DADDY TAKES US SKATING
By
HOWARD R. GARIS
1914
CHAPTER I
A COLD NIGHT
"Oh, how red your nose is!" cried little Mabel Blake, one day, as her brother Hal came running out of the school yard, where he had been playing with some other boys. Mabel was waiting for him to walk home with her as he had promised.
"So's your's red, too, Mab!" Harry said. "It's as red--as red as some of the crabs we boiled at our seashore cottage this summer."
"Is my nose red?" asked Mab of some of her girl friends.
"It surely is!" replied Jennie Bruce. "All our noses are red!" she went on. "It's the cold that makes 'em so. It's very cold to-day, and soon it will be winter, with lots of snow and ice! Oh! I just love winter!"
"Come on, Hal!" called Mab. "Let's hurry home before it gets any colder!"
"Let's run!" suggested Hal. "When you run you get warm, and you don't mind the cold."
"What makes us get warm when we run?" his sister inquired, as she took hold of his hand and raced along beside him.
"I don't know," Hal answered, "but we'll ask Daddy when we get home. He can tell us everything."
"Huh! Not everything!" cried Sammie Jones, one of the nice boys with whom Hal played, "Your father doesn't know everything."
"Yes he does, too!" exclaimed Hal. Doesn't he, Mab?"
"Yep!" answered the little girl, shaking her head from side to side so fast that you could hardly tell which were her curls and which was her hair ribbon.
"Huh! Does your father know what makes a steam engine go?" asked Sammie.
"Sure he does!" said Hal. "And he told us about it once, too; didn't he, Mab?"
"Yes, he did," the little girl answered. "I know, too. It's hot water in the boiler that makes it go. The hot water swells up, and turns into steam, and the steam pushes on the wheels, and that makes the engine go."
"And our Daddy knows what makes an automobile go, too," went on Hal. "He knows everything."
"Huh! Well, I guess mine does then, too!" spoke Sammie. I'm going to ask him what--what--makes it lightning!"
"And then will you tell us?" asked Mab, for she and Hal wanted to know about everything they saw.
"Yes, I'll tell you," promised Sammie. "And we'll ask Daddy Blake what makes us warm inside when we run," went on Hal, "and then we'll tell you that, Sammie."
The children ran home from school, and, thought it was cold, for it was almost winter now, they did not mind it. Their noses got more and more red, it is true, but they knew when they were in the house, near the warm fire, the red would all fade out.
Hal and Mab said good-bye to Sammie, as he turned down his street, and then the little Blake boy and girl, hand in hand, ran on to their house.
As they reached it they saw their mamma and their Aunt Lolly out in the front yard, bringing in pots of flowers and vines.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Daddy Takes Us Skating by Howard Roger Garis
- 2: Roly Poly was always running off to look for a clothespin
- 3: And what good times Hal and Mab had with him
- 4: Hal and Mab lived with their papa and mamma
- 5: With the round pasteboard cover on top
- 6: To get his bundle away from Roly Poly
- 7: The truth was that both Hal and Roly were so fat and plump
- 8: Hal and Mab watched the plumber
- 9: But Roly Poly paid no attention
- 10: Roly Poly was rushing here and there
- 11: Roly Poly had gone under the ice
- 12: Several times Daddy Blake took the children down to the pond
- 13: So Hal and Mab could see the dark water underneath
- 14: Mab cried My bell is tinkling
- 15: Cried Mab as she sipped the last of her chocolate
- 16: And Mab is becoming a good little skater
- 17: But Mab was a real sportswoman
- 18: That will be our winter pic nic
- 19: Mab was becoming a good skater
- 20: Standing on a glittering white ice raft
- 21: It is like a refrigerator you see
- 22: And the ice is slid in on wooden chutes
- 23: I wonder if that could be Roly
- 24: Roly Poly running along with them
