answered Frances, "we were afraid you might all be busy--but--well +you see, we were going to have a beach party and we thought maybe you +folks would like to go along. All of you." + +Now Alice and Mary hadn't the slightest idea what a beach party was, only +of course they knew it must be something about the lake. But there wasn't +time for questions and talk just then for Frances discovered that they had +walked so slowly that they must rush on home to lunch. + +"We'll get mother to tell you," she promised, "and do say you'll come +'cause it's a fire and cooking and marshmallows and piles of fun." + +"And we've plenty of wires," added Betty, "and they're plenty long so you +won't burn your fingers." + +It sounded amazingly puzzling to Alice and Mary Jane, who couldn't in the +least understand what a fire and wires and all that had to do with a +beach. But they were to find out before so very long. For that same +afternoon, while Alice was still in school, Mrs. Holden and Betty came +over to call on Mrs. Merrill and Mary Jane and then the beach party was +all explained. + +"We go over to the lake very often," said Mrs. Holden. "And on the sandy +beach, close by the water, the children build a big fire. Then, when the +coals are good, we toast sandwiches and roast 'weenies' and toast +marshmallows. The children are so anxious to show your girls just how it +is done," she added, "and as the weather promises to be warm and sunny I +think we should have an extra fine time." + +So it was settled. And a person would have thought from the excitement and +fun of preparation that the party was to be that same day instead of +twenty-four hours away. For as soon as Alice and the older Holden children +came home from school, they all set to work planning the menu and getting +out baskets and cleaning the wires on which, so the Merrill girls learned, +marshmallows were held over the coals to be toasted. + +But when everything that could be done the day before, was finished, there +was still some time for play, so the children went down into the Holden +yard and the boys, Ed and John, showed the girls how to run a track +meet--how to jump and vault and race in proper track style. Alice and Mary +Jane thought the boys wonderfully skilled and the boys, thrilled by such +warm admiration, broke all their previous records and had a beautiful +time. + +At four o'clock the next afternoon the two families set out for the beach +party. And it surely was quite a procession that made its way the four or +five blocks to the park. First there was John with the wagon which held +all the heavy things--baskets of food and such. Next came Ed, who started +out walking behind the wagon to see that nothing dropped off. He and John +were to take turns pulling the load. Then the others carried bundles of +kindling and the wires for marshmallows and toasting racks for meat. They +had such a jolly time getting off that everybody felt sure the party was +to be a success. + +Mary Jane had been so busy helping get settled and all that, that she +hadn't had time for a real visit on the beach. To be sure she had had +glimpses of the big blue they could see down their own street, but to +really come over and see the lake and play in the sand--this was her first +trip. So she skipped along very happily and thought she could hardly wait +till they got there. + +Fortunately they hadn't far to go. Three blocks down and two blocks over +and there was the park--such a beautiful park with tiny lakes and bridges +and great trees whose buds were swelling in the warm afternoon spring +sunshine. Mary Jane thought she must be in fairyland come to life, it was +all so beautiful. They crossed an arched bridge; saw a lovely view off +toward the south where other bridges and lagoons and trees made such a +pretty picture they were tempted to stay and look longer; walked around a +big circle where, so John told them, the band gave concerts in the summer +time; circled a tiny little inlet lake and came out, quite suddenly, right +close to the big lake--Lake Michigan. It almost took Mary Jane's breath +way, coming suddenly that way, upon the sight of so much water. It was all +so blue and clear, she thought, for the minute, that surely it must be the +very same ocean she had seen in Florida only a few weeks before. + +But the boys didn't give much time for sight-seeing of lakes--they had +seen the good old lake many a time and they were thinking more about +supper than any view, however pretty. + +So they hurried their wagon across the boulevard driveway, and of course +all the folks had to follow close behind, and down the beach walk a couple +of hundred yards and there they settled themselves on a stretch of clean +white sand. + +"Now," said big brother Linn, whom the girls hadn't seen much of as yet, +but who seemed to be master of ceremonies, "you boys gather those big logs +down there, you girls fix the kindling and I'll set these stones up so we +get a good draft when we light our fire." + +Everybody set to work. The logs proved to be so big and heavy that Ed and +John were very glad to have the help of their father and Mr. Merrill to +roll them into place. The four girls sorted out the kindling in their +basket and added to it by picking up drift wood on the beach. Frances +explained that they always brought some along to be sure they had some +real dry wood for a start. + +With such good help and so much of it, of course it wasn't long till a +fine blaze was going and the beach party was actually begun. + +"Go ahead and play now," said Linn, when he saw the fire was started and +that there was a big pile of reserve wood close by. "You know we can't +cook till we get some coals." + +"But I'm starved," hinted Ed, with a hungry look toward the baskets his +mother and Mrs. Merrill were guarding. + +"Then you'll have to stay starved, young man," said his mother, laughing, +"because not a basket is to be opened till the coals are ready for +cooking." + +"Then let's make a sand castle," suggested Betty and she ran down to a +smooth place on the beach, away from possible smoke, and began molding the +white sand. + +That pleased Mary Jane. She hadn't forgotten the fun she had playing on +the beach in Florida, and while this beach was different--it didn't have +any of the pretty shells or funny little crawdads she had found on the +Florida beach--still it had lovely white sand and dainty little waves and +was quite the nicest place for play that Mary Jane had seen. + +"I'll tell you what let's do," suggested Alice, as she saw that all the +children were going to play in the sand, "let's each build a castle and +make it any way we like best and then when they're all finished, have an +exhibition and everybody look and see which is the best." + +"All right, let's," agreed the children and they set to work. + +Mary Jane chose for her castle a place down close by the water. She loved +the nearness of the waves and the thrill of knowing that maybe, if she +didn't watch out, a wave would come up really close and get her wet. Betty +picked out a spot nearer the fire on the side away from the smoke and +Alice chose a place where a few pretty pebbles would give her material +with which to pave a "moat" she intended to make. + +And then everybody set to work. So busy were they that Linn had to tend +the fire all by himself and Ed forgot he was hungry. + +Before very long that beach looked like a picture book. Towers and ditches +and castles and bridges were where flat sand had been a few minutes +before. The Holden children had made many a sand house and they knew just +how to pack the damp sand so it would stay in place and just how to put a +small board here and there to hold a second story or a tower straight and +tall. + +But with all their experience, Alice's castle was as pretty as theirs, or +at any rate she thought it was, and Mary Jane's was quite wonderful. She +smoothed off the "garden" in front of her palace, stuck in a few sticks +for flowers, made a pebbly path down to the tiny lake she had scooped out +at one side and then shouted, "Mine's done! Look at mine!" and stepped +aside so all could see her handiwork. + +[Illustration: And then, sliding in the wet sand, she sat right down in +the lake and sent a wave of ripples right over her castle _Page 61_] + +But Mary Jane wasn't used to working so close to the water and she forgot +entirely where she was! Instead of stepping to one side, as she should +have done, she stepped backwards--straight into the big lake! And then, +sliding in the wet sand, she sat right down in the lake and sent a big +wave of ripples--right over her castle and garden and lake and everything +and washed it all away, every bit! + + + + +THE BEACH SUPPER + + +A minute before Mary Jane slid into the lake, the beach was a scene of +busy building and fun. Linn tended the fire, the grown folks gathered wood +and visited and guarded baskets and the children all were intent on their +sand castles. But with Mary Jane's tumble everything changed. + +Sand flew helter skelter as the children jumped hastily and ran to Mary +Jane's assistance; castles were trampled on as though they didn't exist +and fire wood and baskets were all forgotten. + +"Don't be afraid, you're all right!" called Mrs. Merrill as she ran toward +her little girl. + +"Coming! Coming! Here!" shouted Mr. Merrill reassuringly as he dashed over +to his little daughter, picked her up by the shoulders and set her, safe +and sound, on dry sand just in time to miss a fair sized wave. + +"I guess I'm wet!" said Mary Jane. + +"I guess you are," laughed Mr. Merrill, "but I guess things will dry and +you're not so very awfully too wet--not enough to spoil the party, is she, +mother?" + +Mrs. Merrill looked thoughtful and all the children waited anxiously for +her answer. Would Mary Jane have to go clear off home and miss the party +and everything! But it wasn't to be as bad as all that. Mrs. Merrill +remembered the warm day, the glowing sun that was still bright and warm +and she also remembered the hot fire Linn had underway and the warm sand +all around the fire. + +"Of course she isn't wet enough to spoil the party," said Mrs. Merrill, +much to every one's relief. "Only she'll have to stay close by the fire +till she gets warm and dry. Suppose we appoint her head cook and make her +stay right there where it's hot?" + +"She'll get dry then!" exclaimed Ed, so fervently that they all knew he +had had many a hot face from working by the fire at previous picnics. + +"But how about your castles?" asked Mr. Holden, "weren't we to have an +exhibit?" + +But the castles! Dear me! In the excitement of Mary Jane's tumble, no one +had given a thought to the castles. They were stepped on, and trampled +down and all matted down into the sand. + +"That's just too bad!" said Mrs. Merrill. + +"Pooh!" exclaimed John, dismissing the whole question of castles with one +wave of the hand, "who cares about castles! _We're_ going to have supper." +And every one set to work. + +Mary Jane was supposed to be head cook, but as she had never before been +to a beach party, she really didn't know what to do. So she simply stayed +close by the hot fire while the boys brought three benches and made them +in a triangle around the fire--a little way back of course. Then Mrs. +Holden and Mrs. Merrill unpacked the baskets and fixed a place on the +bench for each person. To be sure nobody was expected to sit on the +bench--that would be quite too proper for a beach party meal. But the +mothers put a paper plate and a cup for each person on the benches and +then they put on the plate as many sandwiches and pickles and cookies and +everything as each person was entitled to. + +While they were doing this, Linn raked down the hot coals, set in place a +light wire rack he had made and spread a couple of dozen weenies out to +roast. + +"Now then, Mary Jane," he said to the head cook, "you take this long fork. +And as soon as a weenie begins to sputter and brown, turn it over so it +browns on the other side too." + +That was a very important job, Mary Jane could easily see, and she +determined that every weenie _she_ cooked would be done just to a turn. +She bent over the fire till her back got a crook in it; then she sat down +on the hot sand close to the coals and by the time the weenies were done +ready to eat she was so dry and hot that she felt sure she had never +slipped into the lake--never! + +And all the time Mary Jane was cook, Linn and Mr. Merrill stayed close to +see that the coals kept evenly hot and that no bit of flame started up to +burn the head cook. + +At last the weenies were ready. Each one was beautifully brown and was +sizzling and sputtering and sending a most tempting odor to hungry folks. + +"Form a line, folks," said Mrs. Holden, "ladies first!" + +With much laughter, each person got their own roll, which had been split +and buttered, and filed passed Mary Jane. And Mary Jane, instructed by +Linn just how to do her job, picked up one weenie after another on the +long fork and dropped each one in an open roll held out before her. It was +a scary job, for the sand was close below and Mary Jane knew that weenies +dropped into the sand wouldn't taste very good. But she took her time--too +much time, John thought. + +"Don't be 'fraid of any old sand," he assured her when she put his weenie +in his roll so very carefully, "I eat 'em any way--sand or not." + +Betty eyed Mary Jane a bit enviously. This being chief cook and having a +chance to fill the rolls of each person must surely be fun. + +"Next time we have a beach party," she announced between bites, "_I'm_ +going to fall into the lake too!" + +"I'll save you the trouble," replied Mr. Holden understandingly, "I'll let +you be chief cook without getting wet." + +Betty needn't have worried about Mary Jane's being willing to give up her +job. For there was one disadvantage in that position Miss Betty hadn't +thought of and Mary Jane had just discovered--the head cook had no time to +eat. And Mary Jane was getting fearfully hungry. She was more than willing +to give up the big fork, let Betty fill her roll for her and stand up with +the others to eat the good hot morsel. + +Did anything ever taste as good as those hot weenie sandwiches, eaten +there on the edge of Lake Michigan, with the fine lake air blowing in +their faces and the sunshine warming them and making them forget the chill +of the long winter? The Merrills thought they had never had so much fun +and tasted such good things. Every weenie (and there had seemed to be far +too many) was eaten up; every roll disappeared and cookies and pickles and +sandwiches just vanished as though a warm breeze had melted them away. + +Supper over, the sun going down reminded the children that they must get +the fire ready for dark. They scampered up and down the broad beach, +gathering together all the pieces of drift wood they could find. Later in +the year wood along that beach would be hard to find. But in the early +spring, before the driftings of the winter's storms had been burned up by +picnickers like themselves, there was plenty to be had. + +Linn and Ed put away the cooking rack in the case they had made for it, +the two mothers packed up débris and burned it so the beach would be left +clean and tidy, and all the others gathered wood. Such a lot as they did +find! Linn piled it on high and by the time the sun went to sleep in the +west, the fire was so bright that nobody noticed the growing darkness. +They all sat around on the warm sand and sang--college songs that the +children had learned from the fathers, school songs and popular songs that +they all knew. It was fun to sit there close by the big lake, to watch the +sparks fly upward, to hear the waves swish against the sand and to sing +and sing as loud as they liked. + +But when the darkness settled down enough so that mysterious shadows +lurked over every shoulder and the stars helped the fire make a light, Ed +announced, "Now let's play Indian." + +So they did. Playing Indian, the Merrill girls found, meant a queer +follow-the-leader game. Ed led off first and everybody had to follow. He +ran round and round the fire, prancing and yelling like a wild man. And +the point of the game was for everybody to do exactly as he did. They ran +and jumped and yelled till everybody was breathless with exercise and +laughter and was glad to sit down again and do nothing. + +By this time the fire had again died down to a bed of coals. + +"_Now_ it's time for the marshmallows, isn't it?" asked Betty. She was +right, it was. + +The boxes of marshmallows were opened, wires pulled out of the baskets and +all the children sat around the fire a-toasting. 'Twas just as Betty had +promised. The wires were plenty long enough so that no fingers needed to +be burned or dresses scorched and the bed of coals was big enough to make +room for all. + +Betty and Mary Jane thought they would keep count and see who could eat +the most, but after six they lost count, and they ate and ate till they +simply couldn't eat any more. + +"Let's play still pond," suggested Frances. + +She stood up near the fire and announced, "Twenty steps, two jumps, three +hops and a roll. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, +ten--STILL POND." + +As she said the numbers off, the children began scampering to a place to +safety. All but Mary Jane. She wasn't used to playing on the slippery, +slidy sand. And though she started off just as big as anybody, she slipped +and stumbled and hadn't more than got to her feet when the words, "Still +pond!" were called. And after that she couldn't move but just to use the +steps, jumps, hops and roll Frances had given them. + +To make matters even more exciting, Frances started off exactly in her +direction. + +But Mary Jane hadn't played "Still Pond" in her own yard for nothing. +Perhaps she hadn't learned to run on slippery sand as yet, but she did +know how to play that game. Instead of trying to quietly take her twenty +steps in an effort to get out of Frances' way, she took two quick steps, +dropped down on the sand, gave one little roll, and--was safely hidden +under one of the picnic benches they had used for supper! + +Frances passed so close Mary Jane could have touched her. Other folks were +chased and found, but Mary Jane's hiding place was undiscovered. Of course +when she rolled in under the bench, Mary Jane had expected to roll right +out again when somebody else was caught. But when she found that they +couldn't see her; that they went right around close at hand, talking about +her and wondering where she was and all that, she thought it was such a +good joke that she lay very still and watched. + +She heard them asking each other where she was seen last; she heard her +father say she couldn't be so very far away; and she saw them all start +off in search of herself. Then, just the minute their backs were turned +but before they had had time to be really frightened, she slipped out from +under her seat, stood up close by the dying fire and shouted, "Here I am, +can't you see me?" + +They thought it a very good joke she had played and Mary Jane was sure she +would always remember that the best hiding place is often the nearest +one. + +"Time to go home," said Mr. Holden, looking at his watch, "the fire's most +out and the party's over." + +"But there'll be another one, won't there?" begged Mary Jane. + +"Let's have it next week," said Betty. + +The boys loaded up the empty baskets on their wagon--not much of a load +going home! Mr. Merrill raked out the fire so no harm would come to +anything; Mr. Holden gathered the children together and started the line +of march. It was a happy little crowd that wandered homeward and they all +agreed with Mary Jane when she said, "Well, anyway, I think a beach +party's the mostest fun I know. It's more fun than moving!" + + + + +MARY JANE GOES SHOPPING + + +The days after the beach party seemed to fly past on wings. First it was a +Monday and then, before a person could do half the nice things planned, +Saturday was coming 'round again and Alice was home all day from school +and fun for the four Merrills could be planned. Mrs. Merrill and Mary Jane +took to doing all their "Saturday marketing" on Friday afternoon so they +could have more time on Saturday for trips and sight-seeing and all the +lovely things folks like to do when they've just moved to a big city. + +One Saturday morning, not so very long after the beach party, dawned--not +bright and warm and sunny as Mary Jane had hoped it surely would--but +rainy and cold and windy as some May mornings are sure to be in Chicago. A +cold northeast wind raced across the city and folks had blue noses and +shivery finger tips and not a single thing to be seen looked like spring. + +"Now just look at it!" exclaimed Mary Jane as she stared out of the +living-room window, "and we were going to take a trip through the parks +and I was going to wear my new hat and everything. And look!" + +"And we can't go to the parks again for another whole week!" bemoaned +Alice, "'cause there's school!" + +"Just look!" exclaimed Mary Jane again as a hard gust of wind tossed the +rain against the winds exactly as though Mr. Rain was saying to Mary Jane, +"Thought you'd go out, did you? Well, look what I'm doing!" + +"You girls talk as though parks were the only things to see in Chicago," +said Mrs. Merrill as pleasantly and comfortably as though there was no +such thing as a disappointment in the world. + +Alice and Mary Jane turned away from the window quickly. Something in +their mother's tone of voice made them suspect that the day wasn't to be a +disappointment after all. + +"It's funny to me," continued Mrs. Merrill in a matter of fact voice, +"that you folks haven't asked to go to the big stores--wouldn't you like +to?" + +"Like to!" exclaimed Alice. + +"Would we?" cried Mary Jane. "But we didn't think about it!" + +"Then we'll think about it now," replied Mrs. Merrill. "If you can hold an +umbrella down tight over your head so as not to get your hat wet, I think +we could manage to get to the train without getting soaked. And once down +at the store, we could check our wet umbrellas and shop and sight-see +through the stores all we wished to without a bit of hurry." + +"Oh, may we really go?" asked Alice. + +"Well," answered Mrs. Merrill, pretending to hesitate, "if you _really_ +care to--" + +That settled it and there was no more time wasted talking about weather +_that_ morning. Dishes were washed and beds were made and dusting was done +so quickly that the little flat must have been quite surprised and pleased +with itself--it got put into rights so very quickly. Then Mary Jane got +her hair fixed nicely and a pretty hair bow put on--the bow wouldn't show +very much under the new hat, but even that little had to be just +right--and then, while mother fixed her own and Alice's hair, she put on a +pretty dress--not a party dress, of course, but a nice, pretty, dark +dress. Then they all put on rubbers and raincoats and locked up the doors +and took their umbrellas and started for the train. + +Going down town on the train was fun. In the city where Mary Jane lived +before, one could walk down town. Or if one really wanted to ride, a +street car hustled one to the stores in about five minutes. But in +Chicago, so she discovered, she had to have a ticket and go through a +gate, and up stairs and onto a platform and aboard a train and everything +just as though one intended to go away, far off. The girls both liked to +ride down town. To be sure they couldn't see much of the lake, even though +they did ride right along beside it, because the rain made it all look dim +and gray and foggy. But they knew the lake was there; they could see the +spray the waves made and once in a while they could hear the noise of +splashing water above the roar of the train. All too soon, for there was +so much to see, the train pulled into their station and the conductor +shouted, "Randolph Street! Everybody out! Far's we go!" And all the folks +aboard got their umbrellas ready and went out into the rain. + +Fortunately it was only a very little way from the station to the big +store where Mrs. Merrill took the girls, so they didn't have a chance to +get tired or very wet. And as soon as they got indoors, Mrs. Merrill found +a checking place and they left wet umbrellas and wet raincoats and wet +rubbers and started out for fun. + +"I think that's awfully convenient--just to leave things that way," said +Alice as she settled her collars and cuffs and made sure she was tidy, +"and of course we'll get them back safely?" This checking system was new +to her and she wanted to be assured it was all right. + +"To be sure we will," said Mrs. Merrill. "See? I have the checks for +them." + +"Well, then," said Mary Jane, "let's begin." + +"Yes," said Alice, "let's. And let's see _everything_!" + +"All right," laughed Mrs. Merrill; "shall we take an elevator first?" + +"Oh, no," answered Alice, "'cause then we'd miss the first floor." + +So they "did" the first floor, seeing all the handkerchiefs and jewelry +and bags and fans and pretty decorations and ribbons--Alice could hardly +leave those lovely ribbons--and neckwear--Mary Jane saw five different +neckties she needed--and so many things. + +"Do they have anything left for the second floor?" asked Mary Jane when +they finally got around to where they had started. + +"You just see," said Mrs. Merrill. + +And sure enough there were plenty of things on the second floor, pretty +dishes and lamps and so many things that, really, Mary Jane almost got +tired looking at them all. + +By the time they got ready for the third floor, Mary Jane was wondering if +there were any seats in that store. Not seats where you sit down to buy +things, but really seats where you just sit down whether you buy anything +or not. And sure enough there were just those seats. Nice, big comfy ones, +that appeared to be made for Mary Janes who went a-shopping and wanted to +sit down. The Merrills sat down on a big couch and Mary Jane leaned back +ready to rest when--who should she see right in front of her but Frances +Westland! The girl she met at grandmother's house nearly a year ago. + +In a jiffy Mary Jane forgot all about wanting to sit down. She slid down +from the comfortable couch, dashed after Frances, who, not guessing that a +friend was so near, was hurrying by, and brought her back to meet mother +and Alice. + +Then they all sat down for a visit. + +"No, I'm not living here," said Frances in answer to Mrs. Merrill's +question, "I've been spending the spring with my auntie and going to +school here. But just as soon as school is out I'm going back home. Mother +needs me." + +"I don't doubt it," replied Mrs. Merrill, who was much pleased with the +little girl, "I'm sure your mother misses you greatly. But where are you +living and can't we see you before you go and can't you take lunch with us +to-day?" + +It seemed that Frances's auntie lived in the same part of the city the +Merrills lived in and there was every reason to believe that the girls +might see each other at least once or twice in the little time left of the +school year. + +"But I don't believe I can eat lunch with you," added Frances, "'cause +auntie and I have to hurry home." So with a promise to come to see them +soon at the address Mrs. Merrill wrote out on her card for Frances, the +friends said good-by. + +"I'll declare!" exclaimed Mrs. Merrill, looking at her watch after Frances +left them. "It's almost twelve o'clock already! And we were to meet father +at one. If you girls want to see anything of the toys and dolls and +playrooms, we'd better not be sitting around here any longer." + +Of course the girls did want to see the toys and dolls and everything. +When they got to the fourth floor where all the children's things were +kept, they were sorry they had spent even a minute any place else. For all +the lovely dolls and marvelous toys and enticing games and beautiful +pictures and fascinating puzzles made a person think that Santa Claus's +shop and fairyland and magic were all mixed up together and set down in +one place. The girls looked and looked and looked. They "oh-ed" and +"ah-ed" and exclaimed till they couldn't think of anything more to +say--and then they kept right on looking just the same. + +Mary Jane picked out the doll coat she wanted Georgiannamore to have and +Alice selected a lovely desk. They agreed upon a set of dishes and upon +charming furniture for their balcony--just the right size too. + +"And we'll pretend we'll buy it all, mother," said Mary Jane, who knew +perfectly well she couldn't buy all the things she talked about getting, +"and we'll pretend we'll have it all sent up, that'll be such fun." + +So they pretended and looked and looked and pretended till they had been +over most all that part of the store. + +"Now then," said Mrs. Merrill, "if we're to meet Dadah for lunch--" + +"Oh, goody!" cried Alice, "are we to meet him here?" + +"Not here," said Mrs. Merrill, "but in this store in the lunch room and in +ten minutes. So we'd better wash our hands and go to the lunch room +floor." + +Mr. Merrill was waiting for them and had a table engaged close by a +charming fountain ("Just think of a fountain in a house!" exclaimed Mary +Jane when she spied it) and all the time Mary Jane sat there eating, she +could look right over and watch the fishes and she could hear the splash +of the water. + +But Mary Jane wasn't thinking of fishes or water just then. She was +hungry. And the things her father read to her sounded so good--oh, dear, +but they did sound good! She and Alice had a dreadfully hard time deciding +just what did sound the best. But Alice finally decided on stuffed chicken +legs (she hadn't an idea what they were but they sounded good) and potato +salad and strawberry parfait. And Mary Jane chose chicken pie--a whole one +all her own--and hashed brown potatoes and orange sherbet. + +While the lunch was being fixed, Mr. Merrill took Mary Jane over to the +window so she could look down, down, way down, to the street below, where +the folks appeared so little and upside down and where the automobiles +looked like the ones they had just seen in the toy department. + +When the lunch came, it proved to be just as good as the menu promised it +would be and the girls enjoyed every bite. Mary Jane was afraid for a +minute that she had made a mistake. For Alice's parfait came in a tall +glass, with a long spoon that made the girls think of the story of the fox +and the goose and the banquet, and Mary Jane was sure nothing she had +ordered could be as nice as parfait. But when the maid set the orange +sherbet at her place, Mary Jane was quite satisfied, for the ice was set +in a real orange, all cut out in dainty scallops and trimmed with green. + +"Yummy-um!" she whispered, happily. "I'm so glad you had this party, +Dadah!" + +Dadah seemed to want everything to be all right, for he had added to their +order some little cakes, done up in frilly papers and unlike anything the +girls had ever seen. They almost hated to eat them, they were so pretty, +but cakes one cannot eat are not good for much, Mr. Merrill reminded them, +and so the cakes were eaten up. + +"Now then," said Mary Jane, as she dabbled her fingers in the finger bowl +and ate up the candy she found at the side of the tiny tray, "what do we +do next?" + + + + +THE BUS RIDE + + +"What do we do next?" asked Mr. Merrill, repeating Mary Jane's question. +"I'm sure of this much--we must do something _very_ nice because it's such +a nice day." + +"_Nice day_!" exclaimed Alice. "What in the world are you talking about, +Dadah? This is the worst weather we've had since we came to Chicago--but +we don't care 'cause we're having such a good time anyway." + +Mr. Merrill laughed and replied, "Suppose you look out of the window." + +So they left their cozy table, where nothing but empty dishes told the +story of their delightful lunch party, and wandered over to the window +where Mary Jane had looked down at the street not much over an hour +before. But what a difference! With a sudden, unexpected shift of wind +that only the Chicago weather man knows how to bring about, the stiff, +cold northeaster that had brought the cold rain of the morning had been +sent off and in its place a warm breeze from the south blew softly across +the city, bringing with it sunshine and warmth and pleasantness for all. + +"Why--" exclaimed Mary Jane, much puzzled, "where's the rain?" + +"Did you want it back?" laughed Mrs. Merrill, and then she explained to +the girls something about the effect the big lake might have on weather +and told them that one of the queer things about Chicago was its sudden +changes to good, or sometimes bad, weather. + +"So I was wondering," said Mr. Merrill, "if you folks wouldn't like an +hour of fresh air and then, if you're not through shopping we can come +back to the stores." + +The girls hadn't an idea what he might want to do, but they were pretty +sure it would be fun. So they agreed that an hour out of doors was just +what they most wanted and they went down to get wraps from the check room. +They left the umbrellas till later, put on their wraps and left the +store. + +"Now then," said Mr. Merrill, "see that big bus down there--we're going +for a ride on the top." + +"What's a bus?" asked Mary Jane, who had never heard the word before. But +before her father could answer they were pushed into the crowd at the +crossing, hurried across and the next second Mr. Merrill had hailed a +great, lumbering, top-heavy automobile and was helping the girls to step +aboard. + +The "bus" proved to be a large-sized passenger automobile, with a deck on +top for passengers who wished to ride in the open air. Mary Jane and Alice +were thrilled with the fun of getting on it. It seemed exactly like going +aboard a house-boat on wheels. They stepped into a little hallway and +then--and this wasn't so easy because the bus immediately began to +move--they climbed up a curving flight of stairs and walked down an +aisle--an awfully wiggly aisle it was too!--to seats on the very front +row. + +Then, before they had had a chance to look around or feel at home, the +conductor, who stood at the back, shouted, "Low bridge!" and everybody +ducked their heads while the great bus went under the elevated railroad. +Mary Jane felt, truly, as though she must be a person in a story +book--Arabian Nights or something marvelous--because surely the things +that were happening to her weren't _really_ happening. + +But after the elevated was passed, the bus rolled out onto Michigan +Boulevard and Mary Jane settled herself comfortably in her front seat with +her mother, smiled across the aisle to Alice and her father and began to +feel really at home in her high perch. By the time the bus had turned +northward and crossed the river, she began to feel that riding on the top +of a bus was the thing she'd been wanting to do all her life. It was such +fun to sit up high and watch the lake, so blue and beautiful in the +sunshine, the trees just getting a tinge of green at the tips, the pretty +houses that lined the parkway, the people--it seemed as everybody in +Chicago must be out in their 'tother best clothes--and most of all, it was +fun to watch the automobiles dart in and out of the crowd, around the bus +and beside it, till Mary Jane was sure their driver must be some wonderful +being to be able to manage so that everybody stayed alive! + +"Here, Mary Jane," said Mr. Merrill, interrupting Mary Jane's +sight-seeing, "don't you want to pay your fare--Alice is paying ours." He +slipped two dimes into her hand just as the conductor stepped to the front +of the bus. Mary Jane wasn't quite sure what she was to do with the dimes +till she noticed that the conductor had in his hand a queer-looking thing +like a clock, only it had a hole in the top just the right size for a +dime. Into that hole Mary Jane dropped a dime. And--"ding_ding_!" went a +musical little bell somewhere in the "clock." Then she dropped the other +dime. And again the bell sounded, "ding_ding_!" just as though it tried to +say "Thank _you_!" that way. Alice then dropped her two dimes and Mary +Jane had the fun of hearing the bell again. She thought she wouldn't do a +thing but watch the conductor and listen to his bell all the time he +collected fares, but just as he stepped back to get the next folks' money +the bus passed in front of the queer old stone building with great tower +that Mr. Merrill said was the city water works building, and of course +that meant the girls wanted to hear about when it was built and hear again +the story Mr. Merrill had started to tell them several evenings before +about how the great Chicago fire started and how it burned up to this very +spot they were now passing. Somehow, being at that place and seeing the +one building that stood through the fire made the history stories seem +very plain and there were a lot of questions to be asked and answered. + +But buses don't wait for questions--the girls soon discovered that! Long +before the fire story was told they had raced up Lake Shore Drive, passed +its beautiful old homes, and were turning into Lincoln Park. Here it +seemed to the girls that the city ended and fairyland began. The grass +seemed greener, the lake bluer and the trees greener than any place they +had seen; and hundreds of tulips peeping up through the ground here, there +and everywhere, made spots of bright vivid color and beauty. + +"Oh!" exclaimed Mary Jane happily, "I hope the bus goes on and on forever! +I'd like to keep on riding all the time!" + +But when, a minute or two later, they passed near the buildings of the +Zoo, Mary Jane forgot all about wanting to ride forever and wanted to get +out, right away quick and see all the animals she had heard lived there. + +"Not to-day," said Mr. Merrill, looking at his watch. "You remember we are +to go back to the stores--we're just out for a bit of fresh air this time. +Some other day when it's still warmer so we can get our dinner here, then +we'll come and visit the Zoo. But to-day I want to get back to the stores +before they close." + +"Of course," added Alice, "for our umbrellas." + +"Of course for something else too," laughed her father, and though both +girls were very curious, not another word would he say. + +So they stayed on the bus and rode clear through the park, and up Sheridan +Road a long way till the bus turned around at a corner and the conductor +shouted, "Far's we go!" + +But the Merrills didn't get off. They wanted to keep those good front +seats so they sat still and in about two minutes the bus started south and +whirled them through the park and past all the same interesting sights on +the way cityward. This time, Mary Jane felt very much at home in her +high-up perch. She dropped in the dimes her father gave her, eyed the +passing autos without a bit of fear and looked down on all the children +she saw walking and playing quite as though she had lived in a city and +ridden in busses all her young life. + +It was a very reluctant pair of young ladies that Mr. Merrill assisted to +the sidewalk when the big stores and "time to get off" were reached. + +"But what was it besides umbrellas you wanted to get?" asked Mary Jane, +suddenly remembering. + +"Well," said Mr. Merrill, "I haven't been through the toy department with +anybody. And I have a calendar." + +The girls looked puzzled. What had the toy department to do with a +calendar? They couldn't guess. Even Mrs. Merrill looked puzzled. + +"Of course if you don't intend to have birthdays since we've moved--" said +Mr. Merrill teasingly. And then everybody knew! To be sure! It was almost +time for Mary Jane's birthday--almost a year, it was, since the lovely +birthday party when the little girl was five years old--and in the +excitement of moving and getting settled and seeing new sights, even the +little lady herself had forgotten how near the day was at hand. + +"It's mine!" exclaimed Mary Jane happily, "and I'll be six! Come on, +quick, Dadah! and I'll show you perzactly what I want." When Mary Jane got +excited she sometimes got words a little mixed, but her father knew well +enough just what she meant. She grabbed hold of his hand, called to her +mother and Alice to come on with them and away they went toward the +elevator that quickly took them to the toy section. + +Going through that department the second time was even more fun than the +first trip, because now father was along to see things and to explain +mechanical toys. And also because there was the fun of picking out the +thing she wanted to wish for, for her birthday. That last was a very +serious matter, as every little girl knows. + +They looked at dolls--but not a doll was as lovely as Georgiannamore, at +least that was Mary Jane's opinion--and then they looked at furniture and +at dishes and toys and games and clothes for dolls and, well, at every +single thing in that whole big department. After everything had been +considered and looked at and thought about, and it was about time for the +big warning bell to ring and tell folks that in ten minutes the store +would close and everybody'd have to get out, then and not until then, Mary +Jane decided that the thing she wanted most of all was a doll cart. A +beautiful little ivory enameled doll cart made just exactly like the one +that Junior's little brother had back at their old home. A cart with a top +that moved back and forth just like a real baby cart and that had cushions +and tires and everything that a really truly mother is particular to want +for her baby. + +"Yes," said Mary Jane, as she looked around the store with a rather tired +sigh, "I think that's the thing I want the most and I'm going to wish for +it, Dadah." + +"Sounds easily settled," laughed her father, "but do you know what time it +is?" + +Before she could answer, the warning bell rang and clerks began to cover +up counters and to straighten up the store for its Sunday rest. So the +Merrills four hurried down to get umbrellas and to go home. + +On the train going home Mary Jane was so tired looking at things that she +didn't care a bit about looking any more. She watched the lake some, but +mostly she simply settled back in her little corner behind the door and +just sat. Thoughts of all the wonderful things she had seen that day raced +through her mind--the lunch, the ride, the lake, the park--but most of +all, that wonderful doll cart, and she couldn't help wondering (and of +course hoping) if she really truly would, _possibly_, get that lovely gift +for her birthday. + + + + +THE BIRTHDAY LUNCHEON + + +As soon as they got home that evening, and had dinner and rested up a bit, +Mary Jane hunted up a calendar so she could find out about her birthday. +And she discovered that two weeks from that same day was "her" day. + +"It's Saturday, so you can do something too!" she said to Alice. "Now, +Mother, let's plan." + +So they talked over all the nice things a person _might_ do for a +birthday, but long before they could decide which was the very nicest of +all the plans, bedtime came. Then the next morning there were interesting +things to do, and nobody thought about plans for a day that was two weeks +away. That is, nobody but Mary Jane thought about it, and, if the truth +must be told, she thought more about the doll cart she had wished for than +she did about what she might do to celebrate. + +Monday noon, when Alice came home for her luncheon, she was much excited. + +"Who do you s'pose I saw at recess this morning?" she demanded. "Guess!" + +But Mrs. Merrill and Mary Jane couldn't guess--they didn't know anybody in +Chicago to guess! Or at least they thought they didn't. + +"I saw--" began Alice slowly, for she wanted the fun of keeping them +waiting to last as long as possible, "I saw--Frances Westland! And she +goes to my school!" + +"Why in the world didn't we know that?" said Mrs. Merrill. "We should have +guessed! Of course she goes to your school. I remember of thinking she +wasn't very far from us." + +"Can't we have her come to see us?" asked Mary Jane eagerly. + +"I already asked her if she couldn't come," explained Alice, "because I +knew you'd want me to, and she says she's sure she can. But she can't come +next Saturday because she and her auntie are going to Milwaukee to spend +the week-end. But she thought she could come the next Saturday." + +"And that's my birthday," Mary Jane reminded her. + +"I know it," agreed Alice, "but I didn't tell her. I just said I'd find +out what we were doing that day and let her know this afternoon--was that +all right, Mother?" + +"You did exactly right, dear," said Mrs. Merrill reassuringly. "Come right +out to the dining-room now, because your soup is ready and you mustn't +hurry yourself too much with your lunch. While we eat, we'll plan for the +birthday." + +Of course there were many plans to be talked of, because in a big city +there are so many kinds of things one may do. And it was awfully hard to +decide which plan was the very most fun--you know how that is yourself. +But after every plan that any of the three could think of had been +discussed carefully, Mary Jane decided that there were two things she +wanted the most to do. First, she wanted to stay home to celebrate and +have a party and all that; and, second, she wanted to go down town and go +to a big grown-up theater where there was music and lights and pretty +things just like grown folks see up town. And for her part she admitted +that she didn't see how a person possibly, even on a birthday, could do +those two conflicting things. + +"Pooh!" laughed Mrs. Merrill, "that's easy! I was telling Dad the other +night that inasmuch as this was the first birthday in the city and on +Saturday and everything--so convenient for us all--we'd better do those +very two things." + +"But how'll we do it, Mother?" asked Alice. "We can't stay home for a +party while we're down town at the theater!" + +"To be sure, we can't," agreed Mrs. Merrill. "But we can stay home for a +party _before_ we go down town for a show. And that's just what we're +going to do. You hurry off to school now, dear, because it's ten of one. +And next time you see Frances Westland, you invite her to come here for +twelve o'clock luncheon a week from next Saturday. Be sure to tell her +it's an all-afternoon party, so she can stay long enough to go down town +with us." + +"And who else'll we have?" asked Mary Jane, when Alice had gone. "It +wouldn't be a party with one person." + +"Of course not," said her mother. "There are going to be three folks. +After school this very day you are going to invite Frances and Betty +Holden--that'll make it almost a 'Frances' party, won't it? We'll ask them +right away, even though a week from Saturday is a long time off, because +Dadah will want to get the tickets and we will all want to make our +plans." + +A week and five days seem a very long time, when you have to wait for +them. But Mary Jane found that, after all, they went quicker than she had +thought they could, because there was so much to do. First she had to +decide what she wanted to have to eat at the luncheon. After much thought +and consultation the menu was made out and tacked up on the kitchen +cabinet for future reference. Mary Jane printed it out all by herself and +the letters were big and plain and could be easily read by any +cook--especially Mother. It said: + + CHICKEN BALLS + HOT ROLLS + FRUIT SALAD WITH WHIPPED CREAM + ICE CREAM CAKE + HASHED BROWN POTATOES + JELLY + +Chicken balls really meant chicken croquettes, but croquettes proved to be +such a big and puzzling word that Mary Jane decided she would say balls +and Mrs. Merrill agreed to take a verbal order for the croquette part of +the luncheon. + +When the food was planned for, Mary Jane began to talk about the +decorations. It was soon found that to be really pretty, the table +trimmings would have to be made by the hostess herself, so Mary Jane set +to work. From the advertising sections of magazines she cut letters about +an inch high. Letters enough to spell everybody's first name and last +initial. She had to have the last initial because two of her guests had +the same first name. These she sorted very carefully and put in envelopes; +one envelope for each person and just the right letters in that envelope +for the person's name. Then, she planned, when the luncheon was all ready, +she would put the letters in little piles in front of each person's place +and let them puzzle out the names before they sat down. + +Mrs. Merrill promised to have a basket of flowers, spring flowers that +Mary Jane loved so very much, in the center of the table. And Mary Jane +planned to make a procession of girls and boys all around the basket. +These she cut out of magazines too and she chose girls and boys who were +doing all the things that she herself liked to do. + +With all these things, besides regular duties and fun, to keep her busy, +Mary Jane didn't really have a chance to think her birthday was a long +time coming. First thing _she_ knew it was Friday night and the birthday +was the very next morning! + +On Saturday morning, she waked up knowing something nice was going to +happen. Then, before her eyes were really open, she felt herself getting +mother's birthday kisses and, before those were all delivered, Alice's +birthday spats--six good big lively ones! + +"Never you mind, Alice," she promised, "just wait till it's _your_ +birthday and you'll get some of the hardest--" + +"Don't stop for promises," said Mr. Merrill, coming in to deliver his +spats too, "what I want is breakfast and for the life of me, _I_ can't get +into that dining-room." + +"_Oh!_" cried Mary Jane rapturously, "I'll be right out!" + +"Not till you get dressed, you know," Alice reminded her, "so do hurry!" +For it was one of the rules of the Merrill household that birthdays and +Christmases didn't really begin till folks were dressed. So Mary Jane +scrabbled into her clothes and gave her face and hands about the most +hurry-up washing they had ever had and then rushed out to the +dining-room. + +And there, standing right by her chair, was the--yes, really--the very +doll cart she had picked out! She was so happy that for a minute she +couldn't speak, she just stared. The next minute she was down on her knees +with her arms around the whole cart--or at least as much of the cart as +two six-year-old arms could get around--and she was counting over all the +wonderful virtues of her gift. It surely was a cart to make any little +girl proud and when Mary Jane saw her own Georgiannamore, wearing a lovely +new coat (Mrs. Merrill's gift), and a pair of really truly gloves (from +Alice), and sitting up as big as life in the cart, she thought the +happiest day of her life had come. + +After breakfast the morning raced by on wings. Of course Mary Jane had to +show the cart and doll's clothes to Betty and they had to walk around the +block to give the doll an airing. Then, just as they got back to Mary +Jane's apartment, the postman came with a box from grandpa and grandma. +Betty was invited up for the fun of opening it and she was glad to come +both for the fun and for the big pieces of grandmother's candy that she +got when the box was opened. Then there was the table to set and the +puzzle letters to put around and everybody to dress in their best--that's +a good deal for one morning. No wonder it seemed to be an unusually short +one. + +At the very last minute, Mary Jane with her new white dress and pink +ribbons all just as they should be, went in to the kitchen to see if she +could help. And at that very minute a neighbor came in to get Mrs. +Merrill's advice about an important matter. + +"Everything's ready now," said Mrs. Merrill, as she left the kitchen. +"Only, I believe, Mary Jane, it would be a good idea for you to put that +whipped cream into the ice box. We won't make the salad till they get here +and I want to keep it stiff and cold." + +Now, Mary Jane had put things in the ice box many a time. Big things and +little things and spilly things and all, and there was no reason in the +world why she couldn't do it all right. No reason, except-- Just as she +picked up the bowl of cream, the door bell rang a long, loud peal that she +was sure must be her three guests coming all at once, so she hurried and +the cream jiggled in the bowl, and slid over the edge--and all down the +front of her best new dress! + +Fortunately Alice came into the kitchen just then, in time to see the +accident, and to notice two big tears which popped into Mary Jane's eyes +and threatened to spill down her cheeks. + +"Pooh!" she exclaimed comfortably, "don't you worry about a little thing +like that, Mary Jane," and she made a grab for the bowl, rescued some of +the cream and set it in the ice box. "I'll have you fixed up so soon that +you won't know anything happened." + +"But it's all down my dress," said Mary Jane, trying her very best not to +cry. + +[Illustration: "But it's all down my dress," said Mary Jane, trying her +very best not to cry _Page 111_] + +"Oh, well," replied Alice, nothing daunted, "it's not going to stay there +long." She took a clean cloth, dampened it with cold water and, with quick +little dabs, scrubbed the cream all off the front of the birthday dress. +Then she took a fresh cloth, and more cold water and, putting a big, clean +towel under the front of the dress, scrubbed again till every trace of the +cream was gone. Then she opened the oven door so the heat would help dry +the wetness and with a fresh cloth rubbed and rubbed the wet place till it +was entirely dry. + +"There now," she said, as she shook the dress into place, "I think the +girls are here; let's go see." And immediately the accident that +threatened to spoil Mary Jane's fun was forgotten. + +Sure enough, the girls had come and the party began at once. + +The letter puzzles for place cards proved to be lots of fun and filled in +the time while Mrs. Merrill brought in the plates of good things to eat. +Judging by the appetites Mary Jane's menu must have been a favorite with +everybody, for the goodies disappeared by magic and Mrs. Merrill filled up +plates and passed rolls and brought in salad and everything till she +hardly had time to eat her own luncheon. + +The ice cream was a surprise even to Mary Jane. On the plate was, first, a +big, round piece of cake; then, on top of that, was a slice of ice cream, +white, and on top of _that_ a ball of pink ice cream with a pink candle, +lighted, stuck in the top. They looked so pretty and bright that the girls +hated to blow them out, but Mrs. Merrill said every one was to make a wish +and then blow and if the candle went out on the first blow the wish would +come true. + +Alice suddenly remembered that they were to take a train at one-thirty and +that it was nearing one now, so the dessert was finished in a hurry, wraps +were hastily put on and the whole party started for the train to meet Mr. +Merrill and have the rest of the fun. + + + + +LOST--ONE DOLL CART + + +There was only one thing wrong about the birthday celebration and that was +that the day was such a very busy, happy one that there was very little +time for playing with the new doll cart. Of course Mary Jane and Betty +took their dolls out for one airing in the morning soon after breakfast. +But what is one little airing when one has a new cart? Nothing at all, +Mary Jane thought. All through the luncheon and the ride down town and the +play father took them to, which proved to be just the very most +interesting kind of a play for little girls to see, Mary Jane kept +thinking of her new cart and of the fun she would have on Monday when +there was a whole day for Georgiannamore and the doll cart. + +So when Monday morning actually came Mary Jane lost no time getting up and +doing her share of the morning work. Mary Jane was very particular about +her morning work. She didn't want her mother to have to do the things a +six-year-old girl was plenty big enough to do; and then, anyway, she knew +it was lots more fun to work when two did the job than for one person to +work alone. She picked up all the papers, and emptied the waste baskets, +and cleaned the bathroom washstand and the kitchen sink--she liked those +jobs the best because they were so scrubby and grown-up and +interesting--and put out clean towels and dusted the living-room. Of +course this was after the dishes were washed and put away; that was a job +with which Alice helped too, before she started for school. So by the time +Mary Jane was ready to play Mrs. Merrill was about through too, ready for +sewing or baking or whatever she had to do that day. + +"I think I'd better help you take down your cart," suggested Mrs. Merrill, +when the last job was finished. "It's not so easy for one person to take +that cart down from the second floor. But it will be no trouble at all for +you to take one end and me to take the other and carry it down together. +Then you can put Georgiannamore in it before you start down and there'll +be no danger of bouncing her out." + +"But how'll I get back up, Mother?" asked Mary Jane. + +"Ring the bell three short taps and I'll come down to meet you," answered +Mrs. Merrill. "Don't try to bring it up alone; it's far too heavy." + +Mary Jane dressed Georgiannamore in her very best dress, put on the new +coat and gloves, tucked her carefully into the cart so she wouldn't catch +cold by being out for a long walk, and then she and Mrs. Merrill carried +the cart, oh, so very carefully, down stairs and out to the sidewalk. + +Fortunately, that May morning was bright and sunny; the breeze blew warm +from the southland instead of cold and blustery from the lake, and it was +the very best kind of a morning possible for being out of doors. Mary Jane +walked around the block, starting toward the lake, then she went around +the block the other way, and of course she went rather slowly because +there was so much to see and to show Georgiannamore. Bright colored +crocuses were blooming in all the yards where there were houses--and in +that particular neighborhood there were many houses as well as +apartments--tulips were bursting up through the ground and the lilac buds +were swelling their plump green sides nearly to the bursting point. + +On the third time around, Mary Jane thought of school--to be sure, it +couldn't be anywhere near time for school to be out, because the morning +hadn't much more than begun, but then it would be fun to go around to the +corner where the children crossed the street to go to school. There were +so many automobiles whizzing around the streets that a little girl even as +old as six couldn't be allowed to cross streets without a grown person or +an older sister along. + +She went around the block to the corner where the children would come, +after a while, and there, just as she turned to start back home, thinking +she'd come here again nearer noon, she heard a commotion. Looking down the +half block to the yard around the school house she heard a bell peal out +and saw, yes, truly, crowds of children coming out of school! And just as +she was about to look around to see if there was a fire or a parade or +anything special to cause school to be dismissed early, she heard the +whistles blow for noon--the morning was gone! That's how time flies when a +person has a new doll cart! + +Mary Jane waited at the corner till Alice and Frances and Betty came along +together and they all four walked home. + +"You shouldn't bother to carry your cart clear upstairs every time," +suggested Frances, "when our front porch is so handy. Just run the cart up +on the porch, lock the brake and it will be safe as can be till you eat +your lunch." + +Alice thought that was a good idea too, so the cart was left there, locked +with the brake, and with the understanding that if Mrs. Merrill didn't +approve, the girls would come down and get it at once. + +Lunch was ready and waiting, so the cart stayed on the porch while the +girls ate and then Mary Jane walked back toward school as far as she was +allowed to go. + +By the time Mary Jane got back in front of her own apartment, Mrs. Merrill +was ready to go and do her marketing and errands and of course Mary Jane +and Georgiannamore went along and had a beautiful time--especially when +they looked in the windows and saw all the good things to eat. Mary Jane +had thought that she knew every sort of good thing a person could possibly +want to eat, but she soon found out that she didn't. For in one of the +windows they passed she saw a tray of apples, covered with something slick +and brown and carrying in their stem ends a small smooth stick like a +butcher's skewer. + +"What are they, Mother?" she exclaimed. "Don't they look _good_! And may +we buy some?" + +Mrs. Merrill went inside the store and Mary Jane, anxiously watching her +mother through the window, waited outside with the doll and cart. She saw +her mother speak to the salesman, look at the apples and then, oh, joy! +saw him pick out four fine ones under Mrs. Merrill's direction and put +them in a paper bag. + +"He says they are called Taffy Apples," explained Mrs. Merrill when she +came out, "and that all the girls and boys like them very much. So I +didn't bother to consult you," she added with a twinkle in her eye. "I +bought some for you four girls to eat after school--just on a chance that +you might like them." + +The bag was carefully tucked in under the folds of Georgiannamore's robe +and the walking and shopping were resumed, but all the time, Mary Jane +kept her eye on the hump made by the bag of apples and kept wishing that +time for school to be out would hurry up and come. Some good fairy must +have heard the wishes too, for the afternoon hurried by almost as fast as +the morning and first thing Mary Jane knew they were all through the +errands and were going down the street toward the school, ready to meet +Alice. + +"Do you like 'Taffy Apples'?" Mary Jane asked Betty as soon as she came +out of the school yard. + +"Like 'em--u-um!" replied Betty expressively. + +"Well," continued Mary Jane slowly, so the surprise wouldn't be over too +soon, "I've got one in there," pointing to the cart. + +Betty eyed the hump Mary Jane pointed out and smiled knowingly. + +"It looks like more than one," she suggested hopefully. + +"It is more than one," answered Mary Jane delightedly; "it's four--all for +us." + +"Can we eat 'em now?" demanded Betty. + +"Better wait till we get home," suggested Mrs. Merrill; "that won't be +more than five minutes and then there won't be any danger of stumbling and +running a stick into your throats." + +The two little girls didn't loiter much after that. They skipped along +briskly and soon were ahead of Mrs. Merrill and Alice and Frances. + +"I'll tell you what," said Betty, as they turned into her own yard, "let's +put the cart up on the porch while I get my doll and then when we get +through eating our apples we'll be all ready to go walking." + +She picked up the front end and Mary Jane took the handle end and they set +the cart up at the end of the porch and went into the house. Fortunately +Mary Jane took Georgiannamore along with her into the house; if she +hadn't--but then, that's getting ahead of the story. + +The little girls had no more than gone inside before Mrs. Merrill, Alice +and Frances turned the corner and strolled along toward the Holden house. + +"Funny where those girls have gone," said Frances, looking at the empty +porch. + +"They've hid our Taffy Apples somewhere, I just know they have!" said +Alice. "Frances, we ought to be smart enough to find them so quickly they +won't try teasing again." + +"I don't believe they've hidden the apples," said Frances thoughtfully, +"because Betty would be so hungry she wouldn't bother with teasing till +after she was through eating. Maybe they've gone into the house to get +Betty's doll and cart." + +"But why would they bother to take Mary Jane's cart indoors if Betty was +just going in for her doll?" asked Alice. + +Before Frances or Mrs. Merrill could suggest an answer, the two little +girls themselves came out of the front door, turned to look at the porch +and then stood there, as though fastened to the floor--they were that +surprised. + +"Why--why--" said Mary Jane, "I left it right here!" + +"Well, nobody ever stole anything before," said Betty. "Maybe the boys +just hid it!" + +"No, they didn't," replied Frances, "because they haven't come home from +school yet. They stopped to see Jimmie's new chicken house and they won't +be home for an hour." + +"What's the trouble?" asked Mrs. Holden, who, hearing voices, came to the +front door to invite folks in for a visit. + +"Trouble enough, Mother," said Frances, worriedly. "Mary Jane left her +brand new doll cart on our porch and it's gone!" + +"And we just went in to get my doll," explained Betty, getting very +excited. "We just went in a little minute and then we were going to eat +the taffy apples and now they're gone too--oh, dear!" + +At that minute, yes, things really do happen this way sometimes, who +should go by the house but the big friendly policeman who always stood at +the street corner nearest the school to guard the children from swiftly +moving autos. Betty spied him and ran down the walk to speak to him. + +"So the cart's gone, is it?" he said as he and Betty came up toward the +house. "Well, if you'll let me use your 'phone, I'll tell them down at the +station just what kind of a cart it is and maybe we can get a trace of +it--anyway, we can try." + +Mrs. Holden went indoors with him and the others stood around on the porch +hardly knowing what to do. Losing her cart was a real calamity to poor +Mary Jane--she very well knew that her father couldn't afford to get her +another one and she had hard work, awfully hard work, to keep back the +tears that came to her eyes and to swallow the lump that filled her +throat. She didn't want to be a crybaby, but--and the lump got bigger and +bigger-- + +Mrs. Merrill noticed that Mary Jane was trying so very hard to be brave so +she did her best to help. + +"Wasn't it lucky that officer came by just then!" she said cheerfully. "I +can't for the life of me see why anybody would be mean enough to steal a +little girl's doll cart and I keep thinking we'll find it somewhere. Come +on, Mary Jane, let's sit down on this settee here till Mrs. Holden comes +out. Then perhaps some of you girls will be good enough to go up to the +candy shop with me and get some more taffy apples--I suppose those went +with the cart!" + +Mary Jane stepped over toward her mother, who had already seated herself +on the settee at the end of the porch. But before she sat down she just +happened to look down toward the ground. The Holden porch had no railing +around the side and as Mary Jane was always a little timid about falling +she kept a close watch on the end of the porch every time she went near +it. She glanced down at the ground and then--her face changed! The +sorrowful look vanished and smiles spread like sunshine over her face. + +"Look!" she exclaimed, as she pointed to the ground. "Look there!" + + + + +A TRIP TO THE ZOO + + +It wasn't hard to guess what Mary Jane had found; nothing but her precious +doll cart could have made her feel and look so happy. They all ran to the +end of the porch, looked over the edge, and there, sure enough, was the +birthday cart all tumbled down in a heap. Alice and Frances jumped down, +set it up straight and then, with Mrs. Merrill's help from above, lifted +it up to the porch just as the policeman and Mrs. Holden came out of the +house. + +"Bless my soul!" exclaimed the officer. "Another cart?" + +"No, it's mine!" cried Mary Jane happily. She ran her hands over the hood, +the body part and then the wheels to make sure nothing was broken. +Everything seemed all right, even the bag of taffy apples was still tucked +under the carriage robe that had come loose but had not fallen clear out. + +"Yours?" asked the officer. "But I thought yours was lost!" + +"It was," admitted Mary Jane, "but it isn't any more." + +Mrs. Merrill hastened to explain that the cart had just then been +discovered on the ground at the end of the porch. + +"I know what was the trouble," said Frances, "she didn't fasten the +brake--did you, Mary Jane?" + +Mary Jane and the policeman bent down to inspect the brake. No, it wasn't +fastened. + +"It wouldn't take much of a breeze to blow that cart off the porch, young +lady," said the officer, laughingly, "and so I suggest that if you ever +want to leave your doll in the cart, you'd better be sure the brake is +locked. You might have a smashed doll instead of a lost cart to report and +then things wouldn't be so easy to straighten out!" And with a pleasant +good-by he went on about his business. + +Left alone the two mothers looked at each other and laughed--such an easy +ending to disappointment didn't often come! The four girls made a dive for +the bag of apples and settled themselves on the broad front steps for a +few minutes of real enjoyment. Mary Jane found that taffy apples were a +lot of fun to eat. The hard, slick surface was delicious to "lick" and +then, when a small part was licked thin, it was fun to bite right straight +through to the apple. + +"If you think they're good now," said Frances, "you should taste them in +the fall when the fresh apples are in--yummy-um!" + +"These are good enough for me," said Betty contentedly and she bit off a +big chunk of apple. + +"Betty Holden!" exclaimed Frances with big sisterly chagrin, "you look +like a monkey with that apple all over your face!" + +"Oh, fiddle!" replied Betty indifferently, "I like monkeys." + +"Did you ever see one?" asked Mary Jane, "a really truly live one?" + +Betty stared. "Why of course!" she answered, "haven't you?" + +Mary Jane shook her head. + +"Well then you ought to go up to the Zoo," she said positively, "let's all +go." She jumped up and ran over to her mother. "Mother!" she announced, +"Mary Jane's never seen a monkey--never! Can't we take her up to the Zoo +and show 'em to her?" + +"Never seen a monkey!" exclaimed Mrs. Holden and she was as surprised as +Betty had been, "are you sure?" + +"Yes, Betty's right," said Mrs. Merrill. "Mary Jane has seen a great many +things for a little girl who has just had her sixth birthday. But she +hasn't seen a monkey. Her father and I were saying only last night that we +must take the girls up to the Zoo as soon as possible." + +"Let's all go next Saturday," suggested Mrs. Holden, "no, we can't go next +Saturday because the girls and I have some shopping to do. Let's go a week +from Saturday. By that time the restaurant in Lincoln Park will be open. +The way we do," she explained to the Merrills, "is to take our lunch, a +picnic lunch, with us. We start up about eleven, eat over by the lake and +then have the whole afternoon for watching the animals; we eat dinner in +that nice restaurant, before dark, and then come home in the early +evening. Can you all go on that day?" + +Mrs. Merrill said she was sure they could, so plans were made right then +and there. + +Mary Jane and Alice thought those two weeks, or nearly two weeks, never +would pass. Of course there was the doll cart to play with and Mary Jane +loved it exactly as much as ever. But she did want to see the monkeys, and +the foxes (Betty told her she would love the foxes!) and all the creatures +that Betty seemed to know so much about and which she had never even +seen. + +But at last the morning came, warm and sunny and clear and the lunch boxes +were packed, the apartment locked up and everybody started toward Lincoln +Park feeling happy and ready for fun. The fathers couldn't come for lunch, +but really when all the Holden girls and boys were added to the three +Merrills, there was such a crowd that, for the time at least, fathers +weren't so very much missed. + +When they reached the park Mary Jane realized, for the first time, how +close it was getting to really truly summer. The sun shone with real +summer warmth, the lake was blue and beautiful and flowers bloomed on +every corner. + +"Oh, I'd just like to live in a park all the time," she exclaimed as she +looked around her, "it seems just like home!" + +"Yes, it does," said Mrs. Merrill, with a wee bit of a sigh, "I'm afraid I +know some folks who are going to miss their gardens and flower bed this +summer." + +"How stupid of me not to have thought of that!" exclaimed Mrs. Holden. +"You know it will be just two weeks now till we go up to the lake for all +the summer. Why didn't I think to have you plant stuff in our back garden? +Then you could have all the garden you liked right there handy--we always +do hate to leave the ground idle." + +"Perhaps we might plant something even yet," suggested Mrs. Merrill, much +delighted with the idea, "we'd love to try." + +But there was no time for further planning just then--John Holden demanded +his lunch; Betty made a lively second and in a minute or two a clean +grassy place was picked out, the individual lunch boxes were passed out +and then, for a few minutes, everybody was quiet. + +"I'm going to feed the black bear," announced Betty, as she paused to pick +out another sandwich, "I'm going to feed him peanuts--I saved up enough +money for two bagsful." + +"But aren't you afraid of him?" asked Mary Jane breathlessly. + +"Afraid? Pooh!" grunted Betty. + +"Never you mind, Mary Jane," said Linn comfortingly, "she was afraid the +first time she saw him and I remember all about it. But now she's learned +that he can't get out the cage." + +"Now, Linn, I never--" began Betty. + +But John interrupted. "There!" he said, "I'm through. Come on, let's +gather up the boxes and papers and stick 'em in the trash box on the way +to get the peanuts." So the children all helped and in a jiffy the pretty, +grassy spot where they had eaten lunch was as clean and tidy as when they +came. And then away they scampered after the peanuts. + +Such an afternoon as it was! Mary Jane tried to remember each thing they +did so she could tell her father when he met them after three o'clock. But +she couldn't remember half what they had done. She knew they saw the +little foxes--such pretty, dainty white and tan colored foxes that played +together like little pet kittens and made her want to hold them in her lap +and pet them. She knew they saw the bears--great big bears and middle +sized bears and little bit o' bears just like in the story book, and she +fed them peanuts which they caught very deftly in their soft cushioned +paws. But all the rest, she really couldn't remember in the right +order--there were kangaroos and buffaloes and a giraffe who stuck his long +neck over the top of a great high fence and made Mary Jane think of +nothing so much as a funny paper picture. And then of course the +monkeys--dozens of them and queer birds with curious colored feathers and +funny bills and feet. Really, she had seen in that one afternoon, more +animals than she had guessed lived in the whole world, oh, many more! + +"But have you seen the seals?" asked Mr. Merrill who met them at the bird +house. + +No, they hadn't. + +"It's almost four o'clock," said Mr. Merrill, looking at his watch, "and +Mr. Holden said they ate at four and we should meet him there, so let's +hurry." + +It was a good thing they did hurry for other folks seemed to know, too, +that the seals were fed at four. From all directions, folks could be seen +walking toward the big enclosed pond where the seals were kept. But, by +hurrying, they got there in time to stand close to the iron fence where +they could see the antics of those queerest of animals, the seals. + +One would suppose that even the seals knew it was nearly four o'clock, +dinner time, for they were so excited and eager. They barked and swam and +flung themselves around vigorously as though they could hardly stand +waiting for anything. Then, just at four, a man came out of a near-by +building. In his hand he carried a basket of fish--a great, well-filled +basket. He came over to a little platform close by where the Merrill and +Holden children were standing; so they could see everything. + +He picked up a big fish, tossed it over into the rocky island in the +middle of the seals' pond and then! such a scrambling as there was till +the middle-sized seal with a few ungainly flops, grabbed the fish and +gulped it down in one bite. + +Then he threw another fish and another and another--one after the other so +fast that Mary Jane felt sure the seals must get all mixed up about +catching them. But they didn't. Those seals must have been smarter than +folks had thought for they seemed to know, every time, just about where +the fish was to hit on the rocks and to know, too, just how to get to that +particular spot the quickest. Mary Jane thought it very wonderful. + +But one thing worried her. There was one small seal, who for some reason +or other, seemed to be always just a second too late to get a fish. Mary +Jane was sure he had had but one and all the others had had, oh, a lot. +And she couldn't help wishing all the others wouldn't be quite so grabby. + +When the man who was feeding the seals got almost to the bottom of his big +basket, he stopped and looked at the crowd of children assembled for the +feeding. And as he looked, he spied Mary Jane's sober little face. + +"Don't you like to watch them?" he asked her in surprise. + +"Yes, I like to only they're so grabby," she replied promptly, "and he +hasn't had but one." She pointed out the little seal who was a bit too +slow. + +"We'll fix that," said the keeper, kindly, "you just watch." + +He tossed a great big fish close to the crowd of waiting seals, then, +quick as a flash and before they had had time to get that one, he tossed +another, straight at the little seal who was on the edge of the crowd. + +"He got it! He got it!" cried Mary Jane happily, "he got it before they +had a chance!" + +"And he's going to get another," said the keeper as he threw another and +still another, straight at the hungry little seal. "There!" he added as he +looked at the now empty basket, "that ought to do him till to-morrow." +Mary Jane thought he looked so comfortable now that surely he had had as +much as he needed for the day. + +"Better hurry if we're to see the lions eat," said Mr. Holden, who during +the seals' dining hour had come up behind his little party. + +"Lions!" exclaimed Mary Jane. + +"Yes, hurry up!" called Betty and she and her brother who were quite +familiar with the park because of many previous visits, ran on toward a +big brick house near by. + +Mary Jane wasn't afraid, but all the same she thought it would be more fun +to hold her father's hand and even though they were a bit behind, they got +into the lions' house in time. + +Here the dinner was of meat, great big chunks of raw, red meat that the +keepers tossed into the cages. And it was so funny to watch! Just before +the keeper appeared, the lions and tigers and jackals and leopards were +pacing up and down their cages with such weird roars and grunts and growls +that Mary Jane held tightly to her father's hand and didn't go very close +to the iron bars. But when the keepers appeared with the meat there was a +wild scramble, and then silence except for the crunching and smacking of +eating. It certainly was different, oh, very, very different from anything +Mary Jane had ever seen before! + +"Let's not wait here any more," suggested Alice, "let's show Dadah the +monkeys." + +"Yes, and the foxes--the white ones," said Mary Jane, "they're my +favorites of all." + +But before they had had time to show Mr. Merrill every single creature +they had seen, the Holden boys announced that they were hungry and that it +was long past dinner time. And sure enough! Even though it wasn't really +long _past_ dinner time, it _was_ half past five--the time they had agreed +upon for dinner. So a very jolly party seated themselves at a big round +table on a second story porch of the Park restaurant. That was the nicest +place to eat Mary Jane had ever seen--unless perhaps a diner on a train. +For after they gave their order, she discovered that they could look right +down on a small lake where ducks and geese and swans lived. The children +got so interested watching the pretty creatures that for once they didn't +have time to think the waiter was slow! + +They stayed there eating and watching the birds, till the sun set back of +the trees. Then, when there wasn't another scrap of cake or teaspoonful of +ice cream left, they gathered up wraps and hats and started for home. + +"I know one thing," said sleepy Mary Jane as they waited for the bus that +was to take them to their train. "I know there're a lot more animal folks +in the world than I thought for--oh, a lot more! And I think I'd better +come again to see them all." + + + + +A DAY IN THE PARKS + + +A whole long vacation begun! Alice home all day and plenty of time for +walks and playing together! It seemed almost too good to be true. For +although Alice was several years older than her sister Mary Jane, the two +girls had always had very happy times playing together and they had missed +each other very much during school days. Now that the Holden family was +away, for they went off, bag and baggage, to their country home up in +Wisconsin the very day school closed, the two girls had no one near by to +play with, so more than ever before they needed and enjoyed each other's +company. Frances Westland had gone back to the country and the Merrill +girls had not made friends with anyone who lived near enough to make a +convenient playmate. + +They didn't do as some girls and boys do in vacation, get up late in the +morning. No, they thought it was more fun to get up promptly and have +breakfast with Dadah and then, when the afternoon got hot, as often +happened, they took a nice long rest and dressed fresh and clean for +dinner. On many a day Mrs. Merrill packed a basket of dinner and they met +Mr. Merrill over by the park, had their dinner near one of the small +lagoons or close to the big lake. After dinner they played ball or +tennis--Alice was learning to be very good at tennis. + +"I wish there were swans in our park," said Mary Jane as she sat on the +edge of the lagoon and watched the row boats and the electric launches +gliding about on the water. "I liked those swans at Lincoln Park." + +"I was just thinking to-day," said Mr. Merrill, "we haven't seen all the +parks and I promised you, that you should see them--all the big ones +anyway. I wonder when we could go, mother?" + +"I wonder _how_ we could go," said Mrs. Merrill, "the parks are so far +apart that a journey through them all would be a hopeless task, seems to +me." + +"Depends on how you do it," laughed Mr. Merrill. "I'll tell you what I +thought. I'll take the whole day away from the office so as to go along. +We'll start fairly early and take the elevated out to Garfield Park--you +know we promised the girls a trip on the elevated and we've always taken +the train! We'll see that park well, you know it has gardens and +greenhouses and lakes, and then we'll get a taxi and go to two or three +other parks and ride home." + +The girls thought that was a wonderful plan and they wanted to set the day +for that very same week. So Thursday was decided upon. + +"Now there's one thing besides getting a good lunch ready that I want you +folks to do," said Mr. Merrill as they picked up their baskets and balls +ready to go home, "I want you to get out that map of Chicago we had on the +train the day we came up here and find just where Garfield Park is and how +we get there and how many interesting sights like rivers and parks and +boulevards we pass on the way." And of course the girls promised that they +would find the map and get all that information first thing in the +morning. + +Riding on the elevated proved to be great fun. Mary Jane was afraid for a +few minutes she wasn't going to like it--the stairs were so very high up +with holes in each step to see down to the ground; and the train dashed to +the platform with such a roar and bustle and people crowded on and jerk! +the train rushed off. But when she settled down in the seat, comfortingly +near her mother, and looked out over the roofs of houses and stores, and +down long streets, one after another, she found she wasn't a bit afraid +and that she liked it very much. She liked watching for children on folks' +back porches. Some played on the porch and some played in the dining-room +windows--it was easy to tell which were the dining-room windows because +always there were three big windows and always she could look right +through the curtains and see the big table in the middle of the room. The +only trouble with watching folks from an elevated was that the train +dashed by so quickly she couldn't any more than see, till--flash, flash, +and they were gone and there was another street and another set of back +stairs and some different children playing. It really was awfully queer. + +Pretty soon they reached the big down town and there they got off their +train, climbed over a big bridge to another elevated train and away they +went whizzing again. It certainly was a queer way to travel, Mary Jane +thought. + +But finally father announced that they had come to Garfield Park, so they +got off, walked down the stairs to a park that looked so much like their +own park that Mary Jane had to rub her eyes and look twice to make sure +she wasn't dreaming. Here were the same winding driveways, beautiful trees +and small lakes. + +"Did we come back to our Park?" she asked in surprise. + +"Oh, no," answered Alice who had run on a little ahead, "look at the big +greenhouse and look back there! Now don't you see the swans?" + +No, it wasn't their own neighborhood park, Mary Jane soon realized that, +because there were many new things to be seen. The wonderful tropical +greenhouse where palms and bananas and wonderful ferns such as the girls +had seen in Florida were growing. And then there were beautiful out of +door gardens--Mary Jane liked those even better than the greenhouse +gardens, wonderful as those were. She seemed to feel, someway, as though +the flowers must like the out of doors better. + +Right in the middle of the many lovely flower beds in the out of doors +gardens, there was a lily pool in which grew water lilies of all colors +and sorts. Mary Jane had never seen water lilies before and she thought +them very lovely--and rather queer too, if the truth must be told. She +decided she would stay right there a while and let Alice and her father +explore the rest of the gardens--they wanted to know names of flowers and +names didn't seem a bit interesting to the little girl. + +Just after she had decided to stay there and play, she spied a boy of +about her age who was watching the lilies too. + +"Can you walk all the way around the edge?" he asked her. + +"Edge of what?" asked Mary Jane. + +"The edge of the pool," he replied, "see," and he put his foot up on the +stone rim of the pool, "all the way around on this." + +"Can you?" asked Mary Jane. She wanted to see what he would say before she +answered his question. + +"Sure!" he replied, "it's just as easy! Only girls are 'fraidies." + +"I guess I'm not," declared Mary Jane firmly, "watch!" She stepped up on +the stone rim--it was about eight inches wide--and walked boldly along +toward the middle of the long side of the pool. + +"You can, can't you," said the boy admiringly. + +"Just as easy," replied Mary Jane, for when she found she could do what he +had asked she was anxious to have it appear to be as easy for her as for +him. + +"Come on," the boy suggested, "let's race!" + +"Race?" asked Mary Jane, "how?" + +"'Round the pool. You start this way, and I'll start that way and the one +that gets around home first beats." + +"All right," agreed Mary Jane, "let's." + +Now before Mary Jane saw the boy by the pool, Mrs. Merrill spied some very +beautiful grasses over at one side of the gardens; the very sort of +grasses, she decided, that Mary Jane's grandmother would like to use in +her flower beds by the driveways. And of course she wanted to find out the +names of the grasses so she could write to grandmother about them. Seeing +that Mary Jane was so absorbed in the pool and the lilies, she slipped +over to look at the name sign which she knew would be stuck right by the +roots. She jotted the name down in her note book, looked along at a few +others and--turned back to the pool just in time to see her small daughter +and a strange boy run racingly along the rim of the pool straight at each +other. + +"Mary Jane! Mary Jane!" she called, "jump down onto the ground! Jump +down!" + +Whether Mary Jane heard her and became confused, or whether the boy's +bumping into her made her lose her balance, nobody ever quite found out. +But anyway, right before Mrs. Merrill's astonished eyes, Mary Jane Merrill +tumbled 'kplump--into the lily pool! + +Fortunately the lily pool wasn't very deep so Mary Jane didn't fall far. +But she did hit the bottom pretty hard; so hard that when she bobbed up, +her head out of water and her feet on the bottom, she hardly knew what had +happened to her. + +Mrs. Merrill screamed and Mr. Merrill, Alice, three policemen and about +twenty other people came running to see what had happened. It wasn't +necessary for anybody to jump in and make a triumphant rescue for Mary +Jane was so close to shore that Mrs. Merrill had taken firm hold of her +hand and pulled her out just as all the folks got there. So there was +nothing for them to do but to stare and to ask questions. + +"How did she do it?" asked the first policeman. + +"Hurt you any?" asked the second. + +"You and your mother come with me," said the third (and Mary Jane guessed +right away from his voice that he must have some little girls of his own), +"and I'll show you where you can dry your clothes." + +The procession of policemen and onlookers, led by a very wet and greatly +embarrassed little girl, crossed the gardens, crossed the street and went +into a comfortable big building. There a kindly matron produced a big +bathrobe in which Mary Jane sat while her dress was wrung out and dried. +And wasn't she glad there was a good hot sun so things could dry quickly! + +Finally, when Mary Jane was beginning to get awfully hungry, mother +announced that the clothes were dry and that she had pulled and stretched +them the best she could in the place of ironing. So Mary Jane dressed and +they went in search of Alice and her father. + +"Well, you certainly do mix up baths with your picnics," laughed Mr. +Merrill when he saw them coming. "Remember the time you fell into +Clearwater, Pussy?" + +"But it isn't so bad, really, Dadah," said Mary Jane, "and I'm not wet +now." + +"So you're not," said Mr. Merrill, "but _I_ am hungry--anybody agree with +me?" + +They all admitted to being nearly starved, so they found a pretty, grassy +spot close by the lake on which several beautiful swans were sunning +themselves, and there they spread out the luncheon they had brought. At +first the girls were so hungry they didn't want to do anything but eat. +But by the time they had eaten a plateful of potato salad and three or +four sandwiches, the swans discovered their lunching place and came to +call. Evidently swans were used to being treated very nicely by folks who +came to the park for they didn't seem to have a trace of fear of +strangers. + +The girls tossed the crusts of the sandwiches to the edge of the water and +the swans bent their long necks and picked them up and ate them, every +crust, so daintily just as though crusts were a diet fit for kings--and +swans. The swans didn't actually come out of the water, but they came so +close to the shore that the girls could almost touch them and they soon +got to feeling very well acquainted. + +So it was with some regret that they heard Mr. Merrill say, "Well, girls, +weren't we to see some of the other parks too?" And here it was four +o'clock! + +The basket was packed--and there wasn't a scrap of anything a swan could +eat, you may be sure of that--and they strolled down to the roadway. In a +minute or two Mr. Merrill hailed a passing taxi and they settled +themselves for a nice long ride. + +They didn't stop at any other park; Mary Jane was sure no other could be +as interesting as the one where she had had such exciting experiences and +Alice was quite as content as her father and mother to sit back, cool and +comfortable, and see the beautiful flowers and shrubbery slip past them. +So they rode and rode through one park after another, it seemed, till +suddenly Mary Jane spied something that looked familiar. + +"That's my Midway!" she announced, as the car turned into the long, broad +stretch of parkway near their own home. + +"Sure enough it is!" exclaimed Mr. Merrill in pretended amazement, "we'll +have to turn around and go back!" + +"No we won't," said Mary Jane, "we'll go home." + +So they went on home, just in time to cook a good warm dinner and to talk +over and over again the many things they had seen in the parks. + + + + +VISITORS--AND A BOAT RIDE + + +One day, not so very long after the trip through the parks, the bell at +the Merrills' front door pealed long and hard. Mary Jane, whose job was +answering the door, ran to the little house 'phone, and heard a loud voice +shout, "Special for Merrill!" + +"What's he mean, mother?" she asked, in a puzzled voice. + +"Better press the buzzer and let him in, dear," replied Mrs. Merrill, "if +he has the name right he must have something for us." + +So Mary Jane pressed the downstairs buzzer and then opened the front door. +Yes, it was for them--a special delivery letter for Mrs. Merrill. Mary +Jane and Alice were much excited and could hardly wait till the +messenger's book was signed and the letter was opened. + +"It's from grandma," said Mrs. Merrill as she glanced at the writing, "and +listen! This is what she says: + +"'Grandpa finds quite unexpectedly that he must come to Chicago on +business and he says that if it's convenient to you folks I can come along +and we'll stay two or three days for a visit. Please wire reply because we +must start Wednesday evening.'" + +"And it's ten o'clock Wednesday morning now!" exclaimed Mrs. Merrill. She +hurried to the telephone, called Mr. Merrill so he could send a telegram +at once, then she and the two girls went right to work making ready for +the guests. + +It was decided that Alice and Mary Jane should sleep on couches and give +up their room to the visitors. "Now's when I wish we had our nice guest +room," said Mrs. Merrill, "but then, grandma knows that folks who live in +Chicago flats don't keep guest rooms for infrequent visitors." For her +part, Mary Jane thought sleeping on a couch would be great fun--so grown +up and different from every day. She was to have the dining-room couch and +Alice was to sleep in the living-room. When all plans were made, bedding +sorted out and laid ready for making up the beds fresh first thing in the +morning, Mrs. Merrill began planning the meals. If the visitors were to +stay only a short time she wanted to have as much baking and marketing as +possible done beforehand, so every minute could be spent in fun and +visiting. Alice and Mary Jane, who had been marketing so much with their +mother of late that they really could be trusted, took a long list up to +the grocery and Mrs. Merrill set to work baking coffeecake and bread and +cookies. Um-m! It wasn't an hour till that tiny kitchen began to smell so +good that the girls could hardly be coaxed away. Mrs. Merrill let them +help in a good many ways. Mary Jane put the sugar and nuts on the tops of +the cookies after her mother put them in the pan and Alice, who was +getting to be a really good cook, tended to the baking. She put the big +pans in, and watched the baking, and took them out when every cookie was +evenly browned. Then, after she took a pan out of the oven, she gently +lifted the hot cookies out from the baking pan onto a wire rack where they +could cool without losing their pretty shapes. When the cookies were cool, +it was Mary Jane's turn again. She put them all in the tin cookie box, +counting them and laying them neatly between layers of paraffin paper so +they would keep fresh even in the hot weather. + +It was a rule that only perfect cookies should be packed away--scraps +never went into the tin box. But for some reason or other, the girls never +seemed to mind the job of eating the broken ones! In fact Mary Jane often +asked Alice _not_ to be so careful--to please break a few so there would +be plenty to eat right then and there. + +The day went by so quickly that it was bed time before the girls realized +it and then, after about forty winks, it was morning--the morning when +grandma and grandpa were coming. + +Everybody was up early, Alice and Mary Jane made up the beds fresh and +neat, mother cooked a good breakfast and Dadah went to the train, at a +near-by suburban station, to meet the travelers. It was a jolly party that +sat around the breakfast table--you may be sure of that! + +"Now then," said Mr. Merrill, when the breakfast was eaten up and news of +the farm had been told, "I'll have to go to work and I suppose grandpa has +to do his business to-day, so we'll leave you folks to yourselves. Then +to-morrow, if grandpa is through his business, we can plan some fun." + +So the two business folks went down town and grandma was left to enjoy +life at home. The girls were glad she could stay. + +"Let's take grandma over to the lake," suggested Alice, "I know you'd love +riding in one of those little electric launches, grandmother." + +"Let's take some lunch and not come home till she's seen everything in +Chicago," said Mary Jane in a rush of hospitality. + +"Dear me! Child!" exclaimed grandma in dismay, "don't you know there's +another day coming!" + +Mary Jane agreed to leave a few sights for the next day, but she didn't +want to lose any time getting off. Fortunately the morning work didn't +take but a tiny bit of time, and as grandma, who didn't care much for +"stuffy sleepers," was very glad to get out into the fresh air, they very +soon were on their way to the park. + +The girls felt quite at home in the neighborhood and in the park by this +time, and they thought it was great fun to show the sights to somebody +else--somebody who didn't know all about Chicago. Grandma loved the +beautiful Midway, the charming lagoons and she enjoyed her ride on the +little launch fully as much as the girls had thought she would. + +"But don't you have any _big_ boats?" she asked, "great big ones with two +decks and lots of passengers and all that? I'd like to ride on a big boat +too." + +"Then that's exactly what we'll do to-morrow, mother," said Mrs. Merrill. +"There is a big boat that runs from Jackson Park up to the municipal pier. +We'll go on it to-morrow and we'll get our lunch up town and then we'll +come back home on the boat." + +And that's exactly what they did. + +When Mr. Merrill heard that grandma wanted a ride on a big boat, the plans +for the next day were as good as made. He thought the idea of going to +town on the boat and then getting lunch and coming home was a fine one and +he only made one change in the plan. + +"Instead of going to a store, in the loop, let's take one of the little +launches that run from the Municipal pier to Lincoln Park and go up there +for our lunch so grandma can see your favorite swans and perhaps, if we +want to stay that long, see the seals get their four o'clock tea." But +dear me, he little guessed what would happen as his nice-sounding plan +worked out! + +So the next morning, the Merrills all had a nice, leisurely, visity +breakfast, then a walk through the park, and never did the park look +lovelier than on the sunny summer morning, and then, boarding the boat +that rocked at the pier on the big lake, they found comfortable seats on +the shady side and prepared for a pleasant ride. + +Mary Jane chose to sit on the side nearest the pier because she loved to +look down from the upper deck and watch the people boarding the boat. She +had never ridden on boats very much, only when she went to Florida, and +this boat they were now aboard seemed very different from the big, +awkward, flat bottomed boat they took their river trip on through Florida +jungles. + +"You don't need to sit by me if you want to talk to mother," she said to +her father. + +"Humph!" said her father teasingly, "how do I know you're not going to +tumble overboard! You know you have a way of mixing up picnics and water, +Mary Jane, so I don't think I'll take any chances." But when Mary Jane +promised that she would sit very still and not walk around a step and not +lean over the edge, he went to speak to grandpa a few minutes. And while +he was gone, Mary Jane leaned up against the side of the boat and watched +the folks down on the pier. + +She thought it must surely be about time for the boat to start because +there was hurrying on the pier, and men were busy taking ropes off of the +big wooden posts along the side nearest the water. While she was watching, +a woman came along the dock toward the boat and with her were two little +children, a girl about Mary Jane's own age and a little boy some two years +younger. Just as they reached the gang plank, ready to step onto the boat, +the little boy began to cry. + +"I left my boat! I left my boat! I left my boat!" he cried. Mary Jane +could hear him very plainly even though she sat so far up above him. + +She couldn't hear what the mother said, but evidently she promised to get +the missing boat for him, because she left both children by the side of +the gang plank, and hurrying as fast as possible she ran back toward the +shore. And right at that minute, the big bell overhead rang three times +and the engine aboard the boat began to throb--it was time to go. + +The men on the dock noticed the two children and one said to the little +girl, "Were you going?" and she nodded yes. So he picked up the boy and +hurried the two children aboard just as the gang plank was hauled in and +the boat made away from the pier. + +Mary Jane was so thrilled and excited she could hardly sit still. She +tried to call her father but he was on the other side of the boat and she +had promised to sit still--perfectly still--till he came back. What in the +world was a little girl to do? And back on the shore that was so rapidly +getting farther and farther way, Mary Jane could see the mother of the +children, running frantically toward the dock which the boat had left. +Surely the captain would see her, Mary Jane thought. But if he did, he +likely thought she was merely somebody who had missed the boat and that he +had no time for turning back. And so the boat continued out into the +lake. + +Finally after what seemed the _longest_ time (though it really was hardly +more than five minutes), Mr. Merrill came back and then, such a story as +he heard! + +"Are you sure, Mary Jane?" he asked, "certain sure? The men wouldn't put +children on a boat without grown folks along!" + +"But they did, Dadah!" insisted Mary Jane, "I saw 'em!" + +"Then you come with me," said Mr. Merrill, "and we'll see if we can find +them." + +So Mr. Merrill and Mary Jane went down the stairs, and that took some time +because folks were coming and going and getting settled for the trip, and +there, huddled close together and crying as hard as they could cry, were +the two little waifs! + +Mary Jane with real motherliness began talking to the little girl; Mr. +Merrill picked up the boy and together the whole party went in search of +the captain. By the time he was found though, the boat was still farther +on its journey toward the city and the dock they started from was farther +and farther behind. + +"Well, that is a time we were wrong," admitted the captain when he had +listened to all Mary Jane had to say and talked with the man who had put +the children aboard. "But even though we were wrong, we can't go back now. +We'll have to make the children comfortable and take them back to their +mother on the return trip." + +So Mr. Merrill and Mary Jane went back to the deck, only this time they +took with them the two little strangers. Mrs. Merrill was told the story +and she and Alice and Mary Jane, with help from grandma, grandpa and Mr. +Merrill, set themselves to the task of making the little children happy. +At first it was hard work, because they cried all the time for their +mother. But erelong they understood the friendliness around them and they +stopped crying and began to have a good time. Grandpa discovered some +crackerjack and everybody knows what a help _that_ is; Mrs. Merrill told +some funny stories and Mr. Merrill took them all over the boat--to see the +great engine and everything. Then there were the sights to watch from the +deck and the big buildings to count and the boats they passed to +watch--oh, there surely was a lot to do that made that trip interesting +and so very short. + +As the boat pulled up near the down town pier, the Merrills saw a taxi +dash up near where the boat was to land: saw a woman get out and, followed +by a policeman, hurry up to the side where the boat would pull in. + +"Look!" exclaimed Mary Jane excitedly. "Look!" + +The little girl, whose name was Ann, looked along with the others, and +then she gave a happy cry. + +"Mother!" she shouted, so loudly that her mother, waiting on the pier +could hear and was so very relieved! + +When the boat pulled into the dock, the captain was the first one to step +off; he met the mother and the officer and brought them aboard at once. +Mary Jane was called upon to explain all that she had seen and the +officer, as well as the mother, was satisfied that the whole thing was an +accident and not an attempt to steal the children. + +"But how did you get up here so quickly?" asked Mary Jane, when the first +excitement was over. + +"My dear child!" laughed Ann's mother, "a person can do a lot when she +thinks something is happening to her children! I took a passing taxi, +dashed to a police station and then on up here. And nothing has happened +at all--except you nice people have given my little folks a very pleasant +trip. Next time, Bobby," she added, "we'll leave your toy boat or we'll +all go together to find it. We won't take any chances of losing each +other!" + +"Well," laughed Mr. Merrill when the mother and children and officer and +captain had all gone on about their own business, "what was it we were +going to do to-day?" + +Everybody laughed at that! They had been so excited that they had +forgotten, yes, actually forgotten, that this was a sight-seeing trip for +grandma and grandpa. But once they remembered, they knew just what to do. +They climbed aboard a waiting launch, rode up to Lincoln Park, had a +wonderful dinner and fun all the rest of the day. + +"I don't see," remarked grandma, as they neared home, late that evening, +"how you girls are ever going to settle down to school again! Did you know +that school was only a few weeks away? Vacation will be over before you +know it!" + + + + +SCHOOL BEGINS + + +When grandma suggested that it was nearly time for school to begin, on +that day of the boat ride, she guessed better than the girls suspected. At +the time they laughed and thought she was joking, but, after she and +grandpa had gone home, they got out a calendar and counted up and there, +to be sure, only one and one-half weeks of vacation were left. + +"I didn't realize school began so early," exclaimed Mrs. Merrill in +dismay. + +"I thought summer was a long time!" cried Alice, "but it isn't any time at +all!" + +"Goody! Goody! Goody!" Mary Jane said happily, "then I get to start to +school like a big girl." + +It was no wonder Mary Jane was happy, for she remembered that the plan was +for her to start in the really truly school, not the kindergarten where +she had gone in her other home, and any little girl likes to start to +school like her big sister. + +When the day finally came, Alice was as much excited as Mary Jane herself. +For although the summer had been so pleasant she almost hated to see it +end--the free days with plenty of time for visits with mother and picnics +and marketing and all--still, school was pleasant too and any little girl +who does nice work and tries to learn, will make good friends and have +happy days, just as Alice always had had. + +Mary Jane had a hard time deciding which dress to wear. She wanted to look +very grown up, so that teacher would realize she was a big girl, so she +finally decided upon a dark blue sailor suit. The one that had the red +insignia on the sleeve and that looked just like a big girl's dress. With +a clean 'kerchief peeking out of her pocket and a smashing big red bow on +the top of her brown head, she looked very nice. + +Alice and Mary Jane waked up that morning the very minute they were called +for they wanted to help mother so she could go over to school with them. +And with all that good help of course they were off on time. Alice was +glad to have company going to school for Frances wasn't home yet and +wouldn't be there for a couple of weeks. + +Mary Jane's heart went thump, thump as she and her mother went in at the +teachers' gate, and up the stairs and into the principal's office. And +thump, thump some more when she saw the whole roomful of strange boys and +girls and thump, thump some more when her turn came and she was sent +(fortunately with her mother along) to the first grade room--number 104. +The room was full of children, hundreds, Mary Jane thought there must be, +though the teacher told Mrs. Merrill there were about forty-five. And if +her heart went thump, thump before, it certainly went thump, thump, +_thump_ when the teacher, smiling at her so kindly, gave her a seat in +the--front-row--such a nice seat for her very own! and she sat down and +tried to look as though she had been used to going to school all her whole +life. + +For a minute she couldn't look around or anything, she felt so queer. Then +she glanced at the next seat and there, sitting right beside her, +was--whom do you suppose? Ann! The same pretty little Ann who had been +lost on the boat. Immediately Mary Jane forgot all about being afraid and +thumping hearts and strangeness and everything and began to like school. +The two little girls had much to say about what they would do at recess +and where did they live and everything, so the time before school began +passed very quickly. + +Suddenly, in the midst of their talk, a bell rang, "GONG-GONG!" Two loud +tones close together that way, and school began. Mary Jane Merrill was in +a really truly school like the big girl she was getting to be. + +Ann came home with Mary Jane that first afternoon and Mrs. Merrill +discovered that her name was Ann Ellis and that she lived two blocks from +their own home and that the two little girls would no doubt find it very +easy to be friends. They began having a good time that very afternoon and +they planned still better times when Betty would be back and they could +all play together. Now wasn't that fine! + +Mary Jane found that she liked school every bit as much as she had thought +she would. She liked her teacher, a charming Miss Treavor, and she liked +her studies. But most of all she liked the fun she had on the playground. +In the big cities, like Chicago, where lots of girls and boys have no +yards, the school yards are the only places were children can play. So, to +make everything safe and orderly, the school folks have a playground +teacher stay at school all the day, to help in the games and to see that +every one has a happy time. The playground teacher at Mary Jane's school +liked little girls very much and she knew many good games for them to +play. So in addition to "London Bridge" and "Drop the Handkerchief" and +"Tag" that all children play, Mary Jane learned "Roman Soldiers" and +"Ghost Walk" and "Three times Three." + +Of the new ones, Mary Jane liked "Ghost Walk" the best. To play it, the +girls and boys made a big circle, then they selected some one to be +"Ghost." This person stood in the middle of the circle and everybody shut +eyes tight, very tight. Then the Ghost, while every one kept very quiet, +tried to tip-toe to the edge of the circle, slip out between two folks and +get away without being caught. That may sound easy, but played in a yard +full of romping boys and girls, it is not really as easy as it might seem +and it was lots of fun, because often folks would think the "Ghost" was +near them and would try to grab--and the joke was on them because all the +while, maybe, the "ghost" was in another part of the ring. And whenever +folks thought they caught the "Ghost" and _didn't_, then every one opened +their eyes, the person who had made the mistake had to get out of the +circle and the game began again. But if the "Ghost" really did get out of +the circle without being caught, then the "Ghost" could hide anywhere in +the yard and the game became an old-fashioned hide-and-seek with everybody +hunting one lucky person. + +One day, when Mary Jane was "Ghost," she was determined she would get out +of that circle without getting caught. She had tried it many a time before +and failed; this time she was going to do it. She tiptoed, oh, so softly +over the loose gravel to the edge of the circle. Then noiselessly she +dropped down on hands and knees and, without a thought for her dress, +crawled slowly between Ann and the girl next to her. She could hardly keep +from giggling, it was so funny to be so close she almost bumped them and +yet not to be discovered. Now she was right between them, now she was +almost outside--now she was free and away she dashed to the spot she had +long ago picked out as a hiding place for just such a time as this. + +The folks in the circle waited--but nobody was caught, so they shouted, +"Ghost Walk?" and when the "ghost" didn't answer they opened their eyes +and--no Mary Jane was there! + +"I'll get her," shouted Ann, "I'll find her! I'll bet she got out on your +side of the circle, Janny, she never could have passed _me_!" + +"I'll find her myself," answered Janny, "but she never passed by me, she +didn't!" + +So they hunted, up and down the yard, around the bushes, by the doorway, +everywhere they could think of. But no sign of Mary Jane did they +discover. They hunted and they hunted till the gong sounded and they had +to go into school again. But not a sign of any Mary Jane did they find. +Was Mary Jane lost? Miss Treavor must be told so everybody could hunt, for +something surely must have happened to a little girl who didn't answer the +recess bell when it rang for school to begin. + +Now it happened that some days before, when Mary Jane had first learned to +play "Ghost walk" she hunted around the yard for a good place to hide--in +case she ever succeeded in getting out of the circle so she _could_ hide. +She didn't want to hide among the bushes because that was the first place +the children looked; she didn't want to hide in the doorway because that +was against rules and if a child was discovered there by a teacher, the +child had to go straight upstairs and stay the rest of recess. And there +didn't seem to be any other place. But there was another hiding place--and +Mary Jane found it. Around the corner of the building, on the side nearest +the furnace entrance, there was a jog in the brick wall. And in front of +the little niche made by this jog, boards left by some carpenters had been +carelessly tossed. + +"I could climb over the boards," Mary Jane had thought, "and hide down +behind and nobody'd ever find me--ever." + +So when her time came, and she really did get out of the circle without +being caught, she didn't have to stop and hunt a hiding place; she knew +exactly where she wanted to go. + +But there was one thing Mary Jane hadn't figured on; one thing she didn't +even think of as she crouched down behind her boards while the children +hunted for her, hither and yon over the school yard. She hadn't thought +that way off, 'round the corner and behind boards that way, she +couldn't--_hear_. The sounds of playing and romping seemed so quiet, so +quiet that they were hardly noticeable. She didn't hear the bell and she +didn't even notice the sudden quiet when the children fell in line to +march upstairs. She sat there, huddled in a snug little heap, and she +laughed to herself about the joke she was playing on her mates. + +To be sure the time _did_ seem pretty long and she thought they were very +stupid--but then--she never suspected that recess was over and-- + +Till suddenly there descended upon her a cloud of chalk dust! It powdered +her face and dress and shoes and made her forget all about being quiet and +jump up with a lively scream of fright. + +Overhead she heard Miss Treavor's voice, exclaiming, "Whatever in the +world!" And then, before she could quite get the dust out of her eyes and +understand what had happened, Miss Treavor and two other teachers who had +heard the scream, stood before her and the whole story came out. Miss +Treavor tried not to laugh when Mary Jane told her she was hiding but she +couldn't help it. Mary Jane looked so be-powdered and forlorn. But Mary +Jane didn't mind the laughing because at the same time, Miss Treavor +lifted her out from behind the boards and set her down in the cheerful +sunlight. + +"That _was_ a good place to hide," the teacher admitted, "and you were a +clever little girl to think of it. But I believe, dear," she added kindly, +"that next time you'd better hide some place where you can hear the bell, +even though you _are_ more likely to get caught." + +And Mary Jane promised that she would never, never hide in such a very +good place again. + +Mary Jane hated to go back into the school room all mussed and tumbled as +she was, so Miss Treavor sent for Alice and the two little girls skipped +home for a fresh dress and clean ribbons so Mary Jane could enjoy the +classes. + +When, a half an hour later, she came back, with the dark blue dress +changed to a plaid gingham and the red bow changed to green, the children +wanted to know where she had been and what had happened. But Miss Treavor +wouldn't tell. And she had made Mary Jane promise not to tell, because +that place was _such_ a good hiding place that the teachers didn't want +other folks finding it and hiding there to make trouble too. + +But all of Mary Jane's school fun wasn't from trouble. That was just one +day. Most of the time, she played without anything happening just as the +other folks did. And all the time she made more friends and had a better +time, till, when Betty came back from the country, she knew most everybody +in her room. + +She liked school so very much that the days slipped by one after another +so fast a person could hardly count them--one day and another day and +another day--just that way. Till one Monday morning when they went to +school, Miss Treavor announced, "Do you boys and girls know what we are +going to do to-day? We're going to start making Christmas presents. +Because Christmas is only _three weeks away_!" + +"Christmas!" thought Mary Jane, with a thrill of joy, "Christmas! Why, +they _do_ have Christmas in Chicago! I wonder what I'll get and what I'll +do!" + + + + +CHRISTMAS IN CHICAGO + + +Christmas in Chicago! When Mary Jane heard those words she had her first +real pang of homesickness for the home she had left when they moved to +Chicago. Would any Christmas anywhere ever be so beautiful as the +Christmas in that dear home? She remembered the pine trees in the yard, +loaded down with their wealth of snow: the glowing fire on the hearth with +its Christmas-y smell from the pine cones that were saved through the year +for the Christmas Day fire; the tree in the angle near the fireplace where +the afternoon sun touched it into a blaze of glory; the party for the poor +children that had been such fun to plan for--would anything in Chicago +ever be half the fun of Christmas in the old home? But Mary Jane was soon +to discover that Christmas doesn't need certain houses or fires or trees +to make it perfect; that Christmas is made in folks' hearts and that +wherever there is a Christmas heart, there will be a happy day--in village +or city, the place makes no difference. + +When she went home from school that afternoon and announced that Miss +Treavor said Christmas was so very near, she found that mother wasn't even +a little surprised. + +"Why to be sure Christmas is coming," laughed Mrs. Merrill, "and here I've +been waiting and waiting and _waiting_ for you to talk about it till, +actually, I thought I'd had to begin myself, if you didn't wake up pretty +soon." And then everybody began to talk at once. + +"Do they have trees in Chicago?" asked Alice. + +"Are there any poor folks who would like parties?" asked Mary Jane. + +"Is anybody coming to see us?" demanded Mary Jane. + +"Here! Here! Here!" exclaimed Mr. Merrill, "one at a time, ladies, one at +a time! If you doubt that there will be trees in Chicago, you should see +what I saw this morning as I went down to work. A train load of Christmas +trees--yes, sir!" (for he noticed the girls could hardly believe him) "a +whole train load of trees. And I see by the paper this evening that a boat +load has arrived, too, so there will be no shortage of trees." + +"Then we can have one," said Mary Jane, with a satisfied sigh. + +"And let's put it in front of this foolish little gas log," suggested +Alice, "then we won't think about a real fireplace." + +"And there are plenty of poor folks," said Mrs. Merrill, going back to +Mary Jane's question, "only they will not be so easy to get together, as +back at home. How would you like to take a Christmas party to some family +instead of having a party at home as we did last year?" + +The girls hardly knew what to say about that new idea so Mrs. Merrill +explained further. "I telephoned to the Associated Charities this very +day," she said, "and they gave me the names of a fatherless family in +which there are two girls about your ages, and one boy. I thought we could +plan a fine Christmas for them and then, on Christmas morning, take it +over and surprise them." + +"Oh, let's do that, mother," said Mary Jane happily, "then we'd be like a +real Santa Claus only we'd be a morning Santa. May we do it, surely?" + +"I thought you'd like the idea," said Mrs. Merrill, "so I got lists from +the association as to just what was most needed. Alice, if you'll get a +pencil and paper, we'll figure it all out." + +Making plans was the girls' favorite way of spending an evening so they +whisked the cover off the dining table, pulled up chairs for four and went +to work list-making. + +"Tom," began Mrs. Merrill, consulting her list, "hasn't a bit of warm +clothing." + +"Why couldn't I knit him a muffler and some mittens?" asked Mary Jane. "I +remember how and I haven't knitted anything since the war stopped." + +"Fine!" approved Mrs. Merrill, "I think I have enough yarn for the mittens +and if you'll get it out of the drawer there we can wind it while we talk +and it will be all ready for you to set up at once. You'll have to work +hard and fast if you want to make a muffler and a pair of mittens before +Christmas." + +"Now then," she continued, looking at the list, "they have very few bed +covers and the children get so cold at night." + +"Why couldn't you make some covers, mother?" suggested Alice, "and let me +make them each some flannelette pajamas like we wear--you know how +toasting warm they are. And I have the pattern and I know I could make +them all myself." + +"That's a beautiful idea," approved Mrs. Merrill, "and I hadn't even +thought of such a thing. When we get through planning, dear, you can get +out your pattern and see how much material you'll need. Then, when I go up +town to-morrow, I'll get it for you." + +"And they need stockings," she continued, "and shoes--" + +"Could any of 'em wear my good shoes that are too little?" asked Mary Jane +eagerly. She had been greatly distressed about those "best" shoes that +were so good, and yet were hopelessly outgrown. + +"I think they'll be exactly right," said Mrs. Merrill. "In fact I picked +out this particular family because I was sure we could find nice things +for them among you girls' outgrown things and that, put with what we buy +new, would make all the bigger Christmas for them. + +"And about toys," she continued with the list, "the girls have never had a +doll--" + +"Never had--" began Mary Jane but she couldn't quite get the words out. +Never had a doll. Never had a Marie Georgiannamore to love and care for +and take riding in a beautiful cart. Never had--no, she couldn't quite +imagine it. + +After that there was no more reading off a list. Mary Jane and Alice began +making a list of their own, of what those children were to have for +Christmas. + +"But," objected Mrs. Merrill, "you girls forget that things cost money--a +lot of money these days. And you can't possibly buy all those things and +get any Christmas of your own too." + +"Humph!" grunted Mary Jane as she squeezed her face up tight in an +effort to write, "then we won't have one of our own! Haven't we got Marie +Georgiannamore and a cart and a nice house and warm +clothes--and--everything?" + +That settled it. There would be a tree and dinner and a lot of fun in the +Merrill house on Christmas Day, but the presents were to go to their +adopted family to make _their_ Christmas one never to be forgotten. + +If you have ever planned a Christmas for somebody who never, in all their +lives had one, you will know something about the fun that Mary Jane and +Alice had in the time that was left before Christmas. They were about the +busiest girls in all Chicago! They hurried home from school and they +worked Saturdays but, actually, as soon as they got one thing done they +thought of something else they wanted to make or buy and they had to begin +all over again. They made cookies and candies and dressed dolls, one for +each girl, and made a complete set of covers and pillows and "fixings" for +an adorable doll bed that Mr. Merrill made in the evenings. Alice had to +work pretty hard to get the pajamas all finished in time for there was +considerable work on each pair; but she got them finished and she could +hardly wait till Christmas to take them over to their family. + +Mary Jane finished the muffler and mittens though she _almost_ had to knit +while she ate--towards the last--it takes a good many stitches to make a +muffler big enough for an eight year old boy. The muffler was a deep +crimson and the mittens a warm shade of gray with three rows of crimson in +the wrist end; Mary Jane had picked colors she was sure Tom would like. + +At last the twenty-fourth of December came around--cold and snowy and just +the kind of a day for making a Christmas. The trees were bought and set on +the balcony, the turkeys, two of them, were in the pantry ready to dress +and three big baskets were set on the dining-room table ready for +packing. + +"Now, then," said Mrs. Merrill, "if you have everything ready, I think +we'd better pack all the things we can now, because when Dadah comes home +there'll be plenty to do." + +Mary Jane thought the packing was the most fun of anything she had ever +done. They packed all the doll things in one basket, doll things and toys +and three nice books. Of course the doll bed wouldn't go in the basket; it +had to have a package all by itself. A second basket was for clothing, the +pajamas--and no one would ever guess that a girl as young as Alice had +made those charming garments--the muffler, the mittens, one pair for each +child, warm underwear and a dress for each girl (one of the nicest of +Alice and Mary Jane's outgrown frocks). Mr. Merrill had added a nice +flannel shirt for Tom and Mrs. Merrill put in a warm sweater for the good +mother. + +"That's a basket they'll like to open," said Alice, proudly, as she tucked +the brand new comforter Mrs. Merrill had made, around the top, "they'll be +so happy they won't hardly be able to wait till they can put 'em on!" + +The third basket was fully as interesting as the others. It was a big, big +one and in it the girls packed groceries, cans of vegetables and soup and +sugar--a very little bit to be sure for there wasn't much to be had, but +the Merrills had decided to send exactly half of what they had--and +oranges for breakfast and cereals and bread. Then on top, they were to put +cookies and candy and the turkey. But of course those last things would go +in in the morning, just before the baskets were taken away. + +By the time Mr. Merrill came home, the three baskets were packed, covered +up and set in the corner of the dining-room ready for morning. + +"Now for the tree!" said Mr. Merrill as he took off his coat ready for +work. He set their tree in the dining-room and with Alice's good help +fixed a solid bottom standard and set it up in the living-room right in +front of the foolish little fireplace. They wired it firmly and then Mrs. +Merrill brought in the boxes of Christmas trimmings and everybody set to +work. + +Such fun as it was! Mary Jane kept saying, "Remember this!" And Alice +added, "Remember that!" till it seemed as though it _couldn't_ be more +than a week since last Christmas when they had put the same things on a +tree that looked exactly like the one they were now trimming. This year, +seeing Mary Jane was such a _very_ old person, she was allowed to put the +gold star on the top of the tree; she climbed the ladder, with father +holding one hand and wired it on all by herself; and Alice, as a special +privilege, was allowed to hang the crystal icicles on every tip. + +Nobody put any tinsel on the tree--that was left for the middle of the +night like the story of the old time legend. Whether the spiders and the +Christmas fairies, working together, really covered the tree with silver, +Mary Jane never stopped to figure out. But at any rate the tree was +covered with strings of gold the next morning and Mary Jane thought it the +prettiest Christmas tree she had ever seen! + +[Illustration: This year, seeing Mary Jane was such a _very_ old person, +she was allowed to put the gold star on the top of the tree +_Page 195_] + +The very last thing before she went to bed, Mary Jane hung up her +stocking. And Alice, looking a bit foolish, hung hers close by. + +"I thought you two folks weren't going to have any Christmas," said Mr. +Merrill teasingly. + +"Of course we're not," said Mary Jane bravely, "but we want to hang our +stockings just the same as if--you know." And Dadah must have understood +for he nodded his head and didn't tease any more. + +Nobody would say how it ever happened. Certainly it was well understood +that there were to be no presents. But, anyway, when Mary Jane and Alice +looked at those stockings Christmas morning they were fat, as fat could +be! Just bulging over with queer shaped parcels! + +Mary Jane couldn't even wait to put her slippers on! She bundled a kimono +around her, grabbed up her stocking and ran into her mother's room to open +it. Alice wasn't far behind and certainly for girls who were to have _no_ +presents, they fared very well indeed! Santa Claus must have got his +signals mixed some way! There were doll things for Marie Georgiannamore, +and a ring for Mary Jane; hair ribbons, handkerchiefs, skates for Alice +(think of that in a stocking!) and slippers for the little girl who forgot +to put on her old pair and, oh, many lovely little things that could be +tucked into a stocking. + +The girls spread the things out on mother's bed and had a happy time till +suddenly Mr. Merrill exclaimed, "Girls! It's eight o'clock and I ordered +that taxi for nine!" + +Then there _was_ a scramble! Gifts were hustled away, clothes were put on, +breakfast was eaten and a few last things packed in the baskets, just as +the taxi arrived. + +It was fortunate Mr. Merrill had ordered a big car for with three baskets, +a bundle containing the doll bed and another the turkey, to say nothing of +the tree roped on the side of the car and the box of trimmings on Mrs. +Merrill's lap even a big car was pretty full. + +Mary Jane felt like a real Santa Claus for sure! + +The family they were going to see didn't know they were coming, so when +the car stopped in front of a shabby little house, three puzzled and very +sober faces pressed against the window and looked out. But the sober faces +soon changed. In a few minutes the mother was helping Mrs. Merrill put the +turkey in to roast, the older girl was helping Mr. Merrill set the +Christmas tree in place and Tom and Ellen, the little girl, were helping +the Merrill girls trim the tree. + +When the Merrills left the house some two hours later the turkey was +almost cooked, the tree was trimmed, presents unpacked and happiness and +good cheer had settled down in the little house for many a day. + +It was a good thing they came away when they did, though, for exactly as +they drove up to their own home, they met an express wagon. And in their +own vestibule they found the driver. "Family of Merrill here?" he asked +them. + +"They're us," said Mary Jane eagerly. And whereupon the driver carried +upstairs the biggest, fattest Christmas box Mary Jane had ever seen. + +Of course it was from grandma and in it were so many lovely things from +uncles and grandparents and cousins that Mary Jane thought she never would +get everything unpacked! + +"Well," said the little girl as some time later the family sat down to +their own belated dinner, "I think for not having any presents, we got a +lot! And I think I like Christmas in Chicago just as much as anywhere, I +do." + + + + +A SUMMER HOME--AND A TELEGRAM + + +"Let's go skating!" called Frances one cold morning as she saw Alice shake +the bath room rug from the balcony. + +"Skating?" answered Alice, "where?" + +"Down on the Midway," said Frances. "As soon as you get your work done, +you and Mary Jane come around to our front door and Betty and I will be +ready." + +"But Mary Jane doesn't know how to skate," said Alice. + +"Betty doesn't either," answered Frances, "but they can take their sleds +and coast down the sides of the bank while you and I skate." + +Alice promised and then she hurried inside to finish her work. She had +heard about the fine skating on the Midway where the park board flooded +the sunken greens for the benefit of neighborhood children, but thus far +the weather had been too mild for any skating, so she hadn't had a chance +to try it. But a sudden cold snap, with snow enough to cover the sloping +banks, had provided both skating and coasting. + +Well protected with warm mittens and leggings the girls set out and had +the jolliest kind of a morning. At one end of the ice, the younger folks +did their coasting, the sloping sides giving a flying start and the smooth +ice a glorious finish. At the other end the older boys and girls did their +skating, so there was no mix up or interference. + +That morning was the first of many happy Saturday mornings spent on the +ice. Even Mary Jane got some skates and, with the help of Dadah when he +could get away from the office, she learned to be a fine skater. + +But winter fun never lasts very long. Just about the time Mary Jane +learned to skate well enough to challenge Alice to a race, the spring sun +sent the ice to nowhere land and the while-ago ice pond turned to green +grass! Spring had come. + +With the coming of spring, Mary Jane grew very restless. She wasn't sick, +but something was wrong. Something was making her very solemn and +sober--quite unlike her usual lively self. + +"I know what's the matter with me," she announced one warm sunny morning, +"I want to dig." + +"You want to dig?" exclaimed Mrs. Merrill in amazement, "well, why don't +you go down and dig in the Holdens' yard? You know Mrs. Holden said you +might." + +"But I don't want to dig in somebody's yard," answered Mary Jane, without +a spark of interest, "I want to dig in my _own_ yard and have flowers and +a sand pile and everything right in my own yard, I do." + +Mrs. Merrill didn't reply but she did do a lot of thinking and that +evening she and Mr. Merrill had a long conference. + +As a result, at breakfast table the next morning Mr. Merrill said, "How +would you girls like to have a summer home of your own? A place in the +woods where we could go as soon as school closes and where you could wear +bloomers and play in the sand and gather flowers and make garden and all +the things you love to do but can't do in the city. How would you like +that?" + +Mary Jane and Alice stared at him. Would they _like_ it? anybody could see +by their faces that they would _love_ it! + +"But we wouldn't want to leave you here in Chicago, all summer," objected +Alice. + +"And I wouldn't want to be left," Mr. Merrill assured them. "But I am +sure, somewhere in the suburbs around Chicago there must be _some place_ +we could get a summer home. And we'll make it our business to find that +place." + +"I thought," began Mrs. Merrill, and then she hesitated. + +"Something nice?" asked Alice, encouragingly. + +"It would have been nice," admitted Mrs. Merrill, "but likely we couldn't +do it. I'd been thinking how pleasant it would be to take another trip +this summer. You know how you girls enjoyed going to Florida. And you +remember Uncle Hal graduates from Harvard this June. I had been wondering +if we could go east in time to be there when the festivities are going +on." + +"Oh, mother!" cried Mary Jane, "what fun! I do want to ride on a train, a +big train with a sleeper and a diner! But then I want to dig, too," she +added, insistently. + +"Then we'll take one thing at a time," suggested Mr. Merrill. "We'll look +into the question of a summer home--we know we'd all like that. And you +folks don't know that a very popular uncle would _want_ a grown up sister +and two small nieces hanging around at commencement time," he added +teasingly. + +"How do you find a summer home?" asked Alice thoughtfully. + +"That's what we'll have to discover," laughed Mr. Merrill. "And we'll +begin this very Saturday afternoon if the weather is fine. We'll take a +suburban train and ride till we see a place that looks homey and there +we'll get off and hunt." + +The next Saturday was warm and sunny, the kind of a day for bringing +flowers into bloom and for making little girls want to play out of doors. +Mrs. Merrill and the girls met Mr. Merrill at his office so as not to lose +a minute's time, and they hurried right over to the station, and got +aboard the first suburban train they could find. + +"I think this is lots of fun," said Mary Jane as they found their seats, +"we don't know where we're going--we're just going!" And the train was +off. + +For some time the girls were really discouraged. They passed factories, +and tenements, and more factories till Mary Jane was sure they were never +coming to country--real country. But suddenly, when she was about to give +up, the factories were gone and from the window the girls could see wide +fields and strips of woods and an occasional brook. Two or three little +stations were passed and then the train ran through a beautiful stretch of +woods--rolling woods all leafy and budding and flower decked. The ground +was fairly covered with early blossoms and trees of wild crab were just +bursting into pink bloom. + +Mary Jane grabbed her coat and started down the aisle. + +"Make 'em stop the train, Dadah," she said, "this is where we want to +live!" + +Fortunately at that minute the train really did stop at a small station +and the Merrills got off and looked around. It didn't take long to explore +into the woods far enough to find that they had come to the very place +they were looking for--a spot not too far from the city for Mr. Merrill's +daily trip and yet wild enough to give the girls some real woods. The +girls picked flowers as they explored and had such a happy time that it +was hard work to persuade them to go back to the city when the twilight +came. But they had found the very place! + +Three weeks later Mr. Merrill bought a lot in the heart of the woods, and +the summer home was no longer a mere dream--it was to be really truly. + +"Now," announced Alice, "we'll draw the kind of a house we want. I love to +draw plans of a house!" She cleared off the dining table, sharpened +pencils, brought two tablets and insisted that everybody come out and +help. + +And just then the door bell rang. + +"Telegram for Merrill!" shouted a voice through the tube and Mary Jane +pressed the buzzer in a hurry--a telegram usually meant something +exciting. + +It was addressed to Mrs. Merrill and said, "Have all tickets and hotel +reservations. You and the girls must come." And it was signed by Mrs. +Merrill's brother. + +"If that isn't just like a college boy!" laughed Mrs. Merrill. "For weeks +he doesn't answer a letter and then he telegraphs! Girls," she added, +"let's go! Wouldn't you like to go to Boston and see the college and the +ocean and the White Mountains--and--everything?" + +"Oh, mother, _really_?" exclaimed Mary Jane. (She felt as though she must +be dreaming, things were happening so fast!) + +"But what about the summer home?" asked Alice. + +"Don't you worry about the summer home," Mr. Merrill assured her, "we'll +have that summer home just the same. You girls take your trip east. You +won't be gone more than a couple of weeks--and what are two weeks out of a +whole summer? And before you go, we'll get the shack all planned and when +you come back we'll move out." + +"Goody! Goody! Goody!" cried Mary Jane happily, "then I can see Uncle Hal +and ride on the train and dig a garden and _everything_!" + +And if you want to hear all about Mary Jane's beautiful trip to Boston and +the White Mountains, the fun she had sight-seeing and the jolly party on +"Class Day," you must read-- + + "MARY JANE IN NEW ENGLAND" + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +THE MARY JANE SERIES +BY CLARA INGRAM JUDSON +Cloth, 12mo. Illustrated. +With picture inlay and wrapper. + +[Illustration] +Mary Jane is the typical American little girl who bubbles over with fun +and the good things in life. We meet her here on a visit to her +grandfather's farm where she becomes acquainted with farm life and farm +animals and thoroughly enjoys the experience. We next see her going to +kindergarten and then on a visit to Florida, and then--but read the +stories for yourselves. + +Exquisitely and charmingly written are these books which every little girl +from five to nine years old will want from the first book to the last. + + 1 MARY JANE--HER BOOK + 2 MARY JANE--HER VISIT + 3 MARY JANE'S KINDERGARTEN + 4 MARY JANE DOWN SOUTH + 5 MARY JANE'S CITY HOME + 6 MARY JANE IN NEW ENGLAND + 7 MARY JANE'S COUNTY HOME + +BARSE & HOPKINS +PUBLISHERS +NEWARK, N. J. NEW YORK, N. Y. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +CHICKEN LITTLE JANE SERIES +_By_ LILY MUNSELL RITCHIE + +[Illustration] +Chicken Little Jane is a Western prairie girl who lives a happy, outdoor +life in a country where there is plenty of room to turn around. She is a +wide-awake, resourceful girl who will instantly win her way into the +hearts of other girls. And what good times she has!--with her pets, her +friends, and her many interests. "Chicken Little" is the affectionate +nickname given to her when she is very, very good, but when she misbehaves +it is "Jane"--just Jane! + + Adventures of Chicken Little Jane + Chicken Little Jane on the "Big John" + Chicken Little Jane Comes to Town + +With numerous illustrations in pen and ink +By CHARLES D. HUBBARD +BARSE & HOPKINS +NEWARK NEW YORK + N. J. N. Y. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +Dorothy Whitehill Series +For Girls + +[Illustration] +Here is a sparkling new series of stories for girls--just what they will +like, and ask for more of the same kind. It is all about twin sisters, who +for the first few years in their lives grow up in ignorance of each +other's existence. Then they are at last brought together and things begin +to happen. Janet is an independent go-ahead sort of girl; while her sister +Phyllis is--but meet the twins for yourself and be entertained. + +5 Titles, Cloth, large 12mo., +Covers in color. + + 1. JANET, A TWIN + 2. PHYLLIS, A TWIN + 3. THE TWINS IN THE WEST + 4. THE TWINS IN THE SOUTH + 5. THE TWINS' SUMMER VACATION + 6. THE TWINS AND TOMMY JR. + +BARSE & HOPKINS +PUBLISHERS +NEWARK, N. J. NEW YORK, N. Y. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +THE POLLY PENDLETON SERIES +BY DOROTHY WHITEHILL + +[Illustration] +Polly Pendleton is a resourceful, wide-awake American girl who goes to a +boarding school on the Hudson River some miles above New York. By her +pluck and resourcefulness, she soon makes a place for herself and this she +holds right through the course. The account of boarding school life is +faithful and pleasing and will attract every girl in her teens. + + 1 POLLY'S FIRST YEAR AT BOARDING SCHOOL + 2 POLLY'S SUMMER VACATION + 3 POLLY'S SENIOR YEAR AT BOARDING SCHOOL + 4 POLLY SEES THE WORLD AT WAR + 5 POLLY AND LOIS + 6 POLLY AND BOB + +Cloth, Large 12mo., Illustrated. + +BARSE & HOPKINS +PUBLISHERS +Newark, N. J. New York, N. Y. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +The Sunny Boy Series +By RAMY ALLISON WHITE + +[Illustration] +Children, meet Sunny Boy, a little fellow with big eyes and an inquiring +disposition, who finds the world a large and wonderful thing indeed. And +somehow there is lots going on, when Sunny Boy is around. Perhaps he helps +push! In the first book of this new series he has the finest time ever, +with his Grandpa out in the country. He learns a lot and he helps a lot, +in his small way. Then he has a glorious visit to the seashore, but this +is in the next story. And there are still more adventures in the third +book and fourth book. You will like Sunny Boy. + +4 Titles, Cloth, illustrated, 12mo., +with colored covers. + + 1. SUNNY BOY IN THE COUNTRY + 2. SUNNY BOY AT THE SEASHORE + 3. SUNNY BOY IN THE BIG CITY + 4. SUNNY BOY IN SCHOOL AND OUT + 5. SUNNY BOY AND HIS PLAYMATES + +BARSE & HOPKINS +PUBLISHERS +NEWARK, N. J. NEW YORK, N. Y. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +GOOD STORIES FOR CHILDREN +(From four to nine years old) +THE KNEETIME ANIMAL STORIES +By RICHARD BARNUM + +[Illustration] +In all nursery literature animals have played a conspicuous part; and the +reason is obvious, for nothing entertains a child more than the antics of +an animal. These stories abound in amusing incidents such as children +adore, and the characters are so full of life, so appealing to a child's +imagination, that none will be satisfied until they have met all of their +favorites--Squinty, Slicko, Mappo, and the rest. + + 1 Squinty, the Comical Pig. + 2 Slicko, the Jumping Squirrel. + 3 Mappo, the Merry Monkey. + 4 Tum Tum, the Jolly Elephant. + 5 Don, a Runaway Dog. + 6 Dido, the Dancing Bear. + 7 Blackie, a Lost Cat. + 8 Flop Ear, the Funny Rabbit. + 9 Tinkle, the Trick Pony. + 10 Lightfoot, the Leaping Goat. + 11 Chunky, the Happy Hippo. + 12 Sharp Eyes, the Silver Fox. + 13 Nero, the Circus Lion. + 14 Tamba, the Tame Tiger. + 15 Toto, the Rustling Beaver. + 16 Shaggo, the Mighty Buffalo. + 17 Winky, the Wily Woodchuck. + +Cloth, Large 12mo., Illustrated. + +BARSE & HOPKINS +Publishers +Newark, N. J. New York, N. Y. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +The Yank Brown Series +By DAVID STONE +Cloth, large 12 mo. Illustrated. + +[Illustration] +When Yank Brown comes to Belmont College as a callow Freshman, there is a +whole lot that he doesn't know about college life, such as class rushes, +rivalries, fraternities, and what a lowly Freshman must not do. But he +does know something about how to play football, and he is a big, likeable +chap who speedily makes friends. + +In the first story of this series we watch Yank buck the line as a +Halfback. In the second story he goes in for basketball, among many other +activities of a busy college year. Then there are other stories to +follow--each brimful of action and interest. This is one of the best +college series we have seen in a long while. + + YANK BROWN, HALFBACK + YANK BROWN, FORWARD + YANK BROWN, CROSS-COUNTRY RUNNER + +BARSE & HOPKINS +NEWARK NEW YORK +N. J. N. Y. + +(Other volumes in preparation.) + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Mary Jane's City Home, by Clara Ingram Judson + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MARY JANE'S CITY HOME *** + +***** This file should be named 26517-8.txt or 26517-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/5/1/26517/ + +Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Mary Jane's City Home + +Author: Clara Ingram Judson + +Illustrator: Thelma Gooch + +Release Date: September 3, 2008 [EBook #26517] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MARY JANE'S CITY HOME *** + + + + +Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='figcenter'> +<a name='linki_1' id='linki_1'></a> +<img src='images/maryj-fpc.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 348px; height: 485px;' /><br /> +<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 348px;'> +And she pointed out the little seal who was a bit too slow.<br /> +Frontispiece<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:2em; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:;'>MARY JANE’S CITY</p> +<p style=' font-size:2em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:2em;'>HOME</p> +<div style='margin-top:1em'></div> +<p style=' font-size:; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>BY</p> +<p style=' font-size:1.4em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>CLARA INGRAM JUDSON</p> +<div style='margin-top:1em'></div> +<p style=' font-size:0.8em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>Author of</p> +<div style='margin-top:1em'></div> +<p style=' font-size:0.8em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>“Flower Fairies,” “Good-Night Stories,” “Billy Robin</p> +<p style=' font-size:0.8em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>and His Neighbors,” “Bed Time Tales,”</p> +<p style=' font-size:0.8em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>“The Junior Cook Book,” and</p> +<p style=' font-size:0.8em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:4em;'>Other Works</p> +<div style='margin-top:1em'></div> +<p style=' font-size:; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>ILLUSTRATED BY</p> +<p style=' font-size:1.2em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>THELMA GOOCH</p> +<div style='margin-top:1em'></div> +<p style=' font-size:; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>NEW YORK</p> +<p style=' font-size:1.2em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>BARSE & HOPKINS</p> +<p style=' font-size:; margin-top:; margin-bottom:2em;'>PUBLISHERS</p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce' style=' font-size:0.8em;'> +<p>Copyright, 1920,</p> +<p>by</p> +<p>Barse & Hopkins</p> +<div style='margin-top:1em'></div> +<p>PRINTED IN THE U. S. A.</p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p>TO</p> +<p>MY MOTHER and FATHER</p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.4em; margin-bottom:1em;'>CONTENTS</p> +</div> + +<table border='0' width='500' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Contents' style='margin:1em auto;'> +<tr> + <td align='left'><span style='font-size:small;'> </span></td> + <td align='right'><span style='font-size:small;'>PAGE</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Finding the New Home</span></td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#FINDING_THE_NEW_HOME'>11</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>The Folks Around The Corner</span></td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#THE_FOLKS_AROUND_THE_CORNER'>22</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Visiting with Betty</span></td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#VISITING_WITH_BETTY'>35</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Sand Castles</span></td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#SAND_CASTLES'>49</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>The Beach Supper</span></td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#THE_BEACH_SUPPER'>64</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Mary Jane Goes Shopping</span></td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#MARY_JANE_GOES_SHOPPING'>76</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>The Bus Ride</span></td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#THE_BUS_RIDE'>88</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>The Birthday Luncheon</span></td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#THE_BIRTHDAY_LUNCHEON'>100</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Lost—One Doll Cart</span></td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#LOST_ONE_DOLL_CART'>115</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>A Trip to the Zoo</span></td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#A_TRIP_TO_THE_ZOO'>128</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>A Day in the Parks</span></td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#A_DAY_IN_THE_PARKS'>143</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Visitors—and a Boat Ride</span></td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#VISITORS_AND_A_BOAT_RIDE'>156</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>School Begins</span></td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#SCHOOL_BEGINS'>171</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Christmas in Chicago</span></td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHRISTMAS_IN_CHICAGO'>184</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>A Summer Home—and a Telegram</span></td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#A_SUMMER_HOME_AND_A_TELEGRAM'>201</a></td> +</tr> +</table> +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.4em; margin-bottom:1em;'>ILLUSTRATIONS</p> +</div> + +<table border='0' width='400' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Illustrations' style='margin:1em auto'> +<col style='width:80%;' /> +<col style='width:20%;' /> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td align='right'><span style='font-size:small'>PAGE</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left'>And she pointed out the little seal who was a bit too slow.</td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_1'>Frontispiece</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left'>And then, sliding in the wet sand, she sat right down in the lake and sent a wave of ripples right over her castle</td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_2'>60</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left'>“But it’s all down my dress,” said Mary Jane, trying her very best not to cry</td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_3'>110</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td valign='top' align='left'>This year, seeing Mary Jane was such a <i>very</i> old person, she was allowed to put the gold star on the top of the tree</td> + <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_4'>194</a></td> +</tr> +</table> +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11' name='page_11'></a>11</span></div> +<div class='ce'> +<p>MARY JANE’S CITY HOME</p> +</div> + +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 0em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<a name='FINDING_THE_NEW_HOME' id='FINDING_THE_NEW_HOME'></a> +<h2>FINDING THE NEW HOME</h2> +</div> + +<p>The late afternoon sunshine sent its +slanting, golden rays through the car +windows on to the map that Mary Jane and +her sister Alice had spread out on the table +between the seats of the Pullman in which +they were riding.</p> +<p>“And all that wiggly line is water?” Mary +Jane was asking.</p> +<p>“Every bit water,” replied their father, +who bent over their heads to explain what +they were looking at; “a lot of water, you +see. You remember I told you that Chicago +is right on the edge of Lake Michigan. And +Lake Michigan, so far as looks are concerned, +might just as well be the ocean you saw down +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12' name='page_12'></a>12</span> +in Florida—it’s so big you can’t see the other +side.”</p> +<p>“And does it have big waves?” asked +Mary Jane.</p> +<p>“Just you wait and see,” promised Mr. +Merrill. “Big waves! I should say it +has!”</p> +<p>“And all the green part of the map is +parks,” said Alice, quoting what her father +had told them when he first showed them the +map.</p> +<p>“Then there must be a lot of parks,” suggested +Mary Jane with interest. “I think +I’d like to live by a park,” she added +thoughtfully.</p> +<p>“I think I should too,” agreed Mr. Merrill, +“and it’s near a park we will make the +first hunt for a home.”</p> +<p>“Oh, look!” cried Mary Jane suddenly as +she glanced up from the spread-out map; +“what’s that, Dadah?”</p> +<p>“That’s the beginning of Chicago,” said +Mr. Merrill. “Let’s fold up the map now +and see what we can of the city. This is +South Chicago; and those great stacks and +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13' name='page_13'></a>13</span> +flaming chimneys are steel mills and foundries +and factories—watch now! There are +more!”</p> +<p>The train on which the Merrill family +were traveling went dashing past factory +after factory—past an occasional open +space where they could see in the distance +the blue gleam of Lake Michigan and past +great wide stretches where tracks and more +tracks on which freight cars and engines sped +up and down showed them something of +the whirling industry that has made South +Chicago famous. No wonder it was a +strange sight to the two girls—they had +never before seen anything that made them +even guess the big business that they now +saw spread out before them.</p> +<p>They had spent all their lives thus far—Alice +was twelve and Mary Jane going on +six—in a small city of the Middle West and +though they had had a fine summer in the +country visiting grandma and grandpa and +had only the winter before taken a beautiful +trip through Florida, they had never been to +a great city. And now they were not going +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14' name='page_14'></a>14</span> +to visit or to take a trip. They were going +to live there. The great big city of +Chicago was to be their home.</p> +<p>The pretty little house they had loved so +well was sold. The furniture and books +and dolls and clothes were all packed and +loaded on a freight car to follow them to +the city and all the dear friends had been +given a farewell. Mary Jane had loved the +excitement and muss of packing; the great +boxes and the masses of crinkly excelsior +and the workmen around who always had +time for a pleasant joke with an interested +little girl. But when it came time to say +good-by to Doris and to her much loved +kindergarten and to all the boys and girls +in school and “on her block,” going away +wasn’t so funny. In fact, Mary Jane felt +a queer and troublesome lump in her throat +most of the morning when the good-bys were +said.</p> +<p>But the ride on the train (and how Mary +Jane did love to ride on the train); and the +nice luncheon on the diner (and how Mary +Jane did <i>adore</i> eating on a diner—hashed +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15' name='page_15'></a>15</span> +brown potatoes, a whole order by herself and +ice cream and everything!); and then father’s +nice talk about all the fun they were +going to have, made the lump vanish and in +its place there developed an eager desire to +see the new city and to begin all the promised +fun. It was then that Mr. Merrill +showed them the big map of the city and +pointed out the part of the city where they +would likely live.</p> +<p>As the girls watched, the great factories +and foundries slipped away into the distance, +and in their place the girls could see +houses and occasional stores and here and +there a station, past which their train +dashed as though it wasn’t looking for stations +to-day, thank you.</p> +<p>“Don’t we stop anywhere?” asked Mary +Jane after she had counted three of these +little stations.</p> +<p>“Those are suburban stations,” explained +Mr. Merrill, “and a big through train like +ours hasn’t time to stop at every one. +Pretty soon another train will come along +and stop at each one of those we are now +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16' name='page_16'></a>16</span> +passing so don’t you worry about folks getting +left. <i>This</i> train we are on has got to +get us into Chicago in time for dinner.”</p> +<p>And just at that minute, when the big +three story apartment buildings that looked +so very queer and strange to Mary Jane, +began to fill every block, the porter came +to brush her off and to help her on with her +coat.</p> +<p>“I’m going to live here in Chicago,” she +said to him as he held the coat for her, “and +it’s a big place with lots of lake and +parks and—houses, I guess, and most everything.”</p> +<p>“’Deed it is big, missy,” replied the +porter, “and I hope you’s going to like it +a lot, I do.”</p> +<p>“I’m a-going to,” answered Mary Jane +confidently, as she picked up Georgiannamore +and Georgiannamore’s suit case which +at the last moment couldn’t possibly be +packed in the trunk, and followed her +father and mother down the aisle, “’cause +mother and Dadah and Alice are going to +live here too and we always have fun.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17' name='page_17'></a>17</span></p> +<p>Mr. and Mrs. Merrill had decided to get +off at one of the larger suburban stations +and spend a few days in a near-by hotel; they +thought the comparative quiet of a residence +hotel would be better for their girls than +the flurry and hurry of a big down town +hotel. But to Mary Jane, accustomed to +the sights and sounds of a small city where +street cars went dignifiedly past every +fifteen minutes and where traffic “cops” +would have very few duties, the confusion +she found herself in was quite enough +to be very interesting.</p> +<p>They stepped off the train, walked down +some stairs and found themselves on the +sidewalk of a very busy street. Overhead +the noise of their own train rumbling cityward +made a terrific din; and as though that +were not enough, still higher up the great +elevated car line made a rumble and roar. +Mary Jane craned her neck as they walked +from under the trains and there high in the +air, she saw street cars running along as +though street cars always had and always +would, run on tracks high up in the air! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18' name='page_18'></a>18</span></p> +<p>“Can we ride on it, Dadah?” she shouted +to her father, “are we going to ride on that +train up on stilts?”</p> +<p>Mr. Merrill shook his head laughingly and +hurried them into a waiting taxi.</p> +<p>“We’re not going to ride there to-day,” +he explained when the door of the car shut +out some of the noise, “but some day soon +we’ll take a long ride on the elevated and +then you can see all the back yards and back +porches and parks and streets and everything +about the city, just as plain as plain +can be.”</p> +<p>While he was talking, the Merrills drove +through streets lined on both sides with +three-story apartment buildings. But before +Mary Jane had time to ask a question or +even think what she would like to say, they +whisked around a corner and out into the +beautiful wide driveway on the Midway—the +long, green parkway that stretched, or +so it seemed to Mary Jane, for miles in both +directions. The taxi pulled up in front of a +comfortable looking hotel right on the side +of the park and Mary Jane wasn’t a bit sorry +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19' name='page_19'></a>19</span> +to get out and take a breath of fresh air and +look at the lovely view before her.</p> +<p>“Now just as soon as you are washed up,” +said Mrs. Merrill, briskly, as they went into +the hotel, “you and Alice may come out onto +this nice porch and watch the children play +on the Midway and get a little run before +dinner.”</p> +<p>You may be sure that with that promise +before her, Mary Jane didn’t take very long +to primp. She had spied a group of children +about her age, who seemed to be having a +beautiful time playing ball out there on the +grass and she couldn’t help noticing that +they played just as she and Doris did and +she couldn’t help wishing that she too, even +though she was a new little girl just come +to town, could play with them. So she +stood very still while Mrs. Merrill tied the +fresh hair bow and slipped on a clean frock +and then, holding tight to big sister Alice’s +friendly hand she went down the one flight +of stairs—she was in far too big a hurry to +wait for the elevator—and out onto the +long roomy porch. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20' name='page_20'></a>20</span></p> +<p>Just across the narrow street in front of +the hotel and on the nearest bit of parkway, +three little girls about Mary Jane’s age were +still playing ball. One was dainty and +small and had yellow curls; one was rather +tall and had long straight dark hair and the +third had dark, straight hair bobbed short, +and snapping black eyes.</p> +<p>“Wouldn’t it be funny,” said Mary Jane +as she looked at them wistfully, “if I’d get +to know those girls and they’d be friends. +If I <i>did</i>,” she added, “I think she’d be my +mostest friend,” and Mary Jane pointed to +the little girl with the dark, bobbed hair.</p> +<p>While they watched and were trying to +get up courage to go over and play too, a +pretty girl about Alice’s age came along the +street. Her hair was copper colored and +curly and very, very pretty. And her smile +when she saw the little girls who were playing, +made her seem so friendly and +“homey.”</p> +<p>“I’ve been hunting you, Betty,” she said +to the little girl Mary Jane liked best. “It’s +time to come home for dinner.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21' name='page_21'></a>21</span></p> +<p>So the four girls, three little folks and +one bigger one, went around the corner toward +home, and two strangers, standing on +the porch, watched them till they were quite +out of sight.</p> +<p>“It would be funny,” said Alice, “if +we’d ever get to know them. I’m sure I’d +like to.”</p> +<p>“Wouldn’t it though!” exclaimed Mary +Jane. “I hope we do!”</p> +<p>And all the time they were eating their +first dinner in Chicago, and telling mother +and father about the children they had seen +and making plans about what to do to-morrow, +they were thinking about those two +girls and wishing to know them better.</p> +<p>Little did they guess what would really +truly happen before the week was over!</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<a name='THE_FOLKS_AROUND_THE_CORNER' id='THE_FOLKS_AROUND_THE_CORNER'></a> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22' name='page_22'></a>22</span> +<h2>THE FOLKS AROUND THE CORNER</h2> +</div> + +<p>Three whole days of flat hunting! +And of all the fun she had ever had +in her more than five years of life, Mary +Jane thought flat hunting in Chicago was +the most fun of all! She loved the mystery +of each new apartment; the guessing +which room might be hers and which mother’s; +the hunting up the door bell and hearing +its sound (for as you very well know +each door bell has a sound of its own); the +poking into closets and pantries and porches. +It was the most delightful sort of exploring +she had ever come across and she couldn’t +at all understand why mother and father +got tired and somewhat discouraged. For +<i>her</i> part Mary Jane was tempted to wish +that they would never find a flat, well hardly +that; but that finding the right one would +take a long, oh, a very long time! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23' name='page_23'></a>23</span></p> +<p>But by the afternoon of the third day, her +legs began to get a little tired too, and her +eyes looked more often to the green of the +Midway they occasionally saw and she +thought that flats, even empty flats, really +should have chairs for folks to sit on. So, +as a matter of fact, she wasn’t half as sorry +as she had thought she would be, when, on +the afternoon of the third day of hunting +the Merrill family came across a charming +little apartment.</p> +<p>It was on the second floor of a very attractive +red brick building; it had five rooms, +quite too small, father thought, but then one +can’t have everything, they had found, and +every room was light and sunny and cheerful. +But the part about it that Mary Jane +and Alice liked the best was the back porch. +To be sure there was a front porch, a pretty, +little porch with a stone railing and a view +way down the street toward the park and +lake. But off the dining room the girls discovered +a small balcony that overlooked the +back yard next door, a back yard that had +a garden laid out and a chicken house and +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24' name='page_24'></a>24</span> +everything so homey and comfortable looking +that the girls immediately wanted to sit +out and watch.</p> +<p>“I think if we’d stay here maybe some +children would come out to play,” suggested +Mary Jane in a whisper.</p> +<p>“I think they would, too,” agreed Alice. +“And I think if we lived here maybe we +could get acquainted and play with them.”</p> +<p>“Let’s live here!” exclaimed Mary Jane +and she ran back into the house just at the +very minute Mr. and Mrs. Merrill decided +to rent the apartment.</p> +<p>“So you think you’ll like it, do you?” said +Mrs. Merrill, smiling; “the rooms are pretty +small.”</p> +<p>“I know we’ll love it,” said Alice eagerly, +“and you should see the back porch.”</p> +<p>But Mr. Merrill laughed when they +showed him the porch.</p> +<p>“Do you call this a porch,” he exclaimed, +“why it’s not half big enough for a porch! +I’d call it a balcony.”</p> +<p>“Yes,” agreed Mrs. Merrill, “and then +when you watch folks in the yard down +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25' name='page_25'></a>25</span> +there,—for you <i>are</i> planning to watch and +get acquainted, aren’t you?—then you can +pretend that this is your balcony seat and +that the folks down there are in a play for +you—wouldn’t that be fun?”</p> +<p>The girls thought it would, but there was +so much to plan and think about that they +didn’t stay on their little balcony any longer +just then, which was something of a pity, for +right after they went indoors, somebody +came out into the yard— But then, there’s +no use telling about <i>her</i> for Mary Jane +didn’t see her.</p> +<p>So Mary Jane and Alice went with their +father and mother into the room that was +to be theirs and they planned just where +each bed should be and where was the best +place for the desk and dressing table and +who should have which side of the closet. +And by that time, it was nearly six o’clock—time +to go back to the hotel for dinner.</p> +<p>Mr. Merrill stopped at the desk for mail +as they went up to their room and there he +found a message telling him that their furniture +had arrived in Chicago and that it must +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26' name='page_26'></a>26</span> +be taken out of the freight house the next +morning.</p> +<p>“Dear me!” exclaimed Mrs. Merrill with +a gasp of dismay, “I think it’s a good thing +we found that flat! What ever would we +have done if we hadn’t! Well, girls, I +think we’d better eat a good dinner and then +go to bed early for we’ll have to get down +there and clean up the flat while father tends +to getting our things delivered.”</p> +<p>So bright and early the next morning +everybody started to work. Mr. Merrill +went down town to meet the moving men +he had engaged by ’phone and Mrs. Merrill +and the two girls put aprons and cleaning +rags and soap, all of which they had brought +in their small trunk, into a little grip and +went down to the new home.</p> +<p>Mary Jane had lots of fun that morning. +First she went down to the basement and +borrowed a broom from the janitor. Then +she went back for clean papers which she +folded neatly and spread on the pantry +shelves which Mrs. Merrill with the good +help of the janitor’s wife had cleaned +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27' name='page_27'></a>27</span> +and ready. Then she put papers on the +shelf of the closet she and Alice were to +share and papers in the drawers near the floor +of that same closet. By that time—it takes +pretty long to fold papers neatly and get +every bit of the shelf covered, you know—the +door bell rang—a great, long, hard ring.</p> +<p>“Oh, dear! Can you go, Mary Jane?” +exclaimed Mrs. Merrill, “Alice and I both +have wet hands!” You see, Alice had been +washing mirrors that were on the closet doors +while her mother and the janitor’s wife did +windows and wood work.</p> +<p>“Yes, I’m dry,” said Mary Jane, “and my +papers are done and I’d like to go.”</p> +<p>To tell the honest truth, Mary Jane had +just that very minute been wishing the door +bell would ring. For the janitor’s wife had +showed her how to press the buzzer that +would release the lock of the front door and +let a person come up the stairs. And of +course Mary Jane wanted to try it. So she +hurried over to the house ’phone, took down +the receiver and said, “Who is it?” just as +any grown-up person would. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28' name='page_28'></a>28</span></p> +<p>“Here’s your things!” said a gruff voice, +“we’ll bring ’em up the back!”</p> +<p>Mary Jane didn’t stop to press any buzzer. +She dashed over to the window nearest +the alley and there, sure enough, was a +great big moving van and it was piled up +full of boxes and barrels and crates—all +the things that Mary Jane had watched the +packing of only such a few days before. +Talk about fun! Moving was surely the +best sport ever!</p> +<p>Mary Jane stayed at the window watching +till the men brought the first load up. +Then they announced that they were going +for lunch and Mrs. Merrill said she and the +girls had better eat while the men were away. +So hastily putting on wraps, they went over +to a small tea room only a few doors away, +where they had a tasty little luncheon so +quickly served that they easily got back to +their flat before the moving men arrived +again.</p> +<p>How that afternoon went, Mary Jane +never quite remembered. It was one long +succession of excitement and fun. The unpacking +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29' name='page_29'></a>29</span> +of boxes and crates, the piling up of +rubbish, the finding of cherished belongings +and putting them where they belonged in the +new home, and the gradual change of the +living room from a mess of boxes to a place +that might some day really look like home, +all seemed thrillingly interesting to a little +girl who had never moved before.</p> +<p>But by half past four or thereabouts, even +Mary Jane began to get a little tired.</p> +<p>“I’ll tell you something to do,” suggested +Mrs. Merrill, when a pause in her own work +gave her a chance to notice that Mary Jane +was getting flushed and tired. “Here is a +box of doll things I have just come across. +Suppose you take them out into your own +little balcony and sort them over. Put in +this box (and she handed her a little box) +all the things you must surely have upstairs; +and leave in the big box all the things you +will be willing to put in the store room. +Now take your time, dear, and sit down +while you work.”</p> +<p>Mary Jane was very glad for that advice. +For even though moving men are wonderful +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30' name='page_30'></a>30</span> +to watch, and even though rubbish and boxes +and barrels are all very fascinating, a person +<i>does</i> get tired and sitting down isn’t at +all a bad idea.</p> +<p>One of the men who was unpacking gave +her her own little chair that he had just uncrated +and so she sat down in state, in her +own chair, on her own balcony and opened +the box of doll things. But that’s every bit +that got done to those doll things that day, +every bit.</p> +<p>For at that very minute, who should come +out of the house around the corner, the house +with the back yard and garden and chickens +and everything, but—yes, you must have +guessed it—the same two girls that Alice and +Mary Jane had seen on the Midway the day +they arrived in Chicago. Think of that! +Right under Mary Jane’s own balcony and, +moreover, it was plain to see that they lived +there.</p> +<p>“Now I guess we’ll get to know them,” +whispered Mary Jane to herself happily. +But of course, she didn’t say a thing out +loud. She only sat very still and watched. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31' name='page_31'></a>31</span></p> +<p>And as she watched, two boys came out +on the back porch of the house around the +corner and one of the boys called, “Say, +Fran, did you feed the chickens?”</p> +<p>The girl who was about Alice’s age answered +back, “No I didn’t, Ed, I thought it +was Betty’s turn to-day.”</p> +<p>“Now I know a lot,” Mary Jane whispered +to herself. “She’s Frances, I’m sure, +and he’s Ed; and Betty must be the little +girl that’s ’bout as big as me.”</p> +<p>Just then, when Mary Jane was wishing +and wishing and wishing that she would +come, Alice came to the door of the balcony +and looked out.</p> +<p>“Sh-h-h!” whispered Mary Jane, tensely, +“they’re here, both of ’em, and there’s more +of ’em, too!”</p> +<p>Alice seemed to understand exactly what +Mary Jane meant, even though her sentence +was decidedly mixed up, and she stepped out +onto the balcony.</p> +<p>Frances heard the door shut and looked +up. For a long minute the two girls looked +at each other, then Frances, the girl with +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32' name='page_32'></a>32</span> +the auburn hair and the friendly smile, +nodded shyly.</p> +<p>Little Betty didn’t take long deciding +what she would do. She called eagerly, +“Moving in?”</p> +<p>“Yes, we are,” laughed Alice, waving her +hand toward the piles of boxes and rubbish +stacked up on the back stairs of the building.</p> +<p>Ed, who had started back into the house, +looked around and, seeing his sisters had +made a small start toward conversation, +called a question on his own responsibility.</p> +<p>“Going to use ’em all?” he asked, pointing +to the boxes.</p> +<p>“Dear me, I guess not,” said Alice. “I +don’t see how we could!”</p> +<p>“Then will you give me a box?” he asked, +running back in the yard till he stood right +under the balcony. “We’re going to get +some rabbits, John and I are, and we want a +box for their home.”</p> +<p>“Come on over and see which one you +want,” suggested Alice, “and I’ll ask father.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33' name='page_33'></a>33</span></p> +<p>Ed and his brother John lost no time +climbing over the fence and inspecting the +boxes. By the time Alice brought Mr. Merrill, +he had picked out just the one he wanted +and was very grateful when it was given him +for his own.</p> +<p>“Don’t you want to come over and see ’em +make the rabbit house?” suggested Frances +shyly. “Oh, maybe you’re busy.”</p> +<p>“I’m sure we can come,” replied Alice, +“because mother just told me she wished +we’d get some fresh air.” So Alice and +Mary Jane followed the others to the back yard +and helped hold nails and boards and make +the rabbit house. When it was nearly finished +the children’s mother, who proved to +be very charming Mrs. Holden, came out +with a plate of cookies and a welcome for +the two little strangers.</p> +<p>“Thank you for the cookies,” said Mary +Jane politely, “but we’re not strange—that +is, not any more, we aren’t, we know each +other—all of us do!”</p> +<p>And so it really seemed to all the children. +They were friends from the first day and +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34' name='page_34'></a>34</span> +making the rabbit house was just the beginning +of many nice times in that friendly back +yard.</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<a name='VISITING_WITH_BETTY' id='VISITING_WITH_BETTY'></a> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35' name='page_35'></a>35</span> +<h2>VISITING WITH BETTY</h2> +</div> + +<p>Three days of hard work for everybody +and then the little flat into which +the Merrills had moved began to look like +a real home. The unpacking was all done +and the rubbish cleared away; the furniture +was polished and set in place; the closets +were in order and every cupboard and shelf +held just the right things for comfort. It +wasn’t such an easy matter to stow away all +the things the Merrills had used in their +pretty house—the five room apartment was +much smaller than the house of course—but +with everybody’s help the job was done.</p> +<p>“Now then,” said Mrs. Merrill, happily, +in the late afternoon of the third day, “if +you’ll run the rods in these curtains, Mary +Jane, I’ll hang them up where they belong +and then we’ll all three go to market and +then—guess what? We’ll have dinner in +our own new home!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36' name='page_36'></a>36</span></p> +<p>Mary Jane thought that would be fun, +for, much as she loved eating in the hotel +where they had been living while getting +the new home fixed, she liked better to eat +her mother’s cooking. So it was a very +happy little girl who slipped the rods into +the living room curtains and then put on her +hat and hunted up the market basket from +the pantry.</p> +<p>Now many times before this, Mary Jane +had been marketing with her mother. But +never had she been to such a market! Before, +marketing meant going to the grocery +store about three blocks from their home; it +meant talking to the very interested and +friendly grocer who had known Mary Jane +ever since she first appeared at the grocery +in her big, well-covered cab—she was then +about two months old; it meant telling Mr. +Shover, the grocer, just what they wanted +and picking out the sorts of things they liked +best. But marketing in Chicago was +very different. In the first place there +wasn’t a person around they had ever seen +before; and then everything was so big and +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37' name='page_37'></a>37</span> +there was so much food. Mary Jane +thought there couldn’t possibly be enough +folks in Chicago to eat all those good things! +But when she and her mother actually got +into the store and began to buy, Mary Jane +forgot all about the strangeness and remembered +only the fun. For they didn’t get +somebody to wait on them as they used to +at Mr. Shover’s—not at all! They waited +on themselves! They went through a little +turnstile and then wandered around +among the good things all by themselves and +they took down from the well-stocked +shelves anything they wanted. It certainly +was queer.</p> +<p>“Can we just take <i>anything</i>?” exclaimed +Mary Jane in amazement as her mother +explained what they were to do.</p> +<p>“Well,” laughed Mrs. Merrill, “you must +remember we have to pay for things just the +same as we used to at Mr. Shover’s. But we +can take anything we want—if we pay for +it.”</p> +<p>“Then I’ll pick you out some good things +to eat, mother!” cried Mary Jane happily, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38' name='page_38'></a>38</span> +“don’t you worry about thinking what we’re +going to have!”</p> +<p>Now Mary Jane really did know how to +read, at least a little, but she didn’t stop +to read on this important occasion. She +looked at the pictures on the cans of goodies +and she picked out a can of all her favorites +and set them in the basket Mrs. Merrill +carried on her arm. But that didn’t +work, for Mrs. Merrill had a long list and +the basket wouldn’t hold only so much. So +they decided to let Mrs. Merrill pick out +three things from her list and then Mary +Jane could buy one favorite; then three +more things from the list and then another +favorite. That proved to be great fun and +it certainly did fill the basket in a hurry! +Mary Jane was just trying to decide between +a box of marshmallows and a pan of nice, +gooey, sugary sweet rolls when Mrs. Merrill +said, “whichever you decide, Mary Jane, +you’ll have to carry the bundle yourself, because +this basket won’t hold another parcel—not +even a little one.”</p> +<p>Mary Jane decided on the rolls and she +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39' name='page_39'></a>39</span> +took them over to the counter to have them +wrapped up and there she almost bumped +into—Betty Holden, no less! Betty and +her mother were shopping too, and their basket +was almost as full as Mrs. Merrill’s.</p> +<p>“We market after school,” said Mrs. +Holden, “and then Ed brings his wagon to +meet us and hauls the stuff home. We’ll +get him to give you a lift too.”</p> +<p>“And then can Mary Jane come over to +our house to play?” asked Betty.</p> +<p>“For a little while,” agreed Mrs. Merrill, +smilingly, “but she won’t want to stay very +long to-day because we’re going to have our +first dinner in our new home and she’s promised +to help me lots—and I need it.”</p> +<p>Just then they spied Ed’s face at the door +so they hurried through the second turnstile, +paid for their groceries and left the store. +Ed’s wagon proved to be very big and he +was glad to give them plenty of room for +the Merrill basket.</p> +<p>“Are you going to start in school to-morrow?” +asked Betty as they walked off toward +home. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40' name='page_40'></a>40</span></p> +<p>“I’m going over to see about that to-morrow +morning,” said Mrs. Merrill. “We’ve +been so busy unpacking and settling that we +haven’t even thought about it till now. Do +you like your school, Betty?”</p> +<p>“Yes, I do, lots!” exclaimed Betty heartily. +“I’m just through kindergarten this +spring, I am, and next fall I’m first year.”</p> +<p>“Then I think you must be just about +where Mary Jane will be,” said Mrs. Merrill.</p> +<p>The two little girls ran skipping ahead, +talking about what they would do and where +they would sit and all the things that girls +plan for school.</p> +<p>But when Mrs. Merrill took Alice and +Mary Jane over the next morning, it didn’t +work out as planned. Alice was entered +and found herself in the very same room and +only two seats away from Frances, which +seemed perfect. But there wasn’t room +for Mary Jane! The kindergarten was +crowded, very, very crowded, and new little +folks weren’t allowed to come in. Miss Gilbert, +the teacher, talked with Mary Jane a +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41' name='page_41'></a>41</span> +while and Mary Jane told her all the work +she had done and all the things she had +learned about.</p> +<p>“I really think, Mrs. Merrill,” said the +teacher finally, “that your little girl is ready +for the first grade. She seems very well +prepared. But they don’t take new first +graders so late in the year. Why don’t you +keep her out of school the rest of this term +and then next year, enter her in the first +grade?”</p> +<p>Mrs. Merrill thought that was a fine plan. +There would be so many new sights to see +and things to learn in the city that Mary +Jane would find plenty to do.</p> +<p>But Mary Jane was keenly disappointed. +“I wanted to stay in Betty’s room,” she explained +to the teacher. “She asked me to +sit by her this morning, she did, and I promised +yes I would.”</p> +<p>“Then I’ll tell you what you may do,” +suggested the teacher kindly. “Two of our +folks are absent this morning so we have +enough chairs to go around. Wouldn’t you +like to stay with Betty and visit? And +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42' name='page_42'></a>42</span> +then just a little before time for school to +be out, Betty can take you up to your sister’s +room and she can bring you home.”</p> +<p>Mrs. Merrill agreed that that was a fine +plan, so Mary Jane went to the cloak room +to hang up her hat and her mother hurried +back home.</p> +<p>At first Mary Jane felt very strange in +the new school room. There were so many +children there and the songs were new and +the games were new and everything seemed +different. She almost—not really, but <i>almost</i>—wished +she had gone home with her +mother. And then, after singing three +songs Mary Jane didn’t know, the children +made a big circle and let Mary Jane stand in +the middle and they sang the song Mary +Jane knew so very well,</p> +<p>“I went to visit a friend to-day, +She only lives across the way, +She said she couldn’t come out to play +Because it was her ——”</p> +<p>Quick as a flash Mary Jane dropped onto +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43' name='page_43'></a>43</span> +her knees and began to act out packing +things into a box.</p> +<p>For a minute the children hesitated. +That was a strange thing to be acting; Mary +Jane was not washing or ironing or churning +or sweeping or any of the things the children +usually acted and they were all +puzzled. Then suddenly Betty remembered +the back stairway and all the piles of +boxes and excelsior on Mary Jane’s back +stairway and she called out the end of the +song—“because it was her moving day!” +And everybody finished the verse with a +flourish.</p> +<p>After that Mary Jane felt more at home +and the morning went oh, so very quickly, +till recess time, when they all went out into +the big yard to play in the sunshine.</p> +<p>Betty and her particular friends were +gathering together for a circle game in the +corner of the yard when Mary Jane heard +a soft, helpless little sound close at hand. +Without stopping to say anything to any +one, she ran over to the fence and there, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44' name='page_44'></a>44</span> +caught in between the tall iron bars, was the +tiniest, blackest little dog she had ever seen. +He evidently had seen the children coming +out to play, had wanted to play with them +and had supposed he could slip right +through between the bars of the fence.</p> +<p>Mary Jane tried to pull him out but he +was stuck fast. So she called Betty.</p> +<p>“Here!” shouted one of the boys, “I’ll +pull him out!”</p> +<p>“No you don’t,” cried Betty imperatively, +“you let him alone! We’ll do it!” And +her snapping black eyes flashed so positively +that the boy obeyed. But Betty couldn’t +pull the dog through either, the bars were +too close, she couldn’t move him either way.</p> +<p>“I’ll tell you what let’s do,” she said. +“Mary Jane, you stay here and guard him +so nobody tries to pull him out and I’ll go +and get Tom and he’ll know what to do.” +Tom was the janitor.</p> +<p>Mary Jane stood close by the dog and +patted his head and talked kindly to him so +he would know somebody was trying to help +him. And all the girls and boys who had +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45' name='page_45'></a>45</span> +started to play together gathered around and +watched Mary Jane while Betty ran back to +the school building and down into the basement +to fetch the janitor.</p> +<p>Fortunately, Tom was in his office and +came quickly in response to Betty’s call. +He saw at once what the trouble was and +discovered a way to remedy it. It seems +that the big iron bars that made the fence +were heavier at the bottom than nearer the +top, so the space between the bars got wider +higher up. Tom took firm hold of the wiggling +little creature and gently but very +firmly pushed him straight up between the +bars. That didn’t hurt like trying to pull +him out, so the dog stopped barking and +whining. And in a second Tom had him +out—half way up the fence there was plenty +of room to lift him right through.</p> +<p>Poor little doggie! He was so glad to be +out and so frightened by his experience that +when Tom laid him down on the grass he +looked quite forlorn. Mary Jane sat down +beside him and gathered him up into her +arms. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46' name='page_46'></a>46</span></p> +<p>“Don’t you be afraid, doggie,” she said +softly, “we’ll take care of you, don’t you be +afraid a bit!”</p> +<p>“What you going to do with him?” asked +one of the girls.</p> +<p>But Mary Jane didn’t have to answer that +question. Before she could speak, a small +boy came running along the street, crying as +hard as he could cry and shouting between +sobs, “I’ve lost my dog! I’ve lost my dog! +Somebody’s stole my dog!”</p> +<p>“No they haven’t,” called Betty, “maybe +this is yours!”</p> +<p>The little boy rubbed his eyes, looked +through the fence—and a look of happiness +spread over his small face.</p> +<p>“It’s him! It’s him! It’s him!” he +shouted happily, “then he isn’t stole!”</p> +<p>It took only a minute to run around the +gate, dash across the school yard and grab +the tiny little dog into his arms. And the +children could tell by the way the little creature +snuggled down that the love wasn’t all +on one side—evidently the little boy was a +good master. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47' name='page_47'></a>47</span></p> +<p>Right at that minute, before there was +a chance to start a game or any play, a great +bell in the school doorway began to ring. +Mary Jane was used to a small school of +course—a school so small that the teacher +came to the window and simply called when +recess was over. So she stared in amazement +when the great bell rang out so noisily.</p> +<p>“Come on!” shouted Betty, “recess is +over!”</p> +<p>“Soon as I tell this doggie good-by!” replied +Mary Jane.</p> +<p>Betty didn’t hear and, supposing Mary +Jane was right behind her, she went on into +her place in line. And Mary Jane, remembering +how leisurely folks went up after recess +at her old school, didn’t pay any attention +to the rapidly forming lines. She +turned around and patted the tiny dog and +nodded and smiled and whispered her +good-by.</p> +<p>When she did turn to go in with Betty, she +was amazed to see all the children had disappeared +into the building. She scampered +over to the door as fast as ever she could. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48' name='page_48'></a>48</span> +And up the stairs—but not a soul did she +see! Only the click of a closing door could +be heard—a click that made Mary Jane feel +really shut out and lonely.</p> +<p>“Now let’s see,” said Mary Jane to herself, +“Betty’s room was right around a corner—” +But there wasn’t any room around +that first corner—only a long hall. A lump +came into Mary Jane’s throat. The building +was so big, so very, very big. And she +felt so little, so very, very little. She swallowed +twice, determined not to cry and then +she said out loud in a queer frightened little +voice, “I guess I’m lost. I’m lost in school!”</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<a name='SAND_CASTLES' id='SAND_CASTLES'></a> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49' name='page_49'></a>49</span> +<h2>SAND CASTLES</h2> +</div> + +<p>“I Guess I’m lost! I’m lost in school!”</p> +<p>Mary Jane’s frightened little whisper +sounded like a shout and the doors and +walls and hallways seemed to echo back, +“Lost! Little girl lost!” in a most desolate +fashion. Mary Jane was so frightened that +she stood perfectly still—just as still as +though her shoes were fastened to the floor. +And she looked straight ahead as though she +was trying to see through the wall at which +she was staring. To tell the truth, Mary +Jane wasn’t trying to see through the wall. +She didn’t even know a wall was in front of +her. She couldn’t see a single thing, not +even a big wall, because a mist of tears was +in her eyes and a great lump was growing in +her throat.</p> +<p>Now Mary Jane wasn’t a baby. And she +never cried—or any way, she <i>hardly</i> ever +cried because she was going on six and girls +who are going on six don’t cry. But to be +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50' name='page_50'></a>50</span> +lost in a strange school and in a strange city +and—everything; well, it’s not much wonder +that Mary Jane felt pretty queer.</p> +<p>But before the tears had time to fall, there +was a heavy footstep behind her and Mary +Jane whirled around to see—the kindly face +of Tom the janitor smiling at her.</p> +<p>“Aren’t you pretty late getting to your +room?” he asked.</p> +<p>Mary Jane couldn’t answer. She was so +relieved to have someone around that for +a minute she just couldn’t get the lump out +of her throat enough to talk.</p> +<p>Tom must have been used to little girls—maybe +he had one of his own—because he +didn’t pay any attention to Mary Jane’s silence. +He took hold of her hand and said pleasantly, +“Now don’t you worry a minute. +You just show me which your room is and +I’ll go with you.”</p> +<p>“I’m looking for it too,” said Mary Jane, +finding her voice again, “but I don’t know +where it is.”</p> +<p>“Don’t know where your room is?” asked +Tom in surprise. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51' name='page_51'></a>51</span></p> +<p>“No,” replied Mary Jane with a decided +shake of her head, “I don’t.” And then, for +talking was now getting comfortable and +easy, she added, “you see, it isn’t really my +room. It’s Betty’s. And I’m just a-visiting +her. I’m just moved to Chicago and +they haven’t any chair for me only just to +visit in when somebody’s absent.”</p> +<p>“That sounds like the kindergarten,” said +Tom.</p> +<p>“It is,” agreed Mary Jane with a laugh +of relief, “I’m kindergarten, I am.”</p> +<p>“Then here we go, right down this way,” +said Tom, and off they started in just the opposite +direction.</p> +<p>Before they got clear up to the kindergarten, +though, they met Miss Gilbert, who +was coming in search of the little visitor. +“Betty missed her,” she explained, “but I +thought you’d find her, Tom.” With a +thank you to her janitor friend, Mary Jane +took tight hold of the teacher’s hand and +they went into the kindergarten room together.</p> +<p>After that, the morning went very quickly +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52' name='page_52'></a>52</span> +and happily and Mary Jane could hardly +believe her ears when the big whistles began +to blow for twelve o’clock and Miss Gilbert +told them to put away their scissors and +cut-out papers and get ready to go home. +Mary Jane had cut out two beautiful tulips +and she was very happy when she was told +they might be taken home as a souvenir of +her visit.</p> +<p>On the way home they met Frances and +Alice and Ed so they had plenty of company.</p> +<p>“What you doing Saturday?” asked Ed +as they neared their own corner.</p> +<p>“I don’t know,” replied Alice, “is there +anything nice to do—special?”</p> +<p>“Well,” answered Frances, “we were +afraid you might all be busy—but—well +you see, we were going to have a beach party +and we thought maybe you folks would like +to go along. All of you.”</p> +<p>Now Alice and Mary hadn’t the slightest +idea what a beach party was, only of course +they knew it must be something about the +lake. But there wasn’t time for questions +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53' name='page_53'></a>53</span> +and talk just then for Frances discovered +that they had walked so slowly that they +must rush on home to lunch.</p> +<p>“We’ll get mother to tell you,” she promised, +“and do say you’ll come ’cause it’s a +fire and cooking and marshmallows and +piles of fun.”</p> +<p>“And we’ve plenty of wires,” added +Betty, “and they’re plenty long so you won’t +burn your fingers.”</p> +<p>It sounded amazingly puzzling to Alice +and Mary Jane, who couldn’t in the least +understand what a fire and wires and all that +had to do with a beach. But they were to +find out before so very long. For that same +afternoon, while Alice was still in school, +Mrs. Holden and Betty came over to call +on Mrs. Merrill and Mary Jane and then +the beach party was all explained.</p> +<p>“We go over to the lake very often,” said +Mrs. Holden. “And on the sandy beach, +close by the water, the children build a big +fire. Then, when the coals are good, we +toast sandwiches and roast ‘weenies’ and +toast marshmallows. The children are so +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54' name='page_54'></a>54</span> +anxious to show your girls just how it is +done,” she added, “and as the weather promises +to be warm and sunny I think we should +have an extra fine time.”</p> +<p>So it was settled. And a person would +have thought from the excitement and fun +of preparation that the party was to be that +same day instead of twenty-four hours away. +For as soon as Alice and the older Holden +children came home from school, they all +set to work planning the menu and getting +out baskets and cleaning the wires on which, +so the Merrill girls learned, marshmallows +were held over the coals to be toasted.</p> +<p>But when everything that could be done +the day before, was finished, there was still +some time for play, so the children went +down into the Holden yard and the boys, +Ed and John, showed the girls how to run a +track meet—how to jump and vault and +race in proper track style. Alice and Mary +Jane thought the boys wonderfully skilled +and the boys, thrilled by such warm admiration, +broke all their previous records and had +a beautiful time. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55' name='page_55'></a>55</span></p> +<p>At four o’clock the next afternoon the two +families set out for the beach party. And +it surely was quite a procession that made its +way the four or five blocks to the park. +First there was John with the wagon which +held all the heavy things—baskets of food +and such. Next came Ed, who started +out walking behind the wagon to see that +nothing dropped off. He and John were to +take turns pulling the load. Then the +others carried bundles of kindling and the +wires for marshmallows and toasting racks +for meat. They had such a jolly time getting +off that everybody felt sure the party +was to be a success.</p> +<p>Mary Jane had been so busy helping get +settled and all that, that she hadn’t had +time for a real visit on the beach. To be +sure she had had glimpses of the big blue +they could see down their own street, but to +really come over and see the lake and play +in the sand—this was her first trip. So she +skipped along very happily and thought she +could hardly wait till they got there.</p> +<p>Fortunately they hadn’t far to go. Three +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56' name='page_56'></a>56</span> +blocks down and two blocks over and there +was the park—such a beautiful park with +tiny lakes and bridges and great trees whose +buds were swelling in the warm afternoon +spring sunshine. Mary Jane thought she +must be in fairyland come to life, it was all +so beautiful. They crossed an arched +bridge; saw a lovely view off toward the +south where other bridges and lagoons and +trees made such a pretty picture they were +tempted to stay and look longer; walked +around a big circle where, so John told them, +the band gave concerts in the summer time; +circled a tiny little inlet lake and came out, +quite suddenly, right close to the big lake—Lake +Michigan. It almost took Mary +Jane’s breath way, coming suddenly that +way, upon the sight of so much water. It +was all so blue and clear, she thought, for +the minute, that surely it must be the very +same ocean she had seen in Florida only a +few weeks before.</p> +<p>But the boys didn’t give much time for +sight-seeing of lakes—they had seen the +good old lake many a time and they were +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57' name='page_57'></a>57</span> +thinking more about supper than any view, +however pretty.</p> +<p>So they hurried their wagon across the +boulevard driveway, and of course all the +folks had to follow close behind, and down +the beach walk a couple of hundred yards +and there they settled themselves on a +stretch of clean white sand.</p> +<p>“Now,” said big brother Linn, whom the +girls hadn’t seen much of as yet, but who +seemed to be master of ceremonies, “you boys +gather those big logs down there, you girls +fix the kindling and I’ll set these stones up +so we get a good draft when we light our +fire.”</p> +<p>Everybody set to work. The logs proved +to be so big and heavy that Ed and John +were very glad to have the help of their +father and Mr. Merrill to roll them into +place. The four girls sorted out the kindling +in their basket and added to it by picking +up drift wood on the beach. Frances +explained that they always brought some +along to be sure they had some real dry +wood for a start. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58' name='page_58'></a>58</span></p> +<p>With such good help and so much of it, +of course it wasn’t long till a fine blaze was +going and the beach party was actually begun.</p> +<p>“Go ahead and play now,” said Linn, +when he saw the fire was started and that +there was a big pile of reserve wood close +by. “You know we can’t cook till we get +some coals.”</p> +<p>“But I’m starved,” hinted Ed, with a hungry +look toward the baskets his mother and +Mrs. Merrill were guarding.</p> +<p>“Then you’ll have to stay starved, young +man,” said his mother, laughing, “because +not a basket is to be opened till the coals are +ready for cooking.”</p> +<p>“Then let’s make a sand castle,” suggested +Betty and she ran down to a smooth place +on the beach, away from possible smoke, and +began molding the white sand.</p> +<p>That pleased Mary Jane. She hadn’t +forgotten the fun she had playing on +the beach in Florida, and while this beach +was different—it didn’t have any of the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59' name='page_59'></a>59</span> +pretty shells or funny little crawdads she +had found on the Florida beach—still it had +lovely white sand and dainty little waves +and was quite the nicest place for play that +Mary Jane had seen.</p> +<p>“I’ll tell you what let’s do,” suggested +Alice, as she saw that all the children were +going to play in the sand, “let’s each build a +castle and make it any way we like best and +then when they’re all finished, have an exhibition +and everybody look and see which +is the best.”</p> +<p>“All right, let’s,” agreed the children and +they set to work.</p> +<p>Mary Jane chose for her castle a place +down close by the water. She loved the +nearness of the waves and the thrill of knowing +that maybe, if she didn’t watch out, a +wave would come up really close and get +her wet. Betty picked out a spot nearer the +fire on the side away from the smoke and +Alice chose a place where a few pretty pebbles +would give her material with which to +pave a “moat” she intended to make. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60' name='page_60'></a>60</span></p> +<p>And then everybody set to work. So busy +were they that Linn had to tend the fire all +by himself and Ed forgot he was hungry.</p> +<p>Before very long that beach looked like a +picture book. Towers and ditches and castles +and bridges were where flat sand had +been a few minutes before. The Holden +children had made many a sand house and +they knew just how to pack the damp sand +so it would stay in place and just how to put +a small board here and there to hold a second +story or a tower straight and tall.</p> +<p>But with all their experience, Alice’s castle +was as pretty as theirs, or at any rate she +thought it was, and Mary Jane’s was quite +wonderful. She smoothed off the “garden” +in front of her palace, stuck in a few sticks +for flowers, made a pebbly path down to the +tiny lake she had scooped out at one side +and then shouted, “Mine’s done! Look at +mine!” and stepped aside so all could see +her handiwork.</p> +<div class='figcenter'> +<a name='linki_2' id='linki_2'></a> +<img src='images/maryj-061.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 327px; height: 462px;' /><br /> +<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 327px;'> +And then, sliding in the wet sand, she sat right down in<br /> +the lake and sent a wave of ripples right over her castle <i>Page 61</i><br /> +</p> +</div> + +<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63' name='page_63'></a>63</span></div> +<p>But Mary Jane wasn’t used to working so +close to the water and she forgot entirely +where she was! Instead of stepping to one +side, as she should have done, she stepped +backwards—straight into the big lake! +And then, sliding in the wet sand, she sat +right down in the lake and sent a big wave +of ripples—right over her castle and garden +and lake and everything and washed it all +away, every bit!</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<a name='THE_BEACH_SUPPER' id='THE_BEACH_SUPPER'></a> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64' name='page_64'></a>64</span> +<h2>THE BEACH SUPPER</h2> +</div> + +<p>A minute before Mary Jane slid into +the lake, the beach was a scene of busy +building and fun. Linn tended the fire, the +grown folks gathered wood and visited and +guarded baskets and the children all were intent +on their sand castles. But with Mary +Jane’s tumble everything changed.</p> +<p>Sand flew helter skelter as the children +jumped hastily and ran to Mary Jane’s assistance; +castles were trampled on as though +they didn’t exist and fire wood and baskets +were all forgotten.</p> +<p>“Don’t be afraid, you’re all right!” called +Mrs. Merrill as she ran toward her little +girl.</p> +<p>“Coming! Coming! Here!” shouted +Mr. Merrill reassuringly as he dashed over +to his little daughter, picked her up by the +shoulders and set her, safe and sound, on +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65' name='page_65'></a>65</span> +dry sand just in time to miss a fair sized +wave.</p> +<p>“I guess I’m wet!” said Mary Jane.</p> +<p>“I guess you are,” laughed Mr. Merrill, +“but I guess things will dry and you’re not +so very awfully too wet—not enough to +spoil the party, is she, mother?”</p> +<p>Mrs. Merrill looked thoughtful and all +the children waited anxiously for her answer. +Would Mary Jane have to go clear +off home and miss the party and everything! +But it wasn’t to be as bad as all that. Mrs. +Merrill remembered the warm day, the glowing +sun that was still bright and warm and +she also remembered the hot fire Linn had +underway and the warm sand all around the +fire.</p> +<p>“Of course she isn’t wet enough to spoil +the party,” said Mrs. Merrill, much to every +one’s relief. “Only she’ll have to stay close +by the fire till she gets warm and dry. Suppose +we appoint her head cook and make her +stay right there where it’s hot?”</p> +<p>“She’ll get dry then!” exclaimed Ed, so +fervently that they all knew he had had +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66' name='page_66'></a>66</span> +many a hot face from working by the fire +at previous picnics.</p> +<p>“But how about your castles?” asked Mr. +Holden, “weren’t we to have an exhibit?”</p> +<p>But the castles! Dear me! In the excitement +of Mary Jane’s tumble, no one had +given a thought to the castles. They were +stepped on, and trampled down and all +matted down into the sand.</p> +<p>“That’s just too bad!” said Mrs. Merrill.</p> +<p>“Pooh!” exclaimed John, dismissing the +whole question of castles with one wave of +the hand, “who cares about castles! <i>We’re</i> +going to have supper.” And every one set +to work.</p> +<p>Mary Jane was supposed to be head cook, +but as she had never before been to a beach +party, she really didn’t know what to do. +So she simply stayed close by the hot fire +while the boys brought three benches and +made them in a triangle around the fire—a +little way back of course. Then Mrs. +Holden and Mrs. Merrill unpacked the +baskets and fixed a place on the bench for +each person. To be sure nobody was expected +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67' name='page_67'></a>67</span> +to sit on the bench—that would be +quite too proper for a beach party meal. +But the mothers put a paper plate and a cup +for each person on the benches and then they +put on the plate as many sandwiches and +pickles and cookies and everything as each +person was entitled to.</p> +<p>While they were doing this, Linn raked +down the hot coals, set in place a light wire +rack he had made and spread a couple of +dozen weenies out to roast.</p> +<p>“Now then, Mary Jane,” he said to the +head cook, “you take this long fork. And +as soon as a weenie begins to sputter and +brown, turn it over so it browns on the other +side too.”</p> +<p>That was a very important job, Mary +Jane could easily see, and she determined +that every weenie <i>she</i> cooked would be done +just to a turn. She bent over the fire till +her back got a crook in it; then she sat down +on the hot sand close to the coals and by the +time the weenies were done ready to eat she +was so dry and hot that she felt sure she had +never slipped into the lake—never! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68' name='page_68'></a>68</span></p> +<p>And all the time Mary Jane was cook, +Linn and Mr. Merrill stayed close to see that +the coals kept evenly hot and that no bit of +flame started up to burn the head cook.</p> +<p>At last the weenies were ready. Each +one was beautifully brown and was sizzling +and sputtering and sending a most tempting +odor to hungry folks.</p> +<p>“Form a line, folks,” said Mrs. Holden, +“ladies first!”</p> +<p>With much laughter, each person got their +own roll, which had been split and buttered, +and filed passed Mary Jane. And Mary +Jane, instructed by Linn just how to do her +job, picked up one weenie after another on +the long fork and dropped each one in an +open roll held out before her. It was a scary +job, for the sand was close below and Mary +Jane knew that weenies dropped into the +sand wouldn’t taste very good. But she +took her time—too much time, John thought.</p> +<p>“Don’t be ’fraid of any old sand,” he assured +her when she put his weenie in his +roll so very carefully, “I eat ’em any way—sand +or not.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69' name='page_69'></a>69</span></p> +<p>Betty eyed Mary Jane a bit enviously. +This being chief cook and having a chance +to fill the rolls of each person must surely +be fun.</p> +<p>“Next time we have a beach party,” she +announced between bites, “<i>I’m</i> going to fall +into the lake too!”</p> +<p>“I’ll save you the trouble,” replied Mr. +Holden understandingly, “I’ll let you be +chief cook without getting wet.”</p> +<p>Betty needn’t have worried about Mary +Jane’s being willing to give up her job. +For there was one disadvantage in that position +Miss Betty hadn’t thought of and Mary +Jane had just discovered—the head cook +had no time to eat. And Mary Jane was +getting fearfully hungry. She was more +than willing to give up the big fork, let +Betty fill her roll for her and stand up with +the others to eat the good hot morsel.</p> +<p>Did anything ever taste as good as those +hot weenie sandwiches, eaten there on the +edge of Lake Michigan, with the fine lake +air blowing in their faces and the sunshine +warming them and making them forget the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70' name='page_70'></a>70</span> +chill of the long winter? The Merrills +thought they had never had so much fun and +tasted such good things. Every weenie +(and there had seemed to be far too many) +was eaten up; every roll disappeared and +cookies and pickles and sandwiches just vanished +as though a warm breeze had melted +them away.</p> +<p>Supper over, the sun going down reminded +the children that they must get the +fire ready for dark. They scampered up +and down the broad beach, gathering together +all the pieces of drift wood they could +find. Later in the year wood along that +beach would be hard to find. But in the +early spring, before the driftings of the winter’s +storms had been burned up by picnickers +like themselves, there was plenty to be +had.</p> +<p>Linn and Ed put away the cooking rack +in the case they had made for it, the two +mothers packed up débris and burned it so +the beach would be left clean and tidy, and +all the others gathered wood. Such a lot +as they did find! Linn piled it on high and +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71' name='page_71'></a>71</span> +by the time the sun went to sleep in the +west, the fire was so bright that nobody noticed +the growing darkness. They all sat +around on the warm sand and sang—college +songs that the children had learned from the +fathers, school songs and popular songs that +they all knew. It was fun to sit there close +by the big lake, to watch the sparks fly upward, +to hear the waves swish against the +sand and to sing and sing as loud as they +liked.</p> +<p>But when the darkness settled down +enough so that mysterious shadows lurked +over every shoulder and the stars helped the +fire make a light, Ed announced, “Now let’s +play Indian.”</p> +<p>So they did. Playing Indian, the Merrill +girls found, meant a queer follow-the-leader +game. Ed led off first and everybody had +to follow. He ran round and round the +fire, prancing and yelling like a wild man. +And the point of the game was for everybody +to do exactly as he did. They ran and +jumped and yelled till everybody was +breathless with exercise and laughter and +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72' name='page_72'></a>72</span> +was glad to sit down again and do nothing.</p> +<p>By this time the fire had again died down +to a bed of coals.</p> +<p>“<i>Now</i> it’s time for the marshmallows, +isn’t it?” asked Betty. She was right, it +was.</p> +<p>The boxes of marshmallows were opened, +wires pulled out of the baskets and all the +children sat around the fire a-toasting. +’Twas just as Betty had promised. The +wires were plenty long enough so that no +fingers needed to be burned or dresses +scorched and the bed of coals was big enough +to make room for all.</p> +<p>Betty and Mary Jane thought they would +keep count and see who could eat the most, +but after six they lost count, and they ate +and ate till they simply couldn’t eat any +more.</p> +<p>“Let’s play still pond,” suggested Frances.</p> +<p>She stood up near the fire and announced, +“Twenty steps, two jumps, three hops and +a roll. One, two, three, four, five, six, +seven, eight, nine, ten—<span style='font-variant: small-caps'>STILL POND</span>.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73' name='page_73'></a>73</span></p> +<p>As she said the numbers off, the children +began scampering to a place to safety. All +but Mary Jane. She wasn’t used to playing +on the slippery, slidy sand. And +though she started off just as big as anybody, +she slipped and stumbled and hadn’t more +than got to her feet when the words, “Still +pond!” were called. And after that she +couldn’t move but just to use the steps, +jumps, hops and roll Frances had given +them.</p> +<p>To make matters even more exciting, +Frances started off exactly in her direction.</p> +<p>But Mary Jane hadn’t played “Still +Pond” in her own yard for nothing. Perhaps +she hadn’t learned to run on slippery +sand as yet, but she did know how to play +that game. Instead of trying to quietly +take her twenty steps in an effort to get out +of Frances’ way, she took two quick steps, +dropped down on the sand, gave one little +roll, and—was safely hidden under one of +the picnic benches they had used for supper!</p> +<p>Frances passed so close Mary Jane could +have touched her. Other folks were chased +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74' name='page_74'></a>74</span> +and found, but Mary Jane’s hiding place +was undiscovered. Of course when she +rolled in under the bench, Mary Jane had +expected to roll right out again when somebody +else was caught. But when she found +that they couldn’t see her; that they went +right around close at hand, talking about her +and wondering where she was and all that, +she thought it was such a good joke that she +lay very still and watched.</p> +<p>She heard them asking each other where +she was seen last; she heard her father say +she couldn’t be so very far away; and she +saw them all start off in search of herself. +Then, just the minute their backs were +turned but before they had had time to be +really frightened, she slipped out from under +her seat, stood up close by the dying fire +and shouted, “Here I am, can’t you see me?”</p> +<p>They thought it a very good joke she had +played and Mary Jane was sure she would +always remember that the best hiding place +is often the nearest one.</p> +<p>“Time to go home,” said Mr. Holden, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75' name='page_75'></a>75</span> +looking at his watch, “the fire’s most out and +the party’s over.”</p> +<p>“But there’ll be another one, won’t +there?” begged Mary Jane.</p> +<p>“Let’s have it next week,” said Betty.</p> +<p>The boys loaded up the empty baskets on +their wagon—not much of a load going +home! Mr. Merrill raked out the fire so no +harm would come to anything; Mr. Holden +gathered the children together and started +the line of march. It was a happy little +crowd that wandered homeward and they all +agreed with Mary Jane when she said, +“Well, anyway, I think a beach party’s the +mostest fun I know. It’s more fun than +moving!”</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<a name='MARY_JANE_GOES_SHOPPING' id='MARY_JANE_GOES_SHOPPING'></a> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76' name='page_76'></a>76</span> +<h2>MARY JANE GOES SHOPPING</h2> +</div> + +<p>The days after the beach party seemed +to fly past on wings. First it was a +Monday and then, before a person could do +half the nice things planned, Saturday was +coming ’round again and Alice was home +all day from school and fun for the four +Merrills could be planned. Mrs. Merrill +and Mary Jane took to doing all their “Saturday +marketing” on Friday afternoon so +they could have more time on Saturday for +trips and sight-seeing and all the lovely +things folks like to do when they’ve just +moved to a big city.</p> +<p>One Saturday morning, not so very long +after the beach party, dawned—not bright +and warm and sunny as Mary Jane had +hoped it surely would—but rainy and cold +and windy as some May mornings are sure to +be in Chicago. A cold northeast wind raced +across the city and folks had blue noses and +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77' name='page_77'></a>77</span> +shivery finger tips and not a single thing to +be seen looked like spring.</p> +<p>“Now just look at it!” exclaimed Mary +Jane as she stared out of the living-room +window, “and we were going to take a trip +through the parks and I was going to wear +my new hat and everything. And look!”</p> +<p>“And we can’t go to the parks again for +another whole week!” bemoaned Alice, +“’cause there’s school!”</p> +<p>“Just look!” exclaimed Mary Jane again +as a hard gust of wind tossed the rain against +the winds exactly as though Mr. Rain was +saying to Mary Jane, “Thought you’d go +out, did you? Well, look what I’m doing!”</p> +<p>“You girls talk as though parks were the +only things to see in Chicago,” said Mrs. +Merrill as pleasantly and comfortably as +though there was no such thing as a disappointment +in the world.</p> +<p>Alice and Mary Jane turned away from +the window quickly. Something in their +mother’s tone of voice made them suspect +that the day wasn’t to be a disappointment +after all. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78' name='page_78'></a>78</span></p> +<p>“It’s funny to me,” continued Mrs. Merrill +in a matter of fact voice, “that you folks +haven’t asked to go to the big stores—wouldn’t +you like to?”</p> +<p>“Like to!” exclaimed Alice.</p> +<p>“Would we?” cried Mary Jane. “But +we didn’t think about it!”</p> +<p>“Then we’ll think about it now,” replied +Mrs. Merrill. “If you can hold an umbrella +down tight over your head so as not +to get your hat wet, I think we could manage +to get to the train without getting soaked. +And once down at the store, we could check +our wet umbrellas and shop and sight-see +through the stores all we wished to without a +bit of hurry.”</p> +<p>“Oh, may we really go?” asked Alice.</p> +<p>“Well,” answered Mrs. Merrill, pretending +to hesitate, “if you <i>really</i> care to—”</p> +<p>That settled it and there was no more time +wasted talking about weather <i>that</i> morning. +Dishes were washed and beds were made +and dusting was done so quickly that the +little flat must have been quite surprised and +pleased with itself—it got put into rights so +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79' name='page_79'></a>79</span> +very quickly. Then Mary Jane got her +hair fixed nicely and a pretty hair bow put +on—the bow wouldn’t show very much under +the new hat, but even that little had to +be just right—and then, while mother fixed +her own and Alice’s hair, she put on a pretty +dress—not a party dress, of course, but a +nice, pretty, dark dress. Then they all put +on rubbers and raincoats and locked up the +doors and took their umbrellas and started +for the train.</p> +<p>Going down town on the train was fun. +In the city where Mary Jane lived before, +one could walk down town. Or if one +really wanted to ride, a street car hustled +one to the stores in about five minutes. But +in Chicago, so she discovered, she had to +have a ticket and go through a gate, and up +stairs and onto a platform and aboard a train +and everything just as though one intended +to go away, far off. The girls both liked to +ride down town. To be sure they couldn’t +see much of the lake, even though they did +ride right along beside it, because the rain +made it all look dim and gray and foggy. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80' name='page_80'></a>80</span> +But they knew the lake was there; they could +see the spray the waves made and once in a +while they could hear the noise of splashing +water above the roar of the train. All too +soon, for there was so much to see, the train +pulled into their station and the conductor +shouted, “Randolph Street! Everybody +out! Far’s we go!” And all the folks +aboard got their umbrellas ready and went +out into the rain.</p> +<p>Fortunately it was only a very little way +from the station to the big store where Mrs. +Merrill took the girls, so they didn’t have a +chance to get tired or very wet. And as +soon as they got indoors, Mrs. Merrill found +a checking place and they left wet umbrellas +and wet raincoats and wet rubbers and +started out for fun.</p> +<p>“I think that’s awfully convenient—just +to leave things that way,” said Alice as she +settled her collars and cuffs and made sure +she was tidy, “and of course we’ll get them +back safely?” This checking system was +new to her and she wanted to be assured it +was all right. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81' name='page_81'></a>81</span></p> +<p>“To be sure we will,” said Mrs. Merrill. +“See? I have the checks for them.”</p> +<p>“Well, then,” said Mary Jane, “let’s +begin.”</p> +<p>“Yes,” said Alice, “let’s. And let’s see +<i>everything</i>!”</p> +<p>“All right,” laughed Mrs. Merrill; “shall +we take an elevator first?”</p> +<p>“Oh, no,” answered Alice, “’cause then +we’d miss the first floor.”</p> +<p>So they “did” the first floor, seeing all the +handkerchiefs and jewelry and bags and +fans and pretty decorations and ribbons—Alice +could hardly leave those lovely ribbons—and +neckwear—Mary Jane saw five +different neckties she needed—and so many +things.</p> +<p>“Do they have anything left for the second +floor?” asked Mary Jane when they +finally got around to where they had started.</p> +<p>“You just see,” said Mrs. Merrill.</p> +<p>And sure enough there were plenty of +things on the second floor, pretty dishes and +lamps and so many things that, really, Mary +Jane almost got tired looking at them all. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_82' name='page_82'></a>82</span></p> +<p>By the time they got ready for the third +floor, Mary Jane was wondering if there +were any seats in that store. Not seats +where you sit down to buy things, but really +seats where you just sit down whether you +buy anything or not. And sure enough +there were just those seats. Nice, big +comfy ones, that appeared to be made for +Mary Janes who went a-shopping and +wanted to sit down. The Merrills sat down +on a big couch and Mary Jane leaned back +ready to rest when—who should she see +right in front of her but Frances Westland! +The girl she met at grandmother’s house +nearly a year ago.</p> +<p>In a jiffy Mary Jane forgot all about +wanting to sit down. She slid down from +the comfortable couch, dashed after Frances, +who, not guessing that a friend was so near, +was hurrying by, and brought her back to +meet mother and Alice.</p> +<p>Then they all sat down for a visit.</p> +<p>“No, I’m not living here,” said Frances in +answer to Mrs. Merrill’s question, “I’ve +been spending the spring with my auntie +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83' name='page_83'></a>83</span> +and going to school here. But just as soon +as school is out I’m going back home. +Mother needs me.”</p> +<p>“I don’t doubt it,” replied Mrs. Merrill, +who was much pleased with the little girl, +“I’m sure your mother misses you greatly. +But where are you living and can’t we see +you before you go and can’t you take lunch +with us to-day?”</p> +<p>It seemed that Frances’s auntie lived in +the same part of the city the Merrills lived +in and there was every reason to believe that +the girls might see each other at least once or +twice in the little time left of the school +year.</p> +<p>“But I don’t believe I can eat lunch with +you,” added Frances, “’cause auntie and I +have to hurry home.” So with a promise to +come to see them soon at the address Mrs. +Merrill wrote out on her card for Frances, +the friends said good-by.</p> +<p>“I’ll declare!” exclaimed Mrs. Merrill, +looking at her watch after Frances left them. +“It’s almost twelve o’clock already! And +we were to meet father at one. If you girls +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84' name='page_84'></a>84</span> +want to see anything of the toys and dolls +and playrooms, we’d better not be sitting +around here any longer.”</p> +<p>Of course the girls did want to see the +toys and dolls and everything. When they +got to the fourth floor where all the children’s +things were kept, they were sorry they +had spent even a minute any place else. +For all the lovely dolls and marvelous toys +and enticing games and beautiful pictures +and fascinating puzzles made a person think +that Santa Claus’s shop and fairyland and +magic were all mixed up together and set +down in one place. The girls looked and +looked and looked. They “oh-ed” and +“ah-ed” and exclaimed till they couldn’t +think of anything more to say—and then +they kept right on looking just the same.</p> +<p>Mary Jane picked out the doll coat she +wanted Georgiannamore to have and Alice +selected a lovely desk. They agreed upon +a set of dishes and upon charming furniture +for their balcony—just the right size too.</p> +<p>“And we’ll pretend we’ll buy it all, +mother,” said Mary Jane, who knew perfectly +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85' name='page_85'></a>85</span> +well she couldn’t buy all the things +she talked about getting, “and we’ll pretend +we’ll have it all sent up, that’ll be such fun.”</p> +<p>So they pretended and looked and looked +and pretended till they had been over most +all that part of the store.</p> +<p>“Now then,” said Mrs. Merrill, “if we’re +to meet Dadah for lunch—”</p> +<p>“Oh, goody!” cried Alice, “are we to meet +him here?”</p> +<p>“Not here,” said Mrs. Merrill, “but in +this store in the lunch room and in ten minutes. +So we’d better wash our hands and go +to the lunch room floor.”</p> +<p>Mr. Merrill was waiting for them and had +a table engaged close by a charming fountain +(“Just think of a fountain in a house!” +exclaimed Mary Jane when she spied it) and +all the time Mary Jane sat there eating, she +could look right over and watch the fishes +and she could hear the splash of the water.</p> +<p>But Mary Jane wasn’t thinking of fishes +or water just then. She was hungry. And +the things her father read to her sounded so +good—oh, dear, but they did sound good! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86' name='page_86'></a>86</span> +She and Alice had a dreadfully hard time +deciding just what did sound the best. But +Alice finally decided on stuffed chicken legs +(she hadn’t an idea what they were but they +sounded good) and potato salad and strawberry +parfait. And Mary Jane chose +chicken pie—a whole one all her own—and +hashed brown potatoes and orange sherbet.</p> +<p>While the lunch was being fixed, Mr. +Merrill took Mary Jane over to the window +so she could look down, down, way down, to +the street below, where the folks appeared +so little and upside down and where the +automobiles looked like the ones they had +just seen in the toy department.</p> +<p>When the lunch came, it proved to be just +as good as the menu promised it would be +and the girls enjoyed every bite. Mary +Jane was afraid for a minute that she had +made a mistake. For Alice’s parfait came +in a tall glass, with a long spoon that made +the girls think of the story of the fox and +the goose and the banquet, and Mary Jane +was sure nothing she had ordered could be +as nice as parfait. But when the maid set +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87' name='page_87'></a>87</span> +the orange sherbet at her place, Mary Jane +was quite satisfied, for the ice was set in a +real orange, all cut out in dainty scallops +and trimmed with green.</p> +<p>“Yummy-um!” she whispered, happily. +“I’m so glad you had this party, Dadah!”</p> +<p>Dadah seemed to want everything to be +all right, for he had added to their order +some little cakes, done up in frilly papers +and unlike anything the girls had ever seen. +They almost hated to eat them, they were so +pretty, but cakes one cannot eat are not good +for much, Mr. Merrill reminded them, and +so the cakes were eaten up.</p> +<p>“Now then,” said Mary Jane, as she dabbled +her fingers in the finger bowl and ate up +the candy she found at the side of the tiny +tray, “what do we do next?”</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<a name='THE_BUS_RIDE' id='THE_BUS_RIDE'></a> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88' name='page_88'></a>88</span> +<h2>THE BUS RIDE</h2> +</div> + +<p>“What do we do next?” asked Mr. +Merrill, repeating Mary Jane’s +question. “I’m sure of this much—we must +do something <i>very</i> nice because it’s such a +nice day.”</p> +<p>“<i>Nice day</i>!” exclaimed Alice. “What in +the world are you talking about, Dadah? +This is the worst weather we’ve had since we +came to Chicago—but we don’t care ’cause +we’re having such a good time anyway.”</p> +<p>Mr. Merrill laughed and replied, “Suppose +you look out of the window.”</p> +<p>So they left their cozy table, where nothing +but empty dishes told the story of their +delightful lunch party, and wandered over +to the window where Mary Jane had looked +down at the street not much over an hour +before. But what a difference! With a +sudden, unexpected shift of wind that only +the Chicago weather man knows how to +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89' name='page_89'></a>89</span> +bring about, the stiff, cold northeaster that +had brought the cold rain of the morning had +been sent off and in its place a warm breeze +from the south blew softly across the city, +bringing with it sunshine and warmth and +pleasantness for all.</p> +<p>“Why—” exclaimed Mary Jane, much +puzzled, “where’s the rain?”</p> +<p>“Did you want it back?” laughed Mrs. +Merrill, and then she explained to the girls +something about the effect the big lake +might have on weather and told them that +one of the queer things about Chicago was +its sudden changes to good, or sometimes +bad, weather.</p> +<p>“So I was wondering,” said Mr. Merrill, +“if you folks wouldn’t like an hour of fresh +air and then, if you’re not through shopping +we can come back to the stores.”</p> +<p>The girls hadn’t an idea what he might +want to do, but they were pretty sure it +would be fun. So they agreed that an hour +out of doors was just what they most wanted +and they went down to get wraps from the +check room. They left the umbrellas till +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90' name='page_90'></a>90</span> +later, put on their wraps and left the store.</p> +<p>“Now then,” said Mr. Merrill, “see that +big bus down there—we’re going for a ride +on the top.”</p> +<p>“What’s a bus?” asked Mary Jane, who +had never heard the word before. But before +her father could answer they were +pushed into the crowd at the crossing, hurried +across and the next second Mr. Merrill +had hailed a great, lumbering, top-heavy +automobile and was helping the girls to step +aboard.</p> +<p>The “bus” proved to be a large-sized passenger +automobile, with a deck on top for +passengers who wished to ride in the open +air. Mary Jane and Alice were thrilled +with the fun of getting on it. It seemed +exactly like going aboard a house-boat on +wheels. They stepped into a little hallway +and then—and this wasn’t so easy because +the bus immediately began to move—they +climbed up a curving flight of stairs and +walked down an aisle—an awfully wiggly +aisle it was too!—to seats on the very front +row. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91' name='page_91'></a>91</span></p> +<p>Then, before they had had a chance to +look around or feel at home, the conductor, +who stood at the back, shouted, “Low +bridge!” and everybody ducked their heads +while the great bus went under the elevated +railroad. Mary Jane felt, truly, as though +she must be a person in a story book—Arabian +Nights or something marvelous—because +surely the things that were happening +to her weren’t <i>really</i> happening.</p> +<p>But after the elevated was passed, the bus +rolled out onto Michigan Boulevard and +Mary Jane settled herself comfortably in +her front seat with her mother, smiled across +the aisle to Alice and her father and began +to feel really at home in her high perch. +By the time the bus had turned northward +and crossed the river, she began to +feel that riding on the top of a bus was the +thing she’d been wanting to do all her life. +It was such fun to sit up high and watch the +lake, so blue and beautiful in the sunshine, +the trees just getting a tinge of green at the +tips, the pretty houses that lined the parkway, +the people—it seemed as everybody in +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92' name='page_92'></a>92</span> +Chicago must be out in their ’tother best +clothes—and most of all, it was fun to watch +the automobiles dart in and out of the crowd, +around the bus and beside it, till Mary Jane +was sure their driver must be some wonderful +being to be able to manage so that everybody +stayed alive!</p> +<p>“Here, Mary Jane,” said Mr. Merrill, interrupting +Mary Jane’s sight-seeing, “don’t +you want to pay your fare—Alice is paying +ours.” He slipped two dimes into her hand +just as the conductor stepped to the front of +the bus. Mary Jane wasn’t quite sure what +she was to do with the dimes till she noticed +that the conductor had in his hand a queer-looking +thing like a clock, only it had a hole +in the top just the right size for a dime. +Into that hole Mary Jane dropped a dime. +And—“ding<i>ding</i>!” went a musical little +bell somewhere in the “clock.” Then she +dropped the other dime. And again the bell +sounded, “ding<i>ding</i>!” just as though it tried +to say “Thank <i>you</i>!” that way. Alice then +dropped her two dimes and Mary Jane had +the fun of hearing the bell again. She +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93' name='page_93'></a>93</span> +thought she wouldn’t do a thing but watch +the conductor and listen to his bell all the +time he collected fares, but just as he +stepped back to get the next folks’ money +the bus passed in front of the queer old stone +building with great tower that Mr. Merrill +said was the city water works building, and +of course that meant the girls wanted to hear +about when it was built and hear again the +story Mr. Merrill had started to tell them +several evenings before about how the great +Chicago fire started and how it burned up to +this very spot they were now passing. +Somehow, being at that place and seeing the +one building that stood through the fire +made the history stories seem very plain and +there were a lot of questions to be asked +and answered.</p> +<p>But buses don’t wait for questions—the +girls soon discovered that! Long before the +fire story was told they had raced up Lake +Shore Drive, passed its beautiful old homes, +and were turning into Lincoln Park. Here +it seemed to the girls that the city +ended and fairyland began. The grass +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94' name='page_94'></a>94</span> +seemed greener, the lake bluer and the trees +greener than any place they had seen; and +hundreds of tulips peeping up through the +ground here, there and everywhere, made +spots of bright vivid color and beauty.</p> +<p>“Oh!” exclaimed Mary Jane happily, “I +hope the bus goes on and on forever! +I’d like to keep on riding all the time!”</p> +<p>But when, a minute or two later, they +passed near the buildings of the Zoo, Mary +Jane forgot all about wanting to ride forever +and wanted to get out, right away quick +and see all the animals she had heard lived +there.</p> +<p>“Not to-day,” said Mr. Merrill, looking +at his watch. “You remember we are to go +back to the stores—we’re just out for a bit of +fresh air this time. Some other day when +it’s still warmer so we can get our dinner +here, then we’ll come and visit the Zoo. +But to-day I want to get back to the stores +before they close.”</p> +<p>“Of course,” added Alice, “for our umbrellas.”</p> +<p>“Of course for something else too,” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95' name='page_95'></a>95</span> +laughed her father, and though both girls +were very curious, not another word would +he say.</p> +<p>So they stayed on the bus and rode clear +through the park, and up Sheridan Road a +long way till the bus turned around at a corner +and the conductor shouted, “Far’s we +go!”</p> +<p>But the Merrills didn’t get off. They +wanted to keep those good front seats so they +sat still and in about two minutes the bus +started south and whirled them through the +park and past all the same interesting +sights on the way cityward. This time, +Mary Jane felt very much at home in her +high-up perch. She dropped in the dimes +her father gave her, eyed the passing autos +without a bit of fear and looked down on all +the children she saw walking and playing +quite as though she had lived in a city and +ridden in busses all her young life.</p> +<p>It was a very reluctant pair of young +ladies that Mr. Merrill assisted to the sidewalk +when the big stores and “time to get +off” were reached. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96' name='page_96'></a>96</span></p> +<p>“But what was it besides umbrellas you +wanted to get?” asked Mary Jane, suddenly +remembering.</p> +<p>“Well,” said Mr. Merrill, “I haven’t been +through the toy department with anybody. +And I have a calendar.”</p> +<p>The girls looked puzzled. What had the +toy department to do with a calendar? +They couldn’t guess. Even Mrs. Merrill +looked puzzled.</p> +<p>“Of course if you don’t intend to have +birthdays since we’ve moved—” said Mr. +Merrill teasingly. And then everybody +knew! To be sure! It was almost time for +Mary Jane’s birthday—almost a year, it +was, since the lovely birthday party when +the little girl was five years old—and in the +excitement of moving and getting settled +and seeing new sights, even the little lady +herself had forgotten how near the day was +at hand.</p> +<p>“It’s mine!” exclaimed Mary Jane happily, +“and I’ll be six! Come on, quick, +Dadah! and I’ll show you perzactly what I +want.” When Mary Jane got excited she +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97' name='page_97'></a>97</span> +sometimes got words a little mixed, but her +father knew well enough just what she +meant. She grabbed hold of his hand, +called to her mother and Alice to come on +with them and away they went toward the +elevator that quickly took them to the toy +section.</p> +<p>Going through that department the second +time was even more fun than the first +trip, because now father was along to +see things and to explain mechanical toys. +And also because there was the fun of picking +out the thing she wanted to wish for, for +her birthday. That last was a very serious +matter, as every little girl knows.</p> +<p>They looked at dolls—but not a doll was +as lovely as Georgiannamore, at least that +was Mary Jane’s opinion—and then they +looked at furniture and at dishes and toys +and games and clothes for dolls and, well, +at every single thing in that whole big department. +After everything had been considered +and looked at and thought about, +and it was about time for the big warning +bell to ring and tell folks that in ten minutes +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98' name='page_98'></a>98</span> +the store would close and everybody’d have +to get out, then and not until then, Mary +Jane decided that the thing she wanted most +of all was a doll cart. A beautiful little +ivory enameled doll cart made just exactly +like the one that Junior’s little brother had +back at their old home. A cart with a top +that moved back and forth just like a real +baby cart and that had cushions and tires and +everything that a really truly mother is particular +to want for her baby.</p> +<p>“Yes,” said Mary Jane, as she looked +around the store with a rather tired sigh, “I +think that’s the thing I want the most and +I’m going to wish for it, Dadah.”</p> +<p>“Sounds easily settled,” laughed her father, +“but do you know what time it is?”</p> +<p>Before she could answer, the warning bell +rang and clerks began to cover up counters +and to straighten up the store for its Sunday +rest. So the Merrills four hurried down to +get umbrellas and to go home.</p> +<p>On the train going home Mary Jane was +so tired looking at things that she didn’t +care a bit about looking any more. She +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99' name='page_99'></a>99</span> +watched the lake some, but mostly she simply +settled back in her little corner behind the +door and just sat. Thoughts of all the wonderful +things she had seen that day raced +through her mind—the lunch, the ride, the +lake, the park—but most of all, that wonderful +doll cart, and she couldn’t help wondering +(and of course hoping) if she really truly +would, <i>possibly</i>, get that lovely gift for her +birthday.</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<a name='THE_BIRTHDAY_LUNCHEON' id='THE_BIRTHDAY_LUNCHEON'></a> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100' name='page_100'></a>100</span> +<h2>THE BIRTHDAY LUNCHEON</h2> +</div> + +<p>As soon as they got home that evening, +and had dinner and rested up a bit, +Mary Jane hunted up a calendar so she +could find out about her birthday. And she +discovered that two weeks from that same +day was “her” day.</p> +<p>“It’s Saturday, so you can do something +too!” she said to Alice. “Now, Mother, +let’s plan.”</p> +<p>So they talked over all the nice things a +person <i>might</i> do for a birthday, but long before +they could decide which was the very +nicest of all the plans, bedtime came. Then +the next morning there were interesting +things to do, and nobody thought about +plans for a day that was two weeks away. +That is, nobody but Mary Jane thought +about it, and, if the truth must be told, she +thought more about the doll cart she had +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101' name='page_101'></a>101</span> +wished for than she did about what she might +do to celebrate.</p> +<p>Monday noon, when Alice came home for +her luncheon, she was much excited.</p> +<p>“Who do you s’pose I saw at recess this +morning?” she demanded. “Guess!”</p> +<p>But Mrs. Merrill and Mary Jane couldn’t +guess—they didn’t know anybody in Chicago +to guess! Or at least they thought +they didn’t.</p> +<p>“I saw—” began Alice slowly, for she +wanted the fun of keeping them waiting to +last as long as possible, “I saw—Frances +Westland! And she goes to my school!”</p> +<p>“Why in the world didn’t we know that?” +said Mrs. Merrill. “We should have +guessed! Of course she goes to your school. +I remember of thinking she wasn’t very far +from us.”</p> +<p>“Can’t we have her come to see us?” asked +Mary Jane eagerly.</p> +<p>“I already asked her if she couldn’t come,” +explained Alice, “because I knew you’d want +me to, and she says she’s sure she can. But +she can’t come next Saturday because she +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102' name='page_102'></a>102</span> +and her auntie are going to Milwaukee to +spend the week-end. But she thought she +could come the next Saturday.”</p> +<p>“And that’s my birthday,” Mary Jane reminded +her.</p> +<p>“I know it,” agreed Alice, “but I didn’t +tell her. I just said I’d find out what we +were doing that day and let her know this +afternoon—was that all right, Mother?”</p> +<p>“You did exactly right, dear,” said Mrs. +Merrill reassuringly. “Come right out to +the dining-room now, because your soup is +ready and you mustn’t hurry yourself too +much with your lunch. While we eat, we’ll +plan for the birthday.”</p> +<p>Of course there were many plans to be +talked of, because in a big city there are so +many kinds of things one may do. And it +was awfully hard to decide which plan was +the very most fun—you know how that is +yourself. But after every plan that any of +the three could think of had been discussed +carefully, Mary Jane decided that there +were two things she wanted the most to do. +First, she wanted to stay home to celebrate +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103' name='page_103'></a>103</span> +and have a party and all that; and, second, +she wanted to go down town and go to a big +grown-up theater where there was music and +lights and pretty things just like grown +folks see up town. And for her part she +admitted that she didn’t see how a person +possibly, even on a birthday, could do those +two conflicting things.</p> +<p>“Pooh!” laughed Mrs. Merrill, “that’s +easy! I was telling Dad the other night +that inasmuch as this was the first birthday +in the city and on Saturday and everything—so +convenient for us all—we’d better do +those very two things.”</p> +<p>“But how’ll we do it, Mother?” asked +Alice. “We can’t stay home for a party +while we’re down town at the theater!”</p> +<p>“To be sure, we can’t,” agreed Mrs. Merrill. +“But we can stay home for a party +<i>before</i> we go down town for a show. And +that’s just what we’re going to do. You +hurry off to school now, dear, because it’s +ten of one. And next time you see Frances +Westland, you invite her to come here for +twelve o’clock luncheon a week from next +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_104' name='page_104'></a>104</span> +Saturday. Be sure to tell her it’s an all-afternoon +party, so she can stay long enough to +go down town with us.”</p> +<p>“And who else’ll we have?” asked Mary +Jane, when Alice had gone. “It wouldn’t +be a party with one person.”</p> +<p>“Of course not,” said her mother. +“There are going to be three folks. After +school this very day you are going to invite +Frances and Betty Holden—that’ll make it +almost a ‘Frances’ party, won’t it? We’ll +ask them right away, even though a week +from Saturday is a long time off, because +Dadah will want to get the tickets and we +will all want to make our plans.”</p> +<p>A week and five days seem a very long +time, when you have to wait for them. But +Mary Jane found that, after all, they went +quicker than she had thought they could, because +there was so much to do. First she +had to decide what she wanted to have to +eat at the luncheon. After much thought +and consultation the menu was made out +and tacked up on the kitchen cabinet for future +reference. Mary Jane printed it out +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105' name='page_105'></a>105</span> +all by herself and the letters were big and +plain and could be easily read by any cook—especially +Mother. It said:</p> +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>CHICKEN BALLS</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>HOT ROLLS</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>FRUIT SALAD WITH WHIPPED CREAM</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>ICE CREAM CAKE</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>HASHED BROWN POTATOES</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>JELLY</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<p>Chicken balls really meant chicken croquettes, +but croquettes proved to be such a +big and puzzling word that Mary Jane decided +she would say balls and Mrs. Merrill +agreed to take a verbal order for the croquette +part of the luncheon.</p> +<p>When the food was planned for, Mary +Jane began to talk about the decorations. +It was soon found that to be really pretty, +the table trimmings would have to be made +by the hostess herself, so Mary Jane set to +work. From the advertising sections of +magazines she cut letters about an inch high. +Letters enough to spell everybody’s first +name and last initial. She had to have the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106' name='page_106'></a>106</span> +last initial because two of her guests had +the same first name. These she sorted very +carefully and put in envelopes; one envelope +for each person and just the right letters +in that envelope for the person’s name. +Then, she planned, when the luncheon was +all ready, she would put the letters in little +piles in front of each person’s place and let +them puzzle out the names before they sat +down.</p> +<p>Mrs. Merrill promised to have a basket of +flowers, spring flowers that Mary Jane loved +so very much, in the center of the table. +And Mary Jane planned to make a procession +of girls and boys all around the basket. +These she cut out of magazines too and she +chose girls and boys who were doing all the +things that she herself liked to do.</p> +<p>With all these things, besides regular +duties and fun, to keep her busy, Mary Jane +didn’t really have a chance to think her +birthday was a long time coming. First +thing <i>she</i> knew it was Friday night and the +birthday was the very next morning!</p> +<p>On Saturday morning, she waked up +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107' name='page_107'></a>107</span> +knowing something nice was going to happen. +Then, before her eyes were really +open, she felt herself getting mother’s birthday +kisses and, before those were all delivered, +Alice’s birthday spats—six good big +lively ones!</p> +<p>“Never you mind, Alice,” she promised, +“just wait till it’s <i>your</i> birthday and you’ll +get some of the hardest—”</p> +<p>“Don’t stop for promises,” said Mr. Merrill, +coming in to deliver his spats too, “what +I want is breakfast and for the life of me, <i>I</i> +can’t get into that dining-room.”</p> +<p>“<i>Oh!</i>” cried Mary Jane rapturously, “I’ll +be right out!”</p> +<p>“Not till you get dressed, you know,” +Alice reminded her, “so do hurry!” For it +was one of the rules of the Merrill household +that birthdays and Christmases didn’t +really begin till folks were dressed. So +Mary Jane scrabbled into her clothes and +gave her face and hands about the most +hurry-up washing they had ever had and +then rushed out to the dining-room.</p> +<p>And there, standing right by her chair, was +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108' name='page_108'></a>108</span> +the—yes, really—the very doll cart she had +picked out! She was so happy that for a +minute she couldn’t speak, she just stared. +The next minute she was down on her knees +with her arms around the whole cart—or at +least as much of the cart as two six-year-old +arms could get around—and she was counting +over all the wonderful virtues of her +gift. It surely was a cart to make any little +girl proud and when Mary Jane saw her own +Georgiannamore, wearing a lovely new coat +(Mrs. Merrill’s gift), and a pair of really +truly gloves (from Alice), and sitting up as +big as life in the cart, she thought the happiest +day of her life had come.</p> +<p>After breakfast the morning raced by on +wings. Of course Mary Jane had to show +the cart and doll’s clothes to Betty and they +had to walk around the block to give the doll +an airing. Then, just as they got back to +Mary Jane’s apartment, the postman came +with a box from grandpa and grandma. +Betty was invited up for the fun of opening +it and she was glad to come both for the fun +and for the big pieces of grandmother’s +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109' name='page_109'></a>109</span> +candy that she got when the box was opened. +Then there was the table to set and the puzzle +letters to put around and everybody to +dress in their best—that’s a good deal for +one morning. No wonder it seemed to be +an unusually short one.</p> +<p>At the very last minute, Mary Jane with +her new white dress and pink ribbons all +just as they should be, went in to the kitchen +to see if she could help. And at that very +minute a neighbor came in to get Mrs. Merrill’s +advice about an important matter.</p> +<p>“Everything’s ready now,” said Mrs. +Merrill, as she left the kitchen. “Only, I +believe, Mary Jane, it would be a good idea +for you to put that whipped cream into the +ice box. We won’t make the salad till they +get here and I want to keep it stiff and cold.”</p> +<p>Now, Mary Jane had put things in the ice +box many a time. Big things and little +things and spilly things and all, and there +was no reason in the world why she couldn’t +do it all right. No reason, except— Just +as she picked up the bowl of cream, the door +bell rang a long, loud peal that she was sure +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110' name='page_110'></a>110</span> +must be her three guests coming all at once, +so she hurried and the cream jiggled in the +bowl, and slid over the edge—and all down +the front of her best new dress!</p> +<p>Fortunately Alice came into the kitchen +just then, in time to see the accident, and +to notice two big tears which popped into +Mary Jane’s eyes and threatened to spill +down her cheeks.</p> +<p>“Pooh!” she exclaimed comfortably, +“don’t you worry about a little thing like +that, Mary Jane,” and she made a grab for +the bowl, rescued some of the cream and set +it in the ice box. “I’ll have you fixed up so +soon that you won’t know anything happened.”</p> +<p>“But it’s all down my dress,” said Mary +Jane, trying her very best not to cry.</p> +<div class='figcenter'> +<a name='linki_3' id='linki_3'></a> +<img src='images/maryj-111.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 327px; height: 459px;' /><br /> +<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 327px;'> +“But it’s all down my dress,” said Mary Jane, trying her<br /> +very best not to cry <i>Page 111</i><br /> +</p> +</div> + +<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113' name='page_113'></a>113</span></div> +<p>“Oh, well,” replied Alice, nothing +daunted, “it’s not going to stay there long.” +She took a clean cloth, dampened it with +cold water and, with quick little dabs, +scrubbed the cream all off the front of the +birthday dress. Then she took a fresh cloth, +and more cold water and, putting a big, clean +towel under the front of the dress, scrubbed +again till every trace of the cream was gone. +Then she opened the oven door so the heat +would help dry the wetness and with a fresh +cloth rubbed and rubbed the wet place till it +was entirely dry.</p> +<p>“There now,” she said, as she shook the +dress into place, “I think the girls are here; +let’s go see.” And immediately the accident +that threatened to spoil Mary Jane’s +fun was forgotten.</p> +<p>Sure enough, the girls had come and the +party began at once.</p> +<p>The letter puzzles for place cards proved +to be lots of fun and filled in the time while +Mrs. Merrill brought in the plates of good +things to eat. Judging by the appetites +Mary Jane’s menu must have been a favorite +with everybody, for the goodies disappeared +by magic and Mrs. Merrill filled up plates +and passed rolls and brought in salad and +everything till she hardly had time to eat her +own luncheon.</p> +<p>The ice cream was a surprise even to Mary +Jane. On the plate was, first, a big, round +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114' name='page_114'></a>114</span> +piece of cake; then, on top of that, was a slice +of ice cream, white, and on top of <i>that</i> a ball +of pink ice cream with a pink candle, +lighted, stuck in the top. They looked so +pretty and bright that the girls hated to blow +them out, but Mrs. Merrill said every one +was to make a wish and then blow and if the +candle went out on the first blow the wish +would come true.</p> +<p>Alice suddenly remembered that they were +to take a train at one-thirty and that it was +nearing one now, so the dessert was finished +in a hurry, wraps were hastily put on and the +whole party started for the train to meet Mr. +Merrill and have the rest of the fun.</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<a name='LOST_ONE_DOLL_CART' id='LOST_ONE_DOLL_CART'></a> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115' name='page_115'></a>115</span> +<h2>LOST—ONE DOLL CART</h2> +</div> + +<p>There was only one thing wrong +about the birthday celebration and +that was that the day was such a very busy, +happy one that there was very little time for +playing with the new doll cart. Of course +Mary Jane and Betty took their dolls out +for one airing in the morning soon after +breakfast. But what is one little airing +when one has a new cart? Nothing at all, +Mary Jane thought. All through the luncheon +and the ride down town and the play +father took them to, which proved to be just +the very most interesting kind of a play for +little girls to see, Mary Jane kept thinking +of her new cart and of the fun she would +have on Monday when there was a whole +day for Georgiannamore and the doll cart.</p> +<p>So when Monday morning actually came +Mary Jane lost no time getting up and doing +her share of the morning work. Mary +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116' name='page_116'></a>116</span> +Jane was very particular about her morning +work. She didn’t want her mother to have +to do the things a six-year-old girl was +plenty big enough to do; and then, anyway, +she knew it was lots more fun to work when +two did the job than for one person to work +alone. She picked up all the papers, and +emptied the waste baskets, and cleaned the +bathroom washstand and the kitchen sink—she +liked those jobs the best because they +were so scrubby and grown-up and interesting—and +put out clean towels and dusted +the living-room. Of course this was after +the dishes were washed and put away; that +was a job with which Alice helped too, before +she started for school. So by the time +Mary Jane was ready to play Mrs. Merrill +was about through too, ready for sewing or +baking or whatever she had to do that day.</p> +<p>“I think I’d better help you take down +your cart,” suggested Mrs. Merrill, when the +last job was finished. “It’s not so easy for +one person to take that cart down from the +second floor. But it will be no trouble at +all for you to take one end and me to take +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117' name='page_117'></a>117</span> +the other and carry it down together. Then +you can put Georgiannamore in it before you +start down and there’ll be no danger of +bouncing her out.”</p> +<p>“But how’ll I get back up, Mother?” +asked Mary Jane.</p> +<p>“Ring the bell three short taps and I’ll +come down to meet you,” answered Mrs. +Merrill. “Don’t try to bring it up alone; +it’s far too heavy.”</p> +<p>Mary Jane dressed Georgiannamore in +her very best dress, put on the new coat and +gloves, tucked her carefully into the cart so +she wouldn’t catch cold by being out for a +long walk, and then she and Mrs. Merrill +carried the cart, oh, so very carefully, down +stairs and out to the sidewalk.</p> +<p>Fortunately, that May morning was +bright and sunny; the breeze blew warm +from the southland instead of cold and blustery +from the lake, and it was the very +best kind of a morning possible for being out +of doors. Mary Jane walked around the +block, starting toward the lake, then she +went around the block the other way, and of +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118' name='page_118'></a>118</span> +course she went rather slowly because there +was so much to see and to show Georgiannamore. +Bright colored crocuses were blooming +in all the yards where there were houses—and +in that particular neighborhood +there were many houses as well as apartments—tulips +were bursting up through the +ground and the lilac buds were swelling +their plump green sides nearly to the bursting +point.</p> +<p>On the third time around, Mary Jane +thought of school—to be sure, it couldn’t be +anywhere near time for school to be out, because +the morning hadn’t much more than +begun, but then it would be fun to go around +to the corner where the children crossed the +street to go to school. There were so many +automobiles whizzing around the streets +that a little girl even as old as six couldn’t +be allowed to cross streets without a grown +person or an older sister along.</p> +<p>She went around the block to the corner +where the children would come, after a +while, and there, just as she turned to start +back home, thinking she’d come here again +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119' name='page_119'></a>119</span> +nearer noon, she heard a commotion. Looking +down the half block to the yard around +the school house she heard a bell peal out +and saw, yes, truly, crowds of children coming +out of school! And just as she was +about to look around to see if there was a +fire or a parade or anything special to cause +school to be dismissed early, she heard the +whistles blow for noon—the morning was +gone! That’s how time flies when a person +has a new doll cart!</p> +<p>Mary Jane waited at the corner till Alice +and Frances and Betty came along together +and they all four walked home.</p> +<p>“You shouldn’t bother to carry your cart +clear upstairs every time,” suggested Frances, +“when our front porch is so handy. +Just run the cart up on the porch, lock the +brake and it will be safe as can be till you +eat your lunch.”</p> +<p>Alice thought that was a good idea too, so +the cart was left there, locked with the +brake, and with the understanding that if +Mrs. Merrill didn’t approve, the girls would +come down and get it at once. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120' name='page_120'></a>120</span></p> +<p>Lunch was ready and waiting, so the cart +stayed on the porch while the girls ate and +then Mary Jane walked back toward school +as far as she was allowed to go.</p> +<p>By the time Mary Jane got back in front +of her own apartment, Mrs. Merrill was +ready to go and do her marketing and errands +and of course Mary Jane and Georgiannamore +went along and had a beautiful +time—especially when they looked in the +windows and saw all the good things to eat. +Mary Jane had thought that she knew every +sort of good thing a person could possibly +want to eat, but she soon found out that she +didn’t. For in one of the windows they +passed she saw a tray of apples, covered with +something slick and brown and carrying in +their stem ends a small smooth stick like a +butcher’s skewer.</p> +<p>“What are they, Mother?” she exclaimed. +“Don’t they look <i>good</i>! And may we buy +some?”</p> +<p>Mrs. Merrill went inside the store and +Mary Jane, anxiously watching her mother +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121' name='page_121'></a>121</span> +through the window, waited outside with the +doll and cart. She saw her mother speak to +the salesman, look at the apples and then, +oh, joy! saw him pick out four fine ones under +Mrs. Merrill’s direction and put them +in a paper bag.</p> +<p>“He says they are called Taffy Apples,” +explained Mrs. Merrill when she came out, +“and that all the girls and boys like them +very much. So I didn’t bother to consult +you,” she added with a twinkle in her eye. +“I bought some for you four girls to eat after +school—just on a chance that you might like +them.”</p> +<p>The bag was carefully tucked in under the +folds of Georgiannamore’s robe and the +walking and shopping were resumed, but all +the time, Mary Jane kept her eye on the +hump made by the bag of apples and kept +wishing that time for school to be out would +hurry up and come. Some good fairy must +have heard the wishes too, for the afternoon +hurried by almost as fast as the morning and +first thing Mary Jane knew they were all +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122' name='page_122'></a>122</span> +through the errands and were going down +the street toward the school, ready to meet +Alice.</p> +<p>“Do you like ‘Taffy Apples’?” Mary Jane +asked Betty as soon as she came out of the +school yard.</p> +<p>“Like ’em—u-um!” replied Betty expressively.</p> +<p>“Well,” continued Mary Jane slowly, so +the surprise wouldn’t be over too soon, “I’ve +got one in there,” pointing to the cart.</p> +<p>Betty eyed the hump Mary Jane pointed +out and smiled knowingly.</p> +<p>“It looks like more than one,” she suggested +hopefully.</p> +<p>“It is more than one,” answered Mary +Jane delightedly; “it’s four—all for us.”</p> +<p>“Can we eat ’em now?” demanded Betty.</p> +<p>“Better wait till we get home,” suggested +Mrs. Merrill; “that won’t be more than five +minutes and then there won’t be any danger +of stumbling and running a stick into your +throats.”</p> +<p>The two little girls didn’t loiter much +after that. They skipped along briskly and +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123' name='page_123'></a>123</span> +soon were ahead of Mrs. Merrill and Alice +and Frances.</p> +<p>“I’ll tell you what,” said Betty, as they +turned into her own yard, “let’s put the cart +up on the porch while I get my doll and then +when we get through eating our apples we’ll +be all ready to go walking.”</p> +<p>She picked up the front end and Mary +Jane took the handle end and they set the +cart up at the end of the porch and went into +the house. Fortunately Mary Jane took +Georgiannamore along with her into the +house; if she hadn’t—but then, that’s getting +ahead of the story.</p> +<p>The little girls had no more than gone inside +before Mrs. Merrill, Alice and Frances +turned the corner and strolled along toward +the Holden house.</p> +<p>“Funny where those girls have gone,” said +Frances, looking at the empty porch.</p> +<p>“They’ve hid our Taffy Apples somewhere, +I just know they have!” said Alice. +“Frances, we ought to be smart enough to +find them so quickly they won’t try teasing +again.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124' name='page_124'></a>124</span></p> +<p>“I don’t believe they’ve hidden the apples,” +said Frances thoughtfully, “because +Betty would be so hungry she wouldn’t +bother with teasing till after she was +through eating. Maybe they’ve gone into +the house to get Betty’s doll and cart.”</p> +<p>“But why would they bother to take +Mary Jane’s cart indoors if Betty was just +going in for her doll?” asked Alice.</p> +<p>Before Frances or Mrs. Merrill could suggest +an answer, the two little girls themselves +came out of the front door, turned to +look at the porch and then stood there, as +though fastened to the floor—they were that +surprised.</p> +<p>“Why—why—” said Mary Jane, “I left +it right here!”</p> +<p>“Well, nobody ever stole anything before,” +said Betty. “Maybe the boys just +hid it!”</p> +<p>“No, they didn’t,” replied Frances, “because +they haven’t come home from school +yet. They stopped to see Jimmie’s new +chicken house and they won’t be home for +an hour.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125' name='page_125'></a>125</span></p> +<p>“What’s the trouble?” asked Mrs. Holden, +who, hearing voices, came to the front +door to invite folks in for a visit.</p> +<p>“Trouble enough, Mother,” said Frances, +worriedly. “Mary Jane left her brand new +doll cart on our porch and it’s gone!”</p> +<p>“And we just went in to get my doll,” explained +Betty, getting very excited. “We +just went in a little minute and then we +were going to eat the taffy apples and now +they’re gone too—oh, dear!”</p> +<p>At that minute, yes, things really do happen +this way sometimes, who should go by +the house but the big friendly policeman +who always stood at the street corner nearest +the school to guard the children from swiftly +moving autos. Betty spied him and ran +down the walk to speak to him.</p> +<p>“So the cart’s gone, is it?” he said as he +and Betty came up toward the house. +“Well, if you’ll let me use your ’phone, I’ll +tell them down at the station just what kind +of a cart it is and maybe we can get a trace of +it—anyway, we can try.”</p> +<p>Mrs. Holden went indoors with him and +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126' name='page_126'></a>126</span> +the others stood around on the porch hardly +knowing what to do. Losing her cart was +a real calamity to poor Mary Jane—she very +well knew that her father couldn’t afford to +get her another one and she had hard work, +awfully hard work, to keep back the tears +that came to her eyes and to swallow the +lump that filled her throat. She didn’t +want to be a crybaby, but—and the lump got +bigger and bigger—</p> +<p>Mrs. Merrill noticed that Mary Jane was +trying so very hard to be brave so she did +her best to help.</p> +<p>“Wasn’t it lucky that officer came by just +then!” she said cheerfully. “I can’t for the +life of me see why anybody would be mean +enough to steal a little girl’s doll cart and I +keep thinking we’ll find it somewhere. +Come on, Mary Jane, let’s sit down on this +settee here till Mrs. Holden comes out. +Then perhaps some of you girls will be good +enough to go up to the candy shop with me +and get some more taffy apples—I suppose +those went with the cart!”</p> +<p>Mary Jane stepped over toward her +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127' name='page_127'></a>127</span> +mother, who had already seated herself on +the settee at the end of the porch. But before +she sat down she just happened to look +down toward the ground. The Holden +porch had no railing around the side and as +Mary Jane was always a little timid about +falling she kept a close watch on the end of +the porch every time she went near it. She +glanced down at the ground and then—her +face changed! The sorrowful look vanished +and smiles spread like sunshine over +her face.</p> +<p>“Look!” she exclaimed, as she pointed to +the ground. “Look there!”</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<a name='A_TRIP_TO_THE_ZOO' id='A_TRIP_TO_THE_ZOO'></a> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128' name='page_128'></a>128</span> +<h2>A TRIP TO THE ZOO</h2> +</div> + +<p>It wasn’t hard to guess what Mary Jane +had found; nothing but her precious doll +cart could have made her feel and look so +happy. They all ran to the end of the +porch, looked over the edge, and there, sure +enough, was the birthday cart all tumbled +down in a heap. Alice and Frances jumped +down, set it up straight and then, with Mrs. +Merrill’s help from above, lifted it up to the +porch just as the policeman and Mrs. Holden +came out of the house.</p> +<p>“Bless my soul!” exclaimed the officer. +“Another cart?”</p> +<p>“No, it’s mine!” cried Mary Jane happily. +She ran her hands over the hood, the body +part and then the wheels to make sure nothing +was broken. Everything seemed all +right, even the bag of taffy apples was still +tucked under the carriage robe that had come +loose but had not fallen clear out. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129' name='page_129'></a>129</span></p> +<p>“Yours?” asked the officer. “But I +thought yours was lost!”</p> +<p>“It was,” admitted Mary Jane, “but it +isn’t any more.”</p> +<p>Mrs. Merrill hastened to explain that the +cart had just then been discovered on the +ground at the end of the porch.</p> +<p>“I know what was the trouble,” said Frances, +“she didn’t fasten the brake—did you, +Mary Jane?”</p> +<p>Mary Jane and the policeman bent down +to inspect the brake. No, it wasn’t fastened.</p> +<p>“It wouldn’t take much of a breeze to +blow that cart off the porch, young lady,” +said the officer, laughingly, “and so I suggest +that if you ever want to leave your doll in +the cart, you’d better be sure the brake is +locked. You might have a smashed doll instead +of a lost cart to report and then things +wouldn’t be so easy to straighten out!” +And with a pleasant good-by he went on +about his business.</p> +<p>Left alone the two mothers looked at each +other and laughed—such an easy ending to +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130' name='page_130'></a>130</span> +disappointment didn’t often come! The +four girls made a dive for the bag of apples +and settled themselves on the broad +front steps for a few minutes of real enjoyment. +Mary Jane found that taffy apples +were a lot of fun to eat. The hard, slick +surface was delicious to “lick” and then, +when a small part was licked thin, it was +fun to bite right straight through to the apple.</p> +<p>“If you think they’re good now,” said +Frances, “you should taste them in the fall +when the fresh apples are in—yummy-um!”</p> +<p>“These are good enough for me,” said +Betty contentedly and she bit off a big chunk +of apple.</p> +<p>“Betty Holden!” exclaimed Frances with +big sisterly chagrin, “you look like a monkey +with that apple all over your face!”</p> +<p>“Oh, fiddle!” replied Betty indifferently, +“I like monkeys.”</p> +<p>“Did you ever see one?” asked Mary +Jane, “a really truly live one?”</p> +<p>Betty stared. “Why of course!” she answered, +“haven’t you?” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131' name='page_131'></a>131</span></p> +<p>Mary Jane shook her head.</p> +<p>“Well then you ought to go up to the +Zoo,” she said positively, “let’s all go.” +She jumped up and ran over to her mother. +“Mother!” she announced, “Mary Jane’s +never seen a monkey—never! Can’t we +take her up to the Zoo and show ’em to +her?”</p> +<p>“Never seen a monkey!” exclaimed Mrs. +Holden and she was as surprised as Betty +had been, “are you sure?”</p> +<p>“Yes, Betty’s right,” said Mrs. Merrill. +“Mary Jane has seen a great many things +for a little girl who has just had her sixth +birthday. But she hasn’t seen a monkey. +Her father and I were saying only last night +that we must take the girls up to the Zoo as +soon as possible.”</p> +<p>“Let’s all go next Saturday,” suggested +Mrs. Holden, “no, we can’t go next Saturday +because the girls and I have some shopping +to do. Let’s go a week from Saturday. +By that time the restaurant in Lincoln Park +will be open. The way we do,” she explained +to the Merrills, “is to take our lunch, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132' name='page_132'></a>132</span> +a picnic lunch, with us. We start up about +eleven, eat over by the lake and then +have the whole afternoon for watching the +animals; we eat dinner in that nice restaurant, +before dark, and then come home in the +early evening. Can you all go on that +day?”</p> +<p>Mrs. Merrill said she was sure they could, +so plans were made right then and there.</p> +<p>Mary Jane and Alice thought those two +weeks, or nearly two weeks, never would +pass. Of course there was the doll cart to +play with and Mary Jane loved it exactly as +much as ever. But she did want to see the +monkeys, and the foxes (Betty told her she +would love the foxes!) and all the creatures +that Betty seemed to know so much +about and which she had never even seen.</p> +<p>But at last the morning came, warm and +sunny and clear and the lunch boxes were +packed, the apartment locked up and everybody +started toward Lincoln Park feeling +happy and ready for fun. The fathers +couldn’t come for lunch, but really when all +the Holden girls and boys were added to the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133' name='page_133'></a>133</span> +three Merrills, there was such a crowd that, +for the time at least, fathers weren’t so very +much missed.</p> +<p>When they reached the park Mary Jane +realized, for the first time, how close it was +getting to really truly summer. The sun +shone with real summer warmth, the lake +was blue and beautiful and flowers bloomed +on every corner.</p> +<p>“Oh, I’d just like to live in a park all the +time,” she exclaimed as she looked around +her, “it seems just like home!”</p> +<p>“Yes, it does,” said Mrs. Merrill, with a +wee bit of a sigh, “I’m afraid I know some +folks who are going to miss their gardens +and flower bed this summer.”</p> +<p>“How stupid of me not to have thought +of that!” exclaimed Mrs. Holden. “You +know it will be just two weeks now till we +go up to the lake for all the summer. Why +didn’t I think to have you plant stuff in our +back garden? Then you could have all the +garden you liked right there handy—we always +do hate to leave the ground idle.”</p> +<p>“Perhaps we might plant something even +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134' name='page_134'></a>134</span> +yet,” suggested Mrs. Merrill, much delighted +with the idea, “we’d love to try.”</p> +<p>But there was no time for further planning +just then—John Holden demanded his +lunch; Betty made a lively second and in a +minute or two a clean grassy place was +picked out, the individual lunch boxes were +passed out and then, for a few minutes, +everybody was quiet.</p> +<p>“I’m going to feed the black bear,” announced +Betty, as she paused to pick out +another sandwich, “I’m going to feed him +peanuts—I saved up enough money for two +bagsful.”</p> +<p>“But aren’t you afraid of him?” asked +Mary Jane breathlessly.</p> +<p>“Afraid? Pooh!” grunted Betty.</p> +<p>“Never you mind, Mary Jane,” said Linn +comfortingly, “she was afraid the first time +she saw him and I remember all about it. +But now she’s learned that he can’t get out +the cage.”</p> +<p>“Now, Linn, I never—” began Betty.</p> +<p>But John interrupted. “There!” he said, +“I’m through. Come on, let’s gather up the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135' name='page_135'></a>135</span> +boxes and papers and stick ’em in the trash +box on the way to get the peanuts.” So the +children all helped and in a jiffy the pretty, +grassy spot where they had eaten lunch was +as clean and tidy as when they came. And +then away they scampered after the peanuts.</p> +<p>Such an afternoon as it was! Mary Jane +tried to remember each thing they did so she +could tell her father when he met them after +three o’clock. But she couldn’t remember +half what they had done. She knew they +saw the little foxes—such pretty, dainty +white and tan colored foxes that played together +like little pet kittens and made her +want to hold them in her lap and pet them. +She knew they saw the bears—great big +bears and middle sized bears and little bit o’ +bears just like in the story book, and she fed +them peanuts which they caught very deftly +in their soft cushioned paws. But all the +rest, she really couldn’t remember in the +right order—there were kangaroos and buffaloes +and a giraffe who stuck his long neck +over the top of a great high fence and made +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136' name='page_136'></a>136</span> +Mary Jane think of nothing so much as a +funny paper picture. And then of course +the monkeys—dozens of them and queer +birds with curious colored feathers and +funny bills and feet. Really, she had seen +in that one afternoon, more animals than she +had guessed lived in the whole world, oh, +many more!</p> +<p>“But have you seen the seals?” asked Mr. +Merrill who met them at the bird house.</p> +<p>No, they hadn’t.</p> +<p>“It’s almost four o’clock,” said Mr. Merrill, +looking at his watch, “and Mr. Holden +said they ate at four and we should meet him +there, so let’s hurry.”</p> +<p>It was a good thing they did hurry for +other folks seemed to know, too, that the +seals were fed at four. From all directions, +folks could be seen walking toward the big +enclosed pond where the seals were kept. +But, by hurrying, they got there in time to +stand close to the iron fence where they +could see the antics of those queerest of animals, +the seals.</p> +<p>One would suppose that even the seals +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137' name='page_137'></a>137</span> +knew it was nearly four o’clock, dinner time, +for they were so excited and eager. They +barked and swam and flung themselves +around vigorously as though they could +hardly stand waiting for anything. Then, +just at four, a man came out of a near-by +building. In his hand he carried a basket +of fish—a great, well-filled basket. He +came over to a little platform close by where +the Merrill and Holden children were standing; +so they could see everything.</p> +<p>He picked up a big fish, tossed it over into +the rocky island in the middle of the seals’ +pond and then! such a scrambling as there +was till the middle-sized seal with a few ungainly +flops, grabbed the fish and gulped it +down in one bite.</p> +<p>Then he threw another fish and another +and another—one after the other so fast that +Mary Jane felt sure the seals must get all +mixed up about catching them. But they +didn’t. Those seals must have been smarter +than folks had thought for they seemed to +know, every time, just about where the fish +was to hit on the rocks and to know, too, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138' name='page_138'></a>138</span> +just how to get to that particular spot the +quickest. Mary Jane thought it very wonderful.</p> +<p>But one thing worried her. There was +one small seal, who for some reason or other, +seemed to be always just a second too late to +get a fish. Mary Jane was sure he had had +but one and all the others had had, oh, a lot. +And she couldn’t help wishing all the others +wouldn’t be quite so grabby.</p> +<p>When the man who was feeding the seals +got almost to the bottom of his big basket, +he stopped and looked at the crowd of children +assembled for the feeding. And as +he looked, he spied Mary Jane’s sober little +face.</p> +<p>“Don’t you like to watch them?” he asked +her in surprise.</p> +<p>“Yes, I like to only they’re so grabby,” +she replied promptly, “and he hasn’t had +but one.” She pointed out the little seal +who was a bit too slow.</p> +<p>“We’ll fix that,” said the keeper, kindly, +“you just watch.”</p> +<p>He tossed a great big fish close to the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139' name='page_139'></a>139</span> +crowd of waiting seals, then, quick as a flash +and before they had had time to get that one, +he tossed another, straight at the little seal +who was on the edge of the crowd.</p> +<p>“He got it! He got it!” cried Mary +Jane happily, “he got it before they had a +chance!”</p> +<p>“And he’s going to get another,” said the +keeper as he threw another and still another, +straight at the hungry little seal. “There!” +he added as he looked at the now empty +basket, “that ought to do him till to-morrow.” +Mary Jane thought he looked so +comfortable now that surely he had had as +much as he needed for the day.</p> +<p>“Better hurry if we’re to see the lions +eat,” said Mr. Holden, who during the seals’ +dining hour had come up behind his little +party.</p> +<p>“Lions!” exclaimed Mary Jane.</p> +<p>“Yes, hurry up!” called Betty and she +and her brother who were quite familiar with +the park because of many previous visits, +ran on toward a big brick house near by.</p> +<p>Mary Jane wasn’t afraid, but all the same +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140' name='page_140'></a>140</span> +she thought it would be more fun to hold +her father’s hand and even though they were +a bit behind, they got into the lions’ house +in time.</p> +<p>Here the dinner was of meat, great big +chunks of raw, red meat that the keepers +tossed into the cages. And it was so funny +to watch! Just before the keeper appeared, +the lions and tigers and jackals and leopards +were pacing up and down their cages with +such weird roars and grunts and growls that +Mary Jane held tightly to her father’s hand +and didn’t go very close to the iron bars. +But when the keepers appeared with the +meat there was a wild scramble, and then +silence except for the crunching and smacking +of eating. It certainly was different, oh, +very, very different from anything Mary +Jane had ever seen before!</p> +<p>“Let’s not wait here any more,” suggested +Alice, “let’s show Dadah the monkeys.”</p> +<p>“Yes, and the foxes—the white ones,” +said Mary Jane, “they’re my favorites of +all.”</p> +<p>But before they had had time to show Mr. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141' name='page_141'></a>141</span> +Merrill every single creature they had seen, +the Holden boys announced that they were +hungry and that it was long past dinner +time. And sure enough! Even though it +wasn’t really long <i>past</i> dinner time, it <i>was</i> +half past five—the time they had agreed +upon for dinner. So a very jolly party +seated themselves at a big round table on a +second story porch of the Park restaurant. +That was the nicest place to eat Mary Jane +had ever seen—unless perhaps a diner on a +train. For after they gave their order, she +discovered that they could look right down +on a small lake where ducks and geese and +swans lived. The children got so interested +watching the pretty creatures that for +once they didn’t have time to think the +waiter was slow!</p> +<p>They stayed there eating and watching +the birds, till the sun set back of the trees. +Then, when there wasn’t another scrap of +cake or teaspoonful of ice cream left, they +gathered up wraps and hats and started for +home.</p> +<p>“I know one thing,” said sleepy Mary +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142' name='page_142'></a>142</span> +Jane as they waited for the bus that was +to take them to their train. “I know +there’re a lot more animal folks in the world +than I thought for—oh, a lot more! And I +think I’d better come again to see them all.”</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<a name='A_DAY_IN_THE_PARKS' id='A_DAY_IN_THE_PARKS'></a> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143' name='page_143'></a>143</span> +<h2>A DAY IN THE PARKS</h2> +</div> + +<p>A whole long vacation begun! Alice +home all day and plenty of time for +walks and playing together! It seemed almost +too good to be true. For although +Alice was several years older than her sister +Mary Jane, the two girls had always had +very happy times playing together and they +had missed each other very much during +school days. Now that the Holden family +was away, for they went off, bag and baggage, +to their country home up in Wisconsin +the very day school closed, the two girls had +no one near by to play with, so more than +ever before they needed and enjoyed each +other’s company. Frances Westland had +gone back to the country and the Merrill +girls had not made friends with anyone who +lived near enough to make a convenient +playmate.</p> +<p>They didn’t do as some girls and boys do +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144' name='page_144'></a>144</span> +in vacation, get up late in the morning. +No, they thought it was more fun to get up +promptly and have breakfast with Dadah +and then, when the afternoon got hot, as +often happened, they took a nice long rest +and dressed fresh and clean for dinner. On +many a day Mrs. Merrill packed a basket of +dinner and they met Mr. Merrill over by the +park, had their dinner near one of the small +lagoons or close to the big lake. After dinner +they played ball or tennis—Alice was +learning to be very good at tennis.</p> +<p>“I wish there were swans in our park,” +said Mary Jane as she sat on the edge of +the lagoon and watched the row boats and +the electric launches gliding about on the +water. “I liked those swans at Lincoln +Park.”</p> +<p>“I was just thinking to-day,” said Mr. +Merrill, “we haven’t seen all the parks and +I promised you, that you should see them—all +the big ones anyway. I wonder when +we could go, mother?”</p> +<p>“I wonder <i>how</i> we could go,” said Mrs. +Merrill, “the parks are so far apart that a +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145' name='page_145'></a>145</span> +journey through them all would be a hopeless +task, seems to me.”</p> +<p>“Depends on how you do it,” laughed Mr. +Merrill. “I’ll tell you what I thought. +I’ll take the whole day away from the office +so as to go along. We’ll start fairly early +and take the elevated out to Garfield Park—you +know we promised the girls a trip on +the elevated and we’ve always taken the +train! We’ll see that park well, you know +it has gardens and greenhouses and lakes, +and then we’ll get a taxi and go to two or +three other parks and ride home.”</p> +<p>The girls thought that was a wonderful +plan and they wanted to set the day for that +very same week. So Thursday was decided +upon.</p> +<p>“Now there’s one thing besides getting a +good lunch ready that I want you folks to +do,” said Mr. Merrill as they picked up their +baskets and balls ready to go home, “I want +you to get out that map of Chicago we had +on the train the day we came up here and +find just where Garfield Park is and how we +get there and how many interesting sights +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146' name='page_146'></a>146</span> +like rivers and parks and boulevards we pass +on the way.” And of course the girls +promised that they would find the map and +get all that information first thing in the +morning.</p> +<p>Riding on the elevated proved to be great +fun. Mary Jane was afraid for a few minutes +she wasn’t going to like it—the stairs +were so very high up with holes in each step +to see down to the ground; and the train +dashed to the platform with such a roar and +bustle and people crowded on and jerk! the +train rushed off. But when she settled +down in the seat, comfortingly near her +mother, and looked out over the roofs of +houses and stores, and down long streets, +one after another, she found she wasn’t a bit +afraid and that she liked it very much. +She liked watching for children on folks’ +back porches. Some played on the porch +and some played in the dining-room windows—it +was easy to tell which were the +dining-room windows because always there +were three big windows and always she could +look right through the curtains and see the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147' name='page_147'></a>147</span> +big table in the middle of the room. The +only trouble with watching folks from an +elevated was that the train dashed by so +quickly she couldn’t any more than see, till—flash, +flash, and they were gone and there +was another street and another set of back +stairs and some different children playing. +It really was awfully queer.</p> +<p>Pretty soon they reached the big down +town and there they got off their train, +climbed over a big bridge to another elevated +train and away they went whizzing +again. It certainly was a queer way to +travel, Mary Jane thought.</p> +<p>But finally father announced that they +had come to Garfield Park, so they got off, +walked down the stairs to a park that looked +so much like their own park that Mary Jane +had to rub her eyes and look twice to make +sure she wasn’t dreaming. Here were the +same winding driveways, beautiful trees +and small lakes.</p> +<p>“Did we come back to our Park?” she +asked in surprise.</p> +<p>“Oh, no,” answered Alice who had run on +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148' name='page_148'></a>148</span> +a little ahead, “look at the big greenhouse +and look back there! Now don’t you see +the swans?”</p> +<p>No, it wasn’t their own neighborhood +park, Mary Jane soon realized that, because +there were many new things to be seen. +The wonderful tropical greenhouse where +palms and bananas and wonderful ferns +such as the girls had seen in Florida were +growing. And then there were beautiful +out of door gardens—Mary Jane liked those +even better than the greenhouse gardens, +wonderful as those were. She seemed to +feel, someway, as though the flowers must +like the out of doors better.</p> +<p>Right in the middle of the many lovely +flower beds in the out of doors gardens, there +was a lily pool in which grew water lilies of +all colors and sorts. Mary Jane had never +seen water lilies before and she thought them +very lovely—and rather queer too, if the +truth must be told. She decided she would +stay right there a while and let Alice and +her father explore the rest of the gardens—they +wanted to know names of flowers and +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149' name='page_149'></a>149</span> +names didn’t seem a bit interesting to the +little girl.</p> +<p>Just after she had decided to stay there +and play, she spied a boy of about her age +who was watching the lilies too.</p> +<p>“Can you walk all the way around the +edge?” he asked her.</p> +<p>“Edge of what?” asked Mary Jane.</p> +<p>“The edge of the pool,” he replied, +“see,” and he put his foot up on the stone +rim of the pool, “all the way around on +this.”</p> +<p>“Can you?” asked Mary Jane. She +wanted to see what he would say before she +answered his question.</p> +<p>“Sure!” he replied, “it’s just as easy! +Only girls are ’fraidies.”</p> +<p>“I guess I’m not,” declared Mary Jane +firmly, “watch!” She stepped up on the +stone rim—it was about eight inches wide—and +walked boldly along toward the middle +of the long side of the pool.</p> +<p>“You can, can’t you,” said the boy admiringly.</p> +<p>“Just as easy,” replied Mary Jane, for +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150' name='page_150'></a>150</span> +when she found she could do what he had +asked she was anxious to have it appear to +be as easy for her as for him.</p> +<p>“Come on,” the boy suggested, “let’s +race!”</p> +<p>“Race?” asked Mary Jane, “how?”</p> +<p>“’Round the pool. You start this way, +and I’ll start that way and the one that gets +around home first beats.”</p> +<p>“All right,” agreed Mary Jane, “let’s.”</p> +<p>Now before Mary Jane saw the boy by the +pool, Mrs. Merrill spied some very beautiful +grasses over at one side of the gardens; +the very sort of grasses, she decided, +that Mary Jane’s grandmother would like to +use in her flower beds by the driveways. +And of course she wanted to find out the +names of the grasses so she could write to +grandmother about them. Seeing that +Mary Jane was so absorbed in the pool and +the lilies, she slipped over to look at the +name sign which she knew would be stuck +right by the roots. She jotted the name +down in her note book, looked along at a +few others and—turned back to the pool just +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151' name='page_151'></a>151</span> +in time to see her small daughter and a +strange boy run racingly along the rim of +the pool straight at each other.</p> +<p>“Mary Jane! Mary Jane!” she called, +“jump down onto the ground! Jump +down!”</p> +<p>Whether Mary Jane heard her and became +confused, or whether the boy’s bumping +into her made her lose her balance, nobody +ever quite found out. But anyway, +right before Mrs. Merrill’s astonished eyes, +Mary Jane Merrill tumbled ’kplump—into +the lily pool!</p> +<p>Fortunately the lily pool wasn’t very deep +so Mary Jane didn’t fall far. But she did +hit the bottom pretty hard; so hard that +when she bobbed up, her head out of water +and her feet on the bottom, she hardly knew +what had happened to her.</p> +<p>Mrs. Merrill screamed and Mr. Merrill, +Alice, three policemen and about twenty +other people came running to see what had +happened. It wasn’t necessary for anybody +to jump in and make a triumphant rescue for +Mary Jane was so close to shore that Mrs. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152' name='page_152'></a>152</span> +Merrill had taken firm hold of her hand and +pulled her out just as all the folks got there. +So there was nothing for them to do but to +stare and to ask questions.</p> +<p>“How did she do it?” asked the first +policeman.</p> +<p>“Hurt you any?” asked the second.</p> +<p>“You and your mother come with me,” +said the third (and Mary Jane guessed right +away from his voice that he must have some +little girls of his own), “and I’ll show you +where you can dry your clothes.”</p> +<p>The procession of policemen and onlookers, +led by a very wet and greatly embarrassed +little girl, crossed the gardens, crossed +the street and went into a comfortable big +building. There a kindly matron produced +a big bathrobe in which Mary Jane sat while +her dress was wrung out and dried. And +wasn’t she glad there was a good hot sun so +things could dry quickly!</p> +<p>Finally, when Mary Jane was beginning +to get awfully hungry, mother announced +that the clothes were dry and that she had +pulled and stretched them the best she could +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153' name='page_153'></a>153</span> +in the place of ironing. So Mary Jane +dressed and they went in search of Alice and +her father.</p> +<p> “Well, you certainly do mix up baths with +your picnics,” laughed Mr. Merrill when he +saw them coming. “Remember the time +you fell into Clearwater, Pussy?”</p> +<p>“But it isn’t so bad, really, Dadah,” said +Mary Jane, “and I’m not wet now.”</p> +<p>“So you’re not,” said Mr. Merrill, “but <i>I</i> +am hungry—anybody agree with me?”</p> +<p>They all admitted to being nearly starved, +so they found a pretty, grassy spot close by +the lake on which several beautiful swans +were sunning themselves, and there they +spread out the luncheon they had brought. +At first the girls were so hungry they didn’t +want to do anything but eat. But by the +time they had eaten a plateful of potato +salad and three or four sandwiches, the +swans discovered their lunching place and +came to call. Evidently swans were used +to being treated very nicely by folks who +came to the park for they didn’t seem to have +a trace of fear of strangers. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154' name='page_154'></a>154</span></p> +<p>The girls tossed the crusts of the sandwiches +to the edge of the water and the +swans bent their long necks and picked them +up and ate them, every crust, so daintily +just as though crusts were a diet fit for kings—and +swans. The swans didn’t actually +come out of the water, but they came so close +to the shore that the girls could almost touch +them and they soon got to feeling very well +acquainted.</p> +<p>So it was with some regret that they heard +Mr. Merrill say, “Well, girls, weren’t we +to see some of the other parks too?” And +here it was four o’clock!</p> +<p>The basket was packed—and there wasn’t +a scrap of anything a swan could eat, you +may be sure of that—and they strolled down +to the roadway. In a minute or two Mr. +Merrill hailed a passing taxi and they settled +themselves for a nice long ride.</p> +<p>They didn’t stop at any other park; Mary +Jane was sure no other could be as interesting +as the one where she had had such exciting +experiences and Alice was quite as content +as her father and mother to sit back, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155' name='page_155'></a>155</span> +cool and comfortable, and see the beautiful +flowers and shrubbery slip past them. So +they rode and rode through one park after +another, it seemed, till suddenly Mary Jane +spied something that looked familiar.</p> +<p>“That’s my Midway!” she announced, as +the car turned into the long, broad stretch of +parkway near their own home.</p> +<p>“Sure enough it is!” exclaimed Mr. Merrill +in pretended amazement, “we’ll have to +turn around and go back!”</p> +<p>“No we won’t,” said Mary Jane, “we’ll +go home.”</p> +<p>So they went on home, just in time to cook +a good warm dinner and to talk over and +over again the many things they had seen in +the parks.</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<a name='VISITORS_AND_A_BOAT_RIDE' id='VISITORS_AND_A_BOAT_RIDE'></a> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156' name='page_156'></a>156</span> +<h2>VISITORS—AND A BOAT RIDE</h2> +</div> + +<p>One day, not so very long after the +trip through the parks, the bell at the +Merrills’ front door pealed long and hard. +Mary Jane, whose job was answering the +door, ran to the little house ’phone, and +heard a loud voice shout, “Special for Merrill!”</p> +<p>“What’s he mean, mother?” she asked, in +a puzzled voice.</p> +<p>“Better press the buzzer and let him in, +dear,” replied Mrs. Merrill, “if he has the +name right he must have something for us.”</p> +<p>So Mary Jane pressed the downstairs buzzer +and then opened the front door. Yes, +it was for them—a special delivery letter +for Mrs. Merrill. Mary Jane and Alice +were much excited and could hardly wait +till the messenger’s book was signed and the +letter was opened.</p> +<p>“It’s from grandma,” said Mrs. Merrill as +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157' name='page_157'></a>157</span> +she glanced at the writing, “and listen! +This is what she says:</p> +<p>“‘Grandpa finds quite unexpectedly that +he must come to Chicago on business and he +says that if it’s convenient to you folks I +can come along and we’ll stay two or three +days for a visit. Please wire reply because +we must start Wednesday evening.’”</p> +<p>“And it’s ten o’clock Wednesday morning +now!” exclaimed Mrs. Merrill. She +hurried to the telephone, called Mr. Merrill +so he could send a telegram at once, then she +and the two girls went right to work making +ready for the guests.</p> +<p>It was decided that Alice and Mary Jane +should sleep on couches and give up their +room to the visitors. “Now’s when I wish +we had our nice guest room,” said Mrs. Merrill, +“but then, grandma knows that folks +who live in Chicago flats don’t keep guest +rooms for infrequent visitors.” For her +part, Mary Jane thought sleeping on a couch +would be great fun—so grown up and different +from every day. She was to have the +dining-room couch and Alice was to sleep in +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158' name='page_158'></a>158</span> +the living-room. When all plans were +made, bedding sorted out and laid ready for +making up the beds fresh first thing in the +morning, Mrs. Merrill began planning the +meals. If the visitors were to stay only a +short time she wanted to have as much baking +and marketing as possible done beforehand, +so every minute could be spent in fun and +visiting. Alice and Mary Jane, who had +been marketing so much with their mother of +late that they really could be trusted, took a +long list up to the grocery and Mrs. Merrill +set to work baking coffeecake and bread and +cookies. Um-m! It wasn’t an hour till +that tiny kitchen began to smell so good that +the girls could hardly be coaxed away. +Mrs. Merrill let them help in a good many +ways. Mary Jane put the sugar and nuts +on the tops of the cookies after her mother +put them in the pan and Alice, who was getting +to be a really good cook, tended to the +baking. She put the big pans in, and +watched the baking, and took them out when +every cookie was evenly browned. Then, +after she took a pan out of the oven, she +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159' name='page_159'></a>159</span> +gently lifted the hot cookies out from the +baking pan onto a wire rack where they +could cool without losing their pretty +shapes. When the cookies were cool, it was +Mary Jane’s turn again. She put them all +in the tin cookie box, counting them and +laying them neatly between layers of paraffin +paper so they would keep fresh even in +the hot weather.</p> +<p>It was a rule that only perfect cookies +should be packed away—scraps never went +into the tin box. But for some reason or +other, the girls never seemed to mind the job +of eating the broken ones! In fact Mary +Jane often asked Alice <i>not</i> to be so careful—to +please break a few so there would be +plenty to eat right then and there.</p> +<p>The day went by so quickly that it was +bed time before the girls realized it and then, +after about forty winks, it was morning—the +morning when grandma and grandpa +were coming.</p> +<p>Everybody was up early, Alice and Mary +Jane made up the beds fresh and neat, +mother cooked a good breakfast and Dadah +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160' name='page_160'></a>160</span> +went to the train, at a near-by suburban +station, to meet the travelers. It was a +jolly party that sat around the breakfast +table—you may be sure of that!</p> +<p>“Now then,” said Mr. Merrill, when the +breakfast was eaten up and news of the farm +had been told, “I’ll have to go to work and I +suppose grandpa has to do his business to-day, +so we’ll leave you folks to yourselves. +Then to-morrow, if grandpa is through his +business, we can plan some fun.”</p> +<p>So the two business folks went down town +and grandma was left to enjoy life at home. +The girls were glad she could stay.</p> +<p>“Let’s take grandma over to the lake,” +suggested Alice, “I know you’d love riding +in one of those little electric launches, +grandmother.”</p> +<p>“Let’s take some lunch and not come home +till she’s seen everything in Chicago,” said +Mary Jane in a rush of hospitality.</p> +<p>“Dear me! Child!” exclaimed grandma +in dismay, “don’t you know there’s another +day coming!”</p> +<p>Mary Jane agreed to leave a few sights +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161' name='page_161'></a>161</span> +for the next day, but she didn’t want to lose +any time getting off. Fortunately the +morning work didn’t take but a tiny bit of +time, and as grandma, who didn’t care much +for “stuffy sleepers,” was very glad to get +out into the fresh air, they very soon were +on their way to the park.</p> +<p>The girls felt quite at home in the neighborhood +and in the park by this time, and +they thought it was great fun to show the +sights to somebody else—somebody who +didn’t know all about Chicago. Grandma +loved the beautiful Midway, the charming +lagoons and she enjoyed her ride on the little +launch fully as much as the girls had +thought she would.</p> +<p>“But don’t you have any <i>big</i> boats?” she +asked, “great big ones with two decks and +lots of passengers and all that? I’d like +to ride on a big boat too.”</p> +<p>“Then that’s exactly what we’ll do to-morrow, +mother,” said Mrs. Merrill. +“There is a big boat that runs from Jackson +Park up to the municipal pier. We’ll go on +it to-morrow and we’ll get our lunch up +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162' name='page_162'></a>162</span> +town and then we’ll come back home on the +boat.”</p> +<p>And that’s exactly what they did.</p> +<p>When Mr. Merrill heard that grandma +wanted a ride on a big boat, the plans for the +next day were as good as made. He thought +the idea of going to town on the boat and +then getting lunch and coming home was a +fine one and he only made one change in +the plan.</p> +<p>“Instead of going to a store, in the loop, +let’s take one of the little launches that run +from the Municipal pier to Lincoln Park +and go up there for our lunch so grandma can +see your favorite swans and perhaps, if we +want to stay that long, see the seals get their +four o’clock tea.” But dear me, he little +guessed what would happen as his nice-sounding +plan worked out!</p> +<p>So the next morning, the Merrills all +had a nice, leisurely, visity breakfast, then +a walk through the park, and never did the +park look lovelier than on the sunny summer +morning, and then, boarding the boat +that rocked at the pier on the big lake, they +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163' name='page_163'></a>163</span> +found comfortable seats on the shady side +and prepared for a pleasant ride.</p> +<p>Mary Jane chose to sit on the side nearest +the pier because she loved to look down +from the upper deck and watch the people +boarding the boat. She had never ridden +on boats very much, only when she went to +Florida, and this boat they were now aboard +seemed very different from the big, awkward, +flat bottomed boat they took their +river trip on through Florida jungles.</p> +<p>“You don’t need to sit by me if you want +to talk to mother,” she said to her father.</p> +<p>“Humph!” said her father teasingly, +“how do I know you’re not going to tumble +overboard! You know you have a way of +mixing up picnics and water, Mary Jane, so +I don’t think I’ll take any chances.” But +when Mary Jane promised that she would +sit very still and not walk around a step and +not lean over the edge, he went to speak to +grandpa a few minutes. And while he was +gone, Mary Jane leaned up against the side +of the boat and watched the folks down on +the pier. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164' name='page_164'></a>164</span></p> +<p>She thought it must surely be about time +for the boat to start because there was hurrying +on the pier, and men were busy taking +ropes off of the big wooden posts along the +side nearest the water. While she was +watching, a woman came along the dock toward +the boat and with her were two little +children, a girl about Mary Jane’s own age +and a little boy some two years younger. +Just as they reached the gang plank, ready +to step onto the boat, the little boy began to +cry.</p> +<p>“I left my boat! I left my boat! I left +my boat!” he cried. Mary Jane could hear +him very plainly even though she sat so far +up above him.</p> +<p>She couldn’t hear what the mother said, +but evidently she promised to get the missing +boat for him, because she left both children +by the side of the gang plank, and +hurrying as fast as possible she ran back toward +the shore. And right at that minute, +the big bell overhead rang three times and +the engine aboard the boat began to throb—it +was time to go. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165' name='page_165'></a>165</span></p> +<p>The men on the dock noticed the two children +and one said to the little girl, “Were +you going?” and she nodded yes. So he +picked up the boy and hurried the two children +aboard just as the gang plank was +hauled in and the boat made away from the +pier.</p> +<p>Mary Jane was so thrilled and excited she +could hardly sit still. She tried to call her +father but he was on the other side of the +boat and she had promised to sit still—perfectly +still—till he came back. What in +the world was a little girl to do? And back +on the shore that was so rapidly getting farther +and farther way, Mary Jane could see +the mother of the children, running frantically +toward the dock which the boat had +left. Surely the captain would see her, +Mary Jane thought. But if he did, he likely +thought she was merely somebody who had +missed the boat and that he had no time for +turning back. And so the boat continued +out into the lake.</p> +<p>Finally after what seemed the <i>longest</i> +time (though it really was hardly more than +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166' name='page_166'></a>166</span> +five minutes), Mr. Merrill came back and +then, such a story as he heard!</p> +<p>“Are you sure, Mary Jane?” he asked, +“certain sure? The men wouldn’t put children +on a boat without grown folks along!”</p> +<p>“But they did, Dadah!” insisted Mary +Jane, “I saw ’em!”</p> +<p>“Then you come with me,” said Mr. Merrill, +“and we’ll see if we can find them.”</p> +<p>So Mr. Merrill and Mary Jane went +down the stairs, and that took some time +because folks were coming and going and +getting settled for the trip, and there, huddled +close together and crying as hard as +they could cry, were the two little waifs!</p> +<p>Mary Jane with real motherliness began +talking to the little girl; Mr. Merrill picked +up the boy and together the whole party +went in search of the captain. By the time +he was found though, the boat was still farther +on its journey toward the city and the +dock they started from was farther and farther +behind.</p> +<p>“Well, that is a time we were wrong,” admitted +the captain when he had listened to +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167' name='page_167'></a>167</span> +all Mary Jane had to say and talked with +the man who had put the children aboard. +“But even though we were wrong, we can’t +go back now. We’ll have to make the children +comfortable and take them back to their +mother on the return trip.”</p> +<p>So Mr. Merrill and Mary Jane went back +to the deck, only this time they took with +them the two little strangers. Mrs. Merrill +was told the story and she and Alice and +Mary Jane, with help from grandma, +grandpa and Mr. Merrill, set themselves to +the task of making the little children happy. +At first it was hard work, because they cried +all the time for their mother. But erelong +they understood the friendliness around +them and they stopped crying and began to +have a good time. Grandpa discovered +some crackerjack and everybody knows what +a help <i>that</i> is; Mrs. Merrill told some funny +stories and Mr. Merrill took them all over +the boat—to see the great engine and everything. +Then there were the sights to watch +from the deck and the big buildings to count +and the boats they passed to watch—oh, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168' name='page_168'></a>168</span> +there surely was a lot to do that made that +trip interesting and so very short.</p> +<p>As the boat pulled up near the down town +pier, the Merrills saw a taxi dash up near +where the boat was to land: saw a woman +get out and, followed by a policeman, hurry +up to the side where the boat would pull +in.</p> +<p>“Look!” exclaimed Mary Jane excitedly. +“Look!”</p> +<p>The little girl, whose name was Ann, +looked along with the others, and then she +gave a happy cry.</p> +<p>“Mother!” she shouted, so loudly that +her mother, waiting on the pier could hear +and was so very relieved!</p> +<p>When the boat pulled into the dock, the +captain was the first one to step off; he met +the mother and the officer and brought them +aboard at once. Mary Jane was called upon +to explain all that she had seen and the officer, +as well as the mother, was satisfied that +the whole thing was an accident and not an +attempt to steal the children.</p> +<p>“But how did you get up here so quickly?” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169' name='page_169'></a>169</span> +asked Mary Jane, when the first excitement +was over.</p> +<p>“My dear child!” laughed Ann’s mother, +“a person can do a lot when she thinks something +is happening to her children! I took +a passing taxi, dashed to a police station +and then on up here. And nothing has happened +at all—except you nice people have +given my little folks a very pleasant trip. +Next time, Bobby,” she added, “we’ll leave +your toy boat or we’ll all go together to find +it. We won’t take any chances of losing +each other!”</p> +<p>“Well,” laughed Mr. Merrill when the +mother and children and officer and captain +had all gone on about their own business, +“what was it we were going to do to-day?”</p> +<p>Everybody laughed at that! They had +been so excited that they had forgotten, yes, +actually forgotten, that this was a sight-seeing +trip for grandma and grandpa. But +once they remembered, they knew just what +to do. They climbed aboard a waiting +launch, rode up to Lincoln Park, had a wonderful +dinner and fun all the rest of the day. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170' name='page_170'></a>170</span></p> +<p>“I don’t see,” remarked grandma, as they +neared home, late that evening, “how you +girls are ever going to settle down to school +again! Did you know that school was only +a few weeks away? Vacation will be over +before you know it!”</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<a name='SCHOOL_BEGINS' id='SCHOOL_BEGINS'></a> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171' name='page_171'></a>171</span> +<h2>SCHOOL BEGINS</h2> +</div> + +<p>When grandma suggested that it +was nearly time for school to begin, +on that day of the boat ride, she guessed +better than the girls suspected. At the +time they laughed and thought she was joking, +but, after she and grandpa had gone +home, they got out a calendar and counted +up and there, to be sure, only one and one-half +weeks of vacation were left.</p> +<p>“I didn’t realize school began so early,” +exclaimed Mrs. Merrill in dismay.</p> +<p>“I thought summer was a long time!” +cried Alice, “but it isn’t any time at all!”</p> +<p>“Goody! Goody! Goody!” Mary Jane +said happily, “then I get to start to school +like a big girl.”</p> +<p>It was no wonder Mary Jane was happy, +for she remembered that the plan was for +her to start in the really truly school, not the +kindergarten where she had gone in her other +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172' name='page_172'></a>172</span> +home, and any little girl likes to start to +school like her big sister.</p> +<p>When the day finally came, Alice was as +much excited as Mary Jane herself. For +although the summer had been so pleasant +she almost hated to see it end—the free days +with plenty of time for visits with mother +and picnics and marketing and all—still, +school was pleasant too and any little girl +who does nice work and tries to learn, will +make good friends and have happy days, just +as Alice always had had.</p> +<p>Mary Jane had a hard time deciding +which dress to wear. She wanted to look +very grown up, so that teacher would realize +she was a big girl, so she finally decided +upon a dark blue sailor suit. The one that +had the red insignia on the sleeve and that +looked just like a big girl’s dress. With a +clean ’kerchief peeking out of her pocket +and a smashing big red bow on the top of her +brown head, she looked very nice.</p> +<p>Alice and Mary Jane waked up that +morning the very minute they were called +for they wanted to help mother so she could +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173' name='page_173'></a>173</span> +go over to school with them. And with all +that good help of course they were off on +time. Alice was glad to have company going +to school for Frances wasn’t home yet +and wouldn’t be there for a couple of weeks.</p> +<p>Mary Jane’s heart went thump, thump as +she and her mother went in at the teachers’ +gate, and up the stairs and into the principal’s +office. And thump, thump some more +when she saw the whole roomful of strange +boys and girls and thump, thump some more +when her turn came and she was sent (fortunately +with her mother along) to the first +grade room—number 104. The room was +full of children, hundreds, Mary Jane +thought there must be, though the teacher +told Mrs. Merrill there were about forty-five. +And if her heart went thump, thump +before, it certainly went thump, thump, +<i>thump</i> when the teacher, smiling at her so +kindly, gave her a seat in the—front-row—such +a nice seat for her very own! and +she sat down and tried to look as though she +had been used to going to school all her +whole life. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174' name='page_174'></a>174</span></p> +<p>For a minute she couldn’t look around +or anything, she felt so queer. Then she +glanced at the next seat and there, sitting +right beside her, was—whom do you suppose? +Ann! The same pretty little Ann +who had been lost on the boat. Immediately +Mary Jane forgot all about being +afraid and thumping hearts and strangeness +and everything and began to like school. +The two little girls had much to say about +what they would do at recess and where did +they live and everything, so the time before +school began passed very quickly.</p> +<p>Suddenly, in the midst of their talk, a +bell rang, “GONG-GONG!” Two loud +tones close together that way, and school +began. Mary Jane Merrill was in a really +truly school like the big girl she was getting +to be.</p> +<p>Ann came home with Mary Jane that first +afternoon and Mrs. Merrill discovered that +her name was Ann Ellis and that she lived +two blocks from their own home and that +the two little girls would no doubt find it +very easy to be friends. They began having +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175' name='page_175'></a>175</span> +a good time that very afternoon and they +planned still better times when Betty would +be back and they could all play together. +Now wasn’t that fine!</p> +<p>Mary Jane found that she liked school +every bit as much as she had thought she +would. She liked her teacher, a charming +Miss Treavor, and she liked her studies. +But most of all she liked the fun she had on +the playground. In the big cities, like Chicago, +where lots of girls and boys have no +yards, the school yards are the only places +were children can play. So, to make everything +safe and orderly, the school folks have +a playground teacher stay at school all the +day, to help in the games and to see that +every one has a happy time. The playground +teacher at Mary Jane’s school liked +little girls very much and she knew many +good games for them to play. So in addition +to “London Bridge” and “Drop the +Handkerchief” and “Tag” that all children +play, Mary Jane learned “Roman Soldiers” +and “Ghost Walk” and “Three times +Three.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176' name='page_176'></a>176</span></p> +<p>Of the new ones, Mary Jane liked “Ghost +Walk” the best. To play it, the girls and +boys made a big circle, then they selected +some one to be “Ghost.” This person stood +in the middle of the circle and everybody +shut eyes tight, very tight. Then the +Ghost, while every one kept very quiet, tried +to tip-toe to the edge of the circle, slip out +between two folks and get away without being +caught. That may sound easy, but +played in a yard full of romping boys and +girls, it is not really as easy as it might seem +and it was lots of fun, because often folks +would think the “Ghost” was near them and +would try to grab—and the joke was on them +because all the while, maybe, the “ghost” +was in another part of the ring. And +whenever folks thought they caught the +“Ghost” and <i>didn’t</i>, then every one opened +their eyes, the person who had made the mistake +had to get out of the circle and the +game began again. But if the “Ghost” +really did get out of the circle without being +caught, then the “Ghost” could hide +anywhere in the yard and the game became +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177' name='page_177'></a>177</span> +an old-fashioned hide-and-seek with everybody +hunting one lucky person.</p> +<p>One day, when Mary Jane was “Ghost,” +she was determined she would get out of +that circle without getting caught. She +had tried it many a time before and failed; +this time she was going to do it. She tiptoed, +oh, so softly over the loose gravel to +the edge of the circle. Then noiselessly she +dropped down on hands and knees and, without +a thought for her dress, crawled slowly +between Ann and the girl next to her. She +could hardly keep from giggling, it was so +funny to be so close she almost bumped them +and yet not to be discovered. Now she was +right between them, now she was almost +outside—now she was free and away she +dashed to the spot she had long ago picked +out as a hiding place for just such a time as +this.</p> +<p>The folks in the circle waited—but nobody +was caught, so they shouted, “Ghost +Walk?” and when the “ghost” didn’t answer +they opened their eyes and—no Mary +Jane was there! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178' name='page_178'></a>178</span></p> +<p>“I’ll get her,” shouted Ann, “I’ll find +her! I’ll bet she got out on your side of +the circle, Janny, she never could have +passed <i>me</i>!”</p> +<p>“I’ll find her myself,” answered Janny, +“but she never passed by me, she didn’t!”</p> +<p>So they hunted, up and down the yard, +around the bushes, by the doorway, everywhere +they could think of. But no sign of +Mary Jane did they discover. They hunted +and they hunted till the gong sounded and +they had to go into school again. But not +a sign of any Mary Jane did they find. +Was Mary Jane lost? Miss Treavor must +be told so everybody could hunt, for something +surely must have happened to a little +girl who didn’t answer the recess bell when +it rang for school to begin.</p> +<p>Now it happened that some days before, +when Mary Jane had first learned to play +“Ghost walk” she hunted around the yard +for a good place to hide—in case she ever +succeeded in getting out of the circle so she +<i>could</i> hide. She didn’t want to hide among +the bushes because that was the first place +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179' name='page_179'></a>179</span> +the children looked; she didn’t want to hide +in the doorway because that was against +rules and if a child was discovered there by +a teacher, the child had to go straight upstairs +and stay the rest of recess. And there +didn’t seem to be any other place. But +there was another hiding place—and Mary +Jane found it. Around the corner of the +building, on the side nearest the furnace entrance, +there was a jog in the brick wall. +And in front of the little niche made by this +jog, boards left by some carpenters had been +carelessly tossed.</p> +<p>“I could climb over the boards,” Mary +Jane had thought, “and hide down behind +and nobody’d ever find me—ever.”</p> +<p>So when her time came, and she really did +get out of the circle without being caught, +she didn’t have to stop and hunt a hiding +place; she knew exactly where she wanted +to go.</p> +<p>But there was one thing Mary Jane hadn’t +figured on; one thing she didn’t even think +of as she crouched down behind her boards +while the children hunted for her, hither and +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180' name='page_180'></a>180</span> +yon over the school yard. She hadn’t +thought that way off, ’round the corner and +behind boards that way, she couldn’t—<i>hear</i>. +The sounds of playing and romping seemed +so quiet, so quiet that they were hardly noticeable. +She didn’t hear the bell and she +didn’t even notice the sudden quiet when the +children fell in line to march upstairs. She +sat there, huddled in a snug little heap, and +she laughed to herself about the joke she was +playing on her mates.</p> +<p>To be sure the time <i>did</i> seem pretty long +and she thought they were very stupid—but +then—she never suspected that recess +was over and—</p> +<p>Till suddenly there descended upon her +a cloud of chalk dust! It powdered her +face and dress and shoes and made her forget +all about being quiet and jump up with +a lively scream of fright.</p> +<p>Overhead she heard Miss Treavor’s voice, +exclaiming, “Whatever in the world!” +And then, before she could quite get the dust +out of her eyes and understand what had +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181' name='page_181'></a>181</span> +happened, Miss Treavor and two other +teachers who had heard the scream, stood before +her and the whole story came out. +Miss Treavor tried not to laugh when Mary +Jane told her she was hiding but she couldn’t +help it. Mary Jane looked so be-powdered +and forlorn. But Mary Jane didn’t mind +the laughing because at the same time, Miss +Treavor lifted her out from behind the +boards and set her down in the cheerful sunlight.</p> +<p>“That <i>was</i> a good place to hide,” the +teacher admitted, “and you were a clever +little girl to think of it. But I believe, +dear,” she added kindly, “that next time +you’d better hide some place where you can +hear the bell, even though you <i>are</i> more +likely to get caught.”</p> +<p>And Mary Jane promised that she would +never, never hide in such a very good place +again.</p> +<p>Mary Jane hated to go back into the +school room all mussed and tumbled as she +was, so Miss Treavor sent for Alice and the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182' name='page_182'></a>182</span> +two little girls skipped home for a fresh dress +and clean ribbons so Mary Jane could enjoy +the classes.</p> +<p>When, a half an hour later, she came back, +with the dark blue dress changed to a plaid +gingham and the red bow changed to green, +the children wanted to know where she had +been and what had happened. But Miss +Treavor wouldn’t tell. And she had made +Mary Jane promise not to tell, because that +place was <i>such</i> a good hiding place that the +teachers didn’t want other folks finding it +and hiding there to make trouble too.</p> +<p>But all of Mary Jane’s school fun wasn’t +from trouble. That was just one day. +Most of the time, she played without +anything happening just as the other folks +did. And all the time she made more +friends and had a better time, till, when +Betty came back from the country, she knew +most everybody in her room.</p> +<p>She liked school so very much that the +days slipped by one after another so fast a +person could hardly count them—one day +and another day and another day—just that +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183' name='page_183'></a>183</span> +way. Till one Monday morning when they +went to school, Miss Treavor announced, +“Do you boys and girls know what we are +going to do to-day? We’re going to start +making Christmas presents. Because +Christmas is only <i>three weeks away</i>!”</p> +<p>“Christmas!” thought Mary Jane, with a +thrill of joy, “Christmas! Why, they <i>do</i> +have Christmas in Chicago! I wonder what +I’ll get and what I’ll do!”</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<a name='CHRISTMAS_IN_CHICAGO' id='CHRISTMAS_IN_CHICAGO'></a> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184' name='page_184'></a>184</span> +<h2>CHRISTMAS IN CHICAGO</h2> +</div> + +<p>Christmas in Chicago! When +Mary Jane heard those words she had +her first real pang of homesickness for the +home she had left when they moved to Chicago. +Would any Christmas anywhere ever +be so beautiful as the Christmas in that dear +home? She remembered the pine trees in +the yard, loaded down with their wealth of +snow: the glowing fire on the hearth with its +Christmas-y smell from the pine cones that +were saved through the year for the Christmas +Day fire; the tree in the angle near the +fireplace where the afternoon sun touched +it into a blaze of glory; the party for the +poor children that had been such fun to plan +for—would anything in Chicago ever be +half the fun of Christmas in the old home? +But Mary Jane was soon to discover that +Christmas doesn’t need certain houses or +fires or trees to make it perfect; that +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185' name='page_185'></a>185</span> +Christmas is made in folks’ hearts and that +wherever there is a Christmas heart, there +will be a happy day—in village or city, the +place makes no difference.</p> +<p>When she went home from school that +afternoon and announced that Miss Treavor +said Christmas was so very near, she found +that mother wasn’t even a little surprised.</p> +<p>“Why to be sure Christmas is coming,” +laughed Mrs. Merrill, “and here I’ve been +waiting and waiting and <i>waiting</i> for you to +talk about it till, actually, I thought I’d had +to begin myself, if you didn’t wake up pretty +soon.” And then everybody began to talk +at once.</p> +<p>“Do they have trees in Chicago?” asked +Alice.</p> +<p>“Are there any poor folks who would like +parties?” asked Mary Jane.</p> +<p>“Is anybody coming to see us?” demanded +Mary Jane.</p> +<p>“Here! Here! Here!” exclaimed Mr. +Merrill, “one at a time, ladies, one at a +time! If you doubt that there will be trees +in Chicago, you should see what I saw this +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186' name='page_186'></a>186</span> +morning as I went down to work. A train +load of Christmas trees—yes, sir!” (for he +noticed the girls could hardly believe him) +“a whole train load of trees. And I see by +the paper this evening that a boat load has +arrived, too, so there will be no shortage of +trees.”</p> +<p>“Then we can have one,” said Mary Jane, +with a satisfied sigh.</p> +<p>“And let’s put it in front of this foolish +little gas log,” suggested Alice, “then +we won’t think about a real fireplace.”</p> +<p>“And there are plenty of poor folks,” said +Mrs. Merrill, going back to Mary Jane’s +question, “only they will not be so easy to +get together, as back at home. How would +you like to take a Christmas party to some +family instead of having a party at home as +we did last year?”</p> +<p>The girls hardly knew what to say about +that new idea so Mrs. Merrill explained further. +“I telephoned to the Associated +Charities this very day,” she said, “and they +gave me the names of a fatherless family +in which there are two girls about your ages, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187' name='page_187'></a>187</span> +and one boy. I thought we could plan a +fine Christmas for them and then, on Christmas +morning, take it over and surprise +them.”</p> +<p>“Oh, let’s do that, mother,” said Mary +Jane happily, “then we’d be like a real Santa +Claus only we’d be a morning Santa. May +we do it, surely?”</p> +<p>“I thought you’d like the idea,” said Mrs. +Merrill, “so I got lists from the association +as to just what was most needed. Alice, if +you’ll get a pencil and paper, we’ll figure +it all out.”</p> +<p>Making plans was the girls’ favorite way +of spending an evening so they whisked the +cover off the dining table, pulled up chairs +for four and went to work list-making.</p> +<p>“Tom,” began Mrs. Merrill, consulting +her list, “hasn’t a bit of warm clothing.”</p> +<p>“Why couldn’t I knit him a muffler and +some mittens?” asked Mary Jane. “I remember +how and I haven’t knitted anything +since the war stopped.”</p> +<p>“Fine!” approved Mrs. Merrill, “I think +I have enough yarn for the mittens and if +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188' name='page_188'></a>188</span> +you’ll get it out of the drawer there we can +wind it while we talk and it will be all ready +for you to set up at once. You’ll have to +work hard and fast if you want to make a +muffler and a pair of mittens before Christmas.”</p> +<p>“Now then,” she continued, looking at the +list, “they have very few bed covers and the +children get so cold at night.”</p> +<p>“Why couldn’t you make some covers, +mother?” suggested Alice, “and let me make +them each some flannelette pajamas like we +wear—you know how toasting warm they +are. And I have the pattern and I know I +could make them all myself.”</p> +<p>“That’s a beautiful idea,” approved Mrs. +Merrill, “and I hadn’t even thought of such +a thing. When we get through planning, +dear, you can get out your pattern and see +how much material you’ll need. Then, +when I go up town to-morrow, I’ll get it for +you.”</p> +<p>“And they need stockings,” she continued, +“and shoes—”</p> +<p>“Could any of ’em wear my good shoes +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189' name='page_189'></a>189</span> +that are too little?” asked Mary Jane eagerly. +She had been greatly distressed about +those “best” shoes that were so good, and +yet were hopelessly outgrown.</p> +<p>“I think they’ll be exactly right,” said +Mrs. Merrill. “In fact I picked out this +particular family because I was sure we +could find nice things for them among you +girls’ outgrown things and that, put with +what we buy new, would make all the bigger +Christmas for them.</p> +<p>“And about toys,” she continued with the +list, “the girls have never had a doll—”</p> +<p>“Never had—” began Mary Jane but she +couldn’t quite get the words out. Never +had a doll. Never had a Marie Georgiannamore +to love and care for and take riding +in a beautiful cart. Never had—no, +she couldn’t quite imagine it.</p> +<p>After that there was no more reading off +a list. Mary Jane and Alice began making +a list of their own, of what those children +were to have for Christmas.</p> +<p>“But,” objected Mrs. Merrill, “you girls +forget that things cost money—a lot of +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190' name='page_190'></a>190</span> +money these days. And you can’t possibly +buy all those things and get any Christmas +of your own too.”</p> +<p>“Humph!” grunted Mary Jane as she +squeezed her face up tight in an effort to +write, “then we won’t have one of our own! +Haven’t we got Marie Georgiannamore and +a cart and a nice house and warm clothes—and—everything?”</p> +<p>That settled it. There would be a tree +and dinner and a lot of fun in the Merrill +house on Christmas Day, but the presents +were to go to their adopted family to make +<i>their</i> Christmas one never to be forgotten.</p> +<p>If you have ever planned a Christmas for +somebody who never, in all their lives had +one, you will know something about the fun +that Mary Jane and Alice had in the time +that was left before Christmas. They were +about the busiest girls in all Chicago! They +hurried home from school and they worked +Saturdays but, actually, as soon as they got +one thing done they thought of something +else they wanted to make or buy and they +had to begin all over again. They made +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191' name='page_191'></a>191</span> +cookies and candies and dressed dolls, one +for each girl, and made a complete set of +covers and pillows and “fixings” for an adorable +doll bed that Mr. Merrill made in the +evenings. Alice had to work pretty hard to +get the pajamas all finished in time for there +was considerable work on each pair; but she +got them finished and she could hardly wait +till Christmas to take them over to their family.</p> +<p>Mary Jane finished the muffler and mittens +though she <i>almost</i> had to knit while she +ate—towards the last—it takes a good many +stitches to make a muffler big enough for an +eight year old boy. The muffler was a deep +crimson and the mittens a warm shade of +gray with three rows of crimson in the wrist +end; Mary Jane had picked colors she was +sure Tom would like.</p> +<p>At last the twenty-fourth of December +came around—cold and snowy and just the +kind of a day for making a Christmas. The +trees were bought and set on the balcony, the +turkeys, two of them, were in the pantry +ready to dress and three big baskets were set +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192' name='page_192'></a>192</span> +on the dining-room table ready for packing.</p> +<p>“Now, then,” said Mrs. Merrill, “if you +have everything ready, I think we’d better +pack all the things we can now, because +when Dadah comes home there’ll be plenty +to do.”</p> +<p>Mary Jane thought the packing was the +most fun of anything she had ever done. +They packed all the doll things in one +basket, doll things and toys and three nice +books. Of course the doll bed wouldn’t go +in the basket; it had to have a package all by +itself. A second basket was for clothing, +the pajamas—and no one would ever guess +that a girl as young as Alice had made those +charming garments—the muffler, the mittens, +one pair for each child, warm underwear +and a dress for each girl (one of the +nicest of Alice and Mary Jane’s outgrown +frocks). Mr. Merrill had added a nice flannel +shirt for Tom and Mrs. Merrill put in a +warm sweater for the good mother.</p> +<p>“That’s a basket they’ll like to open,” +said Alice, proudly, as she tucked the brand +new comforter Mrs. Merrill had made, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193' name='page_193'></a>193</span> +around the top, “they’ll be so happy they +won’t hardly be able to wait till they can +put ’em on!”</p> +<p>The third basket was fully as interesting +as the others. It was a big, big one and in +it the girls packed groceries, cans of vegetables +and soup and sugar—a very little bit +to be sure for there wasn’t much to be had, +but the Merrills had decided to send exactly +half of what they had—and oranges for +breakfast and cereals and bread. Then on +top, they were to put cookies and candy and +the turkey. But of course those last things +would go in in the morning, just before the +baskets were taken away.</p> +<p>By the time Mr. Merrill came home, the +three baskets were packed, covered up and +set in the corner of the dining-room ready +for morning.</p> +<p>“Now for the tree!” said Mr. Merrill as +he took off his coat ready for work. He set +their tree in the dining-room and with Alice’s +good help fixed a solid bottom standard and +set it up in the living-room right in front of +the foolish little fireplace. They wired it +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194' name='page_194'></a>194</span> +firmly and then Mrs. Merrill brought in the +boxes of Christmas trimmings and everybody +set to work.</p> +<p>Such fun as it was! Mary Jane kept saying, +“Remember this!” And Alice added, +“Remember that!” till it seemed as though +it <i>couldn’t</i> be more than a week since last +Christmas when they had put the same things +on a tree that looked exactly like the one +they were now trimming. This year, seeing +Mary Jane was such a <i>very</i> old person, she +was allowed to put the gold star on the top +of the tree; she climbed the ladder, with +father holding one hand and wired it on all +by herself; and Alice, as a special privilege, +was allowed to hang the crystal icicles on +every tip.</p> +<p>Nobody put any tinsel on the tree—that +was left for the middle of the night like the +story of the old time legend. Whether the +spiders and the Christmas fairies, working +together, really covered the tree with silver, +Mary Jane never stopped to figure out. +But at any rate the tree was covered with +strings of gold the next morning and Mary +Jane thought it the prettiest Christmas tree +she had ever seen!</p> +<div class='figcenter'> +<a name='linki_4' id='linki_4'></a> +<img src='images/maryj-195.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 327px; height: 461px;' /><br /> +<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 327px;'> +This year, seeing Mary Jane was such a <i>very</i> old person,<br /> +she was allowed to put the gold star on the top of the tree<br /> +<i>Page 195</i><br /> +</p> +</div> + +<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197' name='page_197'></a>197</span></div> +<p>The very last thing before she went to +bed, Mary Jane hung up her stocking. And +Alice, looking a bit foolish, hung hers close +by.</p> +<p>“I thought you two folks weren’t going to +have any Christmas,” said Mr. Merrill teasingly.</p> +<p>“Of course we’re not,” said Mary Jane +bravely, “but we want to hang our stockings +just the same as if—you know.” And +Dadah must have understood for he nodded +his head and didn’t tease any more.</p> +<p>Nobody would say how it ever happened. +Certainly it was well understood that there +were to be no presents. But, anyway, when +Mary Jane and Alice looked at those stockings +Christmas morning they were fat, as +fat could be! Just bulging over with queer +shaped parcels!</p> +<p>Mary Jane couldn’t even wait to put her +slippers on! She bundled a kimono around +her, grabbed up her stocking and ran into her +mother’s room to open it. Alice wasn’t far +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198' name='page_198'></a>198</span> +behind and certainly for girls who were to +have <i>no</i> presents, they fared very well indeed! +Santa Claus must have got his signals +mixed some way! There were doll +things for Marie Georgiannamore, and a +ring for Mary Jane; hair ribbons, handkerchiefs, +skates for Alice (think of that in a +stocking!) and slippers for the little girl +who forgot to put on her old pair and, oh, +many lovely little things that could be +tucked into a stocking.</p> +<p>The girls spread the things out on mother’s +bed and had a happy time till suddenly +Mr. Merrill exclaimed, “Girls! It’s eight +o’clock and I ordered that taxi for nine!”</p> +<p>Then there <i>was</i> a scramble! Gifts were +hustled away, clothes were put on, breakfast +was eaten and a few last things packed in the +baskets, just as the taxi arrived.</p> +<p>It was fortunate Mr. Merrill had ordered a +big car for with three baskets, a bundle containing +the doll bed and another the turkey, +to say nothing of the tree roped on the side +of the car and the box of trimmings on Mrs. +Merrill’s lap even a big car was pretty full. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199' name='page_199'></a>199</span></p> +<p>Mary Jane felt like a real Santa Claus for +sure!</p> +<p>The family they were going to see didn’t +know they were coming, so when the car +stopped in front of a shabby little house, +three puzzled and very sober faces pressed +against the window and looked out. But +the sober faces soon changed. In a few minutes +the mother was helping Mrs. Merrill +put the turkey in to roast, the older girl was +helping Mr. Merrill set the Christmas tree +in place and Tom and Ellen, the little girl, +were helping the Merrill girls trim the tree.</p> +<p>When the Merrills left the house some +two hours later the turkey was almost +cooked, the tree was trimmed, presents unpacked +and happiness and good cheer had +settled down in the little house for many a +day.</p> +<p>It was a good thing they came away +when they did, though, for exactly as they +drove up to their own home, they met an +express wagon. And in their own vestibule +they found the driver. “Family of Merrill +here?” he asked them. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200' name='page_200'></a>200</span></p> +<p>“They’re us,” said Mary Jane eagerly. +And whereupon the driver carried upstairs +the biggest, fattest Christmas box Mary Jane +had ever seen.</p> +<p>Of course it was from grandma and in it +were so many lovely things from uncles and +grandparents and cousins that Mary Jane +thought she never would get everything unpacked!</p> +<p>“Well,” said the little girl as some time +later the family sat down to their own belated +dinner, “I think for not having any +presents, we got a lot! And I think I like +Christmas in Chicago just as much as anywhere, +I do.”</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<a name='A_SUMMER_HOME_AND_A_TELEGRAM' id='A_SUMMER_HOME_AND_A_TELEGRAM'></a> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201' name='page_201'></a>201</span> +<h2>A SUMMER HOME—AND A TELEGRAM</h2> +</div> + +<p>“Let’s go skating!” called Frances one +cold morning as she saw Alice shake +the bath room rug from the balcony.</p> +<p>“Skating?” answered Alice, “where?”</p> +<p>“Down on the Midway,” said Frances. +“As soon as you get your work done, you and +Mary Jane come around to our front door +and Betty and I will be ready.”</p> +<p>“But Mary Jane doesn’t know how to +skate,” said Alice.</p> +<p>“Betty doesn’t either,” answered Frances, +“but they can take their sleds and coast down +the sides of the bank while you and I skate.”</p> +<p>Alice promised and then she hurried inside +to finish her work. She had heard +about the fine skating on the Midway where +the park board flooded the sunken greens +for the benefit of neighborhood children, but +thus far the weather had been too mild for +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202' name='page_202'></a>202</span> +any skating, so she hadn’t had a chance to +try it. But a sudden cold snap, with snow +enough to cover the sloping banks, had provided +both skating and coasting.</p> +<p>Well protected with warm mittens and +leggings the girls set out and had the jolliest +kind of a morning. At one end of the ice, +the younger folks did their coasting, the sloping +sides giving a flying start and the smooth +ice a glorious finish. At the other end the +older boys and girls did their skating, so +there was no mix up or interference.</p> +<p>That morning was the first of many happy +Saturday mornings spent on the ice. Even +Mary Jane got some skates and, with the +help of Dadah when he could get away from +the office, she learned to be a fine skater.</p> +<p>But winter fun never lasts very long. +Just about the time Mary Jane learned to +skate well enough to challenge Alice to a +race, the spring sun sent the ice to nowhere +land and the while-ago ice pond turned to +green grass! Spring had come.</p> +<p>With the coming of spring, Mary Jane +grew very restless. She wasn’t sick, but +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203' name='page_203'></a>203</span> +something was wrong. Something was +making her very solemn and sober—quite +unlike her usual lively self.</p> +<p>“I know what’s the matter with me,” she +announced one warm sunny morning, “I +want to dig.”</p> +<p>“You want to dig?” exclaimed Mrs. Merrill +in amazement, “well, why don’t you go +down and dig in the Holdens’ yard? You +know Mrs. Holden said you might.”</p> +<p>“But I don’t want to dig in somebody’s +yard,” answered Mary Jane, without a spark +of interest, “I want to dig in my <i>own</i> yard +and have flowers and a sand pile and everything +right in my own yard, I do.”</p> +<p>Mrs. Merrill didn’t reply but she did do a +lot of thinking and that evening she and +Mr. Merrill had a long conference.</p> +<p>As a result, at breakfast table the next +morning Mr. Merrill said, “How would you +girls like to have a summer home of your +own? A place in the woods where we could +go as soon as school closes and where you +could wear bloomers and play in the sand +and gather flowers and make garden and all +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204' name='page_204'></a>204</span> +the things you love to do but can’t do in +the city. How would you like that?”</p> +<p>Mary Jane and Alice stared at him. +Would they <i>like</i> it? anybody could see by +their faces that they would <i>love</i> it!</p> +<p>“But we wouldn’t want to leave you here +in Chicago, all summer,” objected Alice.</p> +<p>“And I wouldn’t want to be left,” Mr. +Merrill assured them. “But I am sure, +somewhere in the suburbs around Chicago +there must be <i>some place</i> we could get a summer +home. And we’ll make it our business +to find that place.”</p> +<p>“I thought,” began Mrs. Merrill, and then +she hesitated.</p> +<p>“Something nice?” asked Alice, encouragingly.</p> +<p>“It would have been nice,” admitted Mrs. +Merrill, “but likely we couldn’t do it. I’d +been thinking how pleasant it would be to +take another trip this summer. You know +how you girls enjoyed going to Florida. +And you remember Uncle Hal graduates +from Harvard this June. I had been wondering +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205' name='page_205'></a>205</span> +if we could go east in time to be there +when the festivities are going on.”</p> +<p>“Oh, mother!” cried Mary Jane, “what +fun! I do want to ride on a train, a big +train with a sleeper and a diner! But then +I want to dig, too,” she added, insistently.</p> +<p>“Then we’ll take one thing at a time,” +suggested Mr. Merrill. “We’ll look into +the question of a summer home—we know +we’d all like that. And you folks don’t +know that a very popular uncle would <i>want</i> +a grown up sister and two small nieces hanging +around at commencement time,” he +added teasingly.</p> +<p>“How do you find a summer home?” asked +Alice thoughtfully.</p> +<p>“That’s what we’ll have to discover,” +laughed Mr. Merrill. “And we’ll begin +this very Saturday afternoon if the weather +is fine. We’ll take a suburban train and +ride till we see a place that looks homey and +there we’ll get off and hunt.”</p> +<p>The next Saturday was warm and sunny, +the kind of a day for bringing flowers into +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206' name='page_206'></a>206</span> +bloom and for making little girls want to +play out of doors. Mrs. Merrill and the +girls met Mr. Merrill at his office so as not +to lose a minute’s time, and they hurried +right over to the station, and got aboard the +first suburban train they could find.</p> +<p>“I think this is lots of fun,” said Mary +Jane as they found their seats, “we don’t +know where we’re going—we’re just going!” +And the train was off.</p> +<p>For some time the girls were really discouraged. +They passed factories, and tenements, +and more factories till Mary Jane was +sure they were never coming to country—real +country. But suddenly, when she was +about to give up, the factories were gone and +from the window the girls could see wide +fields and strips of woods and an occasional +brook. Two or three little stations were +passed and then the train ran through a +beautiful stretch of woods—rolling woods +all leafy and budding and flower decked. +The ground was fairly covered with early +blossoms and trees of wild crab were just +bursting into pink bloom. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207' name='page_207'></a>207</span></p> +<p>Mary Jane grabbed her coat and started +down the aisle.</p> +<p>“Make ’em stop the train, Dadah,” she +said, “this is where we want to live!”</p> +<p>Fortunately at that minute the train really +did stop at a small station and the Merrills +got off and looked around. It didn’t take +long to explore into the woods far enough to +find that they had come to the very place +they were looking for—a spot not too far +from the city for Mr. Merrill’s daily trip and +yet wild enough to give the girls some real +woods. The girls picked flowers as they explored +and had such a happy time that it was +hard work to persuade them to go back to the +city when the twilight came. But they had +found the very place!</p> +<p>Three weeks later Mr. Merrill bought a +lot in the heart of the woods, and the summer +home was no longer a mere dream—it +was to be really truly.</p> +<p>“Now,” announced Alice, “we’ll draw +the kind of a house we want. I love to draw +plans of a house!” She cleared off the dining +table, sharpened pencils, brought two +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208' name='page_208'></a>208</span> +tablets and insisted that everybody come out +and help.</p> +<p>And just then the door bell rang.</p> +<p>“Telegram for Merrill!” shouted a voice +through the tube and Mary Jane pressed the +buzzer in a hurry—a telegram usually meant +something exciting.</p> +<p>It was addressed to Mrs. Merrill and said, +“Have all tickets and hotel reservations. +You and the girls must come.” And it was +signed by Mrs. Merrill’s brother.</p> +<p>“If that isn’t just like a college boy!” +laughed Mrs. Merrill. “For weeks he +doesn’t answer a letter and then he telegraphs! +Girls,” she added, “let’s go! +Wouldn’t you like to go to Boston and see +the college and the ocean and the White +Mountains—and—everything?”</p> +<p>“Oh, mother, <i>really</i>?” exclaimed Mary +Jane. (She felt as though she must be +dreaming, things were happening so fast!)</p> +<p>“But what about the summer home?” +asked Alice.</p> +<p>“Don’t you worry about the summer +home,” Mr. Merrill assured her, “we’ll have +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209' name='page_209'></a>209</span> +that summer home just the same. You girls +take your trip east. You won’t be gone +more than a couple of weeks—and what are +two weeks out of a whole summer? And +before you go, we’ll get the shack all planned +and when you come back we’ll move out.”</p> +<p>“Goody! Goody! Goody!” cried Mary +Jane happily, “then I can see Uncle Hal +and ride on the train and dig a garden and +<i>everything</i>!”</p> +<p>And if you want to hear all about Mary +Jane’s beautiful trip to Boston and the +White Mountains, the fun she had sight-seeing +and the jolly party on “Class Day,” +you must read—</p> +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>“<span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Mary Jane in New England</span>”</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.4em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>THE MARY JANE SERIES</p> +<p style=' font-size:; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>BY CLARA INGRAM JUDSON</p> +<p style=' font-size:0.8em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>Cloth, 12mo. Illustrated.</p> +<p style=' font-size:0.8em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>With picture inlay and wrapper.</p> +</div> + +<div class='figleft'> +<img src='images/adv001.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 89px; height: 131px;' /><br /> +</div> + +<p>Mary Jane is the typical American little +girl who bubbles over with fun and the +good things in life. We meet her here on +a visit to her grandfather’s farm where she +becomes acquainted with farm life and farm +animals and thoroughly enjoys the experience. +We next see her going to +kindergarten and then on a visit to Florida, and then—but +read the stories for yourselves.</p> +<p>Exquisitely and charmingly written are these books which +every little girl from five to nine years old will want from the +first book to the last.</p> +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>1 MARY JANE—HER BOOK</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>2 MARY JANE—HER VISIT</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>3 MARY JANE’S KINDERGARTEN</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>4 MARY JANE DOWN SOUTH</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>5 MARY JANE’S CITY HOME</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>6 MARY JANE IN NEW ENGLAND</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>7 MARY JANE’S COUNTY HOME</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>BARSE & HOPKINS</p> +<p style=' font-size:0.8em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:; font-style:italic;'>PUBLISHERS</p> +<p style=' font-size:; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>NEWARK, N. J. NEW YORK, N. Y.</p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.2em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>CHICKEN LITTLE JANE SERIES</p> +<p style=' font-size:; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'><i>By</i> LILY MUNSELL RITCHIE</p> +</div> + +<div class='figleft'> +<img src='images/adv002.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 121px; height: 180px;' /><br /> +</div> + +<p>Chicken Little Jane is a +Western prairie girl who +lives a happy, outdoor life +in a country where there +is plenty of room to turn +around. She is a wide-awake, +resourceful girl +who will instantly win her +way into the hearts of +other girls. And what +good times she has!—with +her pets, her friends, and +her many interests. +“Chicken Little” is the affectionate +nickname given to her when she is +very, very good, but when she misbehaves it is +“Jane”—just Jane!</p> +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>Adventures of Chicken Little Jane</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>Chicken Little Jane on the “Big John”</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>Chicken Little Jane Comes to Town</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:0.8em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'><i>With numerous illustrations in pen and ink</i></p> +<p style=' font-size:; margin-top:; margin-bottom:1em;'>By CHARLES D. HUBBARD</p> +<p style=' font-size:1.2em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>BARSE & HOPKINS</p> +<p>NEWARK NEW YORK</p> +<p> N. J. N. Y.</p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.4em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>Dorothy Whitehill Series</p> +<p style=' font-size:1.2em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'><i>For Girls</i></p> +</div> + +<div class='figleft'> +<img src='images/adv003.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 136px; height: 181px;' /><br /> +</div> + +<p>Here is a sparkling new +series of stories for girls—just +what they will like, +and ask for more of the +same kind. It is all about +twin sisters, who for the +first few years in their +lives grow up in ignorance +of each other’s existence. +Then they are at +last brought together and +things begin to happen. +Janet is an independent +go-ahead sort of girl; +while her sister Phyllis is—but meet the twins +for yourself and be entertained.</p> +<div class='ce'> +<p>5 Titles, Cloth, large 12mo.,</p> +<p>Covers in color.</p> +</div> + +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>1. JANET, A TWIN</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>2. PHYLLIS, A TWIN</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>3. THE TWINS IN THE WEST</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>4. THE TWINS IN THE SOUTH</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>5. THE TWINS’ SUMMER VACATION</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>6. THE TWINS AND TOMMY JR.</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.2em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>BARSE & HOPKINS</p> +<p style=' font-style:italic;'>PUBLISHERS</p> +<p>NEWARK, N. J. NEW YORK, N. Y.</p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.2em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>THE POLLY PENDLETON SERIES</p> +<p style=' font-size:1.2em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>BY DOROTHY WHITEHILL</p> +</div> + +<div class='figleft'> +<img src='images/adv004.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 89px; height: 122px;' /><br /> +</div> + +<p>Polly Pendleton is a resourceful, wide-awake +American girl who goes to a boarding +school on the Hudson River some miles +above New York. By her pluck and resourcefulness, +she soon makes a place for +herself and this she holds right through the +course. The account of boarding school +life is faithful and pleasing and will attract +every girl in her teens.</p> +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>1 POLLY’S FIRST YEAR AT BOARDING SCHOOL</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>2 POLLY’S SUMMER VACATION</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>3 POLLY’S SENIOR YEAR AT BOARDING SCHOOL</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>4 POLLY SEES THE WORLD AT WAR</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>5 POLLY AND LOIS</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>6 POLLY AND BOB</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<div class='ce'> +<p><i>Cloth, Large 12mo., Illustrated.</i></p> +</div> + +<hr class='minor' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p>BARSE & HOPKINS</p> +<p>PUBLISHERS</p> +<p>Newark, N. J. New York, N. Y.</p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.4em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>The Sunny Boy Series</p> +<p style=' font-size:1.2em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>By RAMY ALLISON WHITE</p> +</div> + +<div class='figleft'> +<img src='images/adv005.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 136px; height: 180px;' /><br /> +</div> + +<p>Children, meet Sunny +Boy, a little fellow with +big eyes and an inquiring +disposition, who finds the +world a large and wonderful +thing indeed. And +somehow there is lots going +on, when Sunny Boy +is around. Perhaps he +helps push! In the first +book of this new series he +has the finest time ever, +with his Grandpa out in +the country. He learns a +lot and he helps a lot, in his small way. Then +he has a glorious visit to the seashore, but this is +in the next story. And there are still more adventures +in the third book and fourth book. You +will like Sunny Boy.</p> +<div class='ce'> +<p>4 Titles, Cloth, illustrated, 12mo.,</p> +<p>with colored covers.</p> +</div> + +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>1. SUNNY BOY IN THE COUNTRY</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>2. SUNNY BOY AT THE SEASHORE</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>3. SUNNY BOY IN THE BIG CITY</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>4. SUNNY BOY IN SCHOOL AND OUT</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>5. SUNNY BOY AND HIS PLAYMATES</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.2em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>BARSE & HOPKINS</p> +<p style=' font-style:italic;'>PUBLISHERS</p> +<p>NEWARK, N. J. NEW YORK, N. Y.</p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.2em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>GOOD STORIES FOR CHILDREN</p> +<p>(From four to nine years old)</p> +<p style=' font-size:1.4em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>THE KNEETIME ANIMAL STORIES</p> +<p>By RICHARD BARNUM</p> +</div> + +<div class='figleft'> +<img src='images/adv006.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 91px; height: 120px;' /><br /> +</div> + +<p>In all nursery literature animals have +played a conspicuous part; and the reason +is obvious, for nothing entertains a child +more than the antics of an animal. These +stories abound in amusing incidents such +as children adore, and the characters are +so full of life, so appealing to a child’s +imagination, that none will be satisfied until +they have met all of their favorites—Squinty, +Slicko, Mappo, and the rest.</p> +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>1 Squinty, the Comical Pig.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>2 Slicko, the Jumping Squirrel.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>3 Mappo, the Merry Monkey.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>4 Tum Tum, the Jolly Elephant.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>5 Don, a Runaway Dog.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>6 Dido, the Dancing Bear.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>7 Blackie, a Lost Cat.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>8 Flop Ear, the Funny Rabbit.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>9 Tinkle, the Trick Pony.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>10 Lightfoot, the Leaping Goat.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>11 Chunky, the Happy Hippo.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>12 Sharp Eyes, the Silver Fox.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>13 Nero, the Circus Lion.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>14 Tamba, the Tame Tiger.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>15 Toto, the Rustling Beaver.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>16 Shaggo, the Mighty Buffalo.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>17 Winky, the Wily Woodchuck.</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:0.8em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'><i>Cloth, Large 12mo., Illustrated.</i></p> +</div> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.2em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>BARSE & HOPKINS</p> +<p>Publishers</p> +<p>Newark, N. J. New York, N. Y.</p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.2em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>The Yank Brown Series</p> +<p><i>By</i> DAVID STONE</p> +<p><i>Cloth, large</i> 12 <i>mo. Illustrated.</i></p> +</div> + +<div class='figleft'> +<img src='images/adv007.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 128px; height: 180px;' /><br /> +</div> + +<p>When Yank Brown comes +to Belmont College as a +callow Freshman, there is +a whole lot that he doesn’t +know about college life, +such as class rushes, rivalries, +fraternities, and what +a lowly Freshman must +not do. But he does know +something about how to +play football, and he is a +big, likeable chap who +speedily makes friends.</p> +<p>In the first story of this +series we watch Yank buck the line as a Halfback. +In the second story he goes in for basketball, +among many other activities of a busy college +year. Then there are other stories to follow—each +brimful of action and interest. This +is one of the best college series we have seen in +a long while.</p> +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>YANK BROWN, HALFBACK</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>YANK BROWN, FORWARD</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0.0em;'>YANK BROWN, CROSS-COUNTRY RUNNER</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.2em;'>BARSE & HOPKINS</p> +<p>NEWARK NEW YORK</p> +<p>N. J. N. Y.</p> +<div style='margin-top:1em'></div> +<p style=' font-size:0.8em; margin-top:; margin-bottom:;'>(<i>Other volumes in preparation.</i>)</p> +</div> + +<!-- generated by ppgen.rb version: 2.25 --> +<!-- timestamp: Wed Sep 03 07:23:41 -0400 2008 --> + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Mary Jane's City Home, by Clara Ingram Judson + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MARY JANE'S CITY HOME *** + +***** This file should be named 26517-h.htm or 26517-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/5/1/26517/ + +Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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Home, by Clara Ingram Judson + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Mary Jane's City Home + +Author: Clara Ingram Judson + +Illustrator: Thelma Gooch + +Release Date: September 3, 2008 [EBook #26517] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MARY JANE'S CITY HOME *** + + + + +Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + +[Illustration: And she pointed out the little seal who was a bit too slow. +Frontispiece] + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +MARY JANE'S CITY HOME + +BY +CLARA INGRAM JUDSON + +Author of +"Flower Fairies," "Good-Night Stories," +"Billy Robin and His Neighbors," "Bed Time Tales," +"The Junior Cook Book," and Other Works + +ILLUSTRATED BY +THELMA GOOCH + +NEW YORK +BARSE & HOPKINS +PUBLISHERS + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +Copyright, 1920, +by +Barse & Hopkins + +PRINTED IN THE U. S. A. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +TO +MY MOTHER and FATHER + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +CONTENTS + + PAGE +Finding the New Home 11 +The Folks Around The Corner 22 +Visiting with Betty 35 +Sand Castles 49 +The Beach Supper 64 +Mary Jane Goes Shopping 76 +The Bus Ride 88 +The Birthday Luncheon 100 +Lost--One Doll Cart 115 +A Trip to the Zoo 128 +A Day in the Parks 143 +Visitors--and a Boat Ride 156 +School Begins 171 +Christmas in Chicago 184 +A Summer Home--and a Telegram 201 + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + PAGE + +And she pointed out the little seal who was a bit +too slow. Frontispiece + +And then, sliding in the wet sand, she sat right +down in the lake and sent a wave of ripples right +over her castle 60 + +"But it's all down my dress," said Mary Jane, trying +her very best not to cry 107 + +This year, seeing Mary Jane was such a _very_ old +person, she was allowed to put the gold star on the +top of the tree 188 + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + + + +MARY JANE'S CITY HOME + +FINDING THE NEW HOME + + +The late afternoon sunshine sent its slanting, golden rays through the car +windows on to the map that Mary Jane and her sister Alice had spread out +on the table between the seats of the Pullman in which they were riding. + +"And all that wiggly line is water?" Mary Jane was asking. + +"Every bit water," replied their father, who bent over their heads to +explain what they were looking at; "a lot of water, you see. You remember +I told you that Chicago is right on the edge of Lake Michigan. And Lake +Michigan, so far as looks are concerned, might just as well be the ocean +you saw down in Florida--it's so big you can't see the other side." + +"And does it have big waves?" asked Mary Jane. + +"Just you wait and see," promised Mr. Merrill. "Big waves! I should say it +has!" + +"And all the green part of the map is parks," said Alice, quoting what her +father had told them when he first showed them the map. + +"Then there must be a lot of parks," suggested Mary Jane with interest. "I +think I'd like to live by a park," she added thoughtfully. + +"I think I should too," agreed Mr. Merrill, "and it's near a park we will +make the first hunt for a home." + +"Oh, look!" cried Mary Jane suddenly as she glanced up from the spread-out +map; "what's that, Dadah?" + +"That's the beginning of Chicago," said Mr. Merrill. "Let's fold up the +map now and see what we can of the city. This is South Chicago; and those +great stacks and flaming chimneys are steel mills and foundries and +factories--watch now! There are more!" + +The train on which the Merrill family were traveling went dashing past +factory after factory--past an occasional open space where they could see +in the distance the blue gleam of Lake Michigan and past great wide +stretches where tracks and more tracks on which freight cars and engines +sped up and down showed them something of the whirling industry that has +made South Chicago famous. No wonder it was a strange sight to the two +girls--they had never before seen anything that made them even guess the +big business that they now saw spread out before them. + +They had spent all their lives thus far--Alice was twelve and Mary Jane +going on six--in a small city of the Middle West and though they had had a +fine summer in the country visiting grandma and grandpa and had only the +winter before taken a beautiful trip through Florida, they had never been +to a great city. And now they were not going to visit or to take a trip. +They were going to live there. The great big city of Chicago was to be +their home. + +The pretty little house they had loved so well was sold. The furniture and +books and dolls and clothes were all packed and loaded on a freight car to +follow them to the city and all the dear friends had been given a +farewell. Mary Jane had loved the excitement and muss of packing; the +great boxes and the masses of crinkly excelsior and the workmen around who +always had time for a pleasant joke with an interested little girl. But +when it came time to say good-by to Doris and to her much loved +kindergarten and to all the boys and girls in school and "on her block," +going away wasn't so funny. In fact, Mary Jane felt a queer and +troublesome lump in her throat most of the morning when the good-bys were +said. + +But the ride on the train (and how Mary Jane did love to ride on the +train); and the nice luncheon on the diner (and how Mary Jane did _adore_ +eating on a diner--hashed brown potatoes, a whole order by herself and ice +cream and everything!); and then father's nice talk about all the fun they +were going to have, made the lump vanish and in its place there developed +an eager desire to see the new city and to begin all the promised fun. It +was then that Mr. Merrill showed them the big map of the city and pointed +out the part of the city where they would likely live. + +As the girls watched, the great factories and foundries slipped away into +the distance, and in their place the girls could see houses and occasional +stores and here and there a station, past which their train dashed as +though it wasn't looking for stations to-day, thank you. + +"Don't we stop anywhere?" asked Mary Jane after she had counted three of +these little stations. + +"Those are suburban stations," explained Mr. Merrill, "and a big through +train like ours hasn't time to stop at every one. Pretty soon another +train will come along and stop at each one of those we are now passing so +don't you worry about folks getting left. _This_ train we are on has got +to get us into Chicago in time for dinner." + +And just at that minute, when the big three story apartment buildings that +looked so very queer and strange to Mary Jane, began to fill every block, +the porter came to brush her off and to help her on with her coat. + +"I'm going to live here in Chicago," she said to him as he held the coat +for her, "and it's a big place with lots of lake and parks and--houses, I +guess, and most everything." + +"'Deed it is big, missy," replied the porter, "and I hope you's going to +like it a lot, I do." + +"I'm a-going to," answered Mary Jane confidently, as she picked up +Georgiannamore and Georgiannamore's suit case which at the last moment +couldn't possibly be packed in the trunk, and followed her father and +mother down the aisle, "'cause mother and Dadah and Alice are going to +live here too and we always have fun." + +Mr. and Mrs. Merrill had decided to get off at one of the larger suburban +stations and spend a few days in a near-by hotel; they thought the +comparative quiet of a residence hotel would be better for their girls +than the flurry and hurry of a big down town hotel. But to Mary Jane, +accustomed to the sights and sounds of a small city where street cars went +dignifiedly past every fifteen minutes and where traffic "cops" would have +very few duties, the confusion she found herself in was quite enough to be +very interesting. + +They stepped off the train, walked down some stairs and found themselves +on the sidewalk of a very busy street. Overhead the noise of their own +train rumbling cityward made a terrific din; and as though that were not +enough, still higher up the great elevated car line made a rumble and +roar. Mary Jane craned her neck as they walked from under the trains and +there high in the air, she saw street cars running along as though street +cars always had and always would, run on tracks high up in the air! + +"Can we ride on it, Dadah?" she shouted to her father, "are we going to +ride on that train up on stilts?" + +Mr. Merrill shook his head laughingly and hurried them into a waiting +taxi. + +"We're not going to ride there to-day," he explained when the door of the +car shut out some of the noise, "but some day soon we'll take a long ride +on the elevated and then you can see all the back yards and back porches +and parks and streets and everything about the city, just as plain as +plain can be." + +While he was talking, the Merrills drove through streets lined on both +sides with three-story apartment buildings. But before Mary Jane had time +to ask a question or even think what she would like to say, they whisked +around a corner and out into the beautiful wide driveway on the +Midway--the long, green parkway that stretched, or so it seemed to Mary +Jane, for miles in both directions. The taxi pulled up in front of a +comfortable looking hotel right on the side of the park and Mary Jane +wasn't a bit sorry to get out and take a breath of fresh air and look at +the lovely view before her. + +"Now just as soon as you are washed up," said Mrs. Merrill, briskly, as +they went into the hotel, "you and Alice may come out onto this nice porch +and watch the children play on the Midway and get a little run before +dinner." + +You may be sure that with that promise before her, Mary Jane didn't take +very long to primp. She had spied a group of children about her age, who +seemed to be having a beautiful time playing ball out there on the grass +and she couldn't help noticing that they played just as she and Doris did +and she couldn't help wishing that she too, even though she was a new +little girl just come to town, could play with them. So she stood very +still while Mrs. Merrill tied the fresh hair bow and slipped on a clean +frock and then, holding tight to big sister Alice's friendly hand she went +down the one flight of stairs--she was in far too big a hurry to wait for +the elevator--and out onto the long roomy porch. + +Just across the narrow street in front of the hotel and on the nearest bit +of parkway, three little girls about Mary Jane's age were still playing +ball. One was dainty and small and had yellow curls; one was rather tall +and had long straight dark hair and the third had dark, straight hair +bobbed short, and snapping black eyes. + +"Wouldn't it be funny," said Mary Jane as she looked at them wistfully, +"if I'd get to know those girls and they'd be friends. If I _did_," she +added, "I think she'd be my mostest friend," and Mary Jane pointed to the +little girl with the dark, bobbed hair. + +While they watched and were trying to get up courage to go over and play +too, a pretty girl about Alice's age came along the street. Her hair was +copper colored and curly and very, very pretty. And her smile when she saw +the little girls who were playing, made her seem so friendly and "homey." + +"I've been hunting you, Betty," she said to the little girl Mary Jane +liked best. "It's time to come home for dinner." + +So the four girls, three little folks and one bigger one, went around the +corner toward home, and two strangers, standing on the porch, watched them +till they were quite out of sight. + +"It would be funny," said Alice, "if we'd ever get to know them. I'm sure +I'd like to." + +"Wouldn't it though!" exclaimed Mary Jane. "I hope we do!" + +And all the time they were eating their first dinner in Chicago, and +telling mother and father about the children they had seen and making +plans about what to do to-morrow, they were thinking about those two girls +and wishing to know them better. + +Little did they guess what would really truly happen before the week was +over! + + + + +THE FOLKS AROUND THE CORNER + + +Three whole days of flat hunting! And of all the fun she had ever had in +her more than five years of life, Mary Jane thought flat hunting in +Chicago was the most fun of all! She loved the mystery of each new +apartment; the guessing which room might be hers and which mother's; the +hunting up the door bell and hearing its sound (for as you very well know +each door bell has a sound of its own); the poking into closets and +pantries and porches. It was the most delightful sort of exploring she had +ever come across and she couldn't at all understand why mother and father +got tired and somewhat discouraged. For _her_ part Mary Jane was tempted +to wish that they would never find a flat, well hardly that; but that +finding the right one would take a long, oh, a very long time! + +But by the afternoon of the third day, her legs began to get a little +tired too, and her eyes looked more often to the green of the Midway they +occasionally saw and she thought that flats, even empty flats, really +should have chairs for folks to sit on. So, as a matter of fact, she +wasn't half as sorry as she had thought she would be, when, on the +afternoon of the third day of hunting the Merrill family came across a +charming little apartment. + +It was on the second floor of a very attractive red brick building; it had +five rooms, quite too small, father thought, but then one can't have +everything, they had found, and every room was light and sunny and +cheerful. But the part about it that Mary Jane and Alice liked the best +was the back porch. To be sure there was a front porch, a pretty, little +porch with a stone railing and a view way down the street toward the park +and lake. But off the dining room the girls discovered a small balcony +that overlooked the back yard next door, a back yard that had a garden +laid out and a chicken house and everything so homey and comfortable +looking that the girls immediately wanted to sit out and watch. + +"I think if we'd stay here maybe some children would come out to play," +suggested Mary Jane in a whisper. + +"I think they would, too," agreed Alice. "And I think if we lived here +maybe we could get acquainted and play with them." + +"Let's live here!" exclaimed Mary Jane and she ran back into the house +just at the very minute Mr. and Mrs. Merrill decided to rent the +apartment. + +"So you think you'll like it, do you?" said Mrs. Merrill, smiling; "the +rooms are pretty small." + +"I know we'll love it," said Alice eagerly, "and you should see the back +porch." + +But Mr. Merrill laughed when they showed him the porch. + +"Do you call this a porch," he exclaimed, "why it's not half big enough +for a porch! I'd call it a balcony." + +"Yes," agreed Mrs. Merrill, "and then when you watch folks in the yard +down there,--for you _are_ planning to watch and get acquainted, aren't +you?--then you can pretend that this is your balcony seat and that the +folks down there are in a play for you--wouldn't that be fun?" + +The girls thought it would, but there was so much to plan and think about +that they didn't stay on their little balcony any longer just then, which +was something of a pity, for right after they went indoors, somebody came +out into the yard-- But then, there's no use telling about _her_ for Mary +Jane didn't see her. + +So Mary Jane and Alice went with their father and mother into the room +that was to be theirs and they planned just where each bed should be and +where was the best place for the desk and dressing table and who should +have which side of the closet. And by that time, it was nearly six +o'clock--time to go back to the hotel for dinner. + +Mr. Merrill stopped at the desk for mail as they went up to their room and +there he found a message telling him that their furniture had arrived in +Chicago and that it must be taken out of the freight house the next +morning. + +"Dear me!" exclaimed Mrs. Merrill with a gasp of dismay, "I think it's a +good thing we found that flat! What ever would we have done if we hadn't! +Well, girls, I think we'd better eat a good dinner and then go to bed +early for we'll have to get down there and clean up the flat while father +tends to getting our things delivered." + +So bright and early the next morning everybody started to work. Mr. +Merrill went down town to meet the moving men he had engaged by 'phone and +Mrs. Merrill and the two girls put aprons and cleaning rags and soap, all +of which they had brought in their small trunk, into a little grip and +went down to the new home. + +Mary Jane had lots of fun that morning. First she went down to the +basement and borrowed a broom from the janitor. Then she went back for +clean papers which she folded neatly and spread on the pantry shelves +which Mrs. Merrill with the good help of the janitor's wife had cleaned +and ready. Then she put papers on the shelf of the closet she and Alice +were to share and papers in the drawers near the floor of that same +closet. By that time--it takes pretty long to fold papers neatly and get +every bit of the shelf covered, you know--the door bell rang--a great, +long, hard ring. + +"Oh, dear! Can you go, Mary Jane?" exclaimed Mrs. Merrill, "Alice and I +both have wet hands!" You see, Alice had been washing mirrors that were on +the closet doors while her mother and the janitor's wife did windows and +wood work. + +"Yes, I'm dry," said Mary Jane, "and my papers are done and I'd like to +go." + +To tell the honest truth, Mary Jane had just that very minute been wishing +the door bell would ring. For the janitor's wife had showed her how to +press the buzzer that would release the lock of the front door and let a +person come up the stairs. And of course Mary Jane wanted to try it. So +she hurried over to the house 'phone, took down the receiver and said, +"Who is it?" just as any grown-up person would. + +"Here's your things!" said a gruff voice, "we'll bring 'em up the back!" + +Mary Jane didn't stop to press any buzzer. She dashed over to the window +nearest the alley and there, sure enough, was a great big moving van and +it was piled up full of boxes and barrels and crates--all the things that +Mary Jane had watched the packing of only such a few days before. Talk +about fun! Moving was surely the best sport ever! + +Mary Jane stayed at the window watching till the men brought the first +load up. Then they announced that they were going for lunch and Mrs. +Merrill said she and the girls had better eat while the men were away. So +hastily putting on wraps, they went over to a small tea room only a few +doors away, where they had a tasty little luncheon so quickly served that +they easily got back to their flat before the moving men arrived again. + +How that afternoon went, Mary Jane never quite remembered. It was one long +succession of excitement and fun. The unpacking of boxes and crates, the +piling up of rubbish, the finding of cherished belongings and putting them +where they belonged in the new home, and the gradual change of the living +room from a mess of boxes to a place that might some day really look like +home, all seemed thrillingly interesting to a little girl who had never +moved before. + +But by half past four or thereabouts, even Mary Jane began to get a little +tired. + +"I'll tell you something to do," suggested Mrs. Merrill, when a pause in +her own work gave her a chance to notice that Mary Jane was getting +flushed and tired. "Here is a box of doll things I have just come across. +Suppose you take them out into your own little balcony and sort them over. +Put in this box (and she handed her a little box) all the things you must +surely have upstairs; and leave in the big box all the things you will be +willing to put in the store room. Now take your time, dear, and sit down +while you work." + +Mary Jane was very glad for that advice. For even though moving men are +wonderful to watch, and even though rubbish and boxes and barrels are all +very fascinating, a person _does_ get tired and sitting down isn't at all +a bad idea. + +One of the men who was unpacking gave her her own little chair that he had +just uncrated and so she sat down in state, in her own chair, on her own +balcony and opened the box of doll things. But that's every bit that got +done to those doll things that day, every bit. + +For at that very minute, who should come out of the house around the +corner, the house with the back yard and garden and chickens and +everything, but--yes, you must have guessed it--the same two girls that +Alice and Mary Jane had seen on the Midway the day they arrived in +Chicago. Think of that! Right under Mary Jane's own balcony and, moreover, +it was plain to see that they lived there. + +"Now I guess we'll get to know them," whispered Mary Jane to herself +happily. But of course, she didn't say a thing out loud. She only sat very +still and watched. + +And as she watched, two boys came out on the back porch of the house +around the corner and one of the boys called, "Say, Fran, did you feed the +chickens?" + +The girl who was about Alice's age answered back, "No I didn't, Ed, I +thought it was Betty's turn to-day." + +"Now I know a lot," Mary Jane whispered to herself. "She's Frances, I'm +sure, and he's Ed; and Betty must be the little girl that's 'bout as big +as me." + +Just then, when Mary Jane was wishing and wishing and wishing that she +would come, Alice came to the door of the balcony and looked out. + +"Sh-h-h!" whispered Mary Jane, tensely, "they're here, both of 'em, and +there's more of 'em, too!" + +Alice seemed to understand exactly what Mary Jane meant, even though her +sentence was decidedly mixed up, and she stepped out onto the balcony. + +Frances heard the door shut and looked up. For a long minute the two girls +looked at each other, then Frances, the girl with the auburn hair and the +friendly smile, nodded shyly. + +Little Betty didn't take long deciding what she would do. She called +eagerly, "Moving in?" + +"Yes, we are," laughed Alice, waving her hand toward the piles of boxes +and rubbish stacked up on the back stairs of the building. + +Ed, who had started back into the house, looked around and, seeing his +sisters had made a small start toward conversation, called a question on +his own responsibility. + +"Going to use 'em all?" he asked, pointing to the boxes. + +"Dear me, I guess not," said Alice. "I don't see how we could!" + +"Then will you give me a box?" he asked, running back in the yard till he +stood right under the balcony. "We're going to get some rabbits, John and +I are, and we want a box for their home." + +"Come on over and see which one you want," suggested Alice, "and I'll ask +father." + +Ed and his brother John lost no time climbing over the fence and +inspecting the boxes. By the time Alice brought Mr. Merrill, he had picked +out just the one he wanted and was very grateful when it was given him for +his own. + +"Don't you want to come over and see 'em make the rabbit house?" suggested +Frances shyly. "Oh, maybe you're busy." + +"I'm sure we can come," replied Alice, "because mother just told me she +wished we'd get some fresh air." So Alice and Mary Jane followed the +others to the back yard and helped hold nails and boards and make the +rabbit house. When it was nearly finished the children's mother, who +proved to be very charming Mrs. Holden, came out with a plate of cookies +and a welcome for the two little strangers. + +"Thank you for the cookies," said Mary Jane politely, "but we're not +strange--that is, not any more, we aren't, we know each other--all of us +do!" + +And so it really seemed to all the children. They were friends from the +first day and making the rabbit house was just the beginning of many nice +times in that friendly back yard. + + + + +VISITING WITH BETTY + + +Three days of hard work for everybody and then the little flat into which +the Merrills had moved began to look like a real home. The unpacking was +all done and the rubbish cleared away; the furniture was polished and set +in place; the closets were in order and every cupboard and shelf held just +the right things for comfort. It wasn't such an easy matter to stow away +all the things the Merrills had used in their pretty house--the five room +apartment was much smaller than the house of course--but with everybody's +help the job was done. + +"Now then," said Mrs. Merrill, happily, in the late afternoon of the third +day, "if you'll run the rods in these curtains, Mary Jane, I'll hang them +up where they belong and then we'll all three go to market and then--guess +what? We'll have dinner in our own new home!" + +Mary Jane thought that would be fun, for, much as she loved eating in the +hotel where they had been living while getting the new home fixed, she +liked better to eat her mother's cooking. So it was a very happy little +girl who slipped the rods into the living room curtains and then put on +her hat and hunted up the market basket from the pantry. + +Now many times before this, Mary Jane had been marketing with her mother. +But never had she been to such a market! Before, marketing meant going to +the grocery store about three blocks from their home; it meant talking to +the very interested and friendly grocer who had known Mary Jane ever since +she first appeared at the grocery in her big, well-covered cab--she was +then about two months old; it meant telling Mr. Shover, the grocer, just +what they wanted and picking out the sorts of things they liked best. But +marketing in Chicago was very different. In the first place there wasn't a +person around they had ever seen before; and then everything was so big +and there was so much food. Mary Jane thought there couldn't possibly be +enough folks in Chicago to eat all those good things! But when she and her +mother actually got into the store and began to buy, Mary Jane forgot all +about the strangeness and remembered only the fun. For they didn't get +somebody to wait on them as they used to at Mr. Shover's--not at all! They +waited on themselves! They went through a little turnstile and then +wandered around among the good things all by themselves and they took down +from the well-stocked shelves anything they wanted. It certainly was +queer. + +"Can we just take _anything_?" exclaimed Mary Jane in amazement as her +mother explained what they were to do. + +"Well," laughed Mrs. Merrill, "you must remember we have to pay for things +just the same as we used to at Mr. Shover's. But we can take anything we +want--if we pay for it." + +"Then I'll pick you out some good things to eat, mother!" cried Mary Jane +happily, "don't you worry about thinking what we're going to have!" + +Now Mary Jane really did know how to read, at least a little, but she +didn't stop to read on this important occasion. She looked at the pictures +on the cans of goodies and she picked out a can of all her favorites and +set them in the basket Mrs. Merrill carried on her arm. But that didn't +work, for Mrs. Merrill had a long list and the basket wouldn't hold only +so much. So they decided to let Mrs. Merrill pick out three things from +her list and then Mary Jane could buy one favorite; then three more things +from the list and then another favorite. That proved to be great fun and +it certainly did fill the basket in a hurry! Mary Jane was just trying to +decide between a box of marshmallows and a pan of nice, gooey, sugary +sweet rolls when Mrs. Merrill said, "whichever you decide, Mary Jane, +you'll have to carry the bundle yourself, because this basket won't hold +another parcel--not even a little one." + +Mary Jane decided on the rolls and she took them over to the counter to +have them wrapped up and there she almost bumped into--Betty Holden, no +less! Betty and her mother were shopping too, and their basket was almost +as full as Mrs. Merrill's. + +"We market after school," said Mrs. Holden, "and then Ed brings his wagon +to meet us and hauls the stuff home. We'll get him to give you a lift +too." + +"And then can Mary Jane come over to our house to play?" asked Betty. + +"For a little while," agreed Mrs. Merrill, smilingly, "but she won't want +to stay very long to-day because we're going to have our first dinner in +our new home and she's promised to help me lots--and I need it." + +Just then they spied Ed's face at the door so they hurried through the +second turnstile, paid for their groceries and left the store. Ed's wagon +proved to be very big and he was glad to give them plenty of room for the +Merrill basket. + +"Are you going to start in school to-morrow?" asked Betty as they walked +off toward home. + +"I'm going over to see about that to-morrow morning," said Mrs. Merrill. +"We've been so busy unpacking and settling that we haven't even thought +about it till now. Do you like your school, Betty?" + +"Yes, I do, lots!" exclaimed Betty heartily. "I'm just through +kindergarten this spring, I am, and next fall I'm first year." + +"Then I think you must be just about where Mary Jane will be," said Mrs. +Merrill. + +The two little girls ran skipping ahead, talking about what they would do +and where they would sit and all the things that girls plan for school. + +But when Mrs. Merrill took Alice and Mary Jane over the next morning, it +didn't work out as planned. Alice was entered and found herself in the +very same room and only two seats away from Frances, which seemed perfect. +But there wasn't room for Mary Jane! The kindergarten was crowded, very, +very crowded, and new little folks weren't allowed to come in. Miss +Gilbert, the teacher, talked with Mary Jane a while and Mary Jane told her +all the work she had done and all the things she had learned about. + +"I really think, Mrs. Merrill," said the teacher finally, "that your +little girl is ready for the first grade. She seems very well prepared. +But they don't take new first graders so late in the year. Why don't you +keep her out of school the rest of this term and then next year, enter her +in the first grade?" + +Mrs. Merrill thought that was a fine plan. There would be so many new +sights to see and things to learn in the city that Mary Jane would find +plenty to do. + +But Mary Jane was keenly disappointed. "I wanted to stay in Betty's room," +she explained to the teacher. "She asked me to sit by her this morning, +she did, and I promised yes I would." + +"Then I'll tell you what you may do," suggested the teacher kindly. "Two +of our folks are absent this morning so we have enough chairs to go +around. Wouldn't you like to stay with Betty and visit? And then just a +little before time for school to be out, Betty can take you up to your +sister's room and she can bring you home." + +Mrs. Merrill agreed that that was a fine plan, so Mary Jane went to the +cloak room to hang up her hat and her mother hurried back home. + +At first Mary Jane felt very strange in the new school room. There were so +many children there and the songs were new and the games were new and +everything seemed different. She almost--not really, but _almost_--wished +she had gone home with her mother. And then, after singing three songs +Mary Jane didn't know, the children made a big circle and let Mary Jane +stand in the middle and they sang the song Mary Jane knew so very well, + +"I went to visit a friend to-day, She only lives across the way, She said +she couldn't come out to play Because it was her ----" + +Quick as a flash Mary Jane dropped onto her knees and began to act out +packing things into a box. + +For a minute the children hesitated. That was a strange thing to be +acting; Mary Jane was not washing or ironing or churning or sweeping or +any of the things the children usually acted and they were all puzzled. +Then suddenly Betty remembered the back stairway and all the piles of +boxes and excelsior on Mary Jane's back stairway and she called out the +end of the song--"because it was her moving day!" And everybody finished +the verse with a flourish. + +After that Mary Jane felt more at home and the morning went oh, so very +quickly, till recess time, when they all went out into the big yard to +play in the sunshine. + +Betty and her particular friends were gathering together for a circle game +in the corner of the yard when Mary Jane heard a soft, helpless little +sound close at hand. Without stopping to say anything to any one, she ran +over to the fence and there, caught in between the tall iron bars, was the +tiniest, blackest little dog she had ever seen. He evidently had seen the +children coming out to play, had wanted to play with them and had supposed +he could slip right through between the bars of the fence. + +Mary Jane tried to pull him out but he was stuck fast. So she called +Betty. + +"Here!" shouted one of the boys, "I'll pull him out!" + +"No you don't," cried Betty imperatively, "you let him alone! We'll do +it!" And her snapping black eyes flashed so positively that the boy +obeyed. But Betty couldn't pull the dog through either, the bars were too +close, she couldn't move him either way. + +"I'll tell you what let's do," she said. "Mary Jane, you stay here and +guard him so nobody tries to pull him out and I'll go and get Tom and +he'll know what to do." Tom was the janitor. + +Mary Jane stood close by the dog and patted his head and talked kindly to +him so he would know somebody was trying to help him. And all the girls +and boys who had started to play together gathered around and watched Mary +Jane while Betty ran back to the school building and down into the +basement to fetch the janitor. + +Fortunately, Tom was in his office and came quickly in response to Betty's +call. He saw at once what the trouble was and discovered a way to remedy +it. It seems that the big iron bars that made the fence were heavier at +the bottom than nearer the top, so the space between the bars got wider +higher up. Tom took firm hold of the wiggling little creature and gently +but very firmly pushed him straight up between the bars. That didn't hurt +like trying to pull him out, so the dog stopped barking and whining. And +in a second Tom had him out--half way up the fence there was plenty of +room to lift him right through. + +Poor little doggie! He was so glad to be out and so frightened by his +experience that when Tom laid him down on the grass he looked quite +forlorn. Mary Jane sat down beside him and gathered him up into her arms. + +"Don't you be afraid, doggie," she said softly, "we'll take care of you, +don't you be afraid a bit!" + +"What you going to do with him?" asked one of the girls. + +But Mary Jane didn't have to answer that question. Before she could speak, +a small boy came running along the street, crying as hard as he could cry +and shouting between sobs, "I've lost my dog! I've lost my dog! Somebody's +stole my dog!" + +"No they haven't," called Betty, "maybe this is yours!" + +The little boy rubbed his eyes, looked through the fence--and a look of +happiness spread over his small face. + +"It's him! It's him! It's him!" he shouted happily, "then he isn't +stole!" + +It took only a minute to run around the gate, dash across the school yard +and grab the tiny little dog into his arms. And the children could tell by +the way the little creature snuggled down that the love wasn't all on one +side--evidently the little boy was a good master. + +Right at that minute, before there was a chance to start a game or any +play, a great bell in the school doorway began to ring. Mary Jane was used +to a small school of course--a school so small that the teacher came to +the window and simply called when recess was over. So she stared in +amazement when the great bell rang out so noisily. + +"Come on!" shouted Betty, "recess is over!" + +"Soon as I tell this doggie good-by!" replied Mary Jane. + +Betty didn't hear and, supposing Mary Jane was right behind her, she went +on into her place in line. And Mary Jane, remembering how leisurely folks +went up after recess at her old school, didn't pay any attention to the +rapidly forming lines. She turned around and patted the tiny dog and +nodded and smiled and whispered her good-by. + +When she did turn to go in with Betty, she was amazed to see all the +children had disappeared into the building. She scampered over to the door +as fast as ever she could. And up the stairs--but not a soul did she see! +Only the click of a closing door could be heard--a click that made Mary +Jane feel really shut out and lonely. + +"Now let's see," said Mary Jane to herself, "Betty's room was right around +a corner--" But there wasn't any room around that first corner--only a +long hall. A lump came into Mary Jane's throat. The building was so big, +so very, very big. And she felt so little, so very, very little. She +swallowed twice, determined not to cry and then she said out loud in a +queer frightened little voice, "I guess I'm lost. I'm lost in school!" + + + + +SAND CASTLES + + +"I Guess I'm lost! I'm lost in school!" + +Mary Jane's frightened little whisper sounded like a shout and the doors +and walls and hallways seemed to echo back, "Lost! Little girl lost!" in a +most desolate fashion. Mary Jane was so frightened that she stood +perfectly still--just as still as though her shoes were fastened to the +floor. And she looked straight ahead as though she was trying to see +through the wall at which she was staring. To tell the truth, Mary Jane +wasn't trying to see through the wall. She didn't even know a wall was in +front of her. She couldn't see a single thing, not even a big wall, +because a mist of tears was in her eyes and a great lump was growing in +her throat. + +Now Mary Jane wasn't a baby. And she never cried--or any way, she _hardly_ +ever cried because she was going on six and girls who are going on six +don't cry. But to be lost in a strange school and in a strange city +and--everything; well, it's not much wonder that Mary Jane felt pretty +queer. + +But before the tears had time to fall, there was a heavy footstep behind +her and Mary Jane whirled around to see--the kindly face of Tom the +janitor smiling at her. + +"Aren't you pretty late getting to your room?" he asked. + +Mary Jane couldn't answer. She was so relieved to have someone around that +for a minute she just couldn't get the lump out of her throat enough to +talk. + +Tom must have been used to little girls--maybe he had one of his +own--because he didn't pay any attention to Mary Jane's silence. He took +hold of her hand and said pleasantly, "Now don't you worry a minute. You +just show me which your room is and I'll go with you." + +"I'm looking for it too," said Mary Jane, finding her voice again, "but I +don't know where it is." + +"Don't know where your room is?" asked Tom in surprise. + +"No," replied Mary Jane with a decided shake of her head, "I don't." And +then, for talking was now getting comfortable and easy, she added, "you +see, it isn't really my room. It's Betty's. And I'm just a-visiting her. +I'm just moved to Chicago and they haven't any chair for me only just to +visit in when somebody's absent." + +"That sounds like the kindergarten," said Tom. + +"It is," agreed Mary Jane with a laugh of relief, "I'm kindergarten, I +am." + +"Then here we go, right down this way," said Tom, and off they started in +just the opposite direction. + +Before they got clear up to the kindergarten, though, they met Miss +Gilbert, who was coming in search of the little visitor. "Betty missed +her," she explained, "but I thought you'd find her, Tom." With a thank you +to her janitor friend, Mary Jane took tight hold of the teacher's hand and +they went into the kindergarten room together. + +After that, the morning went very quickly and happily and Mary Jane could +hardly believe her ears when the big whistles began to blow for twelve +o'clock and Miss Gilbert told them to put away their scissors and cut-out +papers and get ready to go home. Mary Jane had cut out two beautiful +tulips and she was very happy when she was told they might be taken home +as a souvenir of her visit. + +On the way home they met Frances and Alice and Ed so they had plenty of +company. + +"What you doing Saturday?" asked Ed as they neared their own corner. + +"I don't know," replied Alice, "is there anything nice to do--special?" + +"Well," answered Frances, "we were afraid you might all be busy--but--well +you see, we were going to have a beach party and we thought maybe you +folks would like to go along. All of you." + +Now Alice and Mary hadn't the slightest idea what a beach party was, only +of course they knew it must be something about the lake. But there wasn't +time for questions and talk just then for Frances discovered that they had +walked so slowly that they must rush on home to lunch. + +"We'll get mother to tell you," she promised, "and do say you'll come +'cause it's a fire and cooking and marshmallows and piles of fun." + +"And we've plenty of wires," added Betty, "and they're plenty long so you +won't burn your fingers." + +It sounded amazingly puzzling to Alice and Mary Jane, who couldn't in the +least understand what a fire and wires and all that had to do with a +beach. But they were to find out before so very long. For that same +afternoon, while Alice was still in school, Mrs. Holden and Betty came +over to call on Mrs. Merrill and Mary Jane and then the beach party was +all explained. + +"We go over to the lake very often," said Mrs. Holden. "And on the sandy +beach, close by the water, the children build a big fire. Then, when the +coals are good, we toast sandwiches and roast 'weenies' and toast +marshmallows. The children are so anxious to show your girls just how it +is done," she added, "and as the weather promises to be warm and sunny I +think we should have an extra fine time." + +So it was settled. And a person would have thought from the excitement and +fun of preparation that the party was to be that same day instead of +twenty-four hours away. For as soon as Alice and the older Holden children +came home from school, they all set to work planning the menu and getting +out baskets and cleaning the wires on which, so the Merrill girls learned, +marshmallows were held over the coals to be toasted. + +But when everything that could be done the day before, was finished, there +was still some time for play, so the children went down into the Holden +yard and the boys, Ed and John, showed the girls how to run a track +meet--how to jump and vault and race in proper track style. Alice and Mary +Jane thought the boys wonderfully skilled and the boys, thrilled by such +warm admiration, broke all their previous records and had a beautiful +time. + +At four o'clock the next afternoon the two families set out for the beach +party. And it surely was quite a procession that made its way the four or +five blocks to the park. First there was John with the wagon which held +all the heavy things--baskets of food and such. Next came Ed, who started +out walking behind the wagon to see that nothing dropped off. He and John +were to take turns pulling the load. Then the others carried bundles of +kindling and the wires for marshmallows and toasting racks for meat. They +had such a jolly time getting off that everybody felt sure the party was +to be a success. + +Mary Jane had been so busy helping get settled and all that, that she +hadn't had time for a real visit on the beach. To be sure she had had +glimpses of the big blue they could see down their own street, but to +really come over and see the lake and play in the sand--this was her first +trip. So she skipped along very happily and thought she could hardly wait +till they got there. + +Fortunately they hadn't far to go. Three blocks down and two blocks over +and there was the park--such a beautiful park with tiny lakes and bridges +and great trees whose buds were swelling in the warm afternoon spring +sunshine. Mary Jane thought she must be in fairyland come to life, it was +all so beautiful. They crossed an arched bridge; saw a lovely view off +toward the south where other bridges and lagoons and trees made such a +pretty picture they were tempted to stay and look longer; walked around a +big circle where, so John told them, the band gave concerts in the summer +time; circled a tiny little inlet lake and came out, quite suddenly, right +close to the big lake--Lake Michigan. It almost took Mary Jane's breath +way, coming suddenly that way, upon the sight of so much water. It was all +so blue and clear, she thought, for the minute, that surely it must be the +very same ocean she had seen in Florida only a few weeks before. + +But the boys didn't give much time for sight-seeing of lakes--they had +seen the good old lake many a time and they were thinking more about +supper than any view, however pretty. + +So they hurried their wagon across the boulevard driveway, and of course +all the folks had to follow close behind, and down the beach walk a couple +of hundred yards and there they settled themselves on a stretch of clean +white sand. + +"Now," said big brother Linn, whom the girls hadn't seen much of as yet, +but who seemed to be master of ceremonies, "you boys gather those big logs +down there, you girls fix the kindling and I'll set these stones up so we +get a good draft when we light our fire." + +Everybody set to work. The logs proved to be so big and heavy that Ed and +John were very glad to have the help of their father and Mr. Merrill to +roll them into place. The four girls sorted out the kindling in their +basket and added to it by picking up drift wood on the beach. Frances +explained that they always brought some along to be sure they had some +real dry wood for a start. + +With such good help and so much of it, of course it wasn't long till a +fine blaze was going and the beach party was actually begun. + +"Go ahead and play now," said Linn, when he saw the fire was started and +that there was a big pile of reserve wood close by. "You know we can't +cook till we get some coals." + +"But I'm starved," hinted Ed, with a hungry look toward the baskets his +mother and Mrs. Merrill were guarding. + +"Then you'll have to stay starved, young man," said his mother, laughing, +"because not a basket is to be opened till the coals are ready for +cooking." + +"Then let's make a sand castle," suggested Betty and she ran down to a +smooth place on the beach, away from possible smoke, and began molding the +white sand. + +That pleased Mary Jane. She hadn't forgotten the fun she had playing on +the beach in Florida, and while this beach was different--it didn't have +any of the pretty shells or funny little crawdads she had found on the +Florida beach--still it had lovely white sand and dainty little waves and +was quite the nicest place for play that Mary Jane had seen. + +"I'll tell you what let's do," suggested Alice, as she saw that all the +children were going to play in the sand, "let's each build a castle and +make it any way we like best and then when they're all finished, have an +exhibition and everybody look and see which is the best." + +"All right, let's," agreed the children and they set to work. + +Mary Jane chose for her castle a place down close by the water. She loved +the nearness of the waves and the thrill of knowing that maybe, if she +didn't watch out, a wave would come up really close and get her wet. Betty +picked out a spot nearer the fire on the side away from the smoke and +Alice chose a place where a few pretty pebbles would give her material +with which to pave a "moat" she intended to make. + +And then everybody set to work. So busy were they that Linn had to tend +the fire all by himself and Ed forgot he was hungry. + +Before very long that beach looked like a picture book. Towers and ditches +and castles and bridges were where flat sand had been a few minutes +before. The Holden children had made many a sand house and they knew just +how to pack the damp sand so it would stay in place and just how to put a +small board here and there to hold a second story or a tower straight and +tall. + +But with all their experience, Alice's castle was as pretty as theirs, or +at any rate she thought it was, and Mary Jane's was quite wonderful. She +smoothed off the "garden" in front of her palace, stuck in a few sticks +for flowers, made a pebbly path down to the tiny lake she had scooped out +at one side and then shouted, "Mine's done! Look at mine!" and stepped +aside so all could see her handiwork. + +[Illustration: And then, sliding in the wet sand, she sat right down in +the lake and sent a wave of ripples right over her castle _Page 61_] + +But Mary Jane wasn't used to working so close to the water and she forgot +entirely where she was! Instead of stepping to one side, as she should +have done, she stepped backwards--straight into the big lake! And then, +sliding in the wet sand, she sat right down in the lake and sent a big +wave of ripples--right over her castle and garden and lake and everything +and washed it all away, every bit! + + + + +THE BEACH SUPPER + + +A minute before Mary Jane slid into the lake, the beach was a scene of +busy building and fun. Linn tended the fire, the grown folks gathered wood +and visited and guarded baskets and the children all were intent on their +sand castles. But with Mary Jane's tumble everything changed. + +Sand flew helter skelter as the children jumped hastily and ran to Mary +Jane's assistance; castles were trampled on as though they didn't exist +and fire wood and baskets were all forgotten. + +"Don't be afraid, you're all right!" called Mrs. Merrill as she ran toward +her little girl. + +"Coming! Coming! Here!" shouted Mr. Merrill reassuringly as he dashed over +to his little daughter, picked her up by the shoulders and set her, safe +and sound, on dry sand just in time to miss a fair sized wave. + +"I guess I'm wet!" said Mary Jane. + +"I guess you are," laughed Mr. Merrill, "but I guess things will dry and +you're not so very awfully too wet--not enough to spoil the party, is she, +mother?" + +Mrs. Merrill looked thoughtful and all the children waited anxiously for +her answer. Would Mary Jane have to go clear off home and miss the party +and everything! But it wasn't to be as bad as all that. Mrs. Merrill +remembered the warm day, the glowing sun that was still bright and warm +and she also remembered the hot fire Linn had underway and the warm sand +all around the fire. + +"Of course she isn't wet enough to spoil the party," said Mrs. Merrill, +much to every one's relief. "Only she'll have to stay close by the fire +till she gets warm and dry. Suppose we appoint her head cook and make her +stay right there where it's hot?" + +"She'll get dry then!" exclaimed Ed, so fervently that they all knew he +had had many a hot face from working by the fire at previous picnics. + +"But how about your castles?" asked Mr. Holden, "weren't we to have an +exhibit?" + +But the castles! Dear me! In the excitement of Mary Jane's tumble, no one +had given a thought to the castles. They were stepped on, and trampled +down and all matted down into the sand. + +"That's just too bad!" said Mrs. Merrill. + +"Pooh!" exclaimed John, dismissing the whole question of castles with one +wave of the hand, "who cares about castles! _We're_ going to have supper." +And every one set to work. + +Mary Jane was supposed to be head cook, but as she had never before been +to a beach party, she really didn't know what to do. So she simply stayed +close by the hot fire while the boys brought three benches and made them +in a triangle around the fire--a little way back of course. Then Mrs. +Holden and Mrs. Merrill unpacked the baskets and fixed a place on the +bench for each person. To be sure nobody was expected to sit on the +bench--that would be quite too proper for a beach party meal. But the +mothers put a paper plate and a cup for each person on the benches and +then they put on the plate as many sandwiches and pickles and cookies and +everything as each person was entitled to. + +While they were doing this, Linn raked down the hot coals, set in place a +light wire rack he had made and spread a couple of dozen weenies out to +roast. + +"Now then, Mary Jane," he said to the head cook, "you take this long fork. +And as soon as a weenie begins to sputter and brown, turn it over so it +browns on the other side too." + +That was a very important job, Mary Jane could easily see, and she +determined that every weenie _she_ cooked would be done just to a turn. +She bent over the fire till her back got a crook in it; then she sat down +on the hot sand close to the coals and by the time the weenies were done +ready to eat she was so dry and hot that she felt sure she had never +slipped into the lake--never! + +And all the time Mary Jane was cook, Linn and Mr. Merrill stayed close to +see that the coals kept evenly hot and that no bit of flame started up to +burn the head cook. + +At last the weenies were ready. Each one was beautifully brown and was +sizzling and sputtering and sending a most tempting odor to hungry folks. + +"Form a line, folks," said Mrs. Holden, "ladies first!" + +With much laughter, each person got their own roll, which had been split +and buttered, and filed passed Mary Jane. And Mary Jane, instructed by +Linn just how to do her job, picked up one weenie after another on the +long fork and dropped each one in an open roll held out before her. It was +a scary job, for the sand was close below and Mary Jane knew that weenies +dropped into the sand wouldn't taste very good. But she took her time--too +much time, John thought. + +"Don't be 'fraid of any old sand," he assured her when she put his weenie +in his roll so very carefully, "I eat 'em any way--sand or not." + +Betty eyed Mary Jane a bit enviously. This being chief cook and having a +chance to fill the rolls of each person must surely be fun. + +"Next time we have a beach party," she announced between bites, "_I'm_ +going to fall into the lake too!" + +"I'll save you the trouble," replied Mr. Holden understandingly, "I'll let +you be chief cook without getting wet." + +Betty needn't have worried about Mary Jane's being willing to give up her +job. For there was one disadvantage in that position Miss Betty hadn't +thought of and Mary Jane had just discovered--the head cook had no time to +eat. And Mary Jane was getting fearfully hungry. She was more than willing +to give up the big fork, let Betty fill her roll for her and stand up with +the others to eat the good hot morsel. + +Did anything ever taste as good as those hot weenie sandwiches, eaten +there on the edge of Lake Michigan, with the fine lake air blowing in +their faces and the sunshine warming them and making them forget the chill +of the long winter? The Merrills thought they had never had so much fun +and tasted such good things. Every weenie (and there had seemed to be far +too many) was eaten up; every roll disappeared and cookies and pickles and +sandwiches just vanished as though a warm breeze had melted them away. + +Supper over, the sun going down reminded the children that they must get +the fire ready for dark. They scampered up and down the broad beach, +gathering together all the pieces of drift wood they could find. Later in +the year wood along that beach would be hard to find. But in the early +spring, before the driftings of the winter's storms had been burned up by +picnickers like themselves, there was plenty to be had. + +Linn and Ed put away the cooking rack in the case they had made for it, +the two mothers packed up debris and burned it so the beach would be left +clean and tidy, and all the others gathered wood. Such a lot as they did +find! Linn piled it on high and by the time the sun went to sleep in the +west, the fire was so bright that nobody noticed the growing darkness. +They all sat around on the warm sand and sang--college songs that the +children had learned from the fathers, school songs and popular songs that +they all knew. It was fun to sit there close by the big lake, to watch the +sparks fly upward, to hear the waves swish against the sand and to sing +and sing as loud as they liked. + +But when the darkness settled down enough so that mysterious shadows +lurked over every shoulder and the stars helped the fire make a light, Ed +announced, "Now let's play Indian." + +So they did. Playing Indian, the Merrill girls found, meant a queer +follow-the-leader game. Ed led off first and everybody had to follow. He +ran round and round the fire, prancing and yelling like a wild man. And +the point of the game was for everybody to do exactly as he did. They ran +and jumped and yelled till everybody was breathless with exercise and +laughter and was glad to sit down again and do nothing. + +By this time the fire had again died down to a bed of coals. + +"_Now_ it's time for the marshmallows, isn't it?" asked Betty. She was +right, it was. + +The boxes of marshmallows were opened, wires pulled out of the baskets and +all the children sat around the fire a-toasting. 'Twas just as Betty had +promised. The wires were plenty long enough so that no fingers needed to +be burned or dresses scorched and the bed of coals was big enough to make +room for all. + +Betty and Mary Jane thought they would keep count and see who could eat +the most, but after six they lost count, and they ate and ate till they +simply couldn't eat any more. + +"Let's play still pond," suggested Frances. + +She stood up near the fire and announced, "Twenty steps, two jumps, three +hops and a roll. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, +ten--STILL POND." + +As she said the numbers off, the children began scampering to a place to +safety. All but Mary Jane. She wasn't used to playing on the slippery, +slidy sand. And though she started off just as big as anybody, she slipped +and stumbled and hadn't more than got to her feet when the words, "Still +pond!" were called. And after that she couldn't move but just to use the +steps, jumps, hops and roll Frances had given them. + +To make matters even more exciting, Frances started off exactly in her +direction. + +But Mary Jane hadn't played "Still Pond" in her own yard for nothing. +Perhaps she hadn't learned to run on slippery sand as yet, but she did +know how to play that game. Instead of trying to quietly take her twenty +steps in an effort to get out of Frances' way, she took two quick steps, +dropped down on the sand, gave one little roll, and--was safely hidden +under one of the picnic benches they had used for supper! + +Frances passed so close Mary Jane could have touched her. Other folks were +chased and found, but Mary Jane's hiding place was undiscovered. Of course +when she rolled in under the bench, Mary Jane had expected to roll right +out again when somebody else was caught. But when she found that they +couldn't see her; that they went right around close at hand, talking about +her and wondering where she was and all that, she thought it was such a +good joke that she lay very still and watched. + +She heard them asking each other where she was seen last; she heard her +father say she couldn't be so very far away; and she saw them all start +off in search of herself. Then, just the minute their backs were turned +but before they had had time to be really frightened, she slipped out from +under her seat, stood up close by the dying fire and shouted, "Here I am, +can't you see me?" + +They thought it a very good joke she had played and Mary Jane was sure she +would always remember that the best hiding place is often the nearest +one. + +"Time to go home," said Mr. Holden, looking at his watch, "the fire's most +out and the party's over." + +"But there'll be another one, won't there?" begged Mary Jane. + +"Let's have it next week," said Betty. + +The boys loaded up the empty baskets on their wagon--not much of a load +going home! Mr. Merrill raked out the fire so no harm would come to +anything; Mr. Holden gathered the children together and started the line +of march. It was a happy little crowd that wandered homeward and they all +agreed with Mary Jane when she said, "Well, anyway, I think a beach +party's the mostest fun I know. It's more fun than moving!" + + + + +MARY JANE GOES SHOPPING + + +The days after the beach party seemed to fly past on wings. First it was a +Monday and then, before a person could do half the nice things planned, +Saturday was coming 'round again and Alice was home all day from school +and fun for the four Merrills could be planned. Mrs. Merrill and Mary Jane +took to doing all their "Saturday marketing" on Friday afternoon so they +could have more time on Saturday for trips and sight-seeing and all the +lovely things folks like to do when they've just moved to a big city. + +One Saturday morning, not so very long after the beach party, dawned--not +bright and warm and sunny as Mary Jane had hoped it surely would--but +rainy and cold and windy as some May mornings are sure to be in Chicago. A +cold northeast wind raced across the city and folks had blue noses and +shivery finger tips and not a single thing to be seen looked like spring. + +"Now just look at it!" exclaimed Mary Jane as she stared out of the +living-room window, "and we were going to take a trip through the parks +and I was going to wear my new hat and everything. And look!" + +"And we can't go to the parks again for another whole week!" bemoaned +Alice, "'cause there's school!" + +"Just look!" exclaimed Mary Jane again as a hard gust of wind tossed the +rain against the winds exactly as though Mr. Rain was saying to Mary Jane, +"Thought you'd go out, did you? Well, look what I'm doing!" + +"You girls talk as though parks were the only things to see in Chicago," +said Mrs. Merrill as pleasantly and comfortably as though there was no +such thing as a disappointment in the world. + +Alice and Mary Jane turned away from the window quickly. Something in +their mother's tone of voice made them suspect that the day wasn't to be a +disappointment after all. + +"It's funny to me," continued Mrs. Merrill in a matter of fact voice, +"that you folks haven't asked to go to the big stores--wouldn't you like +to?" + +"Like to!" exclaimed Alice. + +"Would we?" cried Mary Jane. "But we didn't think about it!" + +"Then we'll think about it now," replied Mrs. Merrill. "If you can hold an +umbrella down tight over your head so as not to get your hat wet, I think +we could manage to get to the train without getting soaked. And once down +at the store, we could check our wet umbrellas and shop and sight-see +through the stores all we wished to without a bit of hurry." + +"Oh, may we really go?" asked Alice. + +"Well," answered Mrs. Merrill, pretending to hesitate, "if you _really_ +care to--" + +That settled it and there was no more time wasted talking about weather +_that_ morning. Dishes were washed and beds were made and dusting was done +so quickly that the little flat must have been quite surprised and pleased +with itself--it got put into rights so very quickly. Then Mary Jane got +her hair fixed nicely and a pretty hair bow put on--the bow wouldn't show +very much under the new hat, but even that little had to be just +right--and then, while mother fixed her own and Alice's hair, she put on a +pretty dress--not a party dress, of course, but a nice, pretty, dark +dress. Then they all put on rubbers and raincoats and locked up the doors +and took their umbrellas and started for the train. + +Going down town on the train was fun. In the city where Mary Jane lived +before, one could walk down town. Or if one really wanted to ride, a +street car hustled one to the stores in about five minutes. But in +Chicago, so she discovered, she had to have a ticket and go through a +gate, and up stairs and onto a platform and aboard a train and everything +just as though one intended to go away, far off. The girls both liked to +ride down town. To be sure they couldn't see much of the lake, even though +they did ride right along beside it, because the rain made it all look dim +and gray and foggy. But they knew the lake was there; they could see the +spray the waves made and once in a while they could hear the noise of +splashing water above the roar of the train. All too soon, for there was +so much to see, the train pulled into their station and the conductor +shouted, "Randolph Street! Everybody out! Far's we go!" And all the folks +aboard got their umbrellas ready and went out into the rain. + +Fortunately it was only a very little way from the station to the big +store where Mrs. Merrill took the girls, so they didn't have a chance to +get tired or very wet. And as soon as they got indoors, Mrs. Merrill found +a checking place and they left wet umbrellas and wet raincoats and wet +rubbers and started out for fun. + +"I think that's awfully convenient--just to leave things that way," said +Alice as she settled her collars and cuffs and made sure she was tidy, +"and of course we'll get them back safely?" This checking system was new +to her and she wanted to be assured it was all right. + +"To be sure we will," said Mrs. Merrill. "See? I have the checks for +them." + +"Well, then," said Mary Jane, "let's begin." + +"Yes," said Alice, "let's. And let's see _everything_!" + +"All right," laughed Mrs. Merrill; "shall we take an elevator first?" + +"Oh, no," answered Alice, "'cause then we'd miss the first floor." + +So they "did" the first floor, seeing all the handkerchiefs and jewelry +and bags and fans and pretty decorations and ribbons--Alice could hardly +leave those lovely ribbons--and neckwear--Mary Jane saw five different +neckties she needed--and so many things. + +"Do they have anything left for the second floor?" asked Mary Jane when +they finally got around to where they had started. + +"You just see," said Mrs. Merrill. + +And sure enough there were plenty of things on the second floor, pretty +dishes and lamps and so many things that, really, Mary Jane almost got +tired looking at them all. + +By the time they got ready for the third floor, Mary Jane was wondering if +there were any seats in that store. Not seats where you sit down to buy +things, but really seats where you just sit down whether you buy anything +or not. And sure enough there were just those seats. Nice, big comfy ones, +that appeared to be made for Mary Janes who went a-shopping and wanted to +sit down. The Merrills sat down on a big couch and Mary Jane leaned back +ready to rest when--who should she see right in front of her but Frances +Westland! The girl she met at grandmother's house nearly a year ago. + +In a jiffy Mary Jane forgot all about wanting to sit down. She slid down +from the comfortable couch, dashed after Frances, who, not guessing that a +friend was so near, was hurrying by, and brought her back to meet mother +and Alice. + +Then they all sat down for a visit. + +"No, I'm not living here," said Frances in answer to Mrs. Merrill's +question, "I've been spending the spring with my auntie and going to +school here. But just as soon as school is out I'm going back home. Mother +needs me." + +"I don't doubt it," replied Mrs. Merrill, who was much pleased with the +little girl, "I'm sure your mother misses you greatly. But where are you +living and can't we see you before you go and can't you take lunch with us +to-day?" + +It seemed that Frances's auntie lived in the same part of the city the +Merrills lived in and there was every reason to believe that the girls +might see each other at least once or twice in the little time left of the +school year. + +"But I don't believe I can eat lunch with you," added Frances, "'cause +auntie and I have to hurry home." So with a promise to come to see them +soon at the address Mrs. Merrill wrote out on her card for Frances, the +friends said good-by. + +"I'll declare!" exclaimed Mrs. Merrill, looking at her watch after Frances +left them. "It's almost twelve o'clock already! And we were to meet father +at one. If you girls want to see anything of the toys and dolls and +playrooms, we'd better not be sitting around here any longer." + +Of course the girls did want to see the toys and dolls and everything. +When they got to the fourth floor where all the children's things were +kept, they were sorry they had spent even a minute any place else. For all +the lovely dolls and marvelous toys and enticing games and beautiful +pictures and fascinating puzzles made a person think that Santa Claus's +shop and fairyland and magic were all mixed up together and set down in +one place. The girls looked and looked and looked. They "oh-ed" and +"ah-ed" and exclaimed till they couldn't think of anything more to +say--and then they kept right on looking just the same. + +Mary Jane picked out the doll coat she wanted Georgiannamore to have and +Alice selected a lovely desk. They agreed upon a set of dishes and upon +charming furniture for their balcony--just the right size too. + +"And we'll pretend we'll buy it all, mother," said Mary Jane, who knew +perfectly well she couldn't buy all the things she talked about getting, +"and we'll pretend we'll have it all sent up, that'll be such fun." + +So they pretended and looked and looked and pretended till they had been +over most all that part of the store. + +"Now then," said Mrs. Merrill, "if we're to meet Dadah for lunch--" + +"Oh, goody!" cried Alice, "are we to meet him here?" + +"Not here," said Mrs. Merrill, "but in this store in the lunch room and in +ten minutes. So we'd better wash our hands and go to the lunch room +floor." + +Mr. Merrill was waiting for them and had a table engaged close by a +charming fountain ("Just think of a fountain in a house!" exclaimed Mary +Jane when she spied it) and all the time Mary Jane sat there eating, she +could look right over and watch the fishes and she could hear the splash +of the water. + +But Mary Jane wasn't thinking of fishes or water just then. She was +hungry. And the things her father read to her sounded so good--oh, dear, +but they did sound good! She and Alice had a dreadfully hard time deciding +just what did sound the best. But Alice finally decided on stuffed chicken +legs (she hadn't an idea what they were but they sounded good) and potato +salad and strawberry parfait. And Mary Jane chose chicken pie--a whole one +all her own--and hashed brown potatoes and orange sherbet. + +While the lunch was being fixed, Mr. Merrill took Mary Jane over to the +window so she could look down, down, way down, to the street below, where +the folks appeared so little and upside down and where the automobiles +looked like the ones they had just seen in the toy department. + +When the lunch came, it proved to be just as good as the menu promised it +would be and the girls enjoyed every bite. Mary Jane was afraid for a +minute that she had made a mistake. For Alice's parfait came in a tall +glass, with a long spoon that made the girls think of the story of the fox +and the goose and the banquet, and Mary Jane was sure nothing she had +ordered could be as nice as parfait. But when the maid set the orange +sherbet at her place, Mary Jane was quite satisfied, for the ice was set +in a real orange, all cut out in dainty scallops and trimmed with green. + +"Yummy-um!" she whispered, happily. "I'm so glad you had this party, +Dadah!" + +Dadah seemed to want everything to be all right, for he had added to their +order some little cakes, done up in frilly papers and unlike anything the +girls had ever seen. They almost hated to eat them, they were so pretty, +but cakes one cannot eat are not good for much, Mr. Merrill reminded them, +and so the cakes were eaten up. + +"Now then," said Mary Jane, as she dabbled her fingers in the finger bowl +and ate up the candy she found at the side of the tiny tray, "what do we +do next?" + + + + +THE BUS RIDE + + +"What do we do next?" asked Mr. Merrill, repeating Mary Jane's question. +"I'm sure of this much--we must do something _very_ nice because it's such +a nice day." + +"_Nice day_!" exclaimed Alice. "What in the world are you talking about, +Dadah? This is the worst weather we've had since we came to Chicago--but +we don't care 'cause we're having such a good time anyway." + +Mr. Merrill laughed and replied, "Suppose you look out of the window." + +So they left their cozy table, where nothing but empty dishes told the +story of their delightful lunch party, and wandered over to the window +where Mary Jane had looked down at the street not much over an hour +before. But what a difference! With a sudden, unexpected shift of wind +that only the Chicago weather man knows how to bring about, the stiff, +cold northeaster that had brought the cold rain of the morning had been +sent off and in its place a warm breeze from the south blew softly across +the city, bringing with it sunshine and warmth and pleasantness for all. + +"Why--" exclaimed Mary Jane, much puzzled, "where's the rain?" + +"Did you want it back?" laughed Mrs. Merrill, and then she explained to +the girls something about the effect the big lake might have on weather +and told them that one of the queer things about Chicago was its sudden +changes to good, or sometimes bad, weather. + +"So I was wondering," said Mr. Merrill, "if you folks wouldn't like an +hour of fresh air and then, if you're not through shopping we can come +back to the stores." + +The girls hadn't an idea what he might want to do, but they were pretty +sure it would be fun. So they agreed that an hour out of doors was just +what they most wanted and they went down to get wraps from the check room. +They left the umbrellas till later, put on their wraps and left the +store. + +"Now then," said Mr. Merrill, "see that big bus down there--we're going +for a ride on the top." + +"What's a bus?" asked Mary Jane, who had never heard the word before. But +before her father could answer they were pushed into the crowd at the +crossing, hurried across and the next second Mr. Merrill had hailed a +great, lumbering, top-heavy automobile and was helping the girls to step +aboard. + +The "bus" proved to be a large-sized passenger automobile, with a deck on +top for passengers who wished to ride in the open air. Mary Jane and Alice +were thrilled with the fun of getting on it. It seemed exactly like going +aboard a house-boat on wheels. They stepped into a little hallway and +then--and this wasn't so easy because the bus immediately began to +move--they climbed up a curving flight of stairs and walked down an +aisle--an awfully wiggly aisle it was too!--to seats on the very front +row. + +Then, before they had had a chance to look around or feel at home, the +conductor, who stood at the back, shouted, "Low bridge!" and everybody +ducked their heads while the great bus went under the elevated railroad. +Mary Jane felt, truly, as though she must be a person in a story +book--Arabian Nights or something marvelous--because surely the things +that were happening to her weren't _really_ happening. + +But after the elevated was passed, the bus rolled out onto Michigan +Boulevard and Mary Jane settled herself comfortably in her front seat with +her mother, smiled across the aisle to Alice and her father and began to +feel really at home in her high perch. By the time the bus had turned +northward and crossed the river, she began to feel that riding on the top +of a bus was the thing she'd been wanting to do all her life. It was such +fun to sit up high and watch the lake, so blue and beautiful in the +sunshine, the trees just getting a tinge of green at the tips, the pretty +houses that lined the parkway, the people--it seemed as everybody in +Chicago must be out in their 'tother best clothes--and most of all, it was +fun to watch the automobiles dart in and out of the crowd, around the bus +and beside it, till Mary Jane was sure their driver must be some wonderful +being to be able to manage so that everybody stayed alive! + +"Here, Mary Jane," said Mr. Merrill, interrupting Mary Jane's +sight-seeing, "don't you want to pay your fare--Alice is paying ours." He +slipped two dimes into her hand just as the conductor stepped to the front +of the bus. Mary Jane wasn't quite sure what she was to do with the dimes +till she noticed that the conductor had in his hand a queer-looking thing +like a clock, only it had a hole in the top just the right size for a +dime. Into that hole Mary Jane dropped a dime. And--"ding_ding_!" went a +musical little bell somewhere in the "clock." Then she dropped the other +dime. And again the bell sounded, "ding_ding_!" just as though it tried to +say "Thank _you_!" that way. Alice then dropped her two dimes and Mary +Jane had the fun of hearing the bell again. She thought she wouldn't do a +thing but watch the conductor and listen to his bell all the time he +collected fares, but just as he stepped back to get the next folks' money +the bus passed in front of the queer old stone building with great tower +that Mr. Merrill said was the city water works building, and of course +that meant the girls wanted to hear about when it was built and hear again +the story Mr. Merrill had started to tell them several evenings before +about how the great Chicago fire started and how it burned up to this very +spot they were now passing. Somehow, being at that place and seeing the +one building that stood through the fire made the history stories seem +very plain and there were a lot of questions to be asked and answered. + +But buses don't wait for questions--the girls soon discovered that! Long +before the fire story was told they had raced up Lake Shore Drive, passed +its beautiful old homes, and were turning into Lincoln Park. Here it +seemed to the girls that the city ended and fairyland began. The grass +seemed greener, the lake bluer and the trees greener than any place they +had seen; and hundreds of tulips peeping up through the ground here, there +and everywhere, made spots of bright vivid color and beauty. + +"Oh!" exclaimed Mary Jane happily, "I hope the bus goes on and on forever! +I'd like to keep on riding all the time!" + +But when, a minute or two later, they passed near the buildings of the +Zoo, Mary Jane forgot all about wanting to ride forever and wanted to get +out, right away quick and see all the animals she had heard lived there. + +"Not to-day," said Mr. Merrill, looking at his watch. "You remember we are +to go back to the stores--we're just out for a bit of fresh air this time. +Some other day when it's still warmer so we can get our dinner here, then +we'll come and visit the Zoo. But to-day I want to get back to the stores +before they close." + +"Of course," added Alice, "for our umbrellas." + +"Of course for something else too," laughed her father, and though both +girls were very curious, not another word would he say. + +So they stayed on the bus and rode clear through the park, and up Sheridan +Road a long way till the bus turned around at a corner and the conductor +shouted, "Far's we go!" + +But the Merrills didn't get off. They wanted to keep those good front +seats so they sat still and in about two minutes the bus started south and +whirled them through the park and past all the same interesting sights on +the way cityward. This time, Mary Jane felt very much at home in her +high-up perch. She dropped in the dimes her father gave her, eyed the +passing autos without a bit of fear and looked down on all the children +she saw walking and playing quite as though she had lived in a city and +ridden in busses all her young life. + +It was a very reluctant pair of young ladies that Mr. Merrill assisted to +the sidewalk when the big stores and "time to get off" were reached. + +"But what was it besides umbrellas you wanted to get?" asked Mary Jane, +suddenly remembering. + +"Well," said Mr. Merrill, "I haven't been through the toy department with +anybody. And I have a calendar." + +The girls looked puzzled. What had the toy department to do with a +calendar? They couldn't guess. Even Mrs. Merrill looked puzzled. + +"Of course if you don't intend to have birthdays since we've moved--" said +Mr. Merrill teasingly. And then everybody knew! To be sure! It was almost +time for Mary Jane's birthday--almost a year, it was, since the lovely +birthday party when the little girl was five years old--and in the +excitement of moving and getting settled and seeing new sights, even the +little lady herself had forgotten how near the day was at hand. + +"It's mine!" exclaimed Mary Jane happily, "and I'll be six! Come on, +quick, Dadah! and I'll show you perzactly what I want." When Mary Jane got +excited she sometimes got words a little mixed, but her father knew well +enough just what she meant. She grabbed hold of his hand, called to her +mother and Alice to come on with them and away they went toward the +elevator that quickly took them to the toy section. + +Going through that department the second time was even more fun than the +first trip, because now father was along to see things and to explain +mechanical toys. And also because there was the fun of picking out the +thing she wanted to wish for, for her birthday. That last was a very +serious matter, as every little girl knows. + +They looked at dolls--but not a doll was as lovely as Georgiannamore, at +least that was Mary Jane's opinion--and then they looked at furniture and +at dishes and toys and games and clothes for dolls and, well, at every +single thing in that whole big department. After everything had been +considered and looked at and thought about, and it was about time for the +big warning bell to ring and tell folks that in ten minutes the store +would close and everybody'd have to get out, then and not until then, Mary +Jane decided that the thing she wanted most of all was a doll cart. A +beautiful little ivory enameled doll cart made just exactly like the one +that Junior's little brother had back at their old home. A cart with a top +that moved back and forth just like a real baby cart and that had cushions +and tires and everything that a really truly mother is particular to want +for her baby. + +"Yes," said Mary Jane, as she looked around the store with a rather tired +sigh, "I think that's the thing I want the most and I'm going to wish for +it, Dadah." + +"Sounds easily settled," laughed her father, "but do you know what time it +is?" + +Before she could answer, the warning bell rang and clerks began to cover +up counters and to straighten up the store for its Sunday rest. So the +Merrills four hurried down to get umbrellas and to go home. + +On the train going home Mary Jane was so tired looking at things that she +didn't care a bit about looking any more. She watched the lake some, but +mostly she simply settled back in her little corner behind the door and +just sat. Thoughts of all the wonderful things she had seen that day raced +through her mind--the lunch, the ride, the lake, the park--but most of +all, that wonderful doll cart, and she couldn't help wondering (and of +course hoping) if she really truly would, _possibly_, get that lovely gift +for her birthday. + + + + +THE BIRTHDAY LUNCHEON + + +As soon as they got home that evening, and had dinner and rested up a bit, +Mary Jane hunted up a calendar so she could find out about her birthday. +And she discovered that two weeks from that same day was "her" day. + +"It's Saturday, so you can do something too!" she said to Alice. "Now, +Mother, let's plan." + +So they talked over all the nice things a person _might_ do for a +birthday, but long before they could decide which was the very nicest of +all the plans, bedtime came. Then the next morning there were interesting +things to do, and nobody thought about plans for a day that was two weeks +away. That is, nobody but Mary Jane thought about it, and, if the truth +must be told, she thought more about the doll cart she had wished for than +she did about what she might do to celebrate. + +Monday noon, when Alice came home for her luncheon, she was much excited. + +"Who do you s'pose I saw at recess this morning?" she demanded. "Guess!" + +But Mrs. Merrill and Mary Jane couldn't guess--they didn't know anybody in +Chicago to guess! Or at least they thought they didn't. + +"I saw--" began Alice slowly, for she wanted the fun of keeping them +waiting to last as long as possible, "I saw--Frances Westland! And she +goes to my school!" + +"Why in the world didn't we know that?" said Mrs. Merrill. "We should have +guessed! Of course she goes to your school. I remember of thinking she +wasn't very far from us." + +"Can't we have her come to see us?" asked Mary Jane eagerly. + +"I already asked her if she couldn't come," explained Alice, "because I +knew you'd want me to, and she says she's sure she can. But she can't come +next Saturday because she and her auntie are going to Milwaukee to spend +the week-end. But she thought she could come the next Saturday." + +"And that's my birthday," Mary Jane reminded her. + +"I know it," agreed Alice, "but I didn't tell her. I just said I'd find +out what we were doing that day and let her know this afternoon--was that +all right, Mother?" + +"You did exactly right, dear," said Mrs. Merrill reassuringly. "Come right +out to the dining-room now, because your soup is ready and you mustn't +hurry yourself too much with your lunch. While we eat, we'll plan for the +birthday." + +Of course there were many plans to be talked of, because in a big city +there are so many kinds of things one may do. And it was awfully hard to +decide which plan was the very most fun--you know how that is yourself. +But after every plan that any of the three could think of had been +discussed carefully, Mary Jane decided that there were two things she +wanted the most to do. First, she wanted to stay home to celebrate and +have a party and all that; and, second, she wanted to go down town and go +to a big grown-up theater where there was music and lights and pretty +things just like grown folks see up town. And for her part she admitted +that she didn't see how a person possibly, even on a birthday, could do +those two conflicting things. + +"Pooh!" laughed Mrs. Merrill, "that's easy! I was telling Dad the other +night that inasmuch as this was the first birthday in the city and on +Saturday and everything--so convenient for us all--we'd better do those +very two things." + +"But how'll we do it, Mother?" asked Alice. "We can't stay home for a +party while we're down town at the theater!" + +"To be sure, we can't," agreed Mrs. Merrill. "But we can stay home for a +party _before_ we go down town for a show. And that's just what we're +going to do. You hurry off to school now, dear, because it's ten of one. +And next time you see Frances Westland, you invite her to come here for +twelve o'clock luncheon a week from next Saturday. Be sure to tell her +it's an all-afternoon party, so she can stay long enough to go down town +with us." + +"And who else'll we have?" asked Mary Jane, when Alice had gone. "It +wouldn't be a party with one person." + +"Of course not," said her mother. "There are going to be three folks. +After school this very day you are going to invite Frances and Betty +Holden--that'll make it almost a 'Frances' party, won't it? We'll ask them +right away, even though a week from Saturday is a long time off, because +Dadah will want to get the tickets and we will all want to make our +plans." + +A week and five days seem a very long time, when you have to wait for +them. But Mary Jane found that, after all, they went quicker than she had +thought they could, because there was so much to do. First she had to +decide what she wanted to have to eat at the luncheon. After much thought +and consultation the menu was made out and tacked up on the kitchen +cabinet for future reference. Mary Jane printed it out all by herself and +the letters were big and plain and could be easily read by any +cook--especially Mother. It said: + + CHICKEN BALLS + HOT ROLLS + FRUIT SALAD WITH WHIPPED CREAM + ICE CREAM CAKE + HASHED BROWN POTATOES + JELLY + +Chicken balls really meant chicken croquettes, but croquettes proved to be +such a big and puzzling word that Mary Jane decided she would say balls +and Mrs. Merrill agreed to take a verbal order for the croquette part of +the luncheon. + +When the food was planned for, Mary Jane began to talk about the +decorations. It was soon found that to be really pretty, the table +trimmings would have to be made by the hostess herself, so Mary Jane set +to work. From the advertising sections of magazines she cut letters about +an inch high. Letters enough to spell everybody's first name and last +initial. She had to have the last initial because two of her guests had +the same first name. These she sorted very carefully and put in envelopes; +one envelope for each person and just the right letters in that envelope +for the person's name. Then, she planned, when the luncheon was all ready, +she would put the letters in little piles in front of each person's place +and let them puzzle out the names before they sat down. + +Mrs. Merrill promised to have a basket of flowers, spring flowers that +Mary Jane loved so very much, in the center of the table. And Mary Jane +planned to make a procession of girls and boys all around the basket. +These she cut out of magazines too and she chose girls and boys who were +doing all the things that she herself liked to do. + +With all these things, besides regular duties and fun, to keep her busy, +Mary Jane didn't really have a chance to think her birthday was a long +time coming. First thing _she_ knew it was Friday night and the birthday +was the very next morning! + +On Saturday morning, she waked up knowing something nice was going to +happen. Then, before her eyes were really open, she felt herself getting +mother's birthday kisses and, before those were all delivered, Alice's +birthday spats--six good big lively ones! + +"Never you mind, Alice," she promised, "just wait till it's _your_ +birthday and you'll get some of the hardest--" + +"Don't stop for promises," said Mr. Merrill, coming in to deliver his +spats too, "what I want is breakfast and for the life of me, _I_ can't get +into that dining-room." + +"_Oh!_" cried Mary Jane rapturously, "I'll be right out!" + +"Not till you get dressed, you know," Alice reminded her, "so do hurry!" +For it was one of the rules of the Merrill household that birthdays and +Christmases didn't really begin till folks were dressed. So Mary Jane +scrabbled into her clothes and gave her face and hands about the most +hurry-up washing they had ever had and then rushed out to the +dining-room. + +And there, standing right by her chair, was the--yes, really--the very +doll cart she had picked out! She was so happy that for a minute she +couldn't speak, she just stared. The next minute she was down on her knees +with her arms around the whole cart--or at least as much of the cart as +two six-year-old arms could get around--and she was counting over all the +wonderful virtues of her gift. It surely was a cart to make any little +girl proud and when Mary Jane saw her own Georgiannamore, wearing a lovely +new coat (Mrs. Merrill's gift), and a pair of really truly gloves (from +Alice), and sitting up as big as life in the cart, she thought the +happiest day of her life had come. + +After breakfast the morning raced by on wings. Of course Mary Jane had to +show the cart and doll's clothes to Betty and they had to walk around the +block to give the doll an airing. Then, just as they got back to Mary +Jane's apartment, the postman came with a box from grandpa and grandma. +Betty was invited up for the fun of opening it and she was glad to come +both for the fun and for the big pieces of grandmother's candy that she +got when the box was opened. Then there was the table to set and the +puzzle letters to put around and everybody to dress in their best--that's +a good deal for one morning. No wonder it seemed to be an unusually short +one. + +At the very last minute, Mary Jane with her new white dress and pink +ribbons all just as they should be, went in to the kitchen to see if she +could help. And at that very minute a neighbor came in to get Mrs. +Merrill's advice about an important matter. + +"Everything's ready now," said Mrs. Merrill, as she left the kitchen. +"Only, I believe, Mary Jane, it would be a good idea for you to put that +whipped cream into the ice box. We won't make the salad till they get here +and I want to keep it stiff and cold." + +Now, Mary Jane had put things in the ice box many a time. Big things and +little things and spilly things and all, and there was no reason in the +world why she couldn't do it all right. No reason, except-- Just as she +picked up the bowl of cream, the door bell rang a long, loud peal that she +was sure must be her three guests coming all at once, so she hurried and +the cream jiggled in the bowl, and slid over the edge--and all down the +front of her best new dress! + +Fortunately Alice came into the kitchen just then, in time to see the +accident, and to notice two big tears which popped into Mary Jane's eyes +and threatened to spill down her cheeks. + +"Pooh!" she exclaimed comfortably, "don't you worry about a little thing +like that, Mary Jane," and she made a grab for the bowl, rescued some of +the cream and set it in the ice box. "I'll have you fixed up so soon that +you won't know anything happened." + +"But it's all down my dress," said Mary Jane, trying her very best not to +cry. + +[Illustration: "But it's all down my dress," said Mary Jane, trying her +very best not to cry _Page 111_] + +"Oh, well," replied Alice, nothing daunted, "it's not going to stay there +long." She took a clean cloth, dampened it with cold water and, with quick +little dabs, scrubbed the cream all off the front of the birthday dress. +Then she took a fresh cloth, and more cold water and, putting a big, clean +towel under the front of the dress, scrubbed again till every trace of the +cream was gone. Then she opened the oven door so the heat would help dry +the wetness and with a fresh cloth rubbed and rubbed the wet place till it +was entirely dry. + +"There now," she said, as she shook the dress into place, "I think the +girls are here; let's go see." And immediately the accident that +threatened to spoil Mary Jane's fun was forgotten. + +Sure enough, the girls had come and the party began at once. + +The letter puzzles for place cards proved to be lots of fun and filled in +the time while Mrs. Merrill brought in the plates of good things to eat. +Judging by the appetites Mary Jane's menu must have been a favorite with +everybody, for the goodies disappeared by magic and Mrs. Merrill filled up +plates and passed rolls and brought in salad and everything till she +hardly had time to eat her own luncheon. + +The ice cream was a surprise even to Mary Jane. On the plate was, first, a +big, round piece of cake; then, on top of that, was a slice of ice cream, +white, and on top of _that_ a ball of pink ice cream with a pink candle, +lighted, stuck in the top. They looked so pretty and bright that the girls +hated to blow them out, but Mrs. Merrill said every one was to make a wish +and then blow and if the candle went out on the first blow the wish would +come true. + +Alice suddenly remembered that they were to take a train at one-thirty and +that it was nearing one now, so the dessert was finished in a hurry, wraps +were hastily put on and the whole party started for the train to meet Mr. +Merrill and have the rest of the fun. + + + + +LOST--ONE DOLL CART + + +There was only one thing wrong about the birthday celebration and that was +that the day was such a very busy, happy one that there was very little +time for playing with the new doll cart. Of course Mary Jane and Betty +took their dolls out for one airing in the morning soon after breakfast. +But what is one little airing when one has a new cart? Nothing at all, +Mary Jane thought. All through the luncheon and the ride down town and the +play father took them to, which proved to be just the very most +interesting kind of a play for little girls to see, Mary Jane kept +thinking of her new cart and of the fun she would have on Monday when +there was a whole day for Georgiannamore and the doll cart. + +So when Monday morning actually came Mary Jane lost no time getting up and +doing her share of the morning work. Mary Jane was very particular about +her morning work. She didn't want her mother to have to do the things a +six-year-old girl was plenty big enough to do; and then, anyway, she knew +it was lots more fun to work when two did the job than for one person to +work alone. She picked up all the papers, and emptied the waste baskets, +and cleaned the bathroom washstand and the kitchen sink--she liked those +jobs the best because they were so scrubby and grown-up and +interesting--and put out clean towels and dusted the living-room. Of +course this was after the dishes were washed and put away; that was a job +with which Alice helped too, before she started for school. So by the time +Mary Jane was ready to play Mrs. Merrill was about through too, ready for +sewing or baking or whatever she had to do that day. + +"I think I'd better help you take down your cart," suggested Mrs. Merrill, +when the last job was finished. "It's not so easy for one person to take +that cart down from the second floor. But it will be no trouble at all for +you to take one end and me to take the other and carry it down together. +Then you can put Georgiannamore in it before you start down and there'll +be no danger of bouncing her out." + +"But how'll I get back up, Mother?" asked Mary Jane. + +"Ring the bell three short taps and I'll come down to meet you," answered +Mrs. Merrill. "Don't try to bring it up alone; it's far too heavy." + +Mary Jane dressed Georgiannamore in her very best dress, put on the new +coat and gloves, tucked her carefully into the cart so she wouldn't catch +cold by being out for a long walk, and then she and Mrs. Merrill carried +the cart, oh, so very carefully, down stairs and out to the sidewalk. + +Fortunately, that May morning was bright and sunny; the breeze blew warm +from the southland instead of cold and blustery from the lake, and it was +the very best kind of a morning possible for being out of doors. Mary Jane +walked around the block, starting toward the lake, then she went around +the block the other way, and of course she went rather slowly because +there was so much to see and to show Georgiannamore. Bright colored +crocuses were blooming in all the yards where there were houses--and in +that particular neighborhood there were many houses as well as +apartments--tulips were bursting up through the ground and the lilac buds +were swelling their plump green sides nearly to the bursting point. + +On the third time around, Mary Jane thought of school--to be sure, it +couldn't be anywhere near time for school to be out, because the morning +hadn't much more than begun, but then it would be fun to go around to the +corner where the children crossed the street to go to school. There were +so many automobiles whizzing around the streets that a little girl even as +old as six couldn't be allowed to cross streets without a grown person or +an older sister along. + +She went around the block to the corner where the children would come, +after a while, and there, just as she turned to start back home, thinking +she'd come here again nearer noon, she heard a commotion. Looking down the +half block to the yard around the school house she heard a bell peal out +and saw, yes, truly, crowds of children coming out of school! And just as +she was about to look around to see if there was a fire or a parade or +anything special to cause school to be dismissed early, she heard the +whistles blow for noon--the morning was gone! That's how time flies when a +person has a new doll cart! + +Mary Jane waited at the corner till Alice and Frances and Betty came along +together and they all four walked home. + +"You shouldn't bother to carry your cart clear upstairs every time," +suggested Frances, "when our front porch is so handy. Just run the cart up +on the porch, lock the brake and it will be safe as can be till you eat +your lunch." + +Alice thought that was a good idea too, so the cart was left there, locked +with the brake, and with the understanding that if Mrs. Merrill didn't +approve, the girls would come down and get it at once. + +Lunch was ready and waiting, so the cart stayed on the porch while the +girls ate and then Mary Jane walked back toward school as far as she was +allowed to go. + +By the time Mary Jane got back in front of her own apartment, Mrs. Merrill +was ready to go and do her marketing and errands and of course Mary Jane +and Georgiannamore went along and had a beautiful time--especially when +they looked in the windows and saw all the good things to eat. Mary Jane +had thought that she knew every sort of good thing a person could possibly +want to eat, but she soon found out that she didn't. For in one of the +windows they passed she saw a tray of apples, covered with something slick +and brown and carrying in their stem ends a small smooth stick like a +butcher's skewer. + +"What are they, Mother?" she exclaimed. "Don't they look _good_! And may +we buy some?" + +Mrs. Merrill went inside the store and Mary Jane, anxiously watching her +mother through the window, waited outside with the doll and cart. She saw +her mother speak to the salesman, look at the apples and then, oh, joy! +saw him pick out four fine ones under Mrs. Merrill's direction and put +them in a paper bag. + +"He says they are called Taffy Apples," explained Mrs. Merrill when she +came out, "and that all the girls and boys like them very much. So I +didn't bother to consult you," she added with a twinkle in her eye. "I +bought some for you four girls to eat after school--just on a chance that +you might like them." + +The bag was carefully tucked in under the folds of Georgiannamore's robe +and the walking and shopping were resumed, but all the time, Mary Jane +kept her eye on the hump made by the bag of apples and kept wishing that +time for school to be out would hurry up and come. Some good fairy must +have heard the wishes too, for the afternoon hurried by almost as fast as +the morning and first thing Mary Jane knew they were all through the +errands and were going down the street toward the school, ready to meet +Alice. + +"Do you like 'Taffy Apples'?" Mary Jane asked Betty as soon as she came +out of the school yard. + +"Like 'em--u-um!" replied Betty expressively. + +"Well," continued Mary Jane slowly, so the surprise wouldn't be over too +soon, "I've got one in there," pointing to the cart. + +Betty eyed the hump Mary Jane pointed out and smiled knowingly. + +"It looks like more than one," she suggested hopefully. + +"It is more than one," answered Mary Jane delightedly; "it's four--all for +us." + +"Can we eat 'em now?" demanded Betty. + +"Better wait till we get home," suggested Mrs. Merrill; "that won't be +more than five minutes and then there won't be any danger of stumbling and +running a stick into your throats." + +The two little girls didn't loiter much after that. They skipped along +briskly and soon were ahead of Mrs. Merrill and Alice and Frances. + +"I'll tell you what," said Betty, as they turned into her own yard, "let's +put the cart up on the porch while I get my doll and then when we get +through eating our apples we'll be all ready to go walking." + +She picked up the front end and Mary Jane took the handle end and they set +the cart up at the end of the porch and went into the house. Fortunately +Mary Jane took Georgiannamore along with her into the house; if she +hadn't--but then, that's getting ahead of the story. + +The little girls had no more than gone inside before Mrs. Merrill, Alice +and Frances turned the corner and strolled along toward the Holden house. + +"Funny where those girls have gone," said Frances, looking at the empty +porch. + +"They've hid our Taffy Apples somewhere, I just know they have!" said +Alice. "Frances, we ought to be smart enough to find them so quickly they +won't try teasing again." + +"I don't believe they've hidden the apples," said Frances thoughtfully, +"because Betty would be so hungry she wouldn't bother with teasing till +after she was through eating. Maybe they've gone into the house to get +Betty's doll and cart." + +"But why would they bother to take Mary Jane's cart indoors if Betty was +just going in for her doll?" asked Alice. + +Before Frances or Mrs. Merrill could suggest an answer, the two little +girls themselves came out of the front door, turned to look at the porch +and then stood there, as though fastened to the floor--they were that +surprised. + +"Why--why--" said Mary Jane, "I left it right here!" + +"Well, nobody ever stole anything before," said Betty. "Maybe the boys +just hid it!" + +"No, they didn't," replied Frances, "because they haven't come home from +school yet. They stopped to see Jimmie's new chicken house and they won't +be home for an hour." + +"What's the trouble?" asked Mrs. Holden, who, hearing voices, came to the +front door to invite folks in for a visit. + +"Trouble enough, Mother," said Frances, worriedly. "Mary Jane left her +brand new doll cart on our porch and it's gone!" + +"And we just went in to get my doll," explained Betty, getting very +excited. "We just went in a little minute and then we were going to eat +the taffy apples and now they're gone too--oh, dear!" + +At that minute, yes, things really do happen this way sometimes, who +should go by the house but the big friendly policeman who always stood at +the street corner nearest the school to guard the children from swiftly +moving autos. Betty spied him and ran down the walk to speak to him. + +"So the cart's gone, is it?" he said as he and Betty came up toward the +house. "Well, if you'll let me use your 'phone, I'll tell them down at the +station just what kind of a cart it is and maybe we can get a trace of +it--anyway, we can try." + +Mrs. Holden went indoors with him and the others stood around on the porch +hardly knowing what to do. Losing her cart was a real calamity to poor +Mary Jane--she very well knew that her father couldn't afford to get her +another one and she had hard work, awfully hard work, to keep back the +tears that came to her eyes and to swallow the lump that filled her +throat. She didn't want to be a crybaby, but--and the lump got bigger and +bigger-- + +Mrs. Merrill noticed that Mary Jane was trying so very hard to be brave so +she did her best to help. + +"Wasn't it lucky that officer came by just then!" she said cheerfully. "I +can't for the life of me see why anybody would be mean enough to steal a +little girl's doll cart and I keep thinking we'll find it somewhere. Come +on, Mary Jane, let's sit down on this settee here till Mrs. Holden comes +out. Then perhaps some of you girls will be good enough to go up to the +candy shop with me and get some more taffy apples--I suppose those went +with the cart!" + +Mary Jane stepped over toward her mother, who had already seated herself +on the settee at the end of the porch. But before she sat down she just +happened to look down toward the ground. The Holden porch had no railing +around the side and as Mary Jane was always a little timid about falling +she kept a close watch on the end of the porch every time she went near +it. She glanced down at the ground and then--her face changed! The +sorrowful look vanished and smiles spread like sunshine over her face. + +"Look!" she exclaimed, as she pointed to the ground. "Look there!" + + + + +A TRIP TO THE ZOO + + +It wasn't hard to guess what Mary Jane had found; nothing but her precious +doll cart could have made her feel and look so happy. They all ran to the +end of the porch, looked over the edge, and there, sure enough, was the +birthday cart all tumbled down in a heap. Alice and Frances jumped down, +set it up straight and then, with Mrs. Merrill's help from above, lifted +it up to the porch just as the policeman and Mrs. Holden came out of the +house. + +"Bless my soul!" exclaimed the officer. "Another cart?" + +"No, it's mine!" cried Mary Jane happily. She ran her hands over the hood, +the body part and then the wheels to make sure nothing was broken. +Everything seemed all right, even the bag of taffy apples was still tucked +under the carriage robe that had come loose but had not fallen clear out. + +"Yours?" asked the officer. "But I thought yours was lost!" + +"It was," admitted Mary Jane, "but it isn't any more." + +Mrs. Merrill hastened to explain that the cart had just then been +discovered on the ground at the end of the porch. + +"I know what was the trouble," said Frances, "she didn't fasten the +brake--did you, Mary Jane?" + +Mary Jane and the policeman bent down to inspect the brake. No, it wasn't +fastened. + +"It wouldn't take much of a breeze to blow that cart off the porch, young +lady," said the officer, laughingly, "and so I suggest that if you ever +want to leave your doll in the cart, you'd better be sure the brake is +locked. You might have a smashed doll instead of a lost cart to report and +then things wouldn't be so easy to straighten out!" And with a pleasant +good-by he went on about his business. + +Left alone the two mothers looked at each other and laughed--such an easy +ending to disappointment didn't often come! The four girls made a dive for +the bag of apples and settled themselves on the broad front steps for a +few minutes of real enjoyment. Mary Jane found that taffy apples were a +lot of fun to eat. The hard, slick surface was delicious to "lick" and +then, when a small part was licked thin, it was fun to bite right straight +through to the apple. + +"If you think they're good now," said Frances, "you should taste them in +the fall when the fresh apples are in--yummy-um!" + +"These are good enough for me," said Betty contentedly and she bit off a +big chunk of apple. + +"Betty Holden!" exclaimed Frances with big sisterly chagrin, "you look +like a monkey with that apple all over your face!" + +"Oh, fiddle!" replied Betty indifferently, "I like monkeys." + +"Did you ever see one?" asked Mary Jane, "a really truly live one?" + +Betty stared. "Why of course!" she answered, "haven't you?" + +Mary Jane shook her head. + +"Well then you ought to go up to the Zoo," she said positively, "let's all +go." She jumped up and ran over to her mother. "Mother!" she announced, +"Mary Jane's never seen a monkey--never! Can't we take her up to the Zoo +and show 'em to her?" + +"Never seen a monkey!" exclaimed Mrs. Holden and she was as surprised as +Betty had been, "are you sure?" + +"Yes, Betty's right," said Mrs. Merrill. "Mary Jane has seen a great many +things for a little girl who has just had her sixth birthday. But she +hasn't seen a monkey. Her father and I were saying only last night that we +must take the girls up to the Zoo as soon as possible." + +"Let's all go next Saturday," suggested Mrs. Holden, "no, we can't go next +Saturday because the girls and I have some shopping to do. Let's go a week +from Saturday. By that time the restaurant in Lincoln Park will be open. +The way we do," she explained to the Merrills, "is to take our lunch, a +picnic lunch, with us. We start up about eleven, eat over by the lake and +then have the whole afternoon for watching the animals; we eat dinner in +that nice restaurant, before dark, and then come home in the early +evening. Can you all go on that day?" + +Mrs. Merrill said she was sure they could, so plans were made right then +and there. + +Mary Jane and Alice thought those two weeks, or nearly two weeks, never +would pass. Of course there was the doll cart to play with and Mary Jane +loved it exactly as much as ever. But she did want to see the monkeys, and +the foxes (Betty told her she would love the foxes!) and all the creatures +that Betty seemed to know so much about and which she had never even +seen. + +But at last the morning came, warm and sunny and clear and the lunch boxes +were packed, the apartment locked up and everybody started toward Lincoln +Park feeling happy and ready for fun. The fathers couldn't come for lunch, +but really when all the Holden girls and boys were added to the three +Merrills, there was such a crowd that, for the time at least, fathers +weren't so very much missed. + +When they reached the park Mary Jane realized, for the first time, how +close it was getting to really truly summer. The sun shone with real +summer warmth, the lake was blue and beautiful and flowers bloomed on +every corner. + +"Oh, I'd just like to live in a park all the time," she exclaimed as she +looked around her, "it seems just like home!" + +"Yes, it does," said Mrs. Merrill, with a wee bit of a sigh, "I'm afraid I +know some folks who are going to miss their gardens and flower bed this +summer." + +"How stupid of me not to have thought of that!" exclaimed Mrs. Holden. +"You know it will be just two weeks now till we go up to the lake for all +the summer. Why didn't I think to have you plant stuff in our back garden? +Then you could have all the garden you liked right there handy--we always +do hate to leave the ground idle." + +"Perhaps we might plant something even yet," suggested Mrs. Merrill, much +delighted with the idea, "we'd love to try." + +But there was no time for further planning just then--John Holden demanded +his lunch; Betty made a lively second and in a minute or two a clean +grassy place was picked out, the individual lunch boxes were passed out +and then, for a few minutes, everybody was quiet. + +"I'm going to feed the black bear," announced Betty, as she paused to pick +out another sandwich, "I'm going to feed him peanuts--I saved up enough +money for two bagsful." + +"But aren't you afraid of him?" asked Mary Jane breathlessly. + +"Afraid? Pooh!" grunted Betty. + +"Never you mind, Mary Jane," said Linn comfortingly, "she was afraid the +first time she saw him and I remember all about it. But now she's learned +that he can't get out the cage." + +"Now, Linn, I never--" began Betty. + +But John interrupted. "There!" he said, "I'm through. Come on, let's +gather up the boxes and papers and stick 'em in the trash box on the way +to get the peanuts." So the children all helped and in a jiffy the pretty, +grassy spot where they had eaten lunch was as clean and tidy as when they +came. And then away they scampered after the peanuts. + +Such an afternoon as it was! Mary Jane tried to remember each thing they +did so she could tell her father when he met them after three o'clock. But +she couldn't remember half what they had done. She knew they saw the +little foxes--such pretty, dainty white and tan colored foxes that played +together like little pet kittens and made her want to hold them in her lap +and pet them. She knew they saw the bears--great big bears and middle +sized bears and little bit o' bears just like in the story book, and she +fed them peanuts which they caught very deftly in their soft cushioned +paws. But all the rest, she really couldn't remember in the right +order--there were kangaroos and buffaloes and a giraffe who stuck his long +neck over the top of a great high fence and made Mary Jane think of +nothing so much as a funny paper picture. And then of course the +monkeys--dozens of them and queer birds with curious colored feathers and +funny bills and feet. Really, she had seen in that one afternoon, more +animals than she had guessed lived in the whole world, oh, many more! + +"But have you seen the seals?" asked Mr. Merrill who met them at the bird +house. + +No, they hadn't. + +"It's almost four o'clock," said Mr. Merrill, looking at his watch, "and +Mr. Holden said they ate at four and we should meet him there, so let's +hurry." + +It was a good thing they did hurry for other folks seemed to know, too, +that the seals were fed at four. From all directions, folks could be seen +walking toward the big enclosed pond where the seals were kept. But, by +hurrying, they got there in time to stand close to the iron fence where +they could see the antics of those queerest of animals, the seals. + +One would suppose that even the seals knew it was nearly four o'clock, +dinner time, for they were so excited and eager. They barked and swam and +flung themselves around vigorously as though they could hardly stand +waiting for anything. Then, just at four, a man came out of a near-by +building. In his hand he carried a basket of fish--a great, well-filled +basket. He came over to a little platform close by where the Merrill and +Holden children were standing; so they could see everything. + +He picked up a big fish, tossed it over into the rocky island in the +middle of the seals' pond and then! such a scrambling as there was till +the middle-sized seal with a few ungainly flops, grabbed the fish and +gulped it down in one bite. + +Then he threw another fish and another and another--one after the other so +fast that Mary Jane felt sure the seals must get all mixed up about +catching them. But they didn't. Those seals must have been smarter than +folks had thought for they seemed to know, every time, just about where +the fish was to hit on the rocks and to know, too, just how to get to that +particular spot the quickest. Mary Jane thought it very wonderful. + +But one thing worried her. There was one small seal, who for some reason +or other, seemed to be always just a second too late to get a fish. Mary +Jane was sure he had had but one and all the others had had, oh, a lot. +And she couldn't help wishing all the others wouldn't be quite so grabby. + +When the man who was feeding the seals got almost to the bottom of his big +basket, he stopped and looked at the crowd of children assembled for the +feeding. And as he looked, he spied Mary Jane's sober little face. + +"Don't you like to watch them?" he asked her in surprise. + +"Yes, I like to only they're so grabby," she replied promptly, "and he +hasn't had but one." She pointed out the little seal who was a bit too +slow. + +"We'll fix that," said the keeper, kindly, "you just watch." + +He tossed a great big fish close to the crowd of waiting seals, then, +quick as a flash and before they had had time to get that one, he tossed +another, straight at the little seal who was on the edge of the crowd. + +"He got it! He got it!" cried Mary Jane happily, "he got it before they +had a chance!" + +"And he's going to get another," said the keeper as he threw another and +still another, straight at the hungry little seal. "There!" he added as he +looked at the now empty basket, "that ought to do him till to-morrow." +Mary Jane thought he looked so comfortable now that surely he had had as +much as he needed for the day. + +"Better hurry if we're to see the lions eat," said Mr. Holden, who during +the seals' dining hour had come up behind his little party. + +"Lions!" exclaimed Mary Jane. + +"Yes, hurry up!" called Betty and she and her brother who were quite +familiar with the park because of many previous visits, ran on toward a +big brick house near by. + +Mary Jane wasn't afraid, but all the same she thought it would be more fun +to hold her father's hand and even though they were a bit behind, they got +into the lions' house in time. + +Here the dinner was of meat, great big chunks of raw, red meat that the +keepers tossed into the cages. And it was so funny to watch! Just before +the keeper appeared, the lions and tigers and jackals and leopards were +pacing up and down their cages with such weird roars and grunts and growls +that Mary Jane held tightly to her father's hand and didn't go very close +to the iron bars. But when the keepers appeared with the meat there was a +wild scramble, and then silence except for the crunching and smacking of +eating. It certainly was different, oh, very, very different from anything +Mary Jane had ever seen before! + +"Let's not wait here any more," suggested Alice, "let's show Dadah the +monkeys." + +"Yes, and the foxes--the white ones," said Mary Jane, "they're my +favorites of all." + +But before they had had time to show Mr. Merrill every single creature +they had seen, the Holden boys announced that they were hungry and that it +was long past dinner time. And sure enough! Even though it wasn't really +long _past_ dinner time, it _was_ half past five--the time they had agreed +upon for dinner. So a very jolly party seated themselves at a big round +table on a second story porch of the Park restaurant. That was the nicest +place to eat Mary Jane had ever seen--unless perhaps a diner on a train. +For after they gave their order, she discovered that they could look right +down on a small lake where ducks and geese and swans lived. The children +got so interested watching the pretty creatures that for once they didn't +have time to think the waiter was slow! + +They stayed there eating and watching the birds, till the sun set back of +the trees. Then, when there wasn't another scrap of cake or teaspoonful of +ice cream left, they gathered up wraps and hats and started for home. + +"I know one thing," said sleepy Mary Jane as they waited for the bus that +was to take them to their train. "I know there're a lot more animal folks +in the world than I thought for--oh, a lot more! And I think I'd better +come again to see them all." + + + + +A DAY IN THE PARKS + + +A whole long vacation begun! Alice home all day and plenty of time for +walks and playing together! It seemed almost too good to be true. For +although Alice was several years older than her sister Mary Jane, the two +girls had always had very happy times playing together and they had missed +each other very much during school days. Now that the Holden family was +away, for they went off, bag and baggage, to their country home up in +Wisconsin the very day school closed, the two girls had no one near by to +play with, so more than ever before they needed and enjoyed each other's +company. Frances Westland had gone back to the country and the Merrill +girls had not made friends with anyone who lived near enough to make a +convenient playmate. + +They didn't do as some girls and boys do in vacation, get up late in the +morning. No, they thought it was more fun to get up promptly and have +breakfast with Dadah and then, when the afternoon got hot, as often +happened, they took a nice long rest and dressed fresh and clean for +dinner. On many a day Mrs. Merrill packed a basket of dinner and they met +Mr. Merrill over by the park, had their dinner near one of the small +lagoons or close to the big lake. After dinner they played ball or +tennis--Alice was learning to be very good at tennis. + +"I wish there were swans in our park," said Mary Jane as she sat on the +edge of the lagoon and watched the row boats and the electric launches +gliding about on the water. "I liked those swans at Lincoln Park." + +"I was just thinking to-day," said Mr. Merrill, "we haven't seen all the +parks and I promised you, that you should see them--all the big ones +anyway. I wonder when we could go, mother?" + +"I wonder _how_ we could go," said Mrs. Merrill, "the parks are so far +apart that a journey through them all would be a hopeless task, seems to +me." + +"Depends on how you do it," laughed Mr. Merrill. "I'll tell you what I +thought. I'll take the whole day away from the office so as to go along. +We'll start fairly early and take the elevated out to Garfield Park--you +know we promised the girls a trip on the elevated and we've always taken +the train! We'll see that park well, you know it has gardens and +greenhouses and lakes, and then we'll get a taxi and go to two or three +other parks and ride home." + +The girls thought that was a wonderful plan and they wanted to set the day +for that very same week. So Thursday was decided upon. + +"Now there's one thing besides getting a good lunch ready that I want you +folks to do," said Mr. Merrill as they picked up their baskets and balls +ready to go home, "I want you to get out that map of Chicago we had on the +train the day we came up here and find just where Garfield Park is and how +we get there and how many interesting sights like rivers and parks and +boulevards we pass on the way." And of course the girls promised that they +would find the map and get all that information first thing in the +morning. + +Riding on the elevated proved to be great fun. Mary Jane was afraid for a +few minutes she wasn't going to like it--the stairs were so very high up +with holes in each step to see down to the ground; and the train dashed to +the platform with such a roar and bustle and people crowded on and jerk! +the train rushed off. But when she settled down in the seat, comfortingly +near her mother, and looked out over the roofs of houses and stores, and +down long streets, one after another, she found she wasn't a bit afraid +and that she liked it very much. She liked watching for children on folks' +back porches. Some played on the porch and some played in the dining-room +windows--it was easy to tell which were the dining-room windows because +always there were three big windows and always she could look right +through the curtains and see the big table in the middle of the room. The +only trouble with watching folks from an elevated was that the train +dashed by so quickly she couldn't any more than see, till--flash, flash, +and they were gone and there was another street and another set of back +stairs and some different children playing. It really was awfully queer. + +Pretty soon they reached the big down town and there they got off their +train, climbed over a big bridge to another elevated train and away they +went whizzing again. It certainly was a queer way to travel, Mary Jane +thought. + +But finally father announced that they had come to Garfield Park, so they +got off, walked down the stairs to a park that looked so much like their +own park that Mary Jane had to rub her eyes and look twice to make sure +she wasn't dreaming. Here were the same winding driveways, beautiful trees +and small lakes. + +"Did we come back to our Park?" she asked in surprise. + +"Oh, no," answered Alice who had run on a little ahead, "look at the big +greenhouse and look back there! Now don't you see the swans?" + +No, it wasn't their own neighborhood park, Mary Jane soon realized that, +because there were many new things to be seen. The wonderful tropical +greenhouse where palms and bananas and wonderful ferns such as the girls +had seen in Florida were growing. And then there were beautiful out of +door gardens--Mary Jane liked those even better than the greenhouse +gardens, wonderful as those were. She seemed to feel, someway, as though +the flowers must like the out of doors better. + +Right in the middle of the many lovely flower beds in the out of doors +gardens, there was a lily pool in which grew water lilies of all colors +and sorts. Mary Jane had never seen water lilies before and she thought +them very lovely--and rather queer too, if the truth must be told. She +decided she would stay right there a while and let Alice and her father +explore the rest of the gardens--they wanted to know names of flowers and +names didn't seem a bit interesting to the little girl. + +Just after she had decided to stay there and play, she spied a boy of +about her age who was watching the lilies too. + +"Can you walk all the way around the edge?" he asked her. + +"Edge of what?" asked Mary Jane. + +"The edge of the pool," he replied, "see," and he put his foot up on the +stone rim of the pool, "all the way around on this." + +"Can you?" asked Mary Jane. She wanted to see what he would say before she +answered his question. + +"Sure!" he replied, "it's just as easy! Only girls are 'fraidies." + +"I guess I'm not," declared Mary Jane firmly, "watch!" She stepped up on +the stone rim--it was about eight inches wide--and walked boldly along +toward the middle of the long side of the pool. + +"You can, can't you," said the boy admiringly. + +"Just as easy," replied Mary Jane, for when she found she could do what he +had asked she was anxious to have it appear to be as easy for her as for +him. + +"Come on," the boy suggested, "let's race!" + +"Race?" asked Mary Jane, "how?" + +"'Round the pool. You start this way, and I'll start that way and the one +that gets around home first beats." + +"All right," agreed Mary Jane, "let's." + +Now before Mary Jane saw the boy by the pool, Mrs. Merrill spied some very +beautiful grasses over at one side of the gardens; the very sort of +grasses, she decided, that Mary Jane's grandmother would like to use in +her flower beds by the driveways. And of course she wanted to find out the +names of the grasses so she could write to grandmother about them. Seeing +that Mary Jane was so absorbed in the pool and the lilies, she slipped +over to look at the name sign which she knew would be stuck right by the +roots. She jotted the name down in her note book, looked along at a few +others and--turned back to the pool just in time to see her small daughter +and a strange boy run racingly along the rim of the pool straight at each +other. + +"Mary Jane! Mary Jane!" she called, "jump down onto the ground! Jump +down!" + +Whether Mary Jane heard her and became confused, or whether the boy's +bumping into her made her lose her balance, nobody ever quite found out. +But anyway, right before Mrs. Merrill's astonished eyes, Mary Jane Merrill +tumbled 'kplump--into the lily pool! + +Fortunately the lily pool wasn't very deep so Mary Jane didn't fall far. +But she did hit the bottom pretty hard; so hard that when she bobbed up, +her head out of water and her feet on the bottom, she hardly knew what had +happened to her. + +Mrs. Merrill screamed and Mr. Merrill, Alice, three policemen and about +twenty other people came running to see what had happened. It wasn't +necessary for anybody to jump in and make a triumphant rescue for Mary +Jane was so close to shore that Mrs. Merrill had taken firm hold of her +hand and pulled her out just as all the folks got there. So there was +nothing for them to do but to stare and to ask questions. + +"How did she do it?" asked the first policeman. + +"Hurt you any?" asked the second. + +"You and your mother come with me," said the third (and Mary Jane guessed +right away from his voice that he must have some little girls of his own), +"and I'll show you where you can dry your clothes." + +The procession of policemen and onlookers, led by a very wet and greatly +embarrassed little girl, crossed the gardens, crossed the street and went +into a comfortable big building. There a kindly matron produced a big +bathrobe in which Mary Jane sat while her dress was wrung out and dried. +And wasn't she glad there was a good hot sun so things could dry quickly! + +Finally, when Mary Jane was beginning to get awfully hungry, mother +announced that the clothes were dry and that she had pulled and stretched +them the best she could in the place of ironing. So Mary Jane dressed and +they went in search of Alice and her father. + +"Well, you certainly do mix up baths with your picnics," laughed Mr. +Merrill when he saw them coming. "Remember the time you fell into +Clearwater, Pussy?" + +"But it isn't so bad, really, Dadah," said Mary Jane, "and I'm not wet +now." + +"So you're not," said Mr. Merrill, "but _I_ am hungry--anybody agree with +me?" + +They all admitted to being nearly starved, so they found a pretty, grassy +spot close by the lake on which several beautiful swans were sunning +themselves, and there they spread out the luncheon they had brought. At +first the girls were so hungry they didn't want to do anything but eat. +But by the time they had eaten a plateful of potato salad and three or +four sandwiches, the swans discovered their lunching place and came to +call. Evidently swans were used to being treated very nicely by folks who +came to the park for they didn't seem to have a trace of fear of +strangers. + +The girls tossed the crusts of the sandwiches to the edge of the water and +the swans bent their long necks and picked them up and ate them, every +crust, so daintily just as though crusts were a diet fit for kings--and +swans. The swans didn't actually come out of the water, but they came so +close to the shore that the girls could almost touch them and they soon +got to feeling very well acquainted. + +So it was with some regret that they heard Mr. Merrill say, "Well, girls, +weren't we to see some of the other parks too?" And here it was four +o'clock! + +The basket was packed--and there wasn't a scrap of anything a swan could +eat, you may be sure of that--and they strolled down to the roadway. In a +minute or two Mr. Merrill hailed a passing taxi and they settled +themselves for a nice long ride. + +They didn't stop at any other park; Mary Jane was sure no other could be +as interesting as the one where she had had such exciting experiences and +Alice was quite as content as her father and mother to sit back, cool and +comfortable, and see the beautiful flowers and shrubbery slip past them. +So they rode and rode through one park after another, it seemed, till +suddenly Mary Jane spied something that looked familiar. + +"That's my Midway!" she announced, as the car turned into the long, broad +stretch of parkway near their own home. + +"Sure enough it is!" exclaimed Mr. Merrill in pretended amazement, "we'll +have to turn around and go back!" + +"No we won't," said Mary Jane, "we'll go home." + +So they went on home, just in time to cook a good warm dinner and to talk +over and over again the many things they had seen in the parks. + + + + +VISITORS--AND A BOAT RIDE + + +One day, not so very long after the trip through the parks, the bell at +the Merrills' front door pealed long and hard. Mary Jane, whose job was +answering the door, ran to the little house 'phone, and heard a loud voice +shout, "Special for Merrill!" + +"What's he mean, mother?" she asked, in a puzzled voice. + +"Better press the buzzer and let him in, dear," replied Mrs. Merrill, "if +he has the name right he must have something for us." + +So Mary Jane pressed the downstairs buzzer and then opened the front door. +Yes, it was for them--a special delivery letter for Mrs. Merrill. Mary +Jane and Alice were much excited and could hardly wait till the +messenger's book was signed and the letter was opened. + +"It's from grandma," said Mrs. Merrill as she glanced at the writing, "and +listen! This is what she says: + +"'Grandpa finds quite unexpectedly that he must come to Chicago on +business and he says that if it's convenient to you folks I can come along +and we'll stay two or three days for a visit. Please wire reply because we +must start Wednesday evening.'" + +"And it's ten o'clock Wednesday morning now!" exclaimed Mrs. Merrill. She +hurried to the telephone, called Mr. Merrill so he could send a telegram +at once, then she and the two girls went right to work making ready for +the guests. + +It was decided that Alice and Mary Jane should sleep on couches and give +up their room to the visitors. "Now's when I wish we had our nice guest +room," said Mrs. Merrill, "but then, grandma knows that folks who live in +Chicago flats don't keep guest rooms for infrequent visitors." For her +part, Mary Jane thought sleeping on a couch would be great fun--so grown +up and different from every day. She was to have the dining-room couch and +Alice was to sleep in the living-room. When all plans were made, bedding +sorted out and laid ready for making up the beds fresh first thing in the +morning, Mrs. Merrill began planning the meals. If the visitors were to +stay only a short time she wanted to have as much baking and marketing as +possible done beforehand, so every minute could be spent in fun and +visiting. Alice and Mary Jane, who had been marketing so much with their +mother of late that they really could be trusted, took a long list up to +the grocery and Mrs. Merrill set to work baking coffeecake and bread and +cookies. Um-m! It wasn't an hour till that tiny kitchen began to smell so +good that the girls could hardly be coaxed away. Mrs. Merrill let them +help in a good many ways. Mary Jane put the sugar and nuts on the tops of +the cookies after her mother put them in the pan and Alice, who was +getting to be a really good cook, tended to the baking. She put the big +pans in, and watched the baking, and took them out when every cookie was +evenly browned. Then, after she took a pan out of the oven, she gently +lifted the hot cookies out from the baking pan onto a wire rack where they +could cool without losing their pretty shapes. When the cookies were cool, +it was Mary Jane's turn again. She put them all in the tin cookie box, +counting them and laying them neatly between layers of paraffin paper so +they would keep fresh even in the hot weather. + +It was a rule that only perfect cookies should be packed away--scraps +never went into the tin box. But for some reason or other, the girls never +seemed to mind the job of eating the broken ones! In fact Mary Jane often +asked Alice _not_ to be so careful--to please break a few so there would +be plenty to eat right then and there. + +The day went by so quickly that it was bed time before the girls realized +it and then, after about forty winks, it was morning--the morning when +grandma and grandpa were coming. + +Everybody was up early, Alice and Mary Jane made up the beds fresh and +neat, mother cooked a good breakfast and Dadah went to the train, at a +near-by suburban station, to meet the travelers. It was a jolly party that +sat around the breakfast table--you may be sure of that! + +"Now then," said Mr. Merrill, when the breakfast was eaten up and news of +the farm had been told, "I'll have to go to work and I suppose grandpa has +to do his business to-day, so we'll leave you folks to yourselves. Then +to-morrow, if grandpa is through his business, we can plan some fun." + +So the two business folks went down town and grandma was left to enjoy +life at home. The girls were glad she could stay. + +"Let's take grandma over to the lake," suggested Alice, "I know you'd love +riding in one of those little electric launches, grandmother." + +"Let's take some lunch and not come home till she's seen everything in +Chicago," said Mary Jane in a rush of hospitality. + +"Dear me! Child!" exclaimed grandma in dismay, "don't you know there's +another day coming!" + +Mary Jane agreed to leave a few sights for the next day, but she didn't +want to lose any time getting off. Fortunately the morning work didn't +take but a tiny bit of time, and as grandma, who didn't care much for +"stuffy sleepers," was very glad to get out into the fresh air, they very +soon were on their way to the park. + +The girls felt quite at home in the neighborhood and in the park by this +time, and they thought it was great fun to show the sights to somebody +else--somebody who didn't know all about Chicago. Grandma loved the +beautiful Midway, the charming lagoons and she enjoyed her ride on the +little launch fully as much as the girls had thought she would. + +"But don't you have any _big_ boats?" she asked, "great big ones with two +decks and lots of passengers and all that? I'd like to ride on a big boat +too." + +"Then that's exactly what we'll do to-morrow, mother," said Mrs. Merrill. +"There is a big boat that runs from Jackson Park up to the municipal pier. +We'll go on it to-morrow and we'll get our lunch up town and then we'll +come back home on the boat." + +And that's exactly what they did. + +When Mr. Merrill heard that grandma wanted a ride on a big boat, the plans +for the next day were as good as made. He thought the idea of going to +town on the boat and then getting lunch and coming home was a fine one and +he only made one change in the plan. + +"Instead of going to a store, in the loop, let's take one of the little +launches that run from the Municipal pier to Lincoln Park and go up there +for our lunch so grandma can see your favorite swans and perhaps, if we +want to stay that long, see the seals get their four o'clock tea." But +dear me, he little guessed what would happen as his nice-sounding plan +worked out! + +So the next morning, the Merrills all had a nice, leisurely, visity +breakfast, then a walk through the park, and never did the park look +lovelier than on the sunny summer morning, and then, boarding the boat +that rocked at the pier on the big lake, they found comfortable seats on +the shady side and prepared for a pleasant ride. + +Mary Jane chose to sit on the side nearest the pier because she loved to +look down from the upper deck and watch the people boarding the boat. She +had never ridden on boats very much, only when she went to Florida, and +this boat they were now aboard seemed very different from the big, +awkward, flat bottomed boat they took their river trip on through Florida +jungles. + +"You don't need to sit by me if you want to talk to mother," she said to +her father. + +"Humph!" said her father teasingly, "how do I know you're not going to +tumble overboard! You know you have a way of mixing up picnics and water, +Mary Jane, so I don't think I'll take any chances." But when Mary Jane +promised that she would sit very still and not walk around a step and not +lean over the edge, he went to speak to grandpa a few minutes. And while +he was gone, Mary Jane leaned up against the side of the boat and watched +the folks down on the pier. + +She thought it must surely be about time for the boat to start because +there was hurrying on the pier, and men were busy taking ropes off of the +big wooden posts along the side nearest the water. While she was watching, +a woman came along the dock toward the boat and with her were two little +children, a girl about Mary Jane's own age and a little boy some two years +younger. Just as they reached the gang plank, ready to step onto the boat, +the little boy began to cry. + +"I left my boat! I left my boat! I left my boat!" he cried. Mary Jane +could hear him very plainly even though she sat so far up above him. + +She couldn't hear what the mother said, but evidently she promised to get +the missing boat for him, because she left both children by the side of +the gang plank, and hurrying as fast as possible she ran back toward the +shore. And right at that minute, the big bell overhead rang three times +and the engine aboard the boat began to throb--it was time to go. + +The men on the dock noticed the two children and one said to the little +girl, "Were you going?" and she nodded yes. So he picked up the boy and +hurried the two children aboard just as the gang plank was hauled in and +the boat made away from the pier. + +Mary Jane was so thrilled and excited she could hardly sit still. She +tried to call her father but he was on the other side of the boat and she +had promised to sit still--perfectly still--till he came back. What in the +world was a little girl to do? And back on the shore that was so rapidly +getting farther and farther way, Mary Jane could see the mother of the +children, running frantically toward the dock which the boat had left. +Surely the captain would see her, Mary Jane thought. But if he did, he +likely thought she was merely somebody who had missed the boat and that he +had no time for turning back. And so the boat continued out into the +lake. + +Finally after what seemed the _longest_ time (though it really was hardly +more than five minutes), Mr. Merrill came back and then, such a story as +he heard! + +"Are you sure, Mary Jane?" he asked, "certain sure? The men wouldn't put +children on a boat without grown folks along!" + +"But they did, Dadah!" insisted Mary Jane, "I saw 'em!" + +"Then you come with me," said Mr. Merrill, "and we'll see if we can find +them." + +So Mr. Merrill and Mary Jane went down the stairs, and that took some time +because folks were coming and going and getting settled for the trip, and +there, huddled close together and crying as hard as they could cry, were +the two little waifs! + +Mary Jane with real motherliness began talking to the little girl; Mr. +Merrill picked up the boy and together the whole party went in search of +the captain. By the time he was found though, the boat was still farther +on its journey toward the city and the dock they started from was farther +and farther behind. + +"Well, that is a time we were wrong," admitted the captain when he had +listened to all Mary Jane had to say and talked with the man who had put +the children aboard. "But even though we were wrong, we can't go back now. +We'll have to make the children comfortable and take them back to their +mother on the return trip." + +So Mr. Merrill and Mary Jane went back to the deck, only this time they +took with them the two little strangers. Mrs. Merrill was told the story +and she and Alice and Mary Jane, with help from grandma, grandpa and Mr. +Merrill, set themselves to the task of making the little children happy. +At first it was hard work, because they cried all the time for their +mother. But erelong they understood the friendliness around them and they +stopped crying and began to have a good time. Grandpa discovered some +crackerjack and everybody knows what a help _that_ is; Mrs. Merrill told +some funny stories and Mr. Merrill took them all over the boat--to see the +great engine and everything. Then there were the sights to watch from the +deck and the big buildings to count and the boats they passed to +watch--oh, there surely was a lot to do that made that trip interesting +and so very short. + +As the boat pulled up near the down town pier, the Merrills saw a taxi +dash up near where the boat was to land: saw a woman get out and, followed +by a policeman, hurry up to the side where the boat would pull in. + +"Look!" exclaimed Mary Jane excitedly. "Look!" + +The little girl, whose name was Ann, looked along with the others, and +then she gave a happy cry. + +"Mother!" she shouted, so loudly that her mother, waiting on the pier +could hear and was so very relieved! + +When the boat pulled into the dock, the captain was the first one to step +off; he met the mother and the officer and brought them aboard at once. +Mary Jane was called upon to explain all that she had seen and the +officer, as well as the mother, was satisfied that the whole thing was an +accident and not an attempt to steal the children. + +"But how did you get up here so quickly?" asked Mary Jane, when the first +excitement was over. + +"My dear child!" laughed Ann's mother, "a person can do a lot when she +thinks something is happening to her children! I took a passing taxi, +dashed to a police station and then on up here. And nothing has happened +at all--except you nice people have given my little folks a very pleasant +trip. Next time, Bobby," she added, "we'll leave your toy boat or we'll +all go together to find it. We won't take any chances of losing each +other!" + +"Well," laughed Mr. Merrill when the mother and children and officer and +captain had all gone on about their own business, "what was it we were +going to do to-day?" + +Everybody laughed at that! They had been so excited that they had +forgotten, yes, actually forgotten, that this was a sight-seeing trip for +grandma and grandpa. But once they remembered, they knew just what to do. +They climbed aboard a waiting launch, rode up to Lincoln Park, had a +wonderful dinner and fun all the rest of the day. + +"I don't see," remarked grandma, as they neared home, late that evening, +"how you girls are ever going to settle down to school again! Did you know +that school was only a few weeks away? Vacation will be over before you +know it!" + + + + +SCHOOL BEGINS + + +When grandma suggested that it was nearly time for school to begin, on +that day of the boat ride, she guessed better than the girls suspected. At +the time they laughed and thought she was joking, but, after she and +grandpa had gone home, they got out a calendar and counted up and there, +to be sure, only one and one-half weeks of vacation were left. + +"I didn't realize school began so early," exclaimed Mrs. Merrill in +dismay. + +"I thought summer was a long time!" cried Alice, "but it isn't any time at +all!" + +"Goody! Goody! Goody!" Mary Jane said happily, "then I get to start to +school like a big girl." + +It was no wonder Mary Jane was happy, for she remembered that the plan was +for her to start in the really truly school, not the kindergarten where +she had gone in her other home, and any little girl likes to start to +school like her big sister. + +When the day finally came, Alice was as much excited as Mary Jane herself. +For although the summer had been so pleasant she almost hated to see it +end--the free days with plenty of time for visits with mother and picnics +and marketing and all--still, school was pleasant too and any little girl +who does nice work and tries to learn, will make good friends and have +happy days, just as Alice always had had. + +Mary Jane had a hard time deciding which dress to wear. She wanted to look +very grown up, so that teacher would realize she was a big girl, so she +finally decided upon a dark blue sailor suit. The one that had the red +insignia on the sleeve and that looked just like a big girl's dress. With +a clean 'kerchief peeking out of her pocket and a smashing big red bow on +the top of her brown head, she looked very nice. + +Alice and Mary Jane waked up that morning the very minute they were called +for they wanted to help mother so she could go over to school with them. +And with all that good help of course they were off on time. Alice was +glad to have company going to school for Frances wasn't home yet and +wouldn't be there for a couple of weeks. + +Mary Jane's heart went thump, thump as she and her mother went in at the +teachers' gate, and up the stairs and into the principal's office. And +thump, thump some more when she saw the whole roomful of strange boys and +girls and thump, thump some more when her turn came and she was sent +(fortunately with her mother along) to the first grade room--number 104. +The room was full of children, hundreds, Mary Jane thought there must be, +though the teacher told Mrs. Merrill there were about forty-five. And if +her heart went thump, thump before, it certainly went thump, thump, +_thump_ when the teacher, smiling at her so kindly, gave her a seat in +the--front-row--such a nice seat for her very own! and she sat down and +tried to look as though she had been used to going to school all her whole +life. + +For a minute she couldn't look around or anything, she felt so queer. Then +she glanced at the next seat and there, sitting right beside her, +was--whom do you suppose? Ann! The same pretty little Ann who had been +lost on the boat. Immediately Mary Jane forgot all about being afraid and +thumping hearts and strangeness and everything and began to like school. +The two little girls had much to say about what they would do at recess +and where did they live and everything, so the time before school began +passed very quickly. + +Suddenly, in the midst of their talk, a bell rang, "GONG-GONG!" Two loud +tones close together that way, and school began. Mary Jane Merrill was in +a really truly school like the big girl she was getting to be. + +Ann came home with Mary Jane that first afternoon and Mrs. Merrill +discovered that her name was Ann Ellis and that she lived two blocks from +their own home and that the two little girls would no doubt find it very +easy to be friends. They began having a good time that very afternoon and +they planned still better times when Betty would be back and they could +all play together. Now wasn't that fine! + +Mary Jane found that she liked school every bit as much as she had thought +she would. She liked her teacher, a charming Miss Treavor, and she liked +her studies. But most of all she liked the fun she had on the playground. +In the big cities, like Chicago, where lots of girls and boys have no +yards, the school yards are the only places were children can play. So, to +make everything safe and orderly, the school folks have a playground +teacher stay at school all the day, to help in the games and to see that +every one has a happy time. The playground teacher at Mary Jane's school +liked little girls very much and she knew many good games for them to +play. So in addition to "London Bridge" and "Drop the Handkerchief" and +"Tag" that all children play, Mary Jane learned "Roman Soldiers" and +"Ghost Walk" and "Three times Three." + +Of the new ones, Mary Jane liked "Ghost Walk" the best. To play it, the +girls and boys made a big circle, then they selected some one to be +"Ghost." This person stood in the middle of the circle and everybody shut +eyes tight, very tight. Then the Ghost, while every one kept very quiet, +tried to tip-toe to the edge of the circle, slip out between two folks and +get away without being caught. That may sound easy, but played in a yard +full of romping boys and girls, it is not really as easy as it might seem +and it was lots of fun, because often folks would think the "Ghost" was +near them and would try to grab--and the joke was on them because all the +while, maybe, the "ghost" was in another part of the ring. And whenever +folks thought they caught the "Ghost" and _didn't_, then every one opened +their eyes, the person who had made the mistake had to get out of the +circle and the game began again. But if the "Ghost" really did get out of +the circle without being caught, then the "Ghost" could hide anywhere in +the yard and the game became an old-fashioned hide-and-seek with everybody +hunting one lucky person. + +One day, when Mary Jane was "Ghost," she was determined she would get out +of that circle without getting caught. She had tried it many a time before +and failed; this time she was going to do it. She tiptoed, oh, so softly +over the loose gravel to the edge of the circle. Then noiselessly she +dropped down on hands and knees and, without a thought for her dress, +crawled slowly between Ann and the girl next to her. She could hardly keep +from giggling, it was so funny to be so close she almost bumped them and +yet not to be discovered. Now she was right between them, now she was +almost outside--now she was free and away she dashed to the spot she had +long ago picked out as a hiding place for just such a time as this. + +The folks in the circle waited--but nobody was caught, so they shouted, +"Ghost Walk?" and when the "ghost" didn't answer they opened their eyes +and--no Mary Jane was there! + +"I'll get her," shouted Ann, "I'll find her! I'll bet she got out on your +side of the circle, Janny, she never could have passed _me_!" + +"I'll find her myself," answered Janny, "but she never passed by me, she +didn't!" + +So they hunted, up and down the yard, around the bushes, by the doorway, +everywhere they could think of. But no sign of Mary Jane did they +discover. They hunted and they hunted till the gong sounded and they had +to go into school again. But not a sign of any Mary Jane did they find. +Was Mary Jane lost? Miss Treavor must be told so everybody could hunt, for +something surely must have happened to a little girl who didn't answer the +recess bell when it rang for school to begin. + +Now it happened that some days before, when Mary Jane had first learned to +play "Ghost walk" she hunted around the yard for a good place to hide--in +case she ever succeeded in getting out of the circle so she _could_ hide. +She didn't want to hide among the bushes because that was the first place +the children looked; she didn't want to hide in the doorway because that +was against rules and if a child was discovered there by a teacher, the +child had to go straight upstairs and stay the rest of recess. And there +didn't seem to be any other place. But there was another hiding place--and +Mary Jane found it. Around the corner of the building, on the side nearest +the furnace entrance, there was a jog in the brick wall. And in front of +the little niche made by this jog, boards left by some carpenters had been +carelessly tossed. + +"I could climb over the boards," Mary Jane had thought, "and hide down +behind and nobody'd ever find me--ever." + +So when her time came, and she really did get out of the circle without +being caught, she didn't have to stop and hunt a hiding place; she knew +exactly where she wanted to go. + +But there was one thing Mary Jane hadn't figured on; one thing she didn't +even think of as she crouched down behind her boards while the children +hunted for her, hither and yon over the school yard. She hadn't thought +that way off, 'round the corner and behind boards that way, she +couldn't--_hear_. The sounds of playing and romping seemed so quiet, so +quiet that they were hardly noticeable. She didn't hear the bell and she +didn't even notice the sudden quiet when the children fell in line to +march upstairs. She sat there, huddled in a snug little heap, and she +laughed to herself about the joke she was playing on her mates. + +To be sure the time _did_ seem pretty long and she thought they were very +stupid--but then--she never suspected that recess was over and-- + +Till suddenly there descended upon her a cloud of chalk dust! It powdered +her face and dress and shoes and made her forget all about being quiet and +jump up with a lively scream of fright. + +Overhead she heard Miss Treavor's voice, exclaiming, "Whatever in the +world!" And then, before she could quite get the dust out of her eyes and +understand what had happened, Miss Treavor and two other teachers who had +heard the scream, stood before her and the whole story came out. Miss +Treavor tried not to laugh when Mary Jane told her she was hiding but she +couldn't help it. Mary Jane looked so be-powdered and forlorn. But Mary +Jane didn't mind the laughing because at the same time, Miss Treavor +lifted her out from behind the boards and set her down in the cheerful +sunlight. + +"That _was_ a good place to hide," the teacher admitted, "and you were a +clever little girl to think of it. But I believe, dear," she added kindly, +"that next time you'd better hide some place where you can hear the bell, +even though you _are_ more likely to get caught." + +And Mary Jane promised that she would never, never hide in such a very +good place again. + +Mary Jane hated to go back into the school room all mussed and tumbled as +she was, so Miss Treavor sent for Alice and the two little girls skipped +home for a fresh dress and clean ribbons so Mary Jane could enjoy the +classes. + +When, a half an hour later, she came back, with the dark blue dress +changed to a plaid gingham and the red bow changed to green, the children +wanted to know where she had been and what had happened. But Miss Treavor +wouldn't tell. And she had made Mary Jane promise not to tell, because +that place was _such_ a good hiding place that the teachers didn't want +other folks finding it and hiding there to make trouble too. + +But all of Mary Jane's school fun wasn't from trouble. That was just one +day. Most of the time, she played without anything happening just as the +other folks did. And all the time she made more friends and had a better +time, till, when Betty came back from the country, she knew most everybody +in her room. + +She liked school so very much that the days slipped by one after another +so fast a person could hardly count them--one day and another day and +another day--just that way. Till one Monday morning when they went to +school, Miss Treavor announced, "Do you boys and girls know what we are +going to do to-day? We're going to start making Christmas presents. +Because Christmas is only _three weeks away_!" + +"Christmas!" thought Mary Jane, with a thrill of joy, "Christmas! Why, +they _do_ have Christmas in Chicago! I wonder what I'll get and what I'll +do!" + + + + +CHRISTMAS IN CHICAGO + + +Christmas in Chicago! When Mary Jane heard those words she had her first +real pang of homesickness for the home she had left when they moved to +Chicago. Would any Christmas anywhere ever be so beautiful as the +Christmas in that dear home? She remembered the pine trees in the yard, +loaded down with their wealth of snow: the glowing fire on the hearth with +its Christmas-y smell from the pine cones that were saved through the year +for the Christmas Day fire; the tree in the angle near the fireplace where +the afternoon sun touched it into a blaze of glory; the party for the poor +children that had been such fun to plan for--would anything in Chicago +ever be half the fun of Christmas in the old home? But Mary Jane was soon +to discover that Christmas doesn't need certain houses or fires or trees +to make it perfect; that Christmas is made in folks' hearts and that +wherever there is a Christmas heart, there will be a happy day--in village +or city, the place makes no difference. + +When she went home from school that afternoon and announced that Miss +Treavor said Christmas was so very near, she found that mother wasn't even +a little surprised. + +"Why to be sure Christmas is coming," laughed Mrs. Merrill, "and here I've +been waiting and waiting and _waiting_ for you to talk about it till, +actually, I thought I'd had to begin myself, if you didn't wake up pretty +soon." And then everybody began to talk at once. + +"Do they have trees in Chicago?" asked Alice. + +"Are there any poor folks who would like parties?" asked Mary Jane. + +"Is anybody coming to see us?" demanded Mary Jane. + +"Here! Here! Here!" exclaimed Mr. Merrill, "one at a time, ladies, one at +a time! If you doubt that there will be trees in Chicago, you should see +what I saw this morning as I went down to work. A train load of Christmas +trees--yes, sir!" (for he noticed the girls could hardly believe him) "a +whole train load of trees. And I see by the paper this evening that a boat +load has arrived, too, so there will be no shortage of trees." + +"Then we can have one," said Mary Jane, with a satisfied sigh. + +"And let's put it in front of this foolish little gas log," suggested +Alice, "then we won't think about a real fireplace." + +"And there are plenty of poor folks," said Mrs. Merrill, going back to +Mary Jane's question, "only they will not be so easy to get together, as +back at home. How would you like to take a Christmas party to some family +instead of having a party at home as we did last year?" + +The girls hardly knew what to say about that new idea so Mrs. Merrill +explained further. "I telephoned to the Associated Charities this very +day," she said, "and they gave me the names of a fatherless family in +which there are two girls about your ages, and one boy. I thought we could +plan a fine Christmas for them and then, on Christmas morning, take it +over and surprise them." + +"Oh, let's do that, mother," said Mary Jane happily, "then we'd be like a +real Santa Claus only we'd be a morning Santa. May we do it, surely?" + +"I thought you'd like the idea," said Mrs. Merrill, "so I got lists from +the association as to just what was most needed. Alice, if you'll get a +pencil and paper, we'll figure it all out." + +Making plans was the girls' favorite way of spending an evening so they +whisked the cover off the dining table, pulled up chairs for four and went +to work list-making. + +"Tom," began Mrs. Merrill, consulting her list, "hasn't a bit of warm +clothing." + +"Why couldn't I knit him a muffler and some mittens?" asked Mary Jane. "I +remember how and I haven't knitted anything since the war stopped." + +"Fine!" approved Mrs. Merrill, "I think I have enough yarn for the mittens +and if you'll get it out of the drawer there we can wind it while we talk +and it will be all ready for you to set up at once. You'll have to work +hard and fast if you want to make a muffler and a pair of mittens before +Christmas." + +"Now then," she continued, looking at the list, "they have very few bed +covers and the children get so cold at night." + +"Why couldn't you make some covers, mother?" suggested Alice, "and let me +make them each some flannelette pajamas like we wear--you know how +toasting warm they are. And I have the pattern and I know I could make +them all myself." + +"That's a beautiful idea," approved Mrs. Merrill, "and I hadn't even +thought of such a thing. When we get through planning, dear, you can get +out your pattern and see how much material you'll need. Then, when I go up +town to-morrow, I'll get it for you." + +"And they need stockings," she continued, "and shoes--" + +"Could any of 'em wear my good shoes that are too little?" asked Mary Jane +eagerly. She had been greatly distressed about those "best" shoes that +were so good, and yet were hopelessly outgrown. + +"I think they'll be exactly right," said Mrs. Merrill. "In fact I picked +out this particular family because I was sure we could find nice things +for them among you girls' outgrown things and that, put with what we buy +new, would make all the bigger Christmas for them. + +"And about toys," she continued with the list, "the girls have never had a +doll--" + +"Never had--" began Mary Jane but she couldn't quite get the words out. +Never had a doll. Never had a Marie Georgiannamore to love and care for +and take riding in a beautiful cart. Never had--no, she couldn't quite +imagine it. + +After that there was no more reading off a list. Mary Jane and Alice began +making a list of their own, of what those children were to have for +Christmas. + +"But," objected Mrs. Merrill, "you girls forget that things cost money--a +lot of money these days. And you can't possibly buy all those things and +get any Christmas of your own too." + +"Humph!" grunted Mary Jane as she squeezed her face up tight in an +effort to write, "then we won't have one of our own! Haven't we got Marie +Georgiannamore and a cart and a nice house and warm +clothes--and--everything?" + +That settled it. There would be a tree and dinner and a lot of fun in the +Merrill house on Christmas Day, but the presents were to go to their +adopted family to make _their_ Christmas one never to be forgotten. + +If you have ever planned a Christmas for somebody who never, in all their +lives had one, you will know something about the fun that Mary Jane and +Alice had in the time that was left before Christmas. They were about the +busiest girls in all Chicago! They hurried home from school and they +worked Saturdays but, actually, as soon as they got one thing done they +thought of something else they wanted to make or buy and they had to begin +all over again. They made cookies and candies and dressed dolls, one for +each girl, and made a complete set of covers and pillows and "fixings" for +an adorable doll bed that Mr. Merrill made in the evenings. Alice had to +work pretty hard to get the pajamas all finished in time for there was +considerable work on each pair; but she got them finished and she could +hardly wait till Christmas to take them over to their family. + +Mary Jane finished the muffler and mittens though she _almost_ had to knit +while she ate--towards the last--it takes a good many stitches to make a +muffler big enough for an eight year old boy. The muffler was a deep +crimson and the mittens a warm shade of gray with three rows of crimson in +the wrist end; Mary Jane had picked colors she was sure Tom would like. + +At last the twenty-fourth of December came around--cold and snowy and just +the kind of a day for making a Christmas. The trees were bought and set on +the balcony, the turkeys, two of them, were in the pantry ready to dress +and three big baskets were set on the dining-room table ready for +packing. + +"Now, then," said Mrs. Merrill, "if you have everything ready, I think +we'd better pack all the things we can now, because when Dadah comes home +there'll be plenty to do." + +Mary Jane thought the packing was the most fun of anything she had ever +done. They packed all the doll things in one basket, doll things and toys +and three nice books. Of course the doll bed wouldn't go in the basket; it +had to have a package all by itself. A second basket was for clothing, the +pajamas--and no one would ever guess that a girl as young as Alice had +made those charming garments--the muffler, the mittens, one pair for each +child, warm underwear and a dress for each girl (one of the nicest of +Alice and Mary Jane's outgrown frocks). Mr. Merrill had added a nice +flannel shirt for Tom and Mrs. Merrill put in a warm sweater for the good +mother. + +"That's a basket they'll like to open," said Alice, proudly, as she tucked +the brand new comforter Mrs. Merrill had made, around the top, "they'll be +so happy they won't hardly be able to wait till they can put 'em on!" + +The third basket was fully as interesting as the others. It was a big, big +one and in it the girls packed groceries, cans of vegetables and soup and +sugar--a very little bit to be sure for there wasn't much to be had, but +the Merrills had decided to send exactly half of what they had--and +oranges for breakfast and cereals and bread. Then on top, they were to put +cookies and candy and the turkey. But of course those last things would go +in in the morning, just before the baskets were taken away. + +By the time Mr. Merrill came home, the three baskets were packed, covered +up and set in the corner of the dining-room ready for morning. + +"Now for the tree!" said Mr. Merrill as he took off his coat ready for +work. He set their tree in the dining-room and with Alice's good help +fixed a solid bottom standard and set it up in the living-room right in +front of the foolish little fireplace. They wired it firmly and then Mrs. +Merrill brought in the boxes of Christmas trimmings and everybody set to +work. + +Such fun as it was! Mary Jane kept saying, "Remember this!" And Alice +added, "Remember that!" till it seemed as though it _couldn't_ be more +than a week since last Christmas when they had put the same things on a +tree that looked exactly like the one they were now trimming. This year, +seeing Mary Jane was such a _very_ old person, she was allowed to put the +gold star on the top of the tree; she climbed the ladder, with father +holding one hand and wired it on all by herself; and Alice, as a special +privilege, was allowed to hang the crystal icicles on every tip. + +Nobody put any tinsel on the tree--that was left for the middle of the +night like the story of the old time legend. Whether the spiders and the +Christmas fairies, working together, really covered the tree with silver, +Mary Jane never stopped to figure out. But at any rate the tree was +covered with strings of gold the next morning and Mary Jane thought it the +prettiest Christmas tree she had ever seen! + +[Illustration: This year, seeing Mary Jane was such a _very_ old person, +she was allowed to put the gold star on the top of the tree +_Page 195_] + +The very last thing before she went to bed, Mary Jane hung up her +stocking. And Alice, looking a bit foolish, hung hers close by. + +"I thought you two folks weren't going to have any Christmas," said Mr. +Merrill teasingly. + +"Of course we're not," said Mary Jane bravely, "but we want to hang our +stockings just the same as if--you know." And Dadah must have understood +for he nodded his head and didn't tease any more. + +Nobody would say how it ever happened. Certainly it was well understood +that there were to be no presents. But, anyway, when Mary Jane and Alice +looked at those stockings Christmas morning they were fat, as fat could +be! Just bulging over with queer shaped parcels! + +Mary Jane couldn't even wait to put her slippers on! She bundled a kimono +around her, grabbed up her stocking and ran into her mother's room to open +it. Alice wasn't far behind and certainly for girls who were to have _no_ +presents, they fared very well indeed! Santa Claus must have got his +signals mixed some way! There were doll things for Marie Georgiannamore, +and a ring for Mary Jane; hair ribbons, handkerchiefs, skates for Alice +(think of that in a stocking!) and slippers for the little girl who forgot +to put on her old pair and, oh, many lovely little things that could be +tucked into a stocking. + +The girls spread the things out on mother's bed and had a happy time till +suddenly Mr. Merrill exclaimed, "Girls! It's eight o'clock and I ordered +that taxi for nine!" + +Then there _was_ a scramble! Gifts were hustled away, clothes were put on, +breakfast was eaten and a few last things packed in the baskets, just as +the taxi arrived. + +It was fortunate Mr. Merrill had ordered a big car for with three baskets, +a bundle containing the doll bed and another the turkey, to say nothing of +the tree roped on the side of the car and the box of trimmings on Mrs. +Merrill's lap even a big car was pretty full. + +Mary Jane felt like a real Santa Claus for sure! + +The family they were going to see didn't know they were coming, so when +the car stopped in front of a shabby little house, three puzzled and very +sober faces pressed against the window and looked out. But the sober faces +soon changed. In a few minutes the mother was helping Mrs. Merrill put the +turkey in to roast, the older girl was helping Mr. Merrill set the +Christmas tree in place and Tom and Ellen, the little girl, were helping +the Merrill girls trim the tree. + +When the Merrills left the house some two hours later the turkey was +almost cooked, the tree was trimmed, presents unpacked and happiness and +good cheer had settled down in the little house for many a day. + +It was a good thing they came away when they did, though, for exactly as +they drove up to their own home, they met an express wagon. And in their +own vestibule they found the driver. "Family of Merrill here?" he asked +them. + +"They're us," said Mary Jane eagerly. And whereupon the driver carried +upstairs the biggest, fattest Christmas box Mary Jane had ever seen. + +Of course it was from grandma and in it were so many lovely things from +uncles and grandparents and cousins that Mary Jane thought she never would +get everything unpacked! + +"Well," said the little girl as some time later the family sat down to +their own belated dinner, "I think for not having any presents, we got a +lot! And I think I like Christmas in Chicago just as much as anywhere, I +do." + + + + +A SUMMER HOME--AND A TELEGRAM + + +"Let's go skating!" called Frances one cold morning as she saw Alice shake +the bath room rug from the balcony. + +"Skating?" answered Alice, "where?" + +"Down on the Midway," said Frances. "As soon as you get your work done, +you and Mary Jane come around to our front door and Betty and I will be +ready." + +"But Mary Jane doesn't know how to skate," said Alice. + +"Betty doesn't either," answered Frances, "but they can take their sleds +and coast down the sides of the bank while you and I skate." + +Alice promised and then she hurried inside to finish her work. She had +heard about the fine skating on the Midway where the park board flooded +the sunken greens for the benefit of neighborhood children, but thus far +the weather had been too mild for any skating, so she hadn't had a chance +to try it. But a sudden cold snap, with snow enough to cover the sloping +banks, had provided both skating and coasting. + +Well protected with warm mittens and leggings the girls set out and had +the jolliest kind of a morning. At one end of the ice, the younger folks +did their coasting, the sloping sides giving a flying start and the smooth +ice a glorious finish. At the other end the older boys and girls did their +skating, so there was no mix up or interference. + +That morning was the first of many happy Saturday mornings spent on the +ice. Even Mary Jane got some skates and, with the help of Dadah when he +could get away from the office, she learned to be a fine skater. + +But winter fun never lasts very long. Just about the time Mary Jane +learned to skate well enough to challenge Alice to a race, the spring sun +sent the ice to nowhere land and the while-ago ice pond turned to green +grass! Spring had come. + +With the coming of spring, Mary Jane grew very restless. She wasn't sick, +but something was wrong. Something was making her very solemn and +sober--quite unlike her usual lively self. + +"I know what's the matter with me," she announced one warm sunny morning, +"I want to dig." + +"You want to dig?" exclaimed Mrs. Merrill in amazement, "well, why don't +you go down and dig in the Holdens' yard? You know Mrs. Holden said you +might." + +"But I don't want to dig in somebody's yard," answered Mary Jane, without +a spark of interest, "I want to dig in my _own_ yard and have flowers and +a sand pile and everything right in my own yard, I do." + +Mrs. Merrill didn't reply but she did do a lot of thinking and that +evening she and Mr. Merrill had a long conference. + +As a result, at breakfast table the next morning Mr. Merrill said, "How +would you girls like to have a summer home of your own? A place in the +woods where we could go as soon as school closes and where you could wear +bloomers and play in the sand and gather flowers and make garden and all +the things you love to do but can't do in the city. How would you like +that?" + +Mary Jane and Alice stared at him. Would they _like_ it? anybody could see +by their faces that they would _love_ it! + +"But we wouldn't want to leave you here in Chicago, all summer," objected +Alice. + +"And I wouldn't want to be left," Mr. Merrill assured them. "But I am +sure, somewhere in the suburbs around Chicago there must be _some place_ +we could get a summer home. And we'll make it our business to find that +place." + +"I thought," began Mrs. Merrill, and then she hesitated. + +"Something nice?" asked Alice, encouragingly. + +"It would have been nice," admitted Mrs. Merrill, "but likely we couldn't +do it. I'd been thinking how pleasant it would be to take another trip +this summer. You know how you girls enjoyed going to Florida. And you +remember Uncle Hal graduates from Harvard this June. I had been wondering +if we could go east in time to be there when the festivities are going +on." + +"Oh, mother!" cried Mary Jane, "what fun! I do want to ride on a train, a +big train with a sleeper and a diner! But then I want to dig, too," she +added, insistently. + +"Then we'll take one thing at a time," suggested Mr. Merrill. "We'll look +into the question of a summer home--we know we'd all like that. And you +folks don't know that a very popular uncle would _want_ a grown up sister +and two small nieces hanging around at commencement time," he added +teasingly. + +"How do you find a summer home?" asked Alice thoughtfully. + +"That's what we'll have to discover," laughed Mr. Merrill. "And we'll +begin this very Saturday afternoon if the weather is fine. We'll take a +suburban train and ride till we see a place that looks homey and there +we'll get off and hunt." + +The next Saturday was warm and sunny, the kind of a day for bringing +flowers into bloom and for making little girls want to play out of doors. +Mrs. Merrill and the girls met Mr. Merrill at his office so as not to lose +a minute's time, and they hurried right over to the station, and got +aboard the first suburban train they could find. + +"I think this is lots of fun," said Mary Jane as they found their seats, +"we don't know where we're going--we're just going!" And the train was +off. + +For some time the girls were really discouraged. They passed factories, +and tenements, and more factories till Mary Jane was sure they were never +coming to country--real country. But suddenly, when she was about to give +up, the factories were gone and from the window the girls could see wide +fields and strips of woods and an occasional brook. Two or three little +stations were passed and then the train ran through a beautiful stretch of +woods--rolling woods all leafy and budding and flower decked. The ground +was fairly covered with early blossoms and trees of wild crab were just +bursting into pink bloom. + +Mary Jane grabbed her coat and started down the aisle. + +"Make 'em stop the train, Dadah," she said, "this is where we want to +live!" + +Fortunately at that minute the train really did stop at a small station +and the Merrills got off and looked around. It didn't take long to explore +into the woods far enough to find that they had come to the very place +they were looking for--a spot not too far from the city for Mr. Merrill's +daily trip and yet wild enough to give the girls some real woods. The +girls picked flowers as they explored and had such a happy time that it +was hard work to persuade them to go back to the city when the twilight +came. But they had found the very place! + +Three weeks later Mr. Merrill bought a lot in the heart of the woods, and +the summer home was no longer a mere dream--it was to be really truly. + +"Now," announced Alice, "we'll draw the kind of a house we want. I love to +draw plans of a house!" She cleared off the dining table, sharpened +pencils, brought two tablets and insisted that everybody come out and +help. + +And just then the door bell rang. + +"Telegram for Merrill!" shouted a voice through the tube and Mary Jane +pressed the buzzer in a hurry--a telegram usually meant something +exciting. + +It was addressed to Mrs. Merrill and said, "Have all tickets and hotel +reservations. You and the girls must come." And it was signed by Mrs. +Merrill's brother. + +"If that isn't just like a college boy!" laughed Mrs. Merrill. "For weeks +he doesn't answer a letter and then he telegraphs! Girls," she added, +"let's go! Wouldn't you like to go to Boston and see the college and the +ocean and the White Mountains--and--everything?" + +"Oh, mother, _really_?" exclaimed Mary Jane. (She felt as though she must +be dreaming, things were happening so fast!) + +"But what about the summer home?" asked Alice. + +"Don't you worry about the summer home," Mr. Merrill assured her, "we'll +have that summer home just the same. You girls take your trip east. You +won't be gone more than a couple of weeks--and what are two weeks out of a +whole summer? And before you go, we'll get the shack all planned and when +you come back we'll move out." + +"Goody! Goody! Goody!" cried Mary Jane happily, "then I can see Uncle Hal +and ride on the train and dig a garden and _everything_!" + +And if you want to hear all about Mary Jane's beautiful trip to Boston and +the White Mountains, the fun she had sight-seeing and the jolly party on +"Class Day," you must read-- + + "MARY JANE IN NEW ENGLAND" + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +THE MARY JANE SERIES +BY CLARA INGRAM JUDSON +Cloth, 12mo. Illustrated. +With picture inlay and wrapper. + +[Illustration] +Mary Jane is the typical American little girl who bubbles over with fun +and the good things in life. We meet her here on a visit to her +grandfather's farm where she becomes acquainted with farm life and farm +animals and thoroughly enjoys the experience. We next see her going to +kindergarten and then on a visit to Florida, and then--but read the +stories for yourselves. + +Exquisitely and charmingly written are these books which every little girl +from five to nine years old will want from the first book to the last. + + 1 MARY JANE--HER BOOK + 2 MARY JANE--HER VISIT + 3 MARY JANE'S KINDERGARTEN + 4 MARY JANE DOWN SOUTH + 5 MARY JANE'S CITY HOME + 6 MARY JANE IN NEW ENGLAND + 7 MARY JANE'S COUNTY HOME + +BARSE & HOPKINS +PUBLISHERS +NEWARK, N. J. NEW YORK, N. Y. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +CHICKEN LITTLE JANE SERIES +_By_ LILY MUNSELL RITCHIE + +[Illustration] +Chicken Little Jane is a Western prairie girl who lives a happy, outdoor +life in a country where there is plenty of room to turn around. She is a +wide-awake, resourceful girl who will instantly win her way into the +hearts of other girls. And what good times she has!--with her pets, her +friends, and her many interests. "Chicken Little" is the affectionate +nickname given to her when she is very, very good, but when she misbehaves +it is "Jane"--just Jane! + + Adventures of Chicken Little Jane + Chicken Little Jane on the "Big John" + Chicken Little Jane Comes to Town + +With numerous illustrations in pen and ink +By CHARLES D. HUBBARD +BARSE & HOPKINS +NEWARK NEW YORK + N. J. N. Y. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +Dorothy Whitehill Series +For Girls + +[Illustration] +Here is a sparkling new series of stories for girls--just what they will +like, and ask for more of the same kind. It is all about twin sisters, who +for the first few years in their lives grow up in ignorance of each +other's existence. Then they are at last brought together and things begin +to happen. Janet is an independent go-ahead sort of girl; while her sister +Phyllis is--but meet the twins for yourself and be entertained. + +5 Titles, Cloth, large 12mo., +Covers in color. + + 1. JANET, A TWIN + 2. PHYLLIS, A TWIN + 3. THE TWINS IN THE WEST + 4. THE TWINS IN THE SOUTH + 5. THE TWINS' SUMMER VACATION + 6. THE TWINS AND TOMMY JR. + +BARSE & HOPKINS +PUBLISHERS +NEWARK, N. J. NEW YORK, N. Y. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +THE POLLY PENDLETON SERIES +BY DOROTHY WHITEHILL + +[Illustration] +Polly Pendleton is a resourceful, wide-awake American girl who goes to a +boarding school on the Hudson River some miles above New York. By her +pluck and resourcefulness, she soon makes a place for herself and this she +holds right through the course. The account of boarding school life is +faithful and pleasing and will attract every girl in her teens. + + 1 POLLY'S FIRST YEAR AT BOARDING SCHOOL + 2 POLLY'S SUMMER VACATION + 3 POLLY'S SENIOR YEAR AT BOARDING SCHOOL + 4 POLLY SEES THE WORLD AT WAR + 5 POLLY AND LOIS + 6 POLLY AND BOB + +Cloth, Large 12mo., Illustrated. + +BARSE & HOPKINS +PUBLISHERS +Newark, N. J. New York, N. Y. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +The Sunny Boy Series +By RAMY ALLISON WHITE + +[Illustration] +Children, meet Sunny Boy, a little fellow with big eyes and an inquiring +disposition, who finds the world a large and wonderful thing indeed. And +somehow there is lots going on, when Sunny Boy is around. Perhaps he helps +push! In the first book of this new series he has the finest time ever, +with his Grandpa out in the country. He learns a lot and he helps a lot, +in his small way. Then he has a glorious visit to the seashore, but this +is in the next story. And there are still more adventures in the third +book and fourth book. You will like Sunny Boy. + +4 Titles, Cloth, illustrated, 12mo., +with colored covers. + + 1. SUNNY BOY IN THE COUNTRY + 2. SUNNY BOY AT THE SEASHORE + 3. SUNNY BOY IN THE BIG CITY + 4. SUNNY BOY IN SCHOOL AND OUT + 5. SUNNY BOY AND HIS PLAYMATES + +BARSE & HOPKINS +PUBLISHERS +NEWARK, N. J. NEW YORK, N. Y. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +GOOD STORIES FOR CHILDREN +(From four to nine years old) +THE KNEETIME ANIMAL STORIES +By RICHARD BARNUM + +[Illustration] +In all nursery literature animals have played a conspicuous part; and the +reason is obvious, for nothing entertains a child more than the antics of +an animal. These stories abound in amusing incidents such as children +adore, and the characters are so full of life, so appealing to a child's +imagination, that none will be satisfied until they have met all of their +favorites--Squinty, Slicko, Mappo, and the rest. + + 1 Squinty, the Comical Pig. + 2 Slicko, the Jumping Squirrel. + 3 Mappo, the Merry Monkey. + 4 Tum Tum, the Jolly Elephant. + 5 Don, a Runaway Dog. + 6 Dido, the Dancing Bear. + 7 Blackie, a Lost Cat. + 8 Flop Ear, the Funny Rabbit. + 9 Tinkle, the Trick Pony. + 10 Lightfoot, the Leaping Goat. + 11 Chunky, the Happy Hippo. + 12 Sharp Eyes, the Silver Fox. + 13 Nero, the Circus Lion. + 14 Tamba, the Tame Tiger. + 15 Toto, the Rustling Beaver. + 16 Shaggo, the Mighty Buffalo. + 17 Winky, the Wily Woodchuck. + +Cloth, Large 12mo., Illustrated. + +BARSE & HOPKINS +Publishers +Newark, N. J. New York, N. Y. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +The Yank Brown Series +By DAVID STONE +Cloth, large 12 mo. Illustrated. + +[Illustration] +When Yank Brown comes to Belmont College as a callow Freshman, there is a +whole lot that he doesn't know about college life, such as class rushes, +rivalries, fraternities, and what a lowly Freshman must not do. But he +does know something about how to play football, and he is a big, likeable +chap who speedily makes friends. + +In the first story of this series we watch Yank buck the line as a +Halfback. In the second story he goes in for basketball, among many other +activities of a busy college year. Then there are other stories to +follow--each brimful of action and interest. This is one of the best +college series we have seen in a long while. + + YANK BROWN, HALFBACK + YANK BROWN, FORWARD + YANK BROWN, CROSS-COUNTRY RUNNER + +BARSE & HOPKINS +NEWARK NEW YORK +N. J. N. Y. + +(Other volumes in preparation.) + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Mary Jane's City Home, by Clara Ingram Judson + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MARY JANE'S CITY HOME *** + +***** This file should be named 26517.txt or 26517.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/5/1/26517/ + +Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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