CHAPTER XVI

  HOT WORDS

  “What’ll we do with our old suits?” asked Ned, as, with his chums, hewalked toward the clothing department, a store in itself.

  “They go into the discard,” answered Bob, who, it seems, had beenmaking inquiries. “I suppose we can send ’em home and have ’em kept forus until after the war.”

  “That’s what I’m going to do,” declared Ned. “This is a good suit,though it looks a bit mussy now. I’m not going to throw it away.”

  “You might as well,” put in Jerry.

  “Why so? This war may not last as long as we think,” Ned made comment.“And suits, and everything else, will be a lot higher after it’s over.Might as well save what I can. Don’t see why it won’t do me any good.”

  “Because it won’t fit you,” Jerry returned. “Don’t you know what ourcaptain told us? He said the new uniforms we get will hang on someof us like bags for a while, but when we fill out our muscles by theexercise and drill, we’ll fill out the uniforms, too.

  “Now your tailor, Ned, and I will say he is a good one, made yourcivilian suit to fit you. In other words he favored you. He padded thehollow places and so on. But in a couple of months you’ll fill out sothat the suit you’re wearing now will look like a set of hand-me-downsfrom the Bowery in New York.”

  “Well, I’ll send it home, anyhow,” decided Ned.

  “Yes, it may come in handy for your mother’s charity work,” agreedJerry.

  Before going to the tailor shop, Ned, Bob, and Jerry, with others ofthe recruits, were measured. These measurements were standardized, sothat when each young man went in to get his uniform, the officer incharge merely called off a certain number to designate coat, trousers,hat and so on.

  The first outfit issued to the boys consisted of one coat, a pairof trousers, a hat, with cord, three pairs of drawers, two pairs oflaces, a pair of leggings, a set of ornaments, an overcoat, two flannelshirts, two pairs of shoes, six pairs of socks, a belt, a pair ofgloves and three undershirts. The value of each article was set downand varied from a hat cord, marked as worth six and a half cents, toan overcoat, which cost the government $14.50, making a total of about$45 for each young soldier. For this, of course, Ned, Bob, and Jerrypaid nothing. A private gets his uniform and food for nothing, but anofficer has to buy his.

  “Return to barracks and get into your uniforms for inspection,” was theorder the boys received, and they were glad to do it. There were some,like Ned, who sent their civilian clothes home to be used as parentssaw fit, and there was a general opinion, coinciding with Jerry’s, thatthey would be of little use to the owners themselves after their armyservice, for the young men would, indeed, be of different physicalappearance and size.

  “Well, how do I look?” asked Ned, as he and his two chums finisheddressing in the barracks.

  “It fits you sort of quick,” answered Jerry.

  The new uniform was, in truth, a trifle loose.

  “Yours fits the same way,” laughed Ned. “I guess I’ll do a double stuntof exercise to fill out quicker.”

  “Bob looks good in his,” commented the tall motor boy. “It’s becausehe’s so fat. When he loses some of his flesh he’ll look as though hewas wearing a meal sack.”

  “Watch your own step,” said Bob, with a laugh. “I’m satisfied.”

  There were jokes and jests among the recruits about the appearance ofone another, and when Pug Kennedy walked out on the way to drill, towhich the squad was summoned, Jerry called to him:

  “You’ve got your hat cord on backwards, old man.”

  It was not that Jerry felt any particular liking for Michael Kennedy,to give him his real name, but the tall lad did not want any memberof his squad to look unmilitary, nor did he want a reprimand to bedirected toward Pug, as it might reflect on his companions. But PugKennedy was still in an ungracious mood, it seemed, for he answeredJerry’s well-meant remark with:

  “Mind your own business! It’s my hat cord.”

  “True enough,” agreed Jerry, good-naturedly; “but it may not be long,if you wear it that way.”

  “Um!” grunted Pug, as he went out. But Ned took notice that, as soon ashe was out of sight around the corner of the barracks, the bully putthe cord on differently. It was a light blue cord, and indicated tothose who knew the regulations, that the man under the hat belonged tothe infantry, or foot-soldier, branch of the army.

  The cavalry wear yellow cords on their hats; and the artillery, red.The engineers have a red and white mixed cord; the signal corps, orangeand white; the medical corps, maroon; and the quartermaster corps, buff.

  In addition there are certain ornaments on the collars of the coats todistinguish the different branches of the service. The infantry wearcrossed rifles, the cavalry crossed sabers, the field artillery crossedcannon, the engineers a castle, like the castle in a set of chessmen,the signal corps crossed flags with a torch between, the quartermastercorps wheel with a pen and sword crossed and an eagle surmounting,while the members of the medical corps wear something that looks likean upright bar with wings at the top and two snakes twining around it.This is a caduceus, and is a form of the staff usually associated withthe god Mercury. The word comes from the Doric and means to proclaim,literally a herald.

  “He took your advice, Jerry,” announced Ned, when he saw what PugKennedy had done.

  “Glad he did. He might have been a little more polite about it, though.I wish he was in some other squad, but I suppose there’s no use tryingto graft him somewhere else. We’ll just have to make the best of him.”

  “Or the worst,” added Bob.

  In their new uniforms the recruits went through the drill, and it couldnot be denied that now there was a little more snap to it. It was moreinspiring to see men all dressed alike doing something in unison thanto watch the same company going through motions, one in a brown suit,another in a green and a third in a blue.

  The drill was hard, and it never seemed to end. When one stopped,there was only a brief rest period, and then came another. But it wasnecessary, and the boys were beginning to feel that.

  “I wonder what the folks at home would think if they could see us now?”asked Ned, as their respite came.

  “Well, I guess they wouldn’t be ashamed of us,” replied Jerry.

  “I should say not!” declared Bob, smoothing out some imaginarywrinkles. “I think we look all to the mustard!”

  “Or cheese!” chuckled Ned. “Come on--there goes mess call,” he added,for it was noon, and time for dinner.

  As it was Friday there was chowder as the main dish. There were friedfish, candied sweet potatoes, green peas, fruit pudding, mustardpickles, bread and coffee. It was a plentiful meal, and several made atrip to the kitchen for a second helping.

  Bob was one of these, and it was when he was walking back to hisplace at the long table that something happened which nearly causedconsiderable trouble.

  Bob was carrying his filled plate in one hand, and his cup of coffeein the other, when, as he passed the bench where Pug Kennedy wassitting, some one bumped into the stout lad, jostling his arm, and thecoffee--or part of it--went down Pug’s back.

  Up the bully sprang with a howl, though the coffee was not hot enoughto burn him.

  “Who did that?” he demanded, wrathfully.

  There was no need to answer. The attitude of Bob, standing directlyback of Pug, with the half-emptied cup in his hand and the queer lookon his face, told more plainly than words that he was the guilty one.

  “Oh, so it’s you again, is it, you sneak!” and Pug fairly snarled thewords.

  “What do you mean?” demanded Bob, justly angry.

  “I mean that you’re trying to make trouble for me again--like the timewhen you accused me of stealing your crullers. You’re trying to spoilmy uniform so I’ll get a call-down. I’ll fix you for this!”

  “It was an accident,” insisted Bob. “Some one ran against me, and----”

  “Accident my eye!” sneered
Pug. “I’ll accident you! I’ll punch you goodand proper, that’s what I’ll do!” he yelled, and he leaped back overthe bench-seat and advanced toward Bob who stepped back.

  A fight was imminent.

 
Clarence Young's Novels
»The Motor Boys Under the Sea; or, From Airship to Submarineby Clarence Young
»Dorothy Dixon and the Mystery Planeby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys Afloat; or, The Stirring Cruise of the Dartawayby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys on a Ranch; or, Ned, Bob and Jerry Among the Cowboysby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys Over the Ocean; Or, A Marvelous Rescue in Mid-Airby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys on Road and River; Or, Racing To Save a Lifeby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys in the Army; or, Ned, Bob and Jerry as Volunteersby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys on the Border; Or, Sixty Nuggets of Goldby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys in Strange Waters; or, Lost in a Floating Forestby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys Across the Plains; or, The Hermit of Lost Lakeby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys Overland; Or, A Long Trip for Fun and Fortuneby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys After a Fortune; or, The Hut on Snake Islandby Clarence Young
»Ned, Bob and Jerry at Boxwood Hall; Or, The Motor Boys as Freshmenby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys on the Wing; Or, Seeking the Airship Treasureby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys Bound for Home; or, Ned, Bob and Jerry on the Wrecked Troopshipby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys in Mexico; Or, The Secret of the Buried Cityby Clarence Young
»The Golden Boys and Their New Electric Cellby Clarence Young
»The Kangaroo Hunters; Or, Adventures in the Bushby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys in the Clouds; or, A Trip for Fame and Fortuneby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys on the Atlantic; or, The Mystery of the Lighthouseby Clarence Young