Ethel Morton and the Christmas Ship - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
"Do we want to take things from outside of the Club?" objected Ethel Brown.
"I don't see why not," answered Margaret. "The idea is to get together for the orphans as many presents as possible, no matter where they come from. We're serving the orphans if we work as collectors just as much as if we made the clothes ourselves."
"Right-o," agreed Roger. "Let's tackle everybody we can on the old clo'
question. We can ask the societies in our churches--"
"Why not in all the churches in town?" dared Ethel Blue.
The idea brought a pause, for the place was small enough for the churches to meet each other with an occasional rub.
"I believe that's a good idea," declared Tom, and as a clergyman's son they listened to his views with respect. "All the churches ought to be willing to come together on the neutral ground of this club and if we are willing to take the responsibility of doing the gathering and the packing and the expressing to the Christmas s.h.i.+p I believe they'll be glad to do just the rummaging in their attics and the mending up."
"We needn't limit their offerings to clothes, either," said Della.
"We'll take care of anything they'll send in."
"Let's put it up to them, I say," cried Roger. "There's at least one member of the Morton family in every society in our church and we ought to get the subject before every one of those groups of people by the end of next week and start things booming."
"We'll do the same at Glen Point," agreed Margaret.
"I can't promise quite as much for New York, because I don't know what Father's plans are for war relief work in his church, but I do feel pretty sure he'll suggest some way of helping us," said Della.
"That's decided, then--we'll lay our paws on everything we can get from every source," Tom summed up the discussion. "Now I come back to what I said a few minutes ago--I think we're going to need more money to run this a.s.sociation than we're going to be able to rake up out of our own allowances, unless Margaret's is a good deal bigger than mine," and he nodded toward Margaret, who had objected to the more-money idea when he had offered it before.
"Just tell me how we'll need more," insisted Margaret.
"I figure it out that the part we boys will have to do in this transaction will be to district this town and Glen Point and make a house to house appeal for clothes and any sort of thing that would do for a Christmas present, all to be sent to Mrs. Smith's."
"That won't cost anything but a few carfares, and you can stand those,"
insisted Margaret.
"Carfares are all right and even a few express charges for some people who for some reason aren't able to deliver their parcels at Mrs. Smith's house. But if you girls are going to make over some of these clothes and perhaps make new garments you'll need some cash to buy materials with."
"Perhaps some of the dry goods people will contribute the materials."
"Maybe they will. But you mark my words--the cost of a little here and a little there mounts up amazingly in work of this sort and I know we're going to need cash."
"Tom's right," confirmed Della. "He's helped Father enough to know."
The idea of needing money, which they did not have, was depressing to the club members who sat around the fire staring into it gloomily.
"The question is, how to get it," went on Tom.
"People might give us money just as well as cloth, I suppose," suggested Margaret.
"I think it would be a thousand times more fun to make the money ourselves," said Ethel Blue.
"The infant's right," cried Tom. "It will be more fun and what's more important still, n.o.body can boss us because he's given us a five dollar bill."
"I suppose somebody might try," murmured Helen.
"They would," cried Tom and Della in concert.
"We aren't a clergyman's children for nothing," Tom went on humorously.
"The importance a five dollar bill can have in the eyes of the giver and the way it swells in size as it leaves his hands is something that few people realize who haven't seen it happen."
"Let's be independent," cried Dorothy decidedly, and her wish was evidently to the mind of all the rest, for murmurs of approval went around the room.
"But if we're so high and mighty as not to take money contributions and if we nevertheless need money, what in the mischief are we going to do about it?" inquired Roger.
"We must earn it," said Helen. "I'll contribute the money Mother is going to pay me for making a dozen middy blouses for the Ethels. She ordered them from me last summer when I began to take the sewing course and I haven't quite finished them yet, but I'll have the last one done this week if I can get home from school promptly for a day or two."
"I can make some baskets for the Woman's Exchange," said Dorothy.
"I learned how to make Lady Baltimore cake the other day," said Margaret, "and I'll go to some ladies in Glen Point who are going to have teas soon and ask them for orders."
"I can make cookies," murmured Ethel Brown, "but I don't know who'd buy them."
"You tell the kids at school that you've gone into the cooky business and you'll have all the work you can do for a while," prophesied Roger.
"I know your cookies; they're bully."
"I don't notice that we boys are mentioning any means of making money,"
remarked James dryly. "I confess I'm stumped."
"I know what you can do," suggested Margaret. "Father said this morning that he was going to get a chauffeur next week if he could find one that wouldn't rob him of all the money he made. You can run the car--why don't you offer to work half time--afternoons after school, for half pay? That would help Father and he'd rather have you than a strange man."
"He'd rather have half time, too. He likes to run the car himself, only he gets tired running it all day on heavy days. Great head, Sis," and James made a gesture of stroking his sister's locks, to which she responded by making a face.
"I know what I can do," said Roger. "You know those bachelor girls about seventy-five apiece, over on Church Street near Aunt Louise's--the Miss Clarks? Well, they had an awful time last year getting their furnace attended to regularly. They had one man who proved to be a--er," Roger hesitated.
"Not a total abstainer?" inquired James elegantly.
"Thank you, Brother Hanc.o.c.k, for the use of your vocabulary. The next one stole the was.h.i.+ng off the line, and the next one--Oh, I don't know what he did, but the Miss Clarks were in a state of mind over the furnace and the furnace man all winter. Now, suppose I offer to take care of their furnace for them this winter? I believe they'd have me."
"I think they'd be mighty glad to get you," confirmed Helen. "Could you do that and take care of ours, too?"
"Sure thing, if I put my mind on it and don't chase off with the fellows every time I feel in the mood."
"Mother would like to have you take care of ours if you could manage three," said Dorothy.
"I'll do it," and Roger thumped his knee with decision.
"I wouldn't undertake too much," warned Helen. "It will mean a visit three times a day at each house, you know, and the last one pretty late in the evening."
"I'm game," insisted Roger. "You know I can be as steady as an old horse when I put my alleged mind on it. Mother never had any kick coming over my work in the furnace department last winter."
"She said you did it splendidly, but this means three times as much."
"I'll do it," and Roger nodded his head solemnly.