[The Early Bird by George Randolph Chester]@TWC D-Link bookThe Early Bird CHAPTER III 6/22
He knew the Stevenses himself, and it had slowly dawned on him that by having his own horse saddled he could beat Princeman over there. It took Sam just about one minute to negotiate for an automobile, a neat little affair, shiny and new, and before they were half-way to Hollis Creek, his innate democracy led him into conversation with the driver, an alert young man of the near-by clay. "Not very good soil in this neighborhood," Sam observed.
"I notice there is a heavy outcropping of stone.
What are the principal crops ?" "Summer resorters," replied the driver briefly. "And do you mean to tell me that all these farm-houses call themselves summer resorts ?" inquired Sam. "No, only those that have running water.
The others just keep boarders." "I see," said Sam, laughing. A moment later they passed over a beautifully clear stream which ran down a narrow pocket valley between two high hills, swept under a rickety wooden culvert, and raced on across a marshy meadow, sparkling invitingly here and there in the sunlight. "Here's running water without a summer resort," observed the passenger, still smiling. "It's too much shut in," replied the chauffeur as one who had voiced a final and insurmountable objection.
All the "summer resorts" in this neighborhood were of one pattern, and no one would so much as dream of varying from the first successful model. Sam scarcely heard.
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