Uncle Sam's Boys in the Ranks: or, Two Recruits in the United States Army. Hancock Harrie Irving

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Uncle Sam's Boys in the Ranks: or, Two Recruits in the United States Army - Hancock Harrie Irving

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when he will have reached the proper age for enlisting. This may seem like a trivial thing to you, but Terry is just one day short of the age, and the regulations provide that an officer who knowingly enlists a recruit below the proper age is to be dismissed from the service. Now, if you prefer, Overton, you can delay enlisting until to-morrow, so as to enter on the same date with your friend."

      "I'd prefer that, sir," admitted Hal.

      "You are both in earnest about enlisting?"

      "Indeed we are, sir," breathed Noll fervently.

      "I believe you," nodded the officer. "Now, have you money enough for a hotel bed and meals until to-morrow forenoon?"

      "Yes, sir."

      "Then be here at nine o'clock to-morrow morning, sharp, and I'll sign you both on the rolls of the Army. Now, furnish me with home references, and, especially, the name of your last employer. These will be investigated by telegraph. Also, are you acquainted with the chief of police in your home city?"

      Hal and Noll answered these questions.

      Then, having nothing pressing on his hands for the moment, Lieutenant Shackleton offered the boys much sound and wholesome advice as to the way to conduct themselves in the Army. He laid especial stress upon truthfulness, which is the keystone of the service. He warned them against bad habits of all kinds, and told them to pick their friends with care, both in and out of the service.

      "In particular," continued the lieutenant, "I want to warn you against contracting the 'guard-house habit.' That is what we call it when a soldier gets in the habit of committing petty breaches of discipline such as will land him in the guard-house for a term of confinement for twenty-four hours or more. The 'guard-house habit' has spoiled hundreds of men, who, but for that first confinement, would have made admirable soldiers. The enlisted man with the 'guard-house habit' is as useless and hopeless as the tramp or the petty thief in civil life."

      It was an excellent talk all the way through. Both boys listened respectfully and appreciatively. It struck them that Lieutenant Shackleton was giving them a large amount of his time. They learned, later, that a competent officer is always willing and anxious to talk with his men upon questions of discipline, duty and efficiency. It is one of the things that the officer is expected and paid to do.

      By the time they came out Tip was just returning from the surgeon's examination.

      "You freshies needn't think ye're the only ones that passed," growled Tip in a low voice, as he passed.

      Neither chum paid any heed to Branders. Somehow, as long as he kept his hands at his sides, Branders didn't seem worth noticing.

      "Make it?" asked the sergeant at the street door.

      "Yes; we sign to-morrow, if our references are all right," Hal nodded happily.

      With a sudden recollection that soldiers must hold themselves erect, Hal and Noll braced their shoulders until they thought they looked and carried themselves very much as the sergeant did. They kept this pose until they had turned the corner into Broadway.

      "Whoop!" exploded the usually quiet Noll Terry unexpectedly.

      "What's wrong, old fellow?" asked Hal quickly.

      "Nothing! Everything's right, and we're soldiers at last!" cried Noll, his eyes shining.

      "At least, we shall be to-morrow, if all goes well," rejoined Hal.

      "Oh, nonsense! Everything is going to go right, now. It can't go any other way."

      As he spoke, Noll turned to cross Broadway at the next corner.

      Hal made a pounce forward, seizing his comrade by an arm. Then he backed like a flash, dragging Noll back to the sidewalk with him. Even at that a moving automobile brushed Noll's clothes, leaving a layer of dirt on them.

      "Things will go wrong, if you don't watch where you're going," cried Hal rather excitedly. "Noll, Noll, don't try to walk on clouds, but remember you're on Broadway."

      "Let's get off of Broadway, then," begged young Terry. "I'm so tickled that I want a chance to enjoy my thoughts."

      "We'll cross and go down Broadway, then," Hal proposed. "I have the address of a hotel with rates low enough to suit our treasury, and it's some blocks below here."

      "Say," muttered Noll, "of all the things I ever heard of! Think of Tip Branders wanting to serve the Flag!"

      The boys talked of this puzzle, mainly, until they reached their street and crossed once more to go to the hotel. They registered, went to their room, and here Noll put in the next twenty minutes in making his clothes look presentable again.

      "If you've got that done, let's go downstairs," proposed happy Hal. "I'm hungry enough to scare the bill of fare clear off the table."

      As they descended into the lobby Hal suddenly touched Noll's arm and stood still.

      "I guess Tip is going to stay right with us," whispered Overton in his chum's ear. "That's Tip's mother over there in the chair. She and her son must be stopping at this hotel."

      "They surely are," nodded Noll, "for there's Tip himself just coming in."

      Neither mother nor son noted the presence of the chums near by.

      Tip hurried up to his mother, a grin on his not very handsome face.

      "Well, old lady," was that son's greeting, "I've gone and done it."

      "You don't mean that you've gotten into any trouble, do you, Tip?" asked his mother apprehensively.

      "Trouble – nothing!" retorted Tip eloquently. "Naw! I've been around to the rookie shed and got passed as a soldier in the Regular Army."

      "What?" gasped his mother paling.

      "Now, that ain't nothing so fierce," almost growled Tip. "But there is a fool rule – me being under twenty-one – that you've got to go and give your consent. So that's the cloth that's cut for you this afternoon, old lady."

      "Oh, oh, oh!" cried Mrs. Branders, sinking back in her chair and covering her face with her hands. "What have I ever done that I should be disgraced by having a son of mine going to – enlist in the Army!"

      CHAPTER IV

      MRS. BRANDERS GETS A NEW VIEW

      THE chums waited to hear no more. It was none of their affair, so they slipped into one of the adjacent dining rooms.

      Hal's eyes were flashing with indignation over Mrs. Brander's remark.

      Noll, on the other hand, was smiling quietly.

      "That must be a severe blow to Mrs. Branders," murmured Noll aloud, as the boys slipped into their chairs at table. "To think of gentle Tip going off into anything as rough and brutal as the Army! And poor little Tip raised so tenderly as a pet!"

      As it afterwards turned out, however, Mrs. Branders, after offering her son a present of a hundred dollars to stay out of the Army, had at last tearfully given her consent to his becoming a soldier.

      She even went to the recruiting office that afternoon with Tip, and gave a reluctant consent to her son's enlistment.

      "Be

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