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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Log of the Water Wagon, by
-Bert Leston Taylor and W. C. Gibson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Log of the Water Wagon
- or The Cruise of the Good Ship 'Lithia'
-
-Author: Bert Leston Taylor
- W. C. Gibson
-
-Illustrator: L. M. Glackens
-
-Release Date: July 31, 2019 [EBook #60022]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LOG OF THE WATER WAGON ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Juliet Sutherland, David Wilson and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Endpaper: Resolution]
-
-
-
-
-THE LOG OF THE WATER WAGON
-
-
-
-
- +--------------------------------------+
- | |
- | This is an unlimited edition, of |
- | which this copy is No. 69,850. |
- | |
- | If you wish a higher number, your |
- | bookseller will gladly supply you. |
- | |
- +--------------------------------------+
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE ORIGINAL WATER WAGON]
-
-
-
-
-THE LOG of THE WATER WAGON
-
- or
-
-THE CRUISE OF THE GOOD SHIP “LITHIA”
-
-
-BY BERT LESTON TAYLOR _and_ W. C. GIBSON
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS _by_ L. M. GLACKENS
-
-[Illustration: Bacchus and Neptune]
-
-PUBLISHED BY H. M. CALDWELL CO. BOSTON
-
-
-
-
- _Copyright, 1905_
- By H. M. Caldwell Co.
-
-
- _COLONIAL PRESS_
- _Electrotyped and Printed by C. H. Simonds & Co.
- Boston, U.S.A._
-
-
-
-
-FOREWORD
-
-
-If you don’t like this book, write to the authors about it. Don’t
-bother the publishers: they are too busy selling it.
-
-
-
-
-DEDICATION
-
-
-To all surviving saloon passengers of the good ship Lithia, who have
-rounded the Horn and passed through perilous Beering Straits, and
-suffered shipwreck, shock, and sudden thirst: to those intrepid souls
-who have clung to the slippery hull of the Water Wagon when it seemed
-the gallant craft could not live another hour; who, lashed to the
-sprinkler, have ridden out many a choking dust-storm; who have heard
-the cafe Lorelei sing, and still hung on, deaf to her seductive song:
-and—
-
-To the memory of countless thousands lost at sea, swept into the
-seething drink without a word of warning, cut off in the blossoms of
-their resolutions, and sent to their slate accounts with all their
-imperfections on their heads—
-
-This little volume is affectionately dedicated.
-
-
-
-
-EDITORS’ NOTE
-
-
-The Log of the Water Wagon was compiled from memoranda found in a
-floating milk-bottle with a patent stopper, flung overboard just
-before the good ship “Lithia” foundered in a fearful simoom off White
-Rock Point. The notes, pencilled in a trembling hand, on the backs of
-blank temperance pledges, I O U’s, and wine-lists, were barely
-legible, testifying to the fearful condition of the unknown writer’s
-tongue, manifestly incapable of moistening the pencil.
-
-With the notes were enclosed a Water Wagon folder, showing itinerary,
-rules and regulations, points of interest touched at, etc., a fragment
-of a clipping from the New York Sun, and sundry moral reflections upon
-life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
-
-The editors have preserved, as far as possible, the spirit and
-literary style of the Log-keeper, whose identity is an interesting
-conjecture. His fate, and that of his fellow passengers, is shrouded
-in mystery.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Table covered with bottles]
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
- FOR OTHER CONTENTS
- SEE BODY OF BOOK
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: St Bromo]
-
-
-
-
-[Newspaper clipping: THE SUN,
-
-THE WATER WAGON DEPARTS.
-
-GOOD SHIP LITHIA HEAVILY LOADED SAILS ON CRUISE.
-
-
-Fresh from the drydock, glistening in new white paint, her blue
-streamers snapping in the breeze, loaded to the limit with
-enthusiastic and babbling passengers, the Water Wagon left last night
-on another perilous voyage. A tremendous crowd was present to see her
-off. The surging mass of well-wishers included relatives and friends
-of the passengers, a large delegation from the International
-Federation of Mineral Water Bottlers, and representatives from the
-W. C. T. U., Band of Hope, Never Again League, and other dusty
-associations.
-
-The farewell presents to the passengers were unusually numerous. These
-included hot-water bags with “Bon Voyage” hand-painted on them, silver
-bonbon boxes containing soda mint and lithia tablets, individual
-cut-glass bromo-seltzer bottles, water lilies, watermelons, and other
-fruit and flowers.
-
-Just before the hour for sailing happy little speeches were made by
-the Superintendent of the Water Works, the Commissioner of Irrigation,
-and the Hon. Bromo S. Emerson, of Ballato, whose sizzling oratory was
-received with terrific applause.
-
-Promptly at midnight a bottle of sarsaparilla was broken on the
-Lithia’s sprinkler, the gang-hose was uncoupled and hauled aboard, and
-the Water Wagon glided gracefully away from her moorings.
-
-A score or more of belated passengers came straggling down the pier
-and finding]
-
-
-
-
-GENERAL INFORMATION
-
-
-In making reservations, the passenger’s real name, not the
-station-house name, must be given, in full. All “John Smiths” will be
-regarded with suspicion, and must be satisfactorily identified.
-
-Seats as well as berths will be assigned for the entire voyage. For a
-few choice seats next the water-cooler a small additional fee will be
-asked.
-
-No life-preservers will be found in staterooms. Do not ask for them.
-
-No “bundles” will be allowed in staterooms, nor allowed to lie around
-the decks.
-
-Excellent concerts will be rendered every evening in the main saloon
-by the Band of Hope. A select library will be found in the
-smoking-room. Water-marked stationery is also at the disposal of all
-first-class passengers.
-
-Don’t try to get on the Wagon while it is in motion. It is the
-Captain’s business to stop for loads. If he does not stop when
-flagged, you will know he is full.
-
-When rounding the sharp curve at the Pousse Cafe, passengers are
-cautioned to hold fast.
-
-Passengers feeling their anchors dragging, and seized with a sudden
-desire to leap from the Wagon, should apply to purser for parachutes.
-
-Stop-overs will be allowed at Vichy Springs, Delaware Water Gap, and
-Waterbury only.
-
-No transfers given on transfers.
-
-Passengers losing any of their wheels will find them in the
-wheel-house.
-
-No rain-checks will be given out. This is a dry cruise.
-
-Buy a round-trip ticket and save money.
-
-All mail received en route will be read aloud by the steward at
-sunset.
-
-SPECIAL INFORMATION.—In looking toward the bow of the vessel, the
-left-hand side is port. The right-hand is sherry.
-
-
-
-
-+First Day+
-
-
-
-
-Hitch your wagon to a star. If it’s the Water Wagon, tie it to the
-Great Dipper.—Emerson.
-
- ⁂
-
- I often wonder where the old moons go
- After they once get full and disappear.
- Do they, I wonder, pilot to and fro
- The men who quit the Wagon year by year?
- —Copernicus.
-
-
-
-
-LOG -- First Day
-
-
- NOTE.—The writer of this record, being the only sober passenger
- aboard the Good Ship “Lithia,” has been requested by the Captain
- to keep the Log. The Captain kindly explains that a log is a thing
- in which you put down the daily occurrences on board ship. I have
- kept a dog, and a valet, and a thirst, and other things, but a log
- is sure a new proposition. But, dash my tarry toplights, here
- goes. Avast there, my hearties! Yeo-heave-ho! Yo-ho!
-
-At midnight we left the Bar, and got under way, with a big tide and
-the wind souse-souse-east and piping free.
-
- ⁂
-
-Everybody aboard, barring the writer, is thoroughly saturated. I
-counted fifty-seven varieties of pickle.
-
- ⁂
-
-Later.—It seems I was mistaken about having left the Bar. The Captain
-announces through the ventilator that he is stuck on the Bar. Loud
-cheers from the passengers, and cries of, “So say we all of us!”
-
- ⁂
-
-Lightened ship by throwing overboard two bales of temperance pledges
-and ten cases of sarsaparilla. The Captain announces that we are off
-the Bar. Groans.
-
- ⁂
-
-I am suspicious of the pilot. He hasn’t flashed a single pilot-biscuit
-since he came aboard.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Lithia is reeling off eight knots an hour. Wind still
-souse-souse-east and piping free. Weather so-so.
-
- ⁂
-
-The passengers, misled by the name, are in the saloon, calling loudly
-for drinks and hammering on the tables. The Captain announces through
-the ventilator that he will turn the hose on them. Cheers, and cries
-of “Louder!”
-
- ⁂
-
-The uproar in the saloon continues. An entertainer is giving a
-realistic imitation of a man mixing a cocktail. Tremendous applause,
-and shouts of “Great, old man!” A young water curate has volunteered
-to go among the noisy pirates and try to soothe them.
-
- ⁂
-
-Later.—The water curate has been thrown down the companion-way.
-
- ⁂
-
-Loud splash on the starboard side. We have dropped the pilot.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Captain has ordered the First Mate to take the wheel. The Mate is
-in the saloon, bound hand and foot, and the passengers are singing
-“How Can I Bear to Leave Thee.” The Lithia is going around in a
-circle.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Mate has been rescued, and has laid a course for Carbonic Light. I
-asked him if a mate’s wife is called a room-mate. He said he didn’t
-know, but the midshipmite.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Captain has just taken soundings, but reports that he can’t hear a
-thing. So much noise in the saloon.
-
- ⁂
-
-Tom Ginn, the noisiest of the bunch, has been put in irons for
-demanding an old-fashioned cocktail and inciting the passengers to
-mutiny. The clanking of his chains is having a quieting effect on the
-other pirates.
-
- ⁂
-
-3 A. M.—Passed the trim little craft Coryphee, homeward bound, loaded
-with lobsters and champagne. Wigwagged to her that her starboard light
-was out and that her hair was coming down. She signalled back, “On
-your way.”
-
- ⁂
-
-Ran afoul of a fleet of full-rigged Johnnies, stuck on Shanley’s
-oyster-beds. Offered to take them aboard the Wagon, but they
-vociferously refused. Said they’d just got off one.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Captain took the Sun as soon as it came out, and reported that we
-were a hell of a way from the Equator.
-
- ⁂
-
-Passed a ragtime whistling buoy.
-
- ⁂
-
-Hennessy Martel, an amateur Ancient Mariner, got into the calcium for
-a minute by trying to shoot a nighthawk, claiming it was an albatross.
-The Captain gave him the water cure.
-
- ⁂
-
-Spoke a tramp tank steamer, Red Booze Line, Captain Handout. “Ahoy!
-What ship is that?” hailed Captain Handout. “The Water Wagon,” I
-replied through the Captain’s megaphone. “Keep off!” he yelled, and
-crowded on all sail.
-
- ⁂
-
-Shipped a heavy swell rolling in from the Faro Banks.
-
- ⁂
-
-Eight bells and all’s well.
-
-
-+Here endeth the first day of the cruise.+
-
-
-
-
-BAGGAGE REGULATIONS
-
-
-Each full ticket entitles passenger to one load. A load and a
-hang-over will be charged as excess baggage.
-
-All baggage must be checked by our regular inspector before departure.
-Contraband baggage, such as bottled cocktails, case goods, whiskey
-capsules, brandied cherries, etc., will be confiscated.
-
-ANIMALS, BIRDS, AND OTHER PETS will not be allowed on the main wagon,
-nor allowed to run alongside. All such must be put in charge of the
-steward, who will tag them and place them in a trailer, where they
-will be fed and cared for, and permitted to drink out of the trough
-of the sea.
-
-All animals will be returned to owners at end of voyage; or, if
-desired, the steward will send them to any designated circus or
-menagerie.
-
-No passenger will be allowed more than three purple monkeys or two
-dozen red, white, and blue snakes. No magenta elephant weighing more
-than twenty tons will be received in the trailer, as the
-accommodations are limited. No mastodons of any colour will be
-accepted.
-
-The management will not be responsible for any accident or change of
-colour these pets may undergo. We cannot guarantee fast colours.
-
-Striped mice, polka-dot lizards, Scotch-plaid guinea-pigs, and other
-small animals, and all perishable buggage, will be carried at owner’s
-risk.
-
-
-
-
-THE WATER WAGON BAND
-
-
-Every evening in the main saloon, from 8 to 10, our own Band of Hope
-will discourse the following musical favourites:
-
- “Drink to Me Only with Thine Eyes.”
- “Wait for the Wagon.”
- “The Old Oaken Bucket.”
- “Father, Dear Father.”
- “Down by the River.”
- “When the Swallows Homeward Fly.”
-
-_NOTE.—Any attention on the part of the audience will be appreciated
-by the Bandmaster._
-
-
-
-
-SHIP’S ITINERARY
-
-
- Leave the Bar 8 bells
- Pass Rye Beach 6 bells
- Off the Faro Banks 3 bells
- Near High Ballston Spa 4 bells
- Arrive Vichy Springs 7 bells
- Weather Cape Casegoods 2 bells
- Nearing Prohibition Park 8 bells
- Arrive Delaware Water Gap 1 bell
- Pass Croton Reservoir 5 bells
- Round Apollinaris Bottling Works 6 bells
- Weather White Rock Point 4 bells
- Arrive at Waterbury 8 bells
-
-_The management reserves the right to change the itinerary at any old
-bell time._
-
-
-
-
-NUTT
-
-The Square Hatter
-
-132 1–2 WATER STREET
-
-Big Heads My Specialty
-
-Any Size Head Fitted
-
-
-Ask to see my =Adjustable, Telescopic Noiseless Hats=. (_Patent
-Pending._) Just the thing for the Water Wagon. No springs or metal
-used. Will expand or contract as conditions require. Space in
-sweat-band for cracked ice. Money refunded if we don’t make good.
-
-Stretching done at your own home the morning after.
-
-Telephone, Derby 8 3–4
-
-=“You get the Head, and we’ll put a Lid on it”=
-
-
-
-
-+Second Day+
-
-
-
-
-Most of the gold-cures are only plated, and it soon wears off.—Keeley.
-
- ⁂
-
-Men’s evil manners live in rum. Their virtues we write in
-water.—Shakespeare.
-
-
-
-
-LOG -- Second Day
-
-
-The morning opened on a full house, and everybody stayed—in bed.
-Barometer throbbing feverishly, indicating a long dry spell.
-
- ⁂
-
-The breakfast-gong was sounded by the Steward, but not a soul made a
-move. Cries of “Lynch him!” from the staterooms.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Captain has been looking over the Log, and says I keep it like a
-butcher’s book. I told him to keep it himself if he didn’t like it.
-
- ⁂
-
-11 A. M.—The Steward got everybody on deck by turning in a still
-alarm that the next round was on the house. The push dressed like a
-commuter making the 8.13 train. Everybody voted it a dirty trick.
-
- ⁂
-
-11.30 A. M.—Tied up at Water Tank No. 1, and took on fifty cases of
-lemon soda and sarsaparilla, and a case of malted milk for Moxie
-Matzoon, alias Moxie Grandpa,—a stowaway, who was discovered soon
-after we cleared the Bar. He is suspected of being the staff
-correspondent of the Weekly Water Cooler. He doesn’t seem to be
-popular.
-
- ⁂
-
-12.30 P. M.—The Captain took a lunar observation, and reported that
-we were in latitude 58:12 W. from Greenwich, Conn. I asked him how he
-managed to observe the moon in the middle of the day, and he referred
-me to the Information Bureau. Crusty old chap.
-
- ⁂
-
-Whale sighted. He was blowing his friends. Cheers from the waterproof
-deck, and cries of “I’ll take the same!”
-
- ⁂
-
-At 3 P. M. mutiny broke out among the passengers, but it was quelled
-by the Captain with his trusty little marlingspike. Doctor Zoolak,
-the ship’s surgeon, diagnosed the case as thirst, not mutiny.
-
- ⁂
-
-The undertow of dissatisfaction among the passengers continues.
-Hennessy Martel called a mass-meeting on the port side, and the Wagon
-almost turned turtle. “Trim ship!” commanded the Captain from the
-bridge, and Eggley Monade, who is a regular wag, asked him if he
-thought we were a bunch of dressmakers.
-
- ⁂
-
-Passed the Can Buoy on Wurzburger Shoals. Some of the boys started to
-rush it.
-
- ⁂
-
-Loan sharks have been following the Lithia all day. The Mate says this
-is a sign that there’s a dead one on board. Jim Sling says there will
-be one, all right, if he doesn’t fall off pretty soon. Jim is a sore
-pup.
-
- ⁂
-
-Just before 6 P. M. the Lithia sprung a leak, and we lost considerable
-water. Something has also happened to the hydraulic engines, and the
-Captain has given orders to let go the dope-sheet.
-
- ⁂
-
-A round-robin has been sent to the Captain, requesting him to touch
-at the Aquarium, for a look at the tanks.
-
- ⁂
-
-The crew held a First Aid to the Foolish drill, and were instructed
-what to do in case a passenger attempts to fall off the Wagon.
-
- ⁂
-
-Guinness Stout and the Count of Maraschino had a hot argument over the
-meaning of “load water line,” the Count maintaining that there was no
-such thing. They appealed to the Captain, who told them they were both
-wrong, and that A wins the box of fudge.
-
- ⁂
-
-The water-cooler has been emptied four times since noon, and the boys
-are now eating the ice. The Captain has put everybody on quarter
-rations, and the Steward is serving cracked ice in capsules, only one
-to a customer.
-
- ⁂
-
-Tom Ginn has again been put in irons for demanding an Angora pousse
-cafe.
-
- ⁂
-
-No casualties to date, barring one passenger, name unknown, who was
-badly punctured by stepping on a starboard tack.
-
- ⁂
-
-Shortly before midnight a mix-up of red and green lights off the
-weather bow had the Captain going for a minute. It turned out to be a
-cut-rate drug-store.
-
- ⁂
-
-12 P. M.—The decks were swabbed with Apollinaris; the Ingersol
-night-watch was wound up, the cat put out and the back door locked,
-and peace brooded over the waters.
-
-
-+Here endeth the second day of the cruise.+
-
-
-
-
-THE WIFE’S MORNING AFTER
-
-
-He—“The boys had a rattling time at our house last night.”
-
-She—(surveying the mess)—“Empty beer-bottles, nearly empty
-whiskey-bottle, half-empty glasses, empty siphons, distorted corks,
-fragments of sandwiches, remnants of cheese, crumbled crackers,
-fugitive olive-pits, beer-stained doilies, stream from recumbent
-catsup-bottle meandering across Aunt Martha’s embroidered centrepiece,
-cigar and cigarette stubs in salad-bowl—over all a Vesuvian deposit of
-ashes. And breakfast only twenty minutes away!”
-
-
-
-
-_FIRST AID TO THE INJURED_
-
-
-In case of a fall from the Water Wagon, prompt action will often save
-the victim.
-
-While the life-line is being cast and the breeches-buoy rigged, lay
-the sufferer on his back and spray him thoroughly with a siphon of
-carbonic until signs of consciousness appear. In the majority of cases
-his first words will be: “Make mine a rye highball.” You will then
-repeat the siphon treatment, at the same time making a few passes over
-him and reciting monotonously in his ear: “Water, water everywhere,
-and not a drop to drink.”
-
-Usually this will produce a condition in which the breeches-buoy can
-be quickly adjusted and the sufferer hauled back on the Wagon. If it
-fails, work his arms up and down like pump-handles, and exclaim in
-threatening tones: “Your wife is coming back on the 5.03 train.” If
-his eyes remain glazed and his struggles continue, add harshly: “She
-telegraphs that Mother is coming with her.” Complete coma should
-result. If not, it can be induced by tactfully whispering: “The next
-round is on the house.” This has never failed.
-
-The breeches-buoy may now be attached and the sufferer snaked aboard
-the Wagon and lashed to the tank.
-
-During his convalescence a friend should be constantly at his side,
-reading to him the history of the Johnstown flood. A single chapter
-has worked wonders.
-
-
-
-
-THE WATER WAGON LIBRARY
-
-
-The following carefully selected list of Books may be had by applying
-to any of the deck-hands. They need not be returned.
-
- “D’ri and I” (Batcheller).
- “Many Waters” (Shackleford).
- “The Desert” (White).
- “Many Cargoes” (Jacobs).
- “The Water Babies” (Kingsley).
- “Ebb Tide” (Stevenson).
- “Frenzied Frappes” (Lawson).
- “The Two Van Revellers” (Tankington).
-
-
-
-
-Stop that Merry-Go-Round!!
-
-
-Do things revolve when you retire? Does your room whirl like a
-fly-wheel in a power-house? Does your trunk go by like the Twentieth
-Century Limited? Do you feel as if you were looping the loop? If so,
-you can flag the merry-go-round with one of
-
-=Professor Bunn’s Patent Plugs for Pifflicated People=
-
-One of these, inserted anywhere in the wall, will bring things to a
-stand-still, or, put in place before retiring, will insure a quiet
-night’s rest.
-
-DON’T SLEEP LIKE A TOP!
-
-
-
-
-+Third Day+
-
-
-
-
-When you move from Brooklyn, be sure to burn your bridge tickets
-behind you.—McKelway.
-
- ⁂
-
-Treat, and the world drinks with you; quit, and it leaves you
-alone.—Horace.
-
-
-
-
-LOG -- Third Day
-
-
-The morning opened clear and extra dry. Big head winds. The Mate tried
-to take the Sun, but the sky was cloudy, so he took the Tribune.
-
- ⁂
-
-Barometer extra brut. Wind S. W. and scorching.
-
- ⁂
-
-The saloon sounds like a dog-show. Everybody has a dry, hacking cough.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Steward, assisted by the Ship’s Valet, dusted off the tongues of
-the passengers and sprayed them with Blisterine. They were very
-grateful, and a collection has been taken up to purchase a loving-cup
-for him.
-
- ⁂
-
-Spoke the brewery barge Budweiser, outward bound, Captain Umlaut. The
-Budweiser fired a salute of four dozen bottles, not one of which,
-unfortunately, reached the Lithia’s deck. In a heroic effort to rescue
-a bottle, Tom Collins fell overboard. He was picked up by a fishing
-party, and when last seen was eating the bait.
-
- ⁂
-
-A blood-curdling screech has come up through the ventilator, and the
-Captain has gone below with a marlingspike.
-
- ⁂
-
-Later.—The Captain has returned. It seems that the Valet scorched
-Hennessy Martel’s tongue trying to iron the wrinkles out of it. The
-rest of us have decided on dry massage for ours.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Scotch-plaid guinea-pig threw a lighted cigarette in some straw in
-the trailer and started a fire. The deck-hands turned on the sprinkler
-and put it out. No great damage. The purple pig had his Keeley-cured
-hams smoked—that’s all.
-
- ⁂
-
-Hennessy Martel has got himself disliked by nailing up in the
-dining-cabin the following teasing dinner-card:
-
- Cocktails
- Grapefruit soused with maraschino
- Consomme with sherry
- Fried skate Soused mackerel
- Croute of pineapple with Madeira sauce
- Leg of lamb, mint julep sauce
- Roast ham, champagne sauce
- Artillery punch
- Venison, port wine sauce
- Plum pudding with lots of brandy sauce
- Rum omelette Buns
- Brandied peaches Black coffee with cognac
- Individual Turkish bath
-
- ⁂
-
-At 3 P. M. we made Water Tank No. 2. Catcalls and groans from all on
-board.
-
- ⁂
-
-Passed the Spit Buoy. Nobody could.
-
- ⁂
-
-Turner Van Newleaf, one of the most popular of the passengers, was
-suddenly taken with water on the brain. Doctor Zoolak bled him, soaked
-him, and pulled his leg. Poor Van Newleaf was compelled to borrow
-enough money to finish the cruise.
-
- ⁂
-
-Some practical joker raised the cry of “What’ll you have?” The panic
-that followed made a football mix-up look like a procession of
-choir-boys, and a dozen or more passengers were lost from the Wagon.
-Among those that fell were Jim Rickey and Guinness Stout.
-
- ⁂
-
-5 P. M.—Sighted the Players’ Club. The Captain gave the Engineer the
-jingle-bell, and we went by the danger-point like a squirt of seltzer.
-
- ⁂
-
-The drouth in the saloon is intolerable. The dry batteries that run
-the fans have given out. Count Martini has tossed his waterproof coat
-over the rail. He says there is such a thing as being too dry. The
-sentiment was wildly applauded.
-
- ⁂
-
-Eggley Monade has been going around asking the conundrum, “Why is a
-port-hole like a chaser?” Everybody gave it up, and he borrowed the
-Captain’s megaphone to reply, “Because it’s something on the side.”
-The Mate put a crimp in him with a belaying-pin, and Doctor Zoolak
-thinks that will hold him for awhile.
-
- ⁂
-
-At 5.30 P. M. we made Larchmont. The club-house piazza was crowded
-with gold braid, yachting-caps, and booze. Wigwagged that we were the
-Good Ship Lithia, and they signalled back, “Look out for floating
-mines.” Most of the club members grabbed their drinks and fled to the
-cyclone cellars, but the daredevils of the rocking-chair fleet sat
-tight and jeered at us.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Lithia’s decks have been cleared for action.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Larchmont Commodore has ordered the club torpedo-boat Highball to
-charge the Lithia (to him).
-
- ⁂
-
-Our Captain, alive to the critical situation, has jammed the wheel
-hard over and given the enemy a broadside of lithia tablets. The
-Highball has reversed her engines and is heading for the dry-dock. Her
-hull looks like a half-portion of Swiss cheese.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Larchmont Commodore wirelessed to the Millionaire Volunteer Fire
-Department, which made a record run. They have hooked on to the club’s
-fire-water plug, and are battering us with a two-inch stream of
-Glengarry Scotch. We have replied with our starboard battery of
-bromo-seltzer and a fleet of Whiteheads loaded with strawberry pop.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Fire Department has uncoupled, and hooked on to a tank of club
-cocktails. The deadly stream is burning off the Lithia’s paint.
-
- ⁂
-
-Our passengers, led by Hennessy Martel, demand the surrender of the
-Water Wagon. They are lapping up the decks.
-
- ⁂
-
-The mutineers have been driven below, and the hatches cotton-battened
-down.
-
- ⁂
-
-Our gallant Captain looped the Santiago loop and is raking the enemy
-fore and aft with withering broadsides of moxie. Some of the stuff got
-into the drinks of the rocking-chair fleet on the club-house piazza,
-and the loss of life was appalling.
-
- ⁂
-
-The enemy, completely demoralized, ran up the white flag, and,
-scorning to take any prisoners of war, we ’bout-shipped and laid our
-course for Delaware Water Gap.
-
-
-+Here endeth the third day of the cruise.+
-
-
-
-
-AN EXPERIENCE TABLE
-
-
- March 4. Advertising for girl to do typewriting $ 1.30
- 9. Violets for typewriter .50
- 13. Week’s salary, typewriter 10.00
- 16. Roses for typewriter 2.00
- 20. Miss Remington’s salary 15.00
- 20. Candy for wife and children over Sunday .60
- 22. Box of bonbons for Miss Remington 4.00
- 26. Lunch with Miss Remington 5.75
- 27. Daisy’s salary 20.00
- 29. Theatre and supper with Daisy 19.00
- 30. Sealskin for wife 225.00
- 30. Dress for wife’s mother 50.00
- 30. Advertising for young man to do typewriting 1.30
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Revolution]
-
-
-
-
-“AT LIBERTY”
-
-
- Miss Tottie Van Tootles is curvy and chic;
- She sings in “The Prince and the Toad.”
- Her wage in the city is twenty per week,
- Twenty-five when she goes on the road.
-
- Miss Tottie Van Tootles is handsomely gowned;
- She has a French maid at her heels,
- A cottage at Larchmont, a yacht on the Sound,
- And three or four automobiles.
-
- Miss Tottie Van Tootles has published a card
- To say she’s “At Liberty” now,
- Which envious persons are pleased to regard
- As the certain result of a row.
-
- With whom? Why, I really can’t say. I don’t know
- The details of Miss Tottie’s young life;
- But ’tis whispered, I hear (not above, but below),
- That an angel has taken a wife.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: plan of the Water Wagon]
-
-
-
-
-A WORD ABOUT THE WAGON
-
-
-The Water Wagon is a ball-bearing, clipper-built craft of the
-whale-back type, designed by Mac Nesia, and built in Bath, Me. She
-draws more water than a yacht-club barkeep, and her water-line is
-eighteen glasses and a pony, with plenty of hang-over. The Water Wagon
-is equipped with Saratoga springs, which ensure a minimum of jolt, and
-a complete battery of hydraulic dust-pumps.
-
-All the staterooms are heated by Hot Copper system and lighted by
-carbonic acid gas. Don’t blow it out!
-
-Accommodations on the Water Wagon are unlimited. There is always room
-for one or two more.
-
-
-
-
-WATER WAGON MENU
-
-
-(_Breakfast, Dinner, and Supper, and Midnight Snack_)
-
- Ammonia cocktail
- Seedless grapenuts Shredded wild oats
- Henniker County hand-picked eggs
- (all flavors)
- Evaporated Welsh Rabbit
- (stuffed with raisins)
- Cold tomales
- Red, white and blue Saratoga chips
- H₂O Punch
- Sliced golf balls with mashie potatoes
- Boneless blanc-mange
- Cracked lemon ice
- Predigested pitless prunes
- (“Three P” brand)
- Dent’s well water crackers
-
-All water served on our tables is kept absolutely wet by a patent
-condensing process.
-
-Do not trouble to report any inattention on the part of waiters. We
-have troubles of our own.
-
-
-[Illustration: Jester and clown]
-
-The Editors confess that this is a trivial and foolish book, and they
-will not be offended if you laugh at it.
-
-
-
-
-=THE “GEM” SAFETY PARACHUTE=
-
-
-IT FLOATS!
-
-=Don’t Jump from the Water Wagon Without One!=
-
-No more jolts. No more broken bones. Opens as promptly as a wine
-agent, descends like mining stock, and lands you gently on both feet
-every time. Will carry any kind of a load. Sold by all progressive
-ship-chandlers.
-
-_One Man’s Experience_
-
-MR. PHILUP BOIES writes us: “I have taken two trips on the Wagon, and
-found your parachute a complete success. On the first occasion it
-landed me safely in a brewery, and on the second in a roof-garden. I
-have recommended the ‘Gem’ to all my friends as a move in the right
-direction.”
-
-=TAKE A DROP AND SEE FOR YOURSELF=
-
-
-
-
-+Fourth Day+
-
-
-
-
-It is much harder to keep on the Water Wagon than on a bucking
-broncho.—Remington.
-
- ⁂
-
-A watered-silk vest is not a badge of temperance. Never judge a man
-by his vest.—Woodruff.
-
-
-
-
-LOG -- Fourth Day
-
-
-Barometer dry and blistered. Mercury bubbling.
-
- ⁂
-
-At roll-call we were shy twenty passengers. The Captain thinks the
-ones unaccounted for fell overboard during the excitement at
-Larchmont.
-
- ⁂
-
-Hennessy Martel, Tom Ginn, and several others are in double irons for
-cheering the enemy. All the souse-renunciators are suffering tortures
-from the frightful drouth. Tom Ginn declares that he has had a regular
-stokehole thirst ever since we left Larchmont, and Hennessy Martel
-offers to swap his Panhard and fifty shares of unassessable Hot Copper
-for three fingers of lumberjack rye.
-
- ⁂
-
-Poor Turner Van Newleaf was found sitting on the sprinkler trolling
-for wine-jellyfish and chattering to himself. Doctor Zoolak dry-cupped
-him and sponged his mouth with Blisterine.
-
- ⁂
-
-10 A. M.—Sighted a night school of whales galloping after the Lithia.
-The wise Mate says this is a sure sign of a Jonah on board. A
-committee of five, headed by the puzzle editor of Golden Days, has
-been appointed to find the Jonah.
-
- ⁂
-
-Clark Dearborn, champion half-shot putter of the Chicago Athletic
-Club, claimed to have seen two swordfish fencing off the weather bow.
-Doctor Zoolak roped him, threw him, and tied him in thirty seconds,
-breaking the Montana record.
-
- ⁂
-
-2 P. M.—Made Delaware Water Gap.
-
- ⁂
-
-The citizens of the Gap turned out in a body and gave us a royal
-welcome. The Mayor, in a happy little speech, presented the freedom of
-the city and the great key to the water-works, both of which we were
-compelled to decline on account of the serious condition of our
-passengers.
-
- ⁂
-
-A chorus of young ladies, carrying a white banneret of watered silk,
-with the motto “Purity” and a crocheted picture of Moses smiting the
-rock, raised their sweet young voices in the affecting song:
-
- “Wait for the Wagon,
- Wait for the Wagon,
- Wait for the Wagon,
- And we’ll all take a ride.”
-
- ⁂
-
-Jack Redwood and Hy Jinks, of the ’Frisco Bohemian Club, cut in with a
-barber-shop tenor and a sterilized barytone, and were promptly and
-loudly hissed by the snakes in the trailer.
-
- ⁂
-
-Hennessy Martel hogged the limelight by offering to loop the Water Gap
-in a ball-bearing catamaran, without the aid of a net, and the
-Captain, scenting trouble, side-stepped the Gap and made a quick
-getaway.
-
- ⁂
-
-At 5 P. M. the lookout reported a sour mash freighter. The passengers
-are kissing the hem of his cardigan jacket and calling him another
-Columbus.
-
- ⁂
-
-Later.—The sour mash freighter turns out to be a root-beer wagon on
-its way to a Sunday-school excursion. The enraged passengers are now
-kicking the hem of the lookout’s jacket.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Committee on Jonah reports progress.
-
- ⁂
-
-At 5.30 P. M. we ran into a dust-gale, caused by an automobile party
-brushing their clothes after being chased by a bicycle cop. The air is
-thick with dust and whisk-brooms, and the Lithia’s passengers are
-lying, gasping, on the cravenette deck. The lookout sends word that he
-can’t see a pair of deuces.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Captain has ordered the rose-sprinkler turned on and the
-electric-fans started.
-
- ⁂
-
-The dust-fog lifted for a few moments, and the passengers were seen
-to be leaping overboard. The Bos’un performed yoehoman service in
-rescuing the imperilled and helping the weak ones back on the Wagon. A
-collection was taken up to purchase him a silver-plated swinging
-ice-pitcher.
-
- ⁂
-
-6.45 P. M.—The Mate took soundings, and reported no bottom. The
-Captain announced that, from the depth of water, we must be nearing
-Wall Street. The Mate was ordered to ring for a messenger-boy and send
-him after a pilot.
-
- ⁂
-
-8 P. M.—The Mate boxed the compass and the compass won on points.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Committee on Jonah have been through the vessel like a pack of
-ferrets, and report that the Jonah can be no other than Moxie Matzoon,
-alias Moxie Grandpa. The report of the Committee was accepted and
-ordered inscribed on the records. A special copy, engrossed on
-parchment, will be sent to the Hon. Bromo S. Emerson, of Baltimore.
-
- ⁂
-
-Very dull in the smoking-room to-night. Nothing doing but a game of
-tiddlywinks on the O. P. side. Roderick Dhuar, a reformed Scotch
-barkeep, enlivened the hours by playing “Comin’ Through the Rye,”
-with variations, on the cash register. When he finished he found he
-owed the Steward $22.30. He gave his I O U.
-
- ⁂
-
-Shortly after midnight the lookout reported a strange light on the
-port bow. It turned out to be an electric advertisement, reading,
-
- WHEN ALL IN AND SPEECHLESS,
- MAKE SIGNS FOR BRICKTOP RYE
-
-At this touch of the real thing, the Lithia’s passengers perked up
-considerably, and the yell that greeted the sign sounded like a dog
-being run over by a Mercedes.
-
-
-+Here endeth the fourth day of the cruise.+
-
-
-
-
-Quoth the Red Raven: “Nevermore!”
-
-
-
-
-OMAR ON THE WAGON
-
-
-I.
-
- Before the last hour of the Old Year died,
- Methought a voice without the Tavern cried:
- “Oh, cut it out, Khayyam; there’s nothing in’t.
- The Water Wagon waits you. Take a ride!”
-
-II.
-
- So, with the echoes of the New Year’s chimes
- The thoughtful Soul upon the Wagon climbs,
- Cuts out the Grape, and promises to reach
- The Bosom of his Family betimes.
-
-III.
-
- At home by six, for Dinner with the Frau;
- Early to bed and rise; a little Cow
- And Seltzer when I line up with the Boys:
- That’s mine. I’m on the Water Wagon now.
-
-IV.
-
- A Moment’s Halt—a momentary taste
- Of Water from the Wagon!—Oh, make haste
- And climb aboard! Aqua is sweeter far
- Than all the Grape Goods that were ever cased.
-
-V.
-
- For some we loved, the loveliest and the best,
- Who tried to beat the Game, are now at rest.
- They set ’em back, and set ’em back, and then
- Were gathered to the Kingdom of the Blest.
-
-VI.
-
- Indeed, indeed, Repentance oft before
- I swore, and I was honest when I swore.
- And then the Wagon bumped the Curb, and I
- Was jolted off into a Liquor Store.
-
-VII.
-
- They say that Tom and Dick and Harry keep
- The Bars at which I gloried and drank deep.
- Well, let them keep them. I am feeling fit,
- And feeding well, and catching up my sleep.
-
-VIII.
-
- I used to think that never blows so red
- The Cherry as when Maraschinoed;
- And watching Barney fish them from the Pot
- I have acquired, at times, a lovely Head.
-
-IX.
-
- And that reviving Herb whose tender Green
- Fledges the River-Lip—how oft I’ve seen
- The Barkeep make a Julep with its leaves,
- The while upon the Bar I’d lightly lean.
-
-X.
-
- But now, my Friends, I’ve had my last Carouse,
- And made a Second Marriage in my house;
- Divorced the wanton Daughter of the Vine
- And taken Neptune’s daughter for my Spouse.
-
-XI.
-
- Yon rising Moon that looks for us again—
- How oft hereafter will she wax and wane;
- How oft hereafter rising look for us
- Through the Roof Gardens—and for me in vain!
-
-XII.
-
- When in your joyous Pilgrimage you pass
- Along the line of Beer and Stout and Bass
- And Rye and Scotch and Fizz, and reach the place
- Where I made One—turn down an empty Glass.
-
-
-
-
-+Fifth Day+
-
-
-
-
-You can’t tell the age of whiskey by looking at its teeth.—King
-William.
-
- ⁂
-
-The truth is mighty and will prevail. When you come home with a
-package don’t tell your wife you’ve been shopping.—Socrates.
-
-
-
-
-LOG -- Fifth Day
-
-
-The sun rose half an hour late. Eggley Monade, the ship’s wag,
-suggested that Old Sol’s safety-razor must have been out of whack. The
-Mate belted him with a piece of tarred rope, and Doctor Zoolak with
-the compass needle took seven stitches.
-
- ⁂
-
-Shortly before noon we picked up the Stock Exchange light, and the
-Lithia was slowed down.
-
- ⁂
-
-Took on Tom Lawson, the pilot, who knows right off the reel, without
-sounding, the depth of water at every point in the dangerous channel
-of Wall Street. Tom brought aboard his magazine-gun, which he mounted
-at the bow, remarking jovially that he might take a crack at a pirate
-or two.
-
- ⁂
-
-Entered the channel, with Trinity cliffs astern. Pilot Lawson is at
-the wheel, looking very wise. Everybody’s watching him.
-
- ⁂
-
-An indignation meeting has been called on the two-for-a-quarter deck
-by excited passengers who promised their wives, sweethearts, and
-parents to keep out of Wall Street. They demand that the vessel be put
-back. The Pilot remarked, grimly, that it is harder to get out of Wall
-Street than into it. He advises all hands to hang on and wait for a
-rise.
-
- ⁂
-
-A little before 3 P. M. the lookout shouted, “Maelstrom dead ahead!”
-A panic resulted, and the cry went up that Lawson was a bum pilot.
-Strong and willing hands tore him from the wheel, and, pursued by the
-infuriated passengers and crew, he ran down the deck and dove over the
-taffrail, yawping: “I will have something to say next month!”
-
- ⁂
-
-“We are lost!” the Captain shouted, as he staggered down the stairs.
-Putting three chips on the red, he spun the wheel to starboard. Round
-and round in the clutches of the maelstrom spun the good ship Lithia.
-“Whee!” cried Hennessy Martel, “this is like old times. First good
-whirl my head’s had since the Lambs’ Club gambol.”
-
- ⁂
-
-2.56 P. M.—The Lithia seems hopelessly lost. The passengers, with
-blanched faces, are swapping farewells and keepsakes.
-
- ⁂
-
-2.58 P. M.—Gottlieb Kirschwasser, of Milwaukee, lost his head, (the
-one he came aboard with), and, screaming, “Heute rot, Morgen tot! Auf
-wiedersehen!” hurled himself overboard.
-
- ⁂
-
-3 P.M.—Saved! The Stock Exchange bell struck three, and the maelstrom
-knocked off for the day. The Lithia’s passengers joyfully returned to
-one another the keepsakes and farewells, and Kirschwasser was fished
-out of the drink with a boat-hook and put in the boiler-room to dry.
-
- ⁂
-
-4 P. M.—We have left Wall Street, and are bowling along toward White
-Rock Point, and kicking up an awful dust.
-
- ⁂
-
-The drouth has become intolerable, and the sufferings of the
-passengers are increasing hourly. The deck-planks are curling up, and
-the oakum is oozing from the seams.
-
- ⁂
-
-The barometer exploded with a loud pop, and Hennessy Martel,
-wild-eyed, ran up the main hatch, crying, “Is that George Kessler
-opening wine?” “No such luck,” gurgled Tom Ginn, who was spraying his
-throat with Blisterine.
-
- ⁂
-
-Old Medford, the Water Wagon veteran, says he doesn’t remember a
-voyage attended by so many disasters. “We must get rid of the Jonah,”
-said he.
-
- ⁂
-
-4.44 P. M.—The Captain made a neat little speech from the bridge, and
-presented to each passenger a dry-point picture of the good ship
-Lithia. Most of them were flung overboard.
-
- ⁂
-
-After supper the Captain, a most considerate man, gave a smoker, in
-order to take the minds of the passengers off their fearful thirst.
-A Keith circuit top-liner, who has a whole page and his picture in
-“Who’s Who on the Water Wagon,” gave an imitation of an actor
-refusing a drink. The audience overlooked the screaming absurdity of
-the plot in their admiration for the artistic performance.
-
- ⁂
-
-Professor Argus, the mind wizard, offered to read the minds of all the
-audience at one crack. Challenged to perform this astounding feat, the
-Professor smiled and said, “You are all thinking that it is almost
-time for a long cold highball.” Crackling shouts of admiration came
-from the parched throats of the audience, and the protest, “Fake!
-Fake! Somebody must have told you!”
-
- ⁂
-
-Harvey Steele, a floor-walker in a wholesale anchor house, was the
-next entertainer. He gave a realistic imitation of a crooked barkeep
-playing on an upright cash register. When he finished the audience
-declared there was nothing in it.
-
- ⁂
-
-An amateur hypnotist was the next to oblige. “Will some gentleman
-kindly step up and assist the Professor in this demonstration?” he
-requested. Dead silence; nobody made a move. The Professor smiled
-patiently, and repeated his request; no takers. Finally the Captain,
-who had drifted in, stepped up, remarking, “Try your stunt on me,
-Professor.” (Deafening applause.) The amateur hypnotist took the
-Captain in hand and made a few passes at him, and he took the count in
-six seconds. “Happy man!” cried the Professor, fixing the subject with
-his glittering eye. “Happy man! you are soused for fair, and are
-opening vintage wine.” “Whee!” said the Captain, bracing himself
-against Davy Jones’s locker. “Frappe two more quarts! Line up, boys!”
-(Tumultuous applause, and cries of “Don’t wake him up!”) But the
-Professor did wake him up, and the Captain bowed sheepishly and
-returned to the wheel-house. “Will some other gentleman kindly step
-up?” asked the Amateur Hypnotist. The scramble that followed made the
-rush-hour at the Brooklyn Bridge look like a chess tournament. In the
-jam the Professor’s shoulder was dislocated, putting him out of
-business.
-
- ⁂
-
-2 A. M.—Hennessy Martel has tied a string around his thumb to remind
-himself to take a drink the minute he gets off the Wagon.
-
-
-+Here endeth the fifth day of the cruise.+
-
-
-
-
-“THE DARKEST HOUR”
-
-
-When a gentleman is deposited on his door-mat by a friendly copper,
-like a cake of ice or a jar of milk, his sense of humour is
-wonderfully acute. To tip over an aquarium of goldfish on his way
-through the hall strikes him as the height of the ridiculous, and the
-flopping of the little fishes and turtles on the Persian rug throws
-him into spasms of stifled mirth. He chuckles himself into hiccoughs
-over his vain attempts to unlace his shoes while lying on his back,
-and his progress up-stairs on all fours is accompanied by joyous
-giggles. When he loses his equilibrium and rolls back down-stairs, he
-sits up and says: “God pity the men at sea on a night like this!”
-
-He is now serious. He turns on all the electric lights and remarks,
-censoriously: “Here it is broad daylight, the front stoop unswept, and
-not a soul in the house up.” In this spirit of criticism he ascends to
-his wife’s room, and, as she raises her head from the pillow for one
-comprehensive glance, he says, sternly: “Things are going from bad to
-worse in this house.”
-
-To her icy rejoinder, “Is that any reason why you should come home in
-this condition?” he replies, with unruffled importance: “The kitchen
-fire is out; the canary hasn’t been fed; the piano isn’t dusted; and
-look at this!” He holds up a ravelling. “Found it right in the middle
-of the hall! What kind of housekeeping do you call that? Why, if I
-tried to run my business that way, we’d all be in the poor-house.”
-
-Softly and soothingly his spouse returns: “Frank, if you’ll lay the
-two goldfish on the bureau and come to bed, we’ll have a long talk
-about it in the morning.”
-
-And they do.
-
-
-
-
-Dr. Bugg Howes
-
-OCULIST
-
-
-Room 26, Hygeia Building
-
-If you see things, I can help you!
-
-One bottle of my celebrated BUGGINE will clear the sight of all
-imaginary objects. Menageries removed by my painless process.
-
-If you see objects double, an application of SKATORIA OINTMENT will
-put you right.
-
-Send for booklet of testimonials from prominent actors, Congressmen,
-journalists, and club-men,—printed by special permission.
-
-“SEEING IS NOT BELIEVING!”
-
-
-
-
-+Sixth Day+
-
-
-
-
-Always keep your powder dry—that’s all.—Mennen.
-
- ⁂
-
-Beware of the man who picks things off your coat lapel while
-conversing with you. He never buys.—Fra Elbertus.
-
-
-
-
-LOG -- Sixth Day
-
-
-The morning opened as still and dry as Boston after 11 P. M. The sun
-rose red as an auction flag against a cold-gravy sky, and the
-atmosphere is heavy with something doing. The Captain, solemn as a
-night-clerk in a Raines Law hotel, is at the wheel, and the Lookout is
-pop-eyed. A few insomniacal passengers are pacing the deck like a man
-who has been called for margin, and are bothering the Captain with
-fool questions. The Captain has put on a pair of plush ear-muffs.
-
- ⁂
-
-11 A. M.—Dirty weather ahead. The Lithia is logging her limit, in an
-effort to weather White Rock Point before the storm breaks.
-
- ⁂
-
-11.20 A. M.—The Lookout reports a siphon-shaped cloud off the weather
-bow. The air is laden with dust, and is coming in dry hot puffs. Tom
-Ginn thinks we are running into another automobile party, but Old
-Medford says we are up against worse than that.
-
- ⁂
-
-11.30 A. M.—The wind has risen to half a gale, and the dust is
-settling on the Lithia’s decks like the soot from a smoking
-nickel-plated banquet-lamp. Most of the passengers have turned out,
-prepared for anything.
-
- ⁂
-
-Gottlieb Kirschwasser has just made his will, bequeathing his
-collection of dried butterflies and a set of Schiller’s works to the
-Milwaukee Gemuthlich Society.
-
- ⁂
-
-11.45 A. M.—The pink rats are deserting the ship.
-
- ⁂
-
-A tidal wave of dust swept over us, carrying away the life-boat and
-Kirschwasser’s meerschaum pipe with a galloping horse carved on it.
-Kirschwasser says he won it at a pinochle tournament in Munich, and is
-crazed by the loss. Nobody else seems to caradam.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Steward has distributed auto goggles, but the passengers are still
-unable to see three fingers before their faces.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Captain has turned the wheel over to the Mate, and has gone among
-the passengers, striving to reassure them. It seems we are off the
-Axminster Carpet Cleaning Works, beside which Cape Hatteras is a
-goldfish aquarium.
-
- ⁂
-
-The sufferings of the passengers baffle description. Everybody feels
-that this is his last trip on the Wagon. Hennessy Martel has tied
-another string around his thumb, to remind himself to make it two
-drinks when he gets off.
-
- ⁂
-
-Old Medford, who is as mad as a conductor when you give him five
-pennies, insists that the Jonah be dumped overboard. A dogged,
-determined committee has gone below to yank out Moxie Grandpa, who, as
-old Medford says, is an interloper, anyway, and has no more business
-on the Water Wagon than a trousers stretcher in a young ladies’
-seminary.
-
- ⁂
-
-Later.—Old Matzoon has been dragged up from the hold, kicking and
-clawing, and the passengers are balloting on the proper disposition of
-him.
-
- ⁂
-
-While the ballot was being taken, another tidal wave of dust broke
-over the hapless Lithia, and the enraged passengers and crew cried in
-chorus, “Over with the Jonah!” The wretched Moxie fiend was thereupon
-flung into the trailer, despite the protests of the magenta elephant
-and the Scotch-plaid guinea-pig.
-
- ⁂
-
-At 1.20 P. M. the Lithia grounded with a fearful crash, and the
-billows of dust that broke over her carried away the sprinkler and all
-the spokes in the aft wheel. A composite picture of John B. Gough and
-Carrie Nation fell to the cabin floor and was totally wrecked.
-
- ⁂
-
-Buried in dust from deck to trucks, the Lithia lay on her side,
-pounding like a farmer at Coney Island on a “Try Your Strength”
-machine. The good old Wagon was doomed. Nothing could hold in such a
-simoom.
-
- ⁂
-
-The Captain shouted down-wind, “Cut away the trailer!” The ship’s
-Carpenter, with hammer and cold-chisel, severed the tow-line, and the
-menagerie vanished in the dust.
-
- ⁂
-
-At 1.35 the Lithia sprung a bunch of leaks, and every drop of water
-ran out of her. We are now high and horribly dry. Hennessy Martel has
-tied still another string around his thumb, to remind himself to make
-it three drinks when he gets off. His hand is beginning to look like a
-hammock.
-
- ⁂
-
-At 1.50 P. M. orders were given to lighten ship. We threw over ten
-bales of temperance pledges, fifty cases malted milk, thirty-two cases
-sarsaparilla, eighteen carboys root beer, twenty-seven vats lemon
-soda, two hundred and thirty-five gallons mineral water, the library,
-the band, the cash register, seventy-five bundles of blue ribbons, the
-water-cooler and three tons of cracked ice, the pianola, Gottlieb
-Kirschwasser, and Doctor Zoolak. The Lithia righted, and it looks as
-if the gallant craft will ride it out. Cheers are rattling from the
-warped throats of passengers and crew.
-
- ⁂
-
-2 P. M.—We are lost! A fresh consignment of boarding-house carpets has
-just been thrown under the slapsticks at the Cleaning Works. This is
-the limit of dirty weather.
-
- ⁂
-
-Hurrah! A St. Bernard dog with a little brown jug tied to his neck is
-battling his way toward the doomed Water Wagon. Good old Nero!
-
- ⁂
-
-The St. Bernard has leaped aboard. Merciful heavens! the jug contains
-arnica! We have torn off Nero’s license tag and chucked him overboard.
-
- ⁂
-
-Hennessy Martel is maudlin and weeping on my pleated shirt-front. “In
-case you pull through, old man,” he says, “tell my poor little wife
-(the tall one) that my insurance policy is in the kitchen clock with
-the milk tickets.”
-
- ⁂
-
-2.20 P. M.—We have launched the life-raft, and stocked it hastily with
-the following supplies: One case Jack Spratt’s assorted dog biscuits,
-two dozen golf balls, a crate of sponges, two telephone books, one
-“Little Giant” gas-stove, one “Little Gem” safety lawn-mower, six
-dozen Lady Macbeth lamp-chimneys, one Prospect Park croquet set, four
-wheelbarrows, one roll-top desk, and one Colonial highboy with glass
-knobs. This outfit will keep us going for a few days.
-
- ⁂
-
-At 2.30 P. M. we cut away the life-raft and pushed off, and we are now
-pitching and tossing on the dusty billows. Heaven only knows how much
-longer our sufferings will be prolonged.
-
- ⁂
-
-I am parched and weary, and my pencil is worn to the quick. Ho,
-Steward, fetch me a milk-bottle with a patent stopper! I must commit
-these writings to the restless sea.
-
- Go, little Log, from this our solitude;
- We cast thee on the waters—go thy ways.
- And if thy luck (unlike our own) be good,
- Some one will read thee after many days.
-
-
-
-
- So here endeth the Log of the Water
- Wagon, as hammered into English
- by the Authors on Watt’ell
- paper; the illustrations by
- Saint Louis, and the whole
- done into a book by the
- H. M. Caldwell Co., at
- Boston, which is near
- Bunker Hill, in the
- State of Massa-
- chusetts, in the
- y e a r O n e
- Th ou s a nd
- N i n e
- H u n-
- d r e d
- a n d
- Five
-
- '¡'
-
-
-
-
-[Endpaper: Dissolution]
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note
-
-Inconsistent hyphenation (drydock/dry-dock) has been left as printed
-in the original.
-
-Typographic conventions are _italic_, =bold=, and +blackletter+.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Log of the Water Wagon, by
-Bert Leston Taylor and W. C. Gibson
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