First day out was foggy but calm, according to my sister's diary, which I still have. She and the teenage set spent a good deal of time in the pool, but I never went in once -- perhaps
because I didn't know how to swim yet. But the gym, with its mechanical horse, and the "bicycles" were an unending source of fascination for any small boy. Of the public rooms, the one I remember best was not the ornate lounge or smoking room, but the verandah and palm court, all the way aft on A Deck.
It has never received much attention from Olympic and Titanic buffs, but to a small boy, the mere fact that there were green plants actually growing there was intriguing and somehow said more about the size of the ship than anything else. 
The other high point taught me a lesson too. This was the ship's treasure hunt, an exciting pastime cooked up for all the first class passengers. We assembled in the
A Deck foyer shortly after lunch, and the purser gave us our first clue. I didn't understand it at all, but in a mass we all surged down the staircase, I along with the pack. Reaching D Deck, we rushed through the reception room into the dining saloon and began turning dishes, trays, pots, everything,
over. I had no idea what I was looking for, but I proceeded with every bit as much energy as the rest.
We did this for a long time, and eventually some of the passengers began to get tired and drift off, but I continued ransacking the place. Suddenly I turned over a large silver
tray and there was the next clue. A more worldly treasure hunter would have kept quiet and slipped off, content with this sudden advantage, but I shouted my discovery and my yell could have reached the crow's nest. The rest of the mob surged over and there went my last chance to win the treasure hunt.
It taught me the virtue of silence under certain conditions.
Thursday, July 16, we touched at Cherbourg, and along with every one else I leaned over the rail watching Cherbourg passengers get off in the little tender [White Star's Nomadic
and Traffic in foreground] and chug away toward land. While we were doing this a blimp flew by overhead, and this was an extra dividend to the excitement of the crossing. 



