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first, you should know this John Gadsby; a man of "around fifty;" a |
family man, and known throughout Branton Hills for his high standard of |
honor and altruism on any kind of an occasion for public good. A loyal |
churchman, Gadsby was a man who, though admitting that an occasional |
fault in our daily acts is bound to occur, had taught his two boys and |
a pair of girls that, though folks do slip from what Scriptural authors |
call that "straight and narrow path," it will not pay to risk your own |
Soul by slipping, just so that you can laugh at your ability in staying |
out of prison; for Gadsby, having grown up in Branton Hills, could |
point to many such man or woman. So, with such firm convictions in his |
mind, this upstanding man was constantly striving so to act that no |
complaint from man, woman or child should bring a word of disapproval. |
In his mind, what a man might do was that man's affair only and could |
stain no Soul but his own. And his altruism taught that it is not |
difficult to find many ways in which to bring joy to such as cannot, |
through physical disability, go out to look for it; and that only a |
small bit of joy, brought to a shut-in invalid will carry with it such |
a warmth as can flow only from acts of human sympathy. |
For many days Gadsby had thought of ways in which folks with a goodly |
bank account could aid in building up this rapidly backsliding town of |
Branton Hills. But, how to show that class what a contribution could |
do? In this town, full of capitalists and philanthropists contributing, |
off and on, for shipping warming pans to Zulus, Gadsby saw a solution. |
In whom? Why, in just that bunch of bright, happy school kids, back |
from many a visit to a _city_, and noting its ability in improving its |
living conditions. So Gadsby thought of thus carrying an inkling to |
such capitalists as to how this stagnating town could claim a big spot |
upon our national map, which is now shown only in small, insignificant |
print. |
As a start, Branton Hills' "Daily Post" would carry a long story, |
outlining a list of factors for improving conditions. This it did; but |
it will always stay as a blot upon high minds and proud blood that not |
a man or woman amongst such capitalists saw, in his plan, any call for |
dormant funds. But did that stop Gadsby? Can you stop a rising wind? |
Hardly! So Gadsby took into council about forty boys of his vicinity |
and built up an Organization of Youth. Also about as many girls who had |
known what it is, compulsorily to pass up many a picnic, or various |
forms of sport, through a lack of public park land. So this strong, |
vigorous combination of both youth and untiring activity, avidly took |
up Gadsby's plan; for nothing so stirs up a youthful mind as an |
opportunity for accomplishing anything that adults cannot do. And did |
Gadsby _know_ Youth? I'll say so! His two sons and girls, now in High |
or Grammar school, had taught him a thing or two; principal amongst |
which was that all-dominating fact that, at a not too far distant day, |
our young folks will occupy important vocational and also political |
positions, and will look back upon this, _our_ day; smiling kindly at |
our way of doing things. So, to say that many a Branton Hills "King of |
Capital" got a bit huffy as a High School stripling was proving how |
stubborn a rich man is if his dollars don't aid so vast an opportunity |
for doing good, would put it mildly! Such downright _gall_ by a |
half-grown kid to inform _him_; an outstanding light on Branton Hills' |
tax list, that this town was sliding down hill; and would soon land |
in an abyss of national oblivion! And our Organization girls! _How_ |
Branton Hills' rich old widows and plump matrons did sniff in disdain |
as a group of High School pupils brought forth straightforward claims |
that cash paving a road, is doing good practical work, but, in filling |
up a strong box, is worth nothing to our town. |
Oh, that class of nabobs! How thoroughly Gadsby _did_ know its |
parsimony!! And how thoroughly did this hard-planning man know just |
what a constant onslaught by Youth could do. So, in about a month, his |
"Organization" had "waylaid," so to say, practically half of Branton |
Hills' cash kings; and had so won out, through that commonly known |
"pull" upon an adult by a child asking for what plainly is worthy, |
that his mail brought not only cash, but two rich landlords put at his |
disposal, tracts of land "for any form of occupancy which can, in any |
way, aid our town." This land Gadsby's Organization promptly put into |
growing farm products for gratis distribution to Branton Hills' poor; |
and that burning craving of Youth for activity soon had it sprouting |
corn, squash, potato, onion and asparagus crops; and, to "doll it up a |
bit," put in a patch of blossoming plants. |
Naturally any man is happy at a satisfactory culmination of his plans |
and so, as Gadsby found that public philanthropy was but an affair |
of plain, ordinary approach, it did not call for much brain work to |
find that, possibly also, a way might turn up for putting handicraft |
instruction in Branton Hills' schools; for schooling, according to |
him, did not consist only of books and black-boards. Hands also should |
know how to construct various practical things in woodwork, plumbing, |
blacksmithing, masonry, and so forth; with thorough instruction |
in sanitation, and that most important of all youthful activity, |
gymnastics. For girls such a school could instruct in cooking, suit |
making, hat making, fancy work, art and loom-work; in fact, about any |
handicraft that a girl might wish to study, and which is not in our |
standard school curriculum. But as Gadsby thought of such a school, |
no way for backing it financially was in sight. Town funds naturally, |
should carry it along; but town funds and Town Councils do not always |
form what you might call synonymous words. So it was compulsory that |
cash should actually "drop into his lap," via a continuation of |
solicitations by his now grandly functioning Organization of Youth. |
So, out again trod that bunch of bright, happy kids, putting forth |
such plain, straightforward facts as to what Manual Training would |
do for Branton Hills, that many saw it in that light. But you will |
always find a group, or individual complaining that such things would |
"automatically dawn" on boys and girls without any training. Old Bill |
Simpkins was loud in his antagonism to what was a "crazy plan to dip |
into our town funds just to allow boys to saw up good wood, and girls |
to burn up good flour, trying to cook biscuits." Kids, according to |