It isn’t only Christmas that comes but once a year and when it comes it brings good cheer; it’s any festival that is worth a hill of beans, High School Commencement, Fourth of July, Sunday-school excursion, Election’ bonfire, Thanksgiving Day (a nice day and one whereon you can eat roast turkey till you can’t choke down another bite, and pumpkin-pie, and cranberry sauce. Tell you!)—but about the best in the whole lot, and something the city folks don’t have, is Firemen’s Tournament. That comes once a year, generally about the time for putting up tomatoes.
The first that most of us know about it is when we see the bills up, telling how much excursion rates will be to our town from Ostrander and Mt. Victory, and Wapatomica, and New Berlin, and Foster’s, and Caledonia, and Mechanicsburg—all the towns around on both the railroads. But before that there was the Citizens’ Committee, and then the Executive Committee, and the Finance Committee, and the Committee on Press and Publicity, and Printing and Prizes, and Decorations and Badges, and Music, and Reception to Firemen, and Reception to Guests—as many committees as there are nails in the fence from your house to mine. And these committees come around and tell you that we want to show the folks that we’ve got public spirit in our town, some spunk, some git-up to us. We want our town to contrast favorably with Caledonia where they had the Tournament last year. We want to put it all over the Caledonia people (they think they’re so smart), and we can do it, too, if everybody will take a-holt and help. Well, we want all we can get. We expect a pretty generous offer from you, for one. Man that has as pretty and tasty got-up store as you have, and does the business that you do, ought to show his appreciation of the town and try to help along.... Oh, anything you’re a mind to give. ‘Most anything comes in handy for prizes. But what we principally need is cash, ready cash. You see, there’s a good deal of expense attached to an enterprise of this character. So many little things you wouldn’t think of, that you’ve just got to have. But laws! you’ll make it all back and more, too. We cackleate there’ll be, at the very least, ten thousand people in town that day, and it’s just naturally bound to be that some of them will do their trading.
Thank you very much, that’s very handsome of you. Good day. (What are you growling about? Lucky to get five cents out of that man.)
The Ladies’ Aid of Center Street M. E., has secured the store-room recently vacated by Rouse & Meyers, and is going to serve a dinner that day for the benefit of the Carpet Fund of their church and about time, too, I say. I like to broke my neck there a week ago last Sunday night, when our minister was away. Caught my foot in a hole in the carpet, and a little more and wouldn’t have gone headlong. So, it’s: “Why, I’ve been meaning for more than a year, to call on you, Mrs.—. Mrs.—(Let me look at my list. Oh, yes) Mrs. Cooper, but we’ve had so much sickness at home—you know my husband’s father is staying with us at present, and he’s been in very poor health all winter—and when it hasn’t been sickness, it’s been company. You know how it is. And it seemed as if I—just—could—not make out to get up your way. What a pretty little place you have! So cozy! I was just saying to Mrs. Thorpe here, it was so seldom you saw a really pretty residence in this part of town. We think that up on the hill, where we reside, you know, is about the handsomest.... Yes, there are a great many wealthy people live up there. The Quackenbushes are enormously wealthy. I was saying to Mrs. Quackenbush only the other day that I thought the hill people were almost too exclusive .... Yes, it is a perfectly lovely day.... Er—er—We’re soliciting for the Firemen’s Tournament—well, not for the Tournament exactly, but the Ladies’ Aid are going to give a dinner that day for the Carpet Fund and we thought perhaps you ‘d like to help along.... Oh, any little thing, a boiled ham or—... Well, we shall want some cake, but we’d druther—or, at least, rawther—have something more substantial, don’t you know, pie or pickles or jelly, don’t you know. And will you bring it or shall I send Michael with the carriage for it?.... Oh, thank you! If you would. It would be so much appreciated. So sorry we couldn’t make a longer stay, but now that we’ve found the way.... Yes, that’s very true. Well, good-afternoon.”
The lady of the house watches them as Michael inquires: “Whur next, mum?” and bangs the door of the carriage. Then she turns and says to herself: “Huh!” Mrs. Thorpe is that instant observing: “Did you notice that crayon enlargement she had hanging up? Wouldn’t it kill you?” To which the other lady responds: “Well, between you and I, Mrs. Thorpe, if I couldn’t have a real hand-painted picture I wouldn’t have nothing at all.”
The lady of the house bakes a cake. She’ll show them a thing or two in the cake line. And while it is in the oven what does that little dev—, that provoking Freddie, do but see if he can’t jump across the kitchen in two jumps. Fall? What cake wouldn’t fall? Of course it falls. But it is too late now to bake another, and if they don’t like it, they know what they can do. She doesn’t know that she’s under any obligation to them.
Mrs. John Van Meter hears Freddie say off the little speech his mother taught him—Oh, you may be sure she’d be there as large as life, taking charge of everything, just as if she had been one of the workers, when, to my certain knowledge, she hadn’t been to one of the committee meetings, not a one. I declare I don’t know what Mr. Craddock is thinking of to let her boss every body around the way she does—and she smiles and says: “It’s all right. It’s just lovely. Tell your mamma Mrs. Van Meter is ever and ever so much obliged to her. Isn’t he a dear boy?” And when he is gone, she says: “What are we ever going to do with all this cake? It seems as if everybody has sent cake. And whatever possessed that woman to attempt a cake, I—can’t imagine. Ts! ts! ts! H-well. Oh, put it somewhere. Maybe we can work it off on the country people. Mrs. Filkins, your coffee smells PERfectly grand! Perfectly grand. Do you think we’ll have spoons enough?”
The Tournament prizes are exhibited in the windows of the leading furniture emporium at the corner of Main and Center, each with a card attached bearing the name of the donor in distinctly legible characters. Old man Hagerman has been mowing all the rag-weed and cuckle-burrs along the line of march, and the lawns have had an unusual amount of shaving and sprinkling. Out near the end of Center Street, the grandstand has been going up, tiers of seats rising from each curb line. The street has been rolled and sprinkled and scraped until it is in fine condition for a running track. Why don’t you pick up that pebble and throw it over into the lot? Suppose some runner should slip on that stone and fall and hurt himself, you’d be to blame.
The day before the Tournament, they hang the banner:
“WELCOME VOLUNTEER FIREMEN”
from Case’s drugstore across to the Furniture Emporium. Along the line of march you may see the man of the house up on a step-ladder against the front porch, with his hands full of drapery and his mouth full of tacks. His wife is backing toward the geranium bed to get a good view, cocking her head on one side.
“How ‘v vif?” he asks as well as he can for the tacks.
“Little higher. Oh, not so much. Down a little. Whope! that’s .... Oh, plague take the firemen! Just look at that! Mercy! Mercy!”
The man of the house can’t turn his head.
“Oh, I wouldn’t have had it happen for I don’t know what! Ts! Ts! Ts! That lovely silverleaf geranium that Mrs. Pritchard give me a slip of. Broke right off! Oh, my! My! My! Do you s’pose it’d grow if I was to stick it into the ground just as it is with all them buds on it?”
The man of the house lets one end of the drapery go and empties his mouth of tacks into his disengaged hand.
“I don’t know. Ow! jabbed right into my gum! But I can tell you this: If you think I’m going to stick up on this ladder all morning while you carry on about some fool old geranium that you can just as well fuss with when I’m gone, why, you’re mighty much mistaken.”
“Well, you needn’t take my head off. I feel awful about that geranium.”
“Well, why don’t you look where you’re going? Is this right?”
“Yes, I told you. I wish now I’d done it myself. I can’t ask you to do a thing about the house but there’s a row raised right away.”
People that don’t want to go to the trouble of tacking up these alphabet flags on the edge of the veranda eaves (it takes fourteen of them to spell “WELCOME FIREMEN”), say they think a handsome flag—a really handsome one, not one of these twenty-five centers—is as pretty and rich looking a decoration as a body can put up.
Tents are raised in the vacant lots along Center Street, and counters knocked together for the sale of ice-cold lemonade, lemo, lemo, lemo, made in the shade, with a spade, by an old maid, lemo, lemo. Here y’ are now, gents, gitch nice cool drink, on’y five a glass. There is even the hook for the ice-cream candy man to throw the taffy over when he pulls it. I like to watch him. It makes me dribble at the mouth to think about it.
The man that sells the squawking toys and the rubber balloons on sticks is in town. All he can say is: “Fi’ cent.” He will blow up the balloons tomorrow morning. The men with the black-velvet covered shields, all stuck full of “souvenirs,” are here, and the men with the little canes. I guess we’ll have a big crowd if it doesn’t rain. What does the paper say about the weather?
The boys have been playing a new game for some time past, but it is only this evening that you notice it. The way of it is this: You take an express-wagon—it has to have real wheels: these sawed-out wheels are too baby—and you tie a long rope to the tongue and fix loops on the rope, so that the boys can put each a loop over his shoulder. (You want a good many boys.) And you get big, long, thick pieces of rag and you take and tie them so as to make a big, big, long piece, about as long as from here to ‘way over there. And you lay this in the wagon, kind of in folds like. Then you go up to where they water the horses and two of you go at the back end of the wagon and the rest put the loops over their shoulders, and one boy says, “Are you ready?” and he has a Fourth of July pistol and he shoots off a cap. And when you hear that, you run like the dickens and the two boys behind the wagon let out the hose (the big, long, thick piece of rag) and fix it so it lies about straight on the ground. And when you have run as far as the hose will reach, the boy with the Fourth of July pistol says: “Twenty-eight and two-fifths,” and that’s the game. And the kids don’t like for big folks to stand and watch them, because they always make fun so.
In other towns they have Boys’ Companies organized strictly for Tournament purposes. There was talk of having one here. Mat. King, the assistant chief, was all for having one so that we could compete in what he calls “the juveline contests,” but it fell through somehow.
Along about sun-up you hear the big farm-wagons clattering into town, chairs in the wagon bed, and Paw, and Maw, and Mary Elizabeth, and Martin Luther, and all the family, clean down to Teedy, the baby. He’s named after Theodore Roosevelt, and they have the letter home now, framed and hanging up over the organ. But for all the wagon is so full, there is room for a big basket covered with a red-ended towel. (Seems to me I smell fried chicken, don’t you?)
I just thought I’dt see if you’d bite. You’ve formed your notions of country people from “The Old Homestead” and these by-gosh-Mirandy novels. The real farmers, nowadays, drive into town in double-seated carriages with matched bays, curried so that you can see to comb your hair in their glossy sides. The single rigs sparkle in the sun, conveying young men and young women of such clean-cut, high-bred features as to make us wonder. And yet I don’t know why we should wonder, either. They all come from good old stock. The young fellows run a little too strongly to patent-leather shoes and their horses are almost too skittish for my liking, but the girls are all right. If their clothes set better than you thought they would, why, you must remember that they subscribe for the very same fashion magazines that you do, and there is such a thing as a mail-order business in this country, even if you aren’t aware of it.
All the little boys in town are out with their baskets chanting sadly:
PEANUTS? FIVE A BAG
You ‘ll hear that all day long.
But there isn’t much going on before the excursion trains come in. Then things begin to hop. The grand marshal and his aides gallop through the streets as if they were going for the doctor. The trains of ten and fifteen coaches pile up in the railroad yard, and the yardmaster nearly goes out of his mind. People are so anxious to get out of the cars, in which they have been packed and jammed for hours, that they don’t mind a little thing like being run over by a switching engine. Every platform is just one solid chunk of summer hats and babies and red shirts and alto horns. They have been nearly five hours coming fifty miles. Stopped at every station and sidetracked for all the regular trains. Such a time! Lots of fun, though. The fellows got out and pulled flowers, and seed cucumbers, and things and threw them at folks. You never saw such cut-ups as they are. Pretty good singers, too. Good part of the way, they sung “My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean,” and “How Can I Bear to Leave Thee,” nice and slow, you know, a good deal of tenor and not much bass, and plenty of these “minor chords.” (Yes, I know, some people call them “barber-shop chords,” but I think “minor” is a nicer name.)
The band played “Hiawatha” eighteen times. One old fellow got on at Huntsville, and he says, to Joe Bangs (that’s the leader), “Shay,” he says, “play ‘Turkey in er Straw,’ won’t you? Aw, go on. Play it. Thass goof feller. Go on.”
Joe, he never heard of the tune. Don’t you know it? Goes like this: ... No, that ain’t it. That’s “Gray Eagle.” Funny, I can’t think how that tune starts. Well, no matter. They played an arrangement that had “Old Zip Coon” in it.
“Naw,” he says, “tha’ ain’ it ‘t all. Go on. Play it. Play ‘Turkey in er Straw.’ Ah, ye don’t know it. Thass reason. Betch don’ know it. Don’ know ‘Turkey in er Straw!’ Ho! Caw seff ml-m’ sishn. Ho! You—you—you ain’ no m’sishn. You—you you’re zis bluff.” Only about half-past eight, too. Think of that! So early in the morning. Ah me! That’s one of the sad features of such an occasion.
If there is anything more magnificent than a firemen’s parade, I don’t know what it is. The varnished woodwork on the apparatus looks as if it had just come out of the shop and every bit of bright work glitters fit to strike you blind. You take, now, a nice hose-reel painted white and striped into panels with a fine red line, every other panel fruits and flowers, and every other panel a piece of looking-glass shaped like a cut of pie and; I tell you, it looks gay. That’s what it does. It looks gay. Some of the hook-and-ladder trucks are just one mass of golden-rod and hydrangeas, and some of them are all fixed with this red-white-and-blue paper rope, sort of chenille effect, or more like a feather boa. Everybody has on white cotton gloves, and those entitled to carry speaking trumpets have bouquets in the bells of them, salvias, and golden-rod, and nasturtiums, and marigolds, and all such.
The Wapatomicas always have a dog up on top of their wagon. First off, you would think it didn’t help out much, it is such a forlorn looking little fice; but this dog, I want you to know, waked up the folks late one night, ‘way ‘long about ten or eleven o’clock, barking at a fire. Saved the town, as you might say. And after that, the fire-boys took him for a mascot. I guess he didn’t belong to anybody before. And another wagon has a chair on it, and in that chair the cutest little girl you almost eyer saw, hair all frizzed at the ends, and a wide blue sash and her white frock starched as stiff as a milk-pail. Everybody says: “Aw, ain’t she just too sweet?”
The Caledonias have tried to make quite a splurge this year. They walk four abreast, with their arms locked, and their white gloves on each other’s shoulders. Their truck has on it what they call “an allegorical figure.” There is a kind of a business (looks to me like it is the axle and wheels of a toy wagon, stood up on end and covered with white paper muslin and a string tied around the middle) that is supposed to be an hour-glass. Then there is a scythe covered with cotton batting, and then a man in a bath-robe (I saw the figure of the goods when the wind blew it open) also covered with white cotton batting. The man has a wig and beard of wicking. First, I thought it was Santa Claus, and then I saw the scythe and knew it must be old Father Time. The hour-glass puzzled me no little though. The man has cotton batting wings. One of them is a little wabbly, but what can you expect from Caledonia? They’re always trying to butt the bull off the bridge. They’re jealous of our town. Oh, they stooped to all the mean, underhanded tricks you ever heard of to get the canning factory to go to their place instead of here. But we know a thing or two ourselves. Yes, we got the canning factory, all right, all right.
Did you notice how neat and trim our boys looked? None of this flub-dub of scarlet shirts with a big white monogram on the breast, or these fawn-colored suits with querlycues of braid all over. They spot very easily. And did you notice how the Caledonias had long, lean men walking with short, fat men, and nobody keeping step? Our boys were all carefully graded and matched, and their dark blue uniforms with just the neat nickel badge, I think, presented the best appearance of all. And I’ll tell you another thing. They’ll put it all over the Caledonias this afternoon. They won’t let ‘em get a smell.
Don’t you like the fife-and-drum corps? The fifes set my teeth on edge, but I could follow the drums all day with their:
Tucket a brum, brum brum-brum, tuck-all de brum
Tucket a brum-brum, tuck-all de brum-brum-brum
Tucket a blip-blip-blip-blip, tucka tuck-all de brum,
Tucket a brum-brum, tuck-all de brum-brum-brum!
Part of the time the drummers click their sticks together instead of hitting the drum-head. That’s what makes it sound so nice. I wish I could play the snare-drum.
In the Mechanicsburg band is a boy about fourteen years old, a muscular, sturdy chunk of a lad. He walks with his heels down, his calves bulged out behind, his head up, and the regular, proper swagger of a bandsman. He hasn’t any uniform, but he’s all right. He plays a solo B part, and he and the other solo cornet spell each other. On the repeat of every strain my boy rests, and rubs his lips with his forefinger, while he looks at the populace with bright, expectant eyes. When he blows, he scowls, and brings the cushion of muscle on the point of his chin clear up to his under lip, and he draws his breath through the corners of his mouth. He’s the real thing. Bright boy, too, I judge, the kind that has a quick answer for everybody, like: “Aw, go chase yerself,” or “Go on, yeh big stiff.” Watch him on the countermarch when they pass the Radnor cornet band. The Radnors broke up the Mechanicsburg band last year and they’re going to try to do it again this year. The musicians blow themselves the color of a huckleberry, and the drummers grit their teeth, and try to pound holes in their sheep-skins. Aha! It’s the Radnor band got rattled in its time this year. Went all to pieces. The boy snatches, a rest. “Yah!” he squawks. “Didge ever get left?” and picks up the tune again. I wish I could play the cornet. Wouldn’t play solo B or I wouldn’t play any—Ooooooooh! Did you see that? Took that stick by the other end from the knob and slung it away, ‘way up in the air, whirling like sixty, and caught it when it came down and never missed a step. Look at him juggle it from hand to hand, over his shoulder, and behind his back, and under one leg, whirling so fast that you can hardly see it, and all in perfect step. Whope! I thought he was going to drop it that time but he didn’t. That’s something you don’t see in the cities. There, all the drum-major does with his stick is just to point it the way the band is to go. I like our fashion the best. Geeminentally! Look at that! I bet it went up in the air forty feet if it went an inch. I wish I was a drummajor. I guess I’d sooner be a drum-major than anything else. Oh, well, detective—that’s different.
Let’s go farther along. Don’t get too near the judges’ stand. I know. It’s the best place to see the finish of an event, but I’ve been to Firemen’s Tournament before. You let me pick out the seats. Up close to the judges’ stand is all right till you come to the “wet races.” What? Oh, you wait and see. Fun? Well, I should say so. Hope they’ll clear all those boys off the rail. Here! Get down off that rail. Think we can see through you? You’re thin, but you’re not thin enough for that. Yes, I mean you, and don’t you give me any of your impudence either. Look at those women out there. Right spang in the way of the scraper. Isn’t that a woman all over? A woman and a hen, I don’t know which is—Well, hel-lo! Where’d you come from? How’s all the folks? Where’s Lizzie? Didn’t she come with you? Aw, isn’t that too bad? Scalding hot! Ts! Ts! Ts! Seems as if they made preserving kettles apurpose so’s they’d tip up when you go to pour anything.... Why, I guess we can. Move over a little, Charley. Can you squeeze in? That’s all right. Pretty thick around here, isn’t it? There’s the band starting up. About time, I think. Teedle-eedle umtum, teedle-eedle, um-tum. “Hiawatha,” of course. What other tune is there on earth? I’ve got so I know almost all of it.
First is—let me see the program. First is what Mat. King calls “the juveline contest.” It says here: “Run with truck carrying three ladders one hundred yards. Take fifteen-foot ladder from truck, raise it against structure”—that’s the judges’ stand—“and boy ascend. Time to be taken when climber grasps top rung of ladder.” They’re off. That pistol-shot started them. Why can’t people sit down? See just as well if they did. New Berlin’s, I guess. Pretty good. He’s hanging out the slate with the time on it. Eighteen and four-fifths. Oh, no, never in the world. Here’s the Mt. Victory boys. See that light-haired boy. Go it, towhead! Ah, they’ve got the ladder crooked. Eighteen. That’s not so bad .... Oh, quit your fooling. He’s nothing of the kind. Honestly? What! that old skeezicks? Who to, for pity’s sake? Well, I thought he was a confirmed old bachelor, if anybody ever was. Well, sir, that just goes to show that any man, I don’t care who he is, can get married if he—Who were those? Are those the Caledonia juveniles? I don’t think much of ‘em, do you? Seventeen and two-fifths. I wouldn’t have thought it. So their team gets the first prize. Well, we weren’t in that.
What’s next? “First prize, silver water-set, donated by Hon. William Krouse.” Since when did old Bill Krouse get to be “Honorable?” Yes, well, don’t talk to me about Bill Krouse. I know him and his whole connection and there isn’t an honest hair—“Association trophy will also be competed for.” Oh, that’s the goldlined loving cup we saw in the window. Our boys have won it twice and the Caledonias have won it twice. If we get it this time, it will be ours for keeps. “Run with truck one hundred and fifty yards; take twenty-five foot ladder,” and so forth and so forth, Dan O’Brien’s the boy for scaling ladders. He was going to enlist in the Boer War, he hates the English so. Down on them the worst way. And say, what do you think? Last year, at Caledonia, he won the first prize for individual ladder scaling. And what do you suppose the first prize was? A picture of Queen Victoria. Isn’t that Caledonia all over? there’s a kind of rivalry between our boys and the Caledonias.
Here they come now. Those are the Caledonian. Tell by the truck .... Do
you think so? I don’t think they’re anything so very much. Nix. You’ll
never do it. Look at the way they run with their heads up. That shows
they’re all winded. Look at the clumsy way they got the ladder off the
wagon. Blap! The judge thought it was coming through the boards on him.
Oh, pretty good, pretty good, but you just wait till you see our boys.
Look at the fool hanging there on the ladder waiting till the time is
announced. Isn’t that Caledonia all over? Yah! Come down! Come down!
What is it? Twenty-five seconds. What’s the record? Twenty-four and
four-fifths? Oh, well, it isn’t so bad for Caledonia, but you just
what our boys do. Hear those yaps from Caledonia yell! If there’s
anything I despise it is for a man to whoop and holler and make a public
spectacle of himself. Who’s this? Oh, the Radnors. They’re out of it.
Look at them. Pulling every which way. That ladder’s too straight up
and down. Twenty-seven and two-fifths. What did I tell you?... What time
does your train go? Well, why don’t you and your wife come take supper
with us? Why didn’t you look us up noon-time?... I could have told you
better than that. (They went to the Ladies’ Aid dinner.) Well, we shan’t
have much, I expect, but we’ll try and scrape up something more
filling than layer-cake. The idea of expecting to feed hungry people
on layer-cake! It’s an imposition.... I didn’t notice which one it
was. Doesn’t matter any way. Only twenty-eight. Ah, here are our boys.
They’ve got blue silk running-breeches on. Well, maybe it is sateen. Let
the women folks alone for knowing sateen from silk a mile off. How much
a yard did you say it was? Notice the way they start with their hands
on the ground, just like the pictures on the sporting page of the Sunday
newspapers. Here they come. Oh, I hope they’ll win. That’s Charley
Rodehaver in front. Run! Oh, why don’t you run? Come on! Come on!
Come on! Come on! COME ON! COME ON! COME O—O-oh! See Dan skip up that
ladder! Go it, Dan! Go it, old boy! Hooray-ay! Hooray-ay, ay! What’s the
time? Twenty-four! Twenty—four flat! BROKE THE RECORD! Hooray-ay-ay!
Where’s Caledonia now? Where’s Caledonia now? Oh, I’m so glad our boys
won. There goes the Caledonia chief. I’ll bet he feels like thirty
cents, Spanish. Ya-a-a-ah! Ya-a-a-ah! Where’s Caledonia now? They can’t
beat that, the other fellows can’t, and it’s our trophy for keeps....
Oh, some crank in the next row. “Wouldn’t I please sit down and not
obstruct the view.” Guess he comes from Caledonia. Looks like it. You
stand up, too, why don’t you? Those planks are terribly hard.... I
didn’t notice. Yes, that wasn’t so bad. Twenty-five and two-fifths. But
it’s our trophy. There goes Dan now. Hey, Dan! Good boy, Dan! Wave your
handkerchief at him. Hooray-ay-ay! Good boy, Dan!
Next is a wet race. Now look out. Let’s see what the program says: “Run seventy-five yards to structure, on top of which an empty barrel has been placed with spout outlet near top. Barrel to be filled with water by means of buckets from reservoir”—That big tin-lined box opposite is the reservoir. They are filling it now with a hose attached to the water-plug yonder—“until water issues from spout.” What are they all laughing at? Which one? Oh, but isn’t she mad? Talk about a wet hen. Why, Charley, the hose got away from the man that was filling the reservoir and the lady was splashed. Why don’t you use your eyes and see what’s going on and not be bothering me to tell you? Ip! There it goes again. Oh, ho! ho! ho! hee! hee! didn’t I tell you it would be fun? See it run out of his sleeves.... I always get to coughing when I laugh as hard as that. Oh, dear me! Makes the tears come.
These are the fellows from Luxora. Oh, the clumsy things! Let the ladder get away from them, and it fell and hit that man in the second row right on the head. Hope it didn’t hurt him much. See ‘em scurry with the water buckets. Aw, get a move on! Get a move! Why, what makes them so slow? “Water, water!” Well, I should think as much. Not for themselves though. Those fellows at the bottom of the ladder are catching it, aren’t they? Oh, pshaw, they don’t mind it. They get it worse than that at a real fire when they aren’t half so well fixed for it. Why, is there no bottom to that barrel at all? Why, look!... Say, the judge forgot to close the valve. There’s a hose connected with the bottom of the barrel to run the water off after each trial and he’s forgotten to—... Well, isn’t that too bad! All that work for nothing. I suppose they’ll let them try it over again.... That man must have got a pretty hard rap. They’re carrying him out. His head’s all bloody.... Wapatomicas, I guess. Yes, Wapatomicas. I hope the valve’s closed this time. Whope! did you see that? One fellow got hit with a water bucket and it was about half-full. It’s running out of the spout. Yes, and it’s falling on those people right where you wanted to sit. Hear the girls squeal. Talk about your fun. I don’t want any better fun than this. Look at ‘em come down the ladder just holding the sides with their hands. They couldn’t do that if the ladder was dry.
Ah, here’s our crowd. Come on! Come on! Come on! COME ON! Oh, don’t be so slow with those buckets! Aren’t they fine? Say, they don’t care if they do spill a drop or two. Why. Why, what are they coming down for? It isn’t running out of the spout yet. Come back! COME BACK! Oh, pshaw! Just threw it away by being in too much of a hurry. That judge looks funny, doesn’t he, with a rubber overcoat on and the sun shining? See, he’s telling them: “One bucket more.” They’ll let ‘em have another trial, of course.... No? Oh, that’s an outrage. That’ s not fair. The Caledonias will get it now.... Yes, sir, they did get it. Oh, well, accidents will happen. What? “Where’s Caledonia now?” Well, they got it by a fluke. What say?... Well only for—Oh, pshaw! Now, don’t tell me that because I was there and—Well, I say they didn’t .... I know better, they didn’t.... Oh, shut up. You don’t know what you’re talking about. I tell you—Now, Mary, don’t you interfere. I’m not quarreling. I’m just telling this gentleman back of me that—Well, all right, if you’re going to cry. If there was any fouling done it was the Caledonias that did it, though.
The next is where they “run three hundred feet from the