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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67871 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67871)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Tom Watson's Magazine, Vol. I, No. 2,
-April 1905, by Various
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Tom Watson's Magazine, Vol. I, No. 2, April 1905
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: Thomas E. Watson
-
-Release Date: April 18, 2022 [eBook #67871]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: hekula03 and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images
- made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TOM WATSON'S MAGAZINE, VOL.
-I, NO. 2, APRIL 1905 ***
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
- Underscores “_” before and after a word or phrase indicate _italics_
- in the original text.
- Equal signs “=” before and after a word or phrase indicate =bold=
- in the original text.
- Small capitals have been converted to SOLID capitals.
- Antiquated spellings have been preserved.
- Typographical errors have been silently corrected.
-
-
-
-
- _Jefferson’s Bible_
-
- A rare volume for the book-lover readers of TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE
-
-
-102 YEARS AGO
-
-Thomas Jefferson, while “overwhelmed with other business,” cut such
-passages from the Evangelists as he believed would best present the
-ethical teachings of Jesus, and “arranged them on the pages of a blank
-book in a certain order of time or subject.” This book he called “The
-Philosophy of Jesus of Nazareth.”
-
-For many years the manuscript of this wonderful book has lain in the
-archives of the State Department at Washington, and public clamor for its
-publication at last became so great that Congress recently ordered it
-issued as a public document—but in very limited number.
-
-Before the original was turned over to the State Department, an accurate
-copy of it was made while in the possession of Col. Thomas Jefferson
-Randolph, Mr. Jefferson’s oldest grandson. From this copy was printed the
-edition now offered to our subscribers.
-
-TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE AND THOMAS JEFFERSON’S BIBLE
-
-For $1.35, sent direct to this office, we will enter a year’s
-subscription to TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE and mail a copy of the Jefferson
-Bible, postage prepaid. A dollar book and a dollar magazine—both for only
-$1.35. Send today. Do it now. Address
-
- =TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE=
- 121 West 42d Street, New York, N. Y.
-
-
-
-
- TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE
- THE MAGAZINE WITH A PURPOSE BACK OF IT
- =April, 1905=
-
-
- _Politics and Economics_ _Thomas E. Watson_ 129
- _In Russia—“Give Them Free Passes and They Will Become
- as Servants”—Two Outlaws—Building on Sand, Again—Look
- at England—Editorial Comments—How Private Ownership
- Breaks Down._
- _The Patriot_ 142
- _The Atonement of Hustler Joe_ _Eleanor H. Porter_ 145
- _The Constitution_ _Frederick Upham Adams_ 181
- _In Absence_ _Eugene C. Dolson_ 185
- _The Gray Weed_ _Owen Oliver_ 187
- _With Caste Against Him_ _Hugh Pendexter_ 196
- _Corrupt Practices in Elections_ _Hon. Lucius F. C. Garvin_ 203
- _Ex-Governor of Rhode Island_
- _Pole Baker_ _Will N. Harben_ 208
- _How I Dined With President Grant_ _B. F. Riley_ 221
- _The New York Children’s Court_ _Hon. Joseph M. Deuel_ 225
- _What Buzz-Saw Morgan Thinks_ _W. S. Morgan_ 234
- _The Heritage of Maxwell Fair_ _Vincent Harper_ 236
- _The Say of Reform Editors_ 245
- _News Record_ 248
-
- Application made for entry as Second-Class Matter at
- New York (N. Y.) Post Office, March, 1905
- Copyright, 1905, in U. S. and Great Britain.
- Published by TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE,
- 121 West 42d Street, N. Y.
-
- TERMS: $1.00 A YEAR; 10 CENTS A NUMBER
-
-
-
-
- TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE ADVERTISER
-
- _What the Country Thinks of_
- TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE
-
-
-“A good fighter.”—_Buffalo Times._
-
-“What Mr. Watson says is forcible.”—_Buffalo Express._
-
-“Has a great deal of spicy reading.”—_Troy (N. Y.) Times._
-
-“Read TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE.”—_Editorial, Boston American._
-
-“The Hon. Tom is at the front, naturally and properly.”—_N. Y. Sun._
-
-“Bears out all that Mr. Watson promised for it.”—_Philadelphia Press._
-
-“Besides specials there is an abundance of good fiction.”—_N. Y. World._
-
-“More than twice the money’s worth.”—_Stephen Fiske, in Spirit of the
-Times._
-
-“Some capital things in prose and verse.”—_New York Times Saturday
-Review._
-
-“Mr. Watson’s pen has lost none of its spice.”—_Binghamton (N. Y.)
-Republican._
-
-“It stands, and will ever stand, for the principle of truth and
-justice.”—_Chicago American._
-
-“Tom Watson, the broadest-minded statesman in the South.”—_Southern
-Mercury, Dallas, Tex._
-
-“He by no means writes as a defeated candidate. Optimism is the keynote
-of his salutatory.”—_New York Herald._
-
-“Although Mr. Watson attacks his opponents in a lively fashion, he shows
-no bitterness.”—_The Fourth Estate._
-
-“Watson’s thoughts are upon great things, and he will not be diverted by
-inconsequential affairs.”—_Joliet (Ill.) News._
-
-“TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE is the latest addition to the list of first-class
-periodicals of the country.”—_Puget Sound American._
-
-“Filled with the piquant, forceful, pungent sentences for which Tom
-Watson is famous.”—_Nebraska Independent, Lincoln, Neb._
-
-“Clean, entertaining and filled with a full sheath of articles, poems and
-stories by well-known writers.”—_Boston Tribune._
-
-“Mr. Watson is an intelligent, aggressive writer, with the courage needed
-by every man who enters the lists as a reformer.”—_Topeka Herald._
-
-“Mr. Thos. E. Watson is a brilliant writer on history, and an honest man,
-sincerely interested in the welfare of mankind.”—_Kansas City Times._
-
-“It shall ever stand for the rights of those who believe in Democracy; it
-stands and will ever stand for the principles of truth and justice.”—_San
-Francisco Examiner._
-
-“The magazine will be useful as an educational force, and all reformers
-welcome, or should welcome, every publication which is educational in its
-purpose.”—_W. J. Bryan’s Commoner._
-
-“Following Tom Lawson, Tom Watson will begin his magazine next month.
-Now, if Teddy will use the big stick when the two Toms throw the
-limelight, the great audience will be ‘de-lighted.’”—_American Standard,
-Indianapolis, Ind._
-
-
-
-
- =_TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE_=
-
- VOL. I APRIL, 1905 No. 2
-
-
-
-
- _Politics and Economics_
-
- BY THOMAS E. WATSON
-
-
- _In Russia_
-
-“A Tale of Two Cities,” written by the great novelist, Charles Dickens,
-contains a vivid picture, which shows the relation existing between a
-nobleman of the Old Order in France and one of the common people.
-
-In that day the streets were narrow. Sidewalks did not separate the
-space used by those who went on foot from that used by those who went in
-vehicles. From the houses on the one side to the houses on the other,
-travel was free to all: those on the ground were ever in danger from
-those who were in vehicles.
-
-Dickens describes the progress of the carriage of one of the French
-aristocrats, driven at headlong speed along these narrow streets. It
-whirled around the corners with a wild rattle and clatter, and with
-an utter lack of consideration for pedestrians. Women and children
-scattered, screaming, to get out of its way, and men clutched at one
-another to escape the danger.
-
-At last, whirling round a corner, by a fountain, one of the wheels of
-this furiously driven carriage strikes a little child and kills it. Amid
-the loud cries of those who behold the sickening spectacle the horses
-rear and plunge and the carriage comes to a standstill. The nobleman
-looks out and calmly inquires what has gone wrong. He is told that a
-child has been run over.
-
-A man is bending over the lifeless form, screaming with grief.
-
-“Why does he make that abominable noise?” asks the nobleman.
-
-“Pardon me, Monsieur le Marquis, it was his child,” explains one of the
-crowd humbly.
-
-“Killed!” screams the father, lifting and extending his arms. “Dead!” he
-cries.
-
-The Marquis runs his eye over all the rabble, as though they were so many
-rats come out of their holes. He draws out his purse.
-
-“I do not see why it is that you people won’t take care of yourselves and
-children? One or the other of you are always in the way. HOW DO I KNOW
-THAT YOU HAVE NOT INJURED ONE OF MY HORSES?”
-
-With this he throws a gold coin on the ground beside the father of the
-child.
-
-The crazed parent continues to scream: “Dead! Dead!”
-
-As the Marquis is driving away, the gold coin which he had thrown to the
-ground is flung back into the carriage, and falls rattling at his feet.
-
-“Hold!” says the Marquis. “Hold the horses! Who threw that coin?”
-
-The crowd makes no answer. No blouse-clad man dare look him in the eye.
-
-“You dogs!” says the Marquis smoothly; “I would ride over any of you very
-willingly and exterminate you from the earth. If I knew who it was that
-threw that coin I would have the brigand crushed under the wheels.”
-
-So cowed were they, so long and hard had been their experience of what
-such a man could do to them, that not a voice or a hand or an eye was
-raised.
-
-Such was the condition of the French before the great Revolution of 1789;
-and while the picture is drawn by a novelist, it is the picture of a
-novelist who painted human life and human conditions as they were never
-painted before. His pictures were photographs.
-
-In another book, not a novel but a history, (the title and the author of
-which shall not be mentioned here), there is another description of human
-relations under the _Ancien Régime_, and that description claims to be
-literally true. I quote the author’s own words:
-
-“Was it not in this same year, 1788, that the Duke of Béthune’s carriage,
-dashing through the narrow streets, as was the aristocratic custom, ran
-over a little girl in the rue de la Ferronnerie and killed her?
-
-“Did not the mother see it all? Did not she rush wildly to the scene,
-snatch up the poor crushed form, gaze distractedly into the eyes for
-light _and see none_, lay her cheek to that of the child to feel the
-warmth of life _and feel none_?
-
-“Still was the little heart, gone the breath, blanched the cheeks, frozen
-the tiny hands.
-
-“What sound does the ear ever hear like that of the voice that was heard
-of old in Ramah?
-
-“Shriek after shriek split the air, piercing every heart in the crowd
-that gathered as the frantic mother, holding her dead child in her arms,
-gave voice to her grief.
-
-“_And the Duke, what said he?_ ‘LET THE WOMAN COME TO MY HOUSE, AND SHE
-SHALL BE PAID FOR HER LOSS.’
-
-“He had not even left the carriage; _he had not spoken a word of sympathy
-or regret_.
-
-“In his view of the case he had done some damage to this woman, and,
-being a man of honor, he was ready to settle the bill.
-
-“That was all. ‘Drive on, coachman!’—and never a thought more did the
-Duke waste on the mother or child. _They were not of his world, but of
-another and a lower._”
-
-This was more than one hundred years ago. Ever since that time we have
-supposed that the human race has been advancing onward and upward toward
-a higher and a better civilization.
-
-The philosopher has reflected and advised. The statesman has studied and
-planned. The reformer has made his battle-axe ring at the door of every
-abuse.
-
-Learning has spoken from all our schools. Religion has preached from all
-our temples; and yet in one of the nations of Europe, where the king and
-the priest have had absolute control of the minds and the bodies of the
-people for hundreds of years, the point of view of the aristocrat is
-precisely the same that it was in France in the year 1788. And the man of
-the common people submits humbly in 1905 just as he did in 1788.
-
-In Russia no man’s conscience is his own; it belongs to the Church. In
-Russia no man’s action is free; he belongs to the State. The Czar rules
-by “_Divine Right_.” He is the earthly representative of _the Most High
-God_; the common people of the land are mere dirt under his feet, being
-of a different world and a lower.
-
-A few Sundays ago his people, in the belief that his heart—the heart of
-their “Little Father”—was accessible to pity and to the plea for justice,
-were coming in peaceful procession, accompanied by their wives and
-their children, to kneel at his feet, lift up their supplicating hands,
-and, with their own tongues, reach his ear with the true story of their
-grievances.
-
-Their Little Father refused to see them or hear them.
-
-Their Little Father threw a glittering line of steel between himself and
-his “children.” The Little Father ordered, “_Fire!_” and his children
-fell before the storm of lead.
-
-They were shot down like dogs; women and children were sabered or
-crushed under the iron-shod feet of horses; they were scourged back to
-their hovels, their cellars, their sweltering dens.
-
-And the hundreds of dead bodies which littered the streets were thrown
-into the river like so much carrion.
-
-A few days afterward it was considered good politics by the Grand Dukes
-who control this contemptible little Czar to grant a hearing to a
-deputation representing these same laborers.
-
-The whole world had been aroused to anger and indignation at the manner
-in which the Cossacks had massacred the people.
-
-Public sentiment had made itself felt even in the inner circles of the
-heartless oligarchy which controls the Russian Empire.
-
-Therefore the Czar was told to receive the deputation, and he did so. The
-deputation bowed down to the earth before the Czar, who said: “_Good day,
-my children._ I have summoned you to hear my words, and to communicate
-them to your companions. The recent unfortunate events were _the
-inevitable results of your own lawless actions_. Those who induced you
-to address this petition to me desire to see you revolt against me and
-my government.” After a few more words of the same complacent character,
-this representative of God on earth said to the delegation:
-
-“I am convinced of _the innocence of the workingmen_, and believe that
-_they_ are well disposed toward me. I WILL PARDON THOSE TRANSGRESSORS.
-RETURN AGAIN TO YOUR WORK. MAY GOD ASSIST YOU.”
-
-The history of the world has so many revolting passages that I cannot
-say that this Russian episode surpasses others, but when the head of a
-great Christian government tunes his tongue to the formula of Divine
-Right which was current during the Dark Ages, and gives us a dash of
-medievalism, to be reported by a special correspondent in the daily
-newspapers, there is something so anomalous about the situation that it
-makes a peculiar impression of its own.
-
-At least 2,000 of this emperor’s “children” had been butchered in cold
-blood for the high crime of wishing to present a petition to him for
-shorter hours of labor and a more liberal recognition of their status as
-human beings.
-
-“May God assist you,” says the Czar—leaving it to the benighted minds
-of these untutored workmen to find out how it is that God is going to
-assist them, when the representative of God on earth shoots them down by
-the thousand, tramples them beneath the hoofs of Cossack horses, slashes
-them with Cossack sabers, pierces them with Cossack lances, lashes them
-with Cossack scourges, and sends them bleeding and howling back to their
-hopeless homes and miserable lives, for no offense other than the wish to
-kneel at his feet and pray for better treatment.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“I FORGIVE YOU!” says the Czar.
-
-_Forgives them for what?_
-
-For being denied the right to petition the throne, for being driven
-back into serfdom, for being hacked and slashed and trampled and
-bullet-riddled by the hireling savages of a barbarian government!
-
-“_As the Great Father above forgives, so I, your Little Father,
-forgives._”
-
-Amen. Let the whimpering wretch who nurses a saber-slashed head recover
-in peace. _He is pardoned for having been Cossacked._
-
-Let the father who drags his lifeless daughter from under the hoofs of
-the warhorse go weep over her in comfort—he and she are _forgiven for
-having dared to hope for mercy from the Czar_.
-
-And the nameless dead who went forth that Sabbath morning, following the
-heroic priest whose baton was the Cross of Christ—went forth in the glow
-of lofty purpose and pathetic hope, and whose bodies are now feeding the
-fishes of the Neva—let them also rest in peace—_their Little Father has
-forgiven them_.
-
-“How do I know that you have not injured my horses?” asked Dickens’s
-Marquis, while the frantic peasant was lamenting his crushed child.
-
-“Let the woman come to my house; she shall be paid. Drive on, coachman,”
-said the Duke of Béthune.
-
-“Served you right!” says the Czar.
-
-“Served you right!” say the Grand Dukes, speaking through the individual
-called Vladimir.
-
-“You should not have quit work. You should not have asked a hearing. You
-got crushed by my troops. I forgive you for it. Go back to your work. Be
-content with your lot. May God assist you.”
-
-Thus the voice of class-rule speaks in Russia today as it spoke in France
-on the eve of the Revolution, and as it always has spoken in every part
-of the world _since man learned the trick of enslaving his brother_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As everybody knows, the real governors of the vast empire of Russia are
-the Grand Dukes. The Czar is a mere puppet in their hands. When he is
-obedient they control him. When he is disobedient they murder him. Thus
-they killed Paul, the father of Alexander the First, because he favored
-an alliance with Napoleon Bonaparte, while the Grand Dukes favored an
-alliance with Great Britain. They would “remove” the present emperor if
-he were to pit his will against theirs.
-
-The spokesman of the present cabal of Grand Dukes is Vladimir, as perfect
-a type of the cruel, obstinate, narrow-minded aristocrat as Europe ever
-saw in its worst days.
-
-Speaking to Michael Davitt, the Irish member of the British Parliament,
-this Grand Duke declared that the reason why representation could not
-be given to the common people of Russia was that _they were not fit to
-exercise it_.
-
-He regarded and intended this to be an indictment against the common
-people. On the contrary, it is a tremendous indictment against the
-government.
-
-The Russian people, as distinguished from the Russian aristocracy, have
-been completely under the control of the laws and the administration
-which the ruling class saw fit to establish. The altar and the throne
-have supported each other. Church and State have been firm and fast
-allies. Ever since the days of Peter the Great the minds and the
-consciences of the common people of Russia have been absolutely dominated
-by the ruling class.
-
-The shepherds have had full control of the flock. The guardians have had
-no interference with the education of their wards.
-
-If after so many hundreds of years the mass of the Russian people are so
-steeped in ignorance and superstition that they are unfit to exercise the
-common rights of manhood, _that fact_, if it be fact, _damns the Russian
-aristocracy with the deep guilt of having debased the nation committed to
-its care and guidance_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-No substantial reform has ever been conceded within a state governed by
-king or aristocracy until the blood of sacrifice has first been shed.
-
-Spain would grant no concessions to those who claimed freedom of
-conscience in the Netherlands, until years of warfare had drenched the
-soil of Holland with the blood of heroes, who fought and died for those
-principles which we carelessly and unappreciatively enjoy today.
-
-France would loosen none of the chains which galled the peasant, until
-that peasant rose in his desperation and paid with his life for the
-liberty his descendants inherit. The king was deaf to all prayers.
-
-The aristocracy drove from power with insults and persecution every
-enlightened minister who proposed to better the condition of the common
-people by conceding moderate reforms. It was only when the desperation of
-despair roused the people to a furious attack upon time-honored abuses
-and vested wrongs of every conceivable kind, that “_privilege_” would
-harken to reason, and Right could find a place on the statute-book.
-
-In England the story has been the same. In the long procession of the
-ages in which the common people have wrung, one by one, from the grip
-of aristocracy those liberties upon which we now pride ourselves, the
-price of blood has been always demanded, and invariably paid. Never has
-king or aristocrat conceded a single demand of the reformers until those
-reformers had either won it in battle or had made such a demonstration as
-_struck fear into the hearts of the ruling class_.
-
-In Russia precisely the same state of affairs exists, and if ever liberal
-institutions are to take the place of grand ducal tyranny and class-rule
-in that empire the soil will once more drink the blood of sacrifice. It
-was so in the beginning, is now, and ever will be, perhaps, for human
-nature is the same “yesterday, today and forever.”
-
-The man who believes that the autocratic class in Russia will give up its
-advantages without a fight is a superficial student of history, just as
-the man who believes that the dominating trusts and corporations in these
-United States can be made, by moral suasion, to turn loose, is an idle
-dreamer who knows nothing of the greed of class-rule. No matter under
-what name it exploits the people, or under what form it exerts its power,
-or under what particular system of legislation it usurps control and
-veils its rascalities, to make it _turn loose_ you must beat it in battle
-OR MAKE IT AFRAID.
-
-
- “_Give Them Free Passes and They Will Become as Servants_”
-
-The manner in which the railway pass can make honest men steal was never
-illustrated more clearly than when the Southern Railroad of J. P. Morgan,
-a few days ago, filched $142,000 from the taxpayers of this country.
-
-It was a shameless, impudent, vulgarly common steal—nothing else. The
-Congressmen who stole this money for the Wall Street King, J. P. Morgan,
-were led by the well-known statesman of Alabama, John H. Bedstead.
-
-Many and many a year ago a stupid Post-Office Department adopted the
-policy of paying subsidies to certain railroads for the carriage of mails
-which they had already contracted to carry.
-
-It is doubtful whether a single dollar of this money was well spent. To
-secure the ridiculously high prices which the government pays for the
-carriage of the mail, the railroads could always have been induced to
-contract for as speedy a delivery as was possible.
-
-Subsidies could not make them do more. Even a stupid P. O. Department
-woke up to this fact, at last, and quit paying the subsidies.
-
-Mails were carried just as fast after that as before.
-
-The rate of payment is so high—the plum so very luscious—that the
-corporation could not refuse the contracts, _especially when they could
-borrow a rascally congressman’s frank, stuff the bags with bogus mail,
-and thus secure a false average of weight upon which they were paid for
-the whole year_.
-
-(Congressman Livingston of Georgia can tell you how this is done.)
-
-But the Southern Railroad clung to the subsidy.
-
-_It needed the money_, as Meredith of Virginia once plaintively stated in
-the House.
-
-The P. O. Department no longer asked it or advised it—but certain
-congressmen from the South who are ravenously fond of free passes stood
-by the hungry corporation, and at every session of Congress this subsidy
-is voted.
-
-The false pretense, used as an excuse, is that it secures _fast mail for
-the South_.
-
-There is no truth in the statement. Under an ordinary contract for mail
-carriage, the government can secure precisely the same service as the
-railroad gives in return for the subsidy. In other words, the $142,000
-is _a gift to the Wall Street Monarch, J. P. Morgan_.
-
-Hon. James H. Blount of Georgia was for many years Chairman of the
-Committee on Post-Offices and Post Roads.
-
-He understood every detail of that service. He bitterly opposed this
-subsidy. I myself heard him denounce it in the most wrathful manner;
-and he declared on the floor of the House that the people got nothing
-whatever for it.
-
-It was a donation—nothing more.
-
-Blount’s place in Congress is now partially filled by a different kind of
-man—and the indignant protest of the South against the contemplated steal
-was not voiced by him or by any other member from Georgia.
-
-That honor was won by Tennessee.
-
-When Hon. John A. Moon and John Wesley Gaines denounced this subsidy as
-it deserved, they earned the applause and the grateful remembrance of
-every honest man in the South.
-
-The Hon. R. B. Macon of Arkansas also deserves the highest credit for his
-opposition to the theft.
-
-Of course, “Slippery Jim” Richardson of Tennessee rushed to the relief of
-the corporation, _as “Slippery Jim” always does_, and the robbers, led by
-the Bedstead statesman of Alabama, prevailed.
-
-The Congressman from Georgia, or Alabama or any other Southern state who
-helps Samuel Spencer and J. P. Morgan steal the taxes of the people upon
-the plea that it is done for the benefit of the South, merits the scorn
-and contempt of every decent Southern man.
-
-But those who excuse their votes upon that pretense are hypocrites, or
-dupes.
-
-They know, or should know, that the subsidy gives no benefit to the South
-which she would not be entitled to under an ordinary mail contract.
-
-The Congressmen who stole this money from the treasury for Morgan’s
-Railroad were seduced _by the indirect bribery of railway favors_—JUST
-THAT, and NOTHING ELSE.
-
-
- _Two Outlaws_
-
-Once upon a time there was a great lawyer, orator, financier and
-statesman who was honest. He bore himself among men with the port of a
-king, and even strangers, when they passed him on the streets, would stop
-and look back at that majestic figure with involuntary admiration. To
-see him was to get a new idea of the natural impressiveness of a great
-man. To hear him talk was to learn more than you had ever dreamed of the
-infinite variety of creative intellect.
-
-I knew him well. And I looked up to him as I have since looked up to the
-higher summits of the Rocky Mountains—with wondering awe for height which
-I might never hope to reach.
-
-Royal as this man was in all his ways, his heart was warm and true. Pure
-as the woman he called wife in his loyalty to the marriage tie, his
-morality recognized the double-life nowhere, and he scorned all that was
-mean and false and cruel and oppressive.
-
-Always and everywhere he was for the under-dog.
-
-A more stalwart soldier of Right never stood up in defense of the weak.
-
-In a murder case he was able to command a fee of ten thousand dollars;
-but he was proudest of that triumph he won in the court-house when he
-volunteered to defend a penniless negro, and saved the life of the
-accused by tearing open his shirt and showing the scars which the black
-man had received on a battlefield in Virginia while defending the life of
-his young master.
-
-Having incurred the displeasure of the Federal authorities prior to
-the Civil War and by certain conduct of his during that war, the best
-Government the world ever saw told him to “git up and git”—and he did it.
-In his native land he was outlawed.
-
-He went to Europe for his health.
-
-While waiting for the wrath of Thaddeus Stevens to cool, he studied
-conditions abroad—particularly the railroad systems and the public
-schools.
-
-Upon his return home he created a demand for a new Constitution for his
-State, and in the convention which framed it he was the undisputed leader.
-
-The legislative appropriations for the convention were spent before
-the Constitution was finished, and the patriots were about to disband.
-Average patriotism moves on its belly, as an army does.
-
-The Georgia outlaw of whom I have been writing borrowed $25,000 from his
-Cotton Factors, and financed the convention until the Constitution was
-finished.
-
-On two occasions only was this Outlaw ever seen to weep in public—once
-when the Constitutional Convention of Georgia thanked him for his
-princely generosity, and once when he stood at the coffin of Alexander H.
-Stephens to deliver the memorial address.
-
-In the new Constitution of Georgia the Outlaw believed he had embodied
-three grand provisions:
-
-(1) He had made the looting of the treasury a difficult job.
-
-(2) He had established a system of public schools to educate at public
-expense the children of the poor as well as the rich.
-
-(3) He had put a curb on corporation tyranny; made it illegal for
-competitive lines of railways to combine, and had created a commission to
-regulate and control the transportation companies.
-
-This was the Georgia Outlaw’s proudest work. He exulted over it; he
-regarded it as his monument: he relied on it to benefit his people for
-generations to come.
-
-In this belief he lived out the remnant of his days, and in this belief
-he died.
-
-Where are now the competing railroads in Georgia?
-
-We have none. Mergers, leases, allied interests have swallowed them all.
-Monopoly rules from border to border. Constitutional provisions are dead
-letters.
-
-The corporations who nullify our law and plunder our people keep paid
-corruptionists busy all the year round to defeat investigation and
-reform.
-
-When the legislature meets, these professional corruptionists all flock
-to the Capitol. They remain throughout the session.
-
-If any member seeks to vindicate the outraged Constitution, these
-lobbyists employ every weapon known to the armory of corruptionists to
-kill the measure.
-
-The campaign fund with which the present Governor beat his competitor was
-furnished by the railroads.
-
-The notorious Hamp McWorter, State lobbyist for the Southern Railroad,
-was tendered a place on the Supreme Bench by this Governor, who owed his
-election to railroad money.
-
-The Railroad Commission has been reduced to a state bordering on
-imbecility. If they pass orders which the corporations dislike the orders
-are ignored. They no more control the railroads than the saddle on a
-horse controls the horse.
-
-Three excellent gentlemen draw comfortable salaries for acting as
-commissioners; the railroad lawyers have something to play with; the
-corporations are sometimes annoyed by having to evade direct answers to
-troublesome questions, and by having to get a Federal Judge to discipline
-the Commission; but that is about all.
-
-_J. P. Morgan is the absolute king of the railroads of Georgia._
-
-He makes the Governor, controls the Legislature, overrides the Commission
-and tramples the Constitution of the State under his feet.
-
-The Georgia Outlaw made the Constitution for the good of the people; the
-Wall Street Outlaw violates it for the good of Wall Street plutocrats.
-
-In making the Constitution, the Georgia Outlaw had the help of the best
-people of the State, and his work was sanctioned by a popular vote after
-it was finished.
-
-In violating the Constitution, J. P. Morgan has the aid of the worst men
-in Georgia, and they dare not submit their work to a free vote of the
-people.
-
-The party machinery of the Democratic party is prostituted to the vile
-uses of the corporation lobbyists, and the negro vote is held in reserve
-to be used as a club to beat down any organized opposition.
-
-The Georgia Outlaw who made our Constitution was a Democrat; the Wall
-Street Outlaw who violates it is a Republican.
-
-Georgia is a Democratic state. The Democratic party is in full control of
-every branch of the Government.
-
-Thus we have an amazing spectacle. A Republican Wall Street outlaw uses
-the machinery of the Democratic party in Georgia to trample upon the
-Constitution and plunder the people.
-
-What is the secret of this astonishing situation?
-
-Bribery—direct and indirect BRIBERY.
-
-Daily and weekly newspapers subsidized; rebates given to certain
-shippers; favors granted where they will do the most good; campaign
-funds supplied to needy candidates; free passes dealt out by the bushel;
-princely salaries paid to plausible lobbyists.
-
-Bribery, _bribery_, BRIBERY!
-
-In no other way can you account for such a shocking state of affairs.
-
-When Democrats hold down a Democratic State while a Wall Street
-Republican robs it, there is just one explanation—only one—BRIBERY.
-
-
- _Building on Sand, Again_
-
-With a strenuous rush and clang and clatter, President Roosevelt has set
-out to solve the Railroad Problem.
-
-All honor to him for the motive. To his everlasting credit be it
-remembered that he recognized the abuses of the present system and
-shouldered the task of reform.
-
-But Mr. Roosevelt’s remedy will never reach the seat of the disease.
-
-In a case of blood poison, shin-plasters for surface abrasions never yet
-saved the patient; and Mr. Roosevelt’s plans for another tribunal _to
-control the railroads_ are mere shin-plasters.
-
-The trouble is that _the corporations will control the new tribunals_,
-just as they have controlled the old ones.
-
-The tremendous pressure which combined capital can bring to bear upon any
-tribunal which Congress creates will be irresistible in the future, as
-it has been in the past. Poor human nature is simply unable to withstand
-temptations which assume so many seductive forms, and intimidations which
-assail natural weakness in such a variety of ways. So vast is the power
-of the corporations to reward or punish, enrich or impoverish, that
-individuals sink into nothingness by comparison. No man is beyond their
-reach. If they cannot act upon the official himself, they can strike him
-through his family, or relatives, or friends, or business connections.
-
-Somewhere, within the little world in which he lives, they will find
-someone who will yield to their temptations or surrender to their power
-to hurt.
-
-Railroads have been known to do great things for the son of a Judge who
-was about to try an important case.
-
-Governors, Senators, Judges, Railroad Commissioners sometimes have
-relatives who are more or less willing to get hold of a good thing.
-
-The wives of the same sometimes have approachable kinsmen who, for a
-consideration, are willing to speak superciliously of the “demagogues”
-who assail corporations.
-
-Then, again, the newspapers—those busy bees!—can be so trained by
-corporation cunning that they will give us their sting instead of their
-honey.
-
-If Sir Statesman votes with a serene disregard for Sir Demagogue, giving
-the railroads what they want, Editorial prowess will take care of him.
-His praises will resound, until his sublime head bumps against the stars.
-But should he be his own master, obeying no orders save those of his
-conscience, the corporation organs can so belittle him, slander him, and
-manufacture lies about him, that he almost grows ashamed of having been
-honest.
-
-In short, the corporation can make “a good time” for those who serve it,
-and “a bad time” for those who defy it.
-
-_Do not all men know this?_
-
-The more necessary any official is to combined capital, the more they
-will do for him, or against him.
-
-Create any tribunal which becomes an absolute necessity to the
-corporations—a matter of life and death to them—and they will either
-tempt it with bribes which no virtue can resist, or assail it with
-intimidations which no courage can defy.
-
-Mr. President, have you studied the history of “The Granger Cases” of
-thirty years ago? If not, study it. Then you will know better how the
-corporations control human tribunals and get rid of laws which are
-obstacles.
-
-Have you studied the recent decisions of the Federal Judges on the
-question of fixing “reasonable rates”? If not, study them.
-
-You will then know better what a monkey a railroad lawyer can make of a
-Federal Judge.
-
-To create another tribunal for the purpose of controlling the railroads,
-is simply the building of another house upon sand.
-
-The only solution of the Railroad Problem is national ownership, _which
-takes away the motive to do wrong_.
-
-In no other way can you cure the disease.
-
-Instead of establishing another Court, or Commission, for the
-corporations to play with, assert the principle of Eminent Domain, assess
-the railroads at a fair valuation, pay for them partly in treasury
-notes and partly in twenty-year two per cent. bonds, place the general
-management of the property under the Interior Department—and _then_ the
-railroads will no more think of free passes, rebates and discriminations
-than the Post-Office service does of free stamps, or privileged patrons
-who must be enriched at the expense of the other patrons.
-
-
- _Look at England_
-
-_Collier’s Weekly_ thinks that the United States should pay higher
-salaries. Ambassadors do not get enough. Neither do cabinet officers. The
-President also is underpaid. How lamentable!
-
-“Look at England,” says _Collier’s_, in effect.
-
-England pays $100,000 to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, $35,000 to the
-Speaker of the House of Commons, and so forth and so on.
-
-Well, let us accept the invitation, and _look at England_.
-
-_Who pays the taxes in England?_ We know who pays them here. With us the
-poor man pays the tax.
-
-When he covers his nakedness, when he satisfies his hunger, when
-he builds his house, when he buys tools to work with, he pays an
-outrageously oppressive Tariff tax.
-
-Rockefeller pays no more Federal tax than is paid by many a one-horse
-negro farmer in the South.
-
-Morgan pays less Federal tax than many a Western corn-grower who fed his
-stove on ear corn in 1891, because it was cheaper than coal.
-
-Blessed are our millionaires! Those of them who are neglected by Congress
-are tenderly cared for by the Federal judiciary.
-
-Blessed are the rich!—they run the government, and the common man pays
-the bill.
-
-LOOK AT ENGLAND!
-
-All right, we now look. This is what we see:
-
-_She compels her railway corporations to pay an Income Tax_ upon the
-assessed valuation of $190,000,000.
-
-_She compels the Coal Barons and the marble quarry owners to pay Income
-Tax_ upon an assessed valuation of $95,000,000.
-
-_She compels the landlords, bankers and merchant princes to pay Income
-Tax_ upon an assessed valuation of $900,000,000.
-
-In this manner _she forces her wealthy classes_ to pay on property and
-income nearly _two hundred million dollars annually_ toward the support
-of the government!
-
-_Her tariff duties are levied exclusively upon articles which are NOT
-necessaries of life._
-
-Not a dollar of Tariff need the poor man pay to live in perfect comfort.
-
-This tariff upon the non-necessaries amounts to $170,000,000.
-
-From intoxicating liquors the revenue is $150,000,000.
-
-Thus it will be seen, by a look at England, that _the poor man can feed
-himself, clothe himself, build a house to live in, and supply it with
-necessary furniture without having to pay one dollar of national tax_.
-
-In this land of the free _he must pay the Tariff tax, or go naked, eat
-grass, and live in a hole in the ground_.
-
-But let us “look at England” again.
-
-We see her operating her Post-Office, carrying parcels as well as
-letters. She does not allow express companies to amass fortunes by
-robbing the people in the carrying of light freight.
-
-Thus she makes $70,000,000 instead of letting the corporations make five
-times that amount.
-
-She owns and operates the telegraph lines, and makes $18,000,000 per year
-instead of letting the corporations make it.
-
-What, therefore, is the net result of the “Look at England”?
-
-We discover that _the government supports itself upon the possessions of
-the people rather than upon their necessities_.
-
-Give us the same system of taxation—compel _those who possess the wealth
-to pay the_ expenses of government—and I, for one, will say, “_Make the
-salaries what you will so long as you, who make them, have to pay them_.”
-
-
- _Editorial Comments_
-
-NOTORIOUSLY, you cannot convict a cow-thief when eleven of the jury got
-part of the beef. Judge Swayne owes his escape to similar conditions. He
-was acquitted by the United States Senate not because he was innocent,
-but because he was regular. He had not done anything which the
-Senatorial Jury does not constantly do.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A railroad fell into the Federal Court of which Swayne happened to be
-the presiding judge. Swayne possesses and controls this railroad through
-the medium of a receiver. In law and in morals Swayne is the trustee
-of the property, administering it for the benefit of the owners—the
-stockholders. Had he put his fingers into the cash-drawer at the ticket
-office and stolen five dollars, his crime would have been clear,
-indefensible. Proof of such an act would have compelled a unanimous
-verdict of guilty—even in the United States Senate—for Senators do not do
-it that way.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But Swayne knows how the game is played, and he played according to rule.
-
-That is to say, he made use of the trust funds which were in his
-possession and control, to fit himself up a palace car and stock it
-with the best eatables and drinkables. He then took on, as a retinue
-of servants, the employees who were paid to work for the stockholders,
-and appropriated car, provisions, employees and all to his own private
-purposes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-With this luxurious car, upon which he had spent the trust funds
-committed to his care, he took himself and family on long pleasure trips
-to his native place in Delaware. In this rolling palace he and his family
-enjoyed a tour of the West.
-
-The sum total of the trust funds which he thus converted to his own use
-could not have been less than thousands of dollars, for the car and its
-equipment would have been worth hundreds of dollars per day had it been
-used by its owners, the stockholders.
-
- * * * * *
-
-These facts were not denied.
-
-In law and morals, Judge Swayne misappropriated trust funds.
-
-He did not go to the cash-drawer at the ticket office and steal
-five dollars, but he took charge of the car, the supplies and the
-employees whose services would have put thousands of dollars into the
-cash-drawers, and thus converted to his own private use the property
-which was in his Court for management and final disposition.
-
-Here was a plain case of dishonest use of power and opportunity.
-
-Here was a plain case of robbery—the Federal Judge taking that which
-belonged to the stockholders and which should have earned them thousands
-of dollars.
-
-In morals and sound law, the crime is the same as it would have been had
-he embezzled the same sum in dollars and cents.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Washington _Post_ argues that the President should have a salary of
-$100,000.
-
-All right. Let us levy a tax or two on the rich, and raise the salaries
-which the organs of the rich say are too small.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If the President is discontented with his pay, why doesn’t he throw up
-his job?
-
-I know several fellows who will take it at the present price.
-
-There is W. J. B., for instance.
-
-I haven’t the faintest doubt that he would be willing to quit editing
-_The Commoner_ and assume Presidential burdens at $50,000 per year. It
-would be easier work, don’t you know, than making twenty-two speeches a
-day for a candidate like Parker, a platform like that of St. Louis 1904,
-and a National Chairman like Tom Taggart—the gambling-hell man of Indiana.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Governor Folk, of Missouri, was elected to stop boodling, banish bribery
-and otherwise purify the political atmosphere.
-
-A bill was promptly introduced into the Legislature to make it possible
-to convict and punish bribery.
-
-The Senate promptly killed the bill.
-
-Folk is still Governor, however.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Populists throughout the country regard with demure interest the modest
-strides which Kansas is taking in State-Socialism.
-
-That Republican State is to own and operate oil refineries to the end
-that Rockefeller’s Trust may not swallow the earth.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Besides the Kansas State refinery, the Republican legislature favors
-other things which are _almost_ new under the sun.
-
-No trust, corporation or private partnership shall be allowed to sell
-cheaper in one place than in another in Kansas—freight being deducted.
-
-All over that State the price must be the same.
-
-Maximum freight rates have been established, oil pipe lines have been
-made common carriers, and the pumping of Kansas gas out of Kansas
-forbidden.
-
-Is it possible that we Populists are to find ourselves reduced to a state
-of mere “eminent respectability” by such thoroughgoing revolutionists as
-the Republicans of Kansas?
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Washington _Post_ says:
-
-“After Kansas gets her oil refinery in operation she may find that Mr.
-Rockefeller will not allow his railroads to carry its product.”
-
-When Rockefeller refuses to haul Kansas oil because Kansas operates a
-refinery he will probably discover that Kansas can do a thing or two
-against his railroads.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When Theodore Roosevelt was a very, very young man, he wrote a “Life of
-Gouverneur Morris” in which the youthful author sweepingly classified Tom
-Paine as “a filthy little atheist.”
-
-Now that Teddy has grown great upon the meat which Cæsar fed on, the
-University of Pennsylvania has conferred an Honorary Degree upon him.
-
-This is the same institution which conferred an Honorary Degree upon Tom
-Paine.
-
-So there you are.
-
-To the extent that the University of Pennsylvania can equalize the
-eminence of Teddy and Tom, equality has been established.
-
-So far as the University of Pennsylvania can link the two names together,
-they are linked.
-
-Whether he likes it or not, Teddy must promenade down the corridors of
-time and fame arm in arm with the “filthy little atheist.”
-
-Here is a case where that one of the Grecian philosophers who laughed at
-everything would weep: and where that one who wept at everything would
-laugh.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Tom Paine being dead cannot resent the honors paid Roosevelt by any act
-of renunciation aimed at the University of Pennsylvania; but Teddy lives
-and can defend his virtue from contaminating contact.
-
-Will he tamely submit to wear the Academic honor tainted by the touch
-of Tom Paine, or will he spurn it with that disdain which condensed the
-career of a much-enduring, much-achieving patriot and democrat in the
-cruelly scornful words, “a dirty little atheist”?
-
- * * * * *
-
-Whenever, in the hour of gloom and doubt, we call upon the presidents of
-our world-famous colleges for guidance we get it. Which is one of the
-reasons why we are still in the dark.
-
-A couple of years since, the chief sage of one of these world-famous
-institutions told us that Social Ostracism was the medicine for the Trust
-evil which would prove a cure-all.
-
-The chief sage neglected to inform us how and when we should or could
-dose the wicked corporations with this medicine: hence we have not as yet
-socially ostracized J. P. Morgan, Ogden Armour or John D. Rockefeller.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Woodrow Wilson, chief sage of Princeton University, is the latest of the
-academic guides who offers to pilot us out of the gloom.
-
-“Trusts,” remarks Woodrow (who, just between you and me, is something of
-a prig), “Trusts can never be abolished.”
-
-“_We must moralize them._”
-
-“The thing that keeps water in stocks is secrecy.”
-
-“_Publicity is the remedy._”
-
-When we hear the chief sage of Princeton droning and driveling this sort
-of nonsense we wonder whether his mind is fixed upon the actual men,
-methods and standards of today, or whether he gropes in some Arcadia of
-the past.
-
-“_Moralize the Trusts?_”
-
-How will you do it, impractical prig?
-
-Mr. Rockefeller is moral, isn’t he? Goes to church every Sunday, endows
-Baptist colleges, sends young John to teach Sabbath school and attend
-English revivals, prates of morality and the Bible to equal any Pecksniff
-that ever stole the livery of the Lord to shear the sheep in.
-
-Yet where was there ever a more ruthless criminal on the face of the
-earth than Rockefeller’s Oil Trust?
-
-“The thing that keeps water in stocks is secrecy.”
-
-No, it isn’t, impractical prig.
-
-It’s water that keeps the water in the stocks.
-
-Secrecy has nothing to do with it.
-
-_The public always knows when the watering is done!_
-
-It was so with the Steel Combine; it has been so with every railroad
-reorganization which Morgan has managed; it was so with Amalgamated
-Copper.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“_Publicity is the remedy!_” says Woodrow, the Sage.
-
-How can that be?
-
-Does the knowledge that we are being robbed stop the robbery?
-
-There is no secrecy about the Beef Trust. Publicity there has run riot.
-
-We know all about the Refrigerator car, the rebate, the discriminations,
-the Big Stick methods, the colossal, un-Godly profits.
-
-We know how the cattle owner is robbed when the Trust buys, and how the
-consumer of dressed meat is robbed when he buys.
-
-What good does the Publicity do us?
-
-None at all.
-
-It makes us rage and rant, but the Trust gets our money just the same.
-
-Have not Lawson and Russell and Ida Tarbell and Lincoln Steffens and
-a dozen others put the flashlight upon all these monstrous piratical
-combinations until the very children are familiar with the details?
-
-_Publicity?_
-
-Why, if there is anything that we have got a lavish supply of, just now,
-_it is Publicity_.
-
-What we haven’t got is RELIEF.
-
-If _Publicity_ were a cure for the disease, we’d have been well long ago.
-
-As it is, the evil grows worse, day by day, in spite of all the
-_Publicity_.
-
-Go back to thy gerund-grinding, Woodrow—thou insufferable, impractical
-prig. Among the dead Greeks and the extinct Romans thy labors may, haply,
-be useful; but when thou comest among the practical men of today seeking
-to master actual conditions and to take part in the great battle of
-thought, motive and purpose which rages around us, thou art but “a babby,
-and a gal babby at that.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mr. Bryan says, in his _Commoner_, that “the movement begun in 1896
-would have succeeded in 1900 had it not been for the Spanish War and the
-increase of the gold supply.”
-
-What a superficial view!
-
-First of all, the “movement” did not begin in 1896.
-
-It began when the West and South were brought together by the Farmers’
-Alliance in 1890. It was in full swing when it gave General Weaver
-1,200,000 votes in 1892. It was running like a millrace when it polled
-1,800,000 in the local elections of 1894. It would have scored a triumph
-in 1896 had the Democratic leaders acted honestly with the Populists.
-
-After 1896 the “movement” lost strength every day.
-
-In 1900 it was doomed to defeat before the campaign opened.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Yes; the reform “movement” was in full swing in 1890, and one of the good
-things it did was to float into Congress a promising young lawyer named
-Bryan.
-
-To the Populist movement W. J. B. owes his rise, for there were then no
-Democrats to speak of in Nebraska.
-
-Populist votes carried his home State for him in 1896, when he ran for
-President against McKinley.
-
-In 1900 Nebraska went Republican, although the same Bryan was running
-against the same McKinley.
-
- * * * * *
-
-They are hunting, in Paris, for the bones of John Paul Jones, the first
-and greatest sea captain who ever flew the Stars and Stripes from the
-masthead of a battleship, and “held the ocean lists against the world in
-mail.”
-
-Congress gives $35,000 to find the bones, and of course they will be
-found—not those of the original Jones, perhaps, but a good enough lot of
-bones for that amount of money.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Had Gouverneur Morris, the American Minister to France, done his duty at
-the time of Paul Jones’s death, by giving him a respectable funeral and
-a modest tombstone, the people of this country would not now be taxed
-$35,000 to find the hero’s grave.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When John Paul Jones—old, broken and poor—lay dying in Paris, our
-high-toned Minister to France, Gouverneur Morris, sat feasting with
-aristocratic company, and that high-toned Minister failed to mark the
-grave of a man who with Nelson’s chances might have done even more than
-Nelson on the sea.
-
-His grave was made in an obscure churchyard, his resting-place neglected
-and forgotten, covered with accumulated deposits, and built over with
-houses.
-
-Those who seek the bones are sinking holes seventeen feet deep, in the
-search.
-
-Of course, they will find the body of Commodore Jones. That is what they
-are hunting for. Therefore, they will find it.
-
-But whether the dust they bring back to America will be that of _our_
-Paul Jones no mortal will ever know.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In his Diary, Gouverneur Morris relates:
-
-“A message from Paul Jones that he is dying.
-
-“I go thither and make his will.... Send for a Notary, _and leave him
-struggling with his enemy_.”
-
-The American Minister to France left Paul Jones struggling with death!
-
-Left him alone with a French Notary, and went away.
-
-To do what?
-
-To “dine with Lord Gower and Lady Sutherland”!
-
-The American Minister knew that Paul Jones was dying, for he says so.
-
-After the dinner with the English Lord and Lady, does the American
-Minister hasten back to the bedside of the fellow-countryman whom he had
-left “struggling with his enemy”?
-
-By no means.
-
-He goes to the Louvre to look at the paintings; and then takes
-Talleyrand’s mistress with him to Jones’s lodging.
-
-“But he is dead—_not yet cold_.”
-
-And this is all that Gouverneur Morris’s Diary records of Paul Jones’s
-death, until the indignation aroused in America by his shocking lack of
-attention to the dying hero had thrown him upon the defensive.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Who paid the burial expenses of Paul Jones?
-
-A Frenchman claims that he did it.
-
-Morris, in his Diary, certainly seeks to make the impression that he paid
-them out of Jones’s estate.
-
-The hero left sufficient property for the purpose, as can easily be
-shown. Further than that we are left in doubt.
-
-But Morris was requested to authorize a public funeral, in which fitting
-honors should be paid to the dead. Morris refused. He states that he
-(Morris) desired “a private and economical funeral.”
-
-He got it. The funeral was so economical and so private that neither the
-tongue of repute, identifying the grave from generation to generation,
-nor the more unerring evidence of shaft or vault guides the footsteps of
-those who come so late, so late! to repair the neglect of a hundred years.
-
-
- _How Private Ownership Breaks Down_
-
-In the great city of New York there is a Subway, an underground street,
-which was opened at the expense of the taxpayers. Every dollar of the
-enormous expenditure came out of the pockets of the citizens of New York.
-After this Subway had been completed and paid for by the people, it was
-turned over to a private corporation to be used for private profit. It
-is unnecessary to say that such a stupendous piece of folly could never
-have been committed by wise men or honest men. On the face of it, the
-transaction reeks with rascality.
-
-Let us, however, contemplate actual results. The men to whom the property
-was given operate the Subway to make all the money that is possible
-out of the franchise. In doing so they have come into collision with
-their employees. The disagreement results in a strike. The experienced
-operators of the cars leave them. Inexperienced men take hold. The
-necessary consequence is danger to life and limb, which only the careless
-or reckless would incur.
-
-The thousands of people in New York, to whom the Subway is a daily
-necessity, are incommoded and injured. The entire city suffers because of
-the dispute between the corporation and its employees.
-
-I will not enter into the question as to who is to blame for the strike.
-It is sufficient to say that under private ownership of this public
-thoroughfare the strike does occur and all of its evil consequences
-naturally follow. No matter whether Belmont is right or wrong; no matter
-whether his employees are right or wrong, the effect upon the public is
-precisely the same. The public gets hurt. The public suffers and the
-public is helpless. Such a situation is surely sufficient to arouse
-thought and investigation.
-
-Ever since we have allowed private corporations to take charge of public
-utilities we have had the strike, the riot, the loss of money, the loss
-of life. As long as private ownership continues to exploit these things
-which belong to the public, we will continue to have the strike, the
-riot, loss of money and the loss of life.
-
-I say nothing about the amount of which the traveling public is robbed
-by these corporations which own the public utilities. I confine myself
-simply and solely to this thought, namely, that under private ownership
-the situation, which now confronts the traveling public of New York City,
-is liable to happen at any time and at any place throughout the Union
-where public franchises are used for selfish and private gain.
-
-That is the fruit of the tree. It always has been; it always will be.
-That kind of tree will _never_ bear any other sort of fruit.
-
-Then why not cut it down?
-
-Public ownership removes the _motive_ for misuse of public utilities, and
-when the motive goes the evil will go. As long as selfishness and greed
-get _the chance_ to gratify themselves at the public expense, just so
-long will they do it.
-
-In every conflict between Capital and Labor the public loses—no matter
-whether Capital wins or Labor wins.
-
-Public ownership would do for the railroads what it does for the
-Post-Office, the Police Department or the Fire Department. Who ever heard
-of a strike among the Post-Office employees? Or in the police force? Or
-among the firemen?
-
-In Germany the railroads are owned and operated by the Government, and
-nobody ever heard of traffic being blocked by a strike. In Austria the
-story is the same. In Australia it is the same. In New Zealand it is the
-same. Nowhere on earth, so far as I know, has there ever been a strike
-when the principle of government ownership was in operation. Take those
-cities of England where the street cars are owned and operated by the
-city government. Who has ever heard of a strike on those lines? From
-Liverpool to Birmingham and from Birmingham to Glasgow you will find the
-principle of public ownership applied with perfect success, and nowhere
-has the operation of public utilities by the public been stopped by a
-strike.
-
-It seems almost impossible for the people of our great cities to learn
-the lesson taught by our own troubles, and taught further by the
-object-lessons furnished us by nationalities which are not such cowardly
-slaves of the corporations as we seem to be. The most amazing feature in
-American life today is the audacity with which predatory corporations
-ride forth, like the feudal barons of olden times, to strike down the
-average citizen and rob him of what he makes as fast as he makes it.
-Individually, we have plenty of courage, but, collectively, we are the
-most cowardly creatures on earth. The communal spirit seems to be dead
-within us. Public opinion is in its infancy. The strength which lies
-dormant within us because of our numbers seems to be a fact of which the
-masses are totally ignorant.
-
-Acting swiftly, acting with unity of purpose, acting with the keenest
-intelligence, acting with a magnificent courage, the outlaws of modern
-commercialism dash at their object with superb confidence in their
-prowess, and they have seized and ridden away with the spoils before the
-drowsy, ignorant and timid public have awakened to the fact that they
-have been raided, stricken down and plundered.
-
-If the city government of New York had at its head a man “with a beard
-on his chin,” he could find a way to solve this Subway problem and
-all kindred problems within a few weeks, and in such a manner that it
-would never be presented again. He would have to be intelligent, he
-would have to be honest, he would have to be brave, but if he had these
-qualities and were, besides, a patriot wishing to do what is best for
-the entire community, he could win a victory which would repeat itself
-in all the centres of our population, and which would terminate the
-reign of rascality which now exploits, for personal ends, the powers and
-the opportunities of public office in almost every great city of this
-Republic.
-
- * * * * *
-
-You ask me _how_ could the Mayor do anything, when the Subway is legally
-in the hands of a Commission created by the Legislature?
-
-I answer that the city has the right to use its streets. One of its
-sovereign powers, inherent and absolute, is that of keeping its streets
-open for the safe and free use of every citizen. Nobody has the right to
-block travel or traffic, nor can the Legislature grant such a privilege.
-
-As to the Subway, it is a street under the ground. True, the _methods_
-which he would have to employ differ from those which he would apply to
-a surface street, but the _principle_ would be precisely the same in the
-one case as in the other.
-
-He could say to Belmont and his employees: “You are blocking the streets.
-You are interfering with the rights of the people who paid for the
-Subway and who want to use it. You and your disputes are as nothing to
-me in comparison with the duty which I owe to the city. _Arbitrate your
-difference_, or I will exert the full sovereign power of the municipality
-to seize the Subway and to open it to travel.
-
-“And you needn’t run to any judge for an injunction, either. In the
-exercise of supreme executive authority policing the city and keeping
-open its streets, I shall tolerate no interference whatever from
-corporation lawyers or corporation judges. I give you fair warning:
-_Arbitrate_, and do it quickly—else the city takes what is hers, and
-operates the cars which you have tied up!”
-
-Who doubts that a threat like this, made by the right kind of Mayor,
-would bring Belmont to his senses in a couple of minutes? Arbitrate! Of
-course he would arbitrate—quickly and gladly.
-
-And the Mayor would have the enthusiastic support of ninety-nine men out
-of every hundred in New York.
-
-
-
-
- _The Patriot_
-
-
- His eyes ashine with ancient memories,
- His blood aglow with subtle racial fire,
- For him are quenched the stirrings of desire.
- The pageant of the world has ceased to please;
- Hushed are the evening songs—the lutes of ease;
- In the war flame, that old ancestral pyre,
- He casts his hopes of home, wife, child or sire;
- Instinct of race, a passion more than these,
- The spirit of his country, holds him thrall;
- In him forgotten heroes, forbears, rise,
- Strengthening his heart to common sacrifice;
- Out of the darkness generations call
- And martyr hosts, that unrecorded fall,
- Salute him from the void with joyful cries.
-
- LONDON DAILY NEWS.
-
-
-
-
- _The Atonement of Hustler Joe_
-
- (COMPLETE NOVELETTE)
-
- BY ELEANOR H. PORTER
-
-
- PROLOGUE
-
-A toy horse or a raspberry-tart is not often responsible for the loss of
-a life, but a succession of toy horses, raspberry-tarts, and whatever
-else the heart of a small boy craved, given in a reckless abandonment
-of superfluity, was certainly responsible for the wilfulness in the
-character of Paul Weston; and the wilfulness, in turn, was responsible
-for the quarrel.
-
-At twenty he was a restless, impulsive, good-hearted, broad-chested,
-strong-limbed young fellow, the adored of his mother and the pride of his
-father. And yet it was over the prostrate form of this same father that
-he now stood—the crack of the revolver still ringing in his ears, the
-weapon itself still clutched in his hand.
-
-Was the man dead? But a minute before he had been speaking; now there was
-a fast-growing pool of something dark and horrible on the floor at his
-side.
-
-Paul Weston brushed the back of his left hand across his eyes and looked
-down at the still smoking revolver. Had his miserable temper brought him
-to this? His features worked convulsively and his eyes widened in horror.
-Throwing the revolver from him to the farthermost corner of the room, he
-turned and fled.
-
-Out the door, through the gate, and down the long street of the little
-New England village he ran. It was dusk, but he stumbled as though it
-were the darkness of midnight.
-
-The neighbors looked and wondered at the fleeing figure, but only their
-eyes spoke disapproval. If Paul Weston chose to use the main street of
-the village as a race-course, it was not for them to interfere—they knew
-him too well. The town fool alone ventured to accost him.
-
-“Hi, there—go it! What’s after ye?” he shouted; but the jeering words and
-the vacant smile died on his lips at sight of the face Paul turned upon
-him.
-
-Down the street, across the open field, and over the fence at a
-bound—surely the friendly shelter of the woods receded as he ran! But his
-pace did not slacken even in the dense shadows of the forest. On and on,
-stumbling, falling, tearing his flesh and his clothing on the thorns and
-brambles until, exhausted, he dropped on a grassy mound, miles away from
-that dread thing he had left behind him.
-
-The wind sighed and whispered over his head. Weston had always loved
-the sound, but tonight it was only an accusing moan in his ears. Even
-the stars that peeped through the leaves above were like menacing eyes
-seeking out his hiding-place.
-
-An owl hooted; Weston raised his head and held his breath. Then through
-the forest came the baying of a distant hound. The man was on his feet in
-an instant. Something tightened in his throat and his heart-beats came in
-slow, suffocating throbs. He knew that sound! They sought for—murderers
-with creatures like that! With a bound he was away on his wild race
-again. Hours later, the gray dawn and his nearness to a small village
-warned him to move more cautiously.
-
-All that day he tramped, without rest, without food, reaching at night
-the seaport town that had been his goal. Skulking through the back
-streets he came to a cheap eating-house down by the wharves.
-
-The odor of greasily fried meats and bad coffee floated out the open
-door, causing Weston to sniff hungrily. In a moment he had thrown caution
-to the winds, entered the restaurant and slunk into the nearest seat.
-
-By his side lay a discarded newspaper. He reached for it with a shaking
-hand, then snatched his fingers back as though the printed sheet had
-scorched them. No, oh, no—he dared not look at it! His mind’s eye
-pictured the headlines, black with horror:
-
- “MURDER! PARRICIDE! THE
- FIEND STILL AT LARGE!”
-
-He pushed back his chair and rushed from the room. An hour later he had
-shipped as a sailor on a vessel bound for San Francisco around Cape Horn.
-
-
- I
-
-The cracker-barrels and packing-boxes that usually served for seats in
-Pedler Jim’s store were, strange to say, unoccupied. Bill Somers, sole
-representative of “the boys,” sat cross-legged on the end of the counter,
-meditatively eying a dozen flies that were buzzing happily around a drop
-of molasses nearby. Pedler Jim himself occupied his customary stool
-behind the counter.
-
-It was ten years now since the little hunchback pedler first appeared in
-Skinner Valley. He came from no one knew where, driving a battered and
-worn horse attached to a yet more battered and worn pedler’s cart. The
-horse had promptly taken advantage of the stop in the village, and by
-dying had made sure of never leaving the place for the wearisome trail
-again. The miners say that the night the old horse died, its master
-patted and stroked the poor dead head until it was cold and stiff, and
-that the morning found him fondling the useless reins with his shriveled,
-misshapen fingers.
-
-The next day he bartered for a tiny piece of land fronting the main
-street. When he had wheeled his old cart into proper position upon it,
-he busied himself some time with a bit of board and a paint pot, finally
-producing a rough sign bearing the single word “Store.” This creation he
-nailed with much satisfaction upon the front of the dashboard, then sat
-down on one of the thills to wait for a customer.
-
-Perhaps it was the oddity of the thing; or perhaps there was something
-in the deformed little body that appealed to the strong-limbed,
-straight-backed miners; or perhaps it was the wonderful knowledge of
-healing herbs and soothing lotions that Pedler Jim possessed—perhaps
-it was a little of all three. At all events, the new store prospered
-amazingly so that in a year its owner bought more land, trundled the
-old cart to the rear, and erected a small cabin on his lot. This, in
-turn, gave place to a good-sized frame building bearing the imposing
-gilt-lettered sign:
-
- JAMES A. POWERS,
- _Skinner Valley Emporium_.
-
-The hunchback rolled this high-sounding title under his tongue with keen
-relish, but it was still “the store” to the boys, and its owner was only
-“Pedler Jim.”
-
-Bill Somers shifted his position on the end of the counter and poked a
-teasing finger at the agitated mass of wings and legs around the molasses
-drop. The storekeeper grinned appreciatively and broke the silence:
-
-“Say, who’s yer new man?”
-
-“Blest if I know.”
-
-“Well, he’s got a name, hain’t he?”
-
-“Mebbe he has—then again, mebbe he hain’t.”
-
-“But don’t ye call him nothin’?”
-
-“Oh, we _call_ him ‘Hustler Joe’; but that ain’t no name to hitch a
-grocery bill on to—eh, Jim?”
-
-The little hunchback slid from his stool and brought his fist down hard
-on the counter.
-
-“That’s jest the point! He don’t git much, but what he does git he pays
-fur—spot cash. An’ that’s more’n I can say of some of the rest of ye,” he
-added, with a reproachful look.
-
-Bill laughed and stretched his long legs.
-
-“I s’pose, now, that’s a dig at me, Jim.”
-
-“I didn’t call no names.”
-
-“I know yer lips didn’t, but yer eyes did. Say, how much do I owe,
-anyhow?”
-
-With manifest alacrity Jim darted over to the pine box that served for a
-desk.
-
-“There ain’t no hurry, Jim,” drawled Somers, with a slow smile. “I
-wouldn’t put ye out fur nothin’!”
-
-The storekeeper did not hear. He was rapidly turning the greasy,
-well-thumbed pages of the account-book before him.
-
-“It’s jest twenty dollars and fourteen cents, now, Bill,” he said, his
-brown forefinger pausing after a run down one of the pages. “Ye hain’t
-paid nothin’ since Christmas, ye know,” he added significantly.
-
-“Well,” sighed Bill, with another slow smile, “mebbe ’twouldn’t do no
-harm if I ponied up a bit!” And he plunged both hands into his trousers
-pockets.
-
-Pedler Jim smiled and edged nearer, while Bill drew out a handful of
-change and laboriously picked out a dime and four pennies.
-
-“There!” he said, slapping the fourteen cents on the counter, “now it’s
-even dollars!”
-
-“Well, I’ll be jiggered!” cried Pedler Jim, turning his back and walking
-over to the window.
-
-Somers looked after the retreating figure, and a broad smile lighted up
-his round red face. Slipping his hand inside his coat he pulled out a
-roll of greenbacks. In another minute the fourteen cents lay neatly piled
-on top of two ten-dollar bills. The man hastily slipped into his old
-position and coughed meaningly.
-
-“Ye don’t seem pleased,” he began.
-
-The hunchback did not stir.
-
-“Mebbe ye don’t want my money,” hazarded the miner.
-
-No answer.
-
-“Oh, well, I can take it back,” and Somers shuffled noisily off his seat.
-
-Pedler Jim wheeled about and came down the store with his small black
-eyes blazing.
-
-“Jiminy Christmas, man! If you ain’t enough ter try a saint! I’m
-blest if I can git mad at ye, though, fur all yer pesterin’ ways. Now
-what in thunder—” The storekeeper’s jaw dropped, and his mouth fell
-open idiotically as his eyes rested on the greenbacks. “Well, I’ll be
-jiggered!” he murmured again, and clutched the money in his claw-like
-fingers.
-
-At that moment the outer door opened to admit a tall, broad-shouldered
-miner wearing a slouch hat well over his eyes. In a trice Pedler Jim was
-the obsequious merchant behind the counter.
-
-The newcomer gave his order in a low voice and stood motionless while the
-hunchback busied himself in filling it.
-
-“Anything else?” suggested Jim wistfully, as he pushed a small package
-toward him.
-
-“Oh, I guess that’ll do for this time,” returned the man, picking up his
-purchase and motioning toward a dollar bill on the counter.
-
-Pedler Jim looked up quickly and something like tenderness came into his
-eyes.
-
-“I—guess you’re from Yankee-land, stranger; shake, won’t ye?” he said,
-thrusting his hand across the counter. “Gorry! but it’s prime ter see a
-good old New Englander among all these dagos and Dutchmen and the Lord
-only knows what else here. Bill an’ me was gittin’ lonesome—I’m glad ye
-come!”
-
-At Jim’s first words the stranger had stepped back, but the outstretched
-hand had brought him to the counter again, and he gave the brown fingers
-a grip that made the little hunchback wince with pain. But Pedler Jim’s
-welcome was scarcely spoken before the man had turned and disappeared
-through the door.
-
-“Well, I snum! I should think he was ‘Hustler Joe’!” murmured Jim. “If
-he didn’t even hustle off and leave his change,” he added, looking
-helplessly at the dollar bill on the counter.
-
-Somers laughed.
-
-“Hustle!—you’d oughter see him at the mines! why, that man works like
-all possessed. He don’t speak nor look at a soul of us ’nless he has to.
-If there’s a chance ter work extry—he gits it; an’ he acts abused ’cause
-he can’t work every night and Sundays to boot. Gosh! I can’t understand
-him,” finished Bill, with a yawn and a long stretch.
-
-“That ain’t ter be wondered at—’tain’t ‘Hustler Bill’ that the boys call
-you,” replied Jim, a sly twinkle in his beady little eyes.
-
-Somers sprang to his feet and towered over the hunchback, his fist raised
-in pretended wrath.
-
-“Why don’t ye take a feller yer own size?” he demanded.
-
-The hunchback chuckled, dove under the upraised arm, and skipped around
-the room like a boy. An encounter like this was meat and drink to him,
-and the miners good-naturedly saw to it that he did not go hungry.
-
-Somers shook his fist at the curious little creature perched on the
-farthermost cracker-barrel and slouched out the door.
-
-
- II
-
-Skinner Valley did not know very much about Hustler Joe. Six weeks ago he
-had appeared at the Candria coal mine and asked for work. Since that time
-he had occupied an old shanty on the hillside—a shanty so hopeless in its
-decrepitude that it had long been abandoned to bats and owls. Hustler
-Joe, however, had accomplished wonders in the short time he had lived
-there.
-
-It was a popular belief in the town that the man never slept. Stray
-wanderers by the shanty had reported hearing the sound of the hammer and
-saw at all hours of the night. Outside the shanty loose timbers, tin
-cans, rags and refuse had given way to a spaded, raked and seeded lawn.
-The cabin itself, no longer broken-roofed and windowless, straightened
-its back and held up its head as if aware of its new surroundings.
-
-This much the villagers could see; but inside it was still a mystery, for
-Hustler Joe did not seem to be hospitably inclined, and even the children
-dared not venture too near the cabin door.
-
-It was vaguely known that the man had come over the mountains from San
-Francisco, and with that the most were content. Keen eyes and ears like
-Pedler Jim’s were not common in the community, and the little hunchback’s
-welcome to the man because he came from “Yankee-land” was not duplicated.
-
-Hustler Joe had not been in the habit of frequenting the store. His
-dollar bill was in Pedler Jim’s hands a week before the disturbed
-storekeeper had an opportunity of handing back the change. The miner had
-forgotten all about the money and had wandered into the store simply
-because each stick and stone and dish and chair at home was in its place
-and there was absolutely nothing for his nervous fingers to put in order.
-
-Joe pushed open the door of the “emporium,” then halted in evident
-indecision. A dozen miners were jabbering in half as many languages over
-by the stove, huddled around it as though the month were January instead
-of June, and the stove full of needed heat instead of last winter’s
-ashes. Bill Somers lolled on the counter, and Pedler Jim was bowing and
-scraping to a well-dressed stranger whose face Joe could not see.
-
-The miner had half turned to go when Pedler Jim’s sharp eyes fell upon
-him. In another moment the hunchback was by his side thrusting some
-change into his fingers.
-
-“You forgot it, ye know—when ye bought them nails,” he said hurriedly;
-then added, “why don’t ye come in and set down?”
-
-For a second Joe hesitated; then he raised his head with a peculiarly
-defiant up-tilting of his chin, and strolled across the room to an
-unoccupied cracker-barrel behind the gesticulating miners. Pedler Jim
-went back to his customer.
-
-“You won’t find a better smoke within fifty miles!” he said pompously,
-giving the box of cigars on the counter a suggestive push.
-
-The well-dressed man gave a disagreeable laugh.
-
-“Well, that’s hardly saying very much, is it?” he questioned.
-
-At the stranger’s first words Hustler Joe glanced up sharply. His fingers
-twitched and a gray look crept around the corners of his mouth. The room,
-the miners, and Pedler Jim seemed to fade and change like the dissolving
-pictures he used to see when a boy. A New England village street drifted
-across his vision with this well-dressed stranger in the foreground. He
-could even see a yellow-lettered sign out one of the windows:
-
- GEORGE L. MARTIN,
- _Counselor at Law_.
-
-Then it all faded into nothingness again—all save the well-dressed
-stranger in the tall black hat. In another minute the jabbering miners,
-Bill Somers, and the obsequious hunchback were in their old places, and
-Pedler Jim was saying:
-
-“Jest try ’em, an’ see fur yerself.”
-
-“All right, I’ll take you at your word,” laughed the stranger, picking
-out a cigar and leisurely striking a match. “It’s a pity you can’t have
-a few more languages going in here,” he added, throwing the dead match
-on the floor and glancing at the group around the stove. “I suppose
-Barrington employs mostly foreigners in the mines, eh?”
-
-The hunchback thrust his brown fingers through his hair and made a wry
-face.
-
-“Foreigners!” he exclaimed. “I was born and raised in the state of Maine,
-an’ if it wa’n’t fur Bill Somers—he’s from York State—to talk God’s own
-language to me once in awhile, I’d ’a’ gone daft long ago!”
-
-The stranger chuckled softly.
-
-“You hav’n’t anyone here at the works from New England, then, I take it,
-eh?” he asked, with studied carelessness.
-
-A smile crept up from Pedler Jim’s mouth and looked out of his twinkling
-eyes.
-
-“Well, we have—” he began, then his eyes suddenly lost their twinkle as
-they encountered the despairing appeal from beneath Hustler Joe’s slouch
-hat. “We have—been wishin’ there would be some,” he finished after the
-slightest of hesitations. “We’ve got everythin’ else under the sun!”
-
-Bill Somers’s long legs came down from the counter abruptly.
-
-“Why, Jim, there’s Hustler Joe—ain’t he from New England?”
-
-The hunchback’s little beany eyes turned upon Somers and looked him
-through and through without winking.
-
-“Hustler Joe came over the mountains from San Francisco, I have heard,”
-he said blandly.
-
-“Oh, so he did—so he did!” murmured Somers, and sauntered out the door.
-
-The man on the cracker-barrel over in the corner pulled his hat down over
-his eyes and sank back into the shadows.
-
-“Well,” said the stranger, tossing a bill and a small white card on the
-counter, “put me up a dozen of those cigars of yours, and there’s my
-card—if you happen to know of any New Englanders coming to these parts,
-just let me know at that address, will you? I’ll make it worth your
-while.”
-
-“Very good, sir, very good,” murmured Pedler Jim, making a neat package
-of the cigars. “Thank you, sir,” he said suavely, holding out the change
-and glancing down at the card; “thank you, Mr.—er—Martin.” And he bowed
-him out of the store.
-
-One by one the miners went away; still the figure on the cracker-barrel
-remained motionless. When the last jabbering foreigner had passed through
-the door, Hustler Joe rose and walked across the room to the pine box
-where the storekeeper was bending over his account-book.
-
-“See here, little chap,” he began huskily, “that was a mighty good turn
-you did me a bit ago—just how good it was, I hope to God you’ll never
-know. What you did it for is a mystery to me; but you did it—and that’s
-enough. I sha’n’t forget it!”
-
-Something splashed down in front of Pedler Jim, then the outer door
-slammed. When the hunchback turned to his accounts again a blot and a
-blister disfigured the page before him.
-
-
- III
-
-John Barrington, the principal owner of the Candria mine, did not
-spend much of his time in Skinner Valley. Still, such time as he did
-spend there he intended to be comfortable. Indeed, the comfort of John
-Barrington—and incidentally of those nearest and dearest to him—was the
-one thing in life worth striving for in the eyes of John Barrington
-himself, and to this end all his energies were bent.
-
-In pursuance of this physical comfort, John Barrington had built for his
-occasional use a large, richly fitted house just beyond the unpleasant
-smoke and sounds of the town. A tiny lake and a glorious view had added
-so materially to its charms that the great man’s wife and daughter had
-unconsciously fallen into the way of passing a week now and then through
-the summer at The Maples, as it came to be called in the family—“Skinner
-Valley” being a name to which Miss Ethel’s red lips did not take kindly.
-
-Mr. Barrington’s factotum-in-chief at the mines, Mark Hemenway, lived
-at the house the year round. He was a man who took every possible
-responsibility from his chief’s shoulders and was assiduous in
-respectful attentions and deferential homage whenever the ladies graced
-the place with their presence.
-
-To Ethel this was of little consequence, as she paid no more attention to
-him than she did to the obsequious servant behind her chair; but to Mrs.
-Barrington he was the one drawback to complete enjoyment of the place.
-
-Mark Hemenway was a man of limited means, but of unlimited ambitions.
-Every day saw him more and more indispensable to his comfort-loving
-employer, and every day saw him more and more determined to attain to his
-latest desire—nothing less than the hand of this same employer’s daughter
-in marriage.
-
-In a vague way Mrs. Barrington was aware of this, though Hemenway was,
-as yet, most circumspect in his actions. Mrs. Barrington was greatly
-disturbed, otherwise she would not have ventured to remonstrate with her
-husband that Sunday afternoon.
-
-“My dear,” she began timidly, “isn’t there any other—couldn’t Mr.
-Hemenway live somewhere else—rather than here?”
-
-Her husband turned in his chair, and a frown that Mrs. Barrington always
-dreaded appeared between his eyebrows.
-
-“Now, Bess, why can’t you leave things all comfortable as they are? I
-like to have you and Ethel here first rate, but I don’t see why you think
-you must upset things when you stay only five minutes, so to speak.”
-
-“I—I don’t mean to upset things, John, but—I don’t like him!” she
-finished in sudden asperity.
-
-“Like him! My dear, who expected you to? Nobody supposes he is one
-of your palavering, tea-drinking members of the upper ten! He isn’t
-polished, of course.”
-
-“Polished! He’s polished enough, in a way, but—I don’t like the metal to
-begin with,” laughed Mrs. Barrington, timidly essaying a joke.
-
-Her husband’s frown deepened.
-
-“But, Bess, don’t you see? I must have him here—it’s easier for me, lots
-easier. Why can’t you let things be as they are, and not bother?” he
-urged in the tone of a fretful boy.
-
-Mrs. Barrington knew the tone, and she knew, too, the meaning of the
-nervous twitching of her husband’s fingers.
-
-“Well, well, John,” she said, hastily rising, “I won’t say anything
-more,” and the door closed softly behind her.
-
-As she passed through the hall she caught a glimpse of Ethel and her
-friend starting for a walk, and the strange unlikeness of the two girls
-struck her anew. Just why Ethel should have chosen Dorothy Fenno for a
-week’s visit to The Maples, Mrs. Barrington could not understand. Perhaps
-it would have puzzled Ethel herself to have given a satisfactory reason.
-
-Ethel Barrington had met Dorothy Fenno the winter before on a committee
-connected with a fashionable charity, and had contrived to keep in touch
-with the girl ever since, though the paths of their daily lives lay wide
-apart.
-
-“She is mixed up with ‘settlement work’ and ‘relief bands,’ and
-everything of that sort,” Ethel had told her mother; “but she’s
-wonderfully interesting and—I like her!” she had finished almost
-defiantly.
-
-The girls leisurely followed a winding path that skirted the lake and
-lost itself in the woods beyond. They had walked half an hour when they
-came to the clearing that commanded the finest view in the vicinity.
-
-Ethel dropped wearily to the ground and, with her chin resting in her
-hand, watched her friend curiously.
-
-“Well, my dear girl, you——”
-
-“Don’t—don’t speak to me!” interrupted Dorothy.
-
-Ethel Barrington bit her lips; then she laughed softly and continued
-to watch the absorbed face of her companion—this time in the desired
-silence. By and bye Dorothy drew a long breath and turned to her.
-
-“Isn’t it beautiful!” she murmured reverently.
-
-Miss Barrington gave a short laugh and sat up.
-
-“Yes, very beautiful, I suppose; but, do you know, I’ve seen so much I’m
-spoiled—absolutely spoiled for a scene like that? I’d rather look at
-you—you are wonderfully refreshing. I don’t know another girl that would
-have snapped me up as you did a minute ago.”
-
-“Indeed, I beg your pardon,” began Dorothy in distress.
-
-“Don’t!” interrupted her friend, with a petulant gesture; “you’ll be like
-all the rest if you do.”
-
-“But it was very rude,” insisted Dorothy earnestly. “A view like this
-always seems to me like a glorious piece of music, and I want everything
-quiet as I would if I were hearing a Beethoven symphony, you know. That
-is why I couldn’t bear even the tones of your voice—but it was rude of
-me, very.”
-
-Ethel sighed, and fell to picking a daisy to pieces.
-
-“I used to feel that way, once,” she said; “I did, really.”
-
-“I haven’t a doubt of it,” replied Dorothy, with a smile.
-
-“But I don’t any more!”—the daisy was tossed aside.
-
-“No?”
-
-“No; I’m like a five-year-old that’s had too much candy, I suppose. I’ve
-seen the Alps and the Rockies, the Rhine and the St. Lawrence; and yet,
-the first time I looked at that view I felt just as you did. But now——!”
-
-“You need something outside yourself to give zest to your life, my dear,”
-said Dorothy, her eyes on the town below.
-
-Ethel looked at her narrowly.
-
-“Now see here, my dear, I love you—and you know it, but I just can’t
-stand any of that settlement talk!”
-
-“I never said settlement,” laughed Dorothy, her eyes still on the
-straggling cottages.
-
-“I know, but—well, I just simply can’t! How in the world you stand those
-dismal sounds and sights and—and smells,” she added, with a grimace, “I
-don’t understand.”
-
-“I suppose the miners live in those cottages,” mused Dorothy aloud, as
-though she had not heard.
-
-“I suppose so,” acquiesced Ethel indifferently. “Others live over the
-hill in Westmont.”
-
-“They don’t look as though they’d be very comfortable,” continued Dorothy
-softly.
-
-“Oh, I don’t know; people like that don’t mind such things, I fancy.”
-
-“Did you ever ask them?”
-
-Ethel looked up in quick suspicion, but Dorothy’s face was placid.
-
-“Of course not! How silly!”
-
-“Suppose you do, sometimes,” suggested Dorothy, quite as a matter of
-course.
-
-“I thought that was what you were coming to!” flashed Ethel. “My dear
-girl, you have no idea what those miners are,” she continued in a
-superior tone. “In the first place, I don’t think there is one of them
-that understands a word of English, and I’d be afraid to trust my life
-anywhere near them.”
-
-“But the women and the little children—they wouldn’t hurt you. Isn’t
-there something you could do for them, dear?” urged Dorothy.
-
-A rumble of thunder brought the girls to their feet before Ethel could
-reply, and a big storm-cloud coming rapidly out of the west drove the
-whole thing from her mind.
-
-“Quick—we must run!” she exclaimed. “We can’t reach home, but there’s an
-old shanty just behind those trees over there. No one lives in it, but
-’twill give us a little shelter, maybe,” and in another minute the girls
-were hurrying down the hill. Big drops of rain and a sharp gust of wind
-quickened their steps to a run.
-
-Had Ethel not been running with her head bent to the wind she would
-have noticed the changed appearance of the shanty to which they were
-hastening. But as it was, she rushed blindly forward, up the steps,
-and pushed open the door, Dorothy close by her side. Once across the
-threshold she stopped in amazement, while Dorothy dropped breathlessly
-into the nearest chair.
-
-
- IV
-
-The tiny room was exquisite in its orderly neatness. The furniture was of
-the plainest, but bore an air of individuality. On one side was a case
-of books, and the mantel above the fireplace was decorated with quaint
-curios and beautiful shells.
-
-A shadow fell across the floor.
-
-“A nearer view might the better satisfy your curiosity, madam,” said a
-voice from behind Ethel.
-
-Ethel turned sharply to find herself face to face with a man in the
-rough garb of a miner. The man’s eyes looked straight into hers without
-flinching.
-
-“I said that a nearer view might the better satisfy your curiosity in
-regard to my poor possessions,” he repeated.
-
-“Yours?” she stammered, a look of repulsion coming into her eyes.
-
-The look and the shrinking gesture were not lost on Hustler Joe. His eyes
-darkened. His broad shoulders bent in a mocking bow and his right hand
-made a sweeping flourish.
-
-“Mine, madam; but consider them yours until the storm is over. I’ll not
-intrude”—and he was gone.
-
-A flare of lightning and a deafening report made his exit wonderfully
-dramatic to Dorothy. The rain was falling in torrents, too—a fact which
-suddenly occurred to Ethel. For a moment she hesitated; then she sped
-through the door, overtook and confronted the miner.
-
-“Go back instantly!” she commanded. “If—if you don’t, I shall start for
-home in all this rain!”
-
-The words were scarcely spoken before the man had turned and was hurrying
-her back to the house. Once inside there was an uncomfortable silence.
-Dorothy came to the rescue.
-
-“I’m afraid you thought we were unpardonably rude,” she began pleasantly.
-“You see we were caught by the shower and my friend thought no one was
-living here; otherwise, we would not have so unceremoniously taken
-possession.”
-
-“No, of course not,” murmured Miss Barrington constrainedly, going over
-to the window and looking out at the swaying trees.
-
-Hustler Joe made a dissenting gesture.
-
-“Say no more: you are quite welcome,” he replied, going over to the
-fireplace and touching a match to the light wood ready placed for a fire.
-“It will take the dampness out of the air, and—of your garments,” he
-added, with a furtive glance at the tall figure in the window.
-
-“Thank you, you are very kind,” said Dorothy, drawing nearer. The
-movement brought her close to the mantel, and she picked up one of the
-shells. “Did you gather these yourself?” she asked, wondering at the
-light that leaped into his eyes at the question.
-
-Ethel, turning round a minute later, found them talking like old friends
-together. She even caught herself listening breathlessly to a story he
-was telling of an Indian arrow he held in his hand. A sudden glance in
-her direction from the man’s dark eyes sent her back to her old position
-with an abruptness that surprised as well as displeased her.
-
-The storm was not a long one. The clouds were already lifting in the west
-and the rain was less flood-like in its descent. Finally the sun peeped
-out and flashed for a moment in Ethel’s eyes.
-
-Dorothy and their host were over at the bookcase deep in a discussion of
-the respective merits of Scott and Dickens, when Ethel crossed the room
-and came toward them.
-
-“I think,” she said, with the slightest of inclinations in Hustler Joe’s
-direction, “that the storm is over. We can go now.”
-
-“So it is,” said Dorothy; then turning to the man at her side she held
-out a cordial hand. “Thank you very much. You have been very kind.”
-
-“Yes, very kind—thank you,” murmured Ethel, bowing slightly and turning
-toward the door. “We shall have to go home by the road,” she announced
-regretfully a moment later, as she stood outside looking longingly at
-the hillside path where the wet grass sparkled in the sun.
-
-For a time the two girls walked on in silence, then Dorothy murmured
-softly:
-
-“Not a word of English—not a word!”
-
-Ethel gave a sidelong look from her lowered lids.
-
-“Well, I didn’t suppose they could!” she said petulantly.
-
-“I wouldn’t trust my life near one of them,” continued Dorothy in the
-same low voice.
-
-Ethel shrugged her shoulders and a faint pink showed on her forehead.
-
-“Don’t!” she protested. “How could you talk with him so?—what dreadful
-boots he wore!”
-
-Dorothy laughed outright.
-
-“My dear, his boots do not cover his head. Would you have a man dig coal
-in patent-leathers?”
-
-Ethel made a wry face and was silent.
-
-“Seriously, dear,” Dorothy went on, “he was very interesting to me.
-His knowledge of books was most amazing. What he is doing here I can’t
-imagine—he’s no common miner!”
-
-“Oh, of course not,” laughed Ethel mockingly. “No doubt he’s a college
-president in disguise! But really, I’m not in the least interested. Let’s
-talk of something else.” And she changed the subject.
-
-And yet it was Ethel who, at dinner that night, turned to Mr. Barrington
-with the abrupt question:
-
-“Father, who is living in the old shanty just beyond the Deerfield woods?”
-
-“I’m sure I haven’t the least idea, my daughter,” replied the man, mildly
-indifferent.
-
-“Perhaps I can assist Miss Barrington in the matter,” interposed the
-smooth voice of Mark Hemenway. “It has lately been taken in hand by a
-curious creature known as ‘Hustler Joe.’”
-
-“‘Hustler Joe’?” murmured John Barrington.
-
-“Yes, sir, one of the men. A queer, silent sort—the kind that no good
-comes of. I’m keeping my eye on him, however.”
-
-“Indeed,” observed Ethel calmly, “I thought him quite the gentleman.”
-
-The effect of her words was like that of an electric shock around the
-table; in fact, Ethel herself felt it to some extent, for her remark was
-almost as much of a surprise to herself as to the others.
-
-“Why, my daughter!” murmured Mrs. Barrington faintly, and even Dorothy
-started. There was an ugly narrowing of Mark Hemenway’s eyes, but it was
-John Barrington who spoke.
-
-“Well, you seem to have the advantage,” he drawled. “Would you mind
-telling where the rest of us could meet—this gentleman?”
-
-His daughter laughed and lapsed into her old bantering tone.
-
-
- V
-
-That portion of the Candria mine known as the “Bonanza” had been on the
-black-list of the miners for some time. It was more than two months since
-Henry Rotalick, a fire boss, had reported that an extra amount of gas
-seemed to be collecting in the district. The mine officials had begun at
-once to take the utmost precautions.
-
-The Bonanza was one of the wealthiest portions of the mine, but, the coal
-being deep and of very fine quality and the slate being particularly
-thick, it necessitated considerable blasting to get down to the finest
-parts. Owing to this and to the growing accumulations of gases, the
-miners had for some time past been repeatedly warned to use the greatest
-care.
-
-On the day after the thunderstorm, Hustler Joe was passing through this
-district when he came upon some miners drilling holes twelve feet or more
-in depth and preparing for an exceptionally heavy charge.
-
-“You’d better look out or you’ll bring the whole thing tumbling about
-your ears!” he said, with a sharp glance at one of the men who seemed
-much the worse for liquor.
-
-A snarl of oaths in various tongues followed him as he turned his back
-and walked away.
-
-Thirty minutes later every door in the Bonanza fell with a crash, and
-solid walls of masonry three feet through were torn down as though they
-were but barriers of paper, so terrible was the explosion that shook the
-earth.
-
-Hustler Joe was half a mile away. The shock threw him on his face, and
-for a minute he was too dazed to think. Then he staggered to his feet
-and rushed blindly forward straight toward the place where he thought
-the explosion had occurred. At every turn he met fleeing men, coatless,
-hatless and crazed with terror. Suddenly he came face to face with Bill
-Somers.
-
-“Good God, man! Where ye goin’? Are ye gone clean crazy?” demanded Bill,
-clutching Joe’s arm and trying to turn him about.
-
-For answer Hustler Joe wrenched himself free, picked up a
-half-unconscious miner and set him on his feet; then he dashed forward
-and attempted to raise a fallen door that had pinned another miner fast.
-
-“Jiminy Christmas! Ye ain’t goin’ ter stay in this hell of a place alone,
-anyhow,” muttered Bill, bringing his broad shoulder and huge strength to
-bear on the door. In another moment the imprisoned man was free and in
-broken English was calling on heaven to reward his rescuers.
-
-The two men did not falter for an instant, though all the while the
-deadly damp was closing around them. From gallery to gallery they went,
-warning, helping, dragging a comrade into a possible place of safety,
-until human endurance could stand it no longer. Exhausted, they staggered
-into a chamber which the fire damp had not entered.
-
-“We—we’d better git out—if we’re goin’ to,” panted Somers weakly.
-
-Joe was dizzy and faint. For himself he did not care. He had long ago
-given up all thought of escape; but a sudden vision came to him of the
-little blue-eyed woman that he had so often seen clinging to this man’s
-arm and looking fondly into his face.
-
-“Your wife and babies, Somers—” murmured Joe, his hand to his head as he
-tried to think. “Yes, we must get out somehow. There’s the fanhouse—we
-might try that,” he added, groping blindly forward.
-
-The fanhouse, now out of use, stood at the top of the airshaft heading
-that led up through the Deerfield hill from the mine. And by this way
-the two men finally reached the open air, and there, blinking in the
-sunshine, they sank exhausted on the hillside.
-
-It was some time before Somers found strength to move, but his companion
-was up and away very soon.
-
-The Candria mine had two openings about four miles apart, that went by
-the names Silver Creek and Beachmont. The Bonanza section was a mile and
-a half from the surface, and was nearer to the Silver Creek opening than
-to the Beachmont. It was to the former entrance, therefore, that Hustler
-Joe turned his steps as soon as he could stand upon his feet.
-
-The news of the disaster was before him. Men running from the mine,
-barely escaping with their lives, had told fearful tales of crawling
-over the dead bodies of their companions in their flight. The story flew
-from lip to lip and quickly spread through the entire town. Mothers,
-wives, daughters, sons and sweethearts rushed to the mine entrances and
-frantically sought for news of their dear ones.
-
-When Hustler Joe reached the Silver Creek entrance, a bit of a woman with
-a tiny babe in her arms darted from the sobbing multitude and clutched
-his arm.
-
-“Bill—my Bill—did you see him?” she cried.
-
-Hustler Joe’s voice shook as it had not done that day.
-
-“On Deerfield hill, by the fanhouse—he’s all right, Mrs. Somers,” he said
-huskily; and the little woman sped with joyful feet back by the way she
-had come.
-
-It was Hustler Joe who was at the head of the first rescue party that
-attempted to enter the mine; but the deadly gases increased with every
-step. First one, then another of the heroic men succumbed, until the
-rest were obliged to stagger back to the outer air, half carrying, half
-dragging their unconscious companions.
-
-Again and again was this repeated, until they were forced to abandon all
-hope of reaching the entombed miners from that direction; then hasty
-preparations were made to attempt the rescue from the Beachmont opening.
-Here, as at Silver Creek, Hustler Joe was untiring—directing, helping,
-encouraging. The man seemed to work in almost a frenzy, yet every
-movement counted and his hand and head were steady.
-
-Slowly, so slowly they worked their way into the mine, fighting the damp
-at every turn. By using canvas screens to wall the side entrances and
-rooms, a direct current of pure air was forced ahead of the rescuers, and
-by night their first load of maimed and blackened forms was sent back to
-the mine entrance to be cared for by tender hands.
-
-All night Hustler Joe worked, and it was his strong arms that oftenest
-bore some suffering miner to air and safety. Once, far down a gallery, he
-heard a shrill laugh. A sound so strange brought the first tingle like
-fear to his heart. Another moment and a blackened form rushed upon him
-out of the darkness, angrily brandishing a pickaxe. Crazed with wandering
-for hours in that horrid charnel-house of the earth’s interior, the miner
-was ready to kill even his rescuers. He was quickly overpowered and his
-hands and feet were securely bound; then on Hustler Joe’s back he made
-the journey of a quarter of a mile to the cars that were waiting to bear
-him, and others like him, to the aid so sadly needed.
-
-Toward morning Hustler Joe was accosted by one of the doctors who had
-been working at his side half the night.
-
-“See here, my man, you’ve done enough. No human being can stand this
-sort of thing forever. I don’t like the look of your eye—go outside and
-get some rest. There are fifty men now that owe their lives to you alone.
-Come—you’d really better quit, for awhile, at least.”
-
-“Fifty? Fifty, did you say?” cried the miner eagerly. Then a look came
-into his face that haunted the doctor for long days after. “Would fifty
-count against—one?” he muttered as if to himself, then fell to work with
-a feverishness that laughed at the doctor’s warning.
-
-From dusk to dawn, and again from dawn to dusk, flying ambulances,
-hastily improvised from every sort of vehicle, coursed the streets with
-their gruesome burdens. Weeping throngs surged about the Beachmont
-entrance and about the stricken homes of the dead. Sleepless wives and
-mothers waited all night for news of their missing dear ones, and peeped
-fearfully through closed blinds as the dead and injured were borne
-through the streets.
-
-But everywhere the name of Hustler Joe was breathed in gratitude and
-love. Tales of his bravery and of his rescues were on every lip, and when
-the man walked out of the mine that day, he walked straight into the
-hearts of every man, woman and child of the place.
-
-His fellow-workmen tried to show their love and appreciation by going in
-a body to his lonely cabin on the hillside. They found him muttering half
-crazily to himself: “Fifty lives for one—fifty for one!” And on the table
-before him he had placed fifty matches in a row and below them one other
-alone.
-
-They looked at him half fearfully, wholly pitifully, thinking the past
-horror had turned his brain. But he listened with brilliant eyes and
-flushed cheeks to their hearty words of thanks and seemed strangely eager
-to hear all that they had come to say.
-
-Yet the next morning his eyes were heavy with misery, and someone said
-that the matches lay strewn all over the floor where an impatient hand
-had cast them—all save one, left alone in the middle of the table.
-
-
- VI
-
-On the day of the explosion in the Candria mine John Barrington sat on
-the broad piazza of The Maples reading his morning paper. Occasionally
-he glanced up to admire the charming picture his daughter and her friend
-made playing tennis on the lawn nearby.
-
-His night’s rest had been good and his morning’s beefsteak tender;
-moreover, a certain paragraph in the newspaper before him had warmed his
-heart and, in prospect, his pocketbook. He leaned back in his chair and
-sighed contentedly.
-
-After a time he spied Hemenway’s tall form at the far end of the winding
-walk leading to the house. There was a languid curiosity in his mind as
-to why Hemenway was walking so fast; but when he caught his first glimpse
-of his general superintendent’s face, his head came upright with a jerk,
-and he waited in some apprehension for the man to speak.
-
-The girls on the lawn heard an exclamation of dismay from the piazza,
-then saw the two men pass rapidly down the walk and disappear in
-the direction of the town. Fifteen minutes later Jennie Somers, the
-parlor-maid, crossed the lawn and approached Miss Barrington. All her
-pretty rose color had fled, and her eyes were wide and frightened.
-
-“I beg your pardon—but would you please let me go to town? There has been
-an explosion in the mine, and my brother—he may be hurt! May I please go?”
-
-“An explosion? How terrible! Yes, yes, child—run right along. Don’t hurry
-back if you’re needed there,” said Miss Barrington. “I hope you’ll find
-your brother uninjured,” she added as the girl hurried away. When she
-turned to speak to Dorothy she found herself alone.
-
-Miss Fenno appeared a few minutes later dressed in a short walking-suit.
-
-“Why, Dorothy!”
-
-“Has Jennie gone? If you don’t mind, dear, I’ll go with her. I might be
-able to do something,” explained Dorothy hastily.
-
-“Mercy!” shuddered Ethel, “how can you go, dear? They’ll be all maimed
-and bleeding! There’ll be doctors and—and others to do everything
-needful. I wouldn’t go—really, dear.”
-
-“I know—but there’ll be something else to do. I might help
-someone—Jennie, for instance, if she found her brother injured. I really
-want to go—Oh—there she is!” And Miss Fenno hurried after Jennie’s
-swiftly moving figure.
-
-Ethel was restless when her friend had gone. She wandered aimlessly
-around the grounds, then went indoors and began to play a waltz on the
-piano. The piece was scarcely half through, however, before her fingers
-moved more and more slowly, finally straying into a minor wail that ended
-abruptly in a discordant crash as the player rose from the piano-stool.
-
-Miss Barrington’s next move was to take the field-glass from the library
-and go upstairs to the tower. From there she could see the village and
-catch occasional glimpses of hurrying forms. She could see the Silver
-Creek entrance to the mine, too, and she shuddered at the crowds her
-glasses showed her there. Twice she turned her eyes away and started
-down the winding stairs, but each time she returned to her old position
-and gazed in a fascination quite unaccountable to herself at the moving
-figures in the distance.
-
-By and bye she saw the head-gardener coming rapidly up the road from the
-town. As he entered the driveway she hurried down the stairs and out into
-the kitchen.
-
-“Were there many injured, Peter?” she asked anxiously as the man came
-into the room.
-
-“They don’t know yet, ma’am; they can’t get into the mine. They’re goin’
-to try the Beachmont openin’ now.”
-
-“Perhaps they won’t find things so bad as they think,” she suggested.
-
-“Mebbe not; but them that has come out, ma’am, tell sorry tales of
-creepin’ over dead men’s bodies—there ain’t much hope for the poor
-fellers inside now, I’m ’fraid.”
-
-“Is—is there anything one can do?”
-
-Peter shook his head.
-
-“Not much, ma’am. They can’t get in to get ’em out. The young lady from
-the house here has got her hands full with the women and children. They
-are takin’ on awful, of course, but she kinder calms ’em down—she and
-that feller they call Hustler Joe.”
-
-Miss Barrington turned away. As she opened the door she stopped abruptly
-and looked back into the kitchen.
-
-“If they need anything, Peter—anything at all—come to me at once,” she
-said hurriedly, and closed the door behind her.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was at dinner the next night that Mr. Barrington said to his general
-superintendent:
-
-“What was the matter with Rotalick today? I heard you laying down the law
-pretty sharp to him this noon.”
-
-“Oh, he wanted a prima donna, that’s all.”
-
-“A what?”
-
-Hemenway laughed.
-
-“Yes, I thought so, too. It was simply this. There isn’t anyone to sing
-at the funerals Thursday. The choir that usually sings at funerals
-hereabouts is incapacitated through injuries to the bass and loss of
-a husband to the soprano. Rotalick wanted a day off to go hunting for
-singers over in Westmont.”
-
-“Humph!” commented Mr. Barrington.
-
-“I rather think our departed friends will excuse the lack of music,”
-laughed the general superintendent coarsely; but the laugh ceased at a
-flash from Miss Barrington’s eyes.
-
-“Will you be so kind, Mr. Hemenway, as to tell the man that I will sing
-Thursday?” Once more the electric shock ran around that table, and once
-more Mrs. Barrington murmured faintly, “Why, my daughter!”
-
-This time Mark Hemenway rose promptly to the occasion.
-
-“How very kind!” he said suavely. “Indeed, Miss Barrington, one could
-almost _afford_ to die for so great an honor. I will tell Rotalick. The
-miners will be overjoyed—they have bitterly bemoaned the probable lack of
-music tomorrow. Funny they should care so much!”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know—they are human beings, I suppose,” Miss Barrington
-suggested.
-
-“Yes—of course—certainly—but then——”
-
-“You seem troubled to find a solution,” she remarked, with slightly
-uplifted eyebrows; “suppose you give it up?”
-
-“Suppose I do,” he acquiesced with ready grace, glad of the way of escape
-she had opened.
-
-
- VII
-
-Many of the victims of the explosion had lived in Westmont, but for
-those whose homes had been in Skinner Valley a succession of funeral
-services had been arranged to take place in the Slovak Catholic Church,
-the largest audience-room in the town. It was here that Miss Barrington
-had offered to sing, and as one sad service followed another in rapid
-succession the task she had undertaken was no light one.
-
-But her heart did not lose its courage nor her voice its sweetness all
-through those long hours. She did grow sick and faint, though, as the
-throngs of weeping women and children filed in and out of the church, and
-her voice trembled and nearly broke when a young girl fainted and sank to
-the floor.
-
-Hustler Joe had not been known to step inside a church since he came to
-Skinner Valley. On the day of the funerals he had lapsed into his old
-unapproachableness. He left his cabin early in the morning and joined the
-crowds moving toward the church, but, once there, he lost himself in the
-throngs outside instead of entering the doors.
-
-Hustler Joe had long since made up his mind that a church was no place
-for him. He had the reverence, born of a New England boyhood’s training,
-for all things sacred, and he had come to feel that his own presence was
-an unpardonable insult to any holy place.
-
-The windows of the church were open and the chanting tones of the priest
-floated out to his ears. He imagined himself as one of those still,
-silent forms before the chancel, and he bitterly envied the dead.
-
-“’Twould have been the easiest way out of it!” he muttered under his
-breath. “By Jove, what a voice!” he added aloud a moment later as the
-priest’s droning gave way to the flute-like tones of a singer.
-
-“It’s old Barrington’s daughter—ain’t she great?” said Bill Somers at his
-elbow. The man had been there several minutes furtively watching for a
-chance to speak.
-
-Hustler Joe did not answer until the last note quivered into silence.
-Then he drew a long breath and turned around.
-
-“Barrington’s daughter? What is she doing here?”
-
-“Singin’—didn’t ye hear her?”
-
-“But why? How happens it?” Joe demanded.
-
-“Rotalick said she heard how that the choir couldn’t sing and that the
-Slavs and Poles were makin’ a terrible touse ’cause there wa’n’t no
-music. So she jest stepped up as pleasant as ye please an’ said she’d
-sing for ’em. She’s a daisy, an’ as purty as a picture. Have ye seen her?”
-
-“Yes,” replied Hustler Joe shortly, moving away.
-
-Ethel Barrington’s singing won her many sincere, if humble, admirers that
-day, but perhaps no one inside the building listened quite so hungrily
-for every tone that fell from her lips as did a tall, sad-eyed man who
-stood outside—just beneath an open window.
-
-When the last sombre procession had moved away from the doors, and
-Miss Barrington herself, white and faint with weariness, stepped into
-her carriage, Hustler Joe left his position under the window and walked
-slowly toward his home.
-
-“Yes, I’ll go back,” he muttered. “There’s nothing but hell upon earth to
-be gained by running away in this cowardly fashion. I’ll give myself up
-and take the consequences—which will be hell somewhere else, I suppose,”
-he added grimly. “Good God—it can’t be worse than this!”
-
-He pushed open his cabin door and looked about him with troubled eyes.
-For the first time he was conscious of a fondness for the place.
-
-“I’ll give them to Jim,” he said aloud, his eyes lingering on the books
-and on the shells and curios over the mantel.
-
-With feverish haste he began collecting a few necessaries into a
-traveling-bag. It was packed and strapped when there came a knock at the
-door. At so unusual an occurrence Hustler Joe started guiltily. Then he
-crossed the room and threw wide the door.
-
-The bent form of an old woman with two frightened eyes peering out from
-beneath a worn shawl confronted him.
-
-“Has he been here?” she whispered, stepping into the room and glancing
-furtively around her.
-
-“He! Who?”
-
-“Then he hasn’t, or you’d know it,” she answered in a relieved tone; but
-her expression changed almost instantly, and her frail form shook with
-terror. “But he may come! You wouldn’t give him up—you’re Hustler Joe,
-ain’t ye? They say you’re good an’ kind. Oh, you wouldn’t give him up!”
-
-A strange look came into the miner’s eyes.
-
-“No, I wouldn’t give him up,” he said, after a moment. “But who is he?
-And who are you?”
-
-“I’m his mother, sir. He didn’t know anyone was livin’ here,” she
-apologized, “an’ he sent me a bit of paper sayin’ he’d meet me here
-tonight. Oh, sir, they’d hang him if they got him! Hang him!” she
-shuddered.
-
-Hustler Joe’s lips twitched, then settled into stern lines.
-
-“Ye see,” continued the woman, her voice husky with feeling, “his daddy
-was—was one of them that was killed, an’ my boy came back to look once
-more on his poor dead face today. He said he’d colored his hair an’
-changed his looks so no one would know him; but oh, they’d hang him—hang
-my boy!” she finished in a frenzy, wringing her hands and swaying her
-body from side to side.
-
-Through the window Hustler Joe saw the figure of a man moving among the
-shadows of the trees near the house. The miner stepped close to the old
-woman and laid a light hand on her shoulder.
-
-“Listen! I am going away for an hour. When I am out of sight, go out to
-the trees behind the house and call your boy in. I shall be gone and
-shall know nothing of it—you can trust me. Do you understand?”
-
-A heartfelt “God bless you!” rang in his ears as he left the house and
-hurried away.
-
-When he returned an hour later he found these words scrawled on a bit of
-brown wrapping-paper:
-
- You treated me white. Thanks. You don’t know what
- you saved my mother. It would have broke her heart
- if they had strung me up. Thanks.
-
-Hustler Joe stared fixedly at the note long after he had read it; then he
-tore the paper into tiny bits and dropped them into the fireplace. Very
-slowly he opened the traveling-bag and unpacked one by one the articles
-therein. When the bag was empty and the room restored to its spotless
-order, he drew a long breath.
-
-“Yes, ’twould break her heart; she’s less miserable if I stay where I
-am,” he murmured. “Poor dear mother, she’s suffered enough through me
-already!”
-
-
- VIII
-
-The days that followed were busy ones for Ethel. Company made The Maples
-gay with fun and laughter; but Ethel did not drop her newly awakened
-interest in the miners. By her earnest persuasion Miss Fenno had agreed
-to lengthen her visit, the need of these same miners having been held up
-by the wary Ethel as good and sufficient reason for her remaining.
-
-A maid, laden with the best the house afforded, always accompanied
-Dorothy on her frequent visits to the town, and sometimes Ethel
-herself went. It was after her first trip of this sort that she burst
-unceremoniously into the library.
-
-“Father, do you do anything for them?” she demanded breathlessly.
-
-“My dear, not being aware of the antecedent of that pronoun, I may not be
-able to give a very satisfactory answer to your question.”
-
-“What? Oh—sure enough!” laughed Ethel. “I mean the miners, of course.”
-
-“Since when—this philanthropic spirit, my dear?”
-
-“Do you, father?” persisted Ethel, ignoring the question.
-
-“Well,” Mr. Barrington began, putting the tips of his forefingers
-together impressively, “we think we do considerable. We are not
-overbearing; we force no ‘company store’ on them, but allow that curious
-little Pedler Jim full sway. We—However, have you anything to suggest?”
-he suddenly demanded in mild sarcasm.
-
-Somewhat to his surprise Miss Barrington did have something to suggest,
-and that something was not particularly to his mind. However, when Miss
-Barrington set out to have her own way she usually had it, even with her
-comfort-loving father—perhaps it was because he was a comfort-loving
-father that he always succumbed in the end.
-
-At all events, the Candria Mining Company, after the explosion in the
-Bonanza section, organized a system of relief to which they ever after
-adhered. The family of each miner killed in the disaster, or dying from
-its effects, received one thousand dollars cash over and above all
-medical and burial expenses. The maimed were dealt with according to the
-extent of their injuries.
-
-The mine was a great source of interest to all of Miss Barrington’s
-friends, and it was accounted a great day among them when a party under
-careful escort were allowed to “do the mines,” as they enthusiastically
-termed a glimpse of the mine buildings and a short trip through a few
-underground passages.
-
-Two weeks after the explosion Ethel, with a merry party of ladies and
-gentlemen led by Mark Hemenway, and duly chaperoned, started for the
-Beachmont entrance to the mine. The general superintendent was in his
-element. He explained and exhibited all through the outer buildings, and
-was about to take his charges into the mine itself when an unavoidable
-something intervened and claimed his immediate attention. It was with
-evident reluctance that he therefore handed his party over to Bill
-Somers, who, having proved himself careful and attentive, had often
-before been intrusted with the escort of sightseers over the mines.
-
-To Ethel the change was a relief. A vague unrest had lately assailed her
-whenever in Hemenway’s presence and she had almost unconsciously begun
-to avoid him. Her old indifference to his existence had given way to a
-growing realization that there was such a being, and the realization was
-bringing with it an intangible something not quite pleasant.
-
-The feminine portion of the party followed Bill Somers through the
-strange underground chambers with daintily lifted skirts and with many a
-shudder and half-smothered shriek. And though they laughed and chatted at
-times, they cast sidelong glances of mingled curiosity and aversion at
-the stalwart forms of the begrimed miners.
-
-“Is—is this anywhere near the—accident?” asked Miss Barrington, looking
-behind her fearfully.
-
-“No, ma’am—oh, no!” reassured Bill Somers quickly. “The Bonanza is a long
-ways off. We don’t go nowheres near there today, ma’am.”
-
-“Oh, was there an accident?” chimed in a pretty girl with rose-pink
-cheeks.
-
-“Sure; this was the mine, wasn’t it?” interposed a fussy little man with
-eyeglasses through which he was peering right and left with his small,
-near-sighted eyes.
-
-“Tell us about it, please,” begged three or four voices at once; and Bill
-needed no second bidding.
-
-When they passed Hustler Joe, Somers pointed him out, and as they walked
-on into the next gallery he told with unconscious power the story of the
-heroic rescue of the imprisoned men. The shifting shadows and twinkling
-lights made the telling more impressive, and the dusky forms flitting
-in and out of the mysterious openings on either side, added a realistic
-touch to the tale that sobered the gay crowd not a little. Their interest
-in the earth’s interior waned perceptibly.
-
-“Are—are we on the way out, now?” asked the pretty girl, her cheeks
-showing white in the gloom.
-
-“No, ma’am; we’re goin’ in deeper. Wa’n’t that what ye wanted?” returned
-Bill.
-
-“Yes, of course,” murmured the girl, without enthusiasm.
-
-The man with glasses coughed.
-
-“Really, Miss Barrington, this is beastly air. It might be well enough to
-go back before long.”
-
-Bill Somers took the hint. He knew the type to which the fussy little
-man belonged. The party turned about, and the pretty girl’s eyes flashed
-with a grateful glance—a glance which the near-sighted-glassed saw and
-promptly appropriated.
-
-As they repassed Hustler Joe, Ethel Barrington dropped behind the others
-and came close to the miner’s side.
-
-“I want to thank you myself,” she said, the crimson staining her cheeks
-as she impulsively held out a slim, ungloved hand. “I want to tell you
-how much I appreciate your courage and bravery at the explosion.”
-
-The man flushed painfully. As he reluctantly touched her finger-tips, she
-added:
-
-“You must be so happy to have saved so many lives. I knew you were a
-good man the minute I saw your face!”
-
-Hustler Joe grew white to the lips, dropped her hand rudely and turned
-away without a word.
-
-Hemenway met the party at the entrance of the mine. He was profuse in
-apologies for his enforced absence and in offerings of further service,
-but Miss Barrington dismissed him with a cool “Thank you; nothing more,”
-and led the way to The Maples.
-
-Miss Barrington was vexed—worse than that, she was vexed because she was
-vexed. Her pulse quickened and her nostrils dilated as she thought of
-Hustler Joe and of the way he had met her impulsive greeting.
-
-“The—the rude—boor!” she said to herself, at loss for words to express
-fittingly that to which she was so little accustomed. A lingering touch
-or a gentle pressure was the usual fare of Miss Barrington’s graciously
-extended hand—never this wordless touching of her finger-tips and hasty,
-rude release. “Not that I care,” she thought, with a disdainful tilt
-of her head. “But he might have been decently civil!” she added, with
-a scornful smile as she thought of how differently a score of pampered
-youths of her acquaintance would have received so signal a mark of favor
-as she had that afternoon bestowed on an all too unappreciative miner.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When Hustler Joe had left Miss Barrington so abruptly he had attacked his
-work with a fierceness that even the miners had never seen him show. “A
-good man—a good man—‘I knew you were a good man’!” he muttered between
-his teeth. “A ‘good’ man indeed—bah!” he snarled aloud, wielding his
-pick with long, sweeping strokes. Then he suddenly stood upright. “Great
-God—am I not a good man? Have fifty lives not a feather’s weight?”
-
-The pick dropped from his relaxed fingers, and his hands went up to his
-head.
-
-“Ah, no,” he moaned; “father—father—fifty, a hundred—a thousand times a
-hundred could not tip the scale with your dear, dead self on the other
-side!”
-
-
- IX
-
-Exciting days came to Skinner Valley. Gold was discovered far up the
-creek. A man furnished with funds by Mark Hemenway, who long had
-expressed faith in the locality, had “struck it rich,” and the general
-superintendent awoke one day to find himself wealthy.
-
-The effect of this awakening was as immediate as it was startling. His
-commanding tones took on an added imperiousness, his clothing a new
-flashiness, and his whole demeanor an importance likely to impress the
-most casual of beholders. His veiled attentions to Miss Barrington gave
-way to a devoted homage that was apparent to all men, and so thick was
-his armor of self-conceit that her daily snubs fell pointless at his feet.
-
-Miss Barrington had never before spent so long a time at The Maples, and
-Mr. Hemenway’s sudden accession to wealth resulted, as far as she was
-concerned, in hasty preparations to leave. Her guests were already gone.
-
-On the day before her intended departure she started off by herself to
-enjoy one more sunset from the clearing beyond the Deerfield woods,
-the place where she and Dorothy were overtaken by that memorable
-thunder-shower.
-
-Mark Hemenway did not confine himself so strictly to business these days
-as had heretofore been his custom, and he was upstairs in his room when
-he spied Miss Barrington’s lithe figure disappearing in the grove that
-skirted the grounds on the west.
-
-The general superintendent had lately invested in a tall silk hat, and it
-was this impressive bit of headgear that he donned as he left the house
-and followed, at a discreet distance, the form of the woman he meant to
-marry.
-
-Since Hemenway had become rich this idea of marriage had strengthened
-wonderfully. In a certain coarse way the man was handsome, and the
-only class of women with which he had ever come in contact had readily
-welcomed his attentions. He had supposed the lack of money would be the
-only drawback in the eyes of this his latest love, and now that the lack
-no longer existed he was confident of success.
-
-Miss Barrington followed the path very leisurely, picking a flower or
-a fern here and there, and softly humming a tune. Upon reaching the
-clearing she settled herself comfortably under her favorite tree and
-opened her book to read. It was then that Hemenway approached from the
-shadows of the path she had just left.
-
-At the snapping of a dry twig Miss Barrington glanced up. Her first
-impulse was to laugh, so absurd did the checkered trousers, flaming
-watch-charm and silk hat look to her against the background of the cool
-green woods. But the laugh was killed at birth by an angry objection that
-the man should be there at all. Even then she supposed him to be merely
-passing by and that he might stop for a word or two.
-
-“Ah, good afternoon, Miss Barrington. What a surprise to find you here,”
-fibbed Hemenway, advancing with easy confidence.
-
-“Good afternoon, Mr. Hemenway.” Miss Barrington moved her book
-suggestively and lowered her eyes.
-
-“Charming view you have here!” said the man.
-
-No reply.
-
-“You have an interesting book there, Miss Barrington?”
-
-“I don’t know—I’m trying to find out,” replied Miss Barrington, with calm
-but ineffectual rudeness.
-
-“Um—delightful place to read! Nice day, too.”
-
-No answer.
-
-Mr. Hemenway looked down approvingly at the lowered lids of the girl’s
-eyes and, blinded by his vast conceit, mistook the flush of annoyance for
-the blush of maidenly shyness. “I never did like a girl to fling herself
-in my face,” he mused, coming a little nearer.
-
-“Well,” he said aloud, “if you have no objections, Miss Barrington, I’ll
-just stop a bit with you and enjoy this breeze,” and he cast himself at
-her feet in careful imitation of the attitude he had seen the fussy man
-with glasses assume only the week before.
-
-Miss Barrington was speechless with indignation. Her first instinct was
-to spring to her feet, but the paralysis of amazement that had struck
-her dumb had also rendered her, for the moment, incapable of motion. A
-sudden determination to “teach the man a lesson and stop once for all
-this insufferable persecution”—as her mind expressed it—followed, and she
-remained passively quiet.
-
-There was an uncomfortable silence that to any man but Hemenway would
-have proved embarrassing.
-
-“Er—I believe I haven’t told you,” he finally began, “how kind I thought
-it was of you to interest yourself as you have in the miners.”
-
-“It is not necessary that you should,” said Ethel icily.
-
-“Very becoming modesty!” thought Hemenway. Aloud he said: “Oh, no, not
-necessary, perhaps, but I want to do it. It is a pleasure to me.”
-
-“It is not one to me.”
-
-Hemenway frowned. There was such a thing as carrying this modesty too far.
-
-“Your singing, too—it was delightful!” he continued smoothly. “And so
-kind of you to do it!”
-
-Miss Barrington turned a leaf of her book with an unnecessary rustling of
-the paper.
-
-“Feigning indifference,” commented Hemenway to himself. “I’ve seen ’em do
-that before.”
-
-“You looked so tired that night after the funerals. I actually worried
-about you—you looked sick,” he said next, in what was meant for tender
-tones.
-
-Miss Barrington’s eyes narrowed ominously as she replied:
-
-“Mr. Hemenway, my actions and my looks can have no possible interest for
-you. I should be obliged if you would cease to consider them.”
-
-To Hemenway’s perverted fancy this was but a bit of shy bait. He
-promptly took advantage of it.
-
-“On the contrary, I have the very greatest interest, my dear Miss
-Barrington—the very warmest interest. I—I—Miss Barrington, as you may be
-aware, I am a rich man now.”
-
-“That does not concern me in the least,” retorted Ethel sharply.
-
-A strange expression came over Hemenway’s face. For the first time a
-doubt shook his egotistical content. His eyes grew hard. No maidenly
-shyness prompted that speech. Still—possibly she had not understood.
-
-“Miss Barrington, it has long been in my mind to ask you to be my wife. I
-love you, and now I am rich I am confident I can make you——”
-
-“Stop! I won’t even listen to you!” Miss Barrington was on her feet, her
-eyes blazing.
-
-Hemenway rose and faced her. All his polish dropped like a mask, and the
-real man looked out from beneath angrily frowning brows.
-
-“You won’t listen, my fine lady? And why not, pray? Ain’t I good enough
-to speak to you?”
-
-“I hate you—I despise you—oh, I loathe the very sight of you!” shuddered
-Ethel, losing all control of herself. “Now will you leave me in peace—or
-must I say more before you quite understand me?”
-
-Hate—despise—loathe; these words Hemenway knew. The delicate shafts of
-society sarcasm fell powerless against his shield of self-conceit, but
-these heavier darts struck home and reached a vital point—his pride. His
-face grew livid.
-
-“Will you go?” repeated Ethel impatiently, not a quiver of fear in the
-scorn of her eyes—“or shall I?” she added.
-
-“Neither one!” he retorted insolently.
-
-For answer Ethel wheeled and took two steps toward the path. Hemenway was
-at her side in an instant with a clutch on her wrist that hurt her.
-
-“Coward!” she cried. “Would you force me to scream for protection?”
-
-“Do so, if you like—there’s not a house within earshot, and the
-inhabitants of this region are not given to walking for pleasure!” He
-released her wrist and stepped again in front of her.
-
-The sharp throb of terror that paled Ethel’s cheek was followed by one of
-joy that sent the color back in surging waves—Hustler Joe’s shanty just
-behind those trees! It was after six—he must be there. If worst came to
-worst——!
-
-“Mr. Hemenway, this is altogether too theatrical. I ask you again—will
-you let me pass?”
-
-“If you think I am a man to be loathed and hated and despised with
-impunity, young lady, you are much mistaken. No, I won’t let you
-pass—you’ll listen to me. I want none of your airs!” he finished sourly.
-
-Ethel’s head bent in a scornful bow.
-
-“Very well, suppose we walk on, then,” she said. “I’m tired of standing.”
-And she turned about and began walking in the opposite direction from the
-path that led toward home.
-
-Mark Hemenway was suspicious of this sudden acquiescence. He hurried to
-her side and looked sharply into her face.
-
-“None of your tricks, young lady! I mean business,” he snarled. “If you
-ain’t willing to hear what I’ve got to say by fair means, you shall by
-foul!” he added, bringing a small revolver into view, then slipping it
-back into his pocket.
-
-Ethel was thoroughly frightened. She thought Hemenway must be mad.
-
-“I should think you had stepped out of a dime novel, Mr. Hemenway,” she
-began, trying to steady her shaking lips. “Nobody wins a bride at the
-point of a pistol nowadays!” The trees that hid Hustler Joe’s shanty from
-view were very near now.
-
-“Then you needn’t treat me as if I was nothing but the dirt under your
-feet,” he muttered sullenly, already regretting his absurd threat of a
-moment before.
-
-Ethel suddenly darted forward and around the edge of the trees, ran
-across the lawn and sprang up the steps of the shanty. Hemenway was
-close at her heels when she flung the door open with a bang and stood
-face to face with Hustler Joe.
-
-“Will you please take me home?” she asked, trying to speak as though she
-considered it a customary thing to invade a man’s house and demand his
-escort in this unceremonious fashion. “Mr. Hemenway is—busy and cannot
-go,” she added, with a cheerful assurance due to the presence of the
-big-bodied miner at her side.
-
-Hustler Joe instantly accepted the part she had given him to play.
-
-“I shall be glad to be of any service,” he said respectfully, with ready
-tact, but with a sharp glance at Hemenway.
-
-The general superintendent bowed to Miss Barrington with uplifted hat,
-then turned and walked away.
-
-“Please do not ask me any questions,” said Miss Barrington hurriedly to
-Hustler Joe as they left the house. “You had better take me by the path
-through the woods—it is the nearer way, and will be less embarrassing
-than the main road would be for—both of us. I know you think my conduct
-extraordinary, but, believe me, I had good reason for asking your escort.
-You—you always seem to be around when I need someone!” she concluded,
-with an hysterical little laugh—the tension to which she had been keyed
-was beginning to tell on her.
-
-“No apology is needed,” demurred the man gravely. “I think I understand.”
-
-That walk was a strange one. The sun had set and the woods were full
-of shadows, and of sounds unheard in the daytime. Ethel was faint and
-nervous. The miner was silent. Once or twice Ethel spoke perfunctorily.
-His answers were civil but short. At the edge of the private grounds the
-girl paused.
-
-“Thank you very much; I shall not forget your courtesy,” she said,
-hesitating a moment, then resolutely offering her hand.
-
-It was not the finger-tips the man touched this time—it was the hand
-from nail to wrist; and his clasp quite hurt her with its fierceness.
-
-“Miss Barrington, you thought me a brute the other day when you spoke so
-kindly to me, and no wonder. I can only beg your pardon—your words cut
-deep. I am going to the mines tomorrow—the gold mines, I mean. I’m glad
-I had this chance to speak to you. You were wrong, Miss Barrington—I—I’m
-not the good man you think!” He dropped her hand and turned away.
-
-“I—I don’t believe it!” she called softly, and fled, swift-footed, across
-the lawn.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mark Hemenway did not appear at The Maples that night. A message from him
-received by Mr. Barrington in the evening said that he had been suddenly
-called away on business connected with his gold mine; that he would
-return soon, however, and would like immediately to make arrangements
-whereby he could sever his connection with the Candria Mining Company, as
-his new interests needed all his attention.
-
-“Humph!” commented Mr. Barrington. “I never saw a little money make such
-a dam fool of a man as it has of Hemenway!”
-
-Ethel’s lips parted, then closed with sudden determination. Twelve hours
-later she left for Dalton without mentioning to her father her experience
-of the day before, and within a week she had sailed from New York on a
-steamer bound for Liverpool.
-
-
- X
-
-The discovery of gold had made all the miners at Skinner Valley restless,
-and Hustler Joe was among the first to take his wages and start for the
-promised bonanza.
-
-Hustler Joe of the coal mines was still “Hustler Joe” of the gold mines.
-The same ceaseless, untiring energy spurred the man on to constant labor.
-The claim he staked out proved to be the richest in the place and wealth
-sought him out and knocked at his cabin door.
-
-Strange to say, Hustler Joe was surprised. He had come to the mines
-simply because they promised excitement and change. He had thought, too,
-that possibly they harbored the peace and forgetfulness for which he so
-longed.
-
-But peace had fled at his approach and wealth had come unasked. Man-like,
-he regarded the unsought with indifference and gazed only at the
-unattainable; whereupon wealth rustled her golden garments to charm his
-ears and flashed her bright beauty to dazzle his eyes. Still failing to
-win his heart, she whispered that she—even she—was peace in disguise, and
-that he had but to embrace her to find what he sought.
-
-It was then that Hustler Joe yielded. In a year he had sold half his
-claim for a fabulous sum. The other half he retained, and leaving it to
-be developed under the charge of expert engineers, he left for Skinner
-Valley.
-
-Hustler Joe had never forgotten the little hunchback pedler, nor the debt
-of gratitude he owed him. Many a time in the old days at the coal mines
-he had tried to pay this debt, but always, in his own estimation, he had
-failed. So it was of Pedler Jim that he first thought when this new power
-of wealth came into his hands.
-
-The news of Hustler Joe’s good luck had not reached Skinner Valley,
-and the man was in the same rough miner’s garb when he pushed open the
-familiar door of the “Emporium” in search of Pedler Jim.
-
-“Well, if it ain’t Hustler Joe!” exclaimed the hunchback delightedly.
-“You’re a sight good fur sore eyes. Come back ter stay?”
-
-“Well, awhile, maybe. How’s the world using you these days, Jim?”
-
-“Oh, fair—fair; ’tain’t quite ’s good as I’d like—but I ain’t
-complainin’.”
-
-“I wonder if anything would make you complain—I never heard you,”
-remarked Joe, helping himself to a seat on the counter.
-
-“Well, now that ye mention it, mebbe I don’t much—I hain’t no need to. My
-appetite’s good an’ my conscience is clear; an’ a clear conscience is——”
-
-“Jim,” interrupted the miner sharply, “did you ever hear of Aladdin and
-his lamp?”
-
-“Huh? Oh, the feller that rubbed it an’ got what he wanted?”
-
-“That’s the chap.”
-
-“Well—s’posin’ I have?”
-
-“Oh, I only wondered what you’d ask for if you had one to rub.”
-
-“Gorry—I wish’t I had!”
-
-“Well, what would you?” persisted Joe, his face alight.
-
-“What would I? Well, I’ll tell ye. I’d buy the big house on the hill——”
-
-“What—Barrington’s?” interrupted Joe.
-
-“Gee whiz, no! I mean the empty one that Rotalick lived in; an’ I’d make
-it over into a hospital, an’ I’d add to it as I was able.”
-
-“A hospital? Why, there is one.”
-
-“Yes, I know—the company’s; but the boys always have ter quit there
-long ’fore they’re able. They can’t work, an’ if they laze ’round home
-it takes furever to git well—what with the noise an’ the children an’
-all. They crawl down here to the store, an’ my heart jest aches fur ’em,
-they’re so peaked-lookin’. I’d have it all fixed up with trees an’ posies
-an’ places ter set, ye know, where they could take some comfort while
-they was gittin’ well.”
-
-A moisture came into Joe’s eyes.
-
-“But how about yourself?” he asked. “You haven’t rubbed out anything for
-yourself, Jim.”
-
-“Fur me? Gorry—if I jest had that lamp, you’d see me rubbin’ out
-somethin’ fur me, all right. I’ve been wantin’ ter send home a box ter
-the old folks—’way back in Maine, ye know. Jiminy Christmas, man, there’d
-be no end ter the black silk dresses and gold-headed canes an’ fixin’s
-an’ fur-belows that I’d rub out an’ send to ’em!”
-
-Hustler Joe laughed; then something came into his throat and choked the
-laugh back.
-
-“But all this isn’t for you, Jim,” he remonstrated.
-
-“Huh? Not fur me? Fur heaven’s sake, man, who is it fur, then?”
-
-The miner laughed again and slid off the counter.
-
-“You’ve got quite a store, Jim. Ever wish you had more room?” he asked
-abruptly.
-
-Pedler Jim not only nibbled at the bait, but swallowed it.
-
-“Well, ye see, I’m goin’ ter have the place next door when I git money
-enough and then I’ll jine ’em together. That’ll be somethin’ worth
-while,” he continued.
-
-Hustler Joe easily kept him talking on this fascinating theme a full ten
-minutes, then he prepared to take his leave.
-
-“Let’s see,” he mused aloud, “you came from Maine, you say. About
-where—the town, I mean?”
-
-Jim named it.
-
-“You say the old folks are living there yet?”
-
-Jim nodded.
-
-“Name is Powers, I suppose, same as yours; maybe you were named for your
-father, eh?”
-
-“No; father’s name was Ebenezer, an’ mother objected—so it’s ‘Jim’ I am.
-Why? Goin’ ter dig up my family tree by the roots?” asked the little man
-whimsically.
-
-“Not a bit of it!” laughed the miner, looking strangely embarrassed as he
-hurried out the door.
-
-“Monte Cristo” had been Hustler Joe’s favorite tale in his boyhood days.
-He thought of it now, as he left the “Emporium,” and the thought brought
-a smile to his lips.
-
-A few days later Pedler Jim was dumfounded to receive a call from a
-Westmont lawyer.
-
-“Well, my friend,” the man began, “I have a few little documents here
-that demand your attention.”
-
-Pedler Jim eyed the formidable-looking papers with some apprehension.
-
-“Now see here, sir,” he demurred, “my conscience is perfectly clear. I
-don’t want nothin’ to do with sech devilish-lookin’ things as that!”—his
-eyes on the big red seal. “I hain’t never harmed no one—’tain’t an
-arres’, is it?” he added, his voice suddenly failing him.
-
-“Well, hardly!” returned the lawyer, chuckling to himself. “This, my
-friend, is the deed, filled out in your name, to the Rotalick property
-on the hill back here; and this,” he continued, taking up another paper
-and paying no attention to the little hunchback, who had dropped in limp
-stupefaction on to a packing-box, “this is the deed—also made out in your
-name—to the building adjoining this store on the south. Mr. Balch, the
-present occupant, has a lease which expires in two months. After that the
-property is at your disposal.”
-
-“But where in thunder did I git it?” demanded Pedler Jim.
-
-“That is not my business, sir,” said the lawyer, with a bow.
-
-“Well, I’ll be jiggered!” murmured the hunchback, gingerly picking up one
-of the deeds and peering at it.
-
-Pedler Jim was still further astounded to find that to his tiny bank
-account had been added a sum so large that he scarcely believed his eyes.
-It was entered under the name “Hospital Fund.”
-
-Following close upon all this came a letter from the folks at home:
-
- _Dear Jimmie_: What a good, good son we have, and how can
- we ever thank you! (“Dear Jimmie” looked blank.) The black
- silk, so soft and rich, will make up into such a beautiful
- gown—much too fine for your old mother, Jimmie, but I shall
- be proud of it. Father is already quite puffed up with his
- lovely gold-topped cane. Nellie and Mary and Tom and John
- have divided up the pretty ribbons and books and sweetmeats
- to suit themselves, as long as you didn’t single them out
- by name. (“No—I’m blest if I did!” murmured Jim.) We were
- proud and pleased to get the box, Jimmie, both because the
- things were so beautiful and because you thought to send
- them. (“I’ll be hanged if I did!” muttered the hunchback,
- scratching his head in his perplexity.) Why don’t you come
- on East and see us, dear? We wish you would.
-
-Then followed bits of neighborhood gossip and family news, ending with
-another burst of thanks which left Pedler Jim helpless with bewilderment.
-
-It was that night that Somers was talking in the store.
-
-“Yes, he’s rich—rich as mud, they say, an’ I ain’t sorry, neither. There
-ain’t anyone I know that I’d as soon would have a streak o’ luck as
-Hustler Joe.”
-
-Pedler Jim was across the room, but he heard.
-
-“Rich! Hustler Joe rich!” he demanded, springing to his feet.
-
-“That’s what he is!”
-
-“Jiminy Christmas!” shouted the hunchback. “I’ve found him—he was the
-lamp himself!”
-
-
- XI
-
-It was in Dalton, the nearest large city to Skinner Valley, that Hustler
-Joe began his career as a rich man.
-
-He built him a house—a house so rare and costly that people came from
-miles around to stare and wonder. Society not only opened its doors to
-him, but reached out persuasive hands and displayed its most alluring
-charms. She demanded but one thing—a new name: “Hustler Joe” could
-scarcely be tolerated in the aristocratic drawing-rooms of the inner
-circle! He gave her “Westbrook,” and thenceforth “Mr. Joseph Westbrook”
-was a power in the city.
-
-He was petted by maneuvering mamas, flattered by doting papas, and beamed
-upon by aspiring daughters; yet the firm lips seldom relaxed in a smile,
-and his groom told of long night rides when the master would come home
-in the gray of the morning with his horse covered with mud and foam. But
-society cared not. Society loves a Mystery—if the Mystery be rich.
-
-When Joseph Westbrook’s mansion was finished and furnished from cellar to
-garret and placed in the hands of a dignified, black-robed housekeeper at
-the head of a corps of servants, and when his stables were filled with
-thoroughbreds and equipped with all things needful, from a gold-tipped
-whip to a liveried coachman, Mr. Joseph Westbrook himself was as restless
-and ill at ease as Hustler Joe had been in the renovated shanty on the
-hillside.
-
-The balls and the dinners—invitations to which poured in upon him—he
-attended in much the same spirit that Hustler Joe had displayed in
-loitering in Pedler Jim’s “Emporium”—anywhere to get rid of himself.
-But if the inner man was the same, the outer certainly was not; and the
-well-groomed gentleman of leisure bore little resemblance to the miner of
-a year before.
-
-On the night of the Charity Ball Westbrook had been almost rude in his
-evasion of various unwelcome advances, and he now stood in the solitude
-for which he had striven, watching the dancers with sombre eyes. Suddenly
-his face lighted up; but the flame that leaped to his eyes was instantly
-quenched by the look of indifference he threw into his countenance.
-Coming toward him was Ethel Barrington, leaning on the arm of her father.
-
-“Mr. Westbrook,” said the old gentleman genially, “my little girl says
-she is sure she has seen your face somewhere, so I have brought her over
-to renew old acquaintance.”
-
-Someone spoke to John Barrington then, and he turned aside, while
-Westbrook found himself once more clasping a slim firm hand, and looking
-into a well-remembered pair of blue eyes.
-
-“You are——?”
-
-“Hustler Joe,” he supplied quietly, his eyes never leaving her face.
-
-“I knew it!” she exclaimed, her pleasure frankly shown. “I never could
-forget your face,” she added impulsively, then colored in confusion as
-she realized the force of her words.
-
-But his tactful reply put her immediately at ease and they were soon
-chatting merrily together, closely watched by many curious eyes. Society
-never had seen Mr. Joseph Westbrook in just this mood before.
-
-“Father did not recognize you,” said Ethel, after a time.
-
-“No; I was introduced to Mr. Barrington at the Essex Club a week ago. I
-hardly thought he would remember Hustler Joe. You have just returned,
-Miss Barrington?”
-
-“A month ago—from Europe, I mean; mother is there yet. America looks
-wonderfully good to me—I have been away from it the greater part of the
-last two years, you know. When I came home to Dalton I found the name
-of Mr. Joseph Westbrook on every lip. You seem to be a very important
-personage, sir,” she laughed.
-
-“A little gilding goes a long way, sometimes,” he replied, with a bitter
-smile.
-
-“But there must have been something to gild!” she challenged. “Mr.
-Westbrook, for the last two weeks I have been at The Maples—have you been
-down to Skinner Valley lately?” she asked, with peculiar abruptness.
-
-“Not for some months.”
-
-“There are some changes in the village.”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“That poor little deformed storekeeper has bought the Rotalick house and
-has turned it into the dearest little convalescents’ home imaginable.”
-
-“Is that so?” murmured Westbrook, meeting Miss Barrington’s gaze with a
-face that was innocently noncommittal. “Pedler Jim always was kind to the
-boys.”
-
-“So it would seem; still—someone must have helped him in this,” she
-suggested, her eyes on his again.
-
-“Do you think so? Possibly! I am wondering, Miss Barrington, if we might
-not find it cooler over there by the window. Will you allow me to escort
-you?”
-
-“Perhaps we might,” she smilingly assented. “Perhaps we could find some
-subject of conversation other than Hustler Joe’s generosity to Pedler
-Jim, too—we might try!” She threw him a merry glance, which he answered
-with a shrug of his shoulders.
-
-“Indeed, Miss Barrington, you quite overestimate anything I may have had
-to do in the matter. It was entirely Pedler Jim’s idea. How about the
-reading-room?” he suddenly asked, mentioning Miss Barrington’s latest
-gift to the miners, “and the kindergarten class, and the——”
-
-“Ah—please!” interrupted the girl, with hand upraised in laughing
-protest. “I acknowledge myself vanquished at my own game. I’ll talk
-about—the weather, now, if you like,” she finished dutifully.
-
-Westbrook laughed, but before he could reply Miss Barrington was claimed
-by a tall young fellow for the next dance.
-
-“I wonder,” he mused as he saw them glide gracefully into the waltz—“I
-wonder if dancing belongs to those things one never forgets. I’ll have to
-brush up my old steps—and learn some new ones,” he added, after a pause.
-
-From the night of the Charity Ball the world appeared in new colors for
-Westbrook. He did not stop to question the cause of all this change. If
-wealth were lifting her disguise and showing a glimpse of peace, he was
-too rejoiced to care to ask the reason.
-
-“I wish you’d come up to the house some time,” said John Barrington to
-Westbrook one evening soon after the Charity Ball. “I’d like to talk with
-you—we can’t make any headway in this infernal racket!”—the “infernal
-racket” in question being the high C’s and low G’s of some world-famous
-singers at a particularly exclusive musical.
-
-Westbrook smiled.
-
-“Thank you; I should be only too happy.”
-
-“Then call it tomorrow night—to dinner. Seven o’clock.”
-
-“I will—and thank you,” said Westbrook after a momentary hesitation.
-
-To his daughter John Barrington said a little later:
-
-“Oh, I’ve invited Mr. Westbrook up to dinner tomorrow night.”
-
-“Mr. Westbrook!”
-
-“Why, yes—why not? You seem surprised.”
-
-“Gilding does count, doesn’t it, father dear?”
-
-“Eh? Gilding? My dear, I don’t know what you mean. I know he’s rich
-as mud—if that’s what you’re talking about; but he’s got more than
-money—he’s got brains. He knows as much about mines as I do! I like
-him—he’s worth a dozen of the youths that usually flutter about you.”
-
-“Perhaps he is,” laughed Ethel, the color in her cheeks deepening.
-
-That was but the first of many visits. Barrington was urgent, Ethel
-charmingly cordial—and Westbrook, nothing loth.
-
-
- XII
-
-“I’m in search of a good lawyer,” said Westbrook to John Barrington one
-day. “Can you recommend one to me?”
-
-“Indeed I can. I have in mind the very man—he’s been doing a little work
-for me, and he is very highly spoken of.”
-
-“That sounds about O. K. Who is he?”
-
-“That’s just the point,” laughed the older man; “the name’s escaped me.
-He’s from the East—hasn’t been here very long. I’ll tell you what—I’ll
-bring him into your office tomorrow. Will that do?”
-
-“It will—and thank you.”
-
-Westbrook’s “office” was something new. A life of leisure was becoming
-wearisome; consequently he invested in various bits of real estate,
-opened an office, put a man in charge, and of late had himself tended
-strictly to business, such time as he could spare from his social
-engagements.
-
-It was into this office that Mr. Barrington came one morning accompanied
-by a short, smooth-faced man whose garments were irreproachable in style
-and cut.
-
-“Ah, Westbrook,” began Barrington, “let me introduce Mr. Martin, of
-Martin & Gray, the lawyer of whom I was telling you yesterday.”
-
-Again the room and all it contained—save the figure of Martin
-himself—faded from Westbrook’s sight, and he saw the New England street
-with the lawyer’s sign in the foreground. The next moment the vision was
-gone, and he had extended a cordial hand.
-
-“I’m very glad to meet Mr. Martin,” he said, looking the lawyer straight
-in the eye.
-
-“Mr. Westbrook—delighted, I’m sure,” murmured the little man suavely;
-then, in a puzzled tone, “have I had the honor of meeting you before, Mr.
-Westbrook? There is something familiar about you.”
-
-“Is there?” began Westbrook, but John Barrington interrupted.
-
-“There, Martin, you’ve hit my case exactly! He’s puzzled me a thousand
-times with a little turn or twist that’s like someone I’ve seen. Dash
-it—who is it?”
-
-“My features must be cast in a common mold,” laughed Westbrook, “to
-remind so many of one they know.”
-
-“Um—ah—well—I shouldn’t want to say quite that!” retorted Barrington.
-“Well, gentlemen,” he resumed after a pause, “I’ll leave you to your own
-devices. I’m off—good morning.”
-
-“Good morning, and thank you,” replied Westbrook, rising. “I’ve no doubt
-Mr. Martin will prove a credit to your introduction,” he concluded as he
-bowed the elder gentleman out. Then he turned to the lawyer and began the
-business at hand.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In his own room that night Westbrook carried a small mirror close to the
-light and scrutinized himself for some minutes.
-
-“H’m,” he mused, “hair rather gray for a man not yet thirty; still—it
-looks less like that of a youth of twenty.”
-
-He stroked his carefully trimmed beard meditatively.
-
-“Hides the telltale mouth and chin pretty well,” he murmured. “Mr. Joseph
-Westbrook can stay where he is for the present, I think.”
-
-The next evening Westbrook called at the Barringtons’. He found Ethel
-and Mr. Martin at the piano singing a duet which they continued at
-his solicitation. Then the two musicians drifted into a discussion
-of Martin’s favorite composer, which was like a foreign language to
-Westbrook.
-
-After a half-hour of this the lawyer took his leave. Westbrook drew a
-long breath, but it was caught and stifled in half completion by Miss
-Barrington’s first remark.
-
-“What a fine voice he has!”
-
-“Er—yes, very.”
-
-“And his knowledge of musical matters is most unusual, too.”
-
-“That so?”
-
-“Yes. He says he wanted to make music his profession, but his parents
-objected; so he took up law.”
-
-“Indeed,” murmured Westbrook without enthusiasm.
-
-“Yes, but he talks of musicians as glibly as though he had read Grove
-as much as Blackstone. I haven’t had so good a time discussing my pet
-composers for many a day.”
-
-Westbrook stirred restlessly, and his hostess suddenly became aware of
-the hopelessly lost look in his eyes. She promptly changed the subject.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was the very next day that Mr. Joseph Westbrook appeared in the
-leading book-store of the city.
-
-“I want some lives of musicians,” he announced.
-
-“I beg pardon?”
-
-“Books, I mean—lives of musicians.”
-
-“Oh, certainly, of course,” apologized the clerk. “Which ones?”
-
-“Why—er—the best ones, to be sure.” Westbrook’s voice faltered at first,
-but it vibrated with the courage of his convictions at the last.
-
-The clerk suddenly turned his back, and when Westbrook next saw his face
-it was an apoplectic shade of reddish purple.
-
-“Certainly, sir. Bach, Beethoven, Handel, Haydn, Mendelssohn, Mozart,
-Chopin——”
-
-“Yes, yes, put me up one of each,” interrupted Westbrook hastily; he was
-growing suspicious of the clerk. He left the store with more dignity than
-he usually displayed.
-
-The real estate business would have suffered in the next few days had it
-depended entirely upon Westbrook, for the greater share of his time was
-spent in poring over the recent addition to his library. At the end of a
-month he was sadly entangled in a bewildering maze of fugues, sonatas,
-concertos and symphonies, in which the names of Bach, Beethoven, Haydn,
-Handel, Mendelssohn, Mozart and Chopin were hopelessly lost.
-
-
- XIII
-
-Westbrook often met the lawyer at the Barringtons’ after that first
-visit. Martin’s music and Martin’s voice seemed to be unfailing
-attractions in the eyes of Miss Barrington. Westbrook studied his “lives”
-assiduously, but only once did he venture to take any part in the
-discussions of composers which were so frequent between Miss Barrington
-and the lawyer. That once was sufficient to show him how hopeless was the
-task he had set for himself; and ever after he kept a discreet silence on
-the subject of music and all that pertained thereto.
-
-As the winter passed, Westbrook was seen more and more frequently in the
-company of Miss Barrington. His eye had lost its gloom and his step had
-gained a new springiness. Just why, Westbrook did not stop to consider.
-Indeed, the considering of anything was what the man most wished to avoid.
-
-It was on a beautiful morning in May that he asked Miss Barrington
-to drive with him. The air that brushed his cheek was laden with the
-fragrance of green-growing things, and the girl at his side had never
-seemed so altogether lovely. He let the reins loosen in his hands as he
-settled back for an hour of unalloyed enjoyment.
-
-“I am particularly glad to take this drive today,” remarked Miss
-Barrington, smiling into his eyes, “for, as I go away tomorrow, I may not
-have another opportunity of enjoying one at present.”
-
-“What?” demanded Westbrook, suddenly sitting upright.
-
-“I merely said I was going away tomorrow,” she returned merrily, picking
-out with intuitive skill that portion of her remark which had so startled
-him. Then something in his face made her add—“for the summer, you know.”
-
-Westbrook pulled the reins taut and snapped the whip sharply. Going
-away! Of course; why not? What of it? Yes, what of it, indeed! Long days
-fraught with sudden emptiness loomed up before him and stretched on into
-weeks devoid of charm. He understood it all now—and he a felon! He could
-hear a girl’s voice saying, “I knew you were a good man the minute I saw
-your face!” Unconsciously he shrank into the corner of the carriage, and
-was only brought to a realization of his action by a voice—amused, yet
-slightly piqued—saying:
-
-“Really, Mr. Westbrook, I hardly expected so simple a statement would
-render you speechless!”
-
-“Speechless? No, oh, no—certainly not! I beg your pardon, I’m sure,” he
-said, talking very fast. “You’re going away, you tell me. It is needless
-to assure you that we shall all miss you very much. Where do you go, if I
-may ask—and how long are you to remain?” And he turned to her with eyes
-so full of misery that she could scarcely believe she had heard his words
-aright.
-
-Before she could answer there came the wild, irregular clattering of
-unguided horses’ feet. Westbrook turned quickly to see two frightened
-animals rushing toward them dragging a swaying empty carriage. By a swift
-and skilful turn he just escaped the collision, but Ethel Barrington felt
-the hot breath of the beasts as they flew past. In another moment their
-own startled horse had dashed after the runaways with speed scarcely less
-than their own.
-
-Westbrook brought all his great strength to bear, then—the right rein
-snapped. The horse swerved sharply, throwing the man to his knees. The
-next moment he was crawling cautiously, but rapidly, over the dashboard
-on to the thill, then to the back of the frightened animal, where he
-could grasp the dangling broken reins. One strong pull, and the horse
-stopped so suddenly that the man shot over her head to the ground; but
-he did not relax his hold, and the trembling animal stood conquered.
-
-Westbrook turned to look into the shining eyes of the girl, who had
-leaped from the carriage and come close to his side.
-
-“Oh, that was wonderful! But—my God! I thought you’d be killed,” she
-cried, holding out two trembling hands, then sinking to the ground and
-sobbing out her nervousness and relief.
-
-The man looked down at her with yearningly tender eyes. Involuntarily he
-extended his hand as though to caress the bowed head; but he drew back
-shuddering—that hand had forfeited all right to such a touch. The look in
-her eyes had thrilled him to his finger-tips, but it as quickly stabbed
-him with the revelation that not he alone would suffer.
-
-“Miss Barrington, don’t, I beg of you,” he said finally, in a voice that
-was stem with self-control. “You are completely unnerved—and no wonder.”
-Then he continued more gently, “But see—Firefly is quiet now. Will you
-dare to drive home behind her if I can manage somehow to mend the reins?”
-
-A vivid color flamed into the girl’s cheeks and she rose unsteadily to
-her feet.
-
-“Yes, indeed,” she asserted, forcing her trembling lips to speak
-firmly. “I am ashamed of myself. I hope you will pay no attention to my
-babyishness, Mr. Westbrook.”
-
-“You were not babyish, Miss Barrington,” objected Westbrook gravely; “on
-the contrary you were very brave.” But as he helped her into the carriage
-he averted his eyes and refused to meet her questioning gaze.
-
-All the way home Ethel Barrington talked with a nervous volubility quite
-unlike herself. Westbrook made an effort to meet her brilliant sallies
-with something like an adequate return, but after two or three dismal
-failures he gave it up and lapsed into a gloomy silence broken only by an
-occasional short reply.
-
-“I expect my friends will come this evening to say good-bye—I shall see
-you, shall I not?” she asked gaily as she gave him her hand in alighting
-at her own door.
-
-Before Westbrook fully realized what the question was, he had murmured,
-“Yes, certainly”; but when he drove away he was muttering, “Fool, what
-possible good can it be to you now? Just suppose she knew you for what
-you are?”
-
-Ethel entered her door and slowly climbed the stairs to her room.
-
-“He cares; I know he does!” she exclaimed under her breath. “But why—why
-couldn’t he—?” Then the conscious red, that was yet half in pique, flamed
-into her cheeks and she shrugged her shoulders disdainfully.
-
-When Westbrook called that night she gave him a gracious hand and looked
-frankly into his eyes with the inward determination to “have no more
-nonsense”; but her eyelids quickly fell before his level gaze and she
-felt the telltale color burning in her cheeks. She was relieved when her
-father broke the awkward silence.
-
-“Well, Westbrook, we shall miss you—we’ve got so we depend upon seeing
-you about once in so often. We shall be in Skinner Valley in August. You
-must plan to run down to The Maples then and make us a visit. I should
-like to show you the mines.”
-
-“Thank you,” replied Westbrook, glancing toward the door and, for the
-first time in his life, welcoming the appearance of Martin.
-
-Martin advanced, smilingly sure of his welcome, nor did he notice that
-Miss Barrington’s greeting was a shade less cordial than usual. His
-coming was the signal for an adjournment to the music-room, and there
-Westbrook sat with clouded eyes and unheeding ears while the air about
-him rang with melody. After a time he was conscious that the music had
-stopped and that Ethel was speaking.
-
-“I think I never heard of anything so horrible!” she said.
-
-From Martin’s next words Westbrook gathered that they were talking of
-a particularly atrocious murder that had been committed in the city the
-night before. Then the girl spoke again, her voice vibrating with feeling.
-
-“Oh, but Mr. Martin—only think of a human being fiendish enough to attack
-his own son!”
-
-Westbrook tried to rouse himself, to speak, to move; but he seemed bound
-by invisible cords. His head was turned away from the speakers, but he
-saw their reflection in the mirror facing him, and he noticed that the
-lawyer’s gaze was fixed across the room upon himself with a peculiar
-intentness as he said:
-
-“Yes, incredible, I grant, Miss Barrington; and yet, in a little New
-England town of my acquaintance a boy of twenty shot down his own father
-in cold blood at their own fireside.”
-
-“Oh, don’t, Mr. Martin—the human fiend!” shuddered Ethel.
-
-The lawyer’s eyes did not waver; a strange light was coming into them.
-
-“A human fiend, indeed,” he repeated softly, half rising from his chair.
-
-Something seemed to snap in Westbrook’s brain, and he forced himself to
-his feet.
-
-“Your music set me to day-dreaming,” he began, with a smile as he
-crossed the room, “and your creepy murder stories awoke me to a
-realization that the sweet sounds had stopped. Come”—he looked straight
-into Martin’s eyes—“some time you may tell me more of this gruesome
-tale—I am interested in studies of human nature. No doubt you meet with
-many strange experiences in your business; but now I want you to sing
-‘Calvary’ for me. Will you, please? Then I must go.”
-
-Martin rose to his feet with a puzzled frown on his face and picked up a
-sheet of music from the piano.
-
-“Thank you,” said Westbrook, when the song was finished. Then he turned
-to Ethel with extended hand. “I hope you will have a pleasant summer,” he
-said in stilted politeness.
-
-“You are very kind. Shall I wish you the same?”
-
-Her voice and her fingers were icy. Her pride was touched, and she
-expressed no hope as to their future meeting, and certainly Westbrook
-dared not. He left the house with a heart that was bitterly rebellious,
-and the blackness outside seemed to him symbolical of his own despair.
-
-That night, and for long nights afterward, he rode over the hills outside
-the city. Little by little his life dropped back into the old rut. All
-the new warmth and brightness faded with the going of Miss Barrington,
-and he threw himself into business with a zeal that quickly brought
-“Westbrook & Company” into the front rank and filled his purse with yet
-greater wealth—wealth which he had come to hate, and for which he had no
-use.
-
-
- XIV
-
-One morning, long after sunrise, Westbrook entered the outskirts of
-the city and allowed his tired beast to slow to a walk. In one of the
-poorest streets of the tenement district he saw a white-faced woman, a
-group of half a dozen puny children and a forlorn heap of clothing and
-furniture. He was off his horse in a moment, and a few kindly questions
-brought out the information that they had been evicted for arrears in
-rent amounting to thirty dollars because the woman had been too ill to
-work. He straightway paid the sleek little agent not only the amount due,
-but also a year’s rent in advance and rode away, followed by a volley of
-thanks and blessings from the woman. He did not know that Martin was the
-landlord and that he came out of the tenement in time to hear the details
-of the incident fresh from his agent.
-
-As Westbrook turned the corner of the dingy street a curious elation took
-possession of him. How the sun shone—how exhilarating the air was! How
-his heart beat in tune with it all! What was this new joy that seemed
-almost to choke and suffocate him? Was this the shadow of peace at last?
-
-He threw the reins to the groom with so beaming a smile that the man
-scratched his head meditatively for a full half-minute.
-
-“Faith, an’ what’s got into the master?” he muttered as he led the horse
-to the stable.
-
-In the days that followed society was treated to a new sensation—the
-Mystery turned into a Philanthropist. A school, a library and a hospital
-were under way in a wonderfully short time. Did Westbrook hear of anyone
-wanting anything—from a toy to a piano or a dinner to an education—he
-promptly bought and presented it. The result was disastrous. There came
-a constant stream of beggars to his door, varying from those in rags
-asking a nickel to bank presidents demanding a million—for “investment,”
-of course; furthermore, he was obliged to hire two private secretaries to
-attend to his mail.
-
-In August came a cordial note from Mr. Barrington inviting him to The
-Maples for a two weeks’ visit. The stiffly worded refusal which Westbrook
-despatched by return mail threw John Barrington into a state of puzzled
-dissatisfaction, and John Barrington’s daughter into a feeling of
-unreasoning anger against the world in general and Joseph Westbrook in
-particular. The anger was not less when, two months later, Westbrook
-called on the Barringtons just four weeks after they had come up to their
-town residence in Dalton.
-
-It was not a pleasant call. Westbrook was stilted, Mr. Barrington plainly
-ill at ease, and Ethel the personification of chill politeness; yet she
-became cordiality itself when Martin appeared a little later. She chatted
-and laughed with the lawyer and sent merry shafts of wit across the room
-to Westbrook and her father. But when Westbrook had gone she lapsed into
-bored indifference and monosyllables.
-
-Mr. Barrington was called from the room after a time, leaving his
-daughter and Martin alone. The lawyer broached subject after subject with
-unvarying ill success, even music itself failing to awaken more than a
-passing interest. At last he said abruptly:
-
-“Queer chap—that Westbrook!”
-
-“Queer? Why?” almost snapped Miss Barrington.
-
-Martin raised his eyebrows.
-
-“How can you ask?” he returned. “You’ve seen him—you know him!”
-
-Miss Barrington gave the lawyer a swift glance. Just what did he mean?
-Had he noticed the change in Westbrook’s manner—his indifference—his
-coldness? Did he think that she——?
-
-Miss Barrington laughed softly.
-
-“Indeed, yes, Mr. Martin, I do know him—slightly, perhaps; but ‘queer’ is
-not the adjective I would have applied to him.”
-
-The lawyer leaned forward.
-
-“Miss Barrington, _what_ do you know of him? Did it ever occur to you how
-very little any of us know of this man?”
-
-The lady stirred uneasily.
-
-“Really, Mr. Martin, I know him for a gentleman, as you do—I might
-also add that he is quite a noted philanthropist, of late,” she added
-teasingly.
-
-“‘Philanthropist!’” scorned the lawyer.
-
-Miss Barrington’s manner instantly changed.
-
-“Mr. Westbrook is doing a world of good with his money; I admire him for
-it,” she said with decision.
-
-“Oh, of course,” returned the man smoothly. “Still, I wonder why—this
-sudden generosity!”
-
-“Sudden? It’s a long time since I first heard of Mr. Westbrook’s good
-deeds, Mr. Martin,” replied Miss Barrington, a vision of Pedler Jim and
-his hospital rising before her eyes.
-
-“H’m-m,” murmured the lawyer, his level gaze on her face, “you knew him
-before, perhaps—this man they—er—call ‘Westbrook.’”
-
-The lady sprang to her feet and crossed the room to the piano.
-
-“Oh, fie, Mr. Lawyer!” she laughed nervously. “I’m no poor victim on the
-witness stand. Come—let’s try this duet.”
-
-The man followed her and leaned his elbow on the piano, but he did not
-pick up the music nor take his eyes from her face.
-
-“You have known him before, then—under his other name, of course,” he
-hazarded.
-
-A swift red came into Ethel’s cheeks.
-
-“Perhaps—perhaps not! I really do not care to discuss it.” And she
-wheeled around upon the piano-stool and dashed into the prelude of the
-duet.
-
-Martin waited until her hands glided into the soft ripple of the
-accompaniment.
-
-“Then you, of all people, Miss Barrington,” he began again, “should
-know that this philanthropic mummery is nothing but a salve for his
-conscience. Admirable, I’m sure!”
-
-The music stopped with a crash.
-
-“What do you mean?” she demanded. “I don’t know what you are talking
-about, with your miserable innuendoes.”
-
-Martin’s face paled.
-
-“Innuendoes!” he burst out, losing his temper; “then I’ll speak plainly,
-since you demand it! Since when, Miss Barrington, have you made a
-practice of shielding—murderers?”
-
-He regretted the word the instant it had left his lips, but he forced
-himself to meet Miss Barrington’s horrified gaze unflinchingly.
-
-“Murderer!” she gasped. “Hustler Joe was no murderer!”
-
-At that moment Mr. Barrington re-entered the room and Martin turned to
-him in relief. Five minutes later he had made his adieus and left the
-house.
-
-
- XV
-
-Murderer!
-
-Ethel fled to her room and locked the door, but the word laughed at bolts
-and bars. It looked from the walls and the pictures and peeped at her
-from the pages of the book she tried to read. She opened the window and
-gazed up at the stars, but they, too, knew the hated word and spelled it
-out in twinkling points of light.
-
-Murderer?
-
-Ah, no, it could not be—and yet——
-
-Away back in Ethel’s memory was a picture of the Deerfield woods that
-skirted the lawn at The Maples. She saw the tall, grave-faced miner and
-the imperious girl, and even now the words rang in her ears—“I’m not the
-good man you think, Miss Barrington!” Half-forgotten tales of “Hustler
-Joe’s queerness” came to her, too, and assumed an appearance of evil.
-
-And was this to be the explanation of that ride—that ride on which
-she had almost betrayed herself only to be met by stern words of
-conventionality? Was this the meaning of the infrequent calls, the
-averted face, the eyes so misery-laden if by chance they met her own?
-
-A murderer?
-
-Ah, no, no! He was so good—so kind—so brave! There were Pedler Jim, the
-miners whose lives he had saved, and the multitudes of the city’s poor to
-give the lie to so base a charge; and yet—Martin had said that these very
-benefactions were but a lullaby to a guilty conscience.
-
-The night brought Ethel no relief. The dark was peopled with horrid
-shapes; and sleep, when it came, was dream-haunted and unrefreshing.
-In the morning, weary and heavy-eyed, she awoke to a day of restless
-wandering from room to room. Twenty-four hours later her trunk was packed
-and she was on her way to The Maples.
-
-It was at about this time that Westbrook’s philanthropy took a new turn.
-He began to spend long hours in the city prison while society looked on
-and shrugged disdainful shoulders. The striped-garbed creatures behind
-the bars seemed to possess a peculiar fascination for him. He haunted
-their habitation daily, yet he never failed to shudder at every clang of
-the iron doors.
-
-Particularly was he kind to those outcasts from human sympathy—the
-murderers. So far did he carry this branch of his charity that the
-authorities ventured to remonstrate with the great man one day, telling
-him that he was putting a premium on the horrible crime. They never
-forgot the look that came over the beneficent Mr. Joseph Westbrook’s
-face as he turned and walked away.
-
-It was on that night that the servants said he sat up until morning in
-his library, raging around the room like some mad creature, so that they
-were all afraid, and one came and listened at the door. There he heard
-his master cry out:
-
-“My God—is it not enough? Is there no atonement—no peace?” Then there was
-a long, quivering sigh, and a noise as of a clinched hand striking the
-desk, and a low muttered, “Oh, the pitiless God of Justice!”
-
-In the morning Westbrook left the house before breakfast and boarded the
-eight o’clock train for Skinner Valley.
-
-
- XVI
-
-Westbrook had gone back to Skinner Valley for a talk with Pedler Joe,
-having it in his mind to tell the little hunchback his life story as that
-of a friend of his and so get the benefit of sound advice without quite
-betraying his secret. But the door opened suddenly and Bill Somers burst
-into the store.
-
-“There’s another blow-up at the mine!” he gasped thickly. “An’ the old
-man’s daughter—she——”
-
-“What old man’s daughter?” demanded Westbrook, his lips white.
-
-“She—Barrington’s girl—is down there in that hell! She went in with her
-friends at two o’clock. They——”
-
-“Which entrance?” thundered Westbrook, with his hand on the door.
-
-“Beachmont! They——”
-
-Westbrook dashed down the steps and across the sidewalk, whipped out his
-knife and cut loose a horse from the shafts of a wagon in front of the
-store. The next moment he had mounted the animal and was urging it into a
-mad run toward the Beachmont entrance of the Candria mine.
-
-Again did he face a crowd of weeping women and children crazed with
-terror; but this time there stood among them the bowed form of the great
-mine-king himself. John Barrington’s lips were stern and set, and only
-his eyes spoke as he grasped Westbrook’s hand.
-
-Once more did a band of heroic men work their way bit by bit into the
-mine, fighting the damp at every turn under Westbrook’s directions.
-
-Barrington had looked at the preparations in amazement.
-
-“How comes it that this Westbrook, this millionaire, knows the mine so
-well?” he stammered.
-
-A woman standing near—Bill Somers’s wife—answered him.
-
-“That’s Hustler Joe, sir,” she said softly.
-
-Hustler Joe! John Barrington drew a deep breath as the memories of the
-Bonanza catastrophe came to him.
-
-“Thank God for Hustler Joe!” he breathed fervently. “If anyone can save
-my little girl, ’tis he!”
-
-“You’re right, sir—an’ he’ll do it, too,” returned the little woman, her
-eyes full of unshed tears.
-
-
- XVII
-
-Slowly, so slowly, the rescuers worked their way into the mine. One by
-one the unconscious forms of the miners were borne back to fresh air and
-safety. But no trace could be found of Miss Barrington and her band of
-sightseers.
-
-At last, far down a gallery, Westbrook heard a faint cry. With an
-answering shout of reassurance he dashed ahead of the others and came
-face to face with Ethel Barrington.
-
-“You!” she cried.
-
-“Yes, yes; you’re not hurt?”
-
-She shook her head and leaned heavily against the wall. The reaction was
-making her head swim.
-
-“And your friends?”
-
-“Here”—she pointed to the ground almost at her feet. “They’re not
-hurt—they fainted.”
-
-Stalwart miners poured into the narrow chamber and lifted the prostrate
-forms, leaving Westbrook to follow with Miss Barrington. That young lady
-still leaned against the wall.
-
-“I—we should be going; can you—let me help you,” stammered Westbrook.
-
-“Oh, I can walk,” she laughed nervously, making a vain attempt to steady
-her limbs as she moved slowly away from her support.
-
-Westbrook caught her outstretched hand and passed his disengaged arm
-around her waist.
-
-“Miss Barrington, you’re quite unnerved,” he said, his voice suddenly
-firm. “Pardon me, but you must accept my assistance.” And he half
-carried, half led her down the long gallery, at the end of which they
-could hear the steps and voices of their companions.
-
-All the misery of the last few days fled from Ethel’s mind. She was
-conscious only of the strength and bravery and tenderness of the man at
-her side. Martin’s hated words became as phantoms of a past existence.
-
-“You—you haven’t told me how you came to be here today, Mr. Westbrook,”
-she began again, a little hysterically. “I thought you were in Dalton.”
-
-“I came down this morning,” he said. Then added softly, “Thank God!”
-
-Ethel was silent for a moment. When she spoke again her voice shook.
-
-“As usual, Mr. Westbrook—you are near when I need you! If I am ever in
-danger again, I shall promptly look for you. Now see that you do not
-disappoint me!” she added with assumed playfulness, trying to hide her
-depth of feeling.
-
-They had almost reached the turn when a distant rumble and vibrating
-crash shook the walls about them, throwing Westbrook and Miss Barrington
-to the ground. It was some time before the man could stagger to his feet
-and help his companion to stand upright.
-
-“What—what was it?” she gasped.
-
-Westbrook advanced two steps only to come sharply against a wall of earth
-and timbers.
-
-“My God—the roof is fallen!” he cried.
-
-She came close to his side.
-
-“Then there was another explosion?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“But they will find us?”
-
-“That wall may be—” he stopped abruptly.
-
-“Many feet in thickness, I know,” she supplied.
-
-“And the damp—if it should enter the gallery from the rear—” his voice
-choked into silence.
-
-“I know—I understand. But—we are together!” She laid her hand on his arm.
-
-He caught the hand and held it in both his own, then slowly raised it and
-laid the soft palm against his lips.
-
-“Ethel—Ethel—may God forgive me!” he whispered brokenly.
-
-She swayed dizzily, and he caught and held her close.
-
-“I—I think I am going to faint,” she murmured. “I——”
-
-His arms tightened their clasp and her head drooped until it lay in the
-hollow of his shoulder.
-
-“Ethel, darling—only one little word! Ah, sweetheart—I’ve loved you so!”
-
-She raised her hand and just touched his cheek with her fingers, then let
-her arm fall about his neck. His head bent low and his lips closed over
-hers as she drew a long, quivering sigh.
-
-“May God forgive me,” he breathed, “but ’tis the end—the end!”
-
-
- XVIII
-
-When Ethel Barrington regained consciousness she was in her own bed at
-The Maples, but it was a full two days after that before they let her
-ask the questions that so often came to her lips. It was her father who
-finally answered her.
-
-“Yes, dear, you were unconscious when the miners found you. Westbrook
-could barely speak. Why, girlie, when that second crash came and the
-miners realized that Hustler Joe—as they insist upon calling that
-remarkable man—was himself imprisoned, they swarmed into that mine like
-ants and attacked the fallen wall like madmen! Those that had no pickaxe
-clawed at the dirt and stones with their naked fingers.”
-
-“And—Mr. Westbrook?”
-
-“Is all right and has been here every day to inquire for you and to bring
-you these,” replied Mr. Barrington, with a wave of his hand toward the
-sumptuous red roses on the table.
-
-The girl’s eyes lingered on the flowers and her cheeks suddenly glowed
-with a reflection of their vivid color.
-
-“He is very kind,” she murmured as she turned her face away.
-
-For a week Westbrook and his roses made daily calls. At the end of that
-time it was reported to him that Miss Barrington was feeling quite like
-herself. The next morning Westbrook did not appear, but his roses came in
-charge of a boy together with a note for Miss Barrington.
-
-The missive bore no date, no salutation, but plunged at once into its
-message.
-
- That I should address you at all is an insult, but my
- cowardly weakness when we were last together makes it a
- greater insult for me to keep silence now. I have waited
- until you were quite recovered before giving you this, for
- I know that it will give you pain—and that it _will_ give
- you pain is at once my greatest curse and my greatest joy.
- That I should have dared to love you is despicable, but
- that I should have allowed you to give me even one tender
- thought in return is dastardly—and yet, nothing in heaven
- or hell can take from me the ecstasy of that one moment
- when your dear lips met mine!
-
- Forgive me—think kindly of me if you can, for—God help
- me—I am going away, never to look on your face again.
- I was a boy of twenty when I committed the sin against
- God and man that has made my life a thing of horror. For
- years I have sought for peace; adventure, work, wealth,
- philanthropy—each alike has failed to bring it. I am going
- now to my boyhood’s home to receive my just punishment.
-
- Ah, Ethel, Ethel, my lost love—what can I say to you? I
- have but words—words—empty words! I can see the horror in
- your dear eyes. I am not worthy of even the thought of you,
- and yet, my darling, oh, my darling, were it not for this
- dread shadow on my life, I swear I would win you for my
- darling in very truth!
-
- But now—God help me—farewell!
-
-There was no name signed, but this Ethel did not notice until she had
-read the note three times with her tear-dimmed eyes; then she whispered:
-
-“Poor fellow! He could not sign ‘Westbrook’ and he would not sign—the
-other.”
-
-Much to John Barrington’s amazement, his daughter insisted upon going to
-town on the noon train that day. In response to his persistent objections
-she assured him that she felt “perfectly well and quite equal to a
-journey around the world, if necessary.”
-
-At four o’clock Lawyer Martin was surprised by an urgent note summoning
-him to the Barringtons’ Dalton residence on Howard Avenue. Half an hour
-afterward he was ushered into the presence of Miss Barrington herself.
-
-The interview was short, sharp and straight to the point. A few hours
-later Miss Barrington and her maid boarded the eight o’clock express for
-the East.
-
-
- XIX
-
-Twenty-four hours passed after Westbrook had sent his letter to Miss
-Barrington before he could so arrange his affairs as to start for the
-little New England village of his boyhood. All day and all night he had
-worked with feverish haste, and the time had flown on wings of the wind;
-now, when he was at last on the morning “Limited,” the hours seemed to
-drag as though weighted with lead.
-
-He could see it all—the proud new name he had made for himself
-dragged low in the dust. He knew just how society would wonder and
-surmise; just how the maneuvering mamas would shake their skirts in
-virtuous indignation and how the doting papas would nod their heads in
-congratulation over a miraculous escape.
-
-He knew how the poor and friendless in the great city would first deny
-the charge, then weep over the truth. He knew, too, the look that would
-come to the faces of the miners, and he winced at even the thought of
-this—Hustler Joe had prized his place in the hearts of his miner friends.
-
-There was one on whom he dared not let his thoughts rest for a moment;
-yet it was that one’s face which seemed ever before his eyes, and it was
-that one’s voice which constantly rang in his ears.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Again the sun had set and it was twilight in the little New England
-village. The street had not changed much—the houses were grayer and the
-trees taller, perhaps.
-
-As he neared the familiar gate, he saw in the window the face of a
-silver-haired woman. Was that his mother—his dearly beloved mother of
-long ago? She turned her head and he was answered.
-
-After all, would it not be better to pass on and away again, rather than
-to bow that gray head once more in grief and shame?
-
-His steps lagged and he almost passed the gate. Then he drew a long
-breath, turned sharply, strode up the path and pulled the bell.
-
-The sweet-faced woman opened the door. The man’s dry lips parted, but
-no sound came, for from an inner room advanced Ethel Barrington with a
-gray-haired man whose kindly face wore a strangely familiar smile.
-
-“What is it, wife? Is it—Paul?” he asked in tremulous tones.
-
-
- EPILOGUE
-
-It was long hours afterward that Paul Joseph Weston sat with Ethel alone
-in the library.
-
-“But yourself, dear—you have not told me yet how you came to be here,” he
-said.
-
-She laughed softly.
-
-“Rash boy! Was there not need of someone’s preparing your father and
-mother for so wonderful a home-coming? I found out by judicious inquiry
-that you had not yet left the city, so I knew, when I took the train,
-that I had at least a few hours’ start of you.”
-
-“But how—what—how could you, dear? Surely I didn’t tell——”
-
-Again she laughed, but this time she dimpled into a rosy blush.
-
-“When your very disquieting letter came, sir, I remembered something
-Mr. Martin had once said to me. I went to town, sent for Mr. Martin and
-insisted upon his telling me all that he knew of—your youth.”
-
-“And that was?”
-
-“That he believed you to be Paul Weston, who had quarreled with his
-father and run away after apparently killing the poor gentleman. Mr.
-Martin said that the father did not die, but slowly recovered from his
-wound and made every possible effort to find his son, even sending Martin
-himself to seek for him. Once Martin traced the boy to a mining camp, but
-there he lost the trail and never regained it until he thought he saw
-Paul Weston’s features in Joseph Westbrook’s face.”
-
-“Ethel, what did Martin first tell you of me that caused you to go to him
-for aid?”
-
-“He hinted that you were a—ah, don’t make me say it, please!”
-
-The man’s face grew stern.
-
-“And he knew all the time it was false!” he cried.
-
-She put a soft finger on his tense lips.
-
-“We just won’t think of him—and really, I’ve forgiven him long ago, for
-it was he that helped me in the end, you know. Besides, he acknowledged
-that he didn’t really suppose you were Paul Weston. I—I fancy he didn’t
-want me to think too highly of this interesting Mr. Joseph Westbrook!”
-she added saucily.
-
-The arm that held her tightened its clasp.
-
-“He needn’t have worried,” she continued, with uptilted chin. “I shall
-never, never marry Mr. Joseph Westbrook!”
-
-“Ethel!”
-
-“But if Hustler Joe or Paul Weston should ask——”
-
-Her lips were silenced by a kiss and a fervent, “You little fraud of a
-sweetheart!”
-
-
-
-
- _Interludes_
-
-
-The rich man speaks about how he spends his money, while his friends
-speak about how he made it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-You could tell the old-time hero by his medals; the modern one is known
-by his collection of loving-cups.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The spendthrift sometimes does more good with his money than the
-philanthropist.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The fact that figures won’t lie probably accounts for the invention of
-statistics.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A political job differs from any other kind, inasmuch as you work before
-you get it, instead of afterward.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The miser holds on to his own money; the millionaire to other people’s.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _His Cogitation_
-
-“Well, then, amongst others, there’s the man who habitually talks to
-himself,” ruminatingly said the Pruntytown Philosopher the other evening.
-“If he does it in order to listen to himself, he is a fool; if he does
-it to avoid listening to his friends, he is a sage; and if he does it to
-save his friends from listening to him, he is a philanthropist.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- _The Safe Side_
-
-REPORTER—Were you quoted correctly in that interview in the morning
-papers?
-
-SENATOR—Come around the day after tomorrow. How can I tell until I see
-how the interview is going to be taken?
-
- * * * * *
-
- _An Inference_
-
-“My wife and I have lived happily together for twenty-five years.”
-
-“Now, tell me, old fellow—in confidence, of course—which one of you has
-had the other bluffed all this time?”
-
-
-
-
- _The Constitution_
-
- BY FREDERICK UPHAM ADAMS
- _Author of “The Kidnapped Millionaires,” “Colonel Monroe’s Doctrine,”
- “President John Smith,” “Shades of the Fathers,” etc._
-
-
-The practical man values a house not by its antiquity, but by its
-conformability to modern standards of construction and equipment. If he
-purchases an ancient structure he is not required to pay an added price
-because of its lack of plumbing, its absence of gas and electric lighting
-fixtures, and he is not entranced that its roof leaks and that its cellar
-is damp and moldy.
-
-This same man, if he gives the subject a passing thought, will likely
-assure you that the Constitution of the United States is a perfect
-document because it is more than one hundred years old. It also is
-likely that this is the extent of his information concerning that famous
-document.
-
-The average lack of knowledge concerning our National Constitution is
-astounding. Like children who have been drilled to repeat the Lord’s
-Prayer without the faintest conception of what the petition means, we
-have mentally drilled ourselves to believe that our Constitution is
-perfect, that it was inspired by a superhuman wisdom, and that it is
-treason to criticize or even discuss its infallible precepts.
-
-In this respect we are the most narrow, bigoted and prejudiced people who
-pretend to keep in alignment with progress. For more than one hundred
-years we have been proclaiming the perfection of our free governmental
-institutions, and calling on other nations to admire us and to follow our
-example.
-
-Within the past few years the truth has been forced home on us that
-the officialdom of our townships, villages, cities, counties, states
-and of the nation is maggoty with corruption; that our local, state
-and national legislatures are openly controlled by mercenary private
-interests; that the scandals concerning our judiciary can no longer
-be smothered or concealed; that our citizens are powerless to pass
-laws demanded by the majority, or to defeat those aimed to despoil the
-majority; that the burdens of taxation are spurned by those who have
-amassed wealth by means of unfair and ofttimes purchased legislation, and
-that the domination of corporations and vested interests is so complete
-as to be apparent to the dullest of the plundered.
-
-This language is not exaggerated. It is impossible to overstate the
-enormity of the depth to which we have descended in the scale of
-political morals. Ten years ago any one of the disclosures which now
-are made from week to week would have aroused the nation; today the
-repetition of these horrors dazes those who attempt to keep track of
-them. Not one crime in a hundred ever sees the light in printer’s ink.
-The bigger thieves are so buttressed and protected by the fortifications
-of wealth, and so secure behind the barbed wire entanglements woven by
-the courts, that their enraged dupes cannot reach them.
-
-Great Britain is a republic in all save name, yet no such conditions
-prevail under its government. France is a republic, yet its people are
-not despoiled by official brigands, neither is the free expression of its
-electorate crushed beneath the massed weight of its moneyed interests.
-
-I count it a disgrace to be an American so long as these degrading
-conditions prevail. It is a dishonor to live in a city, community, state
-or nation where thievery is condoned or tolerated, and it is cowardly
-weakness for the honest majority to assume that the problem of corruption
-is past their solving.
-
-The most formidable barrier in the way of permanent redress has been
-erected and is maintained by those who are checked by it. It consists
-of the absurd assumption that our material prosperity has been the
-consequence of the perfect provisions of our National Constitution.
-It is manifested in the senseless worship of the forefathers, and the
-ignorant deification of the founders of the document, which for more than
-a hundred years has served as a model for our state, municipal and local
-governments.
-
-We have come to recognize the hopelessness of honest majorities when
-pitted against the machinery of our municipal governments; we no longer
-deny that the cumbersome machinery of our state governments lends itself
-to the manipulation of corrupt private interests; the suspicion has
-dawned on us that our National Congress is more concerned with thwarting
-public sentiment than in conforming to it; and despite all this knowledge
-we steadfastly refuse to direct our gaze to the prime cause of these
-abuses.
-
-With a hundred monopolies filching from us that which we have created—and
-doing it under the guise of law and by sanction of the Constitution;
-with legislatures, executives and courts scorning to put into operation
-those remedies for which we have legally voted—and declining to do so
-under the authority of the Constitution; with a system of taxation which
-places all the burdens on those who are poor because they are producers
-of wealth, and releasing from taxation those who have become rich
-because of their exploitation of labor and through the debauching of its
-representatives—this system being founded on constitutional decisions—we
-yet cling to the childish delusion that ours is the only perfect
-government ever bequeathed to mankind.
-
-Compared with the governments of England and France we have only the
-semblance of self-rule, while they possess the substance. The people of
-Germany have more direct influence over legislation than have those of
-the United States. Despite an autocratic emperor, surrounded as he is
-by a nobility and protected by the most powerful standing army in the
-world, the people of Germany have made greater progress along the road of
-democracy within the last twenty years than we have.
-
-If in England there is valid reason to believe that the majority of the
-people hold an opinion counter to that of the administration in power,
-Parliament is dissolved and a direct appeal is made to the voters for a
-new body of representatives. The new Parliament meets and proceeds to
-pass the laws demanded by the electorate. There is a House of Lords, but
-it does not dare reject a measure known to be popular. There is a king,
-but he has not exercised his veto power for more than a century and a
-half, and one need not be a prophet to hazard that he never will exercise
-it again. There is no supreme court in England. In that benighted
-monarchy when the people pass a law it is a law, and not a guess.
-
-To all intents and purposes the same procedure obtains in France and in a
-score of other countries which might be named. Ours is the only country
-on earth where the vote of a citizen has no direct significance.
-
-We are not permitted to vote for a President, but are allowed to help
-choose electors who represent not us, but the state. There is no such
-thing as a citizen of the United States, so far as the franchise is
-concerned. If you have a vote it is by grace of the state in which you
-reside. The Constitution does not recognize your individual sovereignty
-in any way. If you doubt this assertion read that document.
-
-The state fixes your qualifications as a voter. It might debar you
-because of your sex, because of your height, because you were not worth
-$100,000, and you would have no redress under the Constitution of the
-United States. Possibly you did not know this.
-
-In practice you are privileged to vote for members of the Lower House
-of Congress. That is the beginning and the end of your influence so far
-as your national government is concerned. You have nothing to do with
-the selection of senators, and I doubt if you are consulted as to the
-composition of the Supreme Court.
-
-As I have explained, if the Lower House of the Legislature in England
-passes a law, it at once becomes a law. Under our Constitution the
-Senate has the power to amend or defeat it. This is supposed by us to
-be the quintessence of all earthly legislative wisdom. This is Check
-Number One on the mandate of the foolish people. In passing, I desire to
-repeat that this is the only alleged republic or constitutional monarchy
-yet remaining on earth which assumes that its majorities are unfit to
-influence legislation.
-
-If the measure demanded by the people be so fortunate as to pass the
-House and Senate, the President may veto it. This is Check Number Two on
-the mandate of the foolish people. If the President sign the measure the
-Supreme Court may declare it unconstitutional, and that is the end of it,
-unless a subsequent infallible Supreme Court should overrule the decision
-of the first infallible Supreme Court. This is Check Number Three on
-the mandate of a free and enlightened people. In the event that the
-Supreme Court should decide that a law is a law, the financial interests
-adversely affected may and do defeat its enforcement by legal quibbles as
-to details, or may and do resort to the bribery of the officials charged
-with the execution of the law. These are Checks Numbers Four and Five
-on the will of the people in this, the one perfect system of popular
-government ever designed in all history.
-
-We are the most corrupt nation on earth because of “our peculiar
-form of Government”; because of the exactions and limitations of a
-Constitution which was designed to protect and conserve the interests
-of property rather than of citizenship. Those who are astounded or
-offended at this statement need only read the record of the convention
-which drafted the Constitution in order to satisfy themselves as to its
-moderation. I do not mean to insinuate that the fifty-five delegates
-who met in Philadelphia in 1787 had any idea of establishing a system
-which would foster corruption, but the records absolutely prove that
-they deliberately planned to suppress the rule of the majority in order
-that popular clamor might not menace property interests. The train of
-abuses from which we now suffer flow logically from the checks they then
-provided; checks which place selfish and corrupt wealth beyond the reach
-of public redress.
-
-Those foolish persons who have been taught in school and in the public
-prints that the founders of our Constitution were sincerely desirous
-of establishing a system of government in which the will of the people
-should find free expression, will be shocked and undeceived when they
-read its debates and proceedings as recorded by James Madison, one of
-the delegates from Virginia. When one comes to learn of these fifty-five
-delegates that not more than ten are on record as voicing the slightest
-degree of confidence in the wisdom of the people or their fitness to
-rule, he is likely to take a new view of the Constitution framed by them,
-and he is able to account for the innumerable ills which we are compelled
-to suffer.
-
-I will quote a few expressions of opinion from delegates who wielded the
-greater influence in the construction of the Constitution:
-
-_Roger Sherman_—“The people should have as little to do as may be about
-the Government.”
-
-_Elbridge Gerry_—“The evils we experience flow from an excess of
-democracy, the worst of all possible evils.”
-
-_John Dickinson_—“A limited monarchy is one of the best governments in
-the world.”
-
-_Rufus King_—“It is immaterial to the people by what government they are
-possessed, provided they be well employed.”
-
-_Alexander Hamilton_—“The British monarchy is the best government in
-the world,” and he doubted if anything short of it would do in America.
-“Their House of Lords is a most noble institution.”
-
-_Alexander Hamilton_—He acknowledged himself not to think favorably of
-republican government. “Inequality in property constitutes the great and
-fundamental distinction in society.”
-
-_Gunning Bedford_—“Are we to act with greater purity than the rest of
-mankind? Our votes are actuated by interest and ambition.”
-
-_Gouverneur Morris_—“The Senate must have great personal property; it
-must have the aristocratic spirit; it must love to lord it through pride.
-To make it independent it should be for life. Property is the main object
-of society.”
-
-_John Rutledge_—“Property certainly is the principal object of society.”
-
-_Pierce Butler_—“Slaves should have an equal representation in a
-government which is instituted principally for the protection of
-property, and is of itself to be supported by property.”
-
-_Charles C. Pinckney_—“Property in slaves should not be exposed to danger
-in a government instituted for the protection of property.”
-
-_George Mason_—“It would be as unnatural to refer the choice of a proper
-character for President to the people as to refer a test of colors to a
-blind man.”
-
-_James Madison_—“In future times a great majority of the people will not
-only be without landed but any sort of property. If they combine, the
-rights of property will not be safe in their hands.”
-
-_James Ellsworth_—“As population grows, poor laborers will be so plenty
-as to render slaves useless.”
-
-The thirteen delegates, from whom I have quoted were the dominating
-characters in that convention, and it is possible to cite innumerable
-passages expressing the same distrust and contempt for the people.
-It should be understood that the great mass of the people had no
-representation in that secret conclave, and that half a century passed
-before its proceedings were made public by Act of Congress.
-
-I have touched on these facts for the purpose of indicating clearly that
-the right to ignore the majority is inherent in the Constitution. The
-Senate was provided for the special benefit of property interests, and
-at one time a clause was adopted, decreeing that no one could be elected
-a Senator of the United States unless he was worth $50,000 or more.
-This cautious provision was abandoned because there were states which
-had no men with that amount of property. Having provided a Senate they
-continued to pile up checks against the people, until such aristocrats as
-Gerry, Randolph and Mason attempted to call a halt, declaring that the
-people would be so stripped of power that the last of their rights would
-disappear. Their warnings were disregarded, and they absolutely refused
-to sign their names to the document.
-
-With these facts within access of every citizen of the United States, the
-vast majority of us still adhere to the myths and falsehoods contained in
-our school books and uttered by ignorant demagogues and editors.
-
-It is likely that the aristocratic delegates who framed the Constitution
-had just reason to fear the people it was intended to hold in check. The
-average citizen of 1787 was a savage compared with the average voter of
-today. He knew of no world beyond the narrow limit of his horizon. He
-was ignorant, prejudiced, suspicious and envious. The builders of the
-Constitution regretted that it was necessary to grant him even the shadow
-of political power and were consumed by the dread that the Lower House of
-Congress would overawe all other branches of the new government.
-
-In that day wealth had little influence as a mass, but it was strong
-in its instinct of self-preservation. It trembled lest the poor should
-combine at the polls in a crusade for the legal despoiling of the rich.
-Having absolute control of the convention it was free to design a
-document which would include every possible check against the aggressions
-of the dreaded masses, and it rightly conjectured that the magic of the
-name of Washington would induce the people to consent to the provisions
-aimed against them.
-
-We of today are caught in the trap set for those who lived more than a
-hundred years ago. Not until after the nation had been plunged into a
-civil war between two factions—each of which claimed strict allegiance
-to the Constitution—did conditions arise which afforded a fair test of
-the restrictive features of that document. So long as the wealth of the
-nation was so distributed as to prevent the formation of conspiracies in
-its behalf, the masses were able to conserve their rights, despite all
-of the checks and restrictions in the Constitution. It was this fairly
-maintained state of equilibrium which half a century ago gave rise to the
-worship of our system of government.
-
-When the first unscrupulous man found himself in possession of millions
-of dollars the Constitution became not his master but his tool. When the
-officials of our first great corporation found it practical to bribe
-legislation, the trap set by the forefathers was sprung. I do not mean
-to hint that the founders of the Constitution foresaw any such outcome.
-They constructed a device to protect themselves, and their bones had
-crumbled into dust before wealth was sufficiently armed and equipped to
-take advantage of their mistakes.
-
-Wealth seized upon the senates, state and national. It found in the
-judiciary a natural ally, and it did not hesitate to invoke the aid of
-partisanship and the unblushing use of corrupt influences, direct and
-indirect, in order to subject the courts to its domination. This is a
-blunt statement, but the time has arrived when the courts can no longer
-be covered with a machine-made robe of sanctity. There are good judges
-and bad judges, but the decisions of the latter are as binding as those
-of the former. A corporation judge is not a priest; he is a low type of
-politician.
-
-Our aristocratic forefathers designed a Constitution intended to protect
-themselves against a majority. Our modern corporations and vested
-interests have discovered that the same machinery oiled with bribery
-can be used by the minority for the purpose of plundering the majority.
-Our forefathers invented checks; our trusts have converted them into
-bludgeons. Our forefathers constructed constitutional ramparts, behind
-which they hoped to be safe from the attacks of the majority; our vested
-interests have bristled them with guns, behind which they demand and
-receive tribute.
-
- NOTE—In the May number Mr. Adams will treat of the
- necessity for the revision of the Constitution, and
- consider how it may legally be accomplished.
-
-
-
-
- _In Absence_
-
- BY EUGENE C. DOLSON
-
-
- With miles between us—miles of land and sea,
- However far my wandering footsteps roam,
- Still memory ever backward turns to thee—
- Queen of my heart and home.
-
-
-
-
- _In Outline_
-
-
-“Many a man complains that he lost his health in business, although he
-was not in business for his health.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“The quickest way to get to the top in this world is to have someone let
-you in on the ground floor.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Money often fails to bring happiness, on account of the way it has been
-made.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“The world may owe you a living, but you have to work hard to collect the
-debt.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“One-half the world doesn’t care how the other half lives.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“The man who courts an investigation has generally been making love to
-other people’s money.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Not Guilty_
-
-TAVERN LOUNGER—That ’ere smooth-shaved, horse-faced feller jest goin’
-into the dinin’-room looks like an actor.
-
-LANDLORD—Yes; but you bet yer life he ain’t one! He came day before
-yesterday, paid his bill in advance, and ain’t kicked about anything yet!
-
- * * * * *
-
- _A Discovery_
-
-“I have looked the matter over with reasonable care,” said the Pruntytown
-Philosopher, with his usual acridity, “and I have reached the conclusion
-that it is not absolutely necessary to send boys to college in order to
-have ’em act the fool.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- _A One-Sided Alliance_
-
-JUDSON—Do you think capital and labor will ever work together?
-
-BUDSON—It looks that way. At the present time the landlord and the
-tenants seem to be both engaged in raising the rent.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _At the Zoo_
-
-THE PARROT—The eagle says he has been bald ever since he can remember.
-
-THE COCKATOO—Gee-whiz! Those eagles marry very young, don’t they?
-
-
-
-
- _The Gray Weed_
-
- AN EXTRACT FROM THE “LONDON TIMES” OF FEBRUARY 8, 1909
-
- BY OWEN OLIVER
-
-
-Owing to the lamented death of Professor Newton, to whose wisdom and
-courage the world owes its deliverance, I have been asked to contribute
-to the first newspaper issued in the new era some account of the terrible
-weed which overran the earth, and threatened to stifle out mankind.
-
-The professor had intended dealing with the origin of the weed, its
-relations to ordinary plants, the nature of its growth, so far as
-this proceeded, and the forms which it would ultimately have assumed.
-Unfortunately his notes upon these points are so abbreviated and
-technical as to be unintelligible to me; and personally I possess no
-qualifications for dealing with the scientific aspects of the case. So
-I must confine myself to a plain narrative of the occurrences which I
-witnessed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was nine o’clock in the evening of November 10, 1908, when I left my
-office in Norfolk Street, letting myself out with a duplicate key which
-the hall-porter had intrusted to me. I thought at first that it was
-snowing; but when I put out my hand and caught a few of the particles, I
-found that they were flimsy white seeds, something like those of melons,
-only less substantial. Where they lay in heaps—as I thought—in the road,
-their color appeared to be gray. At the Embankment end of the street the
-“heaps” were larger; and when I came to them I discovered that they were
-not seeds, but a growth of gray weed, which fastened round my shoes as I
-tried to walk over it.
-
-I stooped and took hold of a piece to examine it; but, when I attempted
-to pluck it, it stretched like elastic, without breaking off. The
-tendrils were round, and about one-fourth of an inch in diameter when not
-stretched. They had, at intervals, spherical bulges which, at a distance,
-bore the appearance of small berries. These appeared to be of the same
-substance as the tendrils. The latter began twining round my fingers,
-and I had some difficulty in releasing them. The road and the Embankment
-were deserted by people, but three or four horses at the cab stand were
-plunging with fright as the weed wound round their legs. It had grown
-perceptibly in the few minutes that I had been observing it, and, feeling
-somewhat alarmed, I made my way back along Norfolk Street.
-
-The weed had spread a good deal there also; and I noticed that wherever
-a white seed fell a fresh plant sprang up, and grew with marvelous
-rapidity. In the Strand the weed was nearly a yard high. The ’bus drivers
-were whipping their frightened horses in a vain attempt to drive over it.
-The foot-passengers were unable to move, except a big man, who, with a
-small axe, hacked a passage through the growth for himself, his wife and
-his daughter—a pretty girl of about nineteen.
-
-They were making their way down to the Embankment, but I warned them
-that the weed was thick there. The young lady then suggested that they
-should try to get into one of the houses, and I invited them to come
-to my offices. The tendrils were seizing people and pulling them down
-and binding them like flies in a spider’s web. We could hear cries and
-screams all along the Strand, and a cab was upset by the struggles of the
-horse. The weed had spread over Norfolk Street, while we were talking,
-and it clung to our feet as we ran. The lady tripped and fell. The
-tendrils seized her immediately, and we had great difficulty in freeing
-her. When we had entered the door of the house we could not close it
-until we had chopped away the tendrils that followed us.
-
-I turned on the electric light in the halls, and took my new friends to
-my rooms, which were on the fifth floor. The elder lady was faint, and I
-gave her some brandy and soda and biscuits. I had a good stock of these
-fortunately.
-
-The gentleman’s name was George Baker, his wife was Marian Baker, and
-the girl was Viva. They had been buying curiosities in the Strand, and
-the axe—a roughly engraved Moorish instrument—was fortunately among
-their purchases. Some people whom they met in the streets had told them
-that the weed was growing all over London, and that the Guards had been
-ordered out to cut it away. A learned old gentleman had conjectured that
-the seeds were the atoms of some dissipated planet, or the elements of
-some world that was to be, and that they contained the raw elements of
-life, which set them growing when they came into contact with suitable
-matter.
-
-“It’s diabolical!” Mr. Baker said furiously. “The vestries ought to send
-round water-carts with weed-killer, or—or something. I don’t know what
-they ought to do; but they ought to do something.” He wiped his face
-excitedly with his handkerchief. “Diabolical!” he repeated. “It grows
-through the flagstones, the wood paving, everything. It—it seizes people!”
-
-“Seizes people!” his wife repeated, wringing her hands. “We saw it.”
-
-“It clings to you,” the girl added tremulously. “_Clings_ to you. If it
-goes on growing——!”
-
-Her mother gave a sharp scream, and her father groaned.
-
-“If it goes on growing—!” they said together.
-
-“It won’t,” I assured them, with an indifferent appearance of confidence.
-“Those things that grow like—like fungi—never do. It will shrivel up
-suddenly, and let people go again. I don’t suppose they’re really
-hurt, only frightened. In an hour or so you’ll be on your way home,
-and laughing about it; and I shall be thanking the—the fungus—for some
-pleasant acquaintances. I look upon this as a little surprise party.”
-
-The girl wiped her eyes and forced a smile.
-
-“A little surprise party,” she agreed. “What are you going to do for our
-entertainment, Mr. Adamson?—I saw the name on the door-plate.”
-
-“Henry Adamson,” I said, “and very much at your service, Miss Viva—I have
-some cards, but——”
-
-I paused doubtfully. Her mother held up a trembling hand, and her father
-shook his head.
-
-“We won’t have any fool’s games,” he said. “Let’s talk.”
-
-Viva and I talked in broken sentences, and her mother and father in
-monosyllables. We kept glancing at the window, but no one had the courage
-to draw up the blind for nearly an hour. Then we opened the window and
-looked out. The weed was fully six feet high in the street, and higher in
-the Strand. It had overrun the ’bus that stood at the opening. If there
-were people on the ’bus, it had overrun them, too.
-
-“It doesn’t seem to hurt,” I said. “There’s no screaming now.” I
-shuddered as soon as I had said it.
-
-“There is no screaming now,” Viva repeated. “I suppose they—they are
-all——”
-
-Her voice broke. Her father shut the window sharply and drew her away.
-
-“It will be gone in the morning,” he asserted, “as—as our friend said. We
-shall have to impose on your hospitality for the night, I am afraid, Mr.
-Adamson.”
-
-“There is no question of imposing,” I assured him. “I cannot say how
-glad I am to have your company.”
-
-We made a couch for the ladies by putting several hearth-rugs on the
-table in the clerks’ room, and laying two rugs of mine to cover them. Mr.
-Baker and I dozed in front of the fire in my room in chairs. Toward the
-morning I fell into a sounder sleep. When I woke he had pulled up the
-blind.
-
-“It’s fifteen feet high at least,” he told me. “Halfway up the second
-windows. God help us!”
-
-I joined him and saw the roadway filled with a sea of gray weeds. They
-looked like india-rubber reeds. The largest were as thick as my little
-finger, and the bulges were the size of damsons. We opened the window
-and listened. Presently a caretaker opened a window nearly opposite and
-called to his wife.
-
-“Here’s a rum go, Mary,” he shouted, with a laugh. “Bulrushes growing to
-the street! We sha’n’t have any clerks pestering us today.”
-
-The woman joined him, and they laughed together because they would have
-a holiday. They treated the matter as a joke, and evidently disbelieved
-us when we told them of the terrible events of the preceding night.
-So we closed the window and called the ladies. I made some tea on my
-ring-burner, and we breakfasted on that and biscuits. The ladies avoided
-the window, and so did I, but Mr. Baker went to it every few minutes.
-After each visit he whispered to me that it was still growing. Mrs.
-Baker seemed in a stupor, but Viva tried hard to cheer us. She sang
-little snatches of song under her breath as she washed the tea-cups; and
-once she said that it was great “fun.” Her mouth trembled when I looked
-reproachfully at her.
-
-“Mother is so nervous,” she whispered. “I have to pretend, to cheer her.
-Do you think it will—grow?”
-
-“Heaven knows!” I said. “But you are very brave.”
-
-After this, she and I sat at the window, watching the tendrils growing
-and growing, and clutching incessantly at the air. I thought, at first,
-that they were swaying in the wind, but there was no breeze. Also there
-was an indescribable air of purpose about their movement. A number of
-long branches spread themselves over a window opposite. Their swaying
-ceased, and they pressed on it steadily, till at last it broke with
-a dull crash. Mrs. Baker fainted, and her husband lifted her on to
-the sofa. Viva clung to my arm. The malicious tendrils broke down the
-window-frame, piece by piece, and spread slowly into the room, winding
-themselves round the tables and chairs.
-
-“If anyone had been there,” Viva cried hoarsely. “If—if—” She looked at
-me. Her eyes were big with fright.
-
-“They must be doing something to stop it,” I said—“the—the authorities.
-If we could find out! I’ll try the telephone.”
-
-After several calls I obtained an answer. It was a girl’s voice. Six
-of them had stayed all night in the exchange, she said. They were in
-communication with the police and the Government Offices. The soldiers
-had been out since the previous evening, and had cut their passage from
-Chelsea Barracks to Victoria Street, and along this almost to Westminster
-Bridge. They had intended coming on to Whitehall and the Strand; but the
-stuff grew almost as quickly as it was cut down, and had overpowered
-many of them. Over a hundred had been crushed to death by it, and they
-had sent for gun-cotton to try and blow it up, as a last resort. It was
-known, through the telegraph, that the weed had appeared all over England
-and on the Continent. It was also growing out of the sea. The English
-Channel was choked in places, and several vessels had been bound by the
-weed in sight of the coast. “It’s alive!” she wailed; “alive! Its eyes
-are watching us through the windows!” (The bulges had the appearance of
-eyes.)
-
-I was unable to obtain any further answers, although I tried the
-telephone several times. By one o’clock the third-story windows were
-covered. The thickest tendrils were then nearly the diameter of a
-florin, with the bulges the size and shape of exceedingly large plums.
-The stems and bulges seemed to be of one homogeneous material. There
-were no leaves or fruit or flowers at this time, but branches were
-beginning to sprout from the main stems. There did not appear to be
-any communication between one stem and another; but, according to
-Professor Newton’s notes, this undoubtedly took place at the roots, which
-interlaced so as to form a gigantic nervous system or brain.
-
-We made another meal of tea and biscuits. Mrs. Baker seemed stupefied
-with horror, and her husband was evidently overcome by his anxiety for
-her, and scarcely spoke. Viva and I tried to talk, but our voices broke
-off in the middle of words. We listened vainly for any explosions, and
-concluded that the attempt at rescue had failed. By four o’clock the
-weed was up to the window-sill. Mrs. Baker was in a prolonged faint. Her
-husband sat beside her, with his head on his hand. He did not look up
-when I suggested carrying her out on the roof.
-
-“The cold would rouse her,” he said. “It is best as it is. You’re a good
-chap, I think. Do what you can for my little girl.”
-
-I put on my overcoat, crammed the pockets with biscuits and a flask, and
-persuaded Viva to accompany me to the roof to look for a way of escape,
-for us and for her parents. We never saw them again.
-
-Some people from neighboring houses were on the adjoining roofs
-already, two old caretakers, a man and a lad. We saw about twenty more
-on the roofs in other streets. Some of them were raving and singing.
-The caretakers who had spoken to us in the morning flung their window
-open. They were laughing as if they had been drinking. They brought two
-pailfuls of boiling water and emptied it upon the weed. There was a soft
-hissing sound. Then two—four—six quivering tendrils reached slowly toward
-them. The man and woman seemed fascinated. They did not attempt to move,
-only screamed. The tendrils seized them; bound them round and round. Viva
-buried her head on my shoulder, and I shut my eyes. It was about half a
-minute, I think, before the screams ceased. Then there was crash after
-crash as windows were broken in. The weed had its passions, it seemed.
-
-“Take me back to my mother and father,” Viva begged. “We can all die
-together—if you would rather die with us?”
-
-“Yes. I would rather die with you, Viva,” I said. “I should have liked
-you very much if we had lived.”
-
-We returned to the trap-door, but the staircase was choked with the weed.
-As we looked down it seemed to be a pit of twirling gray snakes. We
-called to her mother and father, but there was no answer. Viva would have
-flung herself among the weed, but I held her and carried her back to the
-roof. The weed was beginning to crawl over the gutters. Long rope-like
-filaments were surrounding the other people who were on the roofs. They
-huddled together and did not attempt to escape. The tendrils overran them
-and bound them round and round. I think they had mostly fainted. There
-was only one cry.
-
-The tendrils lashed one another and fought over their prey. Their
-struggles made a repulsive, “scrooping” noise—a noise like the sound of
-stroking silk, only louder. There was also a sound of crunching bones.
-
-I did not notice the weed closing round us till Viva clutched my arm.
-
-“Hold me,” she begged. “Hold me tight! I thought life had only just
-begun——”
-
-I supported her on one arm, and backed toward the Strand end of the roof,
-where the weed had encroached less. We stumbled against a skylight. The
-attic below was empty. I opened the frame, lowered Viva and jumped down
-after her. We crouched in a corner watching the window. One—two minutes
-passed. Then the gray weed, with the bulges that simulated eyes, pressed
-upon it. The glass shivered upon the floor. I lifted Viva in my arms—she
-was too faint to walk—and carried her out on the landing.
-
-The light was bad, and I saw no weed till we reached the next landing.
-Then it stretched toward us from the broken window-frame. A dozen gray
-ropes crept toward us from the stairs when we approached them. The lift
-was standing open. I pushed Viva in, jumped after her, slid the steel
-railing to and lowered us. A tendril caught at the lift as we started. I
-heard it snap.
-
-In my excitement I lowered the lift too fast. We were thrown against the
-sides and almost stunned when it stopped. There was barely a glimmer of
-light, and we did not know if we had reached the bottom of the shaft or
-had been stopped by the weed. We listened for a long while and heard
-nothing. Then we let ourselves out and advanced a few inches at a time,
-feeling round us with our hands. We seemed to be in the hall of the
-basement. We came upon a table and found a tray on it with biscuits and
-milk. We drank the milk and Viva stuffed the biscuits in her pockets,
-as mine were full. There was a dim, barely perceptible light from an
-area window. We peered up through the grating into the forest of huge
-weeds. The trunks, which had grown to the size of young elms, only swayed
-a little; but the branches above twisted and twined incessantly. Viva
-shuddered when she saw them, and I took her away.
-
-“We are safe down here,” I assured her; but she pressed her hand over my
-mouth.
-
-“Hush!” she whispered. “Hush! It may hear.”
-
-We wandered about in the darkness till we found a caretaker’s room. We
-sat there on a sofa, holding hands. We never lost touch of each other all
-the time. I do not know how long it was. It seemed years. The basement
-was very quiet, but the sound of the india-rubbery motion came down
-to us. Once or twice we thought we heard a human cry. Once a mouse
-squeaked, and a spider dropped on the couch beside us with a thud. We
-were always listening.
-
-After an unknown time we groped our way into the scullery to get water.
-We had just drunk when we heard the sound of india-rubbery tentacles
-dragging themselves over the walls. Something clung to my hand. Something
-held her skirt. It tore as I pulled her from it. Something was in the way
-when we tried to close the door. It followed us across the room and into
-the passage. We felt along the walls for the door that we thought led to
-the cellars—found it—fastened it after us—groped down the stairs. It was
-darker than the darkness of the basement above—darkness that could be
-felt. We stumbled over some coals—and a rough, hoarse voice came out of
-the darkness.
-
-“Give us your hand, guv’nor,” it said, “just a touch of your hand. I’ve
-been alone here for—for a thousand years!”
-
-Something staggered toward us—stumbled against us; and a huge rough hand
-gripped my arm.
-
-I put myself between him and Viva and pressed her arm for silence. The
-voice and grip were not reassuring, and I hoped he did not know she was
-there.
-
-“Here is my hand,” I said.
-
-“And mine,” said Viva eagerly. “You are a friend—of course you are a
-friend. God bless you.”
-
-“God bless you, lady.” The rough voice softened strangely. “I—I’m sorry
-to intrude.”
-
-He drew back a little way from us and sat down. I could not see him,
-but I could hear him breathe. Another unknown time passed. Then Viva
-whispered that she was thirsty.
-
-“There’s a pail of water,” the man said, “if I can find it.” He moved
-about in the darkness till he kicked it. Then he brought it to us. We
-drank from the pail and ate a few biscuits. I offered him some, but he
-said that he had a crust left. Viva and I explored the cellar and found
-a shovel and a pick. I suggested that we should try to break through
-into the next cellar, on the chance of finding food; but Viva and the man
-feared that the weed might hear us.
-
-She and I sat on an empty packing-case, and she laid her head on my
-shoulder and slept. After a time I slept too. The man woke us.
-
-“There’s something moving, guv’nor,” he said hoarsely. “I think it’s
-growing out of the floor. Strike a match, and give me the shovel.”
-
-We found forty or fifty weed plants growing. He beat some down with
-the shovel, but others clutched him round the legs. He was a strong,
-rough-looking man and he fought furiously, but they pulled him down. I
-gave Viva the matches and went to his rescue with the pick. The weeds
-seized me too, but he cut us both free with a clasp-knife, and at length
-we destroyed them all.
-
-We saw by the matchlight that the wall was cracking in one place. So we
-resolved to try to get through it. The man dislodged a few bricks with
-the pick, and we pulled others away till our fingers bled and the last
-match gave out. At length he managed to crawl through.
-
-“You come next, sir,” he proposed. “The lady would be frightened of me.”
-
-“Dear friend,” Viva said, “I am not in the least afraid of you.”
-
-So he helped her through, and I followed. We discovered a passage, and
-along the passage another doorway—and people. I do not remember our words
-when we found one another in the dark—only the gladness of it.
-
-There were about twenty of them—men, women and children. They had food
-and drink which they had collected before they fled to the cellar.
-Professor Newton was among them. He seemed acknowledged as their leader,
-and he proposed me as his second. He wanted the aid of an intelligent and
-educated man, he whispered, in fighting the weed.
-
-“We _must_ fight it,” he declared, tapping me on the arm with his finger,
-“but I don’t know how. I—don’t—know—how!—I can’t even guess what it
-is; still less what it is going to be. It may be mere vegetable life—a
-man-eating plant. It may be brute animal life—a _carnivorous_ animal!
-It may be intelligent—diabolical intelligence. Whatever it is, it will
-develop as it grows, develop new organs and new powers, new strength and
-new weaknesses. We must strike _there_. What weaknesses? Ah-h! I don’t
-know! It may outgrow itself and wither. It may perish from the little
-microbes of the earth, like the Martians in Wells’s romance. We thought
-that an idle fancy _then_. It may grow into an intelligent—devil! It
-may be one now and merely lack the organs to carry out fully its evil
-will. On the other hand, its malevolence may be purposeless—a blind
-restlessness that it will outgrow—after we have stifled in the darkness
-at its feet. We must fight it anyhow. To fight it we must understand it.
-To understand it we must study it. Will you risk your life with me?”
-
-“Yes,” I said.
-
-Viva cried softly when I told her I must go; but she did not try to keep
-me from my duty. The professor and I crawled up the stairs into the
-basement, and finding nothing there went up in the lift in the dark. We
-heard the weed moving about on the second landing. I jumped out, turned
-on the electric light, and jumped in again. The tendrils followed me and
-clutched at the steel curtain, but could not break it. We hacked with
-our pen-knives at those that crept through. The juice which ran out from
-them had an oily smell. They beat furiously on the curtain. The professor
-studied them calmly with a microscope. The bulges were the beginning of
-eyes, he thought. He pronounced some feathery sprays sprouting from them
-to be the rudiments of organs like hands. I do not know whether he was
-right, but he always maintained that they would develop organs of sense.
-Anyhow the character of the weed was clearly changing. It had grown
-harder and drier, but without losing its flexibility or strength.
-
-After a time the professor decided that I should return to the others.
-He went up again in the lift when he had lowered me. Viva was waiting for
-me in the dark just inside the door.
-
-I had obtained some candles. We lit one and stuck it in a bottle. I shall
-never forget the group in the low, wide cellar, huddled together on boxes
-or on the floor. The man we met first was nursing an ailing child. Lady
-Evelyn Angell had gathered a young flower-girl under her opera cloak.
-A policeman was binding up a wounded hand with his handkerchief. A
-shivering old match-seller wore his cape. Viva took a little boy on her
-lap and told him about Jack and the Beanstalk. Steel—a card sharper, I
-learned afterward—who had been indefatigable in helping everyone, was
-chatting to Lady Evelyn. Some ill-clad youths had draped themselves in
-sacking. A rouged and gaudily dressed woman was mothering some younger
-ones. She had comforted Viva while I was away, I heard, and had offered
-to accompany her in a search for me, but the others had persuaded them
-that they would only be a hindrance to us.
-
-After a couple of hours—I had wound my watch again—the professor
-reappeared. His clothes were torn and his face and hands were bleeding.
-
-“They broke the steel curtain at last,” he explained, “but I got away.
-Good heavens, how it grows! I can’t make up my mind about it.”
-
-After a time, when most of us were dozing, a portion of the roof and
-the wall fell in. The growth of the roots under the street had pressed
-the earth upon it, the professor conjectured. A faint light streamed
-down the tall weeds and through the opening. The branches overhead were
-still moving, but the lower stems seemed inert. The professor decided to
-venture among them in search of knowledge. I went with him. There was
-just room enough between the weeds for us to pass.
-
-The houses upon the other side of the street were all down. So were many
-in the Strand. In Fleet Street we saw the way it was done. The huge weeds
-leaned upon them, till they fell with a crash. The Law Courts went
-so. We found the clock among the weeds. Sometimes the branches pushed
-themselves through the windows and walls of houses which were still
-standing. Once or twice we heard human cries. We found a woman, with a
-baby and a dog, walking among the weed-trees, and took them with us.
-
-The light which straggled down through the waving branches overhead was
-feeble and patchy, and we lost our way for a time. At length we found
-Norfolk Street; but as we were entering it, some of the tendrils, which
-seemed to be fighting one another viciously overhead, broke off and
-dropped at our feet. They writhed upon the ground like huge gray snakes,
-and wound themselves round the weed-trees and lashed out blindly. One of
-them caught the woman and dashed her against a trunk. We pulled her away
-from the tendril as its violence lessened, but she was dead. The baby was
-not hurt and still slept. I carried it in my arms.
-
-A moment later a broken tendril dropped right upon the dog. He howled
-loudly, and in his fright bit at an unbroken tendril hanging down among
-the trees. (There were a good many such, but we had succeeded in avoiding
-them hitherto.) It shook as if with rage and pain, wrapped its extremity
-round the dog, and bore him aloft, still howling. Hundreds of tendrils
-stretched toward it, and fought with it for the dog. They still fought
-after his cries ceased; and other tendrils began reaching downward, in
-every direction round us, as if searching for further prey. The professor
-watched them intently, oblivious of danger.
-
-“They make a different sound now,” he remarked abstractedly. “It is no
-longer the scroop-scroop of clammy india-rubber—they _rustle_. It doesn’t
-seem like decay. They are stronger—stronger. There is always weakness in
-excess of anything—even strength. Let me think!”
-
-“Quick!” I cried. “Quick! They are falling upon us. Run!”
-
-We dodged rapidly among the weed-trunks. He was slow and I pushed him.
-Tendril after tendril rustled downward, and the trunks themselves swayed.
-Two almost fixed the professor between them—he was a stout man—but I
-dragged him through. The light from above was entirely shut out by the
-descending tendrils, and we must have been lost but for an electric lamp
-burning in one of the houses. As it was, the descending tendrils must
-have caught us but for their struggles among themselves. Broken pieces
-dropped and wriggled madly all round us, and we had to dodge them. One
-caught at my foot, and dragged my shoe off as I pulled myself away.
-Several touched us as we slid down the debris into the cellar. They
-followed us there.
-
-A few of the people screamed. A few fainted. The rest backed in a
-huddled, wide-eyed crowd toward the farthest wall. Lady Evelyn stood in
-front of the children, holding out her arms as if to shelter them. Steel
-came and stood in front of her.
-
-“Dear lady,” he said, “these have been the best days of my life—since we
-met. I should have been a better man if I had met you before.” She smiled
-very sweetly at him.
-
-“I like you greatly, Mr. Steel,” she said.
-
-The rouged woman came and took the baby from me, and I tried to pull the
-professor back; but he would not come. Viva ran out from the crowd and
-put her arms round me. The tendrils drew nearer and nearer. Some came
-along the ceiling, hanging their heads like snakes. Others crawled along
-the floor, raising themselves as if to dart at us. I do not know whether
-they saw us, heard us or smelt us, or how they knew where we were; but
-they knew.
-
-They were within a yard of the professor, and still he did not move; only
-took the burning candle from the bottle, and railed at them as if they
-could hear. I thought that he had gone mad.
-
-“Do you think man has learned nothing in his thousand generations?” he
-shouted. “That you can crush him with the brute strength of a few days?
-Come and see! Come and see!”
-
-The foremost tentacle wound round him; began to lift him. He felt it
-carefully with his hands. “It is dry,” he shouted—“_dry!_”
-
-_Then he put the candle to it!_
-
-There was a wilderness of white light. Then a purple darkness. I heard
-the professor fall. When our eyes recovered from their dazed blindness
-the weed was utterly gone. The daylight was streaming into the hole in
-the wall, and the professor was picking himself up from the floor. His
-hair and beard were badly singed, and his eyebrows were gone.
-
-“It dried too fast,” he told us, with a queer angry chuckle. “That was
-its weakness. It dried—dried——”
-
-He kept on repeating the word in a dull, aimless tone. The rest repeated
-it vacantly after him. Viva was the first to speak coherently—a faint
-whisper in my ear.
-
-“My dear!” she said. “My _dear_!”
-
-Lady Evelyn spoke next—to ex-card sharper Steel.
-
-“The world begins afresh,” she said; “and—you _have_ met me, Mr. Steel.”
-
-The tears rolled down her cheek and his, and they stood smiling at each
-other.
-
-“The world begins afresh,” the professor called in a loud voice. “Come
-with me and make it a better world.” He strode toward the light, but some
-held back.
-
-“The weed!” they cried timorously.
-
-“The weed has gone—burned in an instant, from the end of the world to the
-end of the world!” he assured them. “Follow me.”
-
-We followed him out of the darkness into the sunlight. It was a mild,
-bright day for November, and a pleasant air.
-
-The weed had disappeared entirely, as the professor predicted; and,
-speaking generally, the conflagration had been too sudden to do much
-harm; but most of the buildings had subsided upon the sudden destruction
-of the weed-roots which had undermined them. Here and there houses,
-stones and timber had caught fire; and in many districts the fire spread,
-and lasted for days.
-
-The statistics, which are being prepared in the New Department for the
-Service of the People, over which I have the honor to preside, are not
-yet quite complete; but I may mention that seventeen per cent. of the
-buildings on the north of the Thames are found to have been destroyed,
-and ninety-three per cent. on the south—the wind having blown mainly in
-that direction; and that the destruction of property in Great Britain and
-Ireland generally is roughly estimated at fifty-five per cent.
-
-The adventures of our little band, after we came out from our
-hiding-place, scarcely belong to this story; but I must set down a few
-events which stand out in red letters in our calendar of the world after
-the Gray Weed.
-
-Upon the first afternoon we learned that there were other survivors—which
-we had not dared to hope—by finding a man, woman and child nearly dead
-with hunger and fright, hiding in a basement. We formed ourselves at once
-into small parties to go round London, wherever houses yet stood, and
-rang the church bells, and blew trumpets, and beat drums, and shouted
-to all those who remained to come out. Here and there frightened groups
-of white-faced, famished, disheveled people answered the call. As our
-numbers increased we sent parties to search the cellars and other
-hiding-places, and rescued many at their last gasp. The total number of
-survivors in London, where the percentage of deaths was highest, amounts
-to some 35,000.
-
-Upon the second day we obtained several replies to our calls by telegraph
-to the provinces; and the next day we were in telegraphic communication
-with most parts of the United Kingdom and even the Continent. In almost
-all towns at least one or two persons had escaped. In some parts
-the Gray Weed had left open spaces, or a few houses, to which people
-could flee, and only a portion of those who reached them had died from
-starvation. In a few instances it was alleged to have refrained from
-injuring those with whom it came in contact. Also it failed to crush many
-of the ships which it seized at sea—the sea-growths generally being less
-virulent than those on land. So far as our statistics go at present, we
-hope that nearly one-eighth of the population of Europe has survived.
-
-On the fourth day the first train from the provinces to London was run;
-and several ships, which the weed had overgrown without injuring, came
-into port. After this, traffic was rapidly re-established.
-
-A fortnight later our present government was provisionally established.
-The professor, whom all hailed as their deliverer, refused office
-himself; but upon his nomination I was appointed to my present position.
-Several of our little band were assigned important posts, including
-Steel—now known by another name, and married to Lady Evelyn—and Viva, who
-is presiding over the London Homes for Orphans, until our marriage. The
-day after tomorrow a newspaper appears.
-
-We have toiled unremittingly to reconstruct the social and commercial
-life of the country, and not without success. We have few luxuries, but
-no wants; fewer workers, but no drones; fewer to love—but we love more—I
-think the world will go well, now, because we love one another so much.
-
-“The Gray Weed has solved the problems of poverty, envy, crime and
-strife, which have puzzled mankind for ages,” the professor said, just
-before he died. “Don’t cry, little Viva. Ah! But I felt a tear on my
-hand! There is nothing to cry about, my child. _They_ have gone; and _I_
-am going; but _you_ have learned to love. It is all for the best!”
-
-“All—for—the—best,” he repeated at the last, and smiled. That is his
-message to you to whom I write, dear friends.
-
-
-
-
- _With Caste Against Him_
-
- BY HUGH PENDEXTER
-
-
-Tiberius Smith in love was a spectacle I had never conjured up. Billy
-Campbell, the strolling actor and his patron’s Boswell, had pictured the
-old showman to me as being arrested for a spy in Russia, for a madman
-in France, for a too active Carlist in Spain and for smuggling opium in
-China, but he had never hinted at sentiment. I had taken it for granted
-that Smith’s many wanderings over the face of the earth with his various
-theatrical enterprises and circuses had eliminated any inclination for
-love-sickness, and it seems it had until he met the lord’s daughter.
-
-That was like Smith. It was impossible to conceive of him as married and
-settled down, and when he did fall in love it was his characteristic
-to indulge in a hopeless passion. For all that, the lord’s daughter
-was forced to see him at his best, sturdy and resourceful, when others
-failed her, and I doubt not but that this knowledge was sadly sweet to
-the old showman, and that in after years he enjoyed diagnosing the climax
-and realizing it was superbly dramatic. If she ignored his existence at
-first, he had the keen pleasure of knowing she had only him to rely on at
-a most critical finale and that her world was better, much better, for
-his having lived.
-
-Possibly the trick could have been turned without him, turned in a
-prosaic manner with some bloodshed and a great waste of gunpowder. But
-when a lovely girl is the stake, be she a lord’s daughter or a queen
-from the masses, it is sometimes advisable to finesse. And Tiberius, if
-slightly melodramatic, solved the problem as he could only do, and as
-only he could do—that is, in an unusual manner. Campbell used to style
-him the “assassin of adversity,” and his peculiar faculty of rescuing the
-weak from undesirable situations was, perhaps, never better demonstrated
-than when, with cutter bars down, he restored the English girl to her
-people and incidentally introduced the uses and abuses of modern farming
-implements to some unsophisticated savages in a lonely Pacific isle.
-
-I had recurred to the time when Tiberius piloted an Uncle Tom’s Cabin
-company up and down the land, and Billy, gazing sadly into my open grate,
-irrelevantly observed:
-
-“Yes; and that was when Tib ought to have won her and settled down. He
-was clear daffy over that girl, and I’ll admit she was a hummer; one,
-you know, that would make a man abandon his grandmother in a blinding
-snowstorm if it pleased her. But I reckon Fate had other work cut out for
-Tiberius besides spooning, love in a cottage and no money for the iceman
-and all that sort of stuff. Yes, it was fully ten years ago that the
-_Kalanke_ broke her propeller.”
-
-“You are speaking of a boat?” I inquired.
-
-“Lord bless you, yes. The _Kalanke_ was one of Lord Blam’s boats; ran
-from the Coast to Australia. You see, Tib got the bee that an Uncle
-Thomas show would take in Australia like four squaws in a no-limit
-game; and once he had outlined the bill of fare, there were plenty of
-us come-ons pushing out our plates and begging for a helping. I suppose
-that when it came to the realm of pure “con” there wasn’t a hypnotist
-doing a mail order business that could lay it on quite so succulent and
-plausible as he. Lord, we _had_ to believe him. He believed in himself.
-
-“‘Why, Harriet,’ he cried, drawing up his dear, fat old form and looking
-more honest than any real estate dealer you ever kenned; ‘why, Harriet,
-don’t linger over the paltry twelve dollars a week I’m supposed to
-pay you. Don’t even hesitate. Forget that part of it. Imagine you are
-paying me for the chance to go. Picture, if you please, Opportunity,
-clean-shaven and bald-headed, gliding by your door in a seventy-eight
-horse-power gasolene romp-about at the mirk hour of midnight with you
-chloroformed and locked in your gilded cage. Picture me with a jiu-jitsu
-strangle hold on Oppo, detaining him until you can come to, slip into
-your Horse Show gown and come down and relieve me. Then you are feasting
-your magnetic orbs on truth. Why, the people down there will be so worked
-up over your “Papa, dear papa, set Uncle Tom free,” that they’ll wreck
-your hotel with showers of gold.’
-
-“She was a slim, ingrowing woman, who always played the Little Eva parts
-and was the teariest thing ever between the wings. Clarence, her husband,
-booked for Legree, balked a little and said he’d stand a blankety,
-blank, all blanks, nice chance of getting his showers in lead after he’d
-massacred Thomas. But Tib poured a little balm into his wounds, and that
-was how we came to hop the _Kalanke_ for Australia.
-
-“The boat was one of Lord Blam’s new line and was fixed up regardless.
-Besides the passengers, she did quite a freight business and carried our
-lots of horses and farm implements. Our troupe traveled second class
-except Tib, who always went the limit—or walked. Besides the company
-there weren’t many passengers aboard, as it was in the dull season; but
-we hadn’t cuffed the deep blue for more than two days before Tib met his
-fate.
-
-“She was the English girl, all blue eyes, and peaches for complexion;
-and Tib haunted her usual promenade like a mosquito. She was the lord’s
-only daughter and was making a flying trip to Sydney, where her father
-lay ill. She had hurried from Washington to ’Frisco and caught the boat
-with her maid. The Captain was the rest of her bodyguard. But Tib had the
-Captain solid at the go-in, and through him and his own gall he managed
-to speak to Miss Mary.
-
-“She was about as approachable as the Eiffel Tower. She was the first bit
-of peerage I had ever seen traveling alone, and I would prefer trying to
-get chummy with an iceberg to speaking to her. But a man or a woman had
-to be armor plate to withstand Tib when he put himself out, and at the
-end of one day he had made her laugh; then she got a bit interested in
-him and I knew he was spinning romance.
-
-“When he got to giving his Vermont family an old chateau environment
-and spoke of the good old days at ‘The Oaks,’ and his father’s pack of
-hounds, aristocracy wanted to crawl into a safe deposit vault and slam
-the door or get scalped. He could jam more poetry and _pâté de foie
-gras_ breeding into his round form and look more dreamy passion from his
-pleading eyes than any man that ever made a house believe a bum show was
-a good one. He was all right, I tell you, and if Little Eva hadn’t butted
-in when we were doing things to the equator, and asked him to come down
-and play stud-poker in the smoking-room, I reckoned he’d have won a few
-plighted troths anyway. I shall always believe he had her clinging to the
-ropes when Eva made the fatal stab.
-
-“‘Do you know those people in the second cabin?’ demanded Her Lordship
-with an eighty-two degrees north voice.
-
-“Tib groaned and tore his brown hair and admitted he owned us. ‘The vase
-is broken,’ he cried. ‘I’ve got the bell and it’s back to the barriers.’
-
-“Well, he felt so bad over that girl that he almost wept. It wa’n’t her
-titled papa, or the coat of arms; it was just a case of She. When he was
-talking to her he forgot he was merely a showman. He believed all about
-the old ivy-covered manse and the hounds. Why, I’ve even heard him call
-the pups by name. And his father never owned anything more blue-blooded
-than a sheepdog.
-
-“‘Billy,’ he said to me as we smoked down aft, ‘I never met a girl yet I
-felt so soft over. I know I’m older than she by some years, but I keep my
-age locked up in the baggage-room and we might have been happy if not for
-Little Eva.’
-
-“And Miss English was mad. She scolded the Captain for presenting Tib,
-and told him her father would do things once we’d sighted old earth. And
-the Captain was on the anxious seat, for her father was his meal ticket
-and had delegated him to fetch out his daughter O. K. But on the next
-night we began to forget it, when we steamed into the heart of a flying
-wedge of terrific winds.
-
-“I decided that if ever we got ashore it would be to have the folks come
-down to the beach and look at us and say, ‘How natural they look.’ Some
-of the gingerbread works were carried away the first night of the blow,
-and whenever the wind let up a bit the live stock would throw in a few
-_ensembles_ that made one pray for more breeze. Yet the boat behaved
-well, and if something hadn’t happened to the propeller we’d have come
-through in rare form. But when the chief engineer began to parade out his
-kit and try to mend things while standing on his head I knew the game was
-getting serious. Now we were bumped by every billow, and I heard a petty
-officer whisper that we were being driven far from our course.
-
-“At last the kick stopped, or else we’d slipped out of the storm zone,
-and at about three o’clock in the morning we dropped anchor near a dear
-little island that the Captain couldn’t name with any great degree of
-exactness.
-
-“The anchorage was so good and the water so smooth that our engineer said
-it would be easy to take the boat to pieces and put it together without
-losing even a shingle nail. Well, you can indulge in a small wager that
-we were all up and happy when we came near enough to smell the land. The
-sky was clear and peppered over with incandescent lights, and Tib felt so
-good that he waltzed up to the She Saxon and observed: ‘I regret you have
-been inconvenienced by the storm.’
-
-“Say, she just turned and dragged her two sapphires up and down his
-anatomy as if he were a seven-leaf clover. Then she stabbed him four
-times with as many glances and turned and walked forward to the Captain.
-Cap wheeled around with his lips pursed up to say something unwholesome,
-but seeing who it was he swallowed it, and it hurt. Then she asked
-something in a low voice and he shook his head slowly. Then she stamped
-her hoof and he seemed to give way. At last he called a man to him and
-gave some orders. The next thing we knew a boat was dropped and she was
-being rowed ashore by four sailors.
-
-“‘Isn’t it rather dangerous to let the lady go ashore?’ asked Tib of the
-Captain.
-
-“This gave the Captain a fine chance to ease his mind, and he did it by
-pouring out his whole heart to Tib in a comprehensive flow of profanity.
-He cursed Tib up hill and down, but Tib was so round it all glanced off.
-Cap told him that Miss Mary had gone ashore to get rid of his presence.
-Tib shuddered. Then the Cap reminded him that a British skipper takes
-sass from no one except the owners, and ordered him back with the rest
-of us. Another gilt braid sneaked up and told Tib the Cap meant nothing,
-that he was only feeling cross at being delayed. As to Miss Mary, he
-swore she was as safe when guarded by the four tars as she would be on
-her father’s deck. Besides, the island was probably vacant, he added,
-and she would take a short stroll on the beach beneath the stars and
-then return. But Tib was uneasy. He said no one could ever diagnose the
-disposition of the average cut-up residing on an oceanian isle. ‘Billy,’
-he concluded, ‘I’m cut to the heart. She won’t even look at the same
-ocean with me.’
-
-“In about an hour’s time, just as the sun was lazily crawling out of his
-bed of blue—say, old chap, that sounds voluptuous as well as poetic,
-doesn’t it?—well, as the sun appeared there came to our ears a loud cry
-from the beach, and we could see some dots bobbing up and down trying
-to act intelligent. In two jumps the Captain shot off in a boat, and,
-without seeming to touch land, was back again on the run.
-
-“The lord’s daughter had been carried off by the natives, was the
-startling intelligence he fed out to his officers. It seems she wanted
-to walk up a little hill and get a view of the sea, and, although the
-sailors protested, she had ordered them to remain behind; and, like
-idiots, they obeyed her. Then they heard a smothered scream and ran to
-the rescue, only to meet with a shower of spears and clubs and to witness
-a large band of barefooted taxpayers making off with the skirts. One of
-the sailors had his arm broken, another had a spear through his shoulder,
-and all were badly bruised and battered. The Captain was crazy. He
-ordered his men to arm and rush to the rescue. At first he was going to
-lead them, but some of his officers soothed him down a bit and made him
-see his place was with the boat. It was not only necessary to rescue Miss
-Mary, but the tub must be in condition to carry her away when she was
-recovered.
-
-“But when Tib asked permission to join the posse the Captain broke loose
-again and swore he’d have the boss in irons. If it hadn’t been for Tib
-it never would have happened, he cried. I chipped in then and reminded
-him Her Lordship was too high and mighty to hunt for an exit just to
-avoid a mere man, and I closed with the Stars and Stripes and our consul
-in Australia. This distracted his attention a bit, for he forgot Tib in
-swearing at our consular service.
-
-“‘Billy,’ groaned Tib, ‘I guess the Cap is right, and I’m to blame for
-her going ashore. But these volunteers will never get her by hunting the
-brownies with a brass band.’
-
-“Well, we put in several long hours of waiting, and then two men returned
-and said reinforcements were needed, as the men had discovered a large
-village a few miles inland, which they didn’t dare to attack alone.
-
-“‘Guess you’d better let some of the passengers chip into this game now,’
-advised Tib.
-
-“The Captain began to rave again, but, seeing that the men left were
-needed in making repairs, he had to give in. Just then some more of the
-crew came back to the beach and, once aboard, panted that the colored
-folk were getting aggressive and wouldn’t even wait to be attacked.
-
-“‘To the boats, men!’ cried the Captain, while the steward served out
-howitzers.
-
-“Before the order could be obeyed the officers and the rest of the gang
-rushed down to the beach. Their news was worst of all. They said the
-heathens had produced Her Lordship in view of all and had threatened to
-kill her if her friends didn’t beat a retreat.
-
-“‘If we show violence she’s lost,’ sobbed one of the men.
-
-“The Captain was dazed. He was brave enough and would gladly fight to
-the last gasp; but he didn’t want to recover Miss Mary dead. He tried
-to mumble something about strategy, and Tib caught it. It was the
-psychological moment for him.
-
-“‘If you’ll turn the management of this show over to me I’ll go and get
-her,’ he said simply.
-
-“Some jeered him in wild anger, some eyed him in amazement, and others
-were ready to grasp at any suggestion.
-
-“‘I mean it,’ he repeated firmly, drawing up his fat form and beginning
-to radiate heart waves. ‘Force will avail nothing, except to kill the
-lady. Do as I say and let the galleries back me and a few of my men, and
-I honestly believe we can turn the riffle.’
-
-“Discipline was lost sight of as all clamored for pointers. ‘Hoist up a
-few mowing machines from the hold, drop twice as many horses over into
-the surf, while the carpenters are knocking together a float. Then ferry
-the grass clippers ashore and have your mechanics put them together.
-That’s the scenario.’
-
-“Some said he was crazy, but I believed he could fill his hand if they
-let him alone, and the Captain asked if he intended to palm off the
-mowers as machine guns.
-
-“‘If they can’t recognize a mowing machine you don’t expect ’em to be
-conversant with Maxims, do you?’ groaned Tib. ‘No; I’ll play ’em as
-mowing machines and win out at that. I believe they’ll be big medicine
-with the natives.’
-
-“Of course the Captain pooh-poohed the scheme. He said the niggers would
-kill the lass before the paraphernalia could be thrown together.
-
-“‘And while you’re doing nothing and can think of nothing to do, they
-may kill her,’ cried Tib. ‘And her blood be upon your head! Mine is the
-only plan that’s been advanced, and it is practical. It’s unusual, but
-you can’t impress these folks with shotguns. It’s got to be something
-new in the way of scenic effect. If I had an airship I’d use that. But I
-haven’t. We can use the mowing machines and stagger the banditti. We can
-start in three hours if you’ll only give the word. Besides, I shall want
-the full chorus to follow with their batteries. You lose nothing, unless
-it be me and some of my friends and the machines.’
-
-“‘Hoist ’em up,’ commanded the Captain, and the gang caught Tib’s
-enthusiasm.
-
-“‘Now, who’s game for a little romp?’ asked Tib gently of us actors, his
-brown eyes collecting in two needle points. ‘I want my own men for the
-leading parts in this deal. Now, who’s game?’
-
-“Of course I said I was, as I owed him poker money. Little Eva’s husband
-said if he could have one more drink he’d play tag with the devil, and
-Uncle Tom was on if he didn’t have to black up. Tib wanted one more
-operator, and a young fellow that was coming out to hold down a stool in
-his father’s branch house in Sydney agreed to chip in if he could have
-time to write something sad to his parents. Tib reminded him the postman
-wouldn’t have time to collect the mail before we returned, and so the
-five of us made ready. The Captain ached to go, but Tib reminded him he
-must take command of the rear-guard.
-
-“I was for grabbing up a papaw root and dashing blindly into the weeds,
-but Tib held us all back as he outlined his scheme more fully. The mowing
-machines would dazzle the natives, he contended, and while he and his
-men were trifling with the aborigines’ superstitions the Captain and
-his bullies were to rush in, surround the captive, or else cover Tib’s
-retreat, once he had rescued her. And say! You never saw men work as did
-those boys on the _Kalanke_. The donkey engine was mounted in a trice and
-the big crates, containing the mowing machines, intended for peaceful
-pastoral scenes, were yanked out on deck. By that time the carpenters
-had put a raft together and the clippers were soon ashore with a bevy of
-mechanics impatiently waiting to get in their work. When the different
-parts of the machines had been assembled and joined each to his neighbor,
-some half-crazed draft horses came through the surf and were promptly
-caught. Then boxes of harness were ripped open, and there we were, as gay
-a cluster of charioteers as you would meet with outside a star production
-of ‘Ben Hur.’
-
-“Tib, as the head Mazeppa, jumped onto the first auto completed and
-tested the gearing. Then with his hat tipped jauntily over his right ear
-he reminded the Captain that the crew should loiter not too far in the
-rear, but always out of sight of the enemy, until we gave the signal to
-advance, three pistol shots. Then he cried, ‘Cutter bars up!’ and away we
-clanked around the base of the low hill.
-
-“We had received tips as to the course to take, and it would
-have done your heart good, sir, could you have seen us in that
-bringing-in-the-sheaves effect. We only needed wide-brimmed straw hats,
-with handkerchiefs knotted carelessly about our throats, to be the
-village heroes in the average rural melodrama.
-
-“The land, lucky for us, lay flat and hard baked by the sun, once we
-were around the hill. Then Tib’s good sense in picking his own men was
-demonstrated. Always in the lead as we trundled over the hard ground,
-he had only to move his hand to cause us to catch the signal and obey.
-Back of us, scuttling through the occasional brush, was our bodyguard,
-and the glint of the sun on the gun metal was a wonderful antidote for
-homesickness. In advance a fringe of woods told where the English girl
-was held captive. We expected to encounter outposts, but I reckon the foe
-measured our love for a woman by their own standard and couldn’t conceive
-of a man risking his life to save a squaw.
-
-“At last we struck the shade and sure enough found a broad avenue between
-the trees, just as the boatswain had mapped out. Then came another level
-stretch, only not so long as the first, bounded by a slight rise. It was
-just beyond this that the village was located. We approached as slyly
-as we could and cautiously gained the top without being interrupted.
-Just below us was the encampment, consisting of several scores of low
-huts. They were arranged like the spokes of a wheel, with broad streets
-radiating from the centre. The voters were having a big powwow, and they
-made so much noise that they had failed to catch the sound of our steeds
-or wheels.
-
-“‘Now, children, list,’ commanded Tib. ‘I’m going to drive straight
-ahead. Billy will wend his way to the right and pick up the first spoor,
-followed by Simon Legree, who takes the second trail. Uncle Tom takes
-the first left aisle, followed by young Add Six and Carry Two. And we’ll
-form a cluster, God willing, in the centre of the exposition, where there
-seems to be a commodious green. Attention! Cutter bars down! Forward,
-trot!’
-
-“And we five chauffeurs dashed into the hippodrome in the most ridiculous
-fashion. Tib bounced up and down like a rubber ball, and to fall
-from the seat meant a badly sliced up white man. But the effect was
-stupendous. I reckon the brunettes never before gazed on such wags as
-we must have appeared to be. Bang! Smash! we rode through their rotten
-village, and the machines needed oiling. Of all the rasping, clattering
-noises you ever heard, sir! Black nightmares rushed to get out of the way
-as we cleaned out the lanes.
-
-“Snip! snip! and Tib had shaved off the corner of a mud villa. Crunch!
-and Simon picked up a totem pole. Every tooth in those five cutter bars
-was working and the collateral we chewed up didn’t do ’em a bit of good.
-But, as Tib said, it was only a one-night stand and our game was to
-sell tickets and ramble away. So on we careened, the horses wild with
-fright, now and then the shears picking up a brown toe as some devotee
-fell prostrate in his flight and babbled a cast-iron prayer to some
-burglar-proof god. It simply swept them off their feet, sir. Before they
-woke up we had entered the middle square.
-
-“And if there wasn’t Her Lordship, trussed up between two poles, white as
-death!
-
-“‘If you’ll pardon the bucolic style of my turnout, dear lady, I should
-be felicitated to have you accompany me back to the ship,’ cried Tib
-cheerily as he slashed her free and held her so she would not fall. And
-during it all he was apparently oblivious to the frescoes of black faces
-staring in stupid awe in the background.
-
-“‘Can it be I’m saved!’ she whimpered, brushing back her twenty-two-carat
-hair with an uncertain gesture.
-
-“‘Tut, tut,’ cried Tib heartily as he took her hand and tripped a merry
-morris toward his chariot. ‘I guess there’s no danger. These people
-are simply crude in their deportment and evidently believed you some
-wandering goddess and would detain you awhile.’
-
-“‘You are a brave and a good man,’ she choked.
-
-“‘I guess your hosts think me the devil. Excuse me, lady,’ salaamed Tib.
-
-“‘Never a man took greater risk,’ she murmured.
-
-“‘An Uncle Tom’s Cabin company, lady, will take any risk, or anything
-outside a church,’ replied Tib. ‘Whoa, Montezuma. Now hop up here on my
-knee. These bronze pieces will come to their senses in a second.’
-
-“And when Her Lordship jumped up into his arms the wonder-stricken gang
-gave a howl and came out of their trance. We countermarched in those
-rigs so that Tib had the lead when we quit the plaza, but not before one
-big buck, attired in a war club and a workmanlike spear, gave a grunt of
-disapproval and raised his trowel behind Tib’s back. I had been expecting
-one of them would draw to that card, and while his arm was pulled back I
-pinked him from the hip, and the sunlight was turned off so far as he was
-concerned. But they didn’t mind crowding into hell so long as they could
-regain the woman, and my shot took the Japanese out of only one of them.
-And as we swarmed up the slight rise they came yowling along behind us,
-disturbing the peace in a variety of ways. But just as Simon Legree fired
-three shots in quick succession a fringe of strained-faced tars popped
-over the crest in front, preceded by the busy end of their repeaters.
-Under cover of their diversion we gained the top and bounced down on the
-other side with the neighbors renewing their pursuit.
-
-“Just as everything began to look cozy and homelike my pair of Jaspers
-decided they were afraid of the ocean, and, hang me, if they didn’t
-turn about and caper back right in the face of the dancing spearmen. I
-couldn’t hold ’em, and so I just dropped the cutter bar and pulled out my
-junk, only expecting to muss a few of ’em up before I was registered. My
-friends began to howl behind me, and I tossed a glance over my shoulder
-and beheld old Tiberius coming along after me like a madman, his machine
-jumping and swaying, and he with a big gun in each hand yelling like a
-fiend. He had tossed Her Lordship to the sailors and was back to play
-in my drama. Then the heat of it got into my blood, and as Tib drew up
-beside me I gave a war cry and urged the brutes onward still faster.
-
-“I knew if we tried to turn we were down and out, and that our only show
-was to put up a bold front and scare the enemy off the ridge. The sailors
-were now popping away merrily, and just as we had gone the limit the foe
-threw up the sponge and scampered back down the other side of the rise.
-
-“Maybe we were several hours retreating to the beach! When we got
-there the whole bunch fell on Tib’s neck and pawed his round form
-affectionately, the Captain leading in the demonstration. Tib drove
-them away, but when we got aboard and Her Lordship rushed upon him and
-throwing both arms about his neck, pressed her red lips with a resounding
-and most plebeian smack on his chin, you could have heard him blush. It
-was the first time I had ever known him to lose his nerve. He made a
-clean break-away and bowing low said something in a murmur and it was all
-over. Of course she thanked us all, but she realized that Tib was the
-guiding light.
-
-“To ring off; we left the machines and horses for the natives to get up
-guessing parties with, and with our machinery repaired steamed out to
-the open water. Tib never made any advances to Her Lordship after once
-aboard, although she eyed him with a soft look whenever they met on deck
-during the run to port.
-
-“‘My old heart got foolish, boy,’ he remarked to me the night we landed,
-‘but it’s beating all right now.’ Yet he always kept a handkerchief she
-dropped.
-
-“And wherever the show played Tib coined money by the barrel, for
-Her Lordship’s people boomed his game early and late. But Tib got to
-believing it was because the show was so good. For, you see, he’d explain
-to me as he counted the receipts, ‘Little Eva is dying better every
-night.’”
-
-
-
-
- _Corrupt Practices in Elections_
-
- BY HON. LUCIUS F. C. GARVIN
- _Ex-Governor of Rhode Island_
-
-
-Efforts to expose bribery and other corrupt practices in elections are
-met with the cry, You are defaming the state! If there are governmental
-evils, we are told, prove them to the bottom and correct them quietly.
-Such a course may be feasible if applied to a private business, but in
-public affairs, in the nature of the case, it cannot be successful.
-Certainly none of the persons who directly profit by such practices will
-correct them—not the “respectable” men of means who furnish the funds and
-who do so with a view to recouping themselves in some way as a result
-of the election; not the workers who handle the corruption fund, taking
-good care to see that they themselves are rewarded for the trouble and
-risk involved; not the individuals who pocket the money disbursed, and
-in this way become always morally, and often criminally, confederates;
-nor, finally, the few who secure the offices through fraudulent methods.
-In fact, nothing has been found effective outside of that strongest of
-all influences in a free country, the force of public opinion. The many,
-who are made aware of the iniquity by suffering from it, have every
-inducement to end it.
-
-Over and over again, in great crises, the American people have shown
-themselves to be patriotic, honest and wise. This has happened whenever
-the masses have been aroused by serious threats of danger, either
-external or internal.
-
-The real danger to our institutions lies, not in great crises, but
-rather in a gradual, almost insensible, deterioration of the government,
-due either to a lack of vigilance on the part of the people or to a
-paralysis of their latent powers.
-
-While it is possible that the immense fund of good will and good sense
-possessed by the American people may be expended in private pursuits
-and thus diverted from a control of their own government, the far
-greater danger is that the mighty influences being put forth at almost
-every election will rupture completely the natural dependence of public
-officials upon the electorate.
-
-In order to cure any wrongdoing it is needful, first, to ascertain
-definitely wherein the wrong consists, and, secondly, to fix with equal
-definiteness upon an adequate remedy.
-
-The crudest, the most demoralizing and the most common method of
-withholding the hands of the sovereign people from the control of their
-government is the direct bribery of voters. This means of thwarting the
-wishes of the majority dates back to the early history of the country.
-Our system of so-called majority election by districts, placing, as it
-often does, the balance of power in a small minority of the electorate,
-invites the purchase of the votes of individuals. It has proved easy both
-to estimate the number of votes needed to turn the scale and to find out
-the particular voters who can be so influenced.
-
-Upon the original plan of buying individual voters at retail, the
-improvement has been made of purchasing _en bloc_—the money to be paid
-over only in case of delivery of the goods. In this modern bribery
-by wholesale the venal voters organize, choose an agent to conduct
-negotiations and sell the entire block of votes to the highest bidder.
-When success is achieved, as shown by the count of the ballots, hundreds
-of dollars are paid to the agent and by him distributed to the members of
-the gang.
-
-But, whatever the details of the transaction, a long experience has shown
-that, in a multitude of small constituencies a few dollars placed in
-the hand of a voter are sufficient to outweigh every consideration of
-patriotism or enlightened self-interest. Wherever this habitually occurs,
-the rule of a few moneyed men has been substituted for a government by
-the people.
-
-In the elections of large cities, of populous states and of the nation at
-large, it can seldom happen that bribery of voters, either by retail or
-wholesale, is sufficient to alter the result. To supply this deficiency
-other means are more and more being resorted to. To assure success,
-where the number of voters renders the simpler measure for overcoming
-the people’s will unreliable, party managers now make use of finesse and
-fraud.
-
-The finesse consists in “packing” the primary meetings and conventions of
-the rival party for the purpose of nominating weak opposing candidates.
-Nearly every local party may be differentiated into two factions, both
-desirous of success, but the one occupying morally a very much higher
-plane than the other. The rich party, taking advantage of this division
-in the ranks of its opponents, furnishes funds and votes to aid the baser
-faction, upon condition, of course, that, having gained control of the
-nomination, candidates will be put up of such a character as to drive
-away the better element from their support.
-
-In consequence of these manipulations, when election day comes around,
-the poorer party is found with a so-called “yellow dog” ticket in the
-field—that is to say, a ticket composed of unfit and unknown men,
-clearly inferior to the pliant respectabilities who have been placed in
-nomination by the richer party.
-
-It sometimes happens that even this political trick fails to assure
-success. Either the better faction of the opposing party wins, or,
-notwithstanding the inferiority of the ticket named, it may promise to
-receive a majority of the votes cast. In this exigency the managers of
-the party which is fully supplied with the sinews of war do not hesitate
-at direct fraud. That is to say, they expend large sums of money in
-hiring election officials to betray their trusts at the risk of going to
-jail.
-
-One method adopted, where the law provides an official ballot, is to get
-from the officials having charge of the ballots one or more to be marked
-for the voter by heelers outside of the polling-room. This furnishes a
-sure method of bribery, for the venal voter, after depositing the ballot
-thus prepared for him, returns an unmarked ballot to the briber, as a
-guarantee of good faith, to be marked by him for the use of the next
-person bought. In this way one or more endless chains of purchased votes
-may be run all day, through the connivance of some election officer. This
-was done in Pawtucket, R. I., and at other places in that state, on the
-eighth of last November.
-
-But as the number of venal voters in a polling precinct is limited, so
-there is a limit to the effect attainable by giving out to heelers the
-official ballots designed for use in the voting booth only.
-
-What more, then, can be done in the way of modern chicanery and
-criminality?
-
-Election officers may be bought, and are bought, to defraud their
-fellow-citizens in a variety of ways. For instance, there is a very
-considerable percentage of illiterate voters in most states, many of
-whom desire to give their suffrage to the candidates of one of the
-poorer parties. But the richest party has paid the election officials,
-who assist the illiterate voters, to mark all such ballots for its
-candidates. Evidence exists that this was done systematically at the
-recent Presidential and state election in the city of Providence, R. I.,
-a sufficient number of voters thus being deceived to turn the scale in
-the filling of one or more important offices.
-
-Inasmuch as there is a limit to the number of illiterate voters, even
-that base fraud, added to direct bribery, may not effect the desired
-reversal of the people’s will. But the moneyed party has other resources.
-
-In order to annul votes already cast for opposing candidates, it may hire
-the election officers to make additional marks upon the ballots before
-they are counted. In this way in the city of Providence, R. I., at the
-last election many votes for Augustus S. Meller, the Democratic candidate
-for mayor, were rendered void—fortunately, however, not in sufficient
-numbers to prevent his election.
-
-And not even yet has the corrupted election officer reached the full
-extent of his ability to defraud. It still is possible for him to
-miscount votes; or he may announce the result falsely—for example, by
-revising the total number of votes given to the candidates, when the real
-majority proves to be adverse to his suborned wishes.
-
-In case there is a Returning Board, whose duty it is to make a second and
-final count of the votes cast, as is the law in the city of Providence
-and the state of Rhode Island, that board, too, or its controlling
-members, may be partisan and corrupt.
-
-At the late election in Rhode Island all the ballots for state officers
-and for Presidential electors were in possession of a partisan Returning
-Board, of which the chairman of the Republican State Central Committee
-was the head, for a period of three full weeks before the counting began.
-If there were miscounts in certain voting districts on election day,
-it was easily possible for members of that Returning Board to open the
-sealed packages of ballots, make such changes as were necessary in order
-to have the ballots conform roughly to the previously announced figures,
-and then to reseal without the fraud being detected.
-
-But, it may be asked, where are the courts while such frauds are being
-perpetrated? Why are not these criminal election officers punished?
-Unfortunately, the courts, too, are frequently partisan, especially the
-lower courts, before which the cases are first brought.
-
-After the election of last November in Rhode Island, three cases were
-brought before the inferior courts—one for bribery, one for posing as
-an illiterate voter and one against an election officer in charge of a
-ballot-box for allowing the deposit by voters of sham instead of official
-ballots. Each of these causes was brought before a different local judge,
-and all were thrown out of court. Several days before election it was
-known that immunity had been promised to hesitating and apprehensive
-election officers. “The Republican Party controls the courts,” they
-were told, “and would see that no punishment was meted out to them for
-unlawful acts.”
-
-It is needless to say that, if corrupt practices in elections continue
-to increase, the end of popular government in this country is in sight.
-Already there exists a widespread and deep-seated distrust of the result
-of elections. Instances could be given, occurring within the past ten
-years, in which a very large proportion of the voters interested, perhaps
-a majority of those voting, believe that the wrong candidate was inducted
-into office.
-
-Certainly no duty is more pressing than to see to it that in every
-election the unbiased and unbought will of the people be recorded.
-
-Is there a remedy? And, if so, what is it? My conviction is, that we only
-need to carry out the intent of the founders of this government. They
-blazed the way; we must make a clear and beaten track along that way.
-
-By a republican form of government the Revolutionary statesmen meant two
-things, which now are not carried out. They meant that every state, and
-the nation as well, should possess a legislative body, representative of
-the will of the people. Nowhere does this exist, not even where honest
-elections assure a free ballot and a fair count. Neither in ability nor
-in opinion do state legislatures by their acts represent a majority of
-their constituents, except by accident. Nor will they represent the
-people until each political party, whether large or small, elects its due
-proportion of the members. That is to say, a party which casts forty-five
-per cent. of the total vote for representatives must have forty per cent.
-of the legislature, and the party which casts five per cent. of the total
-vote must have five per cent. of the legislature. Then only will statute
-law be framed in accordance with the will of a majority of the people.
-
-The other part of our republican form of government, as understood and
-intended by American statesmen of the eighteenth century, was that a
-majority of the people should directly control the organic law. To this
-end they had the state constitutions framed by the people, acting through
-delegates chosen to conventions for that sole purpose, but not in effect
-until submitted to the electors and adopted by a majority of the votes
-cast for and against. In like manner the referendum was provided for in
-case of subsequent amendments.
-
-It was thought, also, that a popular initiative for constitutional
-changes was created, in the authority given to legislatures to submit
-amendments; but, alas, time has shown that those legislatures, being
-unrepresentative of the people, refuse to submit amendments, however
-extensively demanded by public sentiment.
-
-Hence the necessity of giving the power to propose constitutional
-amendments, as has lately been done in South Dakota, Utah and Oregon, to
-a reasonable minority (in those states eight per cent.) of the voters.
-When the popular initiative shall thus have been added to the referendum
-already existing for making changes in the organic law of our states, all
-else will take care of itself.
-
-The amendment pending in the Rhode Island Legislature, and known there
-as the constitutional initiative, reads in substance as follows:
-
- Eight per cent. of the legal voters of the state may
- propose specific and particular amendments to this
- constitution by filing with the Secretary of State, not
- less than three months nor more than nine months prior
- to any state election, a petition that the electors may,
- at such election, cast their ballots for or against such
- amendments. Any proposition thus made shall be submitted to
- the electors by the Secretary of State at said election,
- and, if then approved by a majority of the electors of the
- state present and voting thereon, it shall, ninety days
- thereafter, become a part of the Constitution of the state.
-
-To elect a legislature in any state committed to such an amendment calls
-for not only a widespread but an aggressive public sentiment in its
-favor. As a rule the organization of the party dominant in the state will
-strenuously oppose the adoption of the amendment.
-
-A party continuously in power, no matter what its name or avowed
-principles, is sure to frown upon radical measures. The complete control
-of the organic law of a state by a majority of its voters means a future
-political situation hitherto unknown. The effect upon present party
-leaders and upon partisan organizations cannot be foreseen in full, but
-that it will be tremendous no one can doubt.
-
-But if the individuals, who are enjoying the state offices, are opposed
-to a political upheaval of any kind, the parties which are permanently in
-the minority feel very differently. Their organizations and their members
-will welcome any reasonable reform which promises to alter materially
-the existing unsatisfactory situation. Also in sympathy with a reform so
-meritorious and non-partisan would undoubtedly be found a considerable
-portion of the adherents of the dominant party.
-
-Yet even with a clear majority of the voters of any state earnestly in
-favor of a given amendment to the constitution, it does not follow that
-its adoption would be easy. In every state, with scarcely an exception,
-it is the party whose membership comprises nine-tenths of the total
-wealth, which, with few brief and partial interruptions, controls every
-department of the government. For the past decade this has been the
-situation more than ever before, and every year finds the power of money
-to determine the results of elections gaining in strength—notwithstanding
-a rising public sentiment against abuses which are ignored, if not
-encouraged, by the authorities.
-
-The situation seems almost hopeless, as is very near being the case, if
-the reforming elements pursue for the future the same course as in the
-past.
-
-If the leader of the party in power were permitted to dictate the action
-of opponents, his command would be: “Divide your forces.” Its boss would
-say: “Split among yourselves into several separate and distinct parties,
-attack one another with the same virulence that you attack me. Call
-yourselves Democrats, Populists, Socialists, Prohibitionists, Labor, and
-have whatever platforms or principles you please. In fact, the stronger
-and nobler the men and the issues over which the small parties wave
-their banners the better I am pleased, for the more minute will be the
-subdivision and the more attractive and combative each fractional part.”
-
-And these hopelessly minor parties offer few inducements to the
-dissatisfied members of the major party to change their political
-affiliations. Such a transfer is altogether too much like removing one’s
-bed on a bitter cold night from a warm room to a vacant lot. Discomforts,
-and even hardships, patriotic citizens may be willing to endure, but they
-can scarcely be blamed for refusing to embrace them merely for the fun of
-being come-outers.
-
-In order to contend successfully against the party in power, however
-well known its abuses, there must be a co-operation of the dissatisfied
-and antagonistic voters. By co-operation it is not meant that an attempt
-should be made to create a single party with a platform composed of
-the planks of half a dozen parties. Such a composite is but a rope of
-sand; and, in fact, the stringing together of a collection of unrelated
-questions, such as prohibition, socialism and labor, is quite as likely
-to end in mutual hostilities as in a combined charge upon the common
-enemy.
-
-The use of money for carrying a state election by corrupt practices can
-only be offset by the exercise of great wisdom on the part of those who
-depend upon other agencies. The second party, which in the Northern
-states generally means the Democratic, must furnish the nucleus about
-which the third, fourth and fifth parties gather. Indeed, it devolves
-upon the second party to invite the other minor parties to join forces
-with it. And, in order to have such invitation accepted, it must fix upon
-one or two paramount issues so fundamental and important as to attract
-strongly all who are offended with the doings of the party in power.
-If two issues are elected, one of them may well be a constitutional
-amendment such as has been outlined in this article, the other might be a
-legislative measure—such, for instance, as direct primaries, which serve
-excellently the purpose of a corrupt practices act.
-
-Each of the minor parties, besides educational work, wishes to preserve
-its organization and to measure its strength at each succeeding election
-by the number of votes cast in its support. The wish is natural and
-proper; but the objects aimed at can be accomplished in a state election
-without putting full tickets into the field. The nomination and support
-of a single candidate for a minor state office will fully answer both
-purposes.
-
-The means of stopping most surely and speedily corrupt practices by
-the party in power, lies in an open and aboveboard fusion of all its
-opponents upon a few issues, together with a united support of one set
-of candidates for all offices whose incumbents can aid or hinder the
-adoption of the measures agreed upon. This, I believe, offers the best
-chance of accomplishing the very difficult task of establishing in a
-state good and pure government.
-
-
-
-
- _Pole Baker_
-
- BY WILL N. HARBEN
- _Author of “The Georgians,” “Abner Daniel,” etc._
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
-The planter alighted from the dusty little train under the crumbling
-brick car-shed at Darley, turned his heavy hand-luggage over to the negro
-porter and walked across the grass to the steps of the Johnston House.
-Here he was met by Jim Thornton, the dapper young clerk, who always had a
-curled mustache and hair smoothed flatly down over his brow.
-
-“Oh, here you are, right side up, Captain Duncan!” he cried. “You can’t
-stay away from those level acres of yours very long at a time.”
-
-“No, Jim.” The short, thick-set man smiled as he took the extended hand.
-“As soon as I heard spring had opened up here we left Florida. I had a
-bad case of homesickness. My wife and daughter came a week ago. I had to
-stop on business in Jacksonville. I always want to be here in planting
-season; my men never seem to know exactly what I want done when I am
-away. Jim, I’ve got a lot of land out there between the river and the
-mountains.”
-
-“I reckon you have,” laughed the clerk as he led his guest into the hotel
-office. “There’s a neighbor of yours over there at the stove, old Tom
-Mayhew, who runs the big store—Mayhew & Floyd’s—at Springtown.”
-
-“Oh, I know him mighty well,” said Duncan. “How are you, Mayhew? What are
-you doing away from your beat? I thought you’d be behind your counter
-such fine weather as this.”
-
-“Trade’s dull,” said the merchant, who was a tall, spare-made man about
-sixty-five years of age, with iron-gray hair and beard. “Farmers are all
-at the plow, and that’s where they ought to be if they expect to pay
-anything on their debts this fall. I had to lay in some stock, and so I
-ran down to Atlanta day before yesterday. My young partner, Nelson Floyd,
-usually does the replenishing, but the books got out of whack, and I left
-him to tussle with them; he’s got a better head for figures than I have.
-I’ve just sent to the livery-stable for a horse and buggy to take me out;
-how are you going?”
-
-“Why, I hardly know,” answered the planter as he took off his straw hat
-and wiped his bald head with a silk handkerchief. “I telegraphed Lawson,
-my head overseer, to send somebody to meet me, and I was just wondering——”
-
-“Oh, you’ll be attended to all right, Captain Duncan!” said the clerk,
-with a laugh as he stood at the register behind the counter. “Pole Baker
-was in here last night asking if you had arrived. He said he had brought
-a buggy and was going to drive you back. You will make it all right
-if Pole sobers up long enough to get out of town. He was thoroughly
-‘how-come-you-so’ last night. He was in Askew’s bar raising holy Cain.
-The marshal ordered Billy to close at twelve, but Pole wouldn’t hear to
-it, and they were within an inch of having a fight. I believe they would
-if Mrs. Johnston hadn’t heard them and come down. Pole has more respect
-for women than most men, and as soon as he saw her at the door he hushed
-up and went to bed.”
-
-“He’s as straight as a shingle this morning, Captain,” put in Charlie
-Smith, a mulatto porter, who was rolling a pair of trucks across the room
-laden with a drummer’s enormous brass-bound trunk. “He was up before day
-asking if you got in durin’ the night.”
-
-“Well, I’m glad he’s sobered up if he’s to take me out,” said the
-planter. “He’s about the biggest daredevil out our way. You know him,
-don’t you, Mayhew?”
-
-“Know him? Humph! to the extent of over three hundred dollars. Floyd
-thinks the sun rises and sets in him and never will close down on him.
-They are great friends. Floyd will fight for him at the drop of a hat. He
-says Pole has more manhood in him to the square inch than any man in the
-county, white or black. He saw him in a knock-down-and-drag-out row in
-the public square last election. They say Pole whipped three bigger men
-than he is all in a bunch, and bare-handed at that. Nobody knows to this
-day how it started. Nelson doesn’t, but I heard it was some remark one of
-the fellows made about Nelson himself. You know my partner had a rather
-strange start in life—a poor boy with nobody to see to his bringing up,
-but that’s a subject that his best friends don’t mention to him.”
-
-The Captain nodded understandingly. “They tell me Pole used to be a
-moonshiner,” he said, “and I have heard that he was the shrewdest one
-in the mountains. His wife got him to quit it. I understand he fairly
-worships the ground she walks on, and there never was a better father to
-his children.”
-
-“He thinks well enough of them when he’s at himself,” said Mayhew, “but
-when he’s drinking he neglects them awfully. I’ve known the neighbors
-to feed them two weeks on a stretch. He’s got enemies out our way. When
-he quit moonshining he helped some of the government officers find some
-stills over there. That was funny. Pole held off from the job that was
-offered him for a month, during which time he sent word everywhere
-through the mountains that he would give all his old friends plenty of
-time to shut up and quit making whisky, but after his month was up he
-intended to do all he could against law-breakers. He had to testify
-against several, and they now certainly have it in for him. He’d have
-been shot long ago if his enemies weren’t afraid of him.”
-
-“I see him coming now, Mr. Mayhew,” said the clerk. “Captain, he walks
-steady enough. I reckon he’ll take you through safe.”
-
-The tall countryman, about thirty-five years of age, without a coat, his
-coarse cotton shirt open at the neck, a slouch hat on his massive head
-and his tattered trousers stuffed into the tops of his high boots, came
-in. He had a brown, sweeping mustache, and his eyebrows were unusually
-heavy. On the heel of his right foot he wore an old riding-spur, very
-loosely strapped.
-
-“How are you, Captain Duncan?” he said to the planter as he extended his
-brawny hand. “You’ve come back to God’s country, eh?”
-
-“Yes, Baker,” the planter returned with a genial smile; “I had to see
-what sort of chance you fellows stand for a crop this year. I understand
-Lawson sent you over for me and my baggage. I’m certainly glad he engaged
-a man about whom I have heard such good reports.”
-
-“Well, I don’t know about that, Captain,” said Pole, his bushy brows
-meeting in a frown of displeasure and his dark eyes flashing. “I don’t
-know as I’m runnin’ a hack-line, or totin’ trunks about for the upper-ten
-set of humanity. I’m a farmer myself, in a sort of way—smaller’n you are,
-but a farmer. I was comin’ this way yesterday, and was about to take my
-own hoss out o’ the field, where he had plenty to do, when Lawson said,
-said he, ‘Baker, bein’ as you are goin’ to make the trip anyways, I’d
-feel under obligations ef you’d take my rig and fetch Captain Duncan back
-when you come.’ By gum, to tell you the truth, I’ve just come in to tell
-you, old hoss, if you are ready right now, we’ll ride out together, if
-not I’ll leave you an’ go out with Nathan Porter. Engaged, the devil! I’m
-not goin’ to get any money out o’ this job.”
-
-“Oh, I meant no offense at all, Baker,” said the planter in no little
-embarrassment, for the group was smiling.
-
-“Well, I reckon you didn’t,” said Pole, slightly mollified, “but it’s
-always a good idea fer two men to know exactly where they stand, and I’m
-here to say I don’t take off my hat to no man on earth.”
-
-“That’s the right spirit,” Duncan said admiringly. “Now, I’m ready if you
-are, and it’s time we were on the move. Those two valises are mine and
-that big overcoat tied in a bundle.”
-
-“Here, Charlie!” Pole called out to the porter, “put them things o’
-Duncan’s in the back end o’ the buggy, an’ I’ll throw you a dime the next
-time I’m in town.”
-
-“All right, boss,” the mulatto said, with a knowing wink and smile at
-Mayhew. “They’ll be in by the time you get there.”
-
-While the planter was at the counter, saying good-bye to the clerk, Pole
-looked down at Mayhew. “When are _you_ goin’ out?” he asked.
-
-“In an hour or so,” answered the merchant as he spat into a cuspidor.
-“I’m waiting now for a turnout, and I’ve got some business to attend to.”
-
-“Collections to make, I’ll bet my hat,” Pole laughed. “I thought mighty
-few folks was out on Main Street jest now; they know you are abroad in
-the land an’ want to save the’r socks.”
-
-“Do you reckon that’s it, Pole?” said Mayhew as he spat again. “I thought
-maybe it was because they was afraid you’d paint the town, and wanted to
-keep their skins whole.”
-
-The clerk and the planter laughed. “He got you that time, Baker,” the
-latter said, with a smile.
-
-“I’ll acknowledge the corn,” and the mountaineer joined in the laugh
-good-naturedly. “To look at the old skinflint, settin’ half asleep all
-the time, a body wouldn’t think his tongue had any life to it. I’ve seed
-the dern thing wiggle before, but it was mostly when thar was a trade up.”
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
-As they were driving into the country road, just beyond the straggling
-houses in the outskirts of the town, going toward the mountains, which
-lay along the western horizon like blue clouds nestling against the
-earth, the planter said:
-
-“I’ve seen you fishing and hunting with Mayhew’s young partner, Nelson
-Floyd. You and he are rather intimate, are you not?”
-
-“Jest about as friendly as two men can be,” said Pole, “when one’s rising
-in the world an’ t’other is eternally at a standstill, or goin’ down like
-a round rock on the side of a mountain. Or maybe, I ought to say, when
-one of ’em has had the pluck to educate hisself an’ t’other hardly knows
-B from a bull’s foot. I don’t know, Captain, why Nelson Floyd’s friendly
-to me. I like him beca’se he is a man from his toe-nails to the end o’
-the longest hair on his head.”
-
-“I’ve heard a lot of good things about him,” remarked the planter, “and I
-understand, too, that he has his faults.”
-
-“They’re part of his manhood,” said Pole philosophically. “Show me a
-feller without faults and I’ll show you one that’s too weak to have ’em.
-Nelson’s got some o’ the dust o’ the broad road on his coat, an’ yet I’d
-take his place in the general bust-up when old Gabe blows his trumpet
-at the millennium a sight quicker than I’d stand in the shoes o’ some
-o’ these jack-leg preachers. I tell you, Captain Duncan, ef the Lord’s
-goin’ to make favorites o’ some o’ the long-face hypocrites I know, that
-is robbin’ widows an’ orphans in the week an’ prayin’ an’ shoutin’ on
-Sunday to pull the wool over folkses’ eyes, me an’ Him won’t gee in the
-hereafter. You know some’n about that boy’s start in life, don’t you,
-Captain?”
-
-“Not much, I must own,” answered the planter.
-
-“Thar it is!” said Pole, with a condemning sneer; “ef the pore boy had
-belonged to one o’ the big families in yore ring out in Murray—the high
-an’ mighty sort, that owned niggers, you’d ’a’ heard all about him.
-Captain, nobody on earth knows how that feller has suffered. All his life
-he’s wanted to make some’n of hisself an’ has absolutely to my certain
-knowledge had more to contend with than any man alive today. He don’t
-even know the exact date of his birth, an’ ain’t plumb sure that his name
-really is Floyd. You see, jest at the close of the war a woman—so sick
-she could hardly walk—come through the Union lines in East Tennessee with
-a baby in her arms. The report is that she claimed that her name was
-Floyd, an’ that she called the baby ‘Nelson.’ She put up at a mountain
-cabin for the night, a shack where some pore razor-back whites lived
-by the name o’ Perdue. Old man Perdue was a lyin’, treacherous scamp,
-a bushwhacker and a mountain outlaw, an’ his wife was a good mate to
-him. Nelson’s mammy, as I say, was tuck in, but thar wasn’t no doctor
-nigh, an’ very little to eat, an’ the next mornin’ she was ravin’ out
-of her head, and late that day she died. I’m tellin’ you now all that
-Nelson Floyd ever was able to find out, as it came down to him from one
-person’s recollection to another’s. Well, the woman was buried som’ers,
-nobody knows whar, an’ old Mrs. Perdue kept the baby more beca’se she
-was afeared to put it out o’ the way than fer any pity fer it. She had
-a whole litter of brats of her own goin’ about winter an’ summer in
-the’r shirt-tails, an’ so they left Nelson to scratch fer hisself. Then
-the authorities made it hot fer Perdue on some charges agin ’im, and he
-left the child with another pore mountain family by name o’ Scott and
-moved clean out o’ the country. The Scotts couldn’t remember much more
-than hearsay about how Nelson got thar an’ they didn’t care, though they
-tried to raise the boy along with three of their own. He had a tough
-time of it, for he was a plucky little devil and had a fight mighty nigh
-every day with somebody. And as he growed up he naturally fell into bad
-company, or it fell into him, like everything else did, an’ he tuck to
-drinkin’ an’ become a regular young outlaw; he was a bloodthirsty rowdy
-before he was fifteen; shot at one man fer some cause or other an’ barely
-escaped bein’ put up fer life—nothin’ but bein’ so young got ’im off. But
-one day—now I’m givin’ it to you jest as Nelson told me—one day he said
-he got to thinkin’ about the way he was a-goin’, and of his own accord he
-made up his mind to call a halt. He wanted to cut clean off from his old
-set, an’ so he went to Mayhew and told him he wanted to git work in the
-store. Old Mayhew would skin a flea fer its hide an’ tallow, an’ seein’
-his money in the boy, he bound ’im to an agreement to work fer his bare
-board an’ clothes fer three years.”
-
-“Low enough wages, certainly!” exclaimed the planter.
-
-“Yes, but Nelson didn’t grumble, and Mayhew will tell you hisself that
-thar never was sech a worker sence the world was made. He was a general
-hand at ever’thing, and as bright as a new dollar and as quick as a steel
-trap. The Lord only knows when or how he did it, fer nobody ever seed a
-book in his hands in business hours, but he l’arned to read and write
-and figure. An’ that wasn’t all. Mayhew was sech an old skinflint, and
-so hard on folks who got in his debt, that nobody traded at his shebang
-except them that couldn’t go anywhars else; but lo and behold! Nelson
-made so many friends that they flocked around ’im from all directions
-an’ the business of the house was more than doubled at a jump. Mayhew
-knowed the cause of it, fer lots o’ customers throwed it up to ’im. The
-prosperity was almost too much fer the old skunk; in fact, he got mighty
-nigh scared at it and actually tried to dam the stream o’ profit. To
-keep up such a business big credit had to be extended, and it was a new
-venture fer the cautious old scamp. But Nelson had perfect faith in all
-his friends, and thar it stood—a beardless boy holdin’ forth that it was
-the old man’s chance fer a lifetime to git rich, and old Mayhew half
-believin’ it, crazy to act on Nelson’s judgment, an’ yet afraid it would
-be ruination. That was at the close of the boy’s three-year contract. He
-was then about twenty year old, and I was in the store and heard the talk
-between ’em. We was all a-settin’ at the big wood stove in the back end,
-me an’ the old man, an’ Nelson and Joe Peters, a clerk, who is still with
-the firm. I shall never forgit that night as long as I live. I gloried
-in the boy’s spunk to sech an extent I could ’a’ throwed up my hat an’
-hollered.
-
-“‘I’ve been waitin’ to have a talk with you, Mr. Mayhew,’ Nelson said.
-‘Our contract is out today, and you an’ me disagree so much about runnin’
-the business that I hardly know what I ought to do an’ not stand in my
-own light. We’ve got to make a fresh contract anyway.’
-
-“‘I knowed that was comin’,’ old Mayhew said, with one o’ his big,
-hoggish grunts. ‘People for miles around have made it the’r particular
-business to fill you up with ideas about what you are wuth. I’ve thought
-some about lettin’ you go an’ see ef me an’ Joe cayn’t keep things
-a-movin’, but you know the trade round here, an’ I want to do the fair
-thing. What do you think yore time’s wuth?’” Pole laughed. “The old skunk
-was usin’ exactly the same words he’d ’a’ used ef he was startin’ in to
-buy a load o’ produce an’ wanted to kill expectation at the outset.
-
-“‘I want fifty dollars a month, under certain conditions,’ the boy said,
-lookin’ the old skinflint straight in the eye.
-
-“‘Fifty—huh! yo’re crazy, stark’ starin’ crazy—plumb off yore base!’ the
-old man said, his lip twisted up like it is when he’s mad. ‘I see myse’f
-payin’ a beardless boy a Broadway salary to work in a shack like this out
-here in the mountains.’
-
-“‘Well, I’ll jest be obliged to quit you then,’ Nelson said as steady as
-a millpond on a hot day in August, ’an’ I’d sorter hate to do it. Moore
-& Trotter, at Darley, offer me that fer the fust six months, with an
-increase later.’
-
-“‘Moore & Trotter!’ the old skunk grunted loud enough to be heard clean
-to the court-house. They was the only firm in this end o’ the state that
-controlled as much custom as Mayhew did, an’ it struck the old chap
-under the ribs. He got up from his chair an’ walked clean down to the
-front door. It was shet an’ locked, but thar was a lamp on the show-case
-nigh whar he stopped, an’ I could see his old face a-workin’ under
-the influence o’ good an’ evil. Purty soon he grunted, an’ come back,
-thumpin’ his old stick agin barrels an’ boxes along the way.
-
-“‘How am I goin’ to know whether they offered you that much or not?’ he
-axed.
-
-“‘Beca’se I said so,’ Nelson told ’im, an’ his dark eyes was flashin’
-like lightnin’. He stood up an’ faced the old codger. ‘I’ll tell you one
-thing, Mr. Mayhew,’ he let fly at ’im, ’ef you don’t know whether I’m
-tellin’ the truth or not you’d better let me go, fer a man that will lie
-will steal. I say they offered me fifty dollars. I’ve got the’r written
-proposition in my pocket, but I’ll be hanged ef I show it to you.’”
-
-“Good!” exclaimed Duncan.
-
-“Well, it knocked the old man clean off his feet,” Pole went on. “He sat
-down in his chair again, all of a tremble an’ white about the mouth.
-Stingy people git scared to death at the very idea o’ payin’ out money,
-anyway, an’ stingy don’t fit that old cuss. Ef Noah Webster had known him
-he’d ’a’ made another word fer that meanin’. I don’t know but he’d simply
-’a’ spelled out the old man’s name an’ ’a’ been done with it.”
-
-“What answer did Mayhew give the young man, Baker?” asked the planter in
-a tone which indicated no little interest.
-
-“Why, he jest set still for awhile,” said Pole, “an’ me an’ Joe Peters
-was a-wonderin’ what he’d say. He never did do anything sudden. Ef he
-ever gits thar he’ll feel his way through heaven’s gate. I seed ’im keep
-a woman standin’ in the store once from breakfast to dinner-time while
-he was lookin’ fer a paper o’ needles she’d called fer. Every now an’
-then he’d quit huntin’ fer the needles an’ go an’ wait on some other
-customer, an’ then come back to ’er. She was a timid sort o’ thing, an’
-didn’t seem to think she had the right to leave, bein’ as she had started
-the search. Whenever she’d go towards the door to see ef her hoss was
-standin’, he’d call ’er back an’ ax ’er about ’er crap an’ tell ’er not
-to be in a hurry—that Rome wasn’t built in a day, an’ the like. You know
-the old cuss has some education. Finally he found the needles an’ tuck
-another half an hour to select a scrap o’ paper little enough to wrap ’em
-up in. But you axed me what Mayhew said to ’im. You bet the boy was too
-good a trader to push a matter like that to a head. He’d throwed down the
-bars, an’ he jest waited fer the old man to go through of his own accord.
-Finally Mayhew axed, as indifferent as he could under all his excitement,
-‘When do you intend to answer the letter you say you got from Moore &
-Trotter?’
-
-“‘I’ve already answered it,’ Nelson said. ‘I told ’em I appreciated the’r
-offer an’ would run over an’ see ’em day after tomorrow.’”
-
-“Good, very well said, Baker!” laughed Captain Duncan. “No wonder the
-young man’s become rich. You can’t keep talent like that down. But what
-did old Mayhew say?”
-
-“It was like pullin’ eye-teeth,” answered Pole, “but he finally come
-across. ‘Well,’ said he, ‘I reckon you kin make yorese’f as useful to me
-as you kin to them, an’ ef you are bent on ridin’ me to death, after I
-picked you up an’ give you a start an’ l’arnt you how to do business, I
-reckon I’ll have to put up with it.’
-
-“‘I don’t feel like I owe you anything,’ said Nelson as plucky as a
-banker demandin’ good security on a loan. ‘I’ve worked for you like a
-slave for three years for my bare livin’ an’ my experience, an’ from now
-on I am goin’ to work for Number One. I said that I’d stay for fifty
-dollars a month on certain conditions.’
-
-“‘Conditions?’ the old man growled. ‘What conditions do you mean?’
-
-“‘Why, it’s jest this,’ said Nelson. ‘I’ve had my feelin’s, an’ the
-feelin’s o’ my friends, hurt time after time by you turnin’ folks off
-without credit when I knowed they would meet the’r obligations. Now, ef
-I stay with you it is with the distinct understandin’ that I have the
-authority to give or refuse credit whenever I see fit.’
-
-“That knocked the old man off his perch agin. He wilted an’ sat thar as
-limp as a dish-rag. Joe Peters worships the ground Nelson walks on, an’
-as ’feard as he was o’ the old man, he busted out in a big chuckle, an’
-rubbed his hands together. Besides he knowed the boy was talkin’ fer the
-interest o’ the business. He’d seed no end o’ good customers sent off fer
-no reason in the world than that Mayhew was scared o’ his shadow.
-
-“‘I’ll never consent to _that!_’ Mayhew said, mighty nigh clean whipped
-out.
-
-“‘Well, Moore & Trotter _will_,’ Nelson said. ‘That’s one o’ the things
-laid down in the’r proposition.’ An’ the boy went to the desk an’ drawed
-out a sheet o’ paper an’ dipped his pen in the ink. The old man set
-quivering awhile, an’ then got up an’ went an’ stood behind the boy. ‘Put
-down yore pen,’ said he, with a sigh from away down inside of ’im. ‘It
-would ruin me fer you to go to Darley—half the trade would follow you. Go
-ahead; I’ll keep you an’ run the risk.’”
-
-The planter had been listening attentively, and he now said admiringly:
-“Even at that early age the boy was showing what developed later. It
-wasn’t long after that before he became the old man’s partner, I believe.”
-
-“The next year,” answered Pole. “He saved every dollar of his wages,
-and made some good investments that turned out money. It wasn’t a big
-slice of the business at fust, but he now owns a half, an’, countin’ his
-outside interests, he’s wuth a great deal more than old Mayhew. He’s rich
-already, Captain.”
-
-“So I’ve heard the women say,” smiled the planter. “Women always keep
-track of well-to-do unmarried men.”
-
-“It hain’t spiled Nelson one bit, though,” added Baker. “He’s the same
-unselfish friend to me as he ever was, and I hain’t hardly got a roof
-to cover me an’ mine. But, as solid as he always was, he had a serious
-back-set about three years ago, and all his well-wishers thought it was
-goin’ to do him up.”
-
-“You mean when he took to drinking,” said Captain Duncan interrogatively.
-
-“Yes, that’s what I mean. He’d formed the habit when he was a boy, and,
-along with his prosperity an’ late work hours, it begun to fasten its
-claws on ’im like it has on some other folks I know, Captain. He had a
-lot o’ night work to do, an’ Thigpen’s bar was right j’inin’ the store.
-Nelson used to slide in at the back door whenever the notion struck ’im,
-and he made the trail hot, I tell you. Old Mayhew kept a sharp eye on
-’im, an’ ever’ now and then he’d git powerful blue over the way things
-was a-goin’. Finally the old cuss got desperate an’ called a halt. He had
-a straight talk with Nelson, an’ told ’im they would have to divide the’r
-interests, that he wasn’t a drinkin’ man hisse’f, an’ he didn’t want to
-be yoked to one that was soaked half the time. It fetched the boy to his
-senses. He come over to my house that night an’ called me out to the
-fence.
-
-“‘I want to make a deal with you, Pole,’ said he.
-
-“‘With me?’ says I. ‘What sort of a deal?’
-
-“‘Why,’ said he, ‘I’ve made up my mind to swear off fer good an’ all, an’
-I want you to j’ine me.’
-
-“I agreed all right,” Pole laughed. “In fact, I was sorter in that
-business. I’d promised every preacher an’ temperance worker in the
-county to quit, an’ I couldn’t refuse a friend what I was dispensin’ so
-freely right an’ left. So I said, said I, ‘All right, Nelson; I’m with
-you.’”
-
-“And how did it come out?” questioned the planter as he bowed to a wagon
-full of farmers going in an opposite direction.
-
-“His vaccination tuck,” Pole smiled. “He had a mighty sore arm fer a week
-or so, but he held out. As fer me, I was so dern glad to see his success
-in abstainin’ that I started in to celebrate. I did try at fust, though.
-One mornin’ I went in the store an’ seed Nelson have sech a clean,
-prosperous look an’ so well satisfied with his stand that I went out with
-fresh resolutions. What did I do? I went to the barroom an’ bought four
-pint bottles o’ red rye an’ tuck ’em home with me. I set ’em all in a
-straight row on the mantel-shelf, nigh the edge, in front o’ the clock,
-an’ was standin’ lookin’ at ’em when Sally, my wife, come in. She seed
-the display an’ jest set kerflop down in her chair an’ begun to whimper.
-
-“‘You hold on,’ said I; ‘don’t you cross a foot-log till the tree’s
-down. I’m tryin’ a new dicker. I’ve always heard that familiarity breeds
-contempt, an’ I’ve also heard that the hair o’ the dog is good fer the
-bite. Now, I’ve tried my level best to quit liquor by stayin’ away from
-it an’ I’m a-goin’ to see ef I cayn’t do it with its red eye on me all
-the time.’ Well, Captain, the sweet little woman—she’s a sweet, dear
-little creature, Captain Duncan, ef I do say it myself.”
-
-“I’ve always heard so, Baker,” the planter said. “She’s very popular with
-your neighbors.”
-
-“An’ I’m jest t’other way,” said Pole. “Well, Sally, she got up an’
-kissed me, an’ said that somehow she felt like my plan would work.”
-
-“And did it—I mean,” the Captain recalled Pole’s spree of only the night
-before, “I mean did it work for any length of time?”
-
-“I was goin’ on to tell you,” answered the mountaineer. “That night fer
-the fust time sence my marriage I woke smack dab in the middle o’ the
-night, an’ as I laid thar in the room filled with moonlight I couldn’t
-see a blessed thing but that row o’ bottles, an’ then my mouth set in
-to waterin’ at sech a rate that I got afeard I’d ketch my death from
-sleepin’ on a wet pillow. It was certainly a struggle with the flesh.
-I’d put my thirst, when she’s good an’ dry, agin any that ever tickled a
-human throat. It ’ud take the blue ribbon at a state fair. It’s a rail
-thing; it kin walk an’ talk an’ kick an’ squirm, but it won’t be dictated
-to. Finally Sally woke up an’ said:
-
-“‘What’s the matter, Pole? Hain’t you comfortable?’
-
-“‘Comfortable, the devil!’ said I. I’m usually polite to Sally, but I
-felt like that wasn’t no time an’ place to talk about little matters.
-‘Comfortable, nothin’,’ said I; ‘Sally, ef you don’t take that “dog-hair”
-out o’ this house an’ hide it, I’ll be as drunk as a b’iled owl in ten
-minutes.’
-
-“’“Dog-hair?”’ said she, an’ then the little woman remembered an’ got
-up. I heard the bottles tinkle like sorrowful good-bye bells callin’
-wanderin’ friends back to the fold as she tuck ’em up an’ left. Captain,
-I felt jest like”—Pole laughed good-naturedly—“I felt like thar was a
-plot agin the best friends I ever had. I actually felt sorry fer them
-bottles, an’ I got up an’ stood at the window an’ watched Sally as she
-tuck ’em away out in the lonely moonlight to the barn. I seed ’er climb
-over the fence o’ the cow-lot an’ go in the side whar I kept my hay an’
-fodder an’ roughness fer my cattle. Then I laid down in bed agin.”
-
-“That was certainly a courageous thing to do,” said the planter, “and you
-deserve credit for putting your foot down so firmly on what you felt was
-so injurious, even, even—” the Captain came back again to reality—“even
-if you did not remain firm very long afterward.”
-
-“Well, I’ll tell you one thing,” the ex-moonshiner laughed again, and his
-eyes twinkled in subtle enjoyment, “it tuck Sally longer, it seemed to
-me, to git to sleep after she got back than it ever had in all her life.
-Of all times on earth she wanted to talk. But I shet ’er off. I made
-like I was breathin’ good an’ deep an’ then she set in too. What did I
-do? Captain Duncan, I spent the best half o’ that night out in the barn
-lookin’ fer hens’ nests. I found two an’ had to be put to bed at sun-up.”
-
-The planter laughed heartily. “There is one good thing about the
-situation, Baker,” he said, “and that is, your making a joke of it. I
-believe you will get the under-hold on the thing some day and throw it
-over. Coming back to your friend Floyd; it’s a fact that he gave up
-whisky, but if reports are true, he has another fault that is almost as
-bad.”
-
-“Oh, you mean all that talk about Jeff Wade’s sister,” answered the
-mountaineer.
-
-“Yes, Baker, a reputation of that sort is not a desirable thing in any
-community. I know that many brainy and successful men hold that kind of
-thing lightly, but it will down anybody who tampers with it.”
-
-“Now, look here, Captain,” Pole said sharply, “don’t you be plumb
-foolish! Ain’t you got more sense ’an to swallow everything that passes
-amongst idle women in these mountains? Nelson Floyd, I’ll admit, has got
-a backbone full o’ the fire o’ youth an’ strong-blooded manhood, but
-he’s, to my positive knowledge, one o’ the cleanest young men I ever come
-across. To tell you the truth, I don’t believe he ever made but that
-one slip. It got out, an’ beca’se he was rich an’ prominent, it raised
-a regular whirlwind o’ gossip an’ exaggeration. If the same thing had
-happened to half a dozen other young men round about here, not a word
-would ’a’ been said.”
-
-“Oh, I see!” smiled the planter. “He’s not as black as he’s painted,
-then?”
-
-“Not by a jugful!” said the farmer. “I tell you he’s all right, Captain,
-an’ folks will know it ’fore long.”
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
-Springtown was about twelve miles west of Darley, only a mile from
-Captain Duncan’s house, and half a mile from Pole Baker’s humble cottage
-and small farm. The village had a population of about two hundred souls.
-It was the county seat; and the court-house, a simple, ante-bellum brick
-structure, stood in the centre of the public square, round which were
-clustered the one-storied shops, lawyers’ offices, cotton warehouses,
-hotel and general stores.
-
-Chief among the last mentioned was the well-known establishment of Mayhew
-& Floyd. It was a long frame building, once white but now a murky gray, a
-tone which nothing but the brush of time and weather could have given it.
-
-It was only a week since Captain Duncan’s talk with Pole Baker, and a
-bright, inspiring morning, well suited to the breaking of the soil and
-the planting of seed. The village was agog with the spirit of hope. The
-post-office was filled with men who had come for their mail, and they
-stood and chatted about the crops on the long veranda of the hotel and
-in the front part of Mayhew & Floyd’s store. Pole Baker was in the store
-talking with Joe Peters, the clerk, about seed-potatoes, when a tall
-countryman in the neighborhood of forty-five years of age slouched in and
-leaned heavily against the counter.
-
-“I want a box o’ forty-four cartridges,” he said, drawing out a long
-revolver and rapping on the counter with the butt of it.
-
-“What! you goin’ squirrel huntin’?” Peters laughed and winked at Pole.
-“That gun’s got a long enough barrel to reach the top o’ the highest tree
-in these mountains.”
-
-“You slide around behind thar an’ git me them cartridges!” retorted the
-customer. “Do yore talkin’ to somebody else. I’ll hunt what an’ whar I
-want to, I reckon.”
-
-“Oh, come off yore perch, Jeff Wade!” the clerk said, with another easy
-laugh. “You hain’t nobody’s daddy. But here you are. Forty cents a box,
-full count, every one warranted to make a hole an’ a noise. Want me to
-charge ’em?”
-
-“No, I don’t; by God—I don’t! An’ what’s more, I want to know exactly how
-much I owe this house. I went to a dozen money lenders ’fore I found what
-I wanted, but I got it an’ I want to pay what I owe Mayhew & Floyd.”
-
-Just then Pole Baker stepped up to the man’s side and, peering under the
-broad brim of his hat, said:
-
-“Looky here, Jeff Wade, what you shootin’ off yore mouth fer? I ’lowed at
-fust that you was full, but you hain’t drinkin’; at least, you don’t seem
-that way to me.”
-
-“Drinkin’, hell! No, I’m not drinkin’, an’ what’s more, I don’t intend
-to let a drap pass down my throat till I’ve done my duty to me an’ mine.
-Say, you look an’ see ef I’m drinkin’. See ef you think a man that’s in
-liquor would have as steady a nerve as I’ve got. You watch me! Maybe
-it’ll show you what I’m able to do.”
-
-Turning, he stalked out of the store, and Peters and Pole followed,
-watching him in wonder. He strode across the street to the court-house,
-loading his revolver as he went. Reaching the closed door of the public
-building he took an envelope from his pocket and fastened it to the panel
-by thrusting the blade of his big pocket-knife into it several times.
-The spectators heard the hollow, resounding blows like the strokes of a
-carpenter’s hammer, and then Wade turned and came back toward them.
-
-“By gum, he’s off his nut!” said Peters seriously. “He’s as crazy as a
-bedbug.”
-
-“It’s my opinion he’s jest comin’ to his senses,” Pole mused, a
-thoughtful look in his eyes. “Yes, that’s about it; he’s jest wakin’ up,
-an’ the whole county will know it, too. By gum, I hate this—I hate it!”
-
-“You hate what?” asked Peters, his eyes on the farmer, who was now quite
-near them. Pole made no reply, for Wade was by his side on the brick
-walk beneath the wooden shed in front of the store, his revolver swinging
-at his side.
-
-“You fellows keep yore eye on that envelope,” said Wade, and he cocked
-his revolver.
-
-“Look here, don’t make a dern fool o’ yorese’f,” said Pole Baker, and
-he laid a remonstrating hand on the tense arm of the gaunt mountaineer.
-“You know it’s agin the ordinance. You know you’ll git into trouble; you
-listen to the advice of a friend. Put that gun up an’ go home.”
-
-“I’m my own boss!” snarled the man with the weapon.
-
-“You’re a blamed fool too,” answered Baker.
-
-“Well, that’s my lookout.” Wade glared over his shoulder and raised his
-voice significantly: “I want to show this town how easy it will be fer me
-to put three balls into the blackest heart that ever pumped human blood.”
-
-“You’d better mind what yo’re about, Jeff Wade.” Pole Baker was pale, his
-lips were tight, his eyes flashing.
-
-“I know what I’m about. I’m tryin’ to draw a coward from his lair. I’m
-not shore—I’m not _dead_ shore, mind you, but I’m mighty nigh it. Ef the
-guilty stand an’ hear what I’m a-sayin’ an’ don’t take it up, they are
-wuss than hell-tainted. You watch that white mark.”
-
-The bystanders, several comprehending, stood rigid. Pole Baker stared.
-Wade raised his revolver, aimed steadily at the mark and fired three
-shots in quick succession.
-
-“Thar!” said the marksman, with grim triumph, “as bad as my sight is, I
-kin see ’em from here.”
-
-“By gum, they are thar!” exclaimed Peters, with a strange look into Pole
-Baker’s set face. “They are thar, Pole.”
-
-“You bet they are thar, an’ some’ll be in another spot ’fore long,” said
-Wade. “Now, Peters, you go in the house an’ bring me my account. I’ve got
-the money.”
-
-Wonderingly the clerk obeyed. Pole went into the store behind him, and,
-as Peters stood at the big ledger figuring, Pole stepped up to Nelson
-Floyd, who sat near a window in the rear with a newspaper in front of him.
-
-“Did you hear all that, Nelson?” the farmer asked.
-
-“Did I? Of course I did; wasn’t it intended for—?” The young merchant
-glanced furtively at Peters and paused. His handsome, dark face was set
-as from some inward struggle.
-
-There was a pause. Peters went toward the front, a written account drying
-in the air as he waved it to and fro.
-
-“I was about to ask you if—?” the young merchant started to say, but he
-was interrupted by Baker.
-
-“Hush, listen!”
-
-There was the sound of clinking coin on the counter below. The bell on
-the cash-drawer rang as the clerk put the money away.
-
-“Thar, I’m even with this dirty shebang!” It was Jeff Wade’s raised
-voice. “An’ I kin act when the proper time comes. Oh, you all know what
-I’m talkin’ about! Nobody kin hide a thing in these mountains. But you’ll
-all understand it better ef it ever comes into yore families. I never
-had but one little sister—she was all the Lord ever allowed me to have.
-Well, she was married not more’n a month ago, an’ went off to Texas with
-a man who believes in ’er an’ swears he will make her a good husband
-an’ protector. But no sooner was the pore little thing gone than the
-talk set in. It was writ out to her, an’ she writ back to me to stop it.
-She admitted it was true, but wouldn’t lay the blame. Folks say they
-know, but they won’t talk. They are afeared o’ the influence o’ money
-an’ power, I reckon, but it will git out. I have my suspicions, but I’m
-not dead sure, but I will be, an’ what I done fer that scrap o’ paper
-I will do fer that man, ef God don’t paralyze this right arm. Ef the
-black-hearted devil is within the sound o’ my voice at this minute, an’
-stays still, he’s not only the thief of a woman’s happiness, but he’s
-wuss than a coward. He’s a sneakin’ son——”
-
-Nelson Floyd, his face rigid, sprang up and went into Joe Peters’s little
-bedroom, which was cut off in one corner of the store. Opening the top
-drawer of an old bureau, he took out a revolver. Turning, he met the
-stalwart form of Pole Baker in the doorway.
-
-“Put down that gun, Nelson; put it down!” Pole commanded. “Jeff Wade’s
-deliberately set this trap to draw you into it, an’ the minute you walk
-down thar it will be a public acknowledgment, an’ he’ll kill you ’fore
-you can bat an eye.”
-
-“No doubt,” said Nelson Floyd; “but the fellow has his rights. I could
-never draw a free breath if this passes. I owe it to the poor devil,
-Pole, and I’ll pay. That has always been my rule. I’ll pay. Stand aside!”
-
-“I’ll be damned ef I do!” Pole stood his ground firmly. “You must listen
-to reason. It’s deliberate death.”
-
-“Stand out of the way, Pole; don’t make me mad,” said Floyd. “I’m goin’
-down. I’d expect him to pay me, and I shall him.”
-
-“Stop! you are a fool—you are a hot-headed idiot, Nelson Floyd! Listen to
-me”—Pole caught the revolver and held on to the barrel of it, while the
-young merchant clutched the butt—“listen to me, I say. Are you a-goin’
-back on a helpless little woman who gets married to a man who believes
-in her an’ goes away off an’ is on a fair road to happiness—are you, I
-say, a-goin’ to publicly advertise her shame, an’, no doubt, bust up a
-contented home?”
-
-“Great God, Pole!” exclaimed Floyd as he sank on to the edge of Peters’s
-bed, “do you think, if I give him satisfaction, it will——?”
-
-“Will it? It will be in every paper from Maine to California. Meddlesome
-devils will mark the articles an’ mail ’em to the gal’s husband. A lot o’
-folks did the’r level best to bust up the match anyway, by talkin’ to him
-about you an’ others.”
-
-Nelson Floyd stared at the floor and slowly nodded his head.
-
-“He’s caught me in a more degrading trap than the other would have been,
-Pole,” he declared bitterly. “My conduct has branded me as a coward
-and left me without power to vindicate myself. That’s one of the ways
-Providence has of punishing a poor devil. He may have a good impulse, but
-can’t act upon it owing to the restrictions laid on him by his very sins.”
-
-Pole looked down into the store.
-
-“Never mind,” he said gloomily. “Wade’s gone.”
-
-Floyd dropped the revolver into the drawer of the bureau and went back to
-his desk.
-
-“It’s only a question of time, Pole,” he said. “He suspects me now, but
-is not sure. It won’t be long before the full story will reach him, and
-then we’ll have to meet. As far as I am concerned, I’d rather have had it
-out with him. I’ve swallowed a bitter pill this mornin’, Pole.”
-
-“Well, it wasn’t a lead one.” Baker’s habitual sense of humor was rising
-to the surface. “Most any sort o’ physic is better’n cold metal shoved
-into the system the wrong way.”
-
-There was a step in the store. Pole looked down again.
-
-“It’s old Mayhew,” he said. “I’m powerful glad he was late this mornin’,
-Nelson. The old codger would have seed through that talk.”
-
-“Yes, he would have seen through it,” answered Floyd despondently as he
-opened a big ledger and bent over it.
-
-Mayhew trudged toward them, his heavy cane knocking against the long
-dry-goods counter.
-
-“I’ll have the law on that fellow!” he growled as he hung his stick on
-its accustomed nail behind the stove. “No rampageous daredevil like that
-can stand right in my door and shoot for mere amusement at the county
-court-house. This isn’t a fort yet, and the war is over, thank the Lord.”
-
-Pole glanced at Floyd.
-
-“Oh, he’s jest a little hilarious this mornin’, Mr. Mayhew,” he said. “He
-must ’a’ met a mountain whisky wagon on his way to town. Anyways, you
-needn’t complain; he come in here jest now an’ paid off his account in
-full.”
-
-“What? Paid off? Is that so, Nelson?”
-
-Floyd nodded, and then bent more closely over the ledger. “Yes, he paid
-up to date.”
-
-“Well, that’s queer—or I am, one or the other. Why, boys, I had that
-fellow on my dead-list. I didn’t think he’d ever raise any money, and if
-he did I had no idea it would drift our way.”
-
-Floyd left the desk and reached for his hat. Pole was watching him
-closely.
-
-“Post-office?” he asked.
-
-“Yes.” The two walked part of the way to the front door and paused. Joe
-Peters was attending a man on the grocery side of the house, and a young
-woman neatly dressed, with a pretty figure and graceful movement, stood
-waiting her turn.
-
-“By gum,” Pole exclaimed under his breath, “that’s my little neighbor,
-Cynthia Porter—the purtiest, neatest an’ best little trick that ever wore
-a bonnet. I needn’t tell you that, though, you old scamp. You’ve already
-found it out. Go wait on ’er, Nelson. Don’t keep ’er standin’ thar.”
-
-Pole sat on a bag of coffee and his friend went to the girl.
-
-“Good morning, Miss Cynthia,” he said, his hat in his hand. “Peters seems
-busy. I don’t know much about the stock, but if you’ll tell me what you
-want I’ll look for it.”
-
-Turning, she stared at him, her big brown eyes under their long lashes
-wide open as if in surprise.
-
-“Why—why—” She seemed to be making a valiant effort at self-control, and
-then he noticed that her voice was quivering and that she was quite pale.
-
-“I really didn’t want to buy anything,” she said. “Mother sent me to
-tell Mr. Peters that she couldn’t possibly have the butter ready before
-tomorrow.”
-
-“Oh, the butter!” Floyd said, studying her face and manner in perplexity.
-
-“Yes,” the girl went on, “she promised to have ten pounds ready to send
-to Darley, but the calves got to the cows and spoiled everything. That
-threw her at least a day behind.”
-
-“Oh, that don’t make a bit o’ difference to us, Miss Cynthia,” the clerk
-cried out from the scales, where he was weighing a parcel of sugar. “Our
-wagon ain’t going over till Saturday, nohow.”
-
-“Well, she will certainly be glad,” the girl returned in a tone of
-relief, and she moved toward the door. Floyd, still wondering, went with
-her to the sidewalk.
-
-“You look pale,” he said tentatively, “and—and, well, the truth is, I
-have never seen you just this way, Cynthia. Have you been having more
-trouble at home? Is your mother still determined that we sha’n’t have any
-more of those delightful buggy-rides?”
-
-“It wasn’t that—_today_,” she said, her eyes raised to his in a glance
-that, somehow, went straight to his heart. “I’ll tell you. As I came on,
-I had just reached Sim Tompkins’s field, where he was planting corn and
-burning stumps, when a negro—one of Captain Duncan’s hands—passed on a
-mule. I didn’t hear what he said, but when I came to Sim he had stopped
-plowing and was leaning over the fence saying, ‘Awful, horrible!’ and so
-on. I asked him what had happened and he told me—” she dropped her eyes,
-her words hung in her throat and she put a slender, tapering, though firm
-and sun-browned, hand to her lips.
-
-“Go on,” Floyd urged her, “Tompkins said——”
-
-“He said,” the girl swallowed, “that you and Jeff Wade had had words in
-front of the store and that Wade had shot and killed you. I—I—didn’t
-stop to inquire of anyone—I thought it was true—and came on here. When I
-saw you just then absolutely unharmed I—I—of course—it surprised me—or—I
-mean——”
-
-“How ridiculous!” He laughed mechanically. “There must be some mistake,
-Cynthia. People always get things crooked. That shows how little truth
-there is in reports. Wade came in here and paid his bill, and did not
-even speak to me or I to him.”
-
-“But I heard pistol shots myself away down the road,” said the girl, “and
-as I came in I saw a group of men right there. They were pointing down at
-the sidewalk, and one of them said, ‘He stood right there and fired three
-times.’”
-
-Floyd laughed again, while her lynx eyes slowly probed his face. He
-pointed at the court-house door. “Cynthia, do you see that envelope? Wade
-was shooting at it. I haven’t been over to see yet, but they say he put
-three balls close together in its centre. We ought to incorporate this
-place into a town so that a thing of that sort wouldn’t be allowed.”
-
-“Oh, that was it!” Cynthia exclaimed in a full breath of relief. “I
-suppose you think I’m a goose to be so scared at nothing.”
-
-Floyd’s face clouded over, his eyes went down. A customer was going
-into the store, and he walked on to the street corner with her before
-replying. Then he said tenderly: “I’m glad, though, Cynthia, that you
-felt badly, as I see you did, when you thought I was done for. Good-bye;
-I shall see you again some way, I hope, before long, even if your mother
-does object.”
-
-As they walked away out of his sight Pole Baker lowered his shaggy head
-to his brawny hands, his elbows resting on his knees.
-
-“Fool!” he exclaimed. “Right now with his head in the very jaws o’ death
-he goes on talkin’ sweet stuff to women. A purty face, a soft voice an’
-a pair o’ dreamy eyes would lead that man right into the fire o’ hell
-itself. But that hain’t the p’int. Pole Baker, he’s yore friend, an’ Jeff
-Wade is a-goin’ to kill ’im jest as shore as preachin’.”
-
-When Pole left the store he saw nothing of Floyd, but he noticed
-something else. He was passing Thigpen’s bar and through the open doorway
-he caught sight of a row of bottles behind the counter. A seductive,
-soothing odor greeted him; there was a merry clicking of billiard balls
-in the rear, the joyous thumping of cues on the floor and merry laughter.
-Pole hesitated and then plunged in. At any rate, he told himself, one
-drink would steady his nerves and show him some way, perhaps, to rescue
-Floyd from his overhanging peril. Pole took his drink and sat down. Then
-a friend came in and gave him two or three more. Another of Pole’s sprees
-was beginning.
-
- (_To be continued._)
-
-
-
-
- _When Beauty Is a Fatal Gift_
-
-
-CRAWFORD—It seems to be impossible to convict a pretty woman of a capital
-crime.
-
-CRABSHAW—It wouldn’t be if they allowed women to serve on the jury.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Still Hope_
-
-JAGGLES—Even the doctors can’t kill off the mosquitoes.
-
-WAGGLES—Perhaps they haven’t tried the same methods they use on the human
-race.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _All for the Best_
-
-SMITH—What do you think of the outcry against the childless rich?
-
-BROWN—I don’t blame them. Look how their children turn out.
-
-
-
-
- _How I Dined With President Grant_
-
- BY B. F. RILEY
-
-
-It was in November, 1875. At that time I was a student in Crozer
-Theological Seminary, near Philadelphia. The country was just rallying
-from the effects of a long and disastrous war, and as the centenary of
-the nation would occur the following year, preparations were being made
-for the celebration of the event by a great exposition, which was to be
-held the next year in the City of Brotherly Love. This was the first
-of our great American expositions. It will be remembered that this was
-called the Centennial Exposition.
-
-General Hawley, now a senator from Connecticut, was made the
-superintendent of this first great national undertaking in the way
-of expositions. In order to procure an adequate appropriation from
-Congress, General Hawley and the Centennial Commission conceived the
-plan of bringing to Philadelphia all the dignitaries and celebrities
-from Washington. They were to be shown the grounds and the unfinished
-buildings, as well as the scope of the mammoth undertaking. It was
-further proposed that the people of Philadelphia should give a banquet
-to the distinguished visitors from Washington. This banquet was given in
-Horticultural Hall, the only building that was sufficiently completed for
-such a function. The sound of thousands of hammers and the swish of many
-saws resounded throughout the Centennial grounds in Fairmount Park.
-
-A magnificent train was to bring the distinguished guests from
-Washington, and it was to arrive in Philadelphia at a given hour of the
-evening. President Grant and his Cabinet, both branches of Congress and
-the judges of the Supreme Court were to constitute the excursion. They
-were of course the guests of the city of Philadelphia, and on their
-arrival were driven direct to the hotels. As might naturally be expected,
-such an event and occasion set the city all agog, and the Philadelphia
-press was filled with the manner of their coming as well as the purpose.
-Public excitement ran high, and the excursion was the subject of
-universal comment.
-
-At that time I was an occasional correspondent of two Alabama papers, one
-a religious journal and the other a secular one. Aware that this was the
-most favorable opportunity I should ever have for seeing so many of our
-distinguished men, I resolved to go to Philadelphia, and, if possible,
-come into contact with them. No better plan was suggested than to present
-myself as a member of the press. I imagined that there would not be the
-slightest difficulty in accomplishing this, and that all that was needed
-was to represent myself as such, and the opportunity sought of mingling
-with the great would be at once afforded. Decking myself in my best garb,
-which was none the better for its long service, I hied away to the city,
-fifteen miles distant, on reaching which the suggestion of a lean purse
-was followed in going to a cheap boarding-house.
-
-After a scanty supper I went to the chief hotels where the great guests
-were already arriving, bought an evening paper for two cents, and found
-that a committee of citizens had been appointed to give information to
-all strangers relative to the trip and the banquet of the next day,
-which committee was to be known by the red rosettes which they wore. I
-threaded my way as best I could through the jammed corridors of the
-hotel, jostling with army officers in brilliant uniforms, and elegantly
-dressed statesmen, until one of the committee wearing a rosette was found.
-
-Without apology, and perhaps in rather an assertive way, I began in a
-direct manner, telling him who I was, what I was, and what I wanted as
-a representative of the Southern press. In reply to his question as to
-what papers I represented, I frankly told him, when he asked for my
-credentials. But these were in the vocative, and so I could produce none.
-He eyed me very closely and with a distrustful look while I sought to
-atone for the absence of credentials by telling him that, being in the
-city at the time of learning fully of the event, I had not the means of
-obtaining the desired credentials. After hearing my statement he told me
-that he feared nothing could be done, and bluntly gave me to understand
-that he could do nothing. Once again I met him in the jam, but he
-declined to notice me, of course.
-
-Going across the street to the other hotel, I mingled with the crowd,
-and came upon two members of the committee standing together. I
-presented my request to them, and they said that they were members
-of the Philadelphia press and gave me a most cordial reception. When
-they asked for my authority to represent the Southern papers, and I
-had none, they requested my card, but I had not even a card. They were
-evidently embarrassed, for they showed a willingness to aid me, but
-found themselves unable to do so. After some courteous explanation they
-expressed regret at being unable to serve me, and one of them handed me
-his card and asked me to apply at Centennial headquarters, on Walnut
-Street, the next morning, at eight o’clock, and said that if anything
-could be done, they were sure the Commission would be glad to do it.
-
-Some time before eight I was at the Commission headquarters the next
-morning, and when the doors were opened I strode in, asking for the
-gentleman whose name had been given me the night before, and when I was
-presented to him he looked at me with a gaze of curiosity. I told my
-story as it had been now several times repeated; he listened with some
-impatience, and asked for the credentials. He listened to my explanation
-with a frown, which indicated that he thought me a fraud, and saying
-that he could do nothing under the circumstances, swung his chair around
-and gave me no more heed, until I more than hinted that perhaps I would
-be the only correspondent present from the South, and that I felt some
-consideration was due me, especially if the Commission cared to have the
-people of the South attend on the forthcoming exposition. The question of
-the North and South was a sensitive one at that time, and he replied that
-the South could come if it desired, and suggested that if I wished to
-remain away he did not object. I replied that the South was clearly being
-discriminated against in the matter, as representatives of the North were
-accorded the consideration which I sought. He demolished me with a single
-blow when he said that they came properly accredited.
-
-Nothing seemed left now but to hasten to the hotels and see what could be
-done there. I accosted another member of the committee of citizens, but
-in no wise succeeded. Already the carriages were drawn up along the side
-of the street for several blocks, awaiting the pleasure of the visitors
-from Washington to go out to Fairmount Park, where the buildings were
-going up. Baffled at every point here, I stepped into the street-car
-and reached the park in advance of the procession. Here I met a medical
-student from the University of Pennsylvania whom I had met before, and I
-told him of my ups and downs, very much to his amusement.
-
-I had now practically given up the hope of being thrown with the national
-magnates, but when they began filing through the great incomplete
-buildings, and I stood with many others staring at them, without
-distinguishing one from the other, there came an hour of growing anxiety,
-stronger than before, to know them, at least, by sight. I still felt
-within myself that I might succeed in getting into the banquet hall. I
-mentioned it to my companion, who sought to dissuade me from any further
-effort, and said that it was folly to attempt it. But when I saw the
-horses’ heads turn toward the Horticultural Hall, I bade the medical
-student good-bye, and scudded across the park through the cutting
-November wind toward Horticultural Hall, fully half a mile away. When I
-reached it, I found it strongly guarded by three cordons of policemen,
-standing about twenty yards apart, and surrounding the building. This
-did not inspire much encouragement, and nothing seemed so far away as
-the possibility of getting into the hall. Meanwhile the carriages were
-arriving, and the distinguished guests were alighting, and going rapidly
-into the hall. An eager crowd of gazers stood near where the carriages
-stopped and were looking for dear life at everyone as he stepped from the
-carriages. One Congressman raised a loud laugh when he leaped out and
-said:
-
-“That other fellow is Grant!”
-
-While I was thinking what I might do next, several members of the
-committee wearing rosettes were seen coming toward the hall. With some
-difficulty I reached them, and the many-times-told tale was repeated
-about my being a correspondent from the South, to which they listened
-with interest, and said:
-
-“Why don’t you go along in?”
-
-“The policemen,” I said.
-
-“Have you a badge?”
-
-“No,” I innocently replied.
-
-“We are out of them, or we would give you one,” one of the group said.
-
-“Come along with us, and we will take you within the first line and send
-someone out to show you in.”
-
-Within the first line of policemen they left me, promising to see to
-it that I at once be shown in. Several minutes, that seemed hours,
-passed, and apprehensions began to arise that at last I might slip in
-my arrangements. My anxiety was quickened by a burly Irish policeman
-approaching me with his club, demanding to know what I was doing there.
-I assumed a great deal of courage and replied that one of the committee
-had left me there on business; and when he threatened to put me out,
-I replied rather stoutly that he might get himself into trouble by
-tinkering with the official matters of the commission. He used some ugly
-language, and said that he knew his business, and that he would let me
-stay only a few minutes longer and turned away on his beat. He again
-approached me and hinted that I had misled him by my statement, and that
-I must “get out right away.”
-
-Just at that moment a gentleman wearing a rosette, and one whom I had
-not before seen, appeared at the entrance of the hall and was giving
-some directions to policemen about the door, when I hailed him rather
-unceremoniously and laughingly told him that I was in a fix and he
-must help me out, that I was where the owl had the hen, where I could
-neither back nor squall. His face was a perfect interrogation point as he
-approached me, and he evidently thought fast while I told him that this
-was a funny predicament for a correspondent to be in. He listened to me
-throughout and said:
-
-“Why, yes, this will never do,” and, laying his hand on my shoulder, led
-me within the first door, and sent someone for somebody else to escort me
-into the banquet hall.
-
-A gentleman soon appeared on the scene and asked for that correspondent
-who wanted to get in. I told him I was the one, and he took my arm and
-led me straight into the hall of banquet. As I passed through suddenly
-I came wellnigh coming into collision with President Grant, who was
-standing over a grate warming his feet. He stared at me as though he was
-afraid I might run over him, and I caught a snatch of a conversation
-between himself and another gentleman, who was obviously twitting
-the President on the size of his feet by relating an anecdote of a
-Congressman on the streets of Washington, who was trying to trade with
-a bootblack for a polish, and the shiner of shoes said that the job was
-such a big one he would have to take it by separate contracts. At this
-bit of pleasantry Grant grimly smiled and said nothing.
-
-The improvised banquet hall was a scene of splendor. The walls were
-festooned with flags and bunting and pictures, and the floors at the base
-of the walls were adorned with flowers and evergreens, while the long
-tables were covered with gold and silver plate, cut-glass and branching
-golden candelabra. Running parallel with the wall on the left, on a
-raised platform, was a long table with sumptuous adornments stretching
-at right angles to the tables below. The seats of this elevated table
-fronted those occupying the seats on the floor. Immediately in the centre
-of the table was the chair in which John Hancock sat when he presided
-over the convention which adopted the Declaration of Independence. This
-antique and high-backed piece of furniture was overhung with silken
-banners woven into appropriate designs and a field of stars. This was
-the seat provided for the President. Just in front of him was an immense
-silver laver filled with perfumes, while in the centre was a beautifully
-dressed roasted pig.
-
-When the band began playing the guests took their seats, and I sat on
-the seat within easiest reach. When I looked over the hall I saw that I
-was the only one without a badge or decoration of some sort. Luckily for
-me I had a seat near a Congressman from Arkansas, a gentleman who had
-been a Confederate brigadier. He was warm in his greetings to a young
-Southerner and took great pains to point out to me the most distinguished
-of the guests. While we were admiring the dainty souvenirs a negro
-waiter borrowed one of mine, promising to return it soon, and when he
-disappeared the Congressman said:
-
-“You shouldn’t have allowed that rascal to fool you; he is not going to
-bring that back, but wants it for someone else.”
-
-He was correct, for I haven’t seen the negro waiter since.
-
-The banquet lasted more than an hour, and the effects of the champagne
-were soon manifest from the increased boisterousness of the guests. So
-far as I could observe, I was the only one who declined the wine. When
-the cigars were passed the guests dived their hands deep into the boxes
-and took hands full and filled their pockets. As I did not smoke, I took
-mine to the boys at the seminary who did.
-
-The banquet being over, the toasts began. After a neat speech by the
-toastmaster, he announced the first toast: “The President of the United
-States.”
-
-It was intended that this should be responded to by Grant, but he sat as
-unmoved as a statue. Cheer after cheer rang out, and Grant was called
-for in deafening chorus, but he was imperturbable still. My Congressman
-neighbor remarked in a whisper:
-
-“Now, wouldn’t I feel ashamed to be unable to say a word in response to
-such a demonstration as this!”
-
-As the President would not reply, the other toasts were responded to by
-Chief Justice Waite, the historian Bancroft, James G. Blaine, Senator
-Oliver P. Morton and one or two others of less distinction.
-
-The scene ended amid vociferous songs, oaths and other expressions of
-drunken disorder, which were not calculated to inspire much respect in
-the young theological student for the law-makers and statesmen of the
-country.
-
-Making my way out of the hall, I found that it was already dark on the
-outside. I boarded a street-car and was soon on board a train going
-toward Crozer, and at nine o’clock was in my room surrounded by a host of
-the boys, to whom I related the experiences of the day, while the smokers
-in the crowd smoked my fine cigars.
-
-And that is the way I dined with President Grant.
-
-
-
-
- _The New York Children’s Court_
-
- BY HON. JOSEPH M. DEUEL
- _Author of the legislation creating the Court and a Justice therein_
-
-
-A tribunal with an age-limit for jurisdiction is a modern innovation. For
-two years one of that character has been passing through an experimental
-stage in the city of New York. It has fully justified its creation. It is
-experimental still, in the sense that two years have been insufficient to
-exploit all its useful possibilities. They are illimitable. More than any
-in the world, the success of this Court depends upon the personality of
-the individual who wields its powers; and, however capable, resourceful
-and aspiring, he cannot be eminently successful unless back of him stands
-a strong, healthy and encouraging public sentiment. This is rapidly
-developing as parents come to know that each justice is a willing and
-enthusiastic ally, ready at all times to join heartily with them to
-correct and encourage the boy or girl who has been tempted to go wrong,
-rather than an ordinary minister of justice who measures each infraction
-of law with statutory precision.
-
-When it is widely known that the primary object is not one of punishment,
-but of municipal and communal salvage, its possibilities for good will
-be greatly enhanced. No one has ever sat with its presiding justice
-through an entire session without some expression of satisfaction with
-the Court and the controlling policy in dealing with wayward youth. Said
-a minister of the Gospel recently, at the close of a forenoon session:
-“You are doing more good than all the ministers in the city.” This
-exaggerated commendation is cited simply to show that the experimental
-stage cannot be on the wrong tack when, after careful observation, men
-of intelligence give utterance to such convictions. But every member
-of the community cannot see and judge for himself, and this article is
-designed to give to all a correct idea of the Court, why created, and
-its policy in dealing with offenders. Many strangers, upon information
-not first-hand, have been somewhat severe in criticism of a supposed
-sentimental leniency; they have become warm supporters when brought into
-close range with its operations.
-
-No useful purpose will be served by tracing the origin of the Court or
-singling out and naming those who were instrumental in its creation. It
-came naturally by the process of evolution in the matter of juvenile
-legislation. Its advent was timely, for our civic conditions, three
-years ago, were breeding criminals more rapidly than at any other time
-in our history; and a court to deal solely with the source of criminal
-supply was imperatively demanded. One of the strongest arguments at
-Albany for the bill was based upon these conditions, and it was urged
-that when fairly in progress the prophylactic value of the Court would be
-manifested in a reduced crime rate for the city.
-
-No one then anticipated the volume and character of immigrants that have
-since deluged our ports. Parents with large families of growing children
-have edged into overcrowded tenement centres, where their native tongue
-is almost exclusively spoken, and have produced unwholesome social
-conditions, that destroy the American theory of home, by packing men,
-women and children into one or two small and ill-ventilated rooms. They
-are without means of subsistence. The market demand for their labor is
-already supplied. No employment at wages can be found, and, however
-abundant in that respect may be the prospects in other localities,
-here the parents find themselves, and here they insist on staying and
-taking chances. Children swarm the streets, not only to get sunlight
-and air, but to pick up pennies, from whatever source available, to pay
-rent and buy food. And they are to become American citizens under such
-circumstances.
-
-The fault is not with parents, who are lured here by golden hopes,
-held before them by competing transportation agents, but is with the
-governmental policy that permits immigration to go on without intelligent
-direction. Possibly these people cannot be induced to go to parts of the
-country where there is a demand for the kind of labor they can give, but
-their crowding into New York is working endless mischief in the men and
-women produced.
-
-The records show that boys and girls who have lived here but a short
-time, many less than a year, others one, two and three years, get into
-difficulties and find their way to the Children’s Court, some for
-serious crimes and others for contravening state or local regulations
-of which both parents and child are ignorant. The child stays away from
-school to peddle, or beg, or get money in other ways, and, if he or
-she succeeds in evading the police, is hunted by a truant officer or
-runs foul of a “Gerry” agent. Be the infractions serious or trifling,
-they add materially to the volume of child prisoners, swell the inmates
-of reformatories, increase the expense of city government and furnish
-material for keeping up the army of criminals.
-
-Dr. David Blaustein estimates that the square mile of territory bounded
-by the Bowery, Mangin, East Houston and Cherry Streets contains a Jewish
-population of 350,000, largely composed of Russian immigrants. If it
-contained no other races there would be a superficial area for light,
-ventilation, business, recreation and living less than three yards square
-for each individual. Now for results. Mr. Coulter, Deputy Clerk of the
-Children’s Court, in a published article recently stated that twenty-six
-per cent. of child prisoners were of Russian parents, ninety-eight per
-cent. of them coming from the lower East Side and the largest majority
-from the square mile above mentioned.
-
-The Italian contingent is estimated at 400,000, which yields twenty-four
-per cent. of the juvenile arrests. Russian and Italian immigrants have a
-predilection for hiving like bees rather than for living like Americans.
-They have no inclination to go to those parts of the city where room,
-light and ventilation are in abundance, but select a locality where
-others speaking the same tongue have settled. Then begins the crowding
-process which drives other races from the neighborhood. Children run wild
-in the streets, form undesirable associations and become easy victims
-to rapacious Fagins everywhere abounding. The parents do not learn our
-language with any degree of efficiency, and acquire slight knowledge
-of our government, its policies or ideals. Instances occur daily of
-witnesses that have lived here fifteen to twenty years who require an
-official interpreter to give testimony.
-
-Russian and Italian nationalities furnish more than half of the business
-of the Children’s Court. It is not wholly racial, because ordinarily the
-Jew is devoted to his family, is law abiding and is not prone to active
-crime. Upon this point Mr. Coulter calls attention to the fact that
-with an estimated population of 75,000 Jews in the Bronx that borough
-furnishes but few juvenile criminals of this race. He might have added
-that such as came were of a mischievous or trivial character except
-when boys from the congested centres made predatory excursions to that
-neighborhood.
-
-The statistics gathered at the Court do not furnish data from which
-to compute the length of time delinquents have been in the city. This
-is generally brought out in the course of trial or investigation. I
-have before me the trial record of several cases of recent occurrence.
-In December last Mrs. Rosie Rosenthal, of No. 329 Stanton street,
-brought Isidore Weinstein into Court and asked that he be committed as
-incorrigible and ungovernable. In the course of the proceedings it was
-developed that the boy was so bad at home in Hungary that his parents
-sent him here to get rid of him. He came in September, 1904, with a man
-living in Nashville, Tenn., stopped one night with the aunt and then
-went South. Six weeks later the man shipped the boy back to the aunt
-because he was hopeless. Instead of committing him to an institution at
-an expense of two dollars a week to the taxpayers, the whole power and
-influence of the Court were bent on having him returned to Europe.
-
-Another case was Robert Pries, who pleaded guilty, January 13, to
-stealing jewelry valued at one hundred and fifty dollars from a guest in
-a city hotel where the boy was employed. He came from Germany alone last
-August and had no relatives in this country. He had been a bell-boy at
-the hotel three days and used a pass key to commit the offense.
-
-Raffael Basignano, illegitimate, came from Italy last July with a friend.
-He was brought up in San Malino by a woman, not his mother, known as
-Philomena. She came here, settled at Flushing and then sent money to pay
-his passage. She died before his arrival; he drifted to New York, and
-then reached the Children’s Court. Efforts to deport these last two are
-in progress.
-
-These are types of many coming to this Court for disposition. Taken
-in connection with the localities whence comes the largest amount of
-business, it may be concluded that two factors are producing prisoners
-to an extent dangerously menacing the future good order of this city:
-Immigration laws and congested tenement centres. If there be any fault
-with the former or in their administration the remedy lies with Congress;
-as to defects in the latter we must look both to Albany and the local
-government for relief. The Children’s Court is battling against odds not
-anticipated when created, and with creditable success. Scarcely a session
-passes without definite results, and a parole day never goes by without
-some demonstration of the Court’s usefulness.
-
-When the bill to create the Court was pending, its theoretical value
-had to be appraised by contrast with the system to be displaced. Its
-practical value is better understood by the same method. In fact, no
-true conception of its potency and usefulness otherwise can be realized.
-Formerly all children charged with crime, delinquency, want of proper
-guardianship or found in a state of destitution were taken to the various
-police courts. In the matter of guardianship, destitution and some of the
-minor offenses the magistrates had power to hear and determine. In cases
-of felony and misdemeanor the police court was simply a sieve to separate
-those crimes and to send the former to General Sessions and the latter
-to Special Sessions for trial. In General Sessions the cases had to be
-submitted to a grand jury and, if indicted, a trial followed before a
-petty jury.
-
-There were discouraging delays. Few were indicted and scarcely any
-convicted. Those youthful offenders on returning home unscathed became
-heroes in the estimation of companions; in their own minds they were
-immune to punishment because of superior skill and deftness. They did
-not understand that escape was due to sympathy. Each became a missionary
-in crime to corrupt others; became a chief of admiring associates and
-spent his time and energy in devising methods of pillage and robbery.
-In consequence organized bands of youthful desperadoes sprang up in
-various parts of the city which were known as “de gang.” A vicious boy
-with goodly sums of money in his pockets to flash before and spend upon
-impecunious associates can do more moral damage in a week than Sunday
-schools can correct in a year.
-
-Ten years ago pickpockets in the teens were a rarity; a few years later
-frequent arrests made the subject somewhat conspicuous; in 1900 the
-arraignment of several in one day in the Essex Market Court was quite
-usual. Several youngsters acted in concert, each performed some important
-part in the process, and all shared in the spoils: a small percentage
-satisfied the younger lads who had slight experience in handling money.
-Ready money for theatres and cigarettes, besides something to quiet
-parental inquisitiveness, is an alluring bait to a child with slight
-moral supervision and guidance—far more fascinating than hard work or
-school drudgery and with promises of more freedom and luxury. And it is
-such a simple matter to deceive unsuspecting parents who are unable to
-speak our language. Besides, the young culprit knows how to weave fairy
-tales about some alleged employer that head off all investigations.
-
-It is charitable to assume that confiding parents in their simple
-trustfulness have no conception of the temptations to which their
-children are subjected, but the facts far too frequently indicate supreme
-indifference. I have known fathers of girls just verging into womanhood
-to appear in Court and testify that a disorderly house next door, or in
-the same building one flight down, was not a nuisance. A father of this
-character whose child, boy or girl brings home money never cares to know
-its source. If the money comes no questions are asked, or, if asked, the
-answers are never verified.
-
-This kind of parent is typical of many now coming here, and it is he
-or she whose progeny furnishes business for the Children’s Court and
-recruits for the criminal ranks. The youngster having started in with
-some weekly amount to carry home had to maintain it. If it was not
-available when Saturday came desperate chances were taken which often
-resulted in detection and arrest. But conviction and punishment were
-rare. Fagins multiplied and recruits were plentiful. Picking pockets with
-so many pickers at work was a little overdone and larceny in all its
-forms was studied and operated. We soon had the youthful burglar, highway
-robber, forger, till-tapper, wagon thief and pilfering employee.
-
-The old system was making no headway against crime, for the simple reason
-that it did not effectively operate against the source and lacked the
-requisite machinery for dealing therewith. Sympathetic leniency was too
-prevalent; the time and thought of judges were taken up with adult cases;
-little attention could be given to restraint and supervision. Even if
-these judges had the time and the inclination they were powerless because
-grand jurors failed to indict and petty jurors could not be persuaded to
-convict.
-
-Only recently a grand juror, speaking of his work, criticized a
-magistrate for sending a boy of seventeen to trial for larceny because
-the amount stolen was but a few dollars; it did not dawn upon him that
-the boy was not at fault for stealing so little; he probably took all he
-could. It is the thieving propensity in the young, not the amount stolen,
-that most vitally concerns the community. The amount, by statute and by
-Court custom, is one factor in admeasuring sentence in adult cases; with
-juveniles it is inconsequential, and in no way decisive of treatment
-after conviction. This is the spirit of the law also that permits
-felonious acts to be tried as misdemeanors if committed by children under
-sixteen.
-
-Treatment wisely can be determined only with some insight of the boy’s
-disposition, knowledge of his tendencies and information of home
-environment. In other words, thieving to some extent is a preventable
-evil, and the treatment several boys should have may vary as much as a
-physician’s prescriptions among an equal number afflicted with a like
-physical ailment. The old judicial plan, as it had continued for years,
-sent the youngster home without a reprimand or a warning, kept it up
-until all too late a hardened and confirmed criminal was the result,
-and upon him were visited punitive and vindictive powers. Criminal
-propensities are akin to physical appetites in that they become habits
-by indulgence. It is easier to keep a boy from smoking cigarettes than
-to break him of the habit after long practice. On the same principle a
-youthful offender may be checked much easier than a hardened criminal can
-be redeemed.
-
-Such were the conditions when the Children’s Court was created, and such
-were the principles upon which it was founded. It has been in existence
-and operation since September 2, 1902. Its policies, plans and methods,
-while not perfect, stand in refreshing and encouraging contrast to
-those that preceded, and it is exerting power and influence that may be
-measured with some degree of accuracy and satisfaction.
-
-Instead of delay ending in failures, we have promptness bringing results.
-Children are not lugged from court to court, often going to each several
-times before a hearing; they come up for trial not later than the day
-following arrest, and they do not have to return unless convicted; even
-then many are permitted to go home with some sense of what they have
-done, the reasons making it objectionable and the consequences sure to
-follow a repetition. The quickness with which conviction follows the
-commission of an offense is of the highest importance; especially if it
-be a serious crime, such as larceny, burglary, etc. It is one of the
-Court’s most valuable assets.
-
-There is a total suppression of sympathy or sentiment during trial.
-The prisoner is arraigned, the charge is explained and then he or she
-must plead guilty or not guilty. Each has the benefit of counsel—if
-not employed by a parent the Court invariably assigns one; the trial
-proceeds at once if the plea is “not guilty,” and at its close comes
-acquittal or conviction. During all this time a dispassionate and
-methodical inquiry is pursued by strict legal methods, in which the
-prisoner has the advantage of every technicality known to criminal
-practice. The justice presiding is both judge and jury. He has absolute
-control over future proceedings; if there be a conviction, therefore, he
-divests himself entirely of pity or prejudice. With him it is simply the
-elucidation of facts by strict legal evidence and reaching a conclusion
-that is logical and just. There are objections and rulings, demurrers
-to pleadings, motions for new trials and motions in arrest of judgment.
-Frequently some bright boy defendant watches the progress of the trial
-with interest and learns something which, never injurious, may be of
-advantage. The sad and possibly harmful thing is that he is on trial for
-a crime; and yet that one feature may save him from a disastrous career.
-
-The time for pity, sympathy and sentiment on the part of the justice
-comes when he pronounces the defendant guilty. Then the character and
-attitude of the man upon the bench undergo a complete change, for a
-duty far transcending that of weighing facts and reaching conclusions
-now devolves upon him. This duty is to determine what to do with the
-youngster who has been convicted, and upon this question the greatest
-mistakes may be made; it is the one that weighs most heavily on the
-conscience of the Court and is the most perplexing to the judicial mind.
-
-The controlling principle in the solution is, what is best for the boy
-is best for society; he must either be committed to some reformatory
-presided over by persons of like religious faith as the parents, or he
-must be permitted to return home. Either course may be dangerous. To
-commit may blast his future; to release may be iniquitous to him and
-a positive menace to others. In order to decide the judge must learn
-all that is possible about the individual; his habits, disposition,
-associations, reputation, home environment and previous record. If the
-boy attends school his record there is obtained; if at work the opinion
-of the employer is sought, but in a way not to produce injury. Happily
-the law upon this subject permits the Court to get information through
-any channel, not even gossip, rumor or hearsay is excluded. In many cases
-several days are necessary to gather the material upon which the Court
-finally acts.
-
-The majority of the cases do not require postponement for this purpose.
-The records of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children are
-so complete and instantly available as to enable us to know at the close
-of the trial whether there has been a previous conviction, which is of
-the first importance. If there be none, a suspended sentence or a parole
-generally follows, for it is believed that with the majority better
-results are obtainable through fear under freedom than by discipline
-under restraint.
-
-There is a misunderstanding in the public mind, and unfortunately with
-some of the police officers, as to “suspended sentence.” It means that
-criminal punishment is not then inflicted, but may be the following
-week or month or some time thereafter, but will not be so long as the
-youngster is of good behavior. The boys understand that they will not be
-molested so long as no bad report reaches the Court, and the most of them
-act accordingly. Quite recently several on parole for engaging in street
-stone fights were separately asked what they did during the epidemic of
-stone battles that broke out in January. They replied that they ran home
-and stayed there while the fight lasted. A suspended sentence is quite
-apt to work in the same way with most boys, for a second conviction would
-surely disclose the former, and punishment then is severe.
-
-Occasionally a boy is sent to an institution on his first conviction as a
-safeguard against parents whose depravity and shameless indifference are
-positively detrimental, and sometimes a child is permitted to go home
-and remain so long as the mother avoids drink. Good work has been done in
-both directions—the boy removed from iniquitous surroundings, or these
-mended through parental affection.
-
-A child is rarely committed for the first offense, no matter how serious
-it may be; there is a remand to the Society for its officers to gather
-and report information of the individual and environment, and then
-sentence is deferred and the child put on parole. He goes home with an
-opportunity to earn a suspended sentence by his individual conduct, which
-covers a wide range. It is intended to correct every bad trait; evil
-associations are to be avoided; staying away from home nights must cease;
-conduct everywhere—in the house, on the streets and at school—must be
-exemplary. During this time he is under the supervision of the parole
-officer, to whom there must be a report each week and at the end of the
-period—four, five or six weeks—appearance and report in Court. If a
-high standard of excellence is reached, sentence is suspended; if there
-is improvement, parole is continued; if the boy continues in his old
-ways, sentence is imposed, or there may be a short parole with certain
-commitment at the end if a radical change is not shown.
-
-By these means the boy sees that others are interested in his welfare,
-and he gets encouragement in all directions, for neighbors, noting the
-change, treat him accordingly. Frequently he gets sufficient satisfaction
-out of the experience to determine that he will continue in the same way,
-and in all cases he learns what he can do by exercising self-control; it
-never works harm and often produces most gratifying results. I mention a
-few as indicative of many within the experience of every justice holding
-the Court.
-
-In October last a widow had her only child, a boy of fourteen, taken
-into custody by the police for absolute incorrigibility; he stayed out
-nights, associated with bad companions, would not work and was rude and
-insolent. On the following morning the mother appeared in Court to press
-the charge under oath and insisted that the boy be committed forthwith.
-The usual practice was followed; the boy was remanded to the Society and
-an investigation ordered; the report confirmed everything the mother
-had alleged, and the few days of separation had in no way changed her
-determination to have the boy committed, for, as she declared, she was
-completely discouraged, and he was past redemption. Something about the
-boy led me in the opposite direction and I said to her, “I think we had
-better give this young man just one more chance,” and, turning to him, I
-said, “Don’t you think so, my boy?”
-
-“Yes, Judge,” was the quick response.
-
-After some conversation with the mother, who finally relented, a five
-weeks’ parole was ordered. On the return day both were in Court. The
-boy, tidy in appearance, stood erect and looked me manfully in the eye
-as he took his place before the bench. The parole officer’s report, in
-writing, told me that immediately following parole the boy had secured a
-position in a hardware store, and by industry, attention and intelligence
-had obtained a voluntary promise of increased wages; that he had spent
-his evenings, during parole, at home, which the mother confirmed and with
-moistened eyes she added:
-
-“I could not ask for a better boy, and we are both happy.” The boy
-had found what he could do by trying, and was satisfied. It would be
-difficult to determine which was the prouder and happier, the mother or
-son, as they left Court together.
-
-A disorderly boy at school, and an habitual truant, coming up for
-commitment asked me to try him on parole. He came back a month later
-with a school certificate of 100 per cent. in attendance and deportment.
-A father brought his boy of fourteen to Court for commitment because of
-prolonged disobedience, which could not be corrected by chastening; he
-was a nuisance in the neighborhood and the complaints sent to the house
-had utterly destroyed paternal confidence. He was put on parole against
-the father’s protest. A month later the father reported a satisfactory
-change, which, as the parole officer’s report stated, had been noticed by
-the neighbors. On request the parole was continued for a month, when the
-report of father and parole officer showed almost perfect conduct. On the
-father’s special request the parole period was extended two months. While
-these are exceptional cases they are by no means rare.
-
-From this extreme there is a gradual shading downward to the point
-of absolute hopelessness, when the subject is turned over to the
-disciplinary methods of a reformatory. During the year 1904 out of 1,098
-paroles 170, or 15½ per cent., were subsequently committed, which shows
-satisfactory results of 84½ per cent. Nineteen hundred and three was a
-trifle better with its 1,117 paroles, of which 13⅕ per cent. refused to
-be benefited. But if one-half of the lads can be redeemed or kept within
-reasonable bounds during character formative period, the Court will prove
-a success, and intelligent citizens will regard the parole system as
-worthy of continuance and extension. It is harmful to none and gives each
-a fair chance to test self-reliance and manhood; it does not injure the
-boy past redemption, but simply postpones commitment, and is a wholesome
-demonstration to him that his misfortune is of his own choosing.
-
-The boys generally understand that but one chance can be expected, and
-coming back a second time on a serious charge the benefit of parole
-will be withheld. This is not an inflexible rule. If there are good
-prospects a second or even a third parole would not be refused. But there
-must be more than mere possibility to secure a second and exceedingly
-strong assurances for a third parole. One good test of its beneficence
-is the frequency with which parents ask that it be extended rather than
-terminated; always on the same ground that the boy is better behaved at
-home and at school, and is more careful of his associations.
-
-There is another factor that gives the boys considerable worry and
-serves somewhat as a deterrent: the “Gerry Society,” with its complete
-up-to-date record running back for thirty years. When the time comes for
-pronouncing judgment a Society representative—one or more always being in
-Court—is called upon for the record of the boy and his family. This is
-given in his presence, and sometimes involves older brothers or sisters.
-So that the youngster goes out of Court convinced that it is impossible
-to hide any misdeed. The services of the Society and its officers are of
-inestimable value in the conduct of this Court.
-
-A feature of the Court which would occur only to one who is a frequent
-visitor and careful observer of its proceedings is that of a practical
-kindergarten in civics to those most in need of instruction. As to
-offenses involving moral turpitude—larceny, burglary, picking pockets,
-etc.—the child and the parents know the act is wrong and why it calls
-for arrest and punishment. But this is not true of a great many arrests;
-possibly one-third of those made during any year. There are many acts
-forbidden in a crowded city that would be unobjectionable elsewhere. An
-arrest is sure to bring to the Court a surprised and indignant parent.
-Such acts come under the classification _mala prohibita_ and include
-bonfires, ball playing, craps, cat, throwing missiles, jumping on and off
-street cars, truancy, peddling, etc. It is for the justice to explain why
-the act is condemned and forbidden.
-
-Bonfires may be taken as an illustration. Many arrests were made on the
-day of the last election, and each boy confessed that the fires were
-political. The boys assiduously gather fuel for days in advance and will
-burn it election night, whoever is elected. The lads were commended for
-political zeal, and were asked whether they wanted to become good or
-bad politicians. The answer, of course, was “good,” and then they were
-informed that they had started out wrong, because a good politician
-always studied how to save the people from needless expense; that fires
-on asphalt pavement ruin an area that may require twenty-five, fifty or a
-hundred dollars to repair, which has to be raised by taxation, and some
-portion of it each individual boy or man must pay either directly as a
-property owner or indirectly in the increased cost of rent, clothing,
-fuel, groceries and other purchases. Other matters are explained on
-similar lines, and often the eyes of some youngster will brighten as the
-explanation proceeds and at its close he will say, “I didn’t know it
-was so bad; I’ll never do it again.” Such a boy rarely comes back on a
-second charge. These explanations are not made purely for instruction,
-but to inform the child that behind all law interdicting ordinary acts
-there are good reasons and to state them so as to come within youthful
-comprehension.
-
-The child is not the only beneficiary, for the English-speaking parent
-absorbs some of the information, and each goes away knowing why it is
-unlawful to build bonfires, play crap or ball, or do other things which
-result in arrest. When time permits, the non-English-speaking parent
-gets his information on these topics through the official interpreter.
-To punish a child, or through him the parent, for an act when neither
-understands why it is forbidden, is extremely distasteful; but such
-instances occur, and punishment is inflicted because it is the only
-method for impressing clearly on their minds that the act must not be
-repeated.
-
-Thus far boys only have been mentioned; but a like method of treatment
-applies to girls whenever there is occasion, which is not often.
-Fortunately for the world in general and this city in particular,
-the female sex is far less prone to crime and venality. This is
-specially prominent in the Children’s Court, for, eliminating improper
-guardianship—neither boy nor girl being responsible therefor—girl
-prisoners constituted but four per cent. of the cases. In the police
-courts women make up twenty per cent. of arrests. There were but
-thirty-eight girl defendants in a total of 1,055 larcenies, six in a
-total of 2,870 disorderly conduct cases, two in the 50 robberies, two in
-197 assaults, two in the 346 burglaries; of the three attempts at suicide
-all were girls. It may truthfully be said that womankind is the crowning
-glory of the race and the sheet-anchor of progressive civilization.
-
-Much time is consumed with questions of improper guardianship, of which
-during the year there were 1,983 cases; during 1903, 1,582. These
-complaints are rapidly increasing, partially because of ignorant and
-indifferent aliens. But the machinery for dealing with such matters is
-so much better than formerly existed that more attention is given to
-the subject. During the year preceding the establishment of this Court
-there were but 539 such cases in the seven City Magistrates’ courts of
-this division. There is greater firmness in dealing with them than with
-some transgression of the child. While the subject of inquiry is under
-sixteen years of age the cases practically are of parental adjudication;
-the fathers and mothers are on trial, and it is one or the other that
-is disciplined if the complaint is well founded. If the evil be drink,
-which is true as to many of the cases, it sometimes may be overcome if
-parental affection and desire to retain custody of the child are well
-developed; if in surroundings coming within parental means to correct
-or in restraint and supervision which parents neglect to exercise, the
-objection is overcome with most parents by a warning. While testing
-sincerity and ability the child is permitted to remain at home. In this
-way children are given approximately fair opportunity to develop proper
-and becoming tendencies. The world would be tremendously shocked if it
-could know how many of its criminals, paupers and vagrants are caused
-primarily by home environment and improper parental conduct.
-
-A short time since a visitors’ book was opened at the Court and in it
-those who remained long enough to form an opinion have given expression
-thereto. In closing I append the following excerpts:
-
-“A life-saving station”; Morris K. Jesup, president New York Chamber
-of Commerce. “Profoundly impressed with an institution in which there
-is the highest promise”; Bishop Henry C. Potter. “It does one good to
-appreciate how great an advance has been made as is evidenced by such
-courts”; Seth Low, ex-Mayor of New York. “The spirit of Christianity
-practically expressed”; Rev. Wm. C. Bittings. “A most pathetic and
-interesting scene”; R. Fulton Cutting. “A superb illustration of
-sanctified common sense and of applied religion”; Rev. R. S. MacArthur.
-“The Court is doing most excellent work”; George L. Rives, ex-Corporation
-Counsel. “A practical application of justice and Christian charity”; Dr.
-Norman Fox, ex-Mayor of Morristown. “Impressed by the hopefulness of
-the Children’s Court”; Adolf Hartmann, Berlin. “The best work is always
-the preventative work”; Rev. W. Merle Smith. “One of the best of the
-city’s methods of improving the conditions of the future citizens of
-New York”; Chas. R. Lamb. “A long step in advance in social progress”;
-Rev. Gaylord S. White. “This Court should be better understood”; Wm. T.
-Woods. “The work this Court is doing in sustaining the discipline of the
-Department of Education is invaluable”; Frank H. Partridge. Hon. Jacob
-H. Schiff, Rev. Rufus P. Johnston, Rev. E. S. Holloway and several other
-well-known citizens have visited the Court since the book was opened, but
-unfortunately their entries are so mixed with personal compliment as to
-make reproduction here inappropriate.
-
-Arguments on behalf of the Court from those officially interested in
-its success are not needed when its ordinary sessions call forth such
-commendations from representative men.
-
-
-
-
- _What Buzz-Saw Morgan Thinks_
-
- BY W. S. MORGAN
-
-
-Much of our modern civilization is nothing more than refined savagery.
-
-The yellow metal kills more people than the yellow fever.
-
-Harmony is simply stopping the wheels of progress to get rid of the noise.
-
-Saying that a thing is settled does not settle it.
-
-All old party roads lead workingmen to roam.
-
-Shall our financial system be American or British?
-
-Don’t surrender until you see the size of the enemy—and then don’t
-surrender.
-
-A man must open his eyes in order to see even as bright an object as the
-sun.
-
-Corruption in the best form of government makes it the worst of all.
-
-The trusts owe their existence to yellow-dog politics.
-
-With the control of the currency turned over to the bankers, it will be
-in order to allow the hawks to feed the chickens.
-
-The independent vote is a nightmare to the yellow-dog politician.
-
-The Beef Trust is living in constant defiance of the law. It is a greater
-menace to the rights of the people than a thousand highwaymen.
-
-Democratic statesmanship has gone to seed, and the seed has germinated
-into a howl.
-
-Jefferson and Jackson placed the mark of Cain on bank money, and the
-bankers have never been able to remove it.
-
-The men who talk the most about “sound money” and the “nation’s honor”
-are the greatest tax-dodgers.
-
-Take the corporation lawyers out of the important offices in this
-country and about two-thirds of them would be vacant.
-
-The banker has no more right to regulate the quantity of currency that
-shall be used by the people than he has to limit the number of cattle
-that shall be raised.
-
-Enforced poverty is taking many a man out of the ranks of yellow-dog
-politics and making an independent voter out of him.
-
-It always gives me a pain in the left hind foot to hear a man who wears
-a hoot-owl look on his face, a quid of tobacco in his mouth and a
-double-barrel patch on the bosom of his pants talk about “money that is
-good in Yurrop.”
-
-About the only thing that Bryan can reorganize out of the Democratic
-Party is a bob-tail flush, and that is just what the Republicans want him
-to do.
-
-A stand-patter is a fellow who is too lazy to move, or who has plenty of
-feed in his own trough and doesn’t care for anyone else.
-
-The Beef Trust might possibly make good its plea of innocence, were it
-not for the fact that it has been “caught with the goods.”
-
-The cotton growers who met in New Orleans in January decided that the
-Wall Street “bear” was worse than the Texas weevil.
-
-Yellow-dog politics is the spirit that moves a man to ride to hell in
-a two-wheel cart drawn by the Democratic mule or Republican elephant,
-rather than to go to heaven by the independent route.
-
-It is gratifying to know that a real effort is being made to “control”
-the railroads. The failure of such an effort is the best evidence that
-it can’t be done. Then will come public ownership.
-
-The government has no more right to farm out to the bankers the privilege
-of issuing money than it has to grant to a few rich farmers the exclusive
-privilege of breeding short-horn cattle.
-
-It is said that gold furnishes a stable currency, but history teaches
-that it is the most cowardly money ever used. In time of war, when it is
-needed most, it hides itself and paper money fights the battles.
-
-The glory of war is a relic of barbarism. It differs only in form from
-the ghoulish dances of the aborigines, or the fiend-like performances of
-the Dervishes. “War is hell.” Its spirit is of the devil. Nine-tenths of
-the wars could be avoided. They are caused by the selfishness of man.
-
-In this day of progress and invention no man can define radicalism. That
-which appears radical today is conservative tomorrow. The leaven of a
-higher and better civilization is working in the hearts of the people,
-and the day of emancipation from false systems draws near.
-
-In the past ten years in this country the railroads have killed and
-crippled more people than all the wars in which this government was
-ever engaged. Put that in your pipe and smoke it, and then howl against
-government ownership.
-
-It is urged that the greenbacks should be retired, because they
-constitute an “endless chain” to deplete the gold reserve in the
-Treasury. It should be remembered that no one ever uses the “endless
-chain” but the bankers. The people don’t want the gold; they would rather
-have the greenbacks, and they will take them without any gold behind
-them. The way to break the “endless chain” is to abolish the gold reserve.
-
-Bryan seems bent on building up a straw party for the Republicans to
-knock down. In doing so he is playing into the hands of the Republicans,
-and he is using some good men for straw. He is doing just what the
-Republican bosses want him to do. Whether he has sense enough to see it,
-does not alter the situation. Every move he makes tends to divide the
-Democratic Party and help the Republicans.
-
-The bold and brazen bag-barons of the Beef Trust will in all probability
-find some way to dodge the injunction issued against them. There is an
-old saying that runs something like “catch your cottontail before you
-cook it,” or words to that effect. If there is no change in prices of
-cattle and beef, you may rest assured that the beef barons are still
-robbing the people at both ends of the line.
-
-For thirty years I have heard this talk of the better class of men in
-the Democratic Party getting control of it and bringing it back to its
-old-time moorings, but the party is in a much worse condition today than
-it ever has been before. That there are good men in it, no one will
-attempt to deny. The rank and file of the party are honest and sincere,
-but the party is controlled by the most unscrupulous set of buccaneers
-that ever existed, and, under the system of primaries and conventions,
-the people have no more show to win against the professional politicians
-than a goose would have in a running match with a red fox. The party
-is not only divided and demoralized, but it is disgraced in the eyes
-of the people. The attempt of the party in the recent campaign to ape
-the methods of the Republican Party as practiced by Mr. Hanna in 1896
-and 1900, and its bid for Wall Street support, were despicable beyond
-description. A party that has for years laid claim to being a reform
-party, that will stoop to such contemptible methods, deserves not only
-the distrust of the people, but their everlasting condemnation.
-
-
-
-
- _The Heritage of Maxwell Fair_
-
- BY VINCENT HARPER
-
-
- SYNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS CHAPTERS
-
- Maxwell Fair, an Englishman who has amassed a colossal
- fortune on ’Change, inherits from his ancestors a
- remarkable tendency to devote his life to some object,
- generally a worthy, if peculiar one, which is extravagantly
- chivalrous, even morbid. The story opens with Fair and Mrs.
- Fair standing over the body of a man who has just been shot
- in their house—a foreigner, who had claimed to be an old
- friend of Mrs. Fair. Fair sends her to her room, saying:
- “Leave everything to me.” He hides the body in a chest, and
- decides to close the house “for a trip on the Continent.”
- Fair tells the governess, Kate Mettleby, that he loves
- her, that there is no dishonor in his love, in spite of
- Mrs. Fair’s existence, and that, until an hour ago, he
- thought he could marry her—could “break the self-imposed
- conditions of his weird life-purpose.” They are interrupted
- before Kate, who really loves him, is made to understand.
- While the Fairs are entertaining a few old friends at
- dinner, Kate, not knowing that it contains Mrs. Fair’s
- blood-stained dress, is about to hide a parcel in the chest
- when she is startled by a sound.
-
-
- CHAPTER V (_Continued_)
-
-“Hss—hss,” once more came the noise, and this time she realized that it
-proceeded from the doorway. With a frightened look she saw a man peering
-and smiling at her between the portières.
-
-“Why, who are you?” she asked, involuntarily retreating toward the bell.
-
-“Sh-h. They are at dinner—a very good dinner, from the smell, too,”
-answered the stranger, entering the room with an air of such thorough
-good-nature and easy friendliness that Miss Mettleby gained courage. He
-was a little, wiry, dapper, insinuating fellow whose cockney smartness
-of attire and knowing, “between ourselves” manner suggested almost
-anything, from an upper groom or a veterinary’s assistant to a rising
-young follower of the turf or a successful burglar with aristocratic
-connections.
-
-“I will ring,” said Miss Mettleby, puzzled whether to scream or laugh.
-
-“Oh, I wouldn’t do that, you know,” suggested the visitor pleasantly,
-more like one throwing out a friendly suggestion than a burglar
-intimidating a very frightened young governess. “You see, miss, I have
-business with Mr. Fair—rather nasty business, too, and I never broach a
-disagreeable subject until after dinner, do you?”
-
-“But what do you mean by prowling about people’s houses?” asked Kate,
-with a dignity born of growing assurance that the man did not contemplate
-her immediate murder.
-
-“Oh, I say, let up, miss, you know,” deprecated the invader ruefully.
-“You see, when you have passed a few hours back of pianos and under beds
-and in wardrobes you grow attached to a house, don’t you, miss? I’m that
-attached to this house that you’d be surprised if I was to tell you how
-much. You’ll be the governess now, I dare say?”
-
-“Yes, but on my word, you are the coolest thief—” replied Kate, and the
-cool one broke in:
-
-“Oh, oh, pretty young lady, recall that there wile insinuation, you know.”
-
-“Well, since you are so cool about it and come here where you are sure
-to be seen, I’ll believe you,” answered Miss Mettleby. “But what do you
-want? Really, this is refreshing.”
-
-“Ain’t it just, miss?” acquiesced the cool one, sitting down. “Askin’
-your pardon, I’ll smoke. Now, miss, that we’re so cozy like, I’ll ask you
-a few questions. A dark foreign gentlemen called here about an hour ago.”
-
-“Perhaps he did—what of it?” asked Kate, with a very feeble effort to
-cover the alarm which his words created.
-
-“You saw him?” went on the stranger, with an exasperating coolness.
-
-“If I did, I don’t see what business that is of yours,” retorted Kate
-haughtily enough, but inwardly quaking. “Who are you, sir?”
-
-“I am Ferret, miss,” he answered, rising and bowing; “Mr. Samuel Ferret,
-of the Scotland Yard private detective force—your servant.”
-
-“Good gracious,” cried Miss Mettleby, springing up in spite of her effort
-to betray no feeling. “A detective? But why should you come here?”
-
-Poor Kate’s alarm would have been considerably heightened had she only
-known that three or four other insinuating and evanescent gentlemen had
-been in and out of the premises for the past hour, and that still more of
-them were at that moment watching the house, front and rear.
-
-“Well, you see, miss,” replied Ferret, trying by his manner to reassure
-the young woman, “I’ve been taking an interest in my foreign friend for a
-week. He came here today. I haven’t seen him go away again? Have you?”
-
-“No,” answered Kate, with an indifference which she did not feel; “but he
-must have gone, of course. There is no such person about the premises. I
-must ring and advise Mr. Fair.”
-
-“Now, really, you know,” exclaimed Ferret, jumping up to intercept her;
-“I wouldn’t do that, would you? When a gent goes into a house and don’t
-come out again, it is just possible to imagine that he is somewhere
-near that house, not to say in that house. You follow me, I hope?
-Well, my dear foreign friend came into this here very elegant mansion
-and he didn’t go out of it again, so by a stretch of fancy I think he
-may be in London yet, and in that part of London which is up in your
-attic. Now, don’t jump. If you make a row, you’ll frighten the great
-folks at dinner—such a deucedly good dinner, too—and besides give my
-foreign friend advance knowledge of my little surprise party—I just love
-surprises, don’t you? And them there foreign gents can get out through a
-smaller hole than a self-respecting Englishman, let me tell you.”
-
-“But who is the man?” asked Kate, forgetting her alarm as Ferret, with
-the oddest winks and gestures with his long thumbs, delivered his speech.
-“And what is he doing here? And what do you propose to do about it?”
-
-“Me? What do I propose to do about it?” inquired Ferret as if the thought
-that he would be expected to do something about it had just struck him.
-“Well, first of all, I propose to ask you to be a nice young lady and
-help me a bit. You see, miss, my friend don’t mean any great kindness to
-Mr. and Mrs. Fair. Not a bit of it—that ain’t like my friend. In fact,
-there’s going to be a row—now, now, don’t jump, you know—I was saying
-that there is going to be a row, unless you and I prevent it, you know.”
-
-“Then I insist upon telling Mr. Fair at once—this is awful,” cried Kate,
-beginning again to believe that the alleged detective was simply a clever
-sneak-thief who was playing upon her ignorance.
-
-“Hawful is it?” smiled Ferret, warning her to remain seated with a hand
-lifted eloquently; “but it won’t be hawful, but just a pleasant little
-picnic if you will do just what I tell you. Come now, don’t be a fool,
-miss, but a dear, good, cool-headed young lady. Will you help me?”
-
-“Yes,” replied Miss Mettleby; “of course I will do anything to help Mr.
-Fair—I mean, Mrs. Fair.”
-
-“Of course you will,” said Ferret encouragingly. “I knew you was a
-Christian the minute I see you, miss. You stop in this room until I come
-back. I am going out to telephone, you see.”
-
-“Oh, we have a telephone in the house, you know,” eagerly remarked Kate,
-not liking the idea of being kept a prisoner in the library while this
-man roamed about the house at his leisure.
-
-“Yes,” jeered Ferret; “and it would be a fine thing, wouldn’t it, for me
-to yell through your telephone downstairs that I wanted the Yard to send
-me six constables at once to nab a foreign gentleman—with the foreign
-gent himself lying under the very mat on which I was standing. Innocent!
-No. I must go out to telephone—and if you sort of want to see me safe
-out of the house, why, come down to the door with me—yes, that’s it. I
-want you to sit in the little room by the street door, and when my friend
-goes out the door follow him—follow him, miss, you understand. He will go
-across the street, down the next street to the square, turn to the left,
-and call a cab at the corner. You call the next cab and direct the driver
-to follow the first one. Watch him, follow him, don’t lose sight of him.”
-
-“But he wouldn’t be such a fool as to go out by the front door,” replied
-Kate, thoroughly puzzled by Ferret’s mysterious instructions, which she,
-of course, did not understand were merely attempts on his part to get her
-out of his way and fixed permanently in some known room.
-
-“Never fear,” answered Ferret; “that’s just what he will do. He’ll go out
-of the front door as if he owned the house. In all likelihood I’ll be
-over the way when he and you come out, and then of course I’ll follow him
-myself, but if I ain’t there, you must do as I say. Follow him no matter
-wherever he goes—and then come to Scotland Yard and report.”
-
-“I don’t know about all this,” stoutly returned Kate, shaking her head.
-“Why can’t Mr. Fair be advised at once? This is all wrong—and strange.”
-
-“But you see, miss,” quickly protested Ferret, “Mr. Fair has private
-reasons for not wishing us to trouble the foreign gent, so he wouldn’t
-help us to nab him. Funny, isn’t it? But it often happens that we poor
-detectives has to catch all sorts of gents in spite of the very parties
-on whose accounts we wants ’em. The aristocracy has objections against
-appearing in court even against their own murderers. Now Mr. Fair does
-not know this gent’s little game and so he trusts him. We’ve got to do
-all this business ourselves—and, I tell you, it’s life and death. So, is
-it a go? Will you be a sensible young woman and not make a row, and help
-me?”
-
-“I will,” answered Kate, convinced by the fellow’s irresistibly frank
-air—and moved by the comforting thought that her consent to his plan
-would at least get him out of the house—when she would of course advise
-Mr. Fair of the whole matter, even if it did spoil a good dinner.
-
-“That’s a real lady for you,” gallantly remarked Ferret. “Now I’m off.
-Come downstairs if you want to see me out of the house—you suspicious
-young thing. No? All right. Thanks, but you really must sit in that
-little room, you know, for he may be leaving the house at any minute.”
-
-“I’ll get my hat first,” replied Kate, “so that I can be ready to follow
-him if he goes out.”
-
-Ferret slid noiselessly out of the library with a warning finger at his
-lips, and Kate congratulated herself upon having so cleverly deceived
-him. She would hide the parcel containing the surprise and then send word
-to the dining-room that she must see Mr. Fair at once.
-
-She sat for a moment trying to think out the impressions which had been
-pouring in upon her in this hour of cataclysm and departure. What had
-brought the foreign gentleman to the house? What had he done to make him
-the subject of police suspicion? And why should Mr. Fair wish to protect
-him from the law? And—oh, how the thought came crushing back into her
-heart after being dislodged by the detective’s sudden appearance—of what
-crime had Mr. Fair spoken? The temporary calmness that the diversion had
-purchased for her gave way now to all the torment that had preceded it.
-Springing up to carry out her resolution—action being at all events less
-dreadful than idle horror—she took the parcel from the table, and going
-hurriedly across the room, lifted the lid of the old carved chest. She
-dropped the parcel into it—and fell.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Allyne had just elicited a laugh by one of his characterizations of a
-certain great personage, when the party at dinner heard a shriek that
-brought them all to their feet. Mr. and Mrs. Fair dashed upstairs with
-who can say what horror of expectancy in their minds. They found the
-governess lying beside the chest in the library. Fair acted promptly.
-
-He heard the others running up the stairs, so as he raised Kate from the
-floor he said to Mrs. Fair; “Sit on the chest, Janet—never mind why—and
-do not rise from it until I get them all out of here. It is only Miss
-Mettleby, the governess—she has fainted,” he added as Mrs. March and
-Allyne entered followed by Travers.
-
-“Oh, my dear Mrs. Fair, how pale you look—what has really happened?”
-asked Mrs. March anxiously.
-
-“Miss Mettleby has had a bad turn—that’s all. Pray, all of you go,”
-replied Fair, for Mrs. Fair, with a white face and vacant look, sat as if
-unconscious of what passed.
-
-“Allyne, take Mrs. March down, won’t you?” asked Travers, to relieve the
-situation, and then, after Allyne and Mrs. March were gone: “Is there
-nothing that I can do, Fair? My God, man, what does it all mean?”
-
-“Thanks, old chap,” answered Fair as he laid Miss Mettleby upon the
-leather lounge; “nothing. Go down now, or Lady Poynter will fear there is
-something serious the matter. Janet, my love, let Travers see you down.”
-
-Mrs. Fair suffered Travers to lead her away, walking in a trance.
-
-“Kate—Kate,” said Fair, bending over the governess and chafing her hands
-which now began to twitch convulsively.
-
-“Has he gone?” asked Kate, opening her eyes and staring nervously around
-the room.
-
-“There is nobody here, Miss Mettleby,” quietly answered Fair, helping her
-to her feet. “Are you better?”
-
-“I must have fainted—how stupid of me,” replied Miss Mettleby, getting
-herself together and shuddering as the reality came back upon her. “It is
-nothing, Mr. Fair. Now please go back to your dinner—oh, how foolish and
-annoying of me to disturb you all in this way! I will get my hat and take
-the air for a few minutes. Come.”
-
-They walked slowly out of the library, and in the passage Kate insisted
-on his returning to the dining-room while she ran up to her own room.
-
-Fair went down accordingly, tortured with the fear that she had opened
-the chest. Miss Mettleby, hastily preparing for the street, slipped out
-of the house and fled along to the corner, where she took a cab and was
-driven off at a mad pace.
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
-About nine o’clock that evening Mr. Inspector Sharpe sat in his little
-office, running his eye over the records of a day’s departures from the
-steep and thorny path on the part of the very mixed and sorely tried
-people of London. At that hour he was on duty also on emergency cases
-that might be reported at the ever-expectant Yard. So he glanced at his
-reports casually, as one does who looks to be interrupted at any moment.
-The bells in the steeples were chiming nine when a constable entered,
-conducting a very agitated young woman who showed not only the usual
-nervousness of the layman in police offices, but also a great deal of not
-very clearly defined personal anxiety.
-
-“Well? Well?” asked the Inspector, without looking up from his reports.
-
-“I beg your pardon—but is this—?” asked a timid voice in return.
-
-“Ah, a lady,” exclaimed the Inspector on seeing her. “Beg pardon, ma’am.
-Have a seat, ma’am. And now what can I do for you?”
-
-“Is this where they report things?” asked the girl apologetically.
-
-“Bless us all,” cried out Sharpe, with a smile; “they report some things
-here, miss. Who are you, now?”
-
-“Does it matter? Must I say who I am?” inquired the lady anxiously.
-
-“Really, you know, I can’t say as to that, you know, miss,” replied the
-Inspector, with a merriment which he frowned at when the constable began
-to join in it. “If you have something to report, I must know who it is
-as reports it, wouldn’t you say? But there, now, miss, don’t you be
-afraid of nothing. Out with it. What seems to be a-troublin’ of such a
-quiet-looking young person as you, miss?”
-
-“Well,” answered the girl, much encouraged by the humanity of the
-terrible officer whose uniform and surroundings appalled her at first,
-“I just wanted to report that he did go out and I followed him, but he
-walked so fast that I couldn’t keep up with him, and he disappeared
-around the corner, please, sir.”
-
-“He did, eh?” laughed the Inspector. “You wouldn’t have no objection to
-mentionin’ the gent’s name, now, would you? Must have somebody’s name.”
-
-“Why, you know who I mean,” answered the girl, with surprise, as it did
-not of course occur to her that a number of young women had been asked to
-follow strange gentlemen about the streets that very evening. “You know
-who it was—the foreign gentleman, you know.”
-
-The Inspector burst into a hearty laugh at this, but said sharply to his
-subordinate: “Bellows, if you laugh again, I’ll report you. No, miss, I
-really can’t say as I do know just who you mean. You see, we has such a
-lot of foreign gents to look after one way or another, that we gets ’em
-sort o’ mixed like, sometimes, you know. Who was your particular foreign
-gent and why did he walk so fast and why was you so keen to catch ’im?”
-
-“This is very strange,” replied the girl, beginning to think that, after
-all, she had been played upon by that horrid, suave thief. “Mr. Ferret
-told me to come here and tell you all about it, you know. At Mr. Maxwell
-Fair’s, you know—Carlton House Terrace—please say you understand.”
-
-“Ah, I see,” exclaimed Sharpe, at once showing the keenest interest and
-bristling with alert readiness both to hear and to act. “It’s Ferret, is
-it? Bellows, go and ask Ferret to come here.” The constable departed to
-do as he was bid in spite of a gesture of protest from Miss Mettleby and
-her statement that Mr. Ferret was not here but at Mr. Fair’s house.
-
-“Now, miss,” began the Inspector, when Bellows closed the door after
-him, “how do you come to be interested in this Spanish conspiracy? It
-was Señor Mendes that you followed, eh? Why? Speak out, now, plain and
-square. It’s an ugly business for the likes of you to get mixed up in.”
-
-Miss Mettleby heard all this with a rapidly deepening feeling of guilty
-complicity in some dark plot, and yet, beneath this sickening dread, she
-felt a vague hope that now she would glean some intelligent idea of the
-mystery into which she, Mr. Fair—all her world, had been so suddenly
-plunged by the hurrying events of the past two hours.
-
-“Oh, you see, sir,” she began; “I assure you that I know absolutely
-nothing at all about what Mr. Ferret was about—nothing. I am the
-governess in Mr. Fair’s family, that’s all. And this evening when the
-family were at dinner Mr. Ferret came into the library—nearly frightening
-me to death—and told me that a foreign gentleman was in our house who
-intended some sort of mischief to my kind employer. So he asked me to
-watch the street door and to follow the man if he should go out before
-Mr. Ferret returned from telegraphing or something. And, of course, the
-whole thing is non——”
-
-Her pitiful little plot to divert police suspicion from her knight until
-the horrible evidence of someone’s guilt—not his, not his!—could be
-removed was nipped at this point by the entrance, to her unspeakable
-surprise, of Ferret himself, smiling and unruffled.
-
-“Ferret, do you know this young lady?” asked the inspector perfunctorily.
-
-“Yes, sir,” replied Ferret, with a salute—military to his chief and
-cavalier to the trembling Kate. “She’s the governess, sir, at Mr. Maxwell
-Fair’s. How are you again, miss? You are here rather earlier than I
-looked for you. She’s a regular corker, sir.”
-
-“Silence!” snapped the Inspector, to whom discipline was all. “This young
-person was telling me that she watched as you requested. Go on, miss.”
-
-“Well, Mr. Ferret had scarcely gone out when the foreign gentleman passed
-out of the street door and I immediately followed him,” went on poor
-Kate, with oozing hope that her blundering lie would be believed, now
-that that gimlet-eyed Ferret was here to observe her. “The man crossed
-the square and walked quickly down the next street.”
-
-She stopped. Ferret seemed to be whistling in mild but growing
-unbelief—conduct which he suddenly abandoned on receiving a wireless
-message of caution from the Inspector. The nimble mind of Ferret caught
-his superior’s point at once, so he fell in with his policy and said, as
-if to encourage Kate to proceed bravely with her transparent and useful
-lie: “Didn’t I tell you he would do so?”
-
-“Be quiet, Ferret!” cried Sharpe, fearing that Ferret would develop some
-new indiscretion. “Go on, miss, go on. You saw the gent turn the corner?”
-
-“Yes,” replied Kate, with fresh courage; “he turned the corner and I ran
-after him. There were many people in the narrow street into which he had
-turned, but I kept him in view and——”
-
-“And you jumped into the next cab as quick as a flash—” put in Ferret,
-when he noticed that her powers of creation were ebbing, “and followed
-him until you saw him go into—go on, go on, miss—you’re great, you are.”
-
-“Alas, no,” sighed Kate, fearing to venture to be so specific as to
-locate the mysterious man in a definite house anywhere. “Alas, no. When I
-reached Pall Mall he had disappeared.”
-
-“Oh, dam—that is, you know, I beg pardon—what a pity you missed him,”
-exclaimed Ferret, rapidly calculating what her game was.
-
-“It is only just gone nine,” remarked the Inspector sternly. “When was it
-that you were at Mr. Fair’s house, Ferret? This is very strange.”
-
-It was Ferret’s turn now to fear that the course of affairs reflected on
-his discretion, and, while he could hardly believe that the Inspector
-had failed to perceive that the governess was fibbing, he could not risk
-being thought a bungler, for Sharpe was a man of few words, quick action,
-and little given to reopening cases once he had decided them.
-
-“I am afraid the young lady has made a mistake,” Ferret continued
-carefully. “It was dark and she probably mistook somebody else for the
-foreign gent. You see, sir, I changed my mind and didn’t go to telephone,
-but stood immediately opposite Mr. Fair’s house until ten minutes ago,
-and the gent had not come out of the door—that I can swear to.”
-
-Ferret hoped that this bit of information would so shake the girl’s
-confidence in her story that she would begin a new and contradictory one.
-
-“But he _did_ go out,” sobbed Kate, truly shaken, but with a woman’s
-determination to see a thing through; “I say he did go out. Oh, Mr.
-Inspector, tell me that you believe me! There is no foreign gentleman at
-Mr. Fair’s house—so it will be very foolish for you to send any of those
-awful detectives there. Do, _do_ believe me! I tell you, sir, that there
-has been no foreign gentleman at our house, and anyway I saw him go out.”
-
-“Ferret, come into my private office a minute,” said Sharpe, trying to
-retain his customary solemn and impressive expression. “Please wait here
-for us, miss. Nobody will come in to molest you.”
-
-“My God, what have I done now?” cried Kate, when the two terrible men,
-with their cold, businesslike, lynx ways, had gone. “But he did not do
-it—he did NOT!” she moaned as she leaned her poor reeling head upon the
-edge of the Inspector’s desk.
-
-They came back after a few minutes.
-
-“We believe your story, miss,” began the Inspector kindly; “and Ferret
-will be severely reprimanded in the morning for having annoyed you by
-going into your house. Now tell me anything more that you may know about
-this silly rumor—but be careful what you say, for you may have to swear
-to the truth of it all in a court of law. I shall take down what you say.
-Come, now, what is your name?”
-
-“Kate Mettleby,” she replied, with uneasiness as she thought of perjury;
-“but really, truly, honestly, there has been no murder at our house, so I
-don’t see why you should want me to——”
-
-“Of course not, of course not,” interrupted the Inspector, with a
-cordiality and candor that brought her immense relief; “but, you see,
-the law compels us to look sharp into the ways of all foreigners. The
-law is that all foreigners are guilty until they can prove themselves
-innocent—which is very seldom possible.”
-
-Ferret made a little movement as if he were going to protest against
-quite such a bald bit of cruel treatment of an innocent baby, but he
-remembered his duty and held his tongue.
-
-“Oh, is that the law?” asked Kate, with wide eyes. “But surely there must
-be some foreigners who are as good as English people.”
-
-“There may be,” admitted the Inspector sorrowfully; “but the law don’t
-believe it if it can help it. Now, Miss Mettleby, governesses and
-servants has opportunities. They sometimes hear and see a good deal
-that is said and done by the gentry. Mr. and Mrs. Fair never quarrel, I
-suppose, about a party by the name of Mendes, do they?”
-
-The shrewd officer of the law regretted his words as soon as he had
-spoken them, for Kate sprang to her feet, burning with shame and
-indignation.
-
-“You mistake, sir!” she cried fiercely. “I am not a servant, but the
-friend of Mrs. Maxwell Fair. And if I were a servant, do you suppose—I
-despise your insulting innuendo! And I tell you that Mr. Fair is utterly
-incapable of the crime which I can see that your bloodhound, Mr. Ferret
-there, thinks he has committed. I am going.”
-
-“You are going in a moment—when I allow you to do so,” returned the
-Inspector, anxious to retrieve his mistake, but also desirous to let her
-understand that he had authority. “Now don’t be foolish, miss. You fly
-off into a rage quite unnecessarily, I assure you. Mr. Ferret neither
-makes nor implies any charge of any sort against Mr. Fair, you know. Now
-be calm and simply answer my questions—you will have to answer them here
-or in court, remember. You have heard Mr. and Mrs. Fair speak of one Don
-Pablo Mendes, I suppose?”
-
-“Yes—many times, but always with kindness,” replied Kate stiffly.
-
-“Good,” said Sharpe benignly. “Now we are getting on. And this Don Pablo
-Mendes has been at the house frequently, has he not?”
-
-“Never, as far as I know, until today,” answered Kate, still far from
-mollified. “Mrs. Fair has been—but, no, I sha’n’t say that.”
-
-“Oh, I say, don’t half say things in that way, you know,” exclaimed the
-Inspector, nettled. Then, coaxingly: “You see, miss, when a witness says
-half of a thing, the law compels us to piece it out as we think best. So
-out with it. Mrs. Fair has seen Mendes somewhere away from home—you were
-going to say?”
-
-“Yes,” replied Kate, scarlet with shame at the man’s seeming implication,
-and not a little annoyed by his almost supernatural ability to piece out,
-as he put it, her half sentences; “but, sir, I’d have you understand that
-Mrs. Fair always consulted Mr. Fair before meeting Mr. Mendes—always.”
-
-“No doubt,” answered Sharpe, with a look of lofty elevation above her
-implied rebuke. “Now, miss, don’t please see more than is in my words.
-And don’t be afraid either. Remember, it is this Spanish gent, Mendes,
-and not either your Mr. or Mrs. Fair, that we are looking for.”
-
-“Thank God for that,” murmured Kate, beginning to break down visibly.
-
-Sharpe, on a wink from Ferret, waited a few seconds while Ferret fetched
-a glass of water, which the wretched girl drank eagerly—with a poor
-little smile of thanks that made the susceptible Ferret wish Mendes had
-never been born. This diversion greatly cleared the atmosphere at once.
-
-“Do you happen to know who Mendes is and why we want him?” asked
-the Inspector finally, with the air of a gossip rather than that of
-an inquisitor, which had the effect he desired, for Kate looked up
-fearlessly now.
-
-“I have no idea,” she answered promptly, glad to be able again to tell
-the truth. Then, adding with the former tone of apology to truth: “All
-I ask is that you send nobody to our house—now that Mr. Mendes has gone
-away from it. You won’t, will you? Please, please, do not!”
-
-“It would be nonsense to look for him when he’s gone, wouldn’t it?”
-laughed Sharpe. “And you know we never do nonsensical things when we know
-it. That will do, I think, miss. You may go, if you wish.”
-
-“Thank you, sir,” gasped Kate, with alacrity. “And don’t you see that if
-Mendes has committed some great crime he would be very likely to commit
-suicide? So I don’t see why you should think that—now, don’t laugh.”
-
-Her last words were addressed to Ferret, who did not know that she had
-an eye on him. When she closed the door and they heard her pass into the
-outer passage, it was with anything but a smile that Ferret looked up at
-his chief and said: “Well, by all that’s holy—did you ever?”
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
-Miss Mettleby took a cab and was soon stretched upon her bed more than
-ever torn and tortured by the perfect vortex of vague conjecture and too
-actual knowledge which now dragged her and the man she loved and her
-whole world down to some indefinite but certain ruin.
-
-In the meantime Inspector Sharpe disposed of two cases that had just
-been brought in, and then sending for Ferret, the two penetrating, cool,
-keen-scented gentlemen sat on opposite sides of the little table in the
-Inspector’s private office and discussed the rapidly developing situation.
-
-“But what the devil does it all mean?” inquired Sharpe, showing by his
-graver and tenser expression that the case was passing from an ordinary
-piece of blackmail, involving a few unimportant foreigners, to a very
-genuine mystery of much more serious aspect, involving not an English
-gentleman merely, but the particular English gentleman who was at that
-moment in the eye of the public.
-
-“Mean? Mean?” answered Ferret, leaning back with an air of immense
-professional eagerness. “Why, man, can’t you see what it means? In the
-first place, something happened after I left the house that changed the
-dear little governess lady’s mind. She was told to leave the house, to
-follow the Cuban, you see. Well, the Cuban didn’t go out as the little
-one so prettily lied to you. I know this because I had five of our
-trustiest men watching every entrance to the house. So, for some reason
-the girl has joined Fair in his unaccountable effort to keep the rum chap
-out of our hands. There was a row of some sort just after I left the
-house, for Wilson, whom I let into the place, saw them all suddenly rush
-up from the dinner-table, but, as they came back presently, Wilson didn’t
-go up to the library—especially as he saw pretty Kate slip out into the
-street. Getting thickish, eh? Well, sir, the shot that we heard about
-seven o’clock was fired in Fair’s house, for I saw his revolver lying
-on the library-table with one chamber empty. How’s that for your little
-game?”
-
-“This is getting interesting,” muttered the Inspector.
-
-“Isn’t it just?” answered Ferret, sitting up triumphantly. “And what did
-I tell you? I knew there was a deal more than just an innocent bit of
-Mendes’s regular little practice. The papers will be worth reading, sir,
-tomorrow or the day after. I wish this governess, though, was out of it.”
-
-“You have the house well watched?” asked the Inspector.
-
-“Rather,” answered Ferret, with one of his expressive winks. “Wilson and
-Banks and Thorpe and two others. They won’t let very much get through
-their fingers. Another thing. The Fairs are closing the house tomorrow
-morning all of a sudden. All the servants have been notified. Fair
-himself will spend the day at Drayton Hall—you know, old Sir Nelson
-Poynter’s place in Surrey—and the missis and the kids will go to Paris.
-I quietly read the two telegrams that Fair sent off to engage the rooms
-for them in Paris. Wilson will follow them, while Thorpe will run down
-to Drayton Hall tonight to see how things lie. Tomorrow after they have
-gone I shall give the house a thorough looking over, I can promise you.
-Sharpe, my lad, we’ve struck a gold mine!”
-
-“But what do you make of it all?” asked Sharpe. “I confess that I’m in
-the dark. Have you got at the real situation?”
-
-“Walls have ears—and even minor police officials have a liking for
-knowing what their superiors are at—so, your ear,” replied Ferret, going
-to the Inspector’s side and whispering to him.
-
-“Lord! You don’t mean that?” exclaimed Sharpe, jumping up.
-
-“How’s that for a bit of sensation for the newspapers? Maxwell Fair—Phew!”
-
-“But how ever did you come to talk to the young lady at the house? Was
-that quite prudent, do you think? Isn’t she a bit skittish?” asked the
-Inspector when he resumed his seat. “Poor little innocent!—what a fool
-she was to come here and tell us that he didn’t do it, eh?”
-
-“Oh, the governess—ain’t she a circus?” laughed Ferret. “What a deep one
-to come and tell us not to send any horrid detectives! You see, she was
-in the library when I went up there during their dinner to have a look
-round for the cause of the shooting, and, incidentally, for the Cuban,
-though I knew he must be higher up in the house somewhere—attic probably.
-I had to get the blooming girlie out of the library, so I opened up my
-little plan about having her watch for the Cuban, and she took to it like
-a trout after a fly. That was before whatever happened a little while
-afterward which opened her eyes and changed her bearings. When I went out
-of the house I let Wilson into it, to be ready to investigate the library
-when pretty Kate came down to watch the door—but the row that sent them
-all hurrying from the dinner-table altered that. I stood just over the
-way under a tree, when out comes my little lady, not following the Cuban,
-for he hadn’t come out of the house, but all by her lone and all of a
-blue funk. She hops into a cab at the corner and I into the next one—and
-she got here half a minute ahead of me. Glory what luck we’re playing to;
-why, it’s better than——”
-
-He was interrupted by the telephone bell. The Inspector answered it:
-“Well? Who? Yes. Yes. Ferret is here—with me in my office. What? No?
-Wait—Ferret will speak to you. Good. All right.”
-
-Sharpe turned to Ferret: “Here, Ferret, it’s Wilson—says something’s up.
-Better get it yourself.”
-
-Ferret grabbed the instrument eagerly. The case was developing a trifle
-too rapidly. What could Wilson, whom he had left under the stairs at Mr.
-Fair’s, want so soon?
-
- (_To be continued._)
-
-
-
-
- _The Say of Reform Editors_
-
-
-When the German Emperor rides on the railroads a detailed bill for every
-locomotive and every car used is sent him and he pays the bill. In the
-United States when the President rides on the railroads no bill is sent
-him and no charge is made. In Germany the government owns the railroads
-and in this country they are private property.—_Nebraska Independent._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Government ownership would adjust the matter of railroad rebates
-equitably. And it would do more. It would prevent the railroads extorting
-from the government untold thousands of money which they at present filch
-from the public treasury by excessive charge for hauling mail cars. This
-money would come mighty handy in extending the rural free mail delivery
-system. And it could be spent to good advantage in raising the salaries
-of the postal clerks who deserve so well at the hands of the people. Or
-it could be turned to account in lowering the price of letter postage.
-There’s a thousand and one better ways to spend the people’s money than
-handing it over to the corporations that are always soaking it to the
-government every time they get a chance.—_What’s The Use?_
-
- * * * * *
-
-If President Roosevelt sincerely and vigorously attempts to obtain any
-reform legislation during his administration, two-thirds of his support
-will come from the opposition. His own party, owned by and mortgaged
-to the few, is absolutely powerless to effect any good. There are a
-few prominent kittens in the party who simulate a little independent
-thinking, but when the mother cat gives them a collective swat in the
-face, they lie down and put their chins on their paws and mew in obedient
-accents that they are now good cats.—_Chadron (Neb.) Times._
-
- * * * * *
-
-A certain Wall Street firm was engaged in doing business as curb brokers
-and “washing” a certain stock.
-
-Do you know exactly what “washing” stock is? It is simply a fake auction
-on a big scale. It is the kind of thing that puts a little man in jail
-if he is caught doing it. It is the kind of thing that makes respectable
-fortunes for some of the big men.
-
-This firm was engaged in “washing” a certain copper stock. An officer of
-the dignified National City Bank was interested in this stock. He had
-agreed to take a certain amount of it at a very low price, and he wanted
-to unload it on the public at a very much higher price.
-
-The brokers proceeded to “wash” the stock accordingly.
-
-Let us say that the stock was worth fifty cents per share. One broker
-bid fifty-five cents for a thousand shares, and they all pretended that
-it was a legitimate transaction—in reality it was a fake bid and a fake
-transaction.
-
-The other broker engaged in the skin game would then bid sixty cents for
-another thousand shares—and so it would go.
-
-Not one person engaged in the swindle was actually buying a single share
-of stock. They simply bid back and forth, pretending to buy it, and
-putting the price up day by day.
-
-The crowd of poor fools that believe in the “honor” of these disreputable
-Wall Street gamblers looked on at this mock auction, this fake selling
-and buying of stocks, amazed and excited by the constantly increasing
-values.
-
-Occasionally some gullible creature outside the combination that was
-doing the stock “washing” would come in and in good faith buy some
-shares, actually paying his good money for the worthless stuff.
-
-This went on until they had forced the price of the stock up to a high
-figure, ten times what it was worth. During this “washing” operation,
-they had succeeded in working off a good deal of this stock on the public
-that believed the crooked sales were really genuine.—_New York Journal._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Chicago Union Traction Street Railway Company has issued bonds and
-stocks to the amount of $112,500,000, or at the rate of $135,507 a mile.
-The capitalization of all the street railways in Massachusetts only
-amounts to $110,000,000. In Massachusetts, stock watering is prohibited,
-and the average capitalization of trolley lines in that state is only
-$390.67 per mile. The sort of work done in Chicago is theft, and the men
-who did it, although they occupy the chief seats in the churches, are
-thieves. There is not a preacher in the whole city that dare say so, and
-that makes them accomplices of the thieves.—_Nebraska Independent._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Chicago _Record-Herald_, a Republican paper, refers to the fact that
-the Federal Grand Jury returned indictments against Senators Mitchell,
-Burton and Dietrich, and says: “In each of these deplorable instances the
-charges involve corruption and moral turpitude—a bitter reflection for a
-legislative body proud of its traditions and jealous of its prerogatives
-and reputation. The low tone of political morality receives a painful and
-striking illustration in these successive blows to senatorial prestige.”
-
-The _Record-Herald_ adds: “The possibility of further disgrace and
-degradation would be greatly diminished by substituting for indirect
-elections the plan of popular election of Federal senators.”
-
-The _Record-Herald_ might also have said that the fact that there are a
-number of prominent United States senators who have not yet been reached
-by indictment and will perhaps never be reached by indictment, who serve
-on the Senate floor as the representatives of special interests, provides
-another striking argument in favor of the popular election of senators.
-
-The _Record-Herald_ might also have said that the fact that New York,
-Minnesota and Nebraska have during the present year elected to the Senate
-men who were picked by the railroads provides another strong argument in
-favor of the popular election of senators.—_The Commoner._
-
- * * * * *
-
-An Eastern woman, who “wants to do something for the poor laboring man,”
-threatens to start a school of physical culture for them in New York
-City.—_Rocky Mountain News._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Bee stings cure rheumatism, but a more drastic treatment is necessary for
-the man troubled with politics.—_Eastern Sunday Call._
-
- * * * * *
-
-There are persons who, with their backs to the future, see no objects but
-those that are past. Of history in the making they know nothing. Such
-are those public men, editors and statesmen who are now asserting that
-Jeffersonism has given way to Hamiltonism. The truth is that Jeffersonism
-has been giving way to Hamiltonism ever since Chief-Justice Marshall
-began on the judicial bench to retrieve for Hamiltonism the utter defeat
-it had suffered at the polls. Step by step the Hamiltonian principle was
-built up by judges until the Civil War, and by judges, Congresses and
-Presidents of all parties after that war. But the day of Hamiltonism is
-now passing. A new regime is setting in. The pendulum is poised for the
-swing back to Jeffersonism. Those who think they see Hamiltonism looming
-up ahead are really looking backward.—_Chicago Public._
-
- * * * * *
-
-We blame men for bribing legislators; yet sometimes they are in the
-position of the fellow who is “stood up” by a footpad, with the demand
-for his money or his life.—_San Francisco Star._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The pretentious Apes, in either finance, literature, religion or moral
-philosophy, are making faces at Thomas W. Lawson, of “Frenzied Finance”
-fame.
-
-Making faces, through such mediums as _Collier’s Weekly_ and others of
-that ilk, is all they can do. The weekly tasks of a half-dozen of such
-writers, the rapidity and the versatility of Thomas W. Lawson shows that
-he could walk all over them in ten minutes. The exhibitions of these
-hirelings exemplifies the old story of the frog trying to swell himself
-up to the size of the ox.—_The Patriarch._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Populist ideas are well to the front. It is difficult to pick up a
-magazine or newspaper of any kind now without finding favorable opinions
-of some Populist measure, particularly as to the reforms in voting and
-the management of monopolies. The Populists never stood so high in
-the respect and admiration of the people. It is a time when state and
-local committees should be up and stirring. Whenever and wherever an
-improvement comes, the Populists will be the kernel of the problem. The
-Populists will be required to furnish the working plans and should be
-prepared to receive their friends.—_Joliet News._
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is a lamentable fact, but true nevertheless, that there is more
-absolute want and poverty in these United States than ever before.
-
-Notwithstanding we have made so much cotton here in the South that
-we cannot sell it for enough to pay the cost of production, there
-are thousands in our Southland who are shivering with cold for want
-of needed clothing. Though our prairies have furnished trainloads of
-choicest cattle, our people are forced to go hungry or pay robber prices
-for meat. Our coal mines have yielded coal enough to warm every hut in
-all the land, yet thousands are freezing for want of fuel. Our charity
-associations are snowed under by the inordinate demands for help from
-the unemployed. Even in New York there are forty per cent. more idle men
-today than ever before.
-
-We Southern people know but little of the effects of the concentration of
-wealth in the hands of a few men; of the grinding poverty which prevails
-in the congested centres of population; of the lavish extravagance of the
-pampered spawn of plutocracy and its parasites. It will come to us later
-unless we set to work measures to check it at once.—_Southern Mercury._
-
- * * * * *
-
-While the bacillus of populism is still at work in the Democratic Party,
-it has also attached the railroad arm of the Republican machine.—Our
-Standard.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Our readers will remember the article we printed a short time ago by
-Mr. Eltweed Pomeroy, showing how the voters of one ward of the city of
-Los Angeles, Cal., “recalled” an alderman charged with corruption. That
-was the first time in the United States the Recall has been used. About
-six weeks ago San Diego voted to amend its constitution by adopting the
-Initiative, Referendum and the Recall, and the Legislature has just
-ratified this. We understand that Pasadena has also just adopted the
-Recall, though it has had the Initiative and Referendum for about a year.
-Thus government by the people extends itself. The evils of democracy can
-best be cured by more democracy.—_Independent (N. Y.)._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Reports of suffering from poverty in London are harrowing. At a relief
-meeting on the 31st it was reported that 200,000 people in that city
-alone are living on the verge of starvation. In the midst of all this
-suffering there is something shocking, in spite of the evident good
-intentions of those in attendance, about the self-satisfaction of the
-luxurious persons constituting the relief meeting at which this report
-was made. The meeting was held in the house of a duke, whose great income
-flows unearned into his private coffers from the common inheritance of
-all Londoners. A duchess, whose family lives in luxury on incomes also
-wrung unearned from people who work, occupied the chair. Among those
-participating were other titled personages whose luxurious incomes are
-enjoyed at the expense of their starving fellows whose sufferings they
-had assembled to relieve. But all they proposed to do was to spend
-pennies here and there for sweet charity. Sweet charity! Yes, sweet;
-so sweet to those who dole it out, and so bitter to those who must
-humbly take it or starve. Not one word escaped the lips of any of this
-charitable assemblage in recognition of the element of justice. To know
-that 200,000 fellow men and women were on the verge of starvation excited
-their human sympathies; but that the starving horde were starving because
-privileged drones and titled parasites revel in unearned incomes,
-clearly manifest as is the relation here of cause and effect, did not
-concern the relief meeting. It was something like this that Tolstoy had
-in mind when with characteristic simplicity and directness he said: “The
-rich are willing to do anything for the poor people but get off their
-backs.”—_Chicago Public._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Democratic mule is dead.
-
-The last echo of his heroic brays has died away.
-
-His tail lies limp on the bare ground, like the banner of a defeated army.
-
-His ears lop together and lie stiff and lifeless, like fallen flagstaffs
-from the conquered walls of a dismantled fortress.
-
-There is no breath to moisten the lips that gave forth such pleasant
-music.
-
-Around him stand the doctors.
-
-The autopsy begins.
-
-Dr. Bryan gently, almost lovingly, lifts the tail of the corpse and
-examines it carefully.
-
-“It was Spinal Belmontitis,” he says. “That’s what killed him.”
-
-Dr. Gumshoe Stone is down on the ground examining the ears.
-
-“I think it was Parkeritis.”
-
-“It might be a complication of both,” answered Dr. Bryan.
-
-Dr. Tillman gritted his teeth and spit like a cat.
-
-“I know a name for it,” he hissed, “but I have no language to express it.”
-
-“I pronounce it damphoolishness,” answered Dr. Hogg, of Texas.
-
-“That’s a slow disease,” chimed in Dr. Daniel.
-
-“He’s had it a long time,” said Dr. Hearst.
-
-“But it never affected his voice,” suggested Dr. Williams.
-
-Dr. Bryan blushed and dropped the mule’s tail.
-
-“Let’s try a reorganization battery on him,” he said.
-
-“He’s been organized and reorganized too often now,” grunted Hogg.
-
-“Let’s prop him up anyhow; maybe we can ride him again,” insisted Dr.
-Bryan.
-
-“Let’s rest,” the others said, and they all sat down.—_Morgan’s Buzz-Saw._
-
-
-
-
- _Influence of Letters_
-
-
-JOHNSON—What do you think of those correspondence schools?
-
-BRONSON—I guess love is about the only thing in this world you can learn
-by correspondence.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _A Bad Break_
-
-SUITOR—I’d marry your daughter if she didn’t have a single dollar.
-
-ROCKSEY—Then you’re a bigger fool even than I thought you were. Get out
-of my house at once.
-
-
-
-
- _News Record_
-
- FROM FEBRUARY 7 TO MARCH 7, 1905
-
-
- _Government and Politics_
-
-February 7.—The Navy Department awards contracts for armor plate to two
-companies belonging to the Steel Trust, notwithstanding the fact that the
-Midvale Steel Co., which is outside the Trust, underbid the other two
-companies $56 per ton, or over $75,000 in the aggregate. Secretary of the
-Navy Paul Morton says the award was made because he feared the Midvale
-Steel Co. could not furnish the plates on time.
-
-February 8.—The charge is made in the Wyoming Legislature that United
-States Senator Francis E. Warren has three persons on the payroll who are
-never in Washington and that the salaries are turned over to Warren. A
-resolution to investigate the charge is tabled.
-
- The National Red Cross Society is reorganized with Honorable
- William H. Taft, Secretary of War, at its head.
-
- Honorable Judson Harmon, of Cincinnati, and F. M. Judson, of
- St. Louis, are appointed special attorneys to investigate the
- granting of rebates by the Santa Fé Railroad.
-
- Representative Comerford is expelled from the Illinois
- Legislature for making charges of graft against the members.
-
-February 9.—The President signs the bill providing for the building of
-railroads in the Philippines.
-
-February 10.—The United States takes over the custom house collections at
-Monte Cristi, Santo Domingo.
-
-February 11.—It is announced at the White House that all the members of
-the Cabinet will be reappointed except Postmaster-General Wynne, who will
-be made Consul-General at London. George B. Cortelyou, Chairman of the
-Republican National Committee, will be the new Postmaster-General.
-
-February 13.—Secretary of State Hay announces that the arbitration
-treaties, because of Senate amendments, will not be presented to the
-governments with which they were originally negotiated.
-
- President Roosevelt, speaking at a Lincoln Day banquet in New
- York, defines his position on the race question.
-
-February 15.—The President sends the Santo Domingo treaty to the Senate,
-with a letter upholding the Monroe Doctrine, but insisting that the
-smaller American republics must pay their debts.
-
-February 16.—President Roosevelt orders a thorough investigation of the
-Standard Oil Trust in accordance with the House resolution.
-
- Secretary of the Interior Hitchcock calls the lease of the
- oil lands of the Osage Indians to the Standard Oil interests
- “a public scandal.” This lease was made during President
- Cleveland’s second term.
-
-February 17.—Six supporters of J. Edward Addicks desert him in the
-Delaware Senatorial fight.
-
- Government agents start to Kansas to conduct the inquiry into
- the Standard Oil Co.
-
- The West Virginia State Senate appoints a committee to
- investigate the charges that the Governor of the State has been
- in collusion with Standard Oil agents.
-
-February 18.—Isthmian Canal Commissioners assert that they are authorized
-by the President to retain fees received as directors of the Panama
-Railway.
-
- President Roosevelt receives a portrait of the Empress Dowager
- of China, sent as an evidence of China’s good will to the
- United States.
-
-February 20.—Ex-Chief-Justice Alton B. Parker appears before the New
-York Court of Appeals to argue a case in favor of the New York City
-Interborough Railway Company, whose chief owner is August Belmont.
-
- The United States Supreme Court sustains the Kansas Anti-Trust
- law, affirming sentence of fine and imprisonment against Edmund
- J. Smiley, an agent of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company.
-
- A special committee of the California Legislature recommends
- the expulsion of five State Senators on the charge of
- soliciting and accepting bribes.
-
- The Kansas Legislature, by concurrent resolution, asks the
- annulment of the Government’s blanket lease of Osage lands to
- the Standard Oil Company.
-
-February 21.—The Government begins criminal prosecution of the Beef Trust
-before a Grand Jury at Chicago called especially for that purpose.
-
- Despite the protests against it, Secretary Hitchcock decides to
- extend the leases of the Osage Indian oil lands.
-
- The Illinois Legislature orders an investigation of the oil
- pipe lines of the State, and offers to loan the State of
- Kansas $100,000 to aid in the fight against the Standard Oil
- monopoly.
-
- While J. Edward Addicks has lost all but about fifteen of his
- supporters in the Delaware Legislature, these decide to make
- the deadlock permanent and thus prevent the election of a
- United States Senator at this session.
-
- President Truesdale, of the Lackawanna Railroad, criticizes
- President Roosevelt’s attitude on rate legislation.
-
- At a dinner of the National Roosevelt League given in New York
- a criticism of the President’s message of condolence on the
- death of the Grand Duke Sergius was loudly cheered.
-
-February 23.—The Interstate Commerce Commission hands down a decision
-that the Santa Fé and Southern Pacific railroads have violated the law by
-entering into a pool.
-
-February 24.—The Department of Justice begins an investigation of the
-Tobacco Trust.
-
- The Board of Trade of New York City decides to begin a campaign
- to force an investigation of the Telephone Trust.
-
- Governor Edwin Warfield, of Maryland, in a speech in New York
- warmly commends President Roosevelt’s policy on the negro
- question.
-
-February 25.—The Isthmian Canal Commission reports in favor of the Panama
-Canal being constructed at sea level with two or three sets of locks.
-
- Despite the higher offer made by Kansas citizens, President
- Roosevelt decides that the lease of Osage oil lands to the
- Standard Oil interests must stand.
-
- The Democrats of Chicago nominate Judge Edward F. Dunn for
- Mayor on a municipal ownership platform.
-
- Secretary of the Treasury Leslie M. Shaw defends the action of
- his predecessor, Lyman J. Gage, in selling the New York Custom
- House to the City Bank.
-
- Joseph V. Quarles, of Wisconsin, whose term as United States
- Senator ends March 4, is appointed United States District
- Judge. The La Follette men bitterly oppose the appointment.
-
-February 27.—Four members of the California State Senate are expelled
-from that body for accepting bribes.
-
- The United States Supreme Court sustains the Texas Anti-Trust
- Act under which two oil companies were forced to give up their
- licenses as a penalty for pooling.
-
-February 28.—Word is received at Washington that Colombia will resume
-diplomatic relations with the United States.
-
-March 1.—Secretary of State Hay, in a letter to the Haytian minister,
-says that the United States has no intention to annex Santo Domingo and
-“would not take it as a gift.”
-
- In the contest for the Governorship of Colorado, thirteen
- Republican members of the committee appointed to conduct
- the contest report in favor of seating ex-Governor James H.
- Peabody, nine Democratic members sign a report favorable to
- Governor Alva Adams and five Republican members refuse to sign
- either report.
-
-March 3.—Commissioner of Corporations James R. Garfield reports on the
-Beef Trust, his findings generally favoring the packers.
-
- Former Land Commissioner Binger Hermann, of Oregon, is indicted
- in Washington for destroying public records.
-
-March 4.—Theodore Roosevelt is sworn in as President of the United States
-in the presence of the largest assemblage and the most elaborate military
-display ever seen at an inauguration.
-
-
- _The Doings of Congress._
-
-February 7.—The Senate passes the Statehood bill, but amends it to admit
-New Mexico as one State, leaving Arizona as a Territory. Oklahoma and
-Indian Territory constitute one State, as in the House bill.
-
-February 8.—The electoral vote is canvassed by a joint session of the
-House and Senate, and the result is declared as 336 for Roosevelt and
-Fairbanks, to 140 for Parker and Davis.
-
- The Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs disregards the wishes
- of the President and amends the arbitration treaties by
- striking out in each the word “agreement” and substituting
- therefor the word “treaty.”
-
- C. W. Post, of the Postal Progress League, asks the Senate to
- expel Thomas C. Platt, of New York, on the ground that Platt is
- the President of the United States Express Co., and is not a
- fair representative of the people on any question involving the
- interests of that corporation.
-
-February 9.—The Townsend-Esch bill, giving the Interstate Commerce
-Commission power to fix railroad rates, passes the House by a vote of 326
-to 17.
-
-February 10.—The Senate begins the impeachment trial of Judge Charles
-Swayne, of Florida.
-
- The House Republicans decide to stand by their own Statehood
- bill, refusing to concur in the Senate amendments.
-
-February 11.—The Senate, by an overwhelming vote, amends the arbitration
-treaties, thus virtually breaking with the President. It insists that all
-treaties must be ratified by the Senate.
-
- Testimony was introduced in the Swayne impeachment trial to
- show that the defendant had falsely certified his expenses.
-
-February 13.—Representative John A. Sullivan, of Massachusetts, makes a
-sensational attack on Representative William R. Hearst, of New York, and
-Mr. Hearst in reply shows that Sullivan was once indicted for murder in
-Massachusetts.
-
- Senator Bacon, of Georgia, introduces a resolution calling for
- the facts relative to the United States seizing custom houses
- in Santo Domingo.
-
-February 14.—Senators Lodge and Spooner defend the action of the Senate
-in amending the arbitration treaties.
-
- Representative Littlefield, of Maine, warns Congress that it is
- riding for an $80,000,000 deficit.
-
- The Senate passes the Agricultural Appropriation bill, but
- amends it by prohibiting drawbacks on wheat imported to make
- flour for export.
-
-February 15.—The House, by unanimous vote, adopts a resolution introduced
-by Representative Campbell, of Kansas, which directs the Department of
-Commerce and Labor to investigate the Standard Oil Trust.
-
-February 16.—The House declares the Senate’s amendment of the
-Agricultural Appropriation bill a violation of the Constitution.
-
- The House passes the bill for the government of the Panama
- Canal zone.
-
-February 17.—The House Committee investigating the Panama Railway hears
-testimony to the effect that the commissioners pocket the fees paid them
-as directors. The Senate withdraws its amendment to the Agricultural
-Appropriation bill.
-
-February 20.—By the aid of 46 Democratic votes the Naval Appropriation
-bill, providing for two new battleships, passes the House.
-
- Representative Baker, of New York, denounces President
- Roosevelt for having sent a message of condolence on the death
- of the Grand Duke Sergius.
-
- Representative William R. Hearst introduces a bill to make
- oil pipe lines common carriers, thus taking them out of the
- exclusive control of the Standard Oil Company.
-
- Friends of the freight-rate bill announce that they have
- abandoned hope of its becoming a law at this session.
-
-February 21.—A letter is made public from former Senator William E.
-Chandler, of New Hampshire, to Senator Elkins, Chairman of the Senate
-Committee on Interstate Commerce, urging the passage of the rate bill and
-predicting that, if this is not done, government ownership of railroads
-will result.
-
- The Senate Committee on Naval Affairs decides to report
- favorably the House bill providing for two additional
- battleships.
-
- Senator T. M. Patterson, of Colorado, says that if the
- government does not control the railways the people will demand
- absolute government ownership.
-
-February 23.—The House Indian Committee decides to investigate the Osage
-oil land lease.
-
- Senator Chauncey M. Depew declares in favor of government
- regulation of railroad rates.
-
- Stuyvesant Fish, President of the Illinois Central Railroad,
- tells the Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce that
- President Roosevelt, in a private conference, urged reduction
- of freight rates as long ago as 1902.
-
- The House and Senate conferees on the Army Appropriation bill
- decide to give General Miles retired pay instead of full pay,
- as at present.
-
- The Senate passes the Panama Canal bill with the clause
- destroying the Panama Canal Commission stricken out.
- Representative Bishop, of Michigan, attacks the River and
- Harbor bill and accuses fellow-members of being under the
- influence of the Great Lakes dredge owners.
-
-February 24.—The item of $130,600 for the rent of the old New York Custom
-House from the City Bank (Standard Oil) is stricken from the Civil
-Appropriation bill by the Committee of the Whole House. Mr. Sulzer (Dem.)
-leads in the attack on this item, and the vote striking it out is 90 to
-77.
-
- Representative Vandiver, of Missouri, attacks the Armor Plate
- Trust and asks the Attorney-General why it has not been
- prosecuted.
-
- Senator Morgan, of Alabama, starts a filibuster against the
- Statehood bill.
-
-February 25.—Senator Hale, of Maine, makes sarcastic references to the
-Administration policy of “browbeating smaller Powers.”
-
- Arguments are concluded in the impeachment case of Judge
- Charles Swayne.
-
- Senator Morgan, of Alabama, lodges with the Senate Foreign
- Affairs Committee a formal protest against the action of
- President Roosevelt relating to Santo Domingo.
-
-February 27.—Senator Dryden, of New Jersey, at the supposed request of
-the President, introduces a bill establishing Federal supervision of
-insurance.
-
- Democratic leaders bitterly attack the President’s foreign
- policy in both the House and Senate.
-
- The Senate votes in favor of the House appropriation for two
- additional battleships.
-
- The Democrats of the House prevent the reinstatement of the
- appropriation for rent to the City Bank of New York, enough
- Republicans joining them to reverse the ruling of the Chair.
-
- The Senate, sitting as an Impeachment Court, declares Judge
- Charles Swayne, of Florida, innocent of all the charges against
- him.
-
- The House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce resumes
- its investigation of the Panama Canal and Railroad, and brings
- out testimony to the effect that supplies were bought without
- bids, and that the President’s instructions were not always
- heeded.
-
- The Naval Appropriation bill, as amended by the Senate, directs
- the Secretary of the Navy to investigate the cost of armor
- plate and report to the next Congress.
-
-February 28.—The Senate votes an amendment to the Indian Appropriation
-bill providing that a portion of the educational fund may go to sectarian
-schools.
-
- Senator Kearns, of Utah, in his farewell speech, makes a
- sensational attack on the Mormon Church, which he says is ruled
- by a “monarchy.”
-
-March 1.—The day is spent on the appropriation bills, a large number of
-which are agreed to in conference, and pass both houses. The Senate does
-not attempt to reinstate the item for the rent of the New York Custom
-House from the Rockefeller bank. An objection by Representative Baker, of
-New York, prevents the President’s salary from being raised to $75,000.
-The House votes itself $190,000 for mileage for the “constructive recess.”
-
-March 2.—Both houses spend the day on the appropriation bills. The Senate
-adopts the Kean resolution for a railroad rate inquiry during the recess.
-
- The Senate kills the $190,000 mileage grab of the House.
-
-March 3.—The Fifty-eighth Congress practically completes its work, both
-houses agreeing on all appropriation bills. Freight-rate legislation and
-the Statehood bill go over to the next Congress.
-
-March 4.—The Fifty-eighth Congress ends and the new Senate convenes in
-special session.
-
-
- _General Home News_
-
-February 7.—August W. Machen and the Groff brothers, the Post-Office
-Department officials convicted in the postal fraud cases, and whose
-sentence has just been confirmed by the United States Supreme Court, are
-taken to prison.
-
- It is announced that an international parcels post is to be
- established between Great Britain, France and the United States.
-
- The Standard Oil interests are reported to have made a
- $20,000,000 purchase of stock, thus securing control of the
- Santa Fé Railroad system.
-
- The Interstate Commerce Commission hears the charges brought
- against the Coal Trust by the Honorable William R. Hearst.
-
- The Board of Aldermen of New York City takes steps for the
- construction of a municipal electric-lighting plant.
-
- The State of Kansas continues its war on the Standard Oil
- Trust, the State Senate passing three bills providing for the
- erection of a State oil refinery, for making pipe lines common
- carriers, and for fixing freight rates in oil.
-
-February 8.—Henry C. Frick, of the Steel Trust, and Henry H. Rogers, of
-the Standard Oil Company, are elected directors of the Santa Fé Railroad.
-
- Elihu Root, former Secretary of War, leads an attack on the
- constitutionality of the New York State Barge Canal, which is
- opposed by the railroads, and which was supported by such an
- overwhelming majority in last fall’s election.
-
-February 10.—In the hearing of the Hearst case against the Coal Trust,
-the attorney of the Trust says in effect that the United States has no
-power over the corporation.
-
-February 13.—The Federal Grand Jury returns new indictments against
-Senator Mitchell and Representatives Hermann and Williamson, of Oregon,
-in the public land fraud cases.
-
-February 14.—A sensational war in high finance is begun between President
-Alexander, of the Equitable Life Assurance Association, and James H.
-Hyde, its First Vice-President and majority stockholder.
-
-February 15.—The Kansas House of Representatives passes the bill for a
-State oil refinery already passed by the Senate.
-
- The New York Legislature adopts a resolution directing an
- investigation of the Telephone Trust.
-
-February 16.—A truce is patched up between the warring factions of the
-Equitable Life Association on the promise of Vice-President Hyde to
-mutualize the company.
-
-February 17.—Governor Hoch, of Kansas, signs the bill appropriating
-$400,000 for the erection of a State oil refinery.
-
-February 20.—Mrs. Jefferson Davis, in a letter to the public press,
-scores General Nelson A. Miles for having placed her husband in irons,
-and asks General Miles to publish a photographic copy of her alleged
-letter of thanks.
-
- An explosion in a coal mine at Virginia, Ala., entombs 160 men.
-
- Thomas W. Lawson, in _Everybody’s Magazine_, continues his
- story of the formation of the Amalgamated Copper Company,
- outlines its devious operations under Standard Oil, accuses
- James M. Beck, ex-Assistant Attorney-General of the United
- States, of perjury, and attacks James H. Eckels, ex-Comptroller
- of the Currency, for his part in the infamous Cleveland bond
- deal.
-
-February 21.—Mayor George B. McClellan and ex-Mayor Seth Low, of New
-York, appear before the Legislature at Albany to plead for a larger
-water supply for New York City, claiming that a few dry years would bring
-a water famine to the metropolis.
-
- President Mellen, of the New York, New Haven & Hartford
- Railroad, refuses to arbitrate with the firemen who threaten a
- strike.
-
- Fifty of the 160 miners entombed by the explosion at Virginia,
- Ala., are known to be dead, and little hope is entertained for
- the remainder.
-
- A manuscript copy of one of Edgar Allan Poe’s poems sells for
- $1,000 in New York.
-
- John W. Gates and Joseph H. Hoadley claim to have secured
- control of the Tennessee Coal & Iron Company.
-
-February 22.—Washington’s Birthday is generally celebrated throughout
-the United States and foreign nations. President Roosevelt is the chief
-orator at the University of Pennsylvania, which institution confers
-the degree of LL.D. on himself and Emperor William of Germany. A bust
-of Washington is presented to Congress by M. Jusserand, the French
-Ambassador.
-
- A “boodle fund” of $60,000 is produced in court at the trial
- of Charles Kratz at Butler, Mo. Thomas K.. Niedringhaus,
- Republican nominee for United States Senator, is summoned as a
- witness in the case.
-
- Professor William Osler, in his farewell address to Johns
- Hopkins University, states that men after forty years of age
- are “comparatively useless,” and after sixty are entirely so.
-
- President William R. Harper, of the University of Chicago,
- undergoes an operation for cancer while thousands of students
- and friends pray for his recovery. Physicians find cancer, but
- are unable to remove it.
-
- Colonel William F. Cody, “Buffalo Bill,” says he will apply
- to Howard Gould, the millionaire, for $125,000 furnished Mrs.
- Howard Gould when she was an actress.
-
-February 23.—General Nelson A. Miles, in the _Independent_, makes a
-rejoinder to those who had criticized him for placing Jefferson Davis
-in irons, publishing several letters, among them a note from Mrs. Davis
-thanking him for “kind answers,” and begging him to look after her
-husband’s health.
-
- Standard Oil stocks drop 10 points, or $41,000,000 in nine days.
-
-February 24.—The New York State Factory Inspector finds immigrant boys
-who are virtually made slaves and compelled to work twenty hours a day
-without pay.
-
- Governor Vardaman, of Mississippi, employs troops to protect
- from lynching a negro accused of having assaulted a white girl.
-
- Frank H. Monnett, ex-Attorney-General of Ohio, reaches Topeka,
- where he will assist in framing a case in the Supreme Court to
- oust the Standard Oil Company from the State.
-
- The plan for mutualizing the Equitable Life Assurance Society
- fails, and the war between the Hyde and Alexander factions goes
- on.
-
- The Vanderbilt interests purchase a majority of the stock of
- the Boston & Maine Railroad.
-
-February 25.—Wall Street sees a wild day on the stock market because of a
-reported merger of the New York Central and Union Pacific railroads.
-
- Independent crude oil producers and refiners of Kansas, Ohio,
- Illinois and Indiana unite to fight the Standard Oil Company.
-
- A two-million-dollar fire sweeps Hot Springs, Ark., causing
- several deaths.
-
- Richard Croker, former chief of Tammany Hall, sails for Ireland.
-
- The Engineering Committee of the Isthmian Canal Commission
- estimates that a sea-level canal can be constructed for
- $230,500,000, and that the time occupied in building it will be
- ten or twelve years.
-
-February 26.—A five-million-dollar fire sweeps the river front at New
-Orleans. Elevators and piers destroyed, entailing future loss of export
-trade.
-
-February 27.—By the collapse of the second floor of the African Methodist
-Episcopal Zion Church, of Brooklyn, N. Y., eleven persons are killed and
-several score injured.
-
- The Alexander-Hyde fight in the Equitable Life Assurance
- Society is carried into the courts.
-
- After making from $5,000,000 to $8,000,000 in wheat, John W.
- Gates and his associates throw their holdings on the market,
- causing a sharp decline.
-
-March 1.—Three New York thieves testify that they have been dividing
-proceeds with the police to secure immunity from arrest.
-
-March 2.—H. Rider Haggard, the celebrated British novelist, visits the
-United States for the purpose of studying colonization plans for the poor.
-
-March 6.—A general strike is declared on all the Subway and Elevated
-lines of New York City.
-
-
- _The Russo-Japanese War_
-
-February 7.—A growing peace sentiment is manifest in Russia, and press
-and public are becoming more outspoken against the further prosecution of
-a losing war.
-
- General Kuropatkin sends word of a raid in which fifty Japanese
- were killed.
-
-February 8.—Admiral Togo returns to his flagship, and resumes sea duty.
-
- Tokio hears of skirmishes near Mukden, in which the Russians
- were defeated.
-
-February 10.—The Russians retire from Songchin in Northeastern Corea.
-
- The Russian Baltic fleet is reported off Madagascar on its way
- to the Far East.
-
- General Stoessel says in answer to critics that he sacrificed
- glory to humanity in surrendering Port Arthur.
-
-February 12.—Field Marshal Oyama reports two skirmishes in which the
-Russians are defeated.
-
-February 13.—General Kuropatkin reports that a Japanese cavalry raid
-has destroyed several miles of railroad north of Mukden; also that the
-Japanese have resumed the bombardment of Lone Tree Hill.
-
-February 15.—A large force of Russian cavalry moves against the Japanese
-left in the vicinity of Heikontai.
-
- The Russian third Pacific squadron sails from Libau on its way
- east.
-
-February 16.—Russian attacks at Waitao Mountain are repulsed, and the
-cavalry force, which moved against the Japanese left, is forced to
-retreat.
-
-February 17.—General Grippenberg, who was removed from his command in
-the Russian army after the battle of Heikontai, is given an audience by
-the Czar, and says that General Kuropatkin refused to support him when
-victory was within reach.
-
-February 18.—The Russian strike closes a number of Government factories
-and interferes with manufacturing and shipping of war supplies.
-
-February 20.—Russian cavalry passes Japanese left flank near Hun River.
-Movement of no special importance, and losses insignificant.
-
- Russia’s third Pacific naval squadron passes through the Great
- Belt off Denmark on its way to join the Baltic squadron.
-
- Tokio gives out semi-official statement that Japanese
- casualties at the battle of Heikontai were near 10,000.
-
-February 21.—Lieutenant-General Stoessel, former commandant at Port
-Arthur, lands at Kaffa, Russia, on his return from the Far East, and is
-received by a cheering crowd.
-
-February 22.—A Cossack raid reaches nearly to the Yalu River, and
-destroys a Japanese depot of supplies.
-
-February 24.—The Japanese move northward along the eastern coast of
-Korea, fortify Port Lazareff and threaten Vladivostok.
-
- The Japanese move forward in the Tsinkhetchin district, and
- after desperate fighting force the Russians to abandon their
- base at Beresneff Hill.
-
-February 25.—A battle involving General Kuropatkin’s left flank opens
-south of Mukden.
-
- Mr. Kogoro Takahira, Japanese Minister to the United States,
- says that his country has made no peace advances to Russia.
-
-February 26.—The battle brought on by the flank movement of the Russians
-is continued, and General Kuropatkin admits another defeat. Japanese
-capture the city of Tsinkhetchin, drive in the Russian outposts and cross
-the Sha River. It is reported that Oyama’s artillery is even throwing
-shells into Mukden.
-
-February 27.—A number of Russian naval officers returning from Port
-Arthur are entertained by Count Cassini in Washington. Other Russian
-officers from the same siege land at Victoria, British Columbia; in
-interviews they speak disparagingly of General Stoessel, one expressing
-the opinion that Stoessel showed himself to be “not a hero, but a coward.”
-
- Fighting continues about Mukden, the Japanese being the
- aggressors. It is now certain that General Kuroki has captured
- Tie Pass from the Russians.
-
-February 28.—The battle near Mukden becomes general along a 100-mile
-front, and involving 700,000 men.
-
- It is stated that the Cossacks lost 2,000 men at Tsinkhetchin.
-
-March 1.—The Japanese make a terrific bombardment of Lone Tree or
-Putiloff Hill, employing for the purpose the great siege guns used at
-Port Arthur.
-
- Fierce fighting rages over the Sha River bridge, which is
- finally held by the Japanese.
-
- Field Marshal Oyama gradually forces the Russians back in the
- general battle about Mukden.
-
-March 2.—The Russian flanks are pushed backward and Kuropatkin’s entire
-army continues to retire before the onslaughts of the Japanese.
-
-March 3.—General Kuropatkin is in retreat toward Tie Pass and a portion
-of Oyama’s army reaches a point eleven miles west of Mukden.
-
- The battle around Mukden continues, the results generally
- favoring the Japanese.
-
-March 4.—General Kuropatkin’s left flank suffers and his position grows
-still more critical.
-
-March 5.—A fierce artillery engagement rages throughout the day and
-Marshal Oyama continues his flanking movement.
-
-March 6.—General Kuropatkin is hemmed in and vigorously attacks the
-Japanese left centre. Marshal Oyama relentlessly tightens his lines in an
-endeavor to trap his foe.
-
-
- _General Foreign News_
-
-February 7.—As a result of the massacre of Russian citizens on January
-22, the Social Democratic Party of Russia calls on workmen to march on
-the Czar’s palace with arms in their hands instead of ikons and petitions.
-
- Father Gapon, the Russian revolutionary leader, is reported to
- have escaped to Switzerland.
-
- General Trepoff, the “man of iron” who has been placed at the
- head of the police system at St. Petersburg, threatens to close
- the universities because of the revolutionary sentiment there
- existing.
-
- Disorders continue in Russian Poland, and several strikers are
- killed by the troops.
-
- The assassin of Soisalon Soininen, Procurator-General of
- Finland, is identified a former student at one of the Finnish
- universities.
-
-February 8.—Because of the failure of the employers to concede the
-demands of their workingmen, new strikes are declared at St. Petersburg,
-Vassili Ostroff and other points in Russia.
-
- Strikers tear up the Siberian Railway east of Irkutsk.
-
- Maxim Gorky, the Russian novelist, is questioned in court and
- afterward returned to prison.
-
- The students of one of the St. Petersburg schools refuse to
- attend lectures because of police interference.
-
- Because of the continued state of disorder in Russian Poland,
- many refugees leave the country.
-
- The new protocol between the United States and Santo Domingo
- is signed at Santo Domingo. It provides for the territorial
- integrity of the island republic and for ratification by the
- United States Senate.
-
- The British Government decides that John H. Gaynor and Benjamin
- H. Greene, American refugees in Canada, may be extradited and
- returned to the United States.
-
- King Oscar, of Sweden, turns over the government to Crown
- Prince Gustav.
-
-February 9.—Many strikers are killed by the troops at Sosnovice, Russian
-Poland.
-
- M. Rouvier, the new Premier of France, submits a bill
- absolutely divorcing church and state.
-
- German mine strikers denounce the action of their leaders in
- voting to return to work, and thousands decide to continue the
- struggle.
-
-February 10.—Over sixty strikers are killed and hundreds are wounded by
-troops at Sosnovice and Lodz in Russian Poland.
-
- Strikes are being renewed to such an extent in St. Petersburg
- that the authorities are growing apprehensive.
-
-February 11.—Prince Paul Dolgorouki says that the Czar must call a Zemsky
-Sober (a popular assembly) if he would avoid a revolution.
-
- The strike at Lodz now involves 100,000 men.
-
- Four thousand ironworkers strike at Kharkoff.
-
- Disquieting conditions are reported at Batoum in the Caucasus,
- with a general tie-up of railway lines in the vicinity.
-
-February 12.—Three aeronauts make a balloon voyage from London to Paris
-in a little over six hours.
-
- The Czar promises a commission, including workingmen, to deal
- with the labor problem.
-
- Russian conscripts and reserves mutiny in several provinces.
- Cossacks kill eighteen at Kieff and wound over eighty.
-
- Franz Kossuth, the leader of the Hungarian Independence Party,
- is received in audience by the Austrian Emperor.
-
-February 13.—The Russian Cabinet decides to adopt reform measures,
-including some sort of concessions to the workingmen.
-
- Arguments are concluded in the North Sea case before the
- International Commission at Paris. Decision, it is announced,
- will be handed down at a later date.
-
- It is reported from Essen that the German coal strike, which
- has been one of the most important industrial struggles in
- German history, is ended.
-
-February 14.—King Edward opens the British Parliament. The speech from
-the throne contains no significant passages.
-
-February 15.—The strike in Warsaw again becomes general.
-
- The Emperor of China approves a plan for a parliament of the
- empire’s leading officials.
-
- President Castro, of Venezuela, refuses to arbitrate the
- asphalt claims and other disputes between that country and the
- United States.
-
-February 16.—The strike at St. Petersburg, which was reported to be
-abating, breaks out with renewed force.
-
- On a test vote the Balfour government is sustained in the
- British House of Commons by a majority of 63.
-
- The Venezuela Supreme Court reaffirms its order sequestrating
- the lands belonging to the American Asphalt Company.
-
-February 17.—The Grand Duke Sergius, uncle and brother-in-law of the Czar
-and the most reactionary and influential of the Grand Ducal clique, is
-blown to pieces by a bomb in the Kremlin, Moscow. The assassin, who is
-dressed in the garb of a workingman, is arrested.
-
-February 18.—The Russian strike spreads to the employees of many railways
-and to the telegraphers.
-
- Two Russian officials are assassinated in Transcaucasia.
-
- Consternation reigns among the rulers of Russia, and members of
- the royal family do not venture to appear in public.
-
- The British Government announces that in 1911 it will take over
- the entire property of the National Telephone Company.
-
-February 20.—Three thousand Russian students and professors, in mass
-meeting, denounce the Czar, demand constitutional government and shut up
-the University of St. Petersburg till September.
-
- Martial law is declared at Tsarskoe-Selo, the residence of the
- Czar.
-
- China expresses the desire to pay all her indemnity at once,
- but some of the Powers object, as it deprives certain officials
- of commissions and interest.
-
- Sir John E. Redmond leads an Irish attack on the British
- ministry.
-
-February 21.—The Home Rule amendment offered by Sir John E. Redmond is
-defeated in the British House of Commons, and the Balfour government is
-sustained, but by the reduced majority of 50.
-
- A general revolt against the Russian Government is reported
- throughout the entire Caucasus region.
-
-February 22.—The Armenians seize three towns in the Caucasus.
-
- Sir John E. Redmond renews his attack on the Balfour ministry,
- and the government majority is still further reduced to 42.
-
- Polish disturbances continue, and all trains from Warsaw on the
- Vienna line are discontinued.
-
- Many bodies of slain strikers are found in the streets of Baku,
- a town in the Caucasus.
-
- Workmen destroy factories at Riga, Southern Russia.
-
-February 23.—The London _Times_ states that the Czar has decided to call
-a Zemsky Sober, or popular assembly, to decide, among other things, as
-to the continuation of the war in the Far East. The German Court, on
-the other hand, gives out the statement that the Czar is determined to
-continue the war.
-
- The Tartars are turned loose on the Armenians in the Caucasus
- revolt. The number of corpses found in the streets of Baku is
- reported as high as 300. The revolt continues in other towns in
- the region, 40,000 Georgians being involved.
-
- The strike extends at Warsaw and more railway lines are tied up.
-
- Leonide Andreef, a famous Moscow author, known as “The Little
- Gorky,” is arrested.
-
- Funeral services are held over the remains of Grand Duke
- Sergius at Moscow. The Czar attends a requiem at Tsarskoe-Selo.
- Both ceremonies pass without special incident.
-
-February 24.—An unsuccessful attempt is made to assassinate President
-Morales, of Santo Domingo. Five persons are arrested.
-
- The famous Simplon Tunnel through the Alps, leading from
- Switzerland to Italy, is completed.
-
- It is announced from London that Sir Henry Irving, the famous
- actor, is so broken in health that he may never again appear on
- the stage.
-
- A coffin believed to contain the long-sought remains of John
- Paul Jones, the American Revolutionary naval hero, has been
- found in Paris.
-
- Strikes and rioting continue practically throughout the entire
- Russian empire, many railway lines are tied up, and moujiks are
- becoming fired with the idea of a general land division.
-
-February 25.—The International Commission to inquire into the North Sea
-incident concludes its sittings in Paris and hands down its decision
-that the action of Admiral Rojestvensky, commander of the Russian Baltic
-fleet, in firing on the British fishing vessels was unjustified.
-
- The Warsaw railway strikes are reported partially settled, but
- a street railway strike begins and disturbances continue.
-
- Severe fighting between the Armenians and the Mussulmans
- continues in the Caucasus region; leading officials and
- merchants are assassinated at Batoum, and revolutionary
- manifestoes in favor of a republic are circulated broadcast.
-
- The Countess of Warwick begins an automobile tour of Great
- Britain for the purpose of assisting the various labor
- candidates for Parliament.
-
- A general railway strike begins in Italy, the workmen being
- dissatisfied with the treatment proposed to be given them under
- the bill creating State management of railways.
-
- It is announced that the Czar has decided not to call the
- Zemsky Sober, and that he has irrevocably decided that the war
- with Japan must go on.
-
-February 27.—Maxim Gorky, the famous Russian novelist, is released from
-prison only to be rearrested by order of General Trepoff and banished to
-Riga.
-
- President Morales lays before the Dominican Congress the
- protocol with the United States.
-
- Berlin’s new cathedral is dedicated in the presence of the
- Emperor and delegates from all parts of the world.
-
- The Czar, in an effort to break the strike, orders a raise of
- wages on State railroads and in Government arsenals.
-
- The disturbances in Russian Poland are augmented by a serious
- revolt of the peasantry in fifty villages.
-
- A second Kishineff horror is reported from Theodosia in the
- Crimea, where forty-seven Jews were killed and many more
- injured in a recent massacre.
-
-February 28.—The strike situation in Russia grows steadily worse,
-especially in Poland, where a coal famine is threatened.
-
- The Russian Council of Ministers decides on more repressive
- measures and definitely refuses to call the Zemsky Sober.
-
-March 1.—The workmen selected by the Czar to organize a commission on the
-labor situation meet and demand concessions from the Government before
-taking further action.
-
- Lord Selbourne is chosen British High Commissioner in South
- Africa in place of Lord Milner, resigned.
-
-March 2.—The Russian ministry votes to grant the people religious freedom.
-
- The majority for the present British ministry is reduced to 24.
-
-March 3.—The Czar calls a representative assembly, but without power
-except to consult and advise.
-
- Rioting continues in Russian Poland and a general strike is
- ordered at St. Petersburg.
-
-March 4.—Cossacks kill nine students and wound many more at Tomsk.
-
-March 5.—The Czar’s action in calling an assembly has little or no
-influence on the Russian situation, which grows more grave.
-
-
- _Obituary._
-
-February 7.—Joseph H. Manley, prominent Republican politician, dies at
-his home in Augusta, Me., aged 62.
-
-February 8.—Rear-Admiral Frank C. Cosby, of the United States Navy, dies
-at the age of 65.
-
-February 9.—Adolf von Menzel, famous German painter, dies in Berlin.
-
- Chief-Justice Pardon E. Tillinghast, of the Supreme Court of
- Rhode Island, dies at the age of 68.
-
- Henry W. Blodgett, former United States District Judge, dies at
- the age of 84.
-
-February 11.—Sylvester Scovel, the well-known war correspondent, dies in
-Havana, aged 36.
-
-February 14.—James C. Carter, leading New York lawyer, dies at the age of
-78.
-
-February 15.—General Lew Wallace, the celebrated author, dies at his home
-in Crawfordsville, Ind., aged 78.
-
- William Cullen Bryant, publisher of the Brooklyn _Times_, dies
- at the age of 56.
-
-February 16.—Jay Cooke, once famous as a financier, dies at the age of 83.
-
-February 20.—Norton P. Otis, Member of Congress from New York, dies at
-the age of 65, at his home in Yonkers, N. Y.
-
-February 21.—Jacob Worth, well-known Brooklyn politician and race-track
-man, dies at Hot Springs, Ark.; age, 67.
-
-February 23.—W. F. G. Shanks, a well-known New York newspaper and
-magazine editor, dies in Bermuda, aged 68.
-
-February 24.—Sidney Dillon Ripley, Treasurer of the Equitable
-Life Assurance Society, dies from the effects of an operation for
-appendicitis, at New York.
-
-February 25.—Edward Cooper, ex-Mayor of New York and only son of Peter
-Cooper, dies at New York City, aged 81.
-
-February 27.—Honorable George S. Boutwell, former Governor of
-Massachusetts, United States Senator and Secretary of the Treasury, dies
-at his home at Groton, Mass., aged 87.
-
- Harry Morris, well-known American comedian, dies at New York,
- aged 49.
-
- Henry C. Whitney, formerly one of Chicago’s leading lawyers,
- dies at Salem, Mass., aged 74.
-
- Richard A. Donnelly, Quartermaster-General of New Jersey since
- 1890, dies at his home in Trenton, aged 64.
-
-March 1.—Mrs. Jane Lathrop Stanford, widow of Leland Stanford and famous
-for her gifts to education, dies suddenly in Honolulu. Subsequent
-investigation shows she was poisoned.
-
- Edward O. Wolcott, former United States Senator from Colorado,
- dies at Monte Carlo, Monaco, aged 56.
-
-March 4.—H. L. Muldrow, Assistant Secretary of the Interior under
-President Cleveland, dies at Starkville, Miss.
-
-
-
-
- _Gobbled It All_
-
-
-SMITH—Some of our rich men claim it isn’t right to leave anything behind
-them.
-
-SMYTHE—That’s their way exactly. Wherever they have been they have left
-mighty little behind them.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _The Legal Acrobat_
-
-JUDSON—How did that expert come to contradict himself on the second trial?
-
-BLUDSON—The other side hired him.
-
-
-
-
-Extract from a three-column review in the _San Francisco Examiner_:
-
- “Mr. Hastings has touched the very core of the
- matter respecting the proclivities of our doddering
- plutocracy. Throughout his book he has revealed
- that plutocracy in its true light and shown it to
- be something utterly conscienceless and debased.
- No more scathing review of the situation, as it is
- seen at present, could possibly be given in a work
- of fiction.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
- =SHALL WE
- HAVE A
- KING?=
-
- Will the United States be a monarchy in 1975?
- Have you read “THE FIRST AMERICAN KING,” by George
- Gordon Hastings? It is a dashing romance in which
- a scientist and a detective of today wake up
- seventy-five years later to find His Majesty,
- Imperial and Royal, William I, Emperor of the
- United States and King of the Empire State of New
- York, ruling the land, with the real power in the
- hands of half a dozen huge trusts. Automobiles
- have been replaced by phaërmobiles; air-ships sail
- above the surface of the earth; there has been a
- successful war against Russia; a social revolution
- is brewing. The book is both an enthralling
- romance and a serious sociological study, which
- scourges unmercifully the society and politics of
- the present time, many of whose brightest stars
- reappear in the future under thinly disguised
- names. There are wit and humor and sarcasm
- galore—a stirring tale of adventure and a charming
- love-story.
-
- Net $1.00, postpaid. All Booksellers,
- or sent postpaid upon receipt of price by
-
- =TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE=
- 121 West 42d Street, NEW YORK CITY
-
-
-
-
-=“TOM WATSON”=
- is the one historian through whom we get the point of
- view of the laborer, the mechanic, the plain man, in a
- style that is bold, racy and unconventional. There is
- no other who traces so vividly the life of a _people_
- from the time they were savages until they became the
- most polite and cultured of European nations, as he
- does in
-
-=THE STORY OF FRANCE=
-
- In two handsome volumes, dark red cloth, gilt tops, price $5.00.
-
- “It is well called a story, for it reads like a
- fascinating romance.”—_Plaindealer_, Cleveland.
-
- “A most brilliant, vigorous, human-hearted story
- this: so broad in its sympathies, so vigorous in
- its presentations, so vital, so piquant, lively and
- interesting. It will be read wherever the history of
- France interests men, which is everywhere.”—_New York
- Times’ Sat. Review._
-
-=NAPOLEON=
- =A SKETCH OF HIS LIFE, CHARACTER, STRUGGLES
- AND ACHIEVEMENTS.=
-
- Illustrated with Portraits and Facsimiles.
- Cloth, 8vo, $2.25 net. (Postage 20c.)
-
- “The Splendid Study of a Splendid Genius” is the
- caption of a double-column editorial mention of this
- book in _The New York American and Journal_ when it
- first appeared. The comment urged every reader of that
- paper to read the book and continued:
-
- “There does not live a man who will not be enlarged
- in his thinking processes, there does not live a boy
- who will not be made more ambitious by honest study of
- Watson’s Napoleon * * *
-
- “If you want the best obtainable, most readable, most
- intelligent, most genuinely American study of this
- great character, read Watson’s history of Napoleon.”
-
-=“TOM WATSON”=
- in these books does far more than make history as
- readable as a novel of the best sort. He tells the
- truth with fire and life, not only of events and
- causes, but of their consequences to and their
- influence on the great mass of people at large. They
- are epoch-making books which every American should
- read and own.
-
- Orders for the above books will be filled by
- TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE, 121 West 42nd Street, New York City.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TOM WATSON'S MAGAZINE, VOL. I,
-NO. 2, APRIL 1905 ***
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Tom Watson's Magazine, Vol. I, No. 2, April 1905, by Various</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Tom Watson's Magazine, Vol. I, No. 2, April 1905</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Various</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: Thomas E. Watson</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: April 18, 2022 [eBook #67871]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: hekula03 and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TOM WATSON'S MAGAZINE, VOL. I, NO. 2, APRIL 1905 ***</div>
-
-<div class="transnote bbox covernote">
-
-<p class="f120 space-above1">Transcriber’s Note:</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p class="indent">The cover was created by the transcriber using elements
-from the original cover, and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="bbox">
-
-<p class="bigfont no-indent f300"><span class="u"><i>Jefferson’s Bible</i></span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquot no-indent">A rare volume for the book-lover
-readers of <span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine</span></p>
-
-<p class="bigfont no-indent">102 YEARS AGO</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot no-indent">Thomas Jefferson, while “overwhelmed with other business,”
-cut such passages from the Evangelists as he believed would
-best present the ethical teachings of Jesus, and “arranged
-them on the pages of a blank book in a certain order of time or
-subject.” This book he called “The Philosophy of Jesus of
-Nazareth.”</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">For many years the manuscript of this wonderful book
-has lain in the archives of the State Department at Washington,
-and public clamor for its publication at last became so
-great that Congress recently ordered it issued as a public
-document—but in very limited number.</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">Before the original was turned over to the State Department,
-an accurate copy of it was made while in the possession
-of Col. Thomas Jefferson Randolph, Mr. Jefferson’s
-oldest grandson. From this copy was printed the edition
-now offered to our subscribers.</p>
-
-<p class="bigfont no-indent">TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE<br />
-<small>AND</small><br />
-THOMAS JEFFERSON’S BIBLE</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">For $1.35, sent direct to this office, we will enter a
-year’s subscription to TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE
-and mail a copy of the Jefferson Bible, postage prepaid.
-A dollar book and a dollar magazine—both for only $1.35.
-Send today. Do it now. Address</p>
-
-<p class="f150"><b>TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE</b></p>
-<p class="center">121 West 42d Street, <span class="ws4">New York, N. Y.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<h1>TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE</h1>
-<p class="f90">THE MAGAZINE WITH A PURPOSE BACK OF IT</p>
-<p class="f150"><b>April, 1905</b></p>
-
-<hr class="r25" />
-
-<table summary=" " cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" border="0">
- <tbody>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Politics and Economics</i> </td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1"><i>Thomas E. Watson</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Politics_and_Economics">129</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><small><i>In Russia—“Give Them Free
- Passes and They Will Become as<br />Servants”—Two Outlaws—Building
- on Sand, Again—Look at<br />England—Editorial Comments—How Private
- Ownership<br />Breaks Down.</i></small></td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>The Patriot</i></td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#The_Patriot">142</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>The Atonement of Hustler Joe</i></td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1"><i>Eleanor H. Porter</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#The_Atonement_of_Hustler_Joe">145</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>The Constitution</i></td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1"><i>Frederick Upham Adams</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#The_Constitution">181</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>In Absence</i></td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1"><i>Eugene C. Dolson</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#In_Absence">185</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>The Gray Weed</i></td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1"><i>Owen Oliver</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#The_Gray_Weed">187</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>With Caste Against Him</i></td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1"><i>Hugh Pendexter</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#With_Caste_Against_Him">196</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Corrupt Practices in Elections</i></td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1"><i>Hon. Lucius F. C. Garvin</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Corrupt_Practices_in_Elections">203</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"></td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1"><i>Ex-Governor of Rhode Island</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Pole Baker</i></td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1"><i>Will N. Harben</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Pole_Baker">208</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>How I Dined With President Grant</i></td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1"><i>B. F. Riley</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#How_I_Dined_With_President_Grant">221</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>The New York Children’s Court</i></td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1"><i>Hon. Joseph M. Deuel</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#The_New_York_Childrens_Court">225</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>What Buzz-Saw Morgan Thinks</i></td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1"><i>W. S. Morgan</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#What_Buzz-Saw_Morgan_Thinks">234</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>The Heritage of Maxwell Fair</i></td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1"><i>Vincent Harper</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#The_Heritage_of_Maxwell_Fair">236</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>The Say of Reform Editors</i></td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#The_Say_of_Reform_Editors">245</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>News Record</i></td>
- <td class="tdr_ws1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#News_Record">248</a></td>
- </tr>
- </tbody>
-</table>
-
-<p class="f90 space-above1">Application made for entry as Second-Class Matter at<br />
-New York (N. Y.) Post Office, March, 1905<br />Copyright, 1905, in U. S. and Great Britain.<br />
-Published by <span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine</span>,<br />121 West 42d Street, N. Y.</p>
-
-<p class="center">TERMS: $1.00 A YEAR;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 10 CENTS A NUMBER</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p class="f90">TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE ADVERTISER</p>
-
-<p class="f150"><i>What the Country Thinks of</i></p>
-
-<p class="f200">TOM WATSON’S
-MAGAZINE</p>
-
-<p>“A good fighter.”—<i>Buffalo Times.</i></p>
-
-<p>“What Mr. Watson says is forcible.”—<i>Buffalo Express.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Has a great deal of spicy reading.”—<i>Troy (N. Y.) Times.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Read <span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine</span>.”—<i>Editorial, Boston American.</i></p>
-
-<p>“The Hon. Tom is at the front, naturally and properly.”—<i>N. Y. Sun.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Bears out all that Mr. Watson promised for it.”—<i>Philadelphia Press.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Besides specials there is an abundance of good fiction.”—<i>N. Y. World.</i></p>
-
-<p>“More than twice the money’s worth.”—<i>Stephen Fiske, in Spirit of the Times.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Some capital things in prose and verse.”—<i>New York Times Saturday Review.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Watson’s pen has lost none of its spice.”—<i>Binghamton (N. Y.) Republican.</i></p>
-
-<p>“It stands, and will ever stand, for the principle of truth and justice.”—<i>Chicago
-American.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Tom Watson, the broadest-minded statesman in the South.”—<i>Southern Mercury,
-Dallas, Tex.</i></p>
-
-<p>“He by no means writes as a defeated candidate. Optimism is the keynote of his
-salutatory.”—<i>New York Herald.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Although Mr. Watson attacks his opponents in a lively fashion, he shows no
-bitterness.”—<i>The Fourth Estate.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Watson’s thoughts are upon great things, and he will not be diverted by inconsequential
-affairs.”—<i>Joliet (Ill.) News.</i></p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine</span> is the latest addition to the list of first-class periodicals
-of the country.”—<i>Puget Sound American.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Filled with the piquant, forceful, pungent sentences for which Tom Watson is
-famous.”—<i>Nebraska Independent, Lincoln, Neb.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Clean, entertaining and filled with a full sheath of articles, poems and stories
-by well-known writers.”—<i>Boston Tribune.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Watson is an intelligent, aggressive writer, with the courage needed by every
-man who enters the lists as a reformer.”—<i>Topeka Herald.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Thos. E. Watson is a brilliant writer on history, and an honest man, sincerely
-interested in the welfare of mankind.”—<i>Kansas City Times.</i></p>
-
-<p>“It shall ever stand for the rights of those who believe in Democracy; it stands
-and will ever stand for the principles of truth and justice.”—<i>San Francisco Examiner.</i></p>
-
-<p>“The magazine will be useful as an educational force, and all reformers welcome,
-or should welcome, every publication which is educational in its purpose.”—<i>W. J.
-Bryan’s Commoner.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Following Tom Lawson, Tom Watson will begin his magazine next month.
-Now, if Teddy will use the big stick when the two Toms throw the limelight, the great
-audience will be ‘de-lighted.’”—<i>American Standard, Indianapolis, Ind.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[Pg 129]</span></p>
-
-<p class="f200"><b><i><span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine</span></i></b></p>
-
-<p class="f120"><span class="smcap">Vol. I</span> <span class="ws3">APRIL, 1905</span> <span class="ws3">No. 2</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r25" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="Politics_and_Economics" id="Politics_and_Economics">&nbsp;</a>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>Politics and Economics</i></h2></div>
-
-<p class="center space-above1 space-below1">BY THOMAS E. WATSON</p>
-
-<h3><i>In Russia</i></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">“A TALE of Two Cities,”
-written by the great novelist,
-Charles Dickens, contains
-a vivid picture, which shows
-the relation existing between a nobleman
-of the Old Order in France and
-one of the common people.</p>
-
-<p>In that day the streets were narrow.
-Sidewalks did not separate
-the space used by those who went
-on foot from that used by those
-who went in vehicles. From the
-houses on the one side to the houses
-on the other, travel was free to
-all: those on the ground were ever
-in danger from those who were in
-vehicles.</p>
-
-<p>Dickens describes the progress of
-the carriage of one of the French
-aristocrats, driven at headlong speed
-along these narrow streets. It whirled
-around the corners with a wild rattle
-and clatter, and with an utter lack of
-consideration for pedestrians. Women
-and children scattered, screaming,
-to get out of its way, and men
-clutched at one another to escape the
-danger.</p>
-
-<p>At last, whirling round a corner, by
-a fountain, one of the wheels of this
-furiously driven carriage strikes a
-little child and kills it. Amid the
-loud cries of those who behold the
-sickening spectacle the horses rear
-and plunge and the carriage comes to
-a standstill. The nobleman looks out
-and calmly inquires what has gone
-wrong. He is told that a child has
-been run over.</p>
-
-<p>A man is bending over the lifeless
-form, screaming with grief.</p>
-
-<p>“Why does he make that abominable
-noise?” asks the nobleman.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me, Monsieur le Marquis,
-it was his child,” explains one of the
-crowd humbly.</p>
-
-<p>“Killed!” screams the father, lifting
-and extending his arms. “Dead!” he
-cries.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquis runs his eye over all
-the rabble, as though they were so
-many rats come out of their holes.
-He draws out his purse.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not see why it is that you
-people won’t take care of yourselves
-and children? One or the other of
-you are always in the way. <span class="smcap">How do
-I know that you have not injured
-one of my horses?</span>”</p>
-
-<p>With this he throws a gold coin on
-the ground beside the father of the
-child.</p>
-
-<p>The crazed parent continues to
-scream: “Dead! Dead!”</p>
-
-<p>As the Marquis is driving away, the
-gold coin which he had thrown to the
-ground is flung back into the carriage,
-and falls rattling at his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Hold!” says the Marquis. “Hold
-the horses! Who threw that coin?”</p>
-
-<p>The crowd makes no answer. No
-blouse-clad man dare look him in the
-eye.</p>
-
-<p>“You dogs!” says the Marquis
-smoothly; “I would ride over any of
-you very willingly and exterminate
-you from the earth. If I knew who it
-was that threw that coin I would have
-the brigand crushed under the wheels.”</p>
-
-<p>So cowed were they, so long and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[Pg 130]</span>
-hard had been their experience of
-what such a man could do to them,
-that not a voice or a hand or an eye
-was raised.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the condition of the
-French before the great Revolution of
-1789; and while the picture is drawn
-by a novelist, it is the picture of a
-novelist who painted human life and
-human conditions as they were never
-painted before. His pictures were
-photographs.</p>
-
-<p>In another book, not a novel but a
-history, (the title and the author of
-which shall not be mentioned here),
-there is another description of human
-relations under the <i>Ancien Régime</i>,
-and that description claims to be
-literally true. I quote the author’s
-own words:</p>
-
-<p>“Was it not in this same year, 1788,
-that the Duke of Béthune’s carriage,
-dashing through the narrow streets,
-as was the aristocratic custom, ran
-over a little girl in the rue de la Ferronnerie
-and killed her?</p>
-
-<p>“Did not the mother see it all? Did
-not she rush wildly to the scene,
-snatch up the poor crushed form, gaze
-distractedly into the eyes for light <i>and
-see none</i>, lay her cheek to that of the
-child to feel the warmth of life <i>and feel
-none</i>?</p>
-
-<p>“Still was the little heart, gone the
-breath, blanched the cheeks, frozen
-the tiny hands.</p>
-
-<p>“What sound does the ear ever hear
-like that of the voice that was heard
-of old in Ramah?</p>
-
-<p>“Shriek after shriek split the air,
-piercing every heart in the crowd that
-gathered as the frantic mother, holding
-her dead child in her arms, gave
-voice to her grief.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>And the Duke, what said he?</i> ‘<span class="smcap">Let
-the woman come to my house, and
-she shall be paid for her loss.</span>’</p>
-
-<p>“He had not even left the carriage;
-<i>he had not spoken a word of sympathy
-or regret</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“In his view of the case he had done
-some damage to this woman, and,
-being a man of honor, he was ready to
-settle the bill.</p>
-
-<p>“That was all. ‘Drive on,
-coachman!’—and never a thought more did
-the Duke waste on the mother or
-child. <i>They were not of his world, but
-of another and a lower.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>This was more than one hundred
-years ago. Ever since that time we
-have supposed that the human race
-has been advancing onward and upward
-toward a higher and a better
-civilization.</p>
-
-<p>The philosopher has reflected and
-advised. The statesman has studied
-and planned. The reformer has made
-his battle-axe ring at the door of every
-abuse.</p>
-
-<p>Learning has spoken from all our
-schools. Religion has preached from
-all our temples; and yet in one of the
-nations of Europe, where the king and
-the priest have had absolute control
-of the minds and the bodies of the
-people for hundreds of years, the point
-of view of the aristocrat is precisely
-the same that it was in France in the
-year 1788. And the man of the common
-people submits humbly in 1905
-just as he did in 1788.</p>
-
-<p>In Russia no man’s conscience is his
-own; it belongs to the Church. In
-Russia no man’s action is free; he belongs
-to the State. The Czar rules by
-“<i>Divine Right</i>.” He is the earthly
-representative of <i>the Most High God</i>;
-the common people of the land are
-mere dirt under his feet, being of a
-different world and a lower.</p>
-
-<p>A few Sundays ago his people, in
-the belief that his heart—the heart of
-their “Little Father”—was accessible
-to pity and to the plea for justice,
-were coming in peaceful procession,
-accompanied by their wives and their
-children, to kneel at his feet, lift up
-their supplicating hands, and, with
-their own tongues, reach his ear with
-the true story of their grievances.</p>
-
-<p>Their Little Father refused to see
-them or hear them.</p>
-
-<p>Their Little Father threw a glittering
-line of steel between himself and
-his “children.” The Little Father
-ordered, “<i>Fire!</i>” and his children fell
-before the storm of lead.</p>
-
-<p>They were shot down like dogs;
-women and children were sabered or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[Pg 131]</span>
-crushed under the iron-shod feet of
-horses; they were scourged back to
-their hovels, their cellars, their sweltering
-dens.</p>
-
-<p>And the hundreds of dead bodies
-which littered the streets were thrown
-into the river like so much carrion.</p>
-
-<p>A few days afterward it was considered
-good politics by the Grand
-Dukes who control this contemptible
-little Czar to grant a hearing to a
-deputation representing these same
-laborers.</p>
-
-<p>The whole world had been aroused
-to anger and indignation at the manner
-in which the Cossacks had massacred
-the people.</p>
-
-<p>Public sentiment had made itself
-felt even in the inner circles of the
-heartless oligarchy which controls the
-Russian Empire.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore the Czar was told to receive
-the deputation, and he did so.
-The deputation bowed down to the
-earth before the Czar, who said:
-“<i>Good day, my children.</i> I have summoned
-you to hear my words, and to
-communicate them to your companions.
-The recent unfortunate
-events were <i>the inevitable results of
-your own lawless actions</i>. Those who
-induced you to address this petition
-to me desire to see you revolt against
-me and my government.” After a
-few more words of the same complacent
-character, this representative of
-God on earth said to the delegation:</p>
-
-<p>“I am convinced of <i>the innocence of
-the workingmen</i>, and believe that <i>they</i>
-are well disposed toward me. <span class="smcap">I will
-pardon those transgressors. Return
-again to your work. May
-God assist you.</span>”</p>
-
-<p>The history of the world has so
-many revolting passages that I cannot
-say that this Russian episode surpasses
-others, but when the head of a
-great Christian government tunes his
-tongue to the formula of Divine Right
-which was current during the Dark
-Ages, and gives us a dash of medievalism,
-to be reported by a special correspondent
-in the daily newspapers,
-there is something so anomalous about
-the situation that it makes a peculiar
-impression of its own.</p>
-
-<p>At least 2,000 of this emperor’s
-“children” had been butchered in
-cold blood for the high crime of wishing
-to present a petition to him for
-shorter hours of labor and a more
-liberal recognition of their status as
-human beings.</p>
-
-<p>“May God assist you,” says the
-Czar—leaving it to the benighted
-minds of these untutored workmen to
-find out how it is that God is going to
-assist them, when the representative
-of God on earth shoots them down by
-the thousand, tramples them beneath
-the hoofs of Cossack horses, slashes
-them with Cossack sabers, pierces
-them with Cossack lances, lashes them
-with Cossack scourges, and sends
-them bleeding and howling back to
-their hopeless homes and miserable
-lives, for no offense other than the
-wish to kneel at his feet and pray for
-better treatment.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">I forgive you!</span>” says the Czar.</p>
-
-<p><i>Forgives them for what?</i></p>
-
-<p>For being denied the right to petition
-the throne, for being driven back
-into serfdom, for being hacked and
-slashed and trampled and bullet-riddled
-by the hireling savages of a
-barbarian government!</p>
-
-<p>“<i>As the Great Father above forgives,
-so I, your Little Father, forgives.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Amen. Let the whimpering wretch
-who nurses a saber-slashed head recover
-in peace. <i>He is pardoned for
-having been Cossacked.</i></p>
-
-<p>Let the father who drags his lifeless
-daughter from under the hoofs of the
-warhorse go weep over her in comfort—he
-and she are <i>forgiven for having
-dared to hope for mercy from the Czar</i>.</p>
-
-<p>And the nameless dead who went
-forth that Sabbath morning, following
-the heroic priest whose baton was the
-Cross of Christ—went forth in the
-glow of lofty purpose and pathetic
-hope, and whose bodies are now feeding
-the fishes of the Neva—let them
-also rest in peace—<i>their Little Father
-has forgiven them</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“How do I know that you have not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[Pg 132]</span>
-injured my horses?” asked Dickens’s
-Marquis, while the frantic peasant was
-lamenting his crushed child.</p>
-
-<p>“Let the woman come to my house;
-she shall be paid. Drive on, coachman,”
-said the Duke of Béthune.</p>
-
-<p>“Served you right!” says the Czar.</p>
-
-<p>“Served you right!” say the Grand
-Dukes, speaking through the individual
-called Vladimir.</p>
-
-<p>“You should not have quit work.
-You should not have asked a hearing.
-You got crushed by my troops. I
-forgive you for it. Go back to your
-work. Be content with your lot.
-May God assist you.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus the voice of class-rule speaks
-in Russia today as it spoke in France
-on the eve of the Revolution, and as
-it always has spoken in every part of
-the world <i>since man learned the trick of
-enslaving his brother</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>As everybody knows, the real governors
-of the vast empire of Russia
-are the Grand Dukes. The Czar is a
-mere puppet in their hands. When he
-is obedient they control him. When
-he is disobedient they murder him.
-Thus they killed Paul, the father
-of Alexander the First, because he
-favored an alliance with Napoleon
-Bonaparte, while the Grand Dukes
-favored an alliance with Great Britain.
-They would “remove” the present
-emperor if he were to pit his will
-against theirs.</p>
-
-<p>The spokesman of the present cabal
-of Grand Dukes is Vladimir, as perfect
-a type of the cruel, obstinate,
-narrow-minded aristocrat as Europe
-ever saw in its worst days.</p>
-
-<p>Speaking to Michael Davitt, the
-Irish member of the British Parliament,
-this Grand Duke declared that
-the reason why representation could
-not be given to the common people of
-Russia was that <i>they were not fit to
-exercise it</i>.</p>
-
-<p>He regarded and intended this to be
-an indictment against the common
-people. On the contrary, it is a tremendous
-indictment against the government.</p>
-
-<p>The Russian people, as distinguished
-from the Russian aristocracy, have
-been completely under the control of
-the laws and the administration which
-the ruling class saw fit to establish.
-The altar and the throne have supported
-each other. Church and State
-have been firm and fast allies. Ever
-since the days of Peter the Great the
-minds and the consciences of the
-common people of Russia have been
-absolutely dominated by the ruling
-class.</p>
-
-<p>The shepherds have had full control
-of the flock. The guardians have had
-no interference with the education of
-their wards.</p>
-
-<p>If after so many hundreds of years
-the mass of the Russian people are so
-steeped in ignorance and superstition
-that they are unfit to exercise the
-common rights of manhood, <i>that fact</i>,
-if it be fact, <i>damns the Russian aristocracy
-with the deep guilt of having debased
-the nation committed to its care
-and guidance</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>No substantial reform has ever been
-conceded within a state governed by
-king or aristocracy until the blood of
-sacrifice has first been shed.</p>
-
-<p>Spain would grant no concessions to
-those who claimed freedom of conscience
-in the Netherlands, until years
-of warfare had drenched the soil of
-Holland with the blood of heroes, who
-fought and died for those principles
-which we carelessly and unappreciatively
-enjoy today.</p>
-
-<p>France would loosen none of the
-chains which galled the peasant, until
-that peasant rose in his desperation
-and paid with his life for the liberty
-his descendants inherit. The king
-was deaf to all prayers.</p>
-
-<p>The aristocracy drove from power
-with insults and persecution every
-enlightened minister who proposed to
-better the condition of the common
-people by conceding moderate reforms.
-It was only when the desperation
-of despair roused the people
-to a furious attack upon time-honored
-abuses and vested wrongs of every
-conceivable kind, that “<i>privilege</i>”
-would harken to reason, and Right<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[Pg 133]</span>
-could find a place on the statute-book.</p>
-
-<p>In England the story has been the
-same. In the long procession of the
-ages in which the common people have
-wrung, one by one, from the grip of
-aristocracy those liberties upon which
-we now pride ourselves, the price of
-blood has been always demanded, and
-invariably paid. Never has king or
-aristocrat conceded a single demand
-of the reformers until those reformers
-had either won it in battle or had
-made such a demonstration as <i>struck
-fear into the hearts of the ruling class</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In Russia precisely the same state
-of affairs exists, and if ever liberal institutions
-are to take the place of
-grand ducal tyranny and class-rule in
-that empire the soil will once more
-drink the blood of sacrifice. It was so
-in the beginning, is now, and ever will
-be, perhaps, for human nature is the
-same “yesterday, today and forever.”</p>
-
-<p>The man who believes that the autocratic
-class in Russia will give up its
-advantages without a fight is a superficial
-student of history, just as the
-man who believes that the dominating
-trusts and corporations in these United
-States can be made, by moral suasion,
-to turn loose, is an idle dreamer who
-knows nothing of the greed of class-rule.
-No matter under what name it
-exploits the people, or under what
-form it exerts its power, or under
-what particular system of legislation it
-usurps control and veils its rascalities,
-to make it <i>turn loose</i> you must beat it
-in battle <span class="smcap">or make it afraid</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h3>“<i>Give Them Free Passes and
-They Will Become as Servants</i>”</h3>
-
-<p>The manner in which the railway
-pass can make honest men steal was
-never illustrated more clearly than
-when the Southern Railroad of J. P.
-Morgan, a few days ago, filched
-$142,000 from the taxpayers of this
-country.</p>
-
-<p>It was a shameless, impudent, vulgarly
-common steal—nothing else.
-The Congressmen who stole this money
-for the Wall Street King, J. P. Morgan,
-were led by the well-known statesman
-of Alabama, John H. Bedstead.</p>
-
-<p>Many and many a year ago a
-stupid Post-Office Department adopted
-the policy of paying subsidies to certain
-railroads for the carriage of mails
-which they had already contracted
-to carry.</p>
-
-<p>It is doubtful whether a single
-dollar of this money was well spent.
-To secure the ridiculously high prices
-which the government pays for the
-carriage of the mail, the railroads
-could always have been induced to
-contract for as speedy a delivery as
-was possible.</p>
-
-<p>Subsidies could not make them do
-more. Even a stupid P. O. Department
-woke up to this fact, at last, and
-quit paying the subsidies.</p>
-
-<p>Mails were carried just as fast after
-that as before.</p>
-
-<p>The rate of payment is so high—the
-plum so very luscious—that the
-corporation could not refuse the contracts,
-<i>especially when they could borrow
-a rascally congressman’s frank, stuff
-the bags with bogus mail, and thus secure
-a false average of weight upon
-which they were paid for the whole
-year</i>.</p>
-
-<p>(Congressman Livingston of Georgia
-can tell you how this is done.)</p>
-
-<p>But the Southern Railroad clung
-to the subsidy.</p>
-
-<p><i>It needed the money</i>, as Meredith
-of Virginia once plaintively stated in
-the House.</p>
-
-<p>The P. O. Department no longer
-asked it or advised it—but certain
-congressmen from the South who are
-ravenously fond of free passes stood
-by the hungry corporation, and at
-every session of Congress this subsidy
-is voted.</p>
-
-<p>The false pretense, used as an excuse,
-is that it secures <i>fast mail for the South</i>.</p>
-
-<p>There is no truth in the statement.
-Under an ordinary contract for mail
-carriage, the government can secure
-precisely the same service as the
-railroad gives in return for the subsidy.
-In other words, the $142,000<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[Pg 134]</span>
-is <i>a gift to the Wall Street Monarch,
-J. P. Morgan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Hon. James H. Blount of Georgia was
-for many years Chairman of the Committee
-on Post-Offices and Post Roads.</p>
-
-<p>He understood every detail of that
-service. He bitterly opposed this subsidy.
-I myself heard him denounce
-it in the most wrathful manner; and
-he declared on the floor of the House
-that the people got nothing whatever
-for it.</p>
-
-<p>It was a donation—nothing more.</p>
-
-<p>Blount’s place in Congress is now
-partially filled by a different kind of
-man—and the indignant protest of
-the South against the contemplated
-steal was not voiced by him or by
-any other member from Georgia.</p>
-
-<p>That honor was won by Tennessee.</p>
-
-<p>When Hon. John A. Moon and
-John Wesley Gaines denounced this
-subsidy as it deserved, they earned
-the applause and the grateful remembrance
-of every honest man in the
-South.</p>
-
-<p>The Hon. R. B. Macon of Arkansas
-also deserves the highest credit for his
-opposition to the theft.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, “Slippery Jim” Richardson
-of Tennessee rushed to the relief
-of the corporation, <i>as “Slippery Jim”
-always does</i>, and the robbers, led by
-the Bedstead statesman of Alabama,
-prevailed.</p>
-
-<p>The Congressman from Georgia, or
-Alabama or any other Southern state
-who helps Samuel Spencer and J. P.
-Morgan steal the taxes of the people
-upon the plea that it is done for the
-benefit of the South, merits the scorn
-and contempt of every decent Southern
-man.</p>
-
-<p>But those who excuse their votes
-upon that pretense are hypocrites, or
-dupes.</p>
-
-<p>They know, or should know, that
-the subsidy gives no benefit to the
-South which she would not be entitled
-to under an ordinary mail contract.</p>
-
-<p>The Congressmen who stole this
-money from the treasury for Morgan’s
-Railroad were seduced <i>by the indirect
-bribery of railway favors</i>—JUST THAT,
-and NOTHING ELSE.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h3><i>Two Outlaws</i></h3>
-
-<p>Once upon a time there was a great
-lawyer, orator, financier and statesman
-who was honest. He bore himself
-among men with the port of a
-king, and even strangers, when they
-passed him on the streets, would stop
-and look back at that majestic figure
-with involuntary admiration. To see
-him was to get a new idea of the natural
-impressiveness of a great man. To
-hear him talk was to learn more than
-you had ever dreamed of the infinite
-variety of creative intellect.</p>
-
-<p>I knew him well. And I looked up
-to him as I have since looked up to the
-higher summits of the Rocky Mountains—with
-wondering awe for height
-which I might never hope to reach.</p>
-
-<p>Royal as this man was in all his ways,
-his heart was warm and true. Pure
-as the woman he called wife in his loyalty
-to the marriage tie, his morality
-recognized the double-life nowhere, and
-he scorned all that was mean and false
-and cruel and oppressive.</p>
-
-<p>Always and everywhere he was for
-the under-dog.</p>
-
-<p>A more stalwart soldier of Right
-never stood up in defense of the weak.</p>
-
-<p>In a murder case he was able to
-command a fee of ten thousand dollars;
-but he was proudest of that triumph
-he won in the court-house when
-he volunteered to defend a penniless
-negro, and saved the life of the accused
-by tearing open his shirt and showing
-the scars which the black man had
-received on a battlefield in Virginia
-while defending the life of his young
-master.</p>
-
-<p>Having incurred the displeasure of
-the Federal authorities prior to the
-Civil War and by certain conduct of
-his during that war, the best Government
-the world ever saw told him to
-“git up and git”—and he did it. In
-his native land he was outlawed.</p>
-
-<p>He went to Europe for his health.</p>
-
-<p>While waiting for the wrath of Thaddeus
-Stevens to cool, he studied conditions
-abroad—particularly the railroad
-systems and the public schools.</p>
-
-<p>Upon his return home he created a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[Pg 135]</span>
-demand for a new Constitution for his
-State, and in the convention which
-framed it he was the undisputed leader.</p>
-
-<p>The legislative appropriations for the
-convention were spent before the Constitution
-was finished, and the patriots
-were about to disband. Average patriotism
-moves on its belly, as an army
-does.</p>
-
-<p>The Georgia outlaw of whom I have
-been writing borrowed $25,000 from
-his Cotton Factors, and financed the
-convention until the Constitution was
-finished.</p>
-
-<p>On two occasions only was this Outlaw
-ever seen to weep in public—once
-when the Constitutional Convention of
-Georgia thanked him for his princely
-generosity, and once when he stood at
-the coffin of Alexander H. Stephens to
-deliver the memorial address.</p>
-
-<p>In the new Constitution of Georgia
-the Outlaw believed he had embodied
-three grand provisions:</p>
-
-<p>(1) He had made the looting of the
-treasury a difficult job.</p>
-
-<p>(2) He had established a system of
-public schools to educate at public expense
-the children of the poor as well as
-the rich.</p>
-
-<p>(3) He had put a curb on corporation
-tyranny; made it illegal for competitive
-lines of railways to combine, and
-had created a commission to regulate
-and control the transportation companies.</p>
-
-<p>This was the Georgia Outlaw’s proudest
-work. He exulted over it; he regarded
-it as his monument: he relied
-on it to benefit his people for generations
-to come.</p>
-
-<p>In this belief he lived out the remnant
-of his days, and in this belief he
-died.</p>
-
-<p>Where are now the competing railroads
-in Georgia?</p>
-
-<p>We have none. Mergers, leases, allied
-interests have swallowed them all.
-Monopoly rules from border to border.
-Constitutional provisions are dead letters.</p>
-
-<p>The corporations who nullify our law
-and plunder our people keep paid corruptionists
-busy all the year round to
-defeat investigation and reform.</p>
-
-<p>When the legislature meets, these
-professional corruptionists all flock to
-the Capitol. They remain throughout
-the session.</p>
-
-<p>If any member seeks to vindicate
-the outraged Constitution, these lobbyists
-employ every weapon known to
-the armory of corruptionists to kill the
-measure.</p>
-
-<p>The campaign fund with which the
-present Governor beat his competitor
-was furnished by the railroads.</p>
-
-<p>The notorious Hamp McWorter,
-State lobbyist for the Southern Railroad,
-was tendered a place on the Supreme
-Bench by this Governor, who
-owed his election to railroad money.</p>
-
-<p>The Railroad Commission has been
-reduced to a state bordering on imbecility.
-If they pass orders which the
-corporations dislike the orders are ignored.
-They no more control the railroads
-than the saddle on a horse controls
-the horse.</p>
-
-<p>Three excellent gentlemen draw comfortable
-salaries for acting as commissioners;
-the railroad lawyers have something
-to play with; the corporations
-are sometimes annoyed by having to
-evade direct answers to troublesome
-questions, and by having to get a Federal
-Judge to discipline the Commission;
-but that is about all.</p>
-
-<p><i>J. P. Morgan is the absolute king of
-the railroads of Georgia.</i></p>
-
-<p>He makes the Governor, controls the
-Legislature, overrides the Commission
-and tramples the Constitution of the
-State under his feet.</p>
-
-<p>The Georgia Outlaw made the Constitution
-for the good of the people;
-the Wall Street Outlaw violates it for
-the good of Wall Street plutocrats.</p>
-
-<p>In making the Constitution, the
-Georgia Outlaw had the help of the
-best people of the State, and his work
-was sanctioned by a popular vote after
-it was finished.</p>
-
-<p>In violating the Constitution, J. P.
-Morgan has the aid of the worst men
-in Georgia, and they dare not submit
-their work to a free vote of the people.</p>
-
-<p>The party machinery of the Democratic
-party is prostituted to the vile
-uses of the corporation lobbyists, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[Pg 136]</span>
-the negro vote is held in reserve to be
-used as a club to beat down any organized
-opposition.</p>
-
-<p>The Georgia Outlaw who made our
-Constitution was a Democrat; the Wall
-Street Outlaw who violates it is a Republican.</p>
-
-<p>Georgia is a Democratic state. The
-Democratic party is in full control of
-every branch of the Government.</p>
-
-<p>Thus we have an amazing spectacle.
-A Republican Wall Street outlaw uses
-the machinery of the Democratic party
-in Georgia to trample upon the Constitution
-and plunder the people.</p>
-
-<p>What is the secret of this astonishing
-situation?</p>
-
-<p>Bribery—direct and indirect BRIBERY.</p>
-
-<p>Daily and weekly newspapers subsidized;
-rebates given to certain shippers;
-favors granted where they will
-do the most good; campaign funds supplied
-to needy candidates; free passes
-dealt out by the bushel; princely salaries
-paid to plausible lobbyists.</p>
-
-<p>Bribery, <i>bribery</i>, BRIBERY!</p>
-
-<p>In no other way can you account for
-such a shocking state of affairs.</p>
-
-<p>When Democrats hold down a Democratic
-State while a Wall Street Republican
-robs it, there is just one explanation—only
-one—BRIBERY.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h3><i>Building on Sand, Again</i></h3>
-
-<p>With a strenuous rush and clang
-and clatter, President Roosevelt has
-set out to solve the Railroad
-Problem.</p>
-
-<p>All honor to him for the motive.
-To his everlasting credit be it remembered
-that he recognized the
-abuses of the present system and
-shouldered the task of reform.</p>
-
-<p>But Mr. Roosevelt’s remedy will
-never reach the seat of the disease.</p>
-
-<p>In a case of blood poison, shin-plasters
-for surface abrasions never
-yet saved the patient; and Mr. Roosevelt’s
-plans for another tribunal <i>to
-control the railroads</i> are mere shin-plasters.</p>
-
-<p>The trouble is that <i>the corporations
-will control the new tribunals</i>,
-just as they have controlled the old
-ones.</p>
-
-<p>The tremendous pressure which combined
-capital can bring to bear upon
-any tribunal which Congress creates
-will be irresistible in the future, as it
-has been in the past. Poor human
-nature is simply unable to withstand
-temptations which assume so many
-seductive forms, and intimidations
-which assail natural weakness in such
-a variety of ways. So vast is the
-power of the corporations to reward
-or punish, enrich or impoverish, that
-individuals sink into nothingness by
-comparison. No man is beyond their
-reach. If they cannot act upon the
-official himself, they can strike him
-through his family, or relatives, or
-friends, or business connections.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere, within the little world
-in which he lives, they will find someone
-who will yield to their temptations
-or surrender to their power to
-hurt.</p>
-
-<p>Railroads have been known to do
-great things for the son of a Judge
-who was about to try an important
-case.</p>
-
-<p>Governors, Senators, Judges, Railroad
-Commissioners sometimes have
-relatives who are more or less willing
-to get hold of a good thing.</p>
-
-<p>The wives of the same sometimes
-have approachable kinsmen who, for a
-consideration, are willing to speak
-superciliously of the “demagogues”
-who assail corporations.</p>
-
-<p>Then, again, the newspapers—those
-busy bees!—can be so trained by
-corporation cunning that they will
-give us their sting instead of their
-honey.</p>
-
-<p>If Sir Statesman votes with a
-serene disregard for Sir Demagogue,
-giving the railroads what they want,
-Editorial prowess will take care of him.
-His praises will resound, until his
-sublime head bumps against the stars.
-But should he be his own master,
-obeying no orders save those of his
-conscience, the corporation organs
-can so belittle him, slander him, and
-manufacture lies about him, that he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[Pg 137]</span>
-almost grows ashamed of having been
-honest.</p>
-
-<p>In short, the corporation can make
-“a good time” for those who serve it,
-and “a bad time” for those who defy
-it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Do not all men know this?</i></p>
-
-<p>The more necessary any official is
-to combined capital, the more they
-will do for him, or against him.</p>
-
-<p>Create any tribunal which becomes
-an absolute necessity to the corporations—a
-matter of life and death to
-them—and they will either tempt it
-with bribes which no virtue can resist,
-or assail it with intimidations which
-no courage can defy.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. President, have you studied the
-history of “The Granger Cases” of
-thirty years ago? If not, study it.
-Then you will know better how the
-corporations control human tribunals
-and get rid of laws which are obstacles.</p>
-
-<p>Have you studied the recent decisions
-of the Federal Judges on the
-question of fixing “reasonable rates”?
-If not, study them.</p>
-
-<p>You will then know better what a
-monkey a railroad lawyer can make
-of a Federal Judge.</p>
-
-<p>To create another tribunal for the
-purpose of controlling the railroads, is
-simply the building of another house
-upon sand.</p>
-
-<p>The only solution of the Railroad
-Problem is national ownership, <i>which
-takes away the motive to do wrong</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In no other way can you cure the
-disease.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of establishing another
-Court, or Commission, for the corporations
-to play with, assert the
-principle of Eminent Domain, assess
-the railroads at a fair valuation, pay
-for them partly in treasury notes and
-partly in twenty-year two per cent.
-bonds, place the general management
-of the property under the Interior Department—and
-<i>then</i> the railroads will
-no more think of free passes, rebates
-and discriminations than the Post-Office
-service does of free stamps, or privileged
-patrons who must be enriched
-at the expense of the other patrons.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h3><i>Look at England</i></h3>
-
-<p><i>Collier’s Weekly</i> thinks that the
-United States should pay higher salaries.
-Ambassadors do not get enough.
-Neither do cabinet officers. The
-President also is underpaid. How
-lamentable!</p>
-
-<p>“Look at England,” says <i>Collier’s</i>,
-in effect.</p>
-
-<p>England pays $100,000 to the Lord
-Lieutenant of Ireland, $35,000 to the
-Speaker of the House of Commons, and
-so forth and so on.</p>
-
-<p>Well, let us accept the invitation, and
-<i>look at England</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Who pays the taxes in England?</i> We
-know who pays them here. With us
-the poor man pays the tax.</p>
-
-<p>When he covers his nakedness, when
-he satisfies his hunger, when he builds
-his house, when he buys tools to work
-with, he pays an outrageously oppressive
-Tariff tax.</p>
-
-<p>Rockefeller pays no more Federal
-tax than is paid by many a one-horse
-negro farmer in the South.</p>
-
-<p>Morgan pays less Federal tax than
-many a Western corn-grower who fed
-his stove on ear corn in 1891, because
-it was cheaper than coal.</p>
-
-<p>Blessed are our millionaires! Those
-of them who are neglected by Congress
-are tenderly cared for by the Federal
-judiciary.</p>
-
-<p>Blessed are the rich!—they run the
-government, and the common man
-pays the bill.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Look at England!</span></p>
-
-<p>All right, we now look. This is
-what we see:</p>
-
-<p><i>She compels her railway corporations
-to pay an Income Tax</i> upon the assessed
-valuation of $190,000,000.</p>
-
-<p><i>She compels the Coal Barons and the
-marble quarry owners to pay Income
-Tax</i> upon an assessed valuation of
-$95,000,000.</p>
-
-<p><i>She compels the landlords, bankers
-and merchant princes to pay Income
-Tax</i> upon an assessed valuation of
-$900,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>In this manner <i>she forces her wealthy
-classes</i> to pay on property and income
-nearly <i>two hundred million dollars annually</i><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[Pg 138]</span>
-toward the support of the government!</p>
-
-<p><i>Her tariff duties are levied exclusively
-upon articles which are <span class="smcap">not</span> necessaries
-of life.</i></p>
-
-<p>Not a dollar of Tariff need the poor
-man pay to live in perfect comfort.</p>
-
-<p>This tariff upon the non-necessaries
-amounts to $170,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>From intoxicating liquors the revenue
-is $150,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it will be seen, by a look at
-England, that <i>the poor man can feed
-himself, clothe himself, build a house to
-live in, and supply it with necessary
-furniture without having to pay one
-dollar of national tax</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In this land of the free <i>he must pay
-the Tariff tax, or go naked, eat grass, and
-live in a hole in the ground</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But let us “look at England” again.</p>
-
-<p>We see her operating her Post-Office,
-carrying parcels as well as letters.
-She does not allow express companies
-to amass fortunes by robbing the
-people in the carrying of light freight.</p>
-
-<p>Thus she makes $70,000,000 instead
-of letting the corporations make five
-times that amount.</p>
-
-<p>She owns and operates the telegraph
-lines, and makes $18,000,000 per year
-instead of letting the corporations make
-it.</p>
-
-<p>What, therefore, is the net result of
-the “Look at England”?</p>
-
-<p>We discover that <i>the government
-supports itself upon the possessions of
-the people rather than upon their necessities</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Give us the same system of taxation—compel
-<i>those who possess the wealth to
-pay the</i> expenses of government—and
-I, for one, will say, “<i>Make the salaries
-what you will so long as you, who make
-them, have to pay them</i>.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h3><i>Editorial Comments</i></h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Notoriously</span>, you cannot convict
-a cow-thief when eleven of the jury
-got part of the beef. Judge Swayne
-owes his escape to similar conditions.
-He was acquitted by the United States
-Senate not because he was innocent,
-but because he was regular. He had
-not done anything which the Senatorial
-Jury does not constantly do.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A railroad fell into the Federal Court
-of which Swayne happened to be the
-presiding judge. Swayne possesses
-and controls this railroad through the
-medium of a receiver. In law and in
-morals Swayne is the trustee of the
-property, administering it for the benefit
-of the owners—the stockholders.
-Had he put his fingers into the cash-drawer
-at the ticket office and stolen
-five dollars, his crime would have been
-clear, indefensible. Proof of such an
-act would have compelled a unanimous
-verdict of guilty—even in the United
-States Senate—for Senators do not do
-it that way.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>But Swayne knows how the game is
-played, and he played according to rule.</p>
-
-<p>That is to say, he made use of the
-trust funds which were in his possession
-and control, to fit himself up a palace
-car and stock it with the best eatables
-and drinkables. He then took on, as
-a retinue of servants, the employees
-who were paid to work for the stockholders,
-and appropriated car, provisions,
-employees and all to his own
-private purposes.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>With this luxurious car, upon which
-he had spent the trust funds committed
-to his care, he took himself and family
-on long pleasure trips to his native
-place in Delaware. In this rolling
-palace he and his family enjoyed a
-tour of the West.</p>
-
-<p>The sum total of the trust funds
-which he thus converted to his own use
-could not have been less than thousands
-of dollars, for the car and its
-equipment would have been worth
-hundreds of dollars per day had it been
-used by its owners, the stockholders.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>These facts were not denied.</p>
-
-<p>In law and morals, Judge Swayne
-misappropriated trust funds.</p>
-
-<p>He did not go to the cash-drawer at
-the ticket office and steal five dollars,
-but he took charge of the car, the supplies
-and the employees whose services<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[Pg 139]</span>
-would have put thousands of dollars
-into the cash-drawers, and thus converted
-to his own private use the property
-which was in his Court for management
-and final disposition.</p>
-
-<p>Here was a plain case of dishonest use
-of power and opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>Here was a plain case of robbery—the
-Federal Judge taking that which
-belonged to the stockholders and which
-should have earned them thousands of
-dollars.</p>
-
-<p>In morals and sound law, the crime
-is the same as it would have been had
-he embezzled the same sum in dollars
-and cents.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Washington <i>Post</i> argues that
-the President should have a salary of
-$100,000.</p>
-
-<p>All right. Let us levy a tax or two
-on the rich, and raise the salaries which
-the organs of the rich say are too small.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If the President is discontented with
-his pay, why doesn’t he throw up his
-job?</p>
-
-<p>I know several fellows who will take
-it at the present price.</p>
-
-<p>There is W. J. B., for instance.</p>
-
-<p>I haven’t the faintest doubt that he
-would be willing to quit editing <i>The
-Commoner</i> and assume Presidential
-burdens at $50,000 per year. It would
-be easier work, don’t you know, than
-making twenty-two speeches a day
-for a candidate like Parker, a platform
-like that of St. Louis 1904, and a
-National Chairman like Tom Taggart—the
-gambling-hell man of Indiana.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Governor Folk, of Missouri, was
-elected to stop boodling, banish bribery
-and otherwise purify the political atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>A bill was promptly introduced into
-the Legislature to make it possible to
-convict and punish bribery.</p>
-
-<p>The Senate promptly killed the bill.</p>
-
-<p>Folk is still Governor, however.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Populists throughout the country
-regard with demure interest the modest
-strides which Kansas is taking in State-Socialism.</p>
-
-<p>That Republican State is to own and
-operate oil refineries to the end that
-Rockefeller’s Trust may not swallow
-the earth.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Besides the Kansas State refinery,
-the Republican legislature favors other
-things which are <i>almost</i> new under the
-sun.</p>
-
-<p>No trust, corporation or private
-partnership shall be allowed to sell
-cheaper in one place than in another in
-Kansas—freight being deducted.</p>
-
-<p>All over that State the price must be
-the same.</p>
-
-<p>Maximum freight rates have been
-established, oil pipe lines have been
-made common carriers, and the pumping
-of Kansas gas out of Kansas forbidden.</p>
-
-<p>Is it possible that we Populists are to
-find ourselves reduced to a state of
-mere “eminent respectability” by such
-thoroughgoing revolutionists as the
-Republicans of Kansas?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Washington <i>Post</i> says:</p>
-
-<p>“After Kansas gets her oil refinery in
-operation she may find that Mr. Rockefeller
-will not allow his railroads to
-carry its product.”</p>
-
-<p>When Rockefeller refuses to haul
-Kansas oil because Kansas operates a
-refinery he will probably discover that
-Kansas can do a thing or two against
-his railroads.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When Theodore Roosevelt was a
-very, very young man, he wrote a
-“Life of Gouverneur Morris” in which
-the youthful author sweepingly classified
-Tom Paine as “a filthy little
-atheist.”</p>
-
-<p>Now that Teddy has grown great
-upon the meat which Cæsar fed on,
-the University of Pennsylvania has conferred
-an Honorary Degree upon him.</p>
-
-<p>This is the same institution which
-conferred an Honorary Degree upon
-Tom Paine.</p>
-
-<p>So there you are.</p>
-
-<p>To the extent that the University
-of Pennsylvania can equalize the
-eminence of Teddy and Tom, equality
-has been established.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[Pg 140]</span></p>
-
-<p>So far as the University of Pennsylvania
-can link the two names together,
-they are linked.</p>
-
-<p>Whether he likes it or not, Teddy
-must promenade down the corridors
-of time and fame arm in arm with
-the “filthy little atheist.”</p>
-
-<p>Here is a case where that one of
-the Grecian philosophers who laughed
-at everything would weep: and where
-that one who wept at everything
-would laugh.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Tom Paine being dead cannot resent
-the honors paid Roosevelt by
-any act of renunciation aimed at the
-University of Pennsylvania; but Teddy
-lives and can defend his virtue from
-contaminating contact.</p>
-
-<p>Will he tamely submit to wear the
-Academic honor tainted by the touch
-of Tom Paine, or will he spurn it with
-that disdain which condensed the
-career of a much-enduring, much-achieving
-patriot and democrat in
-the cruelly scornful words, “a dirty
-little atheist”?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Whenever, in the hour of gloom
-and doubt, we call upon the presidents
-of our world-famous colleges
-for guidance we get it. Which is one
-of the reasons why we are still in the
-dark.</p>
-
-<p>A couple of years since, the chief
-sage of one of these world-famous
-institutions told us that Social Ostracism
-was the medicine for the Trust
-evil which would prove a cure-all.</p>
-
-<p>The chief sage neglected to inform
-us how and when we should or could
-dose the wicked corporations with
-this medicine: hence we have not as
-yet socially ostracized J. P. Morgan,
-Ogden Armour or John D. Rockefeller.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Woodrow Wilson, chief sage of
-Princeton University, is the latest
-of the academic guides who offers to
-pilot us out of the gloom.</p>
-
-<p>“Trusts,” remarks Woodrow (who,
-just between you and me, is something
-of a prig), “Trusts can never
-be abolished.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>We must moralize them.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>“The thing that keeps water in
-stocks is secrecy.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Publicity is the remedy.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>When we hear the chief sage of
-Princeton droning and driveling this
-sort of nonsense we wonder whether
-his mind is fixed upon the actual men,
-methods and standards of today, or
-whether he gropes in some Arcadia
-of the past.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Moralize the Trusts?</i>”</p>
-
-<p>How will you do it, impractical
-prig?</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Rockefeller is moral, isn’t he?
-Goes to church every Sunday, endows
-Baptist colleges, sends young
-John to teach Sabbath school and
-attend English revivals, prates of
-morality and the Bible to equal any
-Pecksniff that ever stole the livery of
-the Lord to shear the sheep in.</p>
-
-<p>Yet where was there ever a more
-ruthless criminal on the face of the
-earth than Rockefeller’s Oil Trust?</p>
-
-<p>“The thing that keeps water in
-stocks is secrecy.”</p>
-
-<p>No, it isn’t, impractical prig.</p>
-
-<p>It’s water that keeps the water in
-the stocks.</p>
-
-<p>Secrecy has nothing to do with
-it.</p>
-
-<p><i>The public always knows when the
-watering is done!</i></p>
-
-<p>It was so with the Steel Combine;
-it has been so with every railroad
-reorganization which Morgan has managed;
-it was so with Amalgamated
-Copper.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“<i>Publicity is the remedy!</i>” says Woodrow,
-the Sage.</p>
-
-<p>How can that be?</p>
-
-<p>Does the knowledge that we are
-being robbed stop the robbery?</p>
-
-<p>There is no secrecy about the Beef
-Trust. Publicity there has run riot.</p>
-
-<p>We know all about the Refrigerator
-car, the rebate, the discriminations,
-the Big Stick methods, the colossal,
-un-Godly profits.</p>
-
-<p>We know how the cattle owner is
-robbed when the Trust buys, and how
-the consumer of dressed meat is
-robbed when he buys.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[Pg 141]</span></p>
-
-<p>What good does the Publicity do us?</p>
-
-<p>None at all.</p>
-
-<p>It makes us rage and rant, but
-the Trust gets our money just the
-same.</p>
-
-<p>Have not Lawson and Russell and
-Ida Tarbell and Lincoln Steffens and
-a dozen others put the flashlight upon
-all these monstrous piratical combinations
-until the very children are
-familiar with the details?</p>
-
-<p><i>Publicity?</i></p>
-
-<p>Why, if there is anything that we
-have got a lavish supply of, just now,
-<i>it is Publicity</i>.</p>
-
-<p>What we haven’t got is RELIEF.</p>
-
-<p>If <i>Publicity</i> were a cure for the disease,
-we’d have been well long ago.</p>
-
-<p>As it is, the evil grows worse, day
-by day, in spite of all the <i>Publicity</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Go back to thy gerund-grinding,
-Woodrow—thou insufferable, impractical
-prig. Among the dead Greeks
-and the extinct Romans thy labors
-may, haply, be useful; but when thou
-comest among the practical men of
-today seeking to master actual conditions
-and to take part in the great
-battle of thought, motive and purpose
-which rages around us, thou art but
-“a babby, and a gal babby at that.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Mr. Bryan says, in his <i>Commoner</i>,
-that “the movement begun in 1896
-would have succeeded in 1900 had it
-not been for the Spanish War and
-the increase of the gold supply.”</p>
-
-<p>What a superficial view!</p>
-
-<p>First of all, the “movement” did
-not begin in 1896.</p>
-
-<p>It began when the West and South
-were brought together by the Farmers’
-Alliance in 1890. It was in full swing
-when it gave General Weaver 1,200,000
-votes in 1892. It was running like a
-millrace when it polled 1,800,000 in the
-local elections of 1894. It would
-have scored a triumph in 1896 had the
-Democratic leaders acted honestly with
-the Populists.</p>
-
-<p>After 1896 the “movement” lost
-strength every day.</p>
-
-<p>In 1900 it was doomed to defeat before
-the campaign opened.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Yes; the reform “movement” was in
-full swing in 1890, and one of the good
-things it did was to float into Congress
-a promising young lawyer named Bryan.</p>
-
-<p>To the Populist movement W. J. B.
-owes his rise, for there were then no
-Democrats to speak of in Nebraska.</p>
-
-<p>Populist votes carried his home State
-for him in 1896, when he ran for President
-against McKinley.</p>
-
-<p>In 1900 Nebraska went Republican,
-although the same Bryan was running
-against the same McKinley.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>They are hunting, in Paris, for the
-bones of John Paul Jones, the first and
-greatest sea captain who ever flew the
-Stars and Stripes from the masthead of
-a battleship, and “held the ocean lists
-against the world in mail.”</p>
-
-<p>Congress gives $35,000 to find the
-bones, and of course they will be found—not
-those of the original Jones, perhaps,
-but a good enough lot of bones
-for that amount of money.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Had Gouverneur Morris, the American
-Minister to France, done his duty
-at the time of Paul Jones’s death, by
-giving him a respectable funeral and a
-modest tombstone, the people of this
-country would not now be taxed $35,000
-to find the hero’s grave.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When John Paul Jones—old, broken
-and poor—lay dying in Paris, our
-high-toned Minister to France, Gouverneur
-Morris, sat feasting with aristocratic
-company, and that high-toned
-Minister failed to mark the grave of a
-man who with Nelson’s chances might
-have done even more than Nelson on
-the sea.</p>
-
-<p>His grave was made in an obscure
-churchyard, his resting-place neglected
-and forgotten, covered with accumulated
-deposits, and built over with
-houses.</p>
-
-<p>Those who seek the bones are sinking
-holes seventeen feet deep, in the
-search.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, they will find the body
-of Commodore Jones. That is what
-they are hunting for. Therefore, they
-will find it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[Pg 142]</span></p>
-
-<p>But whether the dust they bring
-back to America will be that of <i>our</i>
-Paul Jones no mortal will ever know.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In his Diary, Gouverneur Morris
-relates:</p>
-
-<p>“A message from Paul Jones that
-he is dying.</p>
-
-<p>“I go thither and make his will....
-Send for a Notary, <i>and leave
-him struggling with his enemy</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>The American Minister to France
-left Paul Jones struggling with
-death!</p>
-
-<p>Left him alone with a French
-Notary, and went away.</p>
-
-<p>To do what?</p>
-
-<p>To “dine with Lord Gower and
-Lady Sutherland”!</p>
-
-<p>The American Minister knew that
-Paul Jones was dying, for he says so.</p>
-
-<p>After the dinner with the English
-Lord and Lady, does the American
-Minister hasten back to the bedside
-of the fellow-countryman whom he
-had left “struggling with his enemy”?</p>
-
-<p>By no means.</p>
-
-<p>He goes to the Louvre to look
-at the paintings; and then takes
-Talleyrand’s mistress with him to
-Jones’s lodging.</p>
-
-<p>“But he is dead—<i>not yet cold</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>And this is all that Gouverneur
-Morris’s Diary records of Paul Jones’s
-death, until the indignation aroused in
-America by his shocking lack of attention
-to the dying hero had thrown him
-upon the defensive.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Who paid the burial expenses of
-Paul Jones?</p>
-
-<p>A Frenchman claims that he did it.</p>
-
-<p>Morris, in his Diary, certainly seeks
-to make the impression that he paid
-them out of Jones’s estate.</p>
-
-<p>The hero left sufficient property
-for the purpose, as can easily be
-shown. Further than that we are left
-in doubt.</p>
-
-<p>But Morris was requested to authorize
-a public funeral, in which fitting
-honors should be paid to the dead.
-Morris refused. He states that he
-(Morris) desired “a private and economical
-funeral.”</p>
-
-<p>He got it. The funeral was so
-economical and so private that neither
-the tongue of repute, identifying the
-grave from generation to generation,
-nor the more unerring evidence of
-shaft or vault guides the footsteps
-of those who come so late, so late!
-to repair the neglect of a hundred
-years.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h3><i>How Private Ownership
-Breaks Down</i></h3>
-
-<p>In the great city of New York there
-is a Subway, an underground street,
-which was opened at the expense of
-the taxpayers. Every dollar of the
-enormous expenditure came out of
-the pockets of the citizens of New
-York. After this Subway had been
-completed and paid for by the people,
-it was turned over to a private corporation
-to be used for private profit.
-It is unnecessary to say that such a
-stupendous piece of folly could never
-have been committed by wise men or
-honest men. On the face of it, the
-transaction reeks with rascality.</p>
-
-<p>Let us, however, contemplate actual
-results. The men to whom the property
-was given operate the Subway
-to make all the money that is possible
-out of the franchise. In doing so they
-have come into collision with their
-employees. The disagreement results
-in a strike. The experienced
-operators of the cars leave them. Inexperienced
-men take hold. The
-necessary consequence is danger to
-life and limb, which only the careless or
-reckless would incur.</p>
-
-<p>The thousands of people in New
-York, to whom the Subway is a daily
-necessity, are incommoded and injured.
-The entire city suffers because
-of the dispute between the corporation
-and its employees.</p>
-
-<p>I will not enter into the question as
-to who is to blame for the strike. It is
-sufficient to say that under private
-ownership of this public thoroughfare
-the strike does occur and all of its evil
-consequences naturally follow. No matter
-whether Belmont is right or wrong;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[Pg 143]</span>
-no matter whether his employees are
-right or wrong, the effect upon the
-public is precisely the same. The
-public gets hurt. The public suffers
-and the public is helpless. Such a
-situation is surely sufficient to arouse
-thought and investigation.</p>
-
-<p>Ever since we have allowed private
-corporations to take charge of public
-utilities we have had the strike, the
-riot, the loss of money, the loss of life.
-As long as private ownership continues
-to exploit these things which belong
-to the public, we will continue to have
-the strike, the riot, loss of money and
-the loss of life.</p>
-
-<p>I say nothing about the amount of
-which the traveling public is robbed
-by these corporations which own the
-public utilities. I confine myself simply
-and solely to this thought, namely,
-that under private ownership the situation,
-which now confronts the traveling
-public of New York City, is liable to
-happen at any time and at any place
-throughout the Union where public
-franchises are used for selfish and
-private gain.</p>
-
-<p>That is the fruit of the tree. It always
-has been; it always will be.
-That kind of tree will <i>never</i> bear any
-other sort of fruit.</p>
-
-<p>Then why not cut it down?</p>
-
-<p>Public ownership removes the <i>motive</i>
-for misuse of public utilities, and when
-the motive goes the evil will go. As
-long as selfishness and greed get <i>the
-chance</i> to gratify themselves at the
-public expense, just so long will they
-do it.</p>
-
-<p>In every conflict between Capital
-and Labor the public loses—no matter
-whether Capital wins or Labor wins.</p>
-
-<p>Public ownership would do for the
-railroads what it does for the Post-Office,
-the Police Department or the
-Fire Department. Who ever heard of
-a strike among the Post-Office employees?
-Or in the police force? Or
-among the firemen?</p>
-
-<p>In Germany the railroads are owned
-and operated by the Government, and
-nobody ever heard of traffic being
-blocked by a strike. In Austria the
-story is the same. In Australia it is
-the same. In New Zealand it is the
-same. Nowhere on earth, so far as I
-know, has there ever been a strike
-when the principle of government
-ownership was in operation. Take
-those cities of England where the street
-cars are owned and operated by the
-city government. Who has ever heard
-of a strike on those lines? From Liverpool
-to Birmingham and from Birmingham
-to Glasgow you will find the
-principle of public ownership applied
-with perfect success, and nowhere has
-the operation of public utilities by the
-public been stopped by a strike.</p>
-
-<p>It seems almost impossible for the
-people of our great cities to learn the
-lesson taught by our own troubles, and
-taught further by the object-lessons
-furnished us by nationalities which
-are not such cowardly slaves of the
-corporations as we seem to be. The
-most amazing feature in American life
-today is the audacity with which
-predatory corporations ride forth, like
-the feudal barons of olden times, to
-strike down the average citizen and
-rob him of what he makes as fast as
-he makes it. Individually, we have
-plenty of courage, but, collectively,
-we are the most cowardly creatures on
-earth. The communal spirit seems to
-be dead within us. Public opinion is
-in its infancy. The strength which
-lies dormant within us because of our
-numbers seems to be a fact of which
-the masses are totally ignorant.</p>
-
-<p>Acting swiftly, acting with unity
-of purpose, acting with the keenest intelligence,
-acting with a magnificent
-courage, the outlaws of modern commercialism
-dash at their object with
-superb confidence in their prowess,
-and they have seized and ridden away
-with the spoils before the drowsy,
-ignorant and timid public have awakened
-to the fact that they have been
-raided, stricken down and plundered.</p>
-
-<p>If the city government of New York
-had at its head a man “with a beard
-on his chin,” he could find a way to
-solve this Subway problem and all
-kindred problems within a few weeks,
-and in such a manner that it would
-never be presented again. He would<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[Pg 144]</span>
-have to be intelligent, he would have
-to be honest, he would have to be
-brave, but if he had these qualities and
-were, besides, a patriot wishing to do
-what is best for the entire community,
-he could win a victory which would
-repeat itself in all the centres of our
-population, and which would terminate
-the reign of rascality which
-now exploits, for personal ends, the
-powers and the opportunities of public
-office in almost every great city of this
-Republic.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>You ask me <i>how</i> could the Mayor do
-anything, when the Subway is legally
-in the hands of a Commission created
-by the Legislature?</p>
-
-<p>I answer that the city has the right
-to use its streets. One of its sovereign
-powers, inherent and absolute, is that
-of keeping its streets open for the safe
-and free use of every citizen. Nobody
-has the right to block travel or traffic,
-nor can the Legislature grant such a
-privilege.</p>
-
-<p>As to the Subway, it is a street
-under the ground. True, the <i>methods</i>
-which he would have to employ differ
-from those which he would apply to a
-surface street, but the <i>principle</i> would
-be precisely the same in the one case
-as in the other.</p>
-
-<p>He could say to Belmont and his
-employees: “You are blocking the
-streets. You are interfering with the
-rights of the people who paid for the
-Subway and who want to use it. You
-and your disputes are as nothing to
-me in comparison with the duty which
-I owe to the city. <i>Arbitrate your difference</i>,
-or I will exert the full sovereign
-power of the municipality to
-seize the Subway and to open it to
-travel.</p>
-
-<p>“And you needn’t run to any judge
-for an injunction, either. In the exercise
-of supreme executive authority
-policing the city and keeping open its
-streets, I shall tolerate no interference
-whatever from corporation lawyers or
-corporation judges. I give you fair
-warning: <i>Arbitrate</i>, and do it quickly—else
-the city takes what is hers, and
-operates the cars which you have tied
-up!”</p>
-
-<p>Who doubts that a threat like this,
-made by the right kind of Mayor,
-would bring Belmont to his senses in
-a couple of minutes? Arbitrate! Of
-course he would arbitrate—quickly
-and gladly.</p>
-
-<p>And the Mayor would have the
-enthusiastic support of ninety-nine
-men out of every hundred in New
-York.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="The_Patriot" id="The_Patriot">&nbsp;</a>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>The Patriot</i></h2></div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span class="i0"><span class="bigfont">H</span>IS eyes ashine with ancient memories,</span>
- <span class="i2">His blood aglow with subtle racial fire,</span>
- <span class="i2">For him are quenched the stirrings of desire.</span>
- <span class="i0">The pageant of the world has ceased to please;</span>
- <span class="i0">Hushed are the evening songs—the lutes of ease;</span>
- <span class="i2">In the war flame, that old ancestral pyre,</span>
- <span class="i2">He casts his hopes of home, wife, child or sire;</span>
- <span class="i0">Instinct of race, a passion more than these,</span>
- <span class="i0">The spirit of his country, holds him thrall;</span>
- <span class="i2">In him forgotten heroes, forbears, rise,</span>
- <span class="i2">Strengthening his heart to common sacrifice;</span>
- <span class="i0">Out of the darkness generations call</span>
- <span class="i0">And martyr hosts, that unrecorded fall,</span>
- <span class="i2">Salute him from the void with joyful cries.</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="right"><span class="smcap">London Daily News.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[Pg 145]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="The_Atonement_of_Hustler_Joe" id="The_Atonement_of_Hustler_Joe">&nbsp;</a>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>The Atonement of Hustler Joe</i></h2></div>
-
-<p class="center space-above1 space-below1">(COMPLETE NOVELETTE)</p>
-
-<p class="center space-above1 space-below1">BY ELEANOR H. PORTER</p>
-
-<h3>PROLOGUE</h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">A TOY horse or a raspberry-tart
-is not often responsible for the
-loss of a life, but a succession
-of toy horses, raspberry-tarts, and
-whatever else the heart of a small boy
-craved, given in a reckless abandonment
-of superfluity, was certainly responsible
-for the wilfulness in the character
-of Paul Weston; and the wilfulness,
-in turn, was responsible for the
-quarrel.</p>
-
-<p>At twenty he was a restless, impulsive,
-good-hearted, broad-chested,
-strong-limbed young fellow, the adored
-of his mother and the pride of his
-father. And yet it was over the prostrate
-form of this same father that he
-now stood—the crack of the revolver
-still ringing in his ears, the weapon itself
-still clutched in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>Was the man dead? But a minute
-before he had been speaking; now
-there was a fast-growing pool of
-something dark and horrible on the
-floor at his side.</p>
-
-<p>Paul Weston brushed the back of
-his left hand across his eyes and
-looked down at the still smoking
-revolver. Had his miserable temper
-brought him to this? His features
-worked convulsively and his eyes
-widened in horror. Throwing the revolver
-from him to the farthermost
-corner of the room, he turned and fled.</p>
-
-<p>Out the door, through the gate, and
-down the long street of the little New
-England village he ran. It was dusk,
-but he stumbled as though it were the
-darkness of midnight.</p>
-
-<p>The neighbors looked and wondered
-at the fleeing figure, but only their
-eyes spoke disapproval. If Paul Weston
-chose to use the main street of the
-village as a race-course, it was not for
-them to interfere—they knew him too
-well. The town fool alone ventured
-to accost him.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi, there—go it! What’s after
-ye?” he shouted; but the jeering
-words and the vacant smile died on
-his lips at sight of the face Paul turned
-upon him.</p>
-
-<p>Down the street, across the open
-field, and over the fence at a bound—surely
-the friendly shelter of the woods
-receded as he ran! But his pace did
-not slacken even in the dense shadows
-of the forest. On and on, stumbling,
-falling, tearing his flesh and his clothing
-on the thorns and brambles until,
-exhausted, he dropped on a grassy
-mound, miles away from that dread
-thing he had left behind him.</p>
-
-<p>The wind sighed and whispered over
-his head. Weston had always loved
-the sound, but tonight it was only an
-accusing moan in his ears. Even the
-stars that peeped through the leaves
-above were like menacing eyes seeking
-out his hiding-place.</p>
-
-<p>An owl hooted; Weston raised his
-head and held his breath. Then
-through the forest came the baying of
-a distant hound. The man was on his
-feet in an instant. Something tightened
-in his throat and his heart-beats
-came in slow, suffocating throbs. He
-knew that sound! They sought for—murderers
-with creatures like that!
-With a bound he was away on his wild
-race again. Hours later, the gray
-dawn and his nearness to a small<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[Pg 146]</span>
-village warned him to move more
-cautiously.</p>
-
-<p>All that day he tramped, without
-rest, without food, reaching at night
-the seaport town that had been his
-goal. Skulking through the back
-streets he came to a cheap eating-house
-down by the wharves.</p>
-
-<p>The odor of greasily fried meats and
-bad coffee floated out the open door,
-causing Weston to sniff hungrily. In
-a moment he had thrown caution to
-the winds, entered the restaurant and
-slunk into the nearest seat.</p>
-
-<p>By his side lay a discarded newspaper.
-He reached for it with a shaking
-hand, then snatched his fingers
-back as though the printed sheet had
-scorched them. No, oh, no—he dared
-not look at it! His mind’s eye pictured
-the headlines, black with horror:</p>
-
-<p class="center">“MURDER! PARRICIDE! THE<br />
-FIEND STILL AT LARGE!”</p>
-
-<p>He pushed back his chair and rushed
-from the room. An hour later he had
-shipped as a sailor on a vessel bound
-for San Francisco around Cape Horn.</p>
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p>The cracker-barrels and packing-boxes
-that usually served for seats in
-Pedler Jim’s store were, strange to say,
-unoccupied. Bill Somers, sole representative
-of “the boys,” sat cross-legged
-on the end of the counter, meditatively
-eying a dozen flies that were
-buzzing happily around a drop of
-molasses nearby. Pedler Jim himself
-occupied his customary stool behind
-the counter.</p>
-
-<p>It was ten years now since the little
-hunchback pedler first appeared in
-Skinner Valley. He came from no
-one knew where, driving a battered
-and worn horse attached to a yet more
-battered and worn pedler’s cart. The
-horse had promptly taken advantage
-of the stop in the village, and by dying
-had made sure of never leaving the
-place for the wearisome trail again.
-The miners say that the night the old
-horse died, its master patted and
-stroked the poor dead head until it
-was cold and stiff, and that the morning
-found him fondling the useless reins
-with his shriveled, misshapen fingers.</p>
-
-<p>The next day he bartered for a tiny
-piece of land fronting the main street.
-When he had wheeled his old cart into
-proper position upon it, he busied
-himself some time with a bit of board
-and a paint pot, finally producing a
-rough sign bearing the single word
-“Store.” This creation he nailed with
-much satisfaction upon the front of
-the dashboard, then sat down on one
-of the thills to wait for a customer.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it was the oddity of the
-thing; or perhaps there was something
-in the deformed little body that appealed
-to the strong-limbed, straight-backed
-miners; or perhaps it was the
-wonderful knowledge of healing herbs
-and soothing lotions that Pedler Jim
-possessed—perhaps it was a little of all
-three. At all events, the new store
-prospered amazingly so that in a
-year its owner bought more land,
-trundled the old cart to the rear, and
-erected a small cabin on his lot. This,
-in turn, gave place to a good-sized
-frame building bearing the imposing
-gilt-lettered sign:</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">James A. Powers</span>,<br />
-<i>Skinner Valley Emporium</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The hunchback rolled this high-sounding
-title under his tongue with
-keen relish, but it was still “the store”
-to the boys, and its owner was only
-“Pedler Jim.”</p>
-
-<p>Bill Somers shifted his position on
-the end of the counter and poked a
-teasing finger at the agitated mass of
-wings and legs around the molasses
-drop. The storekeeper grinned appreciatively
-and broke the silence:</p>
-
-<p>“Say, who’s yer new man?”</p>
-
-<p>“Blest if I know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he’s got a name, hain’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe he has—then again, mebbe
-he hain’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“But don’t ye call him nothin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, we <i>call</i> him ‘Hustler Joe’; but
-that ain’t no name to hitch a grocery
-bill on to—eh, Jim?”</p>
-
-<p>The little hunchback slid from his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[Pg 147]</span>
-stool and brought his fist down hard
-on the counter.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s jest the point! He don’t
-git much, but what he does git he pays
-fur—spot cash. An’ that’s more’n I
-can say of some of the rest of ye,” he
-added, with a reproachful look.</p>
-
-<p>Bill laughed and stretched his long
-legs.</p>
-
-<p>“I s’pose, now, that’s a dig at me,
-Jim.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t call no names.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know yer lips didn’t, but yer eyes
-did. Say, how much do I owe, anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>With manifest alacrity Jim darted
-over to the pine box that served for a
-desk.</p>
-
-<p>“There ain’t no hurry, Jim,” drawled
-Somers, with a slow smile. “I
-wouldn’t put ye out fur nothin’!”</p>
-
-<p>The storekeeper did not hear. He
-was rapidly turning the greasy, well-thumbed
-pages of the account-book
-before him.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s jest twenty dollars and fourteen
-cents, now, Bill,” he said, his
-brown forefinger pausing after a run
-down one of the pages. “Ye hain’t
-paid nothin’ since Christmas, ye know,”
-he added significantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” sighed Bill, with another
-slow smile, “mebbe ’twouldn’t do no
-harm if I ponied up a bit!” And he
-plunged both hands into his trousers
-pockets.</p>
-
-<p>Pedler Jim smiled and edged nearer,
-while Bill drew out a handful of change
-and laboriously picked out a dime and
-four pennies.</p>
-
-<p>“There!” he said, slapping the fourteen
-cents on the counter, “now it’s
-even dollars!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll be jiggered!” cried Pedler
-Jim, turning his back and walking
-over to the window.</p>
-
-<p>Somers looked after the retreating
-figure, and a broad smile lighted up his
-round red face. Slipping his hand inside
-his coat he pulled out a roll of
-greenbacks. In another minute the
-fourteen cents lay neatly piled on top
-of two ten-dollar bills. The man
-hastily slipped into his old position and
-coughed meaningly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye don’t seem pleased,” he began.</p>
-
-<p>The hunchback did not stir.</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe ye don’t want my money,”
-hazarded the miner.</p>
-
-<p>No answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, I can take it back,” and
-Somers shuffled noisily off his seat.</p>
-
-<p>Pedler Jim wheeled about and came
-down the store with his small black
-eyes blazing.</p>
-
-<p>“Jiminy Christmas, man! If you
-ain’t enough ter try a saint! I’m
-blest if I can git mad at ye, though, fur
-all yer pesterin’ ways. Now what in
-thunder—” The storekeeper’s jaw
-dropped, and his mouth fell open idiotically
-as his eyes rested on the greenbacks.
-“Well, I’ll be jiggered!” he
-murmured again, and clutched the
-money in his claw-like fingers.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment the outer door
-opened to admit a tall, broad-shouldered
-miner wearing a slouch hat well
-over his eyes. In a trice Pedler Jim
-was the obsequious merchant behind
-the counter.</p>
-
-<p>The newcomer gave his order in a
-low voice and stood motionless while
-the hunchback busied himself in filling
-it.</p>
-
-<p>“Anything else?” suggested Jim
-wistfully, as he pushed a small package
-toward him.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I guess that’ll do for this time,”
-returned the man, picking up his purchase
-and motioning toward a dollar
-bill on the counter.</p>
-
-<p>Pedler Jim looked up quickly and
-something like tenderness came into
-his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I—guess you’re from Yankee-land,
-stranger; shake, won’t ye?” he said,
-thrusting his hand across the counter.
-“Gorry! but it’s prime ter see a good
-old New Englander among all these
-dagos and Dutchmen and the Lord
-only knows what else here. Bill an’
-me was gittin’ lonesome—I’m glad ye
-come!”</p>
-
-<p>At Jim’s first words the stranger
-had stepped back, but the outstretched
-hand had brought him to the counter
-again, and he gave the brown fingers
-a grip that made the little hunchback<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[Pg 148]</span>
-wince with pain. But Pedler Jim’s
-welcome was scarcely spoken before
-the man had turned and disappeared
-through the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I snum! I should think he
-was ‘Hustler Joe’!” murmured Jim.
-“If he didn’t even hustle off and leave
-his change,” he added, looking helplessly
-at the dollar bill on the counter.</p>
-
-<p>Somers laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Hustle!—you’d oughter see him at
-the mines! why, that man works like
-all possessed. He don’t speak nor look
-at a soul of us ’nless he has to. If
-there’s a chance ter work extry—he gits
-it; an’ he acts abused ’cause he can’t
-work every night and Sundays to
-boot. Gosh! I can’t understand him,”
-finished Bill, with a yawn and a long
-stretch.</p>
-
-<p>“That ain’t ter be wondered at—’tain’t
-‘Hustler Bill’ that the boys call
-you,” replied Jim, a sly twinkle in his
-beady little eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Somers sprang to his feet and towered
-over the hunchback, his fist
-raised in pretended wrath.</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t ye take a feller yer own
-size?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>The hunchback chuckled, dove under
-the upraised arm, and skipped around
-the room like a boy. An encounter
-like this was meat and drink to him,
-and the miners good-naturedly saw to
-it that he did not go hungry.</p>
-
-<p>Somers shook his fist at the curious
-little creature perched on the farthermost
-cracker-barrel and slouched out
-the door.</p>
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>Skinner Valley did not know very
-much about Hustler Joe. Six weeks
-ago he had appeared at the Candria coal
-mine and asked for work. Since that
-time he had occupied an old shanty on
-the hillside—a shanty so hopeless in its
-decrepitude that it had long been
-abandoned to bats and owls. Hustler
-Joe, however, had accomplished wonders
-in the short time he had lived
-there.</p>
-
-<p>It was a popular belief in the town
-that the man never slept. Stray
-wanderers by the shanty had reported
-hearing the sound of the hammer and
-saw at all hours of the night. Outside
-the shanty loose timbers, tin cans,
-rags and refuse had given way to a
-spaded, raked and seeded lawn. The
-cabin itself, no longer broken-roofed
-and windowless, straightened its back
-and held up its head as if aware of its
-new surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>This much the villagers could see;
-but inside it was still a mystery, for
-Hustler Joe did not seem to be hospitably
-inclined, and even the children
-dared not venture too near the cabin
-door.</p>
-
-<p>It was vaguely known that the man
-had come over the mountains from
-San Francisco, and with that the most
-were content. Keen eyes and ears like
-Pedler Jim’s were not common in the
-community, and the little hunchback’s
-welcome to the man because he came
-from “Yankee-land” was not duplicated.</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe had not been in the habit
-of frequenting the store. His dollar
-bill was in Pedler Jim’s hands a week
-before the disturbed storekeeper had
-an opportunity of handing back the
-change. The miner had forgotten all
-about the money and had wandered
-into the store simply because each
-stick and stone and dish and chair at
-home was in its place and there was
-absolutely nothing for his nervous
-fingers to put in order.</p>
-
-<p>Joe pushed open the door of the
-“emporium,” then halted in evident
-indecision. A dozen miners were jabbering
-in half as many languages over
-by the stove, huddled around it as
-though the month were January instead
-of June, and the stove full of
-needed heat instead of last winter’s
-ashes. Bill Somers lolled on the
-counter, and Pedler Jim was bowing
-and scraping to a well-dressed stranger
-whose face Joe could not see.</p>
-
-<p>The miner had half turned to go
-when Pedler Jim’s sharp eyes fell upon
-him. In another moment the hunchback
-was by his side thrusting some
-change into his fingers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[Pg 149]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You forgot it, ye know—when ye
-bought them nails,” he said hurriedly;
-then added, “why don’t ye come in
-and set down?”</p>
-
-<p>For a second Joe hesitated; then he
-raised his head with a peculiarly
-defiant up-tilting of his chin, and
-strolled across the room to an unoccupied
-cracker-barrel behind the gesticulating
-miners. Pedler Jim went back
-to his customer.</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t find a better smoke
-within fifty miles!” he said pompously,
-giving the box of cigars on the counter
-a suggestive push.</p>
-
-<p>The well-dressed man gave a disagreeable
-laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s hardly saying very
-much, is it?” he questioned.</p>
-
-<p>At the stranger’s first words Hustler
-Joe glanced up sharply. His fingers
-twitched and a gray look crept around
-the corners of his mouth. The room,
-the miners, and Pedler Jim seemed to
-fade and change like the dissolving
-pictures he used to see when a boy. A
-New England village street drifted
-across his vision with this well-dressed
-stranger in the foreground.
-He could even see a yellow-lettered
-sign out one of the windows:</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">George L. Martin</span>,<br />
-<i>Counselor at Law</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Then it all faded into nothingness
-again—all save the well-dressed
-stranger in the tall black hat. In
-another minute the jabbering miners,
-Bill Somers, and the obsequious hunchback
-were in their old places, and
-Pedler Jim was saying:</p>
-
-<p>“Jest try ’em, an’ see fur yerself.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, I’ll take you at your
-word,” laughed the stranger, picking
-out a cigar and leisurely striking a
-match. “It’s a pity you can’t have
-a few more languages going in here,”
-he added, throwing the dead match on
-the floor and glancing at the group
-around the stove. “I suppose Barrington
-employs mostly foreigners in the
-mines, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>The hunchback thrust his brown
-fingers through his hair and made a
-wry face.</p>
-
-<p>“Foreigners!” he exclaimed. “I was
-born and raised in the state of Maine,
-an’ if it wa’n’t fur Bill Somers—he’s
-from York State—to talk God’s own
-language to me once in awhile, I’d
-’a’ gone daft long ago!”</p>
-
-<p>The stranger chuckled softly.</p>
-
-<p>“You hav’n’t anyone here at the
-works from New England, then, I take
-it, eh?” he asked, with studied carelessness.</p>
-
-<p>A smile crept up from Pedler Jim’s
-mouth and looked out of his twinkling
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we have—” he began, then
-his eyes suddenly lost their twinkle as
-they encountered the despairing appeal
-from beneath Hustler Joe’s slouch
-hat. “We have—been wishin’ there
-would be some,” he finished after the
-slightest of hesitations. “We’ve got
-everythin’ else under the sun!”</p>
-
-<p>Bill Somers’s long legs came down
-from the counter abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Jim, there’s Hustler Joe—ain’t
-he from New England?”</p>
-
-<p>The hunchback’s little beany eyes
-turned upon Somers and looked him
-through and through without winking.</p>
-
-<p>“Hustler Joe came over the mountains
-from San Francisco, I have heard,”
-he said blandly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, so he did—so he did!” murmured
-Somers, and sauntered out the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>The man on the cracker-barrel over
-in the corner pulled his hat down over
-his eyes and sank back into the shadows.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the stranger, tossing a
-bill and a small white card on the
-counter, “put me up a dozen of those
-cigars of yours, and there’s my card—if
-you happen to know of any New
-Englanders coming to these parts, just
-let me know at that address, will you?
-I’ll make it worth your while.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very good, sir, very good,” murmured
-Pedler Jim, making a neat package
-of the cigars. “Thank you, sir,”
-he said suavely, holding out the change
-and glancing down at the card; “thank
-you, Mr.—er—Martin.” And he
-bowed him out of the store.</p>
-
-<p>One by one the miners went away;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[Pg 150]</span>
-still the figure on the cracker-barrel
-remained motionless. When the last
-jabbering foreigner had passed through
-the door, Hustler Joe rose and walked
-across the room to the pine box where
-the storekeeper was bending over his
-account-book.</p>
-
-<p>“See here, little chap,” he began
-huskily, “that was a mighty good turn
-you did me a bit ago—just how good it
-was, I hope to God you’ll never know.
-What you did it for is a mystery to me;
-but you did it—and that’s enough. I
-sha’n’t forget it!”</p>
-
-<p>Something splashed down in front
-of Pedler Jim, then the outer door
-slammed. When the hunchback
-turned to his accounts again a blot and
-a blister disfigured the page before
-him.</p>
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>John Barrington, the principal
-owner of the Candria mine, did not
-spend much of his time in Skinner
-Valley. Still, such time as he did
-spend there he intended to be comfortable.
-Indeed, the comfort of John
-Barrington—and incidentally of those
-nearest and dearest to him—was the
-one thing in life worth striving for in
-the eyes of John Barrington himself,
-and to this end all his energies were
-bent.</p>
-
-<p>In pursuance of this physical comfort,
-John Barrington had built for his
-occasional use a large, richly fitted
-house just beyond the unpleasant
-smoke and sounds of the town. A
-tiny lake and a glorious view had
-added so materially to its charms that
-the great man’s wife and daughter had
-unconsciously fallen into the way of
-passing a week now and then through
-the summer at The Maples, as it came
-to be called in the family—“Skinner
-Valley” being a name to which Miss
-Ethel’s red lips did not take kindly.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Barrington’s factotum-in-chief
-at the mines, Mark Hemenway, lived
-at the house the year round. He was
-a man who took every possible responsibility
-from his chief’s shoulders and
-was assiduous in respectful attentions
-and deferential homage whenever the
-ladies graced the place with their presence.</p>
-
-<p>To Ethel this was of little consequence,
-as she paid no more attention
-to him than she did to the obsequious
-servant behind her chair; but to Mrs.
-Barrington he was the one drawback
-to complete enjoyment of the place.</p>
-
-<p>Mark Hemenway was a man of limited
-means, but of unlimited ambitions.
-Every day saw him more and more indispensable
-to his comfort-loving employer,
-and every day saw him more
-and more determined to attain to his
-latest desire—nothing less than the
-hand of this same employer’s daughter
-in marriage.</p>
-
-<p>In a vague way Mrs. Barrington was
-aware of this, though Hemenway was,
-as yet, most circumspect in his actions.
-Mrs. Barrington was greatly disturbed,
-otherwise she would not have ventured
-to remonstrate with her husband that
-Sunday afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear,” she began timidly,
-“isn’t there any other—couldn’t Mr.
-Hemenway live somewhere else—rather
-than here?”</p>
-
-<p>Her husband turned in his chair, and
-a frown that Mrs. Barrington always
-dreaded appeared between his eyebrows.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Bess, why can’t you leave
-things all comfortable as they are? I
-like to have you and Ethel here first
-rate, but I don’t see why you think you
-must upset things when you stay only
-five minutes, so to speak.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I don’t mean to upset things,
-John, but—I don’t like him!” she finished
-in sudden asperity.</p>
-
-<p>“Like him! My dear, who expected
-you to? Nobody supposes he is
-one of your palavering, tea-drinking
-members of the upper ten! He isn’t
-polished, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Polished! He’s polished enough,
-in a way, but—I don’t like the metal
-to begin with,” laughed Mrs. Barrington,
-timidly essaying a joke.</p>
-
-<p>Her husband’s frown deepened.</p>
-
-<p>“But, Bess, don’t you see? I must
-have him here—it’s easier for me, lots<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[Pg 151]</span>
-easier. Why can’t you let things be as
-they are, and not bother?” he urged
-in the tone of a fretful boy.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Barrington knew the tone, and
-she knew, too, the meaning of the nervous
-twitching of her husband’s fingers.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well, John,” she said, hastily
-rising, “I won’t say anything more,”
-and the door closed softly behind her.</p>
-
-<p>As she passed through the hall she
-caught a glimpse of Ethel and her
-friend starting for a walk, and the
-strange unlikeness of the two girls
-struck her anew. Just why Ethel
-should have chosen Dorothy Fenno
-for a week’s visit to The Maples, Mrs.
-Barrington could not understand.
-Perhaps it would have puzzled Ethel
-herself to have given a satisfactory
-reason.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel Barrington had met Dorothy
-Fenno the winter before on a committee
-connected with a fashionable
-charity, and had contrived to keep in
-touch with the girl ever since, though
-the paths of their daily lives lay wide
-apart.</p>
-
-<p>“She is mixed up with ‘settlement
-work’ and ‘relief bands,’ and everything
-of that sort,” Ethel had told her
-mother; “but she’s wonderfully interesting
-and—I like her!” she had finished
-almost defiantly.</p>
-
-<p>The girls leisurely followed a winding
-path that skirted the lake and lost
-itself in the woods beyond. They had
-walked half an hour when they came to
-the clearing that commanded the finest
-view in the vicinity.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel dropped wearily to the ground
-and, with her chin resting in her hand,
-watched her friend curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, my dear girl, you——”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t—don’t speak to me!” interrupted
-Dorothy.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel Barrington bit her lips; then
-she laughed softly and continued to
-watch the absorbed face of her companion—this
-time in the desired
-silence. By and bye Dorothy drew a
-long breath and turned to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it beautiful!” she murmured
-reverently.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barrington gave a short laugh
-and sat up.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, very beautiful, I suppose; but,
-do you know, I’ve seen so much I’m
-spoiled—absolutely spoiled for a scene
-like that? I’d rather look at you—you
-are wonderfully refreshing. I
-don’t know another girl that would
-have snapped me up as you did a
-minute ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, I beg your pardon,” began
-Dorothy in distress.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t!” interrupted her friend, with
-a petulant gesture; “you’ll be like all
-the rest if you do.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it was very rude,” insisted
-Dorothy earnestly. “A view like this
-always seems to me like a glorious
-piece of music, and I want everything
-quiet as I would if I were hearing a
-Beethoven symphony, you know.
-That is why I couldn’t bear even the
-tones of your voice—but it was rude of
-me, very.”</p>
-
-<p>Ethel sighed, and fell to picking a
-daisy to pieces.</p>
-
-<p>“I used to feel that way, once,” she
-said; “I did, really.”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t a doubt of it,” replied
-Dorothy, with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>“But I don’t any more!”—the daisy
-was tossed aside.</p>
-
-<p>“No?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; I’m like a five-year-old that’s
-had too much candy, I suppose. I’ve
-seen the Alps and the Rockies, the
-Rhine and the St. Lawrence; and
-yet, the first time I looked at that
-view I felt just as you did. But
-now——!”</p>
-
-<p>“You need something outside yourself
-to give zest to your life, my dear,”
-said Dorothy, her eyes on the town
-below.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel looked at her narrowly.</p>
-
-<p>“Now see here, my dear, I love you—and
-you know it, but I just can’t
-stand any of that settlement talk!”</p>
-
-<p>“I never said settlement,” laughed
-Dorothy, her eyes still on the straggling
-cottages.</p>
-
-<p>“I know, but—well, I just simply
-can’t! How in the world you stand
-those dismal sounds and sights and—and
-smells,” she added, with a grimace,
-“I don’t understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose the miners live in those<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[Pg 152]</span>
-cottages,” mused Dorothy aloud, as
-though she had not heard.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose so,” acquiesced Ethel
-indifferently. “Others live over the
-hill in Westmont.”</p>
-
-<p>“They don’t look as though they’d
-be very comfortable,” continued Dorothy
-softly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know; people like that
-don’t mind such things, I fancy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you ever ask them?”</p>
-
-<p>Ethel looked up in quick suspicion,
-but Dorothy’s face was placid.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not! How silly!”</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose you do, sometimes,” suggested
-Dorothy, quite as a matter of
-course.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought that was what you were
-coming to!” flashed Ethel. “My dear
-girl, you have no idea what those
-miners are,” she continued in a superior
-tone. “In the first place, I
-don’t think there is one of them that
-understands a word of English, and
-I’d be afraid to trust my life anywhere
-near them.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the women and the little children—they
-wouldn’t hurt you. Isn’t
-there something you could do for them,
-dear?” urged Dorothy.</p>
-
-<p>A rumble of thunder brought the
-girls to their feet before Ethel could
-reply, and a big storm-cloud coming
-rapidly out of the west drove the
-whole thing from her mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Quick—we must run!” she exclaimed.
-“We can’t reach home,
-but there’s an old shanty just behind
-those trees over there. No one lives
-in it, but ’twill give us a little shelter,
-maybe,” and in another minute the
-girls were hurrying down the hill.
-Big drops of rain and a sharp gust of
-wind quickened their steps to a run.</p>
-
-<p>Had Ethel not been running with
-her head bent to the wind she would
-have noticed the changed appearance
-of the shanty to which they were
-hastening. But as it was, she rushed
-blindly forward, up the steps, and
-pushed open the door, Dorothy close
-by her side. Once across the threshold
-she stopped in amazement, while
-Dorothy dropped breathlessly into the
-nearest chair.</p>
-
-<h3>IV</h3>
-
-<p>The tiny room was exquisite in its
-orderly neatness. The furniture was of
-the plainest, but bore an air of individuality.
-On one side was a case
-of books, and the mantel above the
-fireplace was decorated with quaint
-curios and beautiful shells.</p>
-
-<p>A shadow fell across the floor.</p>
-
-<p>“A nearer view might the better
-satisfy your curiosity, madam,” said a
-voice from behind Ethel.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel turned sharply to find herself
-face to face with a man in the rough
-garb of a miner. The man’s eyes
-looked straight into hers without
-flinching.</p>
-
-<p>“I said that a nearer view might the
-better satisfy your curiosity in regard
-to my poor possessions,” he repeated.</p>
-
-<p>“Yours?” she stammered, a look of
-repulsion coming into her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The look and the shrinking gesture
-were not lost on Hustler Joe. His
-eyes darkened. His broad shoulders
-bent in a mocking bow and his right
-hand made a sweeping flourish.</p>
-
-<p>“Mine, madam; but consider them
-yours until the storm is over. I’ll not
-intrude”—and he was gone.</p>
-
-<p>A flare of lightning and a deafening
-report made his exit wonderfully
-dramatic to Dorothy. The rain was
-falling in torrents, too—a fact which
-suddenly occurred to Ethel. For a
-moment she hesitated; then she sped
-through the door, overtook and confronted
-the miner.</p>
-
-<p>“Go back instantly!” she commanded.
-“If—if you don’t, I shall
-start for home in all this rain!”</p>
-
-<p>The words were scarcely spoken
-before the man had turned and was
-hurrying her back to the house. Once
-inside there was an uncomfortable
-silence. Dorothy came to the rescue.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid you thought we were
-unpardonably rude,” she began pleasantly.
-“You see we were caught by
-the shower and my friend thought no
-one was living here; otherwise, we
-would not have so unceremoniously
-taken possession.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, of course not,” murmured Miss<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[Pg 153]</span>
-Barrington constrainedly, going over
-to the window and looking out at the
-swaying trees.</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe made a dissenting gesture.</p>
-
-<p>“Say no more: you are quite welcome,”
-he replied, going over to the
-fireplace and touching a match to the
-light wood ready placed for a fire.
-“It will take the dampness out of the
-air, and—of your garments,” he added,
-with a furtive glance at the tall figure
-in the window.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, you are very kind,”
-said Dorothy, drawing nearer. The
-movement brought her close to the
-mantel, and she picked up one of the
-shells. “Did you gather these yourself?”
-she asked, wondering at the
-light that leaped into his eyes at the
-question.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel, turning round a minute
-later, found them talking like old
-friends together. She even caught
-herself listening breathlessly to a
-story he was telling of an Indian arrow
-he held in his hand. A sudden glance
-in her direction from the man’s dark
-eyes sent her back to her old position
-with an abruptness that surprised as
-well as displeased her.</p>
-
-<p>The storm was not a long one. The
-clouds were already lifting in the west
-and the rain was less flood-like in its
-descent. Finally the sun peeped out
-and flashed for a moment in Ethel’s
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Dorothy and their host were over
-at the bookcase deep in a discussion of
-the respective merits of Scott and
-Dickens, when Ethel crossed the room
-and came toward them.</p>
-
-<p>“I think,” she said, with the slightest
-of inclinations in Hustler Joe’s
-direction, “that the storm is over. We
-can go now.”</p>
-
-<p>“So it is,” said Dorothy; then turning
-to the man at her side she held out
-a cordial hand. “Thank you very
-much. You have been very kind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, very kind—thank you,” murmured
-Ethel, bowing slightly and
-turning toward the door. “We shall
-have to go home by the road,” she
-announced regretfully a moment later,
-as she stood outside looking longingly
-at the hillside path where the wet
-grass sparkled in the sun.</p>
-
-<p>For a time the two girls walked on
-in silence, then Dorothy murmured
-softly:</p>
-
-<p>“Not a word of English—not a
-word!”</p>
-
-<p>Ethel gave a sidelong look from her
-lowered lids.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I didn’t suppose they could!”
-she said petulantly.</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t trust my life near one
-of them,” continued Dorothy in the
-same low voice.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel shrugged her shoulders and a
-faint pink showed on her forehead.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t!” she protested. “How
-could you talk with him so?—what
-dreadful boots he wore!”</p>
-
-<p>Dorothy laughed outright.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear, his boots do not cover
-his head. Would you have a man dig
-coal in patent-leathers?”</p>
-
-<p>Ethel made a wry face and was
-silent.</p>
-
-<p>“Seriously, dear,” Dorothy went on,
-“he was very interesting to me. His
-knowledge of books was most amazing.
-What he is doing here I can’t imagine—he’s
-no common miner!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, of course not,” laughed Ethel
-mockingly. “No doubt he’s a college
-president in disguise! But really, I’m
-not in the least interested. Let’s talk
-of something else.” And she changed
-the subject.</p>
-
-<p>And yet it was Ethel who, at dinner
-that night, turned to Mr. Barrington
-with the abrupt question:</p>
-
-<p>“Father, who is living in the old
-shanty just beyond the Deerfield
-woods?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure I haven’t the least idea,
-my daughter,” replied the man, mildly
-indifferent.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I can assist Miss Barrington
-in the matter,” interposed the
-smooth voice of Mark Hemenway.
-“It has lately been taken in hand by a
-curious creature known as ‘Hustler
-Joe.’”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hustler Joe’?” murmured John
-Barrington.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, one of the men. A queer,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[Pg 154]</span>
-silent sort—the kind that no good comes
-of. I’m keeping my eye on him, however.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed,” observed Ethel calmly,
-“I thought him quite the gentleman.”</p>
-
-<p>The effect of her words was like
-that of an electric shock around the
-table; in fact, Ethel herself felt it to
-some extent, for her remark was almost
-as much of a surprise to herself as to
-the others.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, my daughter!” murmured
-Mrs. Barrington faintly, and even
-Dorothy started. There was an ugly
-narrowing of Mark Hemenway’s eyes,
-but it was John Barrington who spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you seem to have the advantage,”
-he drawled. “Would you mind
-telling where the rest of us could meet—this
-gentleman?”</p>
-
-<p>His daughter laughed and lapsed into
-her old bantering tone.</p>
-
-<h3>V</h3>
-
-<p>That portion of the Candria mine
-known as the “Bonanza” had been on
-the black-list of the miners for some
-time. It was more than two months
-since Henry Rotalick, a fire boss, had
-reported that an extra amount of gas
-seemed to be collecting in the district.
-The mine officials had begun at once to
-take the utmost precautions.</p>
-
-<p>The Bonanza was one of the wealthiest
-portions of the mine, but, the coal
-being deep and of very fine quality and
-the slate being particularly thick, it
-necessitated considerable blasting to
-get down to the finest parts. Owing to
-this and to the growing accumulations
-of gases, the miners had for some time
-past been repeatedly warned to use
-the greatest care.</p>
-
-<p>On the day after the thunderstorm,
-Hustler Joe was passing through this
-district when he came upon some
-miners drilling holes twelve feet or
-more in depth and preparing for an exceptionally
-heavy charge.</p>
-
-<p>“You’d better look out or you’ll
-bring the whole thing tumbling about
-your ears!” he said, with a sharp glance
-at one of the men who seemed much
-the worse for liquor.</p>
-
-<p>A snarl of oaths in various tongues
-followed him as he turned his back and
-walked away.</p>
-
-<p>Thirty minutes later every door in
-the Bonanza fell with a crash, and
-solid walls of masonry three feet through
-were torn down as though they were
-but barriers of paper, so terrible was
-the explosion that shook the earth.</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe was half a mile away.
-The shock threw him on his face, and
-for a minute he was too dazed to think.
-Then he staggered to his feet and rushed
-blindly forward straight toward the
-place where he thought the explosion
-had occurred. At every turn he met
-fleeing men, coatless, hatless and crazed
-with terror. Suddenly he came face to
-face with Bill Somers.</p>
-
-<p>“Good God, man! Where ye goin’?
-Are ye gone clean crazy?” demanded
-Bill, clutching Joe’s arm and trying to
-turn him about.</p>
-
-<p>For answer Hustler Joe wrenched
-himself free, picked up a half-unconscious
-miner and set him on his feet;
-then he dashed forward and attempted
-to raise a fallen door that had pinned
-another miner fast.</p>
-
-<p>“Jiminy Christmas! Ye ain’t goin’
-ter stay in this hell of a place alone,
-anyhow,” muttered Bill, bringing his
-broad shoulder and huge strength to
-bear on the door. In another moment
-the imprisoned man was free and in
-broken English was calling on heaven
-to reward his rescuers.</p>
-
-<p>The two men did not falter for an instant,
-though all the while the deadly
-damp was closing around them. From
-gallery to gallery they went, warning,
-helping, dragging a comrade into a
-possible place of safety, until human
-endurance could stand it no longer.
-Exhausted, they staggered into a chamber
-which the fire damp had not entered.</p>
-
-<p>“We—we’d better git out—if we’re
-goin’ to,” panted Somers weakly.</p>
-
-<p>Joe was dizzy and faint. For himself
-he did not care. He had long ago
-given up all thought of escape; but a
-sudden vision came to him of the little<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[Pg 155]</span>
-blue-eyed woman that he had so often
-seen clinging to this man’s arm and
-looking fondly into his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Your wife and babies, Somers—”
-murmured Joe, his hand to his head as
-he tried to think. “Yes, we must get
-out somehow. There’s the fanhouse—we
-might try that,” he added, groping
-blindly forward.</p>
-
-<p>The fanhouse, now out of use, stood
-at the top of the airshaft heading that
-led up through the Deerfield hill from
-the mine. And by this way the two
-men finally reached the open air, and
-there, blinking in the sunshine, they
-sank exhausted on the hillside.</p>
-
-<p>It was some time before Somers
-found strength to move, but his companion
-was up and away very soon.</p>
-
-<p>The Candria mine had two openings
-about four miles apart, that went by
-the names Silver Creek and Beachmont.
-The Bonanza section was a
-mile and a half from the surface, and
-was nearer to the Silver Creek opening
-than to the Beachmont. It was to the
-former entrance, therefore, that Hustler
-Joe turned his steps as soon as he could
-stand upon his feet.</p>
-
-<p>The news of the disaster was before
-him. Men running from the mine,
-barely escaping with their lives, had
-told fearful tales of crawling over the
-dead bodies of their companions in
-their flight. The story flew from lip
-to lip and quickly spread through the
-entire town. Mothers, wives, daughters,
-sons and sweethearts rushed to
-the mine entrances and frantically
-sought for news of their dear ones.</p>
-
-<p>When Hustler Joe reached the
-Silver Creek entrance, a bit of a woman
-with a tiny babe in her arms darted
-from the sobbing multitude and
-clutched his arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Bill—my Bill—did you see him?”
-she cried.</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe’s voice shook as it had
-not done that day.</p>
-
-<p>“On Deerfield hill, by the fanhouse—he’s
-all right, Mrs. Somers,”
-he said huskily; and the little woman
-sped with joyful feet back by the way
-she had come.</p>
-
-<p>It was Hustler Joe who was at the
-head of the first rescue party that
-attempted to enter the mine; but the
-deadly gases increased with every
-step. First one, then another of the
-heroic men succumbed, until the rest
-were obliged to stagger back to the
-outer air, half carrying, half dragging
-their unconscious companions.</p>
-
-<p>Again and again was this repeated,
-until they were forced to abandon all
-hope of reaching the entombed miners
-from that direction; then hasty preparations
-were made to attempt the rescue
-from the Beachmont opening. Here,
-as at Silver Creek, Hustler Joe was
-untiring—directing, helping, encouraging.
-The man seemed to work in
-almost a frenzy, yet every movement
-counted and his hand and head were
-steady.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly, so slowly they worked their
-way into the mine, fighting the damp
-at every turn. By using canvas
-screens to wall the side entrances and
-rooms, a direct current of pure air was
-forced ahead of the rescuers, and by
-night their first load of maimed and
-blackened forms was sent back to the
-mine entrance to be cared for by
-tender hands.</p>
-
-<p>All night Hustler Joe worked, and it
-was his strong arms that oftenest bore
-some suffering miner to air and safety.
-Once, far down a gallery, he heard a
-shrill laugh. A sound so strange
-brought the first tingle like fear to his
-heart. Another moment and a blackened
-form rushed upon him out of the
-darkness, angrily brandishing a pickaxe.
-Crazed with wandering for hours
-in that horrid charnel-house of the
-earth’s interior, the miner was ready
-to kill even his rescuers. He was
-quickly overpowered and his hands
-and feet were securely bound; then
-on Hustler Joe’s back he made the
-journey of a quarter of a mile to the
-cars that were waiting to bear him,
-and others like him, to the aid so
-sadly needed.</p>
-
-<p>Toward morning Hustler Joe was
-accosted by one of the doctors who
-had been working at his side half the
-night.</p>
-
-<p>“See here, my man, you’ve done<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[Pg 156]</span>
-enough. No human being can stand
-this sort of thing forever. I don’t
-like the look of your eye—go outside
-and get some rest. There are fifty
-men now that owe their lives to you
-alone. Come—you’d really better
-quit, for awhile, at least.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fifty? Fifty, did you say?” cried
-the miner eagerly. Then a look came
-into his face that haunted the doctor
-for long days after. “Would fifty
-count against—one?” he muttered as
-if to himself, then fell to work with a
-feverishness that laughed at the doctor’s
-warning.</p>
-
-<p>From dusk to dawn, and again from
-dawn to dusk, flying ambulances,
-hastily improvised from every sort of
-vehicle, coursed the streets with their
-gruesome burdens. Weeping throngs
-surged about the Beachmont entrance
-and about the stricken homes of the
-dead. Sleepless wives and mothers
-waited all night for news of their missing
-dear ones, and peeped fearfully
-through closed blinds as the dead and
-injured were borne through the streets.</p>
-
-<p>But everywhere the name of Hustler
-Joe was breathed in gratitude and
-love. Tales of his bravery and of his
-rescues were on every lip, and when
-the man walked out of the mine that
-day, he walked straight into the
-hearts of every man, woman and
-child of the place.</p>
-
-<p>His fellow-workmen tried to show
-their love and appreciation by going
-in a body to his lonely cabin on the
-hillside. They found him muttering
-half crazily to himself: “Fifty lives
-for one—fifty for one!” And on the
-table before him he had placed fifty
-matches in a row and below them one
-other alone.</p>
-
-<p>They looked at him half fearfully,
-wholly pitifully, thinking the past
-horror had turned his brain. But he
-listened with brilliant eyes and flushed
-cheeks to their hearty words of thanks
-and seemed strangely eager to hear all
-that they had come to say.</p>
-
-<p>Yet the next morning his eyes were
-heavy with misery, and someone said
-that the matches lay strewn all over
-the floor where an impatient hand had
-cast them—all save one, left alone
-in the middle of the table.</p>
-
-<h3>VI</h3>
-
-<p>On the day of the explosion in the
-Candria mine John Barrington sat on
-the broad piazza of The Maples reading
-his morning paper. Occasionally
-he glanced up to admire the charming
-picture his daughter and her friend
-made playing tennis on the lawn nearby.</p>
-
-<p>His night’s rest had been good and
-his morning’s beefsteak tender; moreover,
-a certain paragraph in the newspaper
-before him had warmed his heart
-and, in prospect, his pocketbook. He
-leaned back in his chair and sighed
-contentedly.</p>
-
-<p>After a time he spied Hemenway’s
-tall form at the far end of the winding
-walk leading to the house. There was
-a languid curiosity in his mind as to
-why Hemenway was walking so fast;
-but when he caught his first glimpse
-of his general superintendent’s face,
-his head came upright with a jerk, and
-he waited in some apprehension for the
-man to speak.</p>
-
-<p>The girls on the lawn heard an exclamation
-of dismay from the piazza,
-then saw the two men pass rapidly
-down the walk and disappear in the
-direction of the town. Fifteen minutes
-later Jennie Somers, the parlor-maid,
-crossed the lawn and approached
-Miss Barrington. All her pretty rose
-color had fled, and her eyes were wide
-and frightened.</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon—but would you
-please let me go to town? There has
-been an explosion in the mine, and my
-brother—he may be hurt! May I
-please go?”</p>
-
-<p>“An explosion? How terrible!
-Yes, yes, child—run right along. Don’t
-hurry back if you’re needed there,”
-said Miss Barrington. “I hope you’ll
-find your brother uninjured,” she
-added as the girl hurried away. When
-she turned to speak to Dorothy she
-found herself alone.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Fenno appeared a few minutes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[Pg 157]</span>
-later dressed in a short walking-suit.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Dorothy!”</p>
-
-<p>“Has Jennie gone? If you don’t
-mind, dear, I’ll go with her. I might
-be able to do something,” explained
-Dorothy hastily.</p>
-
-<p>“Mercy!” shuddered Ethel, “how
-can you go, dear? They’ll be all
-maimed and bleeding! There’ll be
-doctors and—and others to do everything
-needful. I wouldn’t go—really,
-dear.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know—but there’ll be something
-else to do. I might help someone—Jennie,
-for instance, if she found her
-brother injured. I really want to go—Oh—there
-she is!” And Miss Fenno
-hurried after Jennie’s swiftly moving
-figure.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel was restless when her friend
-had gone. She wandered aimlessly
-around the grounds, then went indoors
-and began to play a waltz on the piano.
-The piece was scarcely half through,
-however, before her fingers moved
-more and more slowly, finally straying
-into a minor wail that ended abruptly
-in a discordant crash as the player rose
-from the piano-stool.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barrington’s next move was to
-take the field-glass from the library and
-go upstairs to the tower. From there
-she could see the village and catch occasional
-glimpses of hurrying forms.
-She could see the Silver Creek entrance
-to the mine, too, and she shuddered
-at the crowds her glasses showed
-her there. Twice she turned her eyes
-away and started down the winding
-stairs, but each time she returned to her
-old position and gazed in a fascination
-quite unaccountable to herself at the
-moving figures in the distance.</p>
-
-<p>By and bye she saw the head-gardener
-coming rapidly up the road from
-the town. As he entered the driveway
-she hurried down the stairs and out into
-the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>“Were there many injured, Peter?”
-she asked anxiously as the man came
-into the room.</p>
-
-<p>“They don’t know yet, ma’am; they
-can’t get into the mine. They’re goin’
-to try the Beachmont openin’ now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps they won’t find things so
-bad as they think,” she suggested.</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe not; but them that has come
-out, ma’am, tell sorry tales of creepin’
-over dead men’s bodies—there ain’t
-much hope for the poor fellers inside
-now, I’m ’fraid.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is—is there anything one can do?”</p>
-
-<p>Peter shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Not much, ma’am. They can’t
-get in to get ’em out. The young lady
-from the house here has got her hands
-full with the women and children.
-They are takin’ on awful, of course, but
-she kinder calms ’em down—she and
-that feller they call Hustler Joe.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barrington turned away. As
-she opened the door she stopped
-abruptly and looked back into the
-kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>“If they need anything, Peter—anything
-at all—come to me at once,”
-she said hurriedly, and closed the door
-behind her.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was at dinner the next night that
-Mr. Barrington said to his general
-superintendent:</p>
-
-<p>“What was the matter with Rotalick
-today? I heard you laying down
-the law pretty sharp to him this noon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he wanted a prima donna,
-that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>“A what?”</p>
-
-<p>Hemenway laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I thought so, too. It was simply
-this. There isn’t anyone to sing
-at the funerals Thursday. The choir
-that usually sings at funerals hereabouts
-is incapacitated through injuries
-to the bass and loss of a husband
-to the soprano. Rotalick wanted a
-day off to go hunting for singers over in
-Westmont.”</p>
-
-<p>“Humph!” commented Mr. Barrington.</p>
-
-<p>“I rather think our departed friends
-will excuse the lack of music,” laughed
-the general superintendent coarsely;
-but the laugh ceased at a flash from
-Miss Barrington’s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you be so kind, Mr. Hemenway,
-as to tell the man that I will sing
-Thursday?” Once more the electric
-shock ran around that table, and once<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[Pg 158]</span>
-more Mrs. Barrington murmured
-faintly, “Why, my daughter!”</p>
-
-<p>This time Mark Hemenway rose
-promptly to the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>“How very kind!” he said suavely.
-“Indeed, Miss Barrington, one could
-almost <i>afford</i> to die for so great an
-honor. I will tell Rotalick. The
-miners will be overjoyed—they have
-bitterly bemoaned the probable lack
-of music tomorrow. Funny they
-should care so much!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know—they are human
-beings, I suppose,” Miss Barrington
-suggested.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—of course—certainly—but
-then——”</p>
-
-<p>“You seem troubled to find a solution,”
-she remarked, with slightly uplifted
-eyebrows; “suppose you give it
-up?”</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose I do,” he acquiesced with
-ready grace, glad of the way of escape
-she had opened.</p>
-
-<h3>VII</h3>
-
-<p>Many of the victims of the explosion
-had lived in Westmont, but for
-those whose homes had been in Skinner
-Valley a succession of funeral services
-had been arranged to take place in the
-Slovak Catholic Church, the largest
-audience-room in the town. It was
-here that Miss Barrington had offered
-to sing, and as one sad service followed
-another in rapid succession the task
-she had undertaken was no light one.</p>
-
-<p>But her heart did not lose its courage
-nor her voice its sweetness all through
-those long hours. She did grow sick
-and faint, though, as the throngs of
-weeping women and children filed in
-and out of the church, and her voice
-trembled and nearly broke when a
-young girl fainted and sank to the
-floor.</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe had not been known to
-step inside a church since he came to
-Skinner Valley. On the day of the
-funerals he had lapsed into his old
-unapproachableness. He left his cabin
-early in the morning and joined the
-crowds moving toward the church,
-but, once there, he lost himself in the
-throngs outside instead of entering the
-doors.</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe had long since made up
-his mind that a church was no place
-for him. He had the reverence, born
-of a New England boyhood’s training,
-for all things sacred, and he had come
-to feel that his own presence was an
-unpardonable insult to any holy place.</p>
-
-<p>The windows of the church were
-open and the chanting tones of the
-priest floated out to his ears. He
-imagined himself as one of those still,
-silent forms before the chancel, and he
-bitterly envied the dead.</p>
-
-<p>“’Twould have been the easiest way
-out of it!” he muttered under his
-breath. “By Jove, what a voice!” he
-added aloud a moment later as the
-priest’s droning gave way to the flute-like
-tones of a singer.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s old Barrington’s daughter—ain’t
-she great?” said Bill Somers at
-his elbow. The man had been there
-several minutes furtively watching for
-a chance to speak.</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe did not answer until the
-last note quivered into silence. Then
-he drew a long breath and turned
-around.</p>
-
-<p>“Barrington’s daughter? What is she
-doing here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Singin’—didn’t ye hear her?”</p>
-
-<p>“But why? How happens it?” Joe
-demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Rotalick said she heard how that
-the choir couldn’t sing and that the
-Slavs and Poles were makin’ a terrible
-touse ’cause there wa’n’t no music.
-So she jest stepped up as pleasant as
-ye please an’ said she’d sing for ’em.
-She’s a daisy, an’ as purty as a picture.
-Have ye seen her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Hustler Joe shortly,
-moving away.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel Barrington’s singing won her
-many sincere, if humble, admirers that
-day, but perhaps no one inside the
-building listened quite so hungrily for
-every tone that fell from her lips as
-did a tall, sad-eyed man who stood
-outside—just beneath an open window.</p>
-
-<p>When the last sombre procession
-had moved away from the doors, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[Pg 159]</span>
-Miss Barrington herself, white and
-faint with weariness, stepped into her
-carriage, Hustler Joe left his position
-under the window and walked slowly
-toward his home.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’ll go back,” he muttered.
-“There’s nothing but hell upon earth
-to be gained by running away in this
-cowardly fashion. I’ll give myself up
-and take the consequences—which will
-be hell somewhere else, I suppose,” he
-added grimly. “Good God—it can’t
-be worse than this!”</p>
-
-<p>He pushed open his cabin door and
-looked about him with troubled eyes.
-For the first time he was conscious of
-a fondness for the place.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll give them to Jim,” he said
-aloud, his eyes lingering on the books
-and on the shells and curios over the
-mantel.</p>
-
-<p>With feverish haste he began collecting
-a few necessaries into a traveling-bag.
-It was packed and strapped
-when there came a knock at the door.
-At so unusual an occurrence Hustler
-Joe started guiltily. Then he crossed
-the room and threw wide the door.</p>
-
-<p>The bent form of an old woman with
-two frightened eyes peering out from
-beneath a worn shawl confronted him.</p>
-
-<p>“Has he been here?” she whispered,
-stepping into the room and glancing
-furtively around her.</p>
-
-<p>“He! Who?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then he hasn’t, or you’d know it,”
-she answered in a relieved tone; but
-her expression changed almost instantly,
-and her frail form shook with
-terror. “But he may come! You
-wouldn’t give him up—you’re Hustler
-Joe, ain’t ye? They say you’re good
-an’ kind. Oh, you wouldn’t give him
-up!”</p>
-
-<p>A strange look came into the miner’s
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I wouldn’t give him up,” he
-said, after a moment. “But who is he?
-And who are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m his mother, sir. He didn’t
-know anyone was livin’ here,” she
-apologized, “an’ he sent me a bit of
-paper sayin’ he’d meet me here tonight.
-Oh, sir, they’d hang him if they
-got him! Hang him!” she shuddered.</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe’s lips twitched, then
-settled into stern lines.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye see,” continued the woman,
-her voice husky with feeling, “his
-daddy was—was one of them that
-was killed, an’ my boy came back to
-look once more on his poor dead face
-today. He said he’d colored his hair
-an’ changed his looks so no one would
-know him; but oh, they’d hang him—hang
-my boy!” she finished in a
-frenzy, wringing her hands and swaying
-her body from side to side.</p>
-
-<p>Through the window Hustler Joe
-saw the figure of a man moving among
-the shadows of the trees near the
-house. The miner stepped close to
-the old woman and laid a light hand
-on her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen! I am going away for an
-hour. When I am out of sight, go out
-to the trees behind the house and call
-your boy in. I shall be gone and shall
-know nothing of it—you can trust me.
-Do you understand?”</p>
-
-<p>A heartfelt “God bless you!” rang
-in his ears as he left the house and
-hurried away.</p>
-
-<p>When he returned an hour later he
-found these words scrawled on a bit
-of brown wrapping-paper:</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">You treated me white. Thanks. You
-don’t know what you saved my mother. It
-would have broke her heart if they had
-strung me up. Thanks.</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe stared fixedly at the
-note long after he had read it; then he
-tore the paper into tiny bits and
-dropped them into the fireplace. Very
-slowly he opened the traveling-bag
-and unpacked one by one the articles
-therein. When the bag was empty and
-the room restored to its spotless order,
-he drew a long breath.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, ’twould break her heart; she’s
-less miserable if I stay where I am,”
-he murmured. “Poor dear mother,
-she’s suffered enough through me
-already!”</p>
-
-<h3>VIII</h3>
-
-<p>The days that followed were busy
-ones for Ethel. Company made The
-Maples gay with fun and laughter; but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[Pg 160]</span>
-Ethel did not drop her newly awakened
-interest in the miners. By her earnest
-persuasion Miss Fenno had agreed
-to lengthen her visit, the need of these
-same miners having been held up by
-the wary Ethel as good and sufficient
-reason for her remaining.</p>
-
-<p>A maid, laden with the best the
-house afforded, always accompanied
-Dorothy on her frequent visits to the
-town, and sometimes Ethel herself
-went. It was after her first trip of
-this sort that she burst unceremoniously
-into the library.</p>
-
-<p>“Father, do you do anything for
-them?” she demanded breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear, not being aware of the
-antecedent of that pronoun, I may not
-be able to give a very satisfactory
-answer to your question.”</p>
-
-<p>“What? Oh—sure enough!” laughed
-Ethel. “I mean the miners, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Since when—this philanthropic
-spirit, my dear?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you, father?” persisted Ethel,
-ignoring the question.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” Mr. Barrington began, putting
-the tips of his forefingers together
-impressively, “we think we do
-considerable. We are not overbearing;
-we force no ‘company store’ on them,
-but allow that curious little Pedler
-Jim full sway. We—However, have
-you anything to suggest?” he suddenly
-demanded in mild sarcasm.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhat to his surprise Miss Barrington
-did have something to suggest,
-and that something was not particularly
-to his mind. However, when Miss
-Barrington set out to have her own
-way she usually had it, even with her
-comfort-loving father—perhaps it was
-because he was a comfort-loving father
-that he always succumbed in the end.</p>
-
-<p>At all events, the Candria Mining
-Company, after the explosion in the
-Bonanza section, organized a system of
-relief to which they ever after adhered.
-The family of each miner killed in the
-disaster, or dying from its effects, received
-one thousand dollars cash over
-and above all medical and burial expenses.
-The maimed were dealt with
-according to the extent of their
-injuries.</p>
-
-<p>The mine was a great source of
-interest to all of Miss Barrington’s
-friends, and it was accounted a great
-day among them when a party under
-careful escort were allowed to “do
-the mines,” as they enthusiastically
-termed a glimpse of the mine buildings
-and a short trip through a few
-underground passages.</p>
-
-<p>Two weeks after the explosion
-Ethel, with a merry party of ladies and
-gentlemen led by Mark Hemenway,
-and duly chaperoned, started for the
-Beachmont entrance to the mine. The
-general superintendent was in his
-element. He explained and exhibited
-all through the outer buildings, and
-was about to take his charges into the
-mine itself when an unavoidable something
-intervened and claimed his immediate
-attention. It was with evident
-reluctance that he therefore
-handed his party over to Bill Somers,
-who, having proved himself careful
-and attentive, had often before been
-intrusted with the escort of sightseers
-over the mines.</p>
-
-<p>To Ethel the change was a relief.
-A vague unrest had lately assailed her
-whenever in Hemenway’s presence
-and she had almost unconsciously begun
-to avoid him. Her old indifference
-to his existence had given way to a
-growing realization that there was
-such a being, and the realization was
-bringing with it an intangible something
-not quite pleasant.</p>
-
-<p>The feminine portion of the party
-followed Bill Somers through the
-strange underground chambers with
-daintily lifted skirts and with many
-a shudder and half-smothered shriek.
-And though they laughed and chatted
-at times, they cast sidelong glances
-of mingled curiosity and aversion at
-the stalwart forms of the begrimed
-miners.</p>
-
-<p>“Is—is this anywhere near the—accident?”
-asked Miss Barrington,
-looking behind her fearfully.</p>
-
-<p>“No, ma’am—oh, no!” reassured
-Bill Somers quickly. “The Bonanza
-is a long ways off. We don’t go
-nowheres near there today, ma’am.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, was there an accident?”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[Pg 161]</span>
-chimed in a pretty girl with rose-pink
-cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure; this was the mine, wasn’t it?”
-interposed a fussy little man with
-eyeglasses through which he was peering
-right and left with his small, near-sighted
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell us about it, please,” begged
-three or four voices at once; and Bill
-needed no second bidding.</p>
-
-<p>When they passed Hustler Joe,
-Somers pointed him out, and as they
-walked on into the next gallery he told
-with unconscious power the story of
-the heroic rescue of the imprisoned
-men. The shifting shadows and twinkling
-lights made the telling more impressive,
-and the dusky forms flitting
-in and out of the mysterious openings
-on either side, added a realistic touch to
-the tale that sobered the gay crowd
-not a little. Their interest in the
-earth’s interior waned perceptibly.</p>
-
-<p>“Are—are we on the way out,
-now?” asked the pretty girl, her cheeks
-showing white in the gloom.</p>
-
-<p>“No, ma’am; we’re goin’ in deeper.
-Wa’n’t that what ye wanted?” returned
-Bill.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, of course,” murmured the
-girl, without enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>The man with glasses coughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Really, Miss Barrington, this is
-beastly air. It might be well enough
-to go back before long.”</p>
-
-<p>Bill Somers took the hint. He knew
-the type to which the fussy little man
-belonged. The party turned about,
-and the pretty girl’s eyes flashed with a
-grateful glance—a glance which the
-near-sighted-glassed saw and promptly
-appropriated.</p>
-
-<p>As they repassed Hustler Joe, Ethel
-Barrington dropped behind the others
-and came close to the miner’s side.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to thank you myself,” she
-said, the crimson staining her cheeks
-as she impulsively held out a slim, ungloved
-hand. “I want to tell you how
-much I appreciate your courage and
-bravery at the explosion.”</p>
-
-<p>The man flushed painfully. As he
-reluctantly touched her finger-tips, she
-added:</p>
-
-<p>“You must be so happy to have
-saved so many lives. I knew you were
-a good man the minute I saw your
-face!”</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe grew white to the lips,
-dropped her hand rudely and turned
-away without a word.</p>
-
-<p>Hemenway met the party at the entrance
-of the mine. He was profuse
-in apologies for his enforced absence
-and in offerings of further service, but
-Miss Barrington dismissed him with a
-cool “Thank you; nothing more,” and
-led the way to The Maples.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barrington was vexed—worse
-than that, she was vexed because she
-was vexed. Her pulse quickened and
-her nostrils dilated as she thought of
-Hustler Joe and of the way he had met
-her impulsive greeting.</p>
-
-<p>“The—the rude—boor!” she said to
-herself, at loss for words to express
-fittingly that to which she was so little
-accustomed. A lingering touch or a
-gentle pressure was the usual fare of
-Miss Barrington’s graciously extended
-hand—never this wordless touching of
-her finger-tips and hasty, rude release.
-“Not that I care,” she thought,
-with a disdainful tilt of her head. “But
-he might have been decently civil!”
-she added, with a scornful smile as
-she thought of how differently a score
-of pampered youths of her acquaintance
-would have received so signal a
-mark of favor as she had that afternoon
-bestowed on an all too unappreciative
-miner.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When Hustler Joe had left Miss Barrington
-so abruptly he had attacked
-his work with a fierceness that even
-the miners had never seen him show.
-“A good man—a good man—‘I knew
-you were a good man’!” he muttered
-between his teeth. “A ‘good’ man
-indeed—bah!” he snarled aloud, wielding
-his pick with long, sweeping strokes.
-Then he suddenly stood upright.
-“Great God—am I not a good man?
-Have fifty lives not a feather’s weight?”</p>
-
-<p>The pick dropped from his relaxed
-fingers, and his hands went up to his
-head.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, no,” he moaned; “father—father—fifty,
-a hundred—a thousand<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[Pg 162]</span>
-times a hundred could not tip the scale
-with your dear, dead self on the other
-side!”</p>
-
-<h3>IX</h3>
-
-<p>Exciting days came to Skinner
-Valley. Gold was discovered far up
-the creek. A man furnished with
-funds by Mark Hemenway, who long
-had expressed faith in the locality, had
-“struck it rich,” and the general superintendent
-awoke one day to find himself
-wealthy.</p>
-
-<p>The effect of this awakening was
-as immediate as it was startling. His
-commanding tones took on an added
-imperiousness, his clothing a new flashiness,
-and his whole demeanor an importance
-likely to impress the most
-casual of beholders. His veiled attentions
-to Miss Barrington gave way to a
-devoted homage that was apparent to
-all men, and so thick was his armor of
-self-conceit that her daily snubs fell
-pointless at his feet.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barrington had never before
-spent so long a time at The Maples, and
-Mr. Hemenway’s sudden accession to
-wealth resulted, as far as she was concerned,
-in hasty preparations to leave.
-Her guests were already gone.</p>
-
-<p>On the day before her intended departure
-she started off by herself to
-enjoy one more sunset from the clearing
-beyond the Deerfield woods, the
-place where she and Dorothy were
-overtaken by that memorable thunder-shower.</p>
-
-<p>Mark Hemenway did not confine
-himself so strictly to business these
-days as had heretofore been his custom,
-and he was upstairs in his room when
-he spied Miss Barrington’s lithe figure
-disappearing in the grove that skirted
-the grounds on the west.</p>
-
-<p>The general superintendent had lately
-invested in a tall silk hat, and it was
-this impressive bit of headgear that he
-donned as he left the house and followed,
-at a discreet distance, the form
-of the woman he meant to marry.</p>
-
-<p>Since Hemenway had become rich
-this idea of marriage had strengthened
-wonderfully. In a certain coarse
-way the man was handsome, and
-the only class of women with which
-he had ever come in contact had
-readily welcomed his attentions. He
-had supposed the lack of money would
-be the only drawback in the eyes of this
-his latest love, and now that the lack
-no longer existed he was confident of
-success.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barrington followed the path
-very leisurely, picking a flower or a
-fern here and there, and softly humming
-a tune. Upon reaching the
-clearing she settled herself comfortably
-under her favorite tree and opened her
-book to read. It was then that Hemenway
-approached from the shadows
-of the path she had just left.</p>
-
-<p>At the snapping of a dry twig Miss
-Barrington glanced up. Her first impulse
-was to laugh, so absurd did the
-checkered trousers, flaming watch-charm
-and silk hat look to her against
-the background of the cool green woods.
-But the laugh was killed at birth by an
-angry objection that the man should
-be there at all. Even then she supposed
-him to be merely passing by and
-that he might stop for a word or two.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, good afternoon, Miss Barrington.
-What a surprise to find you
-here,” fibbed Hemenway, advancing
-with easy confidence.</p>
-
-<p>“Good afternoon, Mr. Hemenway.”
-Miss Barrington moved her book suggestively
-and lowered her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Charming view you have here!”
-said the man.</p>
-
-<p>No reply.</p>
-
-<p>“You have an interesting book
-there, Miss Barrington?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know—I’m trying to find
-out,” replied Miss Barrington, with
-calm but ineffectual rudeness.</p>
-
-<p>“Um—delightful place to read!
-Nice day, too.”</p>
-
-<p>No answer.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Hemenway looked down approvingly
-at the lowered lids of the
-girl’s eyes and, blinded by his vast conceit,
-mistook the flush of annoyance
-for the blush of maidenly shyness. “I
-never did like a girl to fling herself in
-my face,” he mused, coming a little
-nearer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[Pg 163]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he said aloud, “if you have
-no objections, Miss Barrington, I’ll
-just stop a bit with you and enjoy this
-breeze,” and he cast himself at her feet
-in careful imitation of the attitude he
-had seen the fussy man with glasses
-assume only the week before.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barrington was speechless with
-indignation. Her first instinct was to
-spring to her feet, but the paralysis of
-amazement that had struck her dumb
-had also rendered her, for the moment,
-incapable of motion. A sudden determination
-to “teach the man a lesson
-and stop once for all this insufferable
-persecution”—as her mind expressed
-it—followed, and she remained passively
-quiet.</p>
-
-<p>There was an uncomfortable silence
-that to any man but Hemenway would
-have proved embarrassing.</p>
-
-<p>“Er—I believe I haven’t told you,”
-he finally began, “how kind I thought
-it was of you to interest yourself as you
-have in the miners.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is not necessary that you should,”
-said Ethel icily.</p>
-
-<p>“Very becoming modesty!” thought
-Hemenway. Aloud he said: “Oh, no,
-not necessary, perhaps, but I want to
-do it. It is a pleasure to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is not one to me.”</p>
-
-<p>Hemenway frowned. There was
-such a thing as carrying this modesty
-too far.</p>
-
-<p>“Your singing, too—it was delightful!”
-he continued smoothly. “And
-so kind of you to do it!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barrington turned a leaf of her
-book with an unnecessary rustling of
-the paper.</p>
-
-<p>“Feigning indifference,” commented
-Hemenway to himself. “I’ve seen ’em
-do that before.”</p>
-
-<p>“You looked so tired that night after
-the funerals. I actually worried about
-you—you looked sick,” he said next, in
-what was meant for tender tones.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barrington’s eyes narrowed
-ominously as she replied:</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Hemenway, my actions and my
-looks can have no possible interest
-for you. I should be obliged if you
-would cease to consider them.”</p>
-
-<p>To Hemenway’s perverted fancy
-this was but a bit of shy bait. He
-promptly took advantage of it.</p>
-
-<p>“On the contrary, I have the very
-greatest interest, my dear Miss Barrington—the
-very warmest interest. I—I—Miss
-Barrington, as you may be
-aware, I am a rich man now.”</p>
-
-<p>“That does not concern me in the
-least,” retorted Ethel sharply.</p>
-
-<p>A strange expression came over
-Hemenway’s face. For the first time
-a doubt shook his egotistical content.
-His eyes grew hard. No maidenly
-shyness prompted that speech. Still—possibly
-she had not understood.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Barrington, it has long been
-in my mind to ask you to be my wife.
-I love you, and now I am rich I am
-confident I can make you——”</p>
-
-<p>“Stop! I won’t even listen to you!”
-Miss Barrington was on her feet, her
-eyes blazing.</p>
-
-<p>Hemenway rose and faced her. All
-his polish dropped like a mask, and the
-real man looked out from beneath
-angrily frowning brows.</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t listen, my fine lady?
-And why not, pray? Ain’t I good
-enough to speak to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I hate you—I despise you—oh, I
-loathe the very sight of you!” shuddered
-Ethel, losing all control of herself.
-“Now will you leave me in peace—or
-must I say more before you quite
-understand me?”</p>
-
-<p>Hate—despise—loathe; these words
-Hemenway knew. The delicate shafts
-of society sarcasm fell powerless
-against his shield of self-conceit, but
-these heavier darts struck home and
-reached a vital point—his pride. His
-face grew livid.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you go?” repeated Ethel impatiently,
-not a quiver of fear in the
-scorn of her eyes—“or shall I?” she
-added.</p>
-
-<p>“Neither one!” he retorted insolently.</p>
-
-<p>For answer Ethel wheeled and took
-two steps toward the path. Hemenway
-was at her side in an instant with
-a clutch on her wrist that hurt her.</p>
-
-<p>“Coward!” she cried. “Would you
-force me to scream for protection?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do so, if you like—there’s not a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[Pg 164]</span>
-house within earshot, and the inhabitants
-of this region are not given to
-walking for pleasure!” He released
-her wrist and stepped again in front of
-her.</p>
-
-<p>The sharp throb of terror that paled
-Ethel’s cheek was followed by one of
-joy that sent the color back in surging
-waves—Hustler Joe’s shanty just behind
-those trees! It was after six—he
-must be there. If worst came to
-worst——!</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Hemenway, this is altogether
-too theatrical. I ask you again—will
-you let me pass?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you think I am a man to be
-loathed and hated and despised with
-impunity, young lady, you are much
-mistaken. No, I won’t let you pass—you’ll
-listen to me. I want none of
-your airs!” he finished sourly.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel’s head bent in a scornful bow.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, suppose we walk on,
-then,” she said. “I’m tired of standing.”
-And she turned about and began
-walking in the opposite direction from
-the path that led toward home.</p>
-
-<p>Mark Hemenway was suspicious of
-this sudden acquiescence. He hurried
-to her side and looked sharply into
-her face.</p>
-
-<p>“None of your tricks, young lady!
-I mean business,” he snarled. “If
-you ain’t willing to hear what I’ve got
-to say by fair means, you shall by
-foul!” he added, bringing a small revolver
-into view, then slipping it back
-into his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel was thoroughly frightened.
-She thought Hemenway must be mad.</p>
-
-<p>“I should think you had stepped
-out of a dime novel, Mr. Hemenway,”
-she began, trying to steady her shaking
-lips. “Nobody wins a bride at
-the point of a pistol nowadays!” The
-trees that hid Hustler Joe’s shanty
-from view were very near now.</p>
-
-<p>“Then you needn’t treat me as if I
-was nothing but the dirt under your
-feet,” he muttered sullenly, already
-regretting his absurd threat of a moment
-before.</p>
-
-<p>Ethel suddenly darted forward and
-around the edge of the trees, ran across
-the lawn and sprang up the steps of
-the shanty. Hemenway was close at
-her heels when she flung the door open
-with a bang and stood face to face with
-Hustler Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you please take me home?”
-she asked, trying to speak as though
-she considered it a customary thing
-to invade a man’s house and demand
-his escort in this unceremonious fashion.
-“Mr. Hemenway is—busy and
-cannot go,” she added, with a cheerful
-assurance due to the presence of the
-big-bodied miner at her side.</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe instantly accepted the
-part she had given him to play.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be glad to be of any service,”
-he said respectfully, with ready
-tact, but with a sharp glance at
-Hemenway.</p>
-
-<p>The general superintendent bowed
-to Miss Barrington with uplifted hat,
-then turned and walked away.</p>
-
-<p>“Please do not ask me any questions,”
-said Miss Barrington hurriedly
-to Hustler Joe as they left the house.
-“You had better take me by the path
-through the woods—it is the nearer
-way, and will be less embarrassing
-than the main road would be for—both
-of us. I know you think my
-conduct extraordinary, but, believe
-me, I had good reason for asking your
-escort. You—you always seem to be
-around when I need someone!” she
-concluded, with an hysterical little
-laugh—the tension to which she had
-been keyed was beginning to tell on
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“No apology is needed,” demurred
-the man gravely. “I think I understand.”</p>
-
-<p>That walk was a strange one. The
-sun had set and the woods were full
-of shadows, and of sounds unheard in
-the daytime. Ethel was faint and
-nervous. The miner was silent. Once
-or twice Ethel spoke perfunctorily.
-His answers were civil but short.
-At the edge of the private grounds the
-girl paused.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you very much; I shall not
-forget your courtesy,” she said, hesitating
-a moment, then resolutely
-offering her hand.</p>
-
-<p>It was not the finger-tips the man<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[Pg 165]</span>
-touched this time—it was the hand
-from nail to wrist; and his clasp quite
-hurt her with its fierceness.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Barrington, you thought me
-a brute the other day when you spoke
-so kindly to me, and no wonder. I
-can only beg your pardon—your words
-cut deep. I am going to the mines
-tomorrow—the gold mines, I mean.
-I’m glad I had this chance to speak to
-you. You were wrong, Miss Barrington—I—I’m
-not the good man you
-think!” He dropped her hand and
-turned away.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I don’t believe it!” she called
-softly, and fled, swift-footed, across
-the lawn.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Mark Hemenway did not appear at
-The Maples that night. A message
-from him received by Mr. Barrington
-in the evening said that he had been
-suddenly called away on business connected
-with his gold mine; that he
-would return soon, however, and would
-like immediately to make arrangements
-whereby he could sever his
-connection with the Candria Mining
-Company, as his new interests needed
-all his attention.</p>
-
-<p>“Humph!” commented Mr. Barrington.
-“I never saw a little money
-make such a dam fool of a man as it
-has of Hemenway!”</p>
-
-<p>Ethel’s lips parted, then closed with
-sudden determination. Twelve hours
-later she left for Dalton without mentioning
-to her father her experience
-of the day before, and within a week
-she had sailed from New York on a
-steamer bound for Liverpool.</p>
-
-<h3>X</h3>
-
-<p>The discovery of gold had made all
-the miners at Skinner Valley restless,
-and Hustler Joe was among the first
-to take his wages and start for the
-promised bonanza.</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe of the coal mines was
-still “Hustler Joe” of the gold mines.
-The same ceaseless, untiring energy
-spurred the man on to constant labor.
-The claim he staked out proved to be
-the richest in the place and wealth
-sought him out and knocked at his
-cabin door.</p>
-
-<p>Strange to say, Hustler Joe was
-surprised. He had come to the mines
-simply because they promised excitement
-and change. He had thought,
-too, that possibly they harbored the
-peace and forgetfulness for which he so
-longed.</p>
-
-<p>But peace had fled at his approach
-and wealth had come unasked. Man-like,
-he regarded the unsought with
-indifference and gazed only at the
-unattainable; whereupon wealth rustled
-her golden garments to charm
-his ears and flashed her bright beauty
-to dazzle his eyes. Still failing to win
-his heart, she whispered that she—even
-she—was peace in disguise, and
-that he had but to embrace her to find
-what he sought.</p>
-
-<p>It was then that Hustler Joe yielded.
-In a year he had sold half his claim
-for a fabulous sum. The other half he
-retained, and leaving it to be developed
-under the charge of expert engineers,
-he left for Skinner Valley.</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe had never forgotten the
-little hunchback pedler, nor the debt
-of gratitude he owed him. Many a
-time in the old days at the coal mines
-he had tried to pay this debt, but
-always, in his own estimation, he had
-failed. So it was of Pedler Jim that
-he first thought when this new power
-of wealth came into his hands.</p>
-
-<p>The news of Hustler Joe’s good luck
-had not reached Skinner Valley, and
-the man was in the same rough miner’s
-garb when he pushed open the familiar
-door of the “Emporium” in search of
-Pedler Jim.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if it ain’t Hustler Joe!” exclaimed
-the hunchback delightedly.
-“You’re a sight good fur sore eyes.
-Come back ter stay?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, awhile, maybe. How’s the
-world using you these days, Jim?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, fair—fair; ’tain’t quite ’s good
-as I’d like—but I ain’t complainin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder if anything would make
-you complain—I never heard you,”
-remarked Joe, helping himself to a
-seat on the counter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[Pg 166]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, now that ye mention it,
-mebbe I don’t much—I hain’t no need
-to. My appetite’s good an’ my conscience
-is clear; an’ a clear conscience
-is——”</p>
-
-<p>“Jim,” interrupted the miner
-sharply, “did you ever hear of Aladdin
-and his lamp?”</p>
-
-<p>“Huh? Oh, the feller that rubbed
-it an’ got what he wanted?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the chap.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well—s’posin’ I have?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I only wondered what you’d
-ask for if you had one to rub.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gorry—I wish’t I had!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what would you?” persisted
-Joe, his face alight.</p>
-
-<p>“What would I? Well, I’ll tell ye.
-I’d buy the big house on the hill——”</p>
-
-<p>“What—Barrington’s?” interrupted
-Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“Gee whiz, no! I mean the empty
-one that Rotalick lived in; an’ I’d
-make it over into a hospital, an’ I’d
-add to it as I was able.”</p>
-
-<p>“A hospital? Why, there is one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know—the company’s; but
-the boys always have ter quit there
-long ’fore they’re able. They can’t
-work, an’ if they laze ’round home it
-takes furever to git well—what with
-the noise an’ the children an’ all. They
-crawl down here to the store, an’ my
-heart jest aches fur ’em, they’re so
-peaked-lookin’. I’d have it all fixed
-up with trees an’ posies an’ places
-ter set, ye know, where they could
-take some comfort while they was
-gittin’ well.”</p>
-
-<p>A moisture came into Joe’s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“But how about yourself?” he
-asked. “You haven’t rubbed out
-anything for yourself, Jim.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fur me? Gorry—if I jest had that
-lamp, you’d see me rubbin’ out somethin’
-fur me, all right. I’ve been wantin’
-ter send home a box ter the old folks—’way
-back in Maine, ye know. Jiminy
-Christmas, man, there’d be no end ter
-the black silk dresses and gold-headed
-canes an’ fixin’s an’ fur-belows that I’d
-rub out an’ send to ’em!”</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe laughed; then something
-came into his throat and choked
-the laugh back.</p>
-
-<p>“But all this isn’t for you, Jim,” he
-remonstrated.</p>
-
-<p>“Huh? Not fur me? Fur heaven’s
-sake, man, who is it fur, then?”</p>
-
-<p>The miner laughed again and slid
-off the counter.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got quite a store, Jim.
-Ever wish you had more room?” he
-asked abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>Pedler Jim not only nibbled at the
-bait, but swallowed it.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, ye see, I’m goin’ ter have
-the place next door when I git money
-enough and then I’ll jine ’em together.
-That’ll be somethin’ worth while,” he
-continued.</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe easily kept him talking
-on this fascinating theme a full ten
-minutes, then he prepared to take his
-leave.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s see,” he mused aloud, “you
-came from Maine, you say. About
-where—the town, I mean?”</p>
-
-<p>Jim named it.</p>
-
-<p>“You say the old folks are living
-there yet?”</p>
-
-<p>Jim nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Name is Powers, I suppose, same
-as yours; maybe you were named for
-your father, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; father’s name was Ebenezer, an’
-mother objected—so it’s ‘Jim’ I am.
-Why? Goin’ ter dig up my family tree
-by the roots?” asked the little man
-whimsically.</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit of it!” laughed the miner,
-looking strangely embarrassed as he
-hurried out the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Monte Cristo” had been Hustler
-Joe’s favorite tale in his boyhood
-days. He thought of it now, as he left
-the “Emporium,” and the thought
-brought a smile to his lips.</p>
-
-<p>A few days later Pedler Jim was
-dumfounded to receive a call from a
-Westmont lawyer.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, my friend,” the man began,
-“I have a few little documents here
-that demand your attention.”</p>
-
-<p>Pedler Jim eyed the formidable-looking
-papers with some apprehension.</p>
-
-<p>“Now see here, sir,” he demurred,
-“my conscience is perfectly clear. I
-don’t want nothin’ to do with sech
-devilish-lookin’ things as that!”—his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[Pg 167]</span>
-eyes on the big red seal. “I hain’t
-never harmed no one—’tain’t an arres’,
-is it?” he added, his voice suddenly
-failing him.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, hardly!” returned the lawyer,
-chuckling to himself. “This, my
-friend, is the deed, filled out in your
-name, to the Rotalick property on the
-hill back here; and this,” he continued,
-taking up another paper and
-paying no attention to the little hunchback,
-who had dropped in limp stupefaction
-on to a packing-box, “this is
-the deed—also made out in your
-name—to the building adjoining this
-store on the south. Mr. Balch, the
-present occupant, has a lease which
-expires in two months. After that the
-property is at your disposal.”</p>
-
-<p>“But where in thunder did I git it?”
-demanded Pedler Jim.</p>
-
-<p>“That is not my business, sir,”
-said the lawyer, with a bow.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll be jiggered!” murmured
-the hunchback, gingerly picking up one
-of the deeds and peering at it.</p>
-
-<p>Pedler Jim was still further astounded
-to find that to his tiny bank
-account had been added a sum so
-large that he scarcely believed his eyes.
-It was entered under the name “Hospital
-Fund.”</p>
-
-<p>Following close upon all this came
-a letter from the folks at home:</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot"><i>Dear Jimmie</i>: What a good, good son
-we have, and how can we ever thank you!
-(“Dear Jimmie” looked blank.) The black
-silk, so soft and rich, will make up into such
-a beautiful gown—much too fine for your
-old mother, Jimmie, but I shall be proud of
-it. Father is already quite puffed up with
-his lovely gold-topped cane. Nellie and
-Mary and Tom and John have divided up
-the pretty ribbons and books and sweetmeats
-to suit themselves, as long as you
-didn’t single them out by name. (“No—I’m
-blest if I did!” murmured Jim.) We were
-proud and pleased to get the box, Jimmie,
-both because the things were so beautiful
-and because you thought to send them.
-(“I’ll be hanged if I did!” muttered the
-hunchback, scratching his head in his perplexity.)
-Why don’t you come on East
-and see us, dear? We wish you would.</p>
-
-<p>Then followed bits of neighborhood
-gossip and family news, ending with
-another burst of thanks which left
-Pedler Jim helpless with bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p>It was that night that Somers was
-talking in the store.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, he’s rich—rich as mud, they
-say, an’ I ain’t sorry, neither. There
-ain’t anyone I know that I’d as soon
-would have a streak o’ luck as Hustler
-Joe.”</p>
-
-<p>Pedler Jim was across the room, but
-he heard.</p>
-
-<p>“Rich! Hustler Joe rich!” he demanded,
-springing to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what he is!”</p>
-
-<p>“Jiminy Christmas!” shouted the
-hunchback. “I’ve found him—he was
-the lamp himself!”</p>
-
-<h3>XI</h3>
-
-<p>It was in Dalton, the nearest large
-city to Skinner Valley, that Hustler
-Joe began his career as a rich man.</p>
-
-<p>He built him a house—a house so
-rare and costly that people came from
-miles around to stare and wonder.
-Society not only opened its doors to
-him, but reached out persuasive hands
-and displayed its most alluring charms.
-She demanded but one thing—a new
-name: “Hustler Joe” could scarcely
-be tolerated in the aristocratic drawing-rooms
-of the inner circle! He gave
-her “Westbrook,” and thenceforth
-“Mr. Joseph Westbrook” was a power
-in the city.</p>
-
-<p>He was petted by maneuvering
-mamas, flattered by doting papas, and
-beamed upon by aspiring daughters;
-yet the firm lips seldom relaxed in a
-smile, and his groom told of long night
-rides when the master would come
-home in the gray of the morning with
-his horse covered with mud and foam.
-But society cared not. Society loves a
-Mystery—if the Mystery be rich.</p>
-
-<p>When Joseph Westbrook’s mansion
-was finished and furnished from cellar
-to garret and placed in the hands of a
-dignified, black-robed housekeeper at
-the head of a corps of servants, and
-when his stables were filled with
-thoroughbreds and equipped with all
-things needful, from a gold-tipped whip
-to a liveried coachman, Mr. Joseph
-Westbrook himself was as restless and ill<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[Pg 168]</span>
-at ease as Hustler Joe had been in the
-renovated shanty on the hillside.</p>
-
-<p>The balls and the dinners—invitations
-to which poured in upon him—he
-attended in much the same spirit that
-Hustler Joe had displayed in loitering
-in Pedler Jim’s “Emporium”—anywhere
-to get rid of himself. But if the
-inner man was the same, the outer certainly
-was not; and the well-groomed
-gentleman of leisure bore little resemblance
-to the miner of a year before.</p>
-
-<p>On the night of the Charity Ball
-Westbrook had been almost rude in
-his evasion of various unwelcome advances,
-and he now stood in the solitude
-for which he had striven, watching
-the dancers with sombre eyes. Suddenly
-his face lighted up; but the flame
-that leaped to his eyes was instantly
-quenched by the look of indifference he
-threw into his countenance. Coming
-toward him was Ethel Barrington, leaning
-on the arm of her father.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Westbrook,” said the old gentleman
-genially, “my little girl says
-she is sure she has seen your face somewhere,
-so I have brought her over to
-renew old acquaintance.”</p>
-
-<p>Someone spoke to John Barrington
-then, and he turned aside, while Westbrook
-found himself once more clasping
-a slim firm hand, and looking into
-a well-remembered pair of blue eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“You are——?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hustler Joe,” he supplied quietly,
-his eyes never leaving her face.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew it!” she exclaimed, her pleasure
-frankly shown. “I never could
-forget your face,” she added impulsively,
-then colored in confusion as she
-realized the force of her words.</p>
-
-<p>But his tactful reply put her immediately
-at ease and they were soon
-chatting merrily together, closely
-watched by many curious eyes. Society
-never had seen Mr. Joseph Westbrook
-in just this mood before.</p>
-
-<p>“Father did not recognize you,” said
-Ethel, after a time.</p>
-
-<p>“No; I was introduced to Mr. Barrington
-at the Essex Club a week ago.
-I hardly thought he would remember
-Hustler Joe. You have just returned,
-Miss Barrington?”</p>
-
-<p>“A month ago—from Europe, I
-mean; mother is there yet. America
-looks wonderfully good to me—I have
-been away from it the greater part of
-the last two years, you know. When I
-came home to Dalton I found the name
-of Mr. Joseph Westbrook on every lip.
-You seem to be a very important personage,
-sir,” she laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“A little gilding goes a long way,
-sometimes,” he replied, with a bitter
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>“But there must have been something
-to gild!” she challenged. “Mr.
-Westbrook, for the last two weeks I
-have been at The Maples—have you
-been down to Skinner Valley lately?”
-she asked, with peculiar abruptness.</p>
-
-<p>“Not for some months.”</p>
-
-<p>“There are some changes in the village.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes?”</p>
-
-<p>“That poor little deformed storekeeper
-has bought the Rotalick house
-and has turned it into the dearest little
-convalescents’ home imaginable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is that so?” murmured Westbrook,
-meeting Miss Barrington’s gaze with a
-face that was innocently noncommittal.
-“Pedler Jim always was kind to the
-boys.”</p>
-
-<p>“So it would seem; still—someone
-must have helped him in this,” she
-suggested, her eyes on his again.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think so? Possibly! I am
-wondering, Miss Barrington, if we
-might not find it cooler over there by
-the window. Will you allow me to
-escort you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps we might,” she smilingly
-assented. “Perhaps we could find
-some subject of conversation other
-than Hustler Joe’s generosity to Pedler
-Jim, too—we might try!” She threw
-him a merry glance, which he answered
-with a shrug of his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, Miss Barrington, you quite
-overestimate anything I may have had
-to do in the matter. It was entirely
-Pedler Jim’s idea. How about the
-reading-room?” he suddenly asked,
-mentioning Miss Barrington’s latest
-gift to the miners, “and the kindergarten
-class, and the——”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah—please!” interrupted the girl,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[Pg 169]</span>
-with hand upraised in laughing protest.
-“I acknowledge myself vanquished
-at my own game. I’ll talk
-about—the weather, now, if you like,”
-she finished dutifully.</p>
-
-<p>Westbrook laughed, but before he
-could reply Miss Barrington was claimed
-by a tall young fellow for the next
-dance.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder,” he mused as he saw
-them glide gracefully into the waltz—“I
-wonder if dancing belongs to those
-things one never forgets. I’ll have
-to brush up my old steps—and learn
-some new ones,” he added, after a
-pause.</p>
-
-<p>From the night of the Charity Ball
-the world appeared in new colors for
-Westbrook. He did not stop to question
-the cause of all this change. If
-wealth were lifting her disguise and
-showing a glimpse of peace, he was too
-rejoiced to care to ask the reason.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you’d come up to the house
-some time,” said John Barrington to
-Westbrook one evening soon after the
-Charity Ball. “I’d like to talk with
-you—we can’t make any headway in
-this infernal racket!”—the “infernal
-racket” in question being the high C’s
-and low G’s of some world-famous
-singers at a particularly exclusive
-musical.</p>
-
-<p>Westbrook smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you; I should be only too
-happy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then call it tomorrow night—to
-dinner. Seven o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will—and thank you,” said
-Westbrook after a momentary hesitation.</p>
-
-<p>To his daughter John Barrington
-said a little later:</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’ve invited Mr. Westbrook up
-to dinner tomorrow night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Westbrook!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, yes—why not? You seem
-surprised.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gilding does count, doesn’t it,
-father dear?”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? Gilding? My dear, I don’t
-know what you mean. I know he’s
-rich as mud—if that’s what you’re
-talking about; but he’s got more than
-money—he’s got brains. He knows as
-much about mines as I do! I like him—he’s
-worth a dozen of the youths that
-usually flutter about you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps he is,” laughed Ethel, the
-color in her cheeks deepening.</p>
-
-<p>That was but the first of many visits.
-Barrington was urgent, Ethel charmingly
-cordial—and Westbrook, nothing
-loth.</p>
-
-<h3>XII</h3>
-
-<p>“I’m in search of a good lawyer,”
-said Westbrook to John Barrington
-one day. “Can you recommend one
-to me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed I can. I have in mind the
-very man—he’s been doing a little
-work for me, and he is very highly
-spoken of.”</p>
-
-<p>“That sounds about O. K. Who is
-he?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s just the point,” laughed the
-older man; “the name’s escaped me.
-He’s from the East—hasn’t been here
-very long. I’ll tell you what—I’ll
-bring him into your office tomorrow.
-Will that do?”</p>
-
-<p>“It will—and thank you.”</p>
-
-<p>Westbrook’s “office” was something
-new. A life of leisure was becoming
-wearisome; consequently he invested
-in various bits of real estate, opened an
-office, put a man in charge, and of late
-had himself tended strictly to business,
-such time as he could spare from his
-social engagements.</p>
-
-<p>It was into this office that Mr. Barrington
-came one morning accompanied
-by a short, smooth-faced man
-whose garments were irreproachable in
-style and cut.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Westbrook,” began Barrington,
-“let me introduce Mr. Martin, of
-Martin &amp; Gray, the lawyer of whom I
-was telling you yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>Again the room and all it contained—save
-the figure of Martin himself—faded
-from Westbrook’s sight, and he
-saw the New England street with the
-lawyer’s sign in the foreground. The
-next moment the vision was gone, and
-he had extended a cordial hand.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m very glad to meet Mr. Martin,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[Pg 170]</span>
-he said, looking the lawyer straight in
-the eye.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Westbrook—delighted, I’m
-sure,” murmured the little man suavely;
-then, in a puzzled tone, “have I
-had the honor of meeting you before,
-Mr. Westbrook? There is something
-familiar about you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is there?” began Westbrook, but
-John Barrington interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>“There, Martin, you’ve hit my case
-exactly! He’s puzzled me a thousand
-times with a little turn or twist that’s
-like someone I’ve seen. Dash it—who
-is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“My features must be cast in a common
-mold,” laughed Westbrook, “to
-remind so many of one they know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Um—ah—well—I shouldn’t want
-to say quite that!” retorted Barrington.
-“Well, gentlemen,” he resumed
-after a pause, “I’ll leave you to your
-own devices. I’m off—good morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, and thank you,”
-replied Westbrook, rising. “I’ve no
-doubt Mr. Martin will prove a credit
-to your introduction,” he concluded
-as he bowed the elder gentleman out.
-Then he turned to the lawyer and began
-the business at hand.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In his own room that night Westbrook
-carried a small mirror close to
-the light and scrutinized himself for
-some minutes.</p>
-
-<p>“H’m,” he mused, “hair rather gray
-for a man not yet thirty; still—it looks
-less like that of a youth of twenty.”</p>
-
-<p>He stroked his carefully trimmed
-beard meditatively.</p>
-
-<p>“Hides the telltale mouth and chin
-pretty well,” he murmured. “Mr. Joseph
-Westbrook can stay where he is
-for the present, I think.”</p>
-
-<p>The next evening Westbrook called
-at the Barringtons’. He found Ethel
-and Mr. Martin at the piano singing a
-duet which they continued at his solicitation.
-Then the two musicians
-drifted into a discussion of Martin’s
-favorite composer, which was like a
-foreign language to Westbrook.</p>
-
-<p>After a half-hour of this the lawyer
-took his leave. Westbrook drew a long
-breath, but it was caught and stifled
-in half completion by Miss Barrington’s
-first remark.</p>
-
-<p>“What a fine voice he has!”</p>
-
-<p>“Er—yes, very.”</p>
-
-<p>“And his knowledge of musical matters
-is most unusual, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“That so?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. He says he wanted to make
-music his profession, but his parents
-objected; so he took up law.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed,” murmured Westbrook
-without enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but he talks of musicians as
-glibly as though he had read Grove as
-much as Blackstone. I haven’t had so
-good a time discussing my pet composers
-for many a day.”</p>
-
-<p>Westbrook stirred restlessly, and his
-hostess suddenly became aware of the
-hopelessly lost look in his eyes. She
-promptly changed the subject.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was the very next day that Mr.
-Joseph Westbrook appeared in the
-leading book-store of the city.</p>
-
-<p>“I want some lives of musicians,”
-he announced.</p>
-
-<p>“I beg pardon?”</p>
-
-<p>“Books, I mean—lives of musicians.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, certainly, of course,” apologized
-the clerk. “Which ones?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why—er—the best ones, to be
-sure.” Westbrook’s voice faltered at
-first, but it vibrated with the courage
-of his convictions at the last.</p>
-
-<p>The clerk suddenly turned his back,
-and when Westbrook next saw his face
-it was an apoplectic shade of reddish
-purple.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, sir. Bach, Beethoven,
-Handel, Haydn, Mendelssohn, Mozart,
-Chopin——”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes, put me up one of each,”
-interrupted Westbrook hastily; he was
-growing suspicious of the clerk. He
-left the store with more dignity than
-he usually displayed.</p>
-
-<p>The real estate business would have
-suffered in the next few days had it
-depended entirely upon Westbrook, for
-the greater share of his time was spent
-in poring over the recent addition to
-his library. At the end of a month he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[Pg 171]</span>
-was sadly entangled in a bewildering
-maze of fugues, sonatas, concertos and
-symphonies, in which the names of
-Bach, Beethoven, Haydn, Handel,
-Mendelssohn, Mozart and Chopin were
-hopelessly lost.</p>
-
-<h3>XIII</h3>
-
-<p>Westbrook often met the lawyer
-at the Barringtons’ after that first visit.
-Martin’s music and Martin’s voice
-seemed to be unfailing attractions in
-the eyes of Miss Barrington. Westbrook
-studied his “lives” assiduously,
-but only once did he venture to take
-any part in the discussions of composers
-which were so frequent between
-Miss Barrington and the lawyer. That
-once was sufficient to show him how
-hopeless was the task he had set for
-himself; and ever after he kept a discreet
-silence on the subject of music
-and all that pertained thereto.</p>
-
-<p>As the winter passed, Westbrook was
-seen more and more frequently in the
-company of Miss Barrington. His eye
-had lost its gloom and his step had
-gained a new springiness. Just why,
-Westbrook did not stop to consider.
-Indeed, the considering of anything
-was what the man most wished to avoid.</p>
-
-<p>It was on a beautiful morning in
-May that he asked Miss Barrington to
-drive with him. The air that brushed
-his cheek was laden with the fragrance
-of green-growing things, and the girl
-at his side had never seemed so altogether
-lovely. He let the reins loosen
-in his hands as he settled back for an
-hour of unalloyed enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>“I am particularly glad to take this
-drive today,” remarked Miss Barrington,
-smiling into his eyes, “for, as I
-go away tomorrow, I may not have
-another opportunity of enjoying one
-at present.”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” demanded Westbrook, suddenly
-sitting upright.</p>
-
-<p>“I merely said I was going away
-tomorrow,” she returned merrily,
-picking out with intuitive skill that
-portion of her remark which had so
-startled him. Then something in his
-face made her add—“for the summer,
-you know.”</p>
-
-<p>Westbrook pulled the reins taut and
-snapped the whip sharply. Going
-away! Of course; why not? What of
-it? Yes, what of it, indeed! Long
-days fraught with sudden emptiness
-loomed up before him and stretched
-on into weeks devoid of charm. He
-understood it all now—and he a felon!
-He could hear a girl’s voice saying,
-“I knew you were a good man the
-minute I saw your face!” Unconsciously
-he shrank into the corner of
-the carriage, and was only brought to
-a realization of his action by a voice—amused,
-yet slightly piqued—saying:</p>
-
-<p>“Really, Mr. Westbrook, I hardly
-expected so simple a statement would
-render you speechless!”</p>
-
-<p>“Speechless? No, oh, no—certainly
-not! I beg your pardon, I’m sure,”
-he said, talking very fast. “You’re
-going away, you tell me. It is needless
-to assure you that we shall all
-miss you very much. Where do you
-go, if I may ask—and how long are
-you to remain?” And he turned to
-her with eyes so full of misery that
-she could scarcely believe she had
-heard his words aright.</p>
-
-<p>Before she could answer there came
-the wild, irregular clattering of unguided
-horses’ feet. Westbrook turned
-quickly to see two frightened animals
-rushing toward them dragging a swaying
-empty carriage. By a swift and
-skilful turn he just escaped the collision,
-but Ethel Barrington felt the
-hot breath of the beasts as they flew
-past. In another moment their own
-startled horse had dashed after the
-runaways with speed scarcely less
-than their own.</p>
-
-<p>Westbrook brought all his great
-strength to bear, then—the right rein
-snapped. The horse swerved sharply,
-throwing the man to his knees. The
-next moment he was crawling cautiously,
-but rapidly, over the dashboard
-on to the thill, then to the back
-of the frightened animal, where he
-could grasp the dangling broken reins.
-One strong pull, and the horse stopped
-so suddenly that the man shot over<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[Pg 172]</span>
-her head to the ground; but he did not
-relax his hold, and the trembling
-animal stood conquered.</p>
-
-<p>Westbrook turned to look into the
-shining eyes of the girl, who had leaped
-from the carriage and come close to his
-side.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that was wonderful! But—my
-God! I thought you’d be killed,”
-she cried, holding out two trembling
-hands, then sinking to the ground and
-sobbing out her nervousness and
-relief.</p>
-
-<p>The man looked down at her with
-yearningly tender eyes. Involuntarily
-he extended his hand as though to
-caress the bowed head; but he drew
-back shuddering—that hand had forfeited
-all right to such a touch. The
-look in her eyes had thrilled him to his
-finger-tips, but it as quickly stabbed
-him with the revelation that not he
-alone would suffer.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Barrington, don’t, I beg of
-you,” he said finally, in a voice that
-was stem with self-control. “You are
-completely unnerved—and no wonder.”
-Then he continued more gently, “But
-see—Firefly is quiet now. Will you dare
-to drive home behind her if I can
-manage somehow to mend the reins?”</p>
-
-<p>A vivid color flamed into the girl’s
-cheeks and she rose unsteadily to her
-feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, indeed,” she asserted, forcing
-her trembling lips to speak firmly.
-“I am ashamed of myself. I hope you
-will pay no attention to my babyishness,
-Mr. Westbrook.”</p>
-
-<p>“You were not babyish, Miss Barrington,”
-objected Westbrook gravely;
-“on the contrary you were very brave.”
-But as he helped her into the carriage
-he averted his eyes and refused to meet
-her questioning gaze.</p>
-
-<p>All the way home Ethel Barrington
-talked with a nervous volubility quite
-unlike herself. Westbrook made an
-effort to meet her brilliant sallies with
-something like an adequate return, but
-after two or three dismal failures he
-gave it up and lapsed into a gloomy
-silence broken only by an occasional
-short reply.</p>
-
-<p>“I expect my friends will come this
-evening to say good-bye—I shall see
-you, shall I not?” she asked gaily as
-she gave him her hand in alighting at
-her own door.</p>
-
-<p>Before Westbrook fully realized what
-the question was, he had murmured,
-“Yes, certainly”; but when he drove
-away he was muttering, “Fool, what
-possible good can it be to you now?
-Just suppose she knew you for what
-you are?”</p>
-
-<p>Ethel entered her door and slowly
-climbed the stairs to her room.</p>
-
-<p>“He cares; I know he does!” she
-exclaimed under her breath. “But
-why—why couldn’t he—?” Then the
-conscious red, that was yet half in
-pique, flamed into her cheeks and she
-shrugged her shoulders disdainfully.</p>
-
-<p>When Westbrook called that night
-she gave him a gracious hand and
-looked frankly into his eyes with the
-inward determination to “have no
-more nonsense”; but her eyelids
-quickly fell before his level gaze and
-she felt the telltale color burning in
-her cheeks. She was relieved when her
-father broke the awkward silence.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Westbrook, we shall miss
-you—we’ve got so we depend upon
-seeing you about once in so often.
-We shall be in Skinner Valley in
-August. You must plan to run down
-to The Maples then and make us a
-visit. I should like to show you the
-mines.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” replied Westbrook,
-glancing toward the door and, for the
-first time in his life, welcoming the
-appearance of Martin.</p>
-
-<p>Martin advanced, smilingly sure of
-his welcome, nor did he notice that
-Miss Barrington’s greeting was a shade
-less cordial than usual. His coming
-was the signal for an adjournment to
-the music-room, and there Westbrook
-sat with clouded eyes and unheeding
-ears while the air about him rang with
-melody. After a time he was conscious
-that the music had stopped and
-that Ethel was speaking.</p>
-
-<p>“I think I never heard of anything
-so horrible!” she said.</p>
-
-<p>From Martin’s next words Westbrook
-gathered that they were talking<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[Pg 173]</span>
-of a particularly atrocious murder that
-had been committed in the city the
-night before. Then the girl spoke
-again, her voice vibrating with feeling.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but Mr. Martin—only think of
-a human being fiendish enough to attack
-his own son!”</p>
-
-<p>Westbrook tried to rouse himself, to
-speak, to move; but he seemed bound
-by invisible cords. His head was
-turned away from the speakers, but he
-saw their reflection in the mirror facing
-him, and he noticed that the lawyer’s
-gaze was fixed across the room upon
-himself with a peculiar intentness as
-he said:</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, incredible, I grant, Miss Barrington;
-and yet, in a little New England
-town of my acquaintance a boy
-of twenty shot down his own father
-in cold blood at their own fireside.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t, Mr. Martin—the human
-fiend!” shuddered Ethel.</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer’s eyes did not waver; a
-strange light was coming into them.</p>
-
-<p>“A human fiend, indeed,” he repeated
-softly, half rising from his chair.</p>
-
-<p>Something seemed to snap in Westbrook’s
-brain, and he forced himself to
-his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Your music set me to day-dreaming,”
-he began, with a smile as he
-crossed the room, “and your creepy
-murder stories awoke me to a realization
-that the sweet sounds had stopped.
-Come”—he looked straight into Martin’s
-eyes—“some time you may tell
-me more of this gruesome tale—I am
-interested in studies of human nature.
-No doubt you meet with many strange
-experiences in your business; but now
-I want you to sing ‘Calvary’ for me.
-Will you, please? Then I must go.”</p>
-
-<p>Martin rose to his feet with a puzzled
-frown on his face and picked up a
-sheet of music from the piano.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” said Westbrook, when
-the song was finished. Then he turned
-to Ethel with extended hand. “I hope
-you will have a pleasant summer,” he
-said in stilted politeness.</p>
-
-<p>“You are very kind. Shall I wish
-you the same?”</p>
-
-<p>Her voice and her fingers were icy.
-Her pride was touched, and she expressed
-no hope as to their future meeting,
-and certainly Westbrook dared not.
-He left the house with a heart that was
-bitterly rebellious, and the blackness
-outside seemed to him symbolical of
-his own despair.</p>
-
-<p>That night, and for long nights afterward,
-he rode over the hills outside the
-city. Little by little his life dropped
-back into the old rut. All the new
-warmth and brightness faded with the
-going of Miss Barrington, and he threw
-himself into business with a zeal that
-quickly brought “Westbrook &amp; Company”
-into the front rank and filled
-his purse with yet greater wealth—wealth
-which he had come to hate, and
-for which he had no use.</p>
-
-<h3>XIV</h3>
-
-<p>One morning, long after sunrise,
-Westbrook entered the outskirts of the
-city and allowed his tired beast to slow
-to a walk. In one of the poorest streets
-of the tenement district he saw a white-faced
-woman, a group of half a dozen
-puny children and a forlorn heap of
-clothing and furniture. He was off his
-horse in a moment, and a few kindly
-questions brought out the information
-that they had been evicted for arrears
-in rent amounting to thirty dollars because
-the woman had been too ill to
-work. He straightway paid the sleek
-little agent not only the amount due,
-but also a year’s rent in advance and
-rode away, followed by a volley of
-thanks and blessings from the woman.
-He did not know that Martin was the
-landlord and that he came out of the
-tenement in time to hear the details of
-the incident fresh from his agent.</p>
-
-<p>As Westbrook turned the corner of
-the dingy street a curious elation took
-possession of him. How the sun shone—how
-exhilarating the air was! How
-his heart beat in tune with it all!
-What was this new joy that seemed
-almost to choke and suffocate him?
-Was this the shadow of peace at
-last?</p>
-
-<p>He threw the reins to the groom
-with so beaming a smile that the man<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[Pg 174]</span>
-scratched his head meditatively for a
-full half-minute.</p>
-
-<p>“Faith, an’ what’s got into the master?”
-he muttered as he led the horse
-to the stable.</p>
-
-<p>In the days that followed society
-was treated to a new sensation—the
-Mystery turned into a Philanthropist.
-A school, a library and a hospital were
-under way in a wonderfully short time.
-Did Westbrook hear of anyone wanting
-anything—from a toy to a piano
-or a dinner to an education—he
-promptly bought and presented it.
-The result was disastrous. There came
-a constant stream of beggars to his
-door, varying from those in rags asking
-a nickel to bank presidents demanding
-a million—for “investment,” of course;
-furthermore, he was obliged to hire two
-private secretaries to attend to his
-mail.</p>
-
-<p>In August came a cordial note from
-Mr. Barrington inviting him to The
-Maples for a two weeks’ visit. The
-stiffly worded refusal which Westbrook
-despatched by return mail threw John
-Barrington into a state of puzzled dissatisfaction,
-and John Barrington’s
-daughter into a feeling of unreasoning
-anger against the world in general and
-Joseph Westbrook in particular. The
-anger was not less when, two months
-later, Westbrook called on the Barringtons
-just four weeks after they had
-come up to their town residence in
-Dalton.</p>
-
-<p>It was not a pleasant call. Westbrook
-was stilted, Mr. Barrington
-plainly ill at ease, and Ethel the personification
-of chill politeness; yet she
-became cordiality itself when Martin
-appeared a little later. She chatted
-and laughed with the lawyer and sent
-merry shafts of wit across the room to
-Westbrook and her father. But when
-Westbrook had gone she lapsed into
-bored indifference and monosyllables.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Barrington was called from the
-room after a time, leaving his daughter
-and Martin alone. The lawyer broached
-subject after subject with unvarying
-ill success, even music itself failing to
-awaken more than a passing interest.
-At last he said abruptly:</p>
-
-<p>“Queer chap—that Westbrook!”</p>
-
-<p>“Queer? Why?” almost snapped
-Miss Barrington.</p>
-
-<p>Martin raised his eyebrows.</p>
-
-<p>“How can you ask?” he returned.
-“You’ve seen him—you know him!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barrington gave the lawyer a
-swift glance. Just what did he mean?
-Had he noticed the change in Westbrook’s
-manner—his indifference—his
-coldness? Did he think that she——?</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barrington laughed softly.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, yes, Mr. Martin, I do know
-him—slightly, perhaps; but ‘queer’ is
-not the adjective I would have applied
-to him.”</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer leaned forward.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Barrington, <i>what</i> do you know
-of him? Did it ever occur to you how
-very little any of us know of this man?”</p>
-
-<p>The lady stirred uneasily.</p>
-
-<p>“Really, Mr. Martin, I know him for
-a gentleman, as you do—I might also
-add that he is quite a noted philanthropist,
-of late,” she added teasingly.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Philanthropist!’” scorned the lawyer.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barrington’s manner instantly
-changed.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Westbrook is doing a world of
-good with his money; I admire him for
-it,” she said with decision.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, of course,” returned the man
-smoothly. “Still, I wonder why—this
-sudden generosity!”</p>
-
-<p>“Sudden? It’s a long time since I
-first heard of Mr. Westbrook’s good
-deeds, Mr. Martin,” replied Miss Barrington,
-a vision of Pedler Jim and his
-hospital rising before her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“H’m-m,” murmured the lawyer,
-his level gaze on her face, “you knew
-him before, perhaps—this man they—er—call
-‘Westbrook.’”</p>
-
-<p>The lady sprang to her feet and
-crossed the room to the piano.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, fie, Mr. Lawyer!” she laughed
-nervously. “I’m no poor victim on
-the witness stand. Come—let’s try
-this duet.”</p>
-
-<p>The man followed her and leaned his
-elbow on the piano, but he did not
-pick up the music nor take his eyes from
-her face.</p>
-
-<p>“You have known him before, then—under<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[Pg 175]</span>
-his other name, of course,” he
-hazarded.</p>
-
-<p>A swift red came into Ethel’s
-cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps—perhaps not! I really
-do not care to discuss it.” And she
-wheeled around upon the piano-stool
-and dashed into the prelude of the
-duet.</p>
-
-<p>Martin waited until her hands
-glided into the soft ripple of the accompaniment.</p>
-
-<p>“Then you, of all people, Miss Barrington,”
-he began again, “should
-know that this philanthropic mummery
-is nothing but a salve for his
-conscience. Admirable, I’m sure!”</p>
-
-<p>The music stopped with a crash.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?” she demanded.
-“I don’t know what you
-are talking about, with your miserable
-innuendoes.”</p>
-
-<p>Martin’s face paled.</p>
-
-<p>“Innuendoes!” he burst out, losing
-his temper; “then I’ll speak plainly,
-since you demand it! Since when,
-Miss Barrington, have you made a
-practice of shielding—murderers?”</p>
-
-<p>He regretted the word the instant it
-had left his lips, but he forced himself
-to meet Miss Barrington’s horrified
-gaze unflinchingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Murderer!” she gasped. “Hustler
-Joe was no murderer!”</p>
-
-<p>At that moment Mr. Barrington re-entered
-the room and Martin turned to
-him in relief. Five minutes later he
-had made his adieus and left the
-house.</p>
-
-<h3>XV</h3>
-
-<p>Murderer!</p>
-
-<p>Ethel fled to her room and locked
-the door, but the word laughed at bolts
-and bars. It looked from the walls and
-the pictures and peeped at her from the
-pages of the book she tried to read.
-She opened the window and gazed up
-at the stars, but they, too, knew the
-hated word and spelled it out in
-twinkling points of light.</p>
-
-<p>Murderer?</p>
-
-<p>Ah, no, it could not be—and yet——</p>
-
-<p>Away back in Ethel’s memory was a
-picture of the Deerfield woods that
-skirted the lawn at The Maples. She
-saw the tall, grave-faced miner and the
-imperious girl, and even now the words
-rang in her ears—“I’m not the good
-man you think, Miss Barrington!”
-Half-forgotten tales of “Hustler Joe’s
-queerness” came to her, too, and
-assumed an appearance of evil.</p>
-
-<p>And was this to be the explanation
-of that ride—that ride on which she
-had almost betrayed herself only to be
-met by stern words of conventionality?
-Was this the meaning of the infrequent
-calls, the averted face, the eyes so
-misery-laden if by chance they met
-her own?</p>
-
-<p>A murderer?</p>
-
-<p>Ah, no, no! He was so good—so
-kind—so brave! There were Pedler
-Jim, the miners whose lives he had
-saved, and the multitudes of the city’s
-poor to give the lie to so base a charge;
-and yet—Martin had said that these
-very benefactions were but a lullaby to
-a guilty conscience.</p>
-
-<p>The night brought Ethel no relief.
-The dark was peopled with horrid
-shapes; and sleep, when it came, was
-dream-haunted and unrefreshing. In
-the morning, weary and heavy-eyed,
-she awoke to a day of restless wandering
-from room to room. Twenty-four
-hours later her trunk was packed and
-she was on her way to The Maples.</p>
-
-<p>It was at about this time that Westbrook’s
-philanthropy took a new turn.
-He began to spend long hours in the
-city prison while society looked on and
-shrugged disdainful shoulders. The
-striped-garbed creatures behind the
-bars seemed to possess a peculiar
-fascination for him. He haunted their
-habitation daily, yet he never failed
-to shudder at every clang of the iron
-doors.</p>
-
-<p>Particularly was he kind to those
-outcasts from human sympathy—the
-murderers. So far did he carry this
-branch of his charity that the authorities
-ventured to remonstrate with the great
-man one day, telling him that he was
-putting a premium on the horrible
-crime. They never forgot the look
-that came over the beneficent Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[Pg 176]</span>
-Joseph Westbrook’s face as he turned
-and walked away.</p>
-
-<p>It was on that night that the servants
-said he sat up until morning in his
-library, raging around the room like
-some mad creature, so that they were
-all afraid, and one came and listened at
-the door. There he heard his master
-cry out:</p>
-
-<p>“My God—is it not enough? Is
-there no atonement—no peace?” Then
-there was a long, quivering sigh, and a
-noise as of a clinched hand striking the
-desk, and a low muttered, “Oh, the
-pitiless God of Justice!”</p>
-
-<p>In the morning Westbrook left the
-house before breakfast and boarded
-the eight o’clock train for Skinner
-Valley.</p>
-
-<h3>XVI</h3>
-
-<p>Westbrook had gone back to Skinner
-Valley for a talk with Pedler Joe,
-having it in his mind to tell the little
-hunchback his life story as that of a
-friend of his and so get the benefit
-of sound advice without quite
-betraying his secret. But the door
-opened suddenly and Bill Somers burst
-into the store.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s another blow-up at the
-mine!” he gasped thickly. “An’ the
-old man’s daughter—she——”</p>
-
-<p>“What old man’s daughter?” demanded
-Westbrook, his lips white.</p>
-
-<p>“She—Barrington’s girl—is down
-there in that hell! She went in with
-her friends at two o’clock. They——”</p>
-
-<p>“Which entrance?” thundered Westbrook,
-with his hand on the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Beachmont! They——”</p>
-
-<p>Westbrook dashed down the steps
-and across the sidewalk, whipped out
-his knife and cut loose a horse from
-the shafts of a wagon in front of the
-store. The next moment he had
-mounted the animal and was urging
-it into a mad run toward the Beachmont
-entrance of the Candria mine.</p>
-
-<p>Again did he face a crowd of weeping
-women and children crazed with
-terror; but this time there stood
-among them the bowed form of the
-great mine-king himself. John Barrington’s
-lips were stern and set, and
-only his eyes spoke as he grasped
-Westbrook’s hand.</p>
-
-<p>Once more did a band of heroic men
-work their way bit by bit into the
-mine, fighting the damp at every turn
-under Westbrook’s directions.</p>
-
-<p>Barrington had looked at the preparations
-in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“How comes it that this Westbrook,
-this millionaire, knows the mine so
-well?” he stammered.</p>
-
-<p>A woman standing near—Bill Somers’s
-wife—answered him.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s Hustler Joe, sir,” she said
-softly.</p>
-
-<p>Hustler Joe! John Barrington drew
-a deep breath as the memories of the
-Bonanza catastrophe came to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank God for Hustler Joe!” he
-breathed fervently. “If anyone can
-save my little girl, ’tis he!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right, sir—an’ he’ll do it,
-too,” returned the little woman, her
-eyes full of unshed tears.</p>
-
-<h3>XVII</h3>
-
-<p>Slowly, so slowly, the rescuers
-worked their way into the mine. One
-by one the unconscious forms of the
-miners were borne back to fresh air
-and safety. But no trace could be
-found of Miss Barrington and her band
-of sightseers.</p>
-
-<p>At last, far down a gallery, Westbrook
-heard a faint cry. With an answering
-shout of reassurance he
-dashed ahead of the others and came
-face to face with Ethel Barrington.</p>
-
-<p>“You!” she cried.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes; you’re not hurt?”</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head and leaned
-heavily against the wall. The reaction
-was making her head swim.</p>
-
-<p>“And your friends?”</p>
-
-<p>“Here”—she pointed to the ground
-almost at her feet. “They’re not hurt—they
-fainted.”</p>
-
-<p>Stalwart miners poured into the
-narrow chamber and lifted the prostrate
-forms, leaving Westbrook to follow
-with Miss Barrington. That young
-lady still leaned against the wall.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[Pg 177]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I—we should be going; can you—let
-me help you,” stammered Westbrook.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I can walk,” she laughed
-nervously, making a vain attempt to
-steady her limbs as she moved slowly
-away from her support.</p>
-
-<p>Westbrook caught her outstretched
-hand and passed his disengaged arm
-around her waist.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Barrington, you’re quite unnerved,”
-he said, his voice suddenly
-firm. “Pardon me, but you must accept
-my assistance.” And he half carried,
-half led her down the long gallery,
-at the end of which they could hear
-the steps and voices of their companions.</p>
-
-<p>All the misery of the last few days
-fled from Ethel’s mind. She was conscious
-only of the strength and bravery
-and tenderness of the man at her
-side. Martin’s hated words became as
-phantoms of a past existence.</p>
-
-<p>“You—you haven’t told me how
-you came to be here today, Mr. Westbrook,”
-she began again, a little
-hysterically. “I thought you were in
-Dalton.”</p>
-
-<p>“I came down this morning,” he
-said. Then added softly, “Thank God!”</p>
-
-<p>Ethel was silent for a moment.
-When she spoke again her voice
-shook.</p>
-
-<p>“As usual, Mr. Westbrook—you are
-near when I need you! If I am ever
-in danger again, I shall promptly look
-for you. Now see that you do not
-disappoint me!” she added with assumed
-playfulness, trying to hide her
-depth of feeling.</p>
-
-<p>They had almost reached the turn
-when a distant rumble and vibrating
-crash shook the walls about them,
-throwing Westbrook and Miss Barrington
-to the ground. It was some
-time before the man could stagger to
-his feet and help his companion to
-stand upright.</p>
-
-<p>“What—what was it?” she gasped.</p>
-
-<p>Westbrook advanced two steps only
-to come sharply against a wall of
-earth and timbers.</p>
-
-<p>“My God—the roof is fallen!” he
-cried.</p>
-
-<p>She came close to his side.</p>
-
-<p>“Then there was another explosion?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“But they will find us?”</p>
-
-<p>“That wall may be—” he stopped
-abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>“Many feet in thickness, I know,”
-she supplied.</p>
-
-<p>“And the damp—if it should enter
-the gallery from the rear—” his voice
-choked into silence.</p>
-
-<p>“I know—I understand. But—we
-are together!” She laid her hand on
-his arm.</p>
-
-<p>He caught the hand and held it in
-both his own, then slowly raised it and
-laid the soft palm against his lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Ethel—Ethel—may God forgive
-me!” he whispered brokenly.</p>
-
-<p>She swayed dizzily, and he caught
-and held her close.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I think I am going to faint,”
-she murmured. “I——”</p>
-
-<p>His arms tightened their clasp and
-her head drooped until it lay in the
-hollow of his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Ethel, darling—only one little
-word! Ah, sweetheart—I’ve loved you
-so!”</p>
-
-<p>She raised her hand and just
-touched his cheek with her fingers,
-then let her arm fall about his neck.
-His head bent low and his lips closed
-over hers as she drew a long, quivering
-sigh.</p>
-
-<p>“May God forgive me,” he breathed,
-“but ’tis the end—the end!”</p>
-
-<h3>XVIII</h3>
-
-<p>When Ethel Barrington regained
-consciousness she was in her own bed
-at The Maples, but it was a full two
-days after that before they let her ask
-the questions that so often came to her
-lips. It was her father who finally answered
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, dear, you were unconscious
-when the miners found you. Westbrook
-could barely speak. Why,
-girlie, when that second crash came
-and the miners realized that Hustler
-Joe—as they insist upon calling that
-remarkable man—was himself imprisoned,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[Pg 178]</span>
-they swarmed into that mine
-like ants and attacked the fallen wall
-like madmen! Those that had no
-pickaxe clawed at the dirt and stones
-with their naked fingers.”</p>
-
-<p>“And—Mr. Westbrook?”</p>
-
-<p>“Is all right and has been here every
-day to inquire for you and to bring
-you these,” replied Mr. Barrington,
-with a wave of his hand toward the
-sumptuous red roses on the table.</p>
-
-<p>The girl’s eyes lingered on the flowers
-and her cheeks suddenly glowed
-with a reflection of their vivid color.</p>
-
-<p>“He is very kind,” she murmured
-as she turned her face away.</p>
-
-<p>For a week Westbrook and his roses
-made daily calls. At the end of that
-time it was reported to him that Miss
-Barrington was feeling quite like herself.
-The next morning Westbrook
-did not appear, but his roses came in
-charge of a boy together with a note
-for Miss Barrington.</p>
-
-<p>The missive bore no date, no salutation,
-but plunged at once into its
-message.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>That I should address you at all is an insult,
-but my cowardly weakness when we
-were last together makes it a greater insult
-for me to keep silence now. I have waited
-until you were quite recovered before giving
-you this, for I know that it will give you
-pain—and that it <i>will</i> give you pain is at
-once my greatest curse and my greatest joy.
-That I should have dared to love you is
-despicable, but that I should have allowed
-you to give me even one tender thought
-in return is dastardly—and yet, nothing in
-heaven or hell can take from me the ecstasy
-of that one moment when your dear lips
-met mine!</p>
-
-<p>Forgive me—think kindly of me if you
-can, for—God help me—I am going away,
-never to look on your face again. I was
-a boy of twenty when I committed the sin
-against God and man that has made my
-life a thing of horror. For years I have
-sought for peace; adventure, work, wealth,
-philanthropy—each alike has failed to bring
-it. I am going now to my boyhood’s home
-to receive my just punishment.</p>
-
-<p>Ah, Ethel, Ethel, my lost love—what can
-I say to you? I have but words—words—empty
-words! I can see the horror in your
-dear eyes. I am not worthy of even the
-thought of you, and yet, my darling, oh,
-my darling, were it not for this dread shadow
-on my life, I swear I would win you for
-my darling in very truth!</p>
-
-<p>But now—God help me—farewell!</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There was no name signed, but this
-Ethel did not notice until she had read
-the note three times with her tear-dimmed
-eyes; then she whispered:</p>
-
-<p>“Poor fellow! He could not sign
-‘Westbrook’ and he would not sign—the
-other.”</p>
-
-<p>Much to John Barrington’s amazement,
-his daughter insisted upon going
-to town on the noon train that day.
-In response to his persistent objections
-she assured him that she felt
-“perfectly well and quite equal to a
-journey around the world, if necessary.”</p>
-
-<p>At four o’clock Lawyer Martin was
-surprised by an urgent note summoning
-him to the Barringtons’ Dalton residence
-on Howard Avenue. Half an
-hour afterward he was ushered into
-the presence of Miss Barrington herself.</p>
-
-<p>The interview was short, sharp and
-straight to the point. A few hours
-later Miss Barrington and her maid
-boarded the eight o’clock express for
-the East.</p>
-
-<h3>XIX</h3>
-
-<p>Twenty-four hours passed after
-Westbrook had sent his letter to Miss
-Barrington before he could so arrange
-his affairs as to start for the little New
-England village of his boyhood. All
-day and all night he had worked with
-feverish haste, and the time had flown
-on wings of the wind; now, when he
-was at last on the morning “Limited,”
-the hours seemed to drag as though
-weighted with lead.</p>
-
-<p>He could see it all—the proud new
-name he had made for himself dragged
-low in the dust. He knew just how society
-would wonder and surmise; just
-how the maneuvering mamas would
-shake their skirts in virtuous indignation
-and how the doting papas would
-nod their heads in congratulation over
-a miraculous escape.</p>
-
-<p>He knew how the poor and friendless
-in the great city would first deny
-the charge, then weep over the truth.
-He knew, too, the look that would
-come to the faces of the miners, and he
-winced at even the thought of this—Hustler<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[Pg 179]</span>
-Joe had prized his place in the
-hearts of his miner friends.</p>
-
-<p>There was one on whom he dared not
-let his thoughts rest for a moment; yet
-it was that one’s face which seemed
-ever before his eyes, and it was that
-one’s voice which constantly rang in
-his ears.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Again the sun had set and it was
-twilight in the little New England village.
-The street had not changed
-much—the houses were grayer and the
-trees taller, perhaps.</p>
-
-<p>As he neared the familiar gate, he
-saw in the window the face of a silver-haired
-woman. Was that his mother—his
-dearly beloved mother of long ago?
-She turned her head and he was answered.</p>
-
-<p>After all, would it not be better to
-pass on and away again, rather than
-to bow that gray head once more in
-grief and shame?</p>
-
-<p>His steps lagged and he almost
-passed the gate. Then he drew a long
-breath, turned sharply, strode up the
-path and pulled the bell.</p>
-
-<p>The sweet-faced woman opened the
-door. The man’s dry lips parted, but
-no sound came, for from an inner room
-advanced Ethel Barrington with a
-gray-haired man whose kindly face
-wore a strangely familiar smile.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, wife? Is it—Paul?” he
-asked in tremulous tones.</p>
-
-<h3>EPILOGUE</h3>
-
-<p>It was long hours afterward that
-Paul Joseph Weston sat with Ethel
-alone in the library.</p>
-
-<p>“But yourself, dear—you have not
-told me yet how you came to be here,”
-he said.</p>
-
-<p>She laughed softly.</p>
-
-<p>“Rash boy! Was there not need of
-someone’s preparing your father and
-mother for so wonderful a home-coming?
-I found out by judicious inquiry
-that you had not yet left the city, so I
-knew, when I took the train, that I
-had at least a few hours’ start of
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how—what—how could you,
-dear? Surely I didn’t tell——”</p>
-
-<p>Again she laughed, but this time she
-dimpled into a rosy blush.</p>
-
-<p>“When your very disquieting letter
-came, sir, I remembered something Mr.
-Martin had once said to me. I went
-to town, sent for Mr. Martin and insisted
-upon his telling me all that he
-knew of—your youth.”</p>
-
-<p>“And that was?”</p>
-
-<p>“That he believed you to be Paul
-Weston, who had quarreled with his
-father and run away after apparently
-killing the poor gentleman. Mr. Martin
-said that the father did not die,
-but slowly recovered from his wound
-and made every possible effort to find
-his son, even sending Martin himself
-to seek for him. Once Martin traced
-the boy to a mining camp, but there
-he lost the trail and never regained it
-until he thought he saw Paul Weston’s
-features in Joseph Westbrook’s face.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ethel, what did Martin first tell
-you of me that caused you to go to him
-for aid?”</p>
-
-<p>“He hinted that you were a—ah,
-don’t make me say it, please!”</p>
-
-<p>The man’s face grew stern.</p>
-
-<p>“And he knew all the time it was
-false!” he cried.</p>
-
-<p>She put a soft finger on his tense
-lips.</p>
-
-<p>“We just won’t think of him—and
-really, I’ve forgiven him long ago, for
-it was he that helped me in the end,
-you know. Besides, he acknowledged
-that he didn’t really suppose you were
-Paul Weston. I—I fancy he didn’t
-want me to think too highly of this
-interesting Mr. Joseph Westbrook!” she
-added saucily.</p>
-
-<p>The arm that held her tightened its
-clasp.</p>
-
-<p>“He needn’t have worried,” she continued,
-with uptilted chin. “I shall
-never, never marry Mr. Joseph Westbrook!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ethel!”</p>
-
-<p>“But if Hustler Joe or Paul Weston
-should ask——”</p>
-
-<p>Her lips were silenced by a kiss and
-a fervent, “You little fraud of a sweetheart!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[Pg 180]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="f120"><i>Interludes</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE rich man speaks about how he spends his money, while his friends speak
-about how he made it.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>You could tell the old-time hero by his medals; the modern one is known
-by his collection of loving-cups.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>The spendthrift sometimes does more good with his money than the philanthropist.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>The fact that figures won’t lie probably accounts for the invention of statistics.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>A political job differs from any other kind, inasmuch as you work before
-you get it, instead of afterward.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>The miser holds on to his own money; the millionaire to other people’s.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="f120"><i>His Cogitation</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">“WELL, then, amongst others, there’s the man who habitually talks to
-himself,” ruminatingly said the Pruntytown Philosopher the other
-evening. “If he does it in order to listen to himself, he is a fool; if he does it
-to avoid listening to his friends, he is a sage; and if he does it to save his friends
-from listening to him, he is a philanthropist.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="f120"><i>The Safe Side</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">REPORTER—Were you quoted correctly in that interview in the morning
-papers?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Senator</span>—Come around the day after tomorrow. How can I tell until I
-see how the interview is going to be taken?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="f120"><i>An Inference</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">“MY wife and I have lived happily together for twenty-five years.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, tell me, old fellow—in confidence, of course—which one of you
-has had the other bluffed all this time?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[Pg 181]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="The_Constitution" id="The_Constitution">&nbsp;</a>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>The Constitution</i></h2></div>
-
-<p class="center space-above1 space-below1">BY FREDERICK UPHAM ADAMS<br />
-<i>Author of “The Kidnapped Millionaires,” “Colonel Monroe’s Doctrine,” “President
-John Smith,” “Shades of the Fathers,” etc.</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE practical man values a house
-not by its antiquity, but by
-its conformability to modern
-standards of construction and equipment.
-If he purchases an ancient
-structure he is not required to pay
-an added price because of its lack of
-plumbing, its absence of gas and electric
-lighting fixtures, and he is not entranced
-that its roof leaks and that its
-cellar is damp and moldy.</p>
-
-<p>This same man, if he gives the subject
-a passing thought, will likely assure
-you that the Constitution of the United
-States is a perfect document because
-it is more than one hundred years old.
-It also is likely that this is the extent
-of his information concerning that
-famous document.</p>
-
-<p>The average lack of knowledge concerning
-our National Constitution is
-astounding. Like children who have
-been drilled to repeat the Lord’s Prayer
-without the faintest conception of what
-the petition means, we have mentally
-drilled ourselves to believe that our
-Constitution is perfect, that it was inspired
-by a superhuman wisdom, and
-that it is treason to criticize or even
-discuss its infallible precepts.</p>
-
-<p>In this respect we are the most narrow,
-bigoted and prejudiced people who
-pretend to keep in alignment with
-progress. For more than one hundred
-years we have been proclaiming the
-perfection of our free governmental institutions,
-and calling on other nations
-to admire us and to follow our example.</p>
-
-<p>Within the past few years the truth
-has been forced home on us that the
-officialdom of our townships, villages,
-cities, counties, states and of the nation
-is maggoty with corruption; that our
-local, state and national legislatures
-are openly controlled by mercenary
-private interests; that the scandals concerning
-our judiciary can no longer be
-smothered or concealed; that our citizens
-are powerless to pass laws demanded
-by the majority, or to defeat
-those aimed to despoil the majority;
-that the burdens of taxation are
-spurned by those who have amassed
-wealth by means of unfair and ofttimes
-purchased legislation, and that the
-domination of corporations and vested
-interests is so complete as to be apparent
-to the dullest of the plundered.</p>
-
-<p>This language is not exaggerated.
-It is impossible to overstate the enormity
-of the depth to which we have descended
-in the scale of political morals.
-Ten years ago any one of the disclosures
-which now are made from week to
-week would have aroused the nation;
-today the repetition of these horrors
-dazes those who attempt to keep track
-of them. Not one crime in a hundred
-ever sees the light in printer’s ink.
-The bigger thieves are so buttressed and
-protected by the fortifications of
-wealth, and so secure behind the barbed
-wire entanglements woven by the
-courts, that their enraged dupes cannot
-reach them.</p>
-
-<p>Great Britain is a republic in all save
-name, yet no such conditions prevail
-under its government. France is a republic,
-yet its people are not despoiled
-by official brigands, neither is the free
-expression of its electorate crushed beneath
-the massed weight of its moneyed
-interests.</p>
-
-<p>I count it a disgrace to be an American<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[Pg 182]</span>
-so long as these degrading conditions
-prevail. It is a dishonor to live
-in a city, community, state or nation
-where thievery is condoned or tolerated,
-and it is cowardly weakness for the
-honest majority to assume that the
-problem of corruption is past their
-solving.</p>
-
-<p>The most formidable barrier in the
-way of permanent redress has been
-erected and is maintained by those
-who are checked by it. It consists of
-the absurd assumption that our material
-prosperity has been the consequence
-of the perfect provisions of our
-National Constitution. It is manifested
-in the senseless worship of the
-forefathers, and the ignorant deification
-of the founders of the document,
-which for more than a hundred years
-has served as a model for our state,
-municipal and local governments.</p>
-
-<p>We have come to recognize the
-hopelessness of honest majorities when
-pitted against the machinery of our
-municipal governments; we no longer
-deny that the cumbersome machinery
-of our state governments lends itself
-to the manipulation of corrupt private
-interests; the suspicion has dawned on
-us that our National Congress is more
-concerned with thwarting public sentiment
-than in conforming to it; and despite
-all this knowledge we steadfastly
-refuse to direct our gaze to the prime
-cause of these abuses.</p>
-
-<p>With a hundred monopolies filching
-from us that which we have created—and
-doing it under the guise of law and
-by sanction of the Constitution; with
-legislatures, executives and courts
-scorning to put into operation those
-remedies for which we have legally
-voted—and declining to do so under
-the authority of the Constitution; with
-a system of taxation which places all
-the burdens on those who are poor because
-they are producers of wealth, and
-releasing from taxation those who have
-become rich because of their exploitation
-of labor and through the debauching
-of its representatives—this system
-being founded on constitutional decisions—we
-yet cling to the childish
-delusion that ours is the only perfect
-government ever bequeathed to mankind.</p>
-
-<p>Compared with the governments of
-England and France we have only the
-semblance of self-rule, while they possess
-the substance. The people of
-Germany have more direct influence
-over legislation than have those of the
-United States. Despite an autocratic
-emperor, surrounded as he is by a
-nobility and protected by the most
-powerful standing army in the world,
-the people of Germany have made
-greater progress along the road of
-democracy within the last twenty
-years than we have.</p>
-
-<p>If in England there is valid reason
-to believe that the majority of the
-people hold an opinion counter to that
-of the administration in power, Parliament
-is dissolved and a direct appeal
-is made to the voters for a new body
-of representatives. The new Parliament
-meets and proceeds to pass the
-laws demanded by the electorate. There
-is a House of Lords, but it does not
-dare reject a measure known to be
-popular. There is a king, but he has
-not exercised his veto power for more
-than a century and a half, and one
-need not be a prophet to hazard that
-he never will exercise it again. There
-is no supreme court in England. In
-that benighted monarchy when the
-people pass a law it is a law, and not a
-guess.</p>
-
-<p>To all intents and purposes the same
-procedure obtains in France and in a
-score of other countries which might
-be named. Ours is the only country on
-earth where the vote of a citizen has
-no direct significance.</p>
-
-<p>We are not permitted to vote for a
-President, but are allowed to help
-choose electors who represent not us,
-but the state. There is no such thing
-as a citizen of the United States, so
-far as the franchise is concerned. If
-you have a vote it is by grace of the
-state in which you reside. The Constitution
-does not recognize your
-individual sovereignty in any way.
-If you doubt this assertion read that
-document.</p>
-
-<p>The state fixes your qualifications<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[Pg 183]</span>
-as a voter. It might debar you because
-of your sex, because of your
-height, because you were not worth
-$100,000, and you would have no
-redress under the Constitution of the
-United States. Possibly you did not
-know this.</p>
-
-<p>In practice you are privileged to vote
-for members of the Lower House of
-Congress. That is the beginning and
-the end of your influence so far as
-your national government is concerned.
-You have nothing to do with the
-selection of senators, and I doubt if
-you are consulted as to the composition
-of the Supreme Court.</p>
-
-<p>As I have explained, if the Lower
-House of the Legislature in England
-passes a law, it at once becomes a law.
-Under our Constitution the Senate has
-the power to amend or defeat it. This
-is supposed by us to be the quintessence
-of all earthly legislative wisdom.
-This is Check Number One on
-the mandate of the foolish people. In
-passing, I desire to repeat that this is
-the only alleged republic or constitutional
-monarchy yet remaining on
-earth which assumes that its majorities
-are unfit to influence legislation.</p>
-
-<p>If the measure demanded by the
-people be so fortunate as to pass the
-House and Senate, the President may
-veto it. This is Check Number Two on
-the mandate of the foolish people. If
-the President sign the measure the
-Supreme Court may declare it unconstitutional,
-and that is the end of it,
-unless a subsequent infallible Supreme
-Court should overrule the decision
-of the first infallible Supreme
-Court. This is Check Number Three
-on the mandate of a free and enlightened
-people. In the event that
-the Supreme Court should decide that
-a law is a law, the financial interests
-adversely affected may and do defeat
-its enforcement by legal quibbles as to
-details, or may and do resort to the
-bribery of the officials charged with
-the execution of the law. These are
-Checks Numbers Four and Five on the
-will of the people in this, the one
-perfect system of popular government
-ever designed in all history.</p>
-
-<p>We are the most corrupt nation on
-earth because of “our peculiar form
-of Government”; because of the exactions
-and limitations of a Constitution
-which was designed to protect and conserve
-the interests of property rather
-than of citizenship. Those who are
-astounded or offended at this statement
-need only read the record of the
-convention which drafted the Constitution
-in order to satisfy themselves
-as to its moderation. I do not mean
-to insinuate that the fifty-five delegates
-who met in Philadelphia in 1787
-had any idea of establishing a system
-which would foster corruption, but
-the records absolutely prove that they
-deliberately planned to suppress the
-rule of the majority in order that popular
-clamor might not menace property
-interests. The train of abuses from
-which we now suffer flow logically from
-the checks they then provided; checks
-which place selfish and corrupt wealth
-beyond the reach of public redress.</p>
-
-<p>Those foolish persons who have been
-taught in school and in the public
-prints that the founders of our Constitution
-were sincerely desirous of
-establishing a system of government
-in which the will of the people should
-find free expression, will be shocked
-and undeceived when they read its
-debates and proceedings as recorded
-by James Madison, one of the delegates
-from Virginia. When one comes
-to learn of these fifty-five delegates
-that not more than ten are on record
-as voicing the slightest degree of confidence
-in the wisdom of the people or
-their fitness to rule, he is likely to take
-a new view of the Constitution framed
-by them, and he is able to account for
-the innumerable ills which we are
-compelled to suffer.</p>
-
-<p>I will quote a few expressions of
-opinion from delegates who wielded the
-greater influence in the construction
-of the Constitution:</p>
-
-<p><i>Roger Sherman</i>—“The people should
-have as little to do as may be about the
-Government.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Elbridge Gerry</i>—“The evils we experience
-flow from an excess of democracy,
-the worst of all possible evils.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[Pg 184]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>John Dickinson</i>—“A limited monarchy
-is one of the best governments
-in the world.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Rufus King</i>—“It is immaterial to
-the people by what government they
-are possessed, provided they be well
-employed.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Alexander Hamilton</i>—“The British
-monarchy is the best government in
-the world,” and he doubted if anything
-short of it would do in America.
-“Their House of Lords is a most noble
-institution.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Alexander Hamilton</i>—He acknowledged
-himself not to think favorably
-of republican government. “Inequality
-in property constitutes the great
-and fundamental distinction in society.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Gunning Bedford</i>—“Are we to act
-with greater purity than the rest of
-mankind? Our votes are actuated by
-interest and ambition.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Gouverneur Morris</i>—“The Senate
-must have great personal property; it
-must have the aristocratic spirit; it
-must love to lord it through pride. To
-make it independent it should be for
-life. Property is the main object of
-society.”</p>
-
-<p><i>John Rutledge</i>—“Property certainly
-is the principal object of society.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Pierce Butler</i>—“Slaves should have
-an equal representation in a government
-which is instituted principally for
-the protection of property, and is of
-itself to be supported by property.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Charles C. Pinckney</i>—“Property in
-slaves should not be exposed to danger
-in a government instituted for the protection
-of property.”</p>
-
-<p><i>George Mason</i>—“It would be as unnatural
-to refer the choice of a proper
-character for President to the people
-as to refer a test of colors to a blind
-man.”</p>
-
-<p><i>James Madison</i>—“In future times a
-great majority of the people will not
-only be without landed but any sort
-of property. If they combine, the
-rights of property will not be safe in
-their hands.”</p>
-
-<p><i>James Ellsworth</i>—“As population
-grows, poor laborers will be so plenty
-as to render slaves useless.”</p>
-
-<p>The thirteen delegates, from whom
-I have quoted were the dominating
-characters in that convention, and it
-is possible to cite innumerable passages
-expressing the same distrust and
-contempt for the people. It should
-be understood that the great mass of
-the people had no representation in
-that secret conclave, and that half a
-century passed before its proceedings
-were made public by Act of Congress.</p>
-
-<p>I have touched on these facts for the
-purpose of indicating clearly that the
-right to ignore the majority is inherent
-in the Constitution. The Senate was
-provided for the special benefit of property
-interests, and at one time a clause
-was adopted, decreeing that no one
-could be elected a Senator of the
-United States unless he was worth
-$50,000 or more. This cautious provision
-was abandoned because there
-were states which had no men with
-that amount of property. Having provided
-a Senate they continued to pile
-up checks against the people, until such
-aristocrats as Gerry, Randolph and
-Mason attempted to call a halt, declaring
-that the people would be so stripped
-of power that the last of their rights
-would disappear. Their warnings were
-disregarded, and they absolutely refused
-to sign their names to the document.</p>
-
-<p>With these facts within access of
-every citizen of the United States, the
-vast majority of us still adhere to the
-myths and falsehoods contained in our
-school books and uttered by ignorant
-demagogues and editors.</p>
-
-<p>It is likely that the aristocratic delegates
-who framed the Constitution had
-just reason to fear the people it was
-intended to hold in check. The average
-citizen of 1787 was a savage compared
-with the average voter of today.
-He knew of no world beyond the narrow
-limit of his horizon. He was ignorant,
-prejudiced, suspicious and envious.
-The builders of the Constitution
-regretted that it was necessary to
-grant him even the shadow of political
-power and were consumed by the dread
-that the Lower House of Congress would
-overawe all other branches of the new
-government.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[Pg 185]</span></p>
-
-<p>In that day wealth had little influence
-as a mass, but it was strong in its
-instinct of self-preservation. It trembled
-lest the poor should combine at
-the polls in a crusade for the legal despoiling
-of the rich. Having absolute
-control of the convention it was free to
-design a document which would include
-every possible check against the aggressions
-of the dreaded masses, and
-it rightly conjectured that the magic
-of the name of Washington would induce
-the people to consent to the provisions
-aimed against them.</p>
-
-<p>We of today are caught in the trap
-set for those who lived more than a hundred
-years ago. Not until after the
-nation had been plunged into a civil
-war between two factions—each of
-which claimed strict allegiance to the
-Constitution—did conditions arise
-which afforded a fair test of the restrictive
-features of that document. So
-long as the wealth of the nation was
-so distributed as to prevent the formation
-of conspiracies in its behalf, the
-masses were able to conserve their
-rights, despite all of the checks and restrictions
-in the Constitution. It was
-this fairly maintained state of equilibrium
-which half a century ago gave
-rise to the worship of our system of
-government.</p>
-
-<p>When the first unscrupulous man
-found himself in possession of millions
-of dollars the Constitution became not
-his master but his tool. When the
-officials of our first great corporation
-found it practical to bribe legislation,
-the trap set by the forefathers was
-sprung. I do not mean to hint that
-the founders of the Constitution foresaw
-any such outcome. They constructed
-a device to protect themselves,
-and their bones had crumbled into dust
-before wealth was sufficiently armed
-and equipped to take advantage of
-their mistakes.</p>
-
-<p>Wealth seized upon the senates,
-state and national. It found in the
-judiciary a natural ally, and it did not
-hesitate to invoke the aid of partisanship
-and the unblushing use of corrupt
-influences, direct and indirect, in order
-to subject the courts to its domination.
-This is a blunt statement, but the time
-has arrived when the courts can no
-longer be covered with a machine-made
-robe of sanctity. There are good
-judges and bad judges, but the decisions
-of the latter are as binding as
-those of the former. A corporation
-judge is not a priest; he is a low type
-of politician.</p>
-
-<p>Our aristocratic forefathers designed
-a Constitution intended to protect
-themselves against a majority. Our
-modern corporations and vested interests
-have discovered that the same machinery
-oiled with bribery can be used
-by the minority for the purpose of
-plundering the majority. Our forefathers
-invented checks; our trusts have
-converted them into bludgeons. Our
-forefathers constructed constitutional
-ramparts, behind which they hoped to
-be safe from the attacks of the majority;
-our vested interests have bristled
-them with guns, behind which they
-demand and receive tribute.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Note</span>—In the May number Mr. Adams
-will treat of the necessity for the revision
-of the Constitution, and consider how it
-may legally be accomplished.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="In_Absence" id="In_Absence">&nbsp;</a>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>In Absence</i></h2></div>
-
-<p class="center space-above1 space-below1">BY EUGENE C. DOLSON</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span class="i0"><span class="bigfont">W</span>ITH miles between us—miles of land and sea,</span>
- <span class="i0">However far my wandering footsteps roam,</span>
- <span class="i0">Still memory ever backward turns to thee—</span>
- <span class="i0">Queen of my heart and home.</span><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[Pg 186]</span>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="f120"><i>In Outline</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">“MANY a man complains that he lost his health in business, although he
-was not in business for his health.”</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>“The quickest way to get to the top in this world is to have someone let
-you in on the ground floor.”</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>“Money often fails to bring happiness, on account of the way it has been
-made.”</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>“The world may owe you a living, but you have to work hard to collect
-the debt.”</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>“One-half the world doesn’t care how the other half lives.”</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>“The man who courts an investigation has generally been making love
-to other people’s money.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="f120"><i>Not Guilty</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">TAVERN LOUNGER—That ’ere smooth-shaved, horse-faced feller jest
-goin’ into the dinin’-room looks like an actor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Landlord</span>—Yes; but you bet yer life he ain’t one! He came day before
-yesterday, paid his bill in advance, and ain’t kicked about anything yet!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="f120"><i>A Discovery</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">“I HAVE looked the matter over with reasonable care,” said the Pruntytown
-Philosopher, with his usual acridity, “and I have reached the conclusion
-that it is not absolutely necessary to send boys to college in order to have ’em
-act the fool.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="f120"><i>A One-Sided Alliance</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">JUDSON—Do you think capital and labor will ever work together?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Budson</span>—It looks that way. At the present time the landlord and the
-tenants seem to be both engaged in raising the rent.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="f120"><i>At the Zoo</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE PARROT—The eagle says he has been bald ever since he can remember.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Cockatoo</span>—Gee-whiz! Those eagles marry very young, don’t they?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[Pg 187]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="The_Gray_Weed" id="The_Gray_Weed">&nbsp;</a>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>The Gray Weed</i></h2></div>
-
-<p class="center space-above1 space-below1">AN EXTRACT FROM THE “LONDON TIMES” OF FEBRUARY 8, 1909</p>
-
-<p class="center space-above1 space-below1">BY OWEN OLIVER</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">OWING to the lamented death of
-Professor Newton, to whose
-wisdom and courage the world
-owes its deliverance, I have been asked
-to contribute to the first newspaper
-issued in the new era some account of
-the terrible weed which overran the
-earth, and threatened to stifle out
-mankind.</p>
-
-<p>The professor had intended dealing
-with the origin of the weed, its relations
-to ordinary plants, the nature of
-its growth, so far as this proceeded,
-and the forms which it would ultimately
-have assumed. Unfortunately his notes
-upon these points are so abbreviated
-and technical as to be unintelligible to
-me; and personally I possess no qualifications
-for dealing with the scientific
-aspects of the case. So I must
-confine myself to a plain narrative of
-the occurrences which I witnessed.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was nine o’clock in the evening of
-November 10, 1908, when I left my
-office in Norfolk Street, letting myself
-out with a duplicate key which the
-hall-porter had intrusted to me. I
-thought at first that it was snowing; but
-when I put out my hand and caught
-a few of the particles, I found that
-they were flimsy white seeds, something
-like those of melons, only less
-substantial. Where they lay in heaps—as
-I thought—in the road, their
-color appeared to be gray. At the
-Embankment end of the street the
-“heaps” were larger; and when I came
-to them I discovered that they were not
-seeds, but a growth of gray weed,
-which fastened round my shoes as I
-tried to walk over it.</p>
-
-<p>I stooped and took hold of a piece to
-examine it; but, when I attempted to
-pluck it, it stretched like elastic, without
-breaking off. The tendrils were
-round, and about one-fourth of an inch
-in diameter when not stretched. They
-had, at intervals, spherical bulges
-which, at a distance, bore the appearance
-of small berries. These appeared
-to be of the same substance as the tendrils.
-The latter began twining round
-my fingers, and I had some difficulty in
-releasing them. The road and the
-Embankment were deserted by people,
-but three or four horses at the cab stand
-were plunging with fright as the weed
-wound round their legs. It had grown
-perceptibly in the few minutes that I
-had been observing it, and, feeling
-somewhat alarmed, I made my way
-back along Norfolk Street.</p>
-
-<p>The weed had spread a good deal
-there also; and I noticed that wherever
-a white seed fell a fresh plant sprang
-up, and grew with marvelous rapidity.
-In the Strand the weed was nearly a
-yard high. The ’bus drivers were whipping
-their frightened horses in a vain
-attempt to drive over it. The foot-passengers
-were unable to move, except
-a big man, who, with a small axe,
-hacked a passage through the growth
-for himself, his wife and his daughter—a
-pretty girl of about nineteen.</p>
-
-<p>They were making their way down to
-the Embankment, but I warned them
-that the weed was thick there. The
-young lady then suggested that they
-should try to get into one of the houses,
-and I invited them to come to my offices.
-The tendrils were seizing people and
-pulling them down and binding them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[Pg 188]</span>
-like flies in a spider’s web. We could
-hear cries and screams all along the
-Strand, and a cab was upset by the
-struggles of the horse. The weed had
-spread over Norfolk Street, while we
-were talking, and it clung to our feet
-as we ran. The lady tripped and fell.
-The tendrils seized her immediately,
-and we had great difficulty in freeing
-her. When we had entered the door
-of the house we could not close it until
-we had chopped away the tendrils that
-followed us.</p>
-
-<p>I turned on the electric light in the
-halls, and took my new friends to my
-rooms, which were on the fifth floor.
-The elder lady was faint, and I gave
-her some brandy and soda and biscuits.
-I had a good stock of these fortunately.</p>
-
-<p>The gentleman’s name was George
-Baker, his wife was Marian Baker, and
-the girl was Viva. They had been buying
-curiosities in the Strand, and the
-axe—a roughly engraved Moorish
-instrument—was fortunately among
-their purchases. Some people whom
-they met in the streets had told them
-that the weed was growing all over
-London, and that the Guards had been
-ordered out to cut it away. A learned
-old gentleman had conjectured that the
-seeds were the atoms of some dissipated
-planet, or the elements of some world
-that was to be, and that they contained
-the raw elements of life, which
-set them growing when they came into
-contact with suitable matter.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s diabolical!” Mr. Baker said
-furiously. “The vestries ought to
-send round water-carts with weed-killer,
-or—or something. I don’t
-know what they ought to do; but
-they ought to do something.” He
-wiped his face excitedly with his handkerchief.
-“Diabolical!” he repeated.
-“It grows through the flagstones,
-the wood paving, everything. It—it
-seizes people!”</p>
-
-<p>“Seizes people!” his wife repeated,
-wringing her hands. “We saw it.”</p>
-
-<p>“It clings to you,” the girl added
-tremulously. “<i>Clings</i> to you. If it
-goes on growing——!”</p>
-
-<p>Her mother gave a sharp scream,
-and her father groaned.</p>
-
-<p>“If it goes on growing—!” they
-said together.</p>
-
-<p>“It won’t,” I assured them, with an
-indifferent appearance of confidence.
-“Those things that grow like—like
-fungi—never do. It will shrivel up
-suddenly, and let people go again. I
-don’t suppose they’re really hurt, only
-frightened. In an hour or so you’ll
-be on your way home, and laughing
-about it; and I shall be thanking the—the
-fungus—for some pleasant acquaintances.
-I look upon this as a little surprise
-party.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl wiped her eyes and forced
-a smile.</p>
-
-<p>“A little surprise party,” she agreed.
-“What are you going to do for our
-entertainment, Mr. Adamson?—I saw
-the name on the door-plate.”</p>
-
-<p>“Henry Adamson,” I said, “and
-very much at your service, Miss Viva—I
-have some cards, but——”</p>
-
-<p>I paused doubtfully. Her mother
-held up a trembling hand, and her
-father shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“We won’t have any fool’s games,”
-he said. “Let’s talk.”</p>
-
-<p>Viva and I talked in broken sentences,
-and her mother and father in
-monosyllables. We kept glancing at
-the window, but no one had the courage
-to draw up the blind for nearly an
-hour. Then we opened the window
-and looked out. The weed was fully
-six feet high in the street, and higher
-in the Strand. It had overrun the
-’bus that stood at the opening. If
-there were people on the ’bus, it had
-overrun them, too.</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t seem to hurt,” I said.
-“There’s no screaming now.” I shuddered
-as soon as I had said it.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no screaming now,” Viva
-repeated. “I suppose they—they are
-all——”</p>
-
-<p>Her voice broke. Her father shut
-the window sharply and drew her
-away.</p>
-
-<p>“It will be gone in the morning,”
-he asserted, “as—as our friend said.
-We shall have to impose on your
-hospitality for the night, I am afraid,
-Mr. Adamson.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is no question of imposing,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[Pg 189]</span>
-I assured him. “I cannot say how glad
-I am to have your company.”</p>
-
-<p>We made a couch for the ladies by
-putting several hearth-rugs on the
-table in the clerks’ room, and laying
-two rugs of mine to cover them. Mr.
-Baker and I dozed in front of the fire
-in my room in chairs. Toward the
-morning I fell into a sounder sleep.
-When I woke he had pulled up the
-blind.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s fifteen feet high at least,” he
-told me. “Halfway up the second
-windows. God help us!”</p>
-
-<p>I joined him and saw the roadway
-filled with a sea of gray weeds. They
-looked like india-rubber reeds. The
-largest were as thick as my little finger,
-and the bulges were the size of damsons.
-We opened the window and
-listened. Presently a caretaker opened
-a window nearly opposite and called to
-his wife.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s a rum go, Mary,” he
-shouted, with a laugh. “Bulrushes
-growing to the street! We sha’n’t have
-any clerks pestering us today.”</p>
-
-<p>The woman joined him, and they
-laughed together because they would
-have a holiday. They treated the
-matter as a joke, and evidently disbelieved
-us when we told them of the
-terrible events of the preceding night.
-So we closed the window and called
-the ladies. I made some tea on my
-ring-burner, and we breakfasted on
-that and biscuits. The ladies avoided
-the window, and so did I, but Mr.
-Baker went to it every few minutes.
-After each visit he whispered to me
-that it was still growing. Mrs. Baker
-seemed in a stupor, but Viva tried hard
-to cheer us. She sang little snatches
-of song under her breath as she washed
-the tea-cups; and once she said that it
-was great “fun.” Her mouth trembled
-when I looked reproachfully at her.</p>
-
-<p>“Mother is so nervous,” she whispered.
-“I have to pretend, to cheer
-her. Do you think it will—grow?”</p>
-
-<p>“Heaven knows!” I said. “But
-you are very brave.”</p>
-
-<p>After this, she and I sat at the window,
-watching the tendrils growing
-and growing, and clutching incessantly
-at the air. I thought, at first, that they
-were swaying in the wind, but there
-was no breeze. Also there was an
-indescribable air of purpose about
-their movement. A number of long
-branches spread themselves over a
-window opposite. Their swaying
-ceased, and they pressed on it steadily,
-till at last it broke with a dull crash.
-Mrs. Baker fainted, and her husband
-lifted her on to the sofa. Viva clung
-to my arm. The malicious tendrils
-broke down the window-frame, piece
-by piece, and spread slowly into the
-room, winding themselves round the
-tables and chairs.</p>
-
-<p>“If anyone had been there,” Viva
-cried hoarsely. “If—if—” She looked
-at me. Her eyes were big with fright.</p>
-
-<p>“They must be doing something
-to stop it,” I said—“the—the authorities.
-If we could find out! I’ll try
-the telephone.”</p>
-
-<p>After several calls I obtained an
-answer. It was a girl’s voice. Six of
-them had stayed all night in the exchange,
-she said. They were in communication
-with the police and the
-Government Offices. The soldiers had
-been out since the previous evening,
-and had cut their passage from Chelsea
-Barracks to Victoria Street, and
-along this almost to Westminster
-Bridge. They had intended coming on
-to Whitehall and the Strand; but the
-stuff grew almost as quickly as it was
-cut down, and had overpowered many
-of them. Over a hundred had been
-crushed to death by it, and they had
-sent for gun-cotton to try and blow it
-up, as a last resort. It was known,
-through the telegraph, that the weed
-had appeared all over England and on
-the Continent. It was also growing
-out of the sea. The English Channel
-was choked in places, and several
-vessels had been bound by the weed in
-sight of the coast. “It’s alive!” she
-wailed; “alive! Its eyes are watching
-us through the windows!” (The
-bulges had the appearance of eyes.)</p>
-
-<p>I was unable to obtain any further
-answers, although I tried the telephone
-several times. By one o’clock
-the third-story windows were covered.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[Pg 190]</span>
-The thickest tendrils were then
-nearly the diameter of a florin, with
-the bulges the size and shape of exceedingly
-large plums. The stems and
-bulges seemed to be of one homogeneous
-material. There were no leaves
-or fruit or flowers at this time, but
-branches were beginning to sprout
-from the main stems. There did not
-appear to be any communication between
-one stem and another; but, according
-to Professor Newton’s notes,
-this undoubtedly took place at the
-roots, which interlaced so as to form a
-gigantic nervous system or brain.</p>
-
-<p>We made another meal of tea and
-biscuits. Mrs. Baker seemed stupefied
-with horror, and her husband was
-evidently overcome by his anxiety for
-her, and scarcely spoke. Viva and I
-tried to talk, but our voices broke off
-in the middle of words. We listened
-vainly for any explosions, and concluded
-that the attempt at rescue had
-failed. By four o’clock the weed was
-up to the window-sill. Mrs. Baker was
-in a prolonged faint. Her husband sat
-beside her, with his head on his hand.
-He did not look up when I suggested
-carrying her out on the roof.</p>
-
-<p>“The cold would rouse her,” he
-said. “It is best as it is. You’re a
-good chap, I think. Do what you can
-for my little girl.”</p>
-
-<p>I put on my overcoat, crammed the
-pockets with biscuits and a flask, and
-persuaded Viva to accompany me to
-the roof to look for a way of escape,
-for us and for her parents. We never
-saw them again.</p>
-
-<p>Some people from neighboring houses
-were on the adjoining roofs already,
-two old caretakers, a man and a lad.
-We saw about twenty more on the
-roofs in other streets. Some of them
-were raving and singing. The caretakers
-who had spoken to us in the
-morning flung their window open.
-They were laughing as if they had been
-drinking. They brought two pailfuls
-of boiling water and emptied it upon
-the weed. There was a soft hissing
-sound. Then two—four—six quivering
-tendrils reached slowly toward
-them. The man and woman seemed
-fascinated. They did not attempt to
-move, only screamed. The tendrils
-seized them; bound them round and
-round. Viva buried her head on my
-shoulder, and I shut my eyes. It was
-about half a minute, I think, before
-the screams ceased. Then there was
-crash after crash as windows were
-broken in. The weed had its passions,
-it seemed.</p>
-
-<p>“Take me back to my mother and
-father,” Viva begged. “We can all
-die together—if you would rather die
-with us?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I would rather die with you,
-Viva,” I said. “I should have liked
-you very much if we had lived.”</p>
-
-<p>We returned to the trap-door, but
-the staircase was choked with the
-weed. As we looked down it seemed
-to be a pit of twirling gray snakes. We
-called to her mother and father, but
-there was no answer. Viva would have
-flung herself among the weed, but I
-held her and carried her back to the
-roof. The weed was beginning to
-crawl over the gutters. Long rope-like
-filaments were surrounding the
-other people who were on the roofs.
-They huddled together and did not attempt
-to escape. The tendrils overran
-them and bound them round and
-round. I think they had mostly fainted.
-There was only one cry.</p>
-
-<p>The tendrils lashed one another and
-fought over their prey. Their struggles
-made a repulsive, “scrooping”
-noise—a noise like the sound of stroking
-silk, only louder. There was also
-a sound of crunching bones.</p>
-
-<p>I did not notice the weed closing
-round us till Viva clutched my arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Hold me,” she begged. “Hold me
-tight! I thought life had only just begun——”</p>
-
-<p>I supported her on one arm, and
-backed toward the Strand end of the
-roof, where the weed had encroached
-less. We stumbled against a skylight.
-The attic below was empty. I opened
-the frame, lowered Viva and jumped
-down after her. We crouched in a
-corner watching the window. One—two
-minutes passed. Then the gray
-weed, with the bulges that simulated<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[Pg 191]</span>
-eyes, pressed upon it. The glass shivered
-upon the floor. I lifted Viva in
-my arms—she was too faint to walk—and
-carried her out on the landing.</p>
-
-<p>The light was bad, and I saw no
-weed till we reached the next landing.
-Then it stretched toward us from the
-broken window-frame. A dozen gray
-ropes crept toward us from the stairs
-when we approached them. The lift
-was standing open. I pushed Viva in,
-jumped after her, slid the steel railing
-to and lowered us. A tendril caught
-at the lift as we started. I heard it
-snap.</p>
-
-<p>In my excitement I lowered the lift
-too fast. We were thrown against the
-sides and almost stunned when it
-stopped. There was barely a glimmer
-of light, and we did not know if we
-had reached the bottom of the shaft
-or had been stopped by the weed. We
-listened for a long while and heard
-nothing. Then we let ourselves out
-and advanced a few inches at a time,
-feeling round us with our hands. We
-seemed to be in the hall of the basement.
-We came upon a table and
-found a tray on it with biscuits and
-milk. We drank the milk and Viva
-stuffed the biscuits in her pockets, as
-mine were full. There was a dim,
-barely perceptible light from an area
-window. We peered up through the
-grating into the forest of huge weeds.
-The trunks, which had grown to the
-size of young elms, only swayed a little;
-but the branches above twisted and
-twined incessantly. Viva shuddered
-when she saw them, and I took her
-away.</p>
-
-<p>“We are safe down here,” I assured
-her; but she pressed her hand over my
-mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“Hush!” she whispered. “Hush!
-It may hear.”</p>
-
-<p>We wandered about in the darkness
-till we found a caretaker’s room. We
-sat there on a sofa, holding hands. We
-never lost touch of each other all the
-time. I do not know how long it was.
-It seemed years. The basement was
-very quiet, but the sound of the india-rubbery
-motion came down to us.
-Once or twice we thought we heard a
-human cry. Once a mouse squeaked,
-and a spider dropped on the couch beside
-us with a thud. We were always
-listening.</p>
-
-<p>After an unknown time we groped
-our way into the scullery to get water.
-We had just drunk when we heard the
-sound of india-rubbery tentacles dragging
-themselves over the walls. Something
-clung to my hand. Something
-held her skirt. It tore as I pulled her
-from it. Something was in the way
-when we tried to close the door. It
-followed us across the room and into
-the passage. We felt along the walls
-for the door that we thought led to the
-cellars—found it—fastened it after us—groped
-down the stairs. It was
-darker than the darkness of the basement
-above—darkness that could be
-felt. We stumbled over some coals—and
-a rough, hoarse voice came out of
-the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>“Give us your hand, guv’nor,” it
-said, “just a touch of your hand. I’ve
-been alone here for—for a thousand
-years!”</p>
-
-<p>Something staggered toward us—stumbled
-against us; and a huge rough
-hand gripped my arm.</p>
-
-<p>I put myself between him and Viva
-and pressed her arm for silence. The
-voice and grip were not reassuring, and
-I hoped he did not know she was there.</p>
-
-<p>“Here is my hand,” I said.</p>
-
-<p>“And mine,” said Viva eagerly.
-“You are a friend—of course you are a
-friend. God bless you.”</p>
-
-<p>“God bless you, lady.” The rough
-voice softened strangely. “I—I’m
-sorry to intrude.”</p>
-
-<p>He drew back a little way from us
-and sat down. I could not see him,
-but I could hear him breathe. Another
-unknown time passed. Then Viva
-whispered that she was thirsty.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a pail of water,” the man
-said, “if I can find it.” He moved
-about in the darkness till he kicked it.
-Then he brought it to us. We drank
-from the pail and ate a few biscuits.
-I offered him some, but he said that he
-had a crust left. Viva and I explored
-the cellar and found a shovel and a
-pick. I suggested that we should try<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[Pg 192]</span>
-to break through into the next cellar,
-on the chance of finding food; but Viva
-and the man feared that the weed
-might hear us.</p>
-
-<p>She and I sat on an empty packing-case,
-and she laid her head on my
-shoulder and slept. After a time I
-slept too. The man woke us.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s something moving, guv’nor,”
-he said hoarsely. “I think it’s
-growing out of the floor. Strike a
-match, and give me the shovel.”</p>
-
-<p>We found forty or fifty weed plants
-growing. He beat some down with the
-shovel, but others clutched him round
-the legs. He was a strong, rough-looking
-man and he fought furiously,
-but they pulled him down. I gave
-Viva the matches and went to his rescue
-with the pick. The weeds seized
-me too, but he cut us both free with a
-clasp-knife, and at length we destroyed
-them all.</p>
-
-<p>We saw by the matchlight that the
-wall was cracking in one place. So we
-resolved to try to get through it. The
-man dislodged a few bricks with the
-pick, and we pulled others away till
-our fingers bled and the last match
-gave out. At length he managed to
-crawl through.</p>
-
-<p>“You come next, sir,” he proposed.
-“The lady would be frightened of me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dear friend,” Viva said, “I am not
-in the least afraid of you.”</p>
-
-<p>So he helped her through, and I followed.
-We discovered a passage, and
-along the passage another doorway—and
-people. I do not remember our
-words when we found one another in
-the dark—only the gladness of it.</p>
-
-<p>There were about twenty of them—men,
-women and children. They had
-food and drink which they had collected
-before they fled to the cellar.
-Professor Newton was among them.
-He seemed acknowledged as their
-leader, and he proposed me as his second.
-He wanted the aid of an intelligent
-and educated man, he whispered,
-in fighting the weed.</p>
-
-<p>“We <i>must</i> fight it,” he declared,
-tapping me on the arm with his finger,
-“but I don’t know how. I—don’t—know—how!—I
-can’t even guess what
-it is; still less what it is going to be.
-It may be mere vegetable life—a man-eating
-plant. It may be brute animal
-life—a <i>carnivorous</i> animal! It may
-be intelligent—diabolical intelligence.
-Whatever it is, it will develop as it
-grows, develop new organs and new
-powers, new strength and new weaknesses.
-We must strike <i>there</i>. What
-weaknesses? Ah-h! I don’t know!
-It may outgrow itself and wither. It
-may perish from the little microbes of
-the earth, like the Martians in Wells’s
-romance. We thought that an idle
-fancy <i>then</i>. It may grow into an intelligent—devil!
-It may be one now
-and merely lack the organs to carry out
-fully its evil will. On the other hand,
-its malevolence may be purposeless—a
-blind restlessness that it will outgrow—after
-we have stifled in the darkness
-at its feet. We must fight it anyhow.
-To fight it we must understand it. To
-understand it we must study it. Will
-you risk your life with me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” I said.</p>
-
-<p>Viva cried softly when I told her I
-must go; but she did not try to keep
-me from my duty. The professor and
-I crawled up the stairs into the basement,
-and finding nothing there went
-up in the lift in the dark. We heard
-the weed moving about on the second
-landing. I jumped out, turned on the
-electric light, and jumped in again.
-The tendrils followed me and clutched
-at the steel curtain, but could not
-break it. We hacked with our pen-knives
-at those that crept through.
-The juice which ran out from them had
-an oily smell. They beat furiously on
-the curtain. The professor studied
-them calmly with a microscope. The
-bulges were the beginning of eyes, he
-thought. He pronounced some feathery
-sprays sprouting from them to be
-the rudiments of organs like hands. I
-do not know whether he was right,
-but he always maintained that they
-would develop organs of sense. Anyhow
-the character of the weed was
-clearly changing. It had grown harder
-and drier, but without losing its flexibility
-or strength.</p>
-
-<p>After a time the professor decided<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[Pg 193]</span>
-that I should return to the others. He
-went up again in the lift when he had
-lowered me. Viva was waiting for me
-in the dark just inside the door.</p>
-
-<p>I had obtained some candles. We
-lit one and stuck it in a bottle. I shall
-never forget the group in the low, wide
-cellar, huddled together on boxes or on
-the floor. The man we met first was
-nursing an ailing child. Lady Evelyn
-Angell had gathered a young flower-girl
-under her opera cloak. A policeman
-was binding up a wounded hand
-with his handkerchief. A shivering
-old match-seller wore his cape. Viva
-took a little boy on her lap and told
-him about Jack and the Beanstalk.
-Steel—a card sharper, I learned afterward—who
-had been indefatigable
-in helping everyone, was chatting to
-Lady Evelyn. Some ill-clad youths
-had draped themselves in sacking. A
-rouged and gaudily dressed woman
-was mothering some younger ones.
-She had comforted Viva while I was
-away, I heard, and had offered to accompany
-her in a search for me, but
-the others had persuaded them that
-they would only be a hindrance to us.</p>
-
-<p>After a couple of hours—I had
-wound my watch again—the professor
-reappeared. His clothes were torn
-and his face and hands were bleeding.</p>
-
-<p>“They broke the steel curtain at
-last,” he explained, “but I got away.
-Good heavens, how it grows! I can’t
-make up my mind about it.”</p>
-
-<p>After a time, when most of us were
-dozing, a portion of the roof and the
-wall fell in. The growth of the roots
-under the street had pressed the earth
-upon it, the professor conjectured. A
-faint light streamed down the tall
-weeds and through the opening. The
-branches overhead were still moving,
-but the lower stems seemed inert. The
-professor decided to venture among
-them in search of knowledge. I went
-with him. There was just room enough
-between the weeds for us to pass.</p>
-
-<p>The houses upon the other side of
-the street were all down. So were
-many in the Strand. In Fleet Street
-we saw the way it was done. The huge
-weeds leaned upon them, till they fell
-with a crash. The Law Courts went
-so. We found the clock among
-the weeds. Sometimes the branches
-pushed themselves through the windows
-and walls of houses which were
-still standing. Once or twice we
-heard human cries. We found a
-woman, with a baby and a dog, walking
-among the weed-trees, and took
-them with us.</p>
-
-<p>The light which straggled down
-through the waving branches overhead
-was feeble and patchy, and we
-lost our way for a time. At length we
-found Norfolk Street; but as we were
-entering it, some of the tendrils, which
-seemed to be fighting one another
-viciously overhead, broke off and
-dropped at our feet. They writhed
-upon the ground like huge gray snakes,
-and wound themselves round the weed-trees
-and lashed out blindly. One of
-them caught the woman and dashed
-her against a trunk. We pulled her
-away from the tendril as its violence
-lessened, but she was dead. The baby
-was not hurt and still slept. I carried
-it in my arms.</p>
-
-<p>A moment later a broken tendril
-dropped right upon the dog. He
-howled loudly, and in his fright bit at
-an unbroken tendril hanging down
-among the trees. (There were a good
-many such, but we had succeeded in
-avoiding them hitherto.) It shook
-as if with rage and pain, wrapped its
-extremity round the dog, and bore
-him aloft, still howling. Hundreds
-of tendrils stretched toward it, and
-fought with it for the dog. They still
-fought after his cries ceased; and other
-tendrils began reaching downward, in
-every direction round us, as if searching
-for further prey. The professor watched
-them intently, oblivious of danger.</p>
-
-<p>“They make a different sound now,”
-he remarked abstractedly. “It is no
-longer the scroop-scroop of clammy
-india-rubber—they <i>rustle</i>. It doesn’t
-seem like decay. They are stronger—stronger.
-There is always weakness in
-excess of anything—even strength.
-Let me think!”</p>
-
-<p>“Quick!” I cried. “Quick! They
-are falling upon us. Run!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[Pg 194]</span></p>
-
-<p>We dodged rapidly among the weed-trunks.
-He was slow and I pushed
-him. Tendril after tendril rustled
-downward, and the trunks themselves
-swayed. Two almost fixed the professor
-between them—he was a stout
-man—but I dragged him through.
-The light from above was entirely shut
-out by the descending tendrils, and we
-must have been lost but for an electric
-lamp burning in one of the houses.
-As it was, the descending tendrils must
-have caught us but for their struggles
-among themselves. Broken pieces
-dropped and wriggled madly all round
-us, and we had to dodge them. One
-caught at my foot, and dragged my
-shoe off as I pulled myself away. Several
-touched us as we slid down the
-debris into the cellar. They followed
-us there.</p>
-
-<p>A few of the people screamed. A
-few fainted. The rest backed in a
-huddled, wide-eyed crowd toward the
-farthest wall. Lady Evelyn stood in
-front of the children, holding out her
-arms as if to shelter them. Steel came
-and stood in front of her.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear lady,” he said, “these have
-been the best days of my life—since
-we met. I should have been a better
-man if I had met you before.” She
-smiled very sweetly at him.</p>
-
-<p>“I like you greatly, Mr. Steel,” she
-said.</p>
-
-<p>The rouged woman came and took
-the baby from me, and I tried to pull
-the professor back; but he would not
-come. Viva ran out from the crowd
-and put her arms round me. The
-tendrils drew nearer and nearer. Some
-came along the ceiling, hanging their
-heads like snakes. Others crawled
-along the floor, raising themselves as
-if to dart at us. I do not know whether
-they saw us, heard us or smelt us, or
-how they knew where we were; but
-they knew.</p>
-
-<p>They were within a yard of the professor,
-and still he did not move; only
-took the burning candle from the
-bottle, and railed at them as if they
-could hear. I thought that he had gone
-mad.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think man has learned
-nothing in his thousand generations?”
-he shouted. “That you can crush him
-with the brute strength of a few days?
-Come and see! Come and see!”</p>
-
-<p>The foremost tentacle wound round
-him; began to lift him. He felt it
-carefully with his hands. “It is dry,”
-he shouted—“<i>dry!</i>”</p>
-
-<p><i>Then he put the candle to it!</i></p>
-
-<p>There was a wilderness of white
-light. Then a purple darkness. I heard
-the professor fall. When our eyes recovered
-from their dazed blindness the
-weed was utterly gone. The daylight
-was streaming into the hole in the
-wall, and the professor was picking
-himself up from the floor. His hair
-and beard were badly singed, and his
-eyebrows were gone.</p>
-
-<p>“It dried too fast,” he told us, with
-a queer angry chuckle. “That was its
-weakness. It dried—dried——”</p>
-
-<p>He kept on repeating the word in a
-dull, aimless tone. The rest repeated
-it vacantly after him. Viva was the
-first to speak coherently—a faint
-whisper in my ear.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear!” she said. “My <i>dear</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Evelyn spoke next—to ex-card
-sharper Steel.</p>
-
-<p>“The world begins afresh,” she
-said; “and—you <i>have</i> met me, Mr.
-Steel.”</p>
-
-<p>The tears rolled down her cheek
-and his, and they stood smiling at each
-other.</p>
-
-<p>“The world begins afresh,” the professor
-called in a loud voice. “Come
-with me and make it a better world.”
-He strode toward the light, but some
-held back.</p>
-
-<p>“The weed!” they cried timorously.</p>
-
-<p>“The weed has gone—burned in an
-instant, from the end of the world to
-the end of the world!” he assured them.
-“Follow me.”</p>
-
-<p>We followed him out of the darkness
-into the sunlight. It was a mild, bright
-day for November, and a pleasant air.</p>
-
-<p>The weed had disappeared entirely,
-as the professor predicted; and, speaking
-generally, the conflagration had
-been too sudden to do much harm; but
-most of the buildings had subsided
-upon the sudden destruction of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[Pg 195]</span>
-weed-roots which had undermined
-them. Here and there houses, stones
-and timber had caught fire; and in
-many districts the fire spread, and
-lasted for days.</p>
-
-<p>The statistics, which are being prepared
-in the New Department for the
-Service of the People, over which I
-have the honor to preside, are not yet
-quite complete; but I may mention
-that seventeen per cent. of the buildings
-on the north of the Thames are
-found to have been destroyed, and
-ninety-three per cent. on the south—the
-wind having blown mainly in that
-direction; and that the destruction of
-property in Great Britain and Ireland
-generally is roughly estimated at fifty-five
-per cent.</p>
-
-<p>The adventures of our little band,
-after we came out from our hiding-place,
-scarcely belong to this story;
-but I must set down a few events
-which stand out in red letters in our
-calendar of the world after the Gray
-Weed.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the first afternoon we learned
-that there were other survivors—which
-we had not dared to hope—by
-finding a man, woman and child
-nearly dead with hunger and fright,
-hiding in a basement. We formed ourselves
-at once into small parties to go
-round London, wherever houses yet
-stood, and rang the church bells, and
-blew trumpets, and beat drums, and
-shouted to all those who remained to
-come out. Here and there frightened
-groups of white-faced, famished, disheveled
-people answered the call. As
-our numbers increased we sent parties
-to search the cellars and other hiding-places,
-and rescued many at their last
-gasp. The total number of survivors
-in London, where the percentage of
-deaths was highest, amounts to some
-35,000.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the second day we obtained
-several replies to our calls by telegraph
-to the provinces; and the next
-day we were in telegraphic communication
-with most parts of the United
-Kingdom and even the Continent. In
-almost all towns at least one or two
-persons had escaped. In some parts
-the Gray Weed had left open spaces,
-or a few houses, to which people could
-flee, and only a portion of those who
-reached them had died from starvation.
-In a few instances it was alleged
-to have refrained from injuring those
-with whom it came in contact. Also
-it failed to crush many of the ships
-which it seized at sea—the sea-growths
-generally being less virulent than those
-on land. So far as our statistics go at
-present, we hope that nearly one-eighth
-of the population of Europe
-has survived.</p>
-
-<p>On the fourth day the first train
-from the provinces to London was run;
-and several ships, which the weed had
-overgrown without injuring, came into
-port. After this, traffic was rapidly
-re-established.</p>
-
-<p>A fortnight later our present government
-was provisionally established.
-The professor, whom all hailed as their
-deliverer, refused office himself; but
-upon his nomination I was appointed
-to my present position. Several of our
-little band were assigned important
-posts, including Steel—now known by
-another name, and married to Lady
-Evelyn—and Viva, who is presiding
-over the London Homes for Orphans,
-until our marriage. The day after
-tomorrow a newspaper appears.</p>
-
-<p>We have toiled unremittingly to
-reconstruct the social and commercial
-life of the country, and not without
-success. We have few luxuries, but no
-wants; fewer workers, but no drones;
-fewer to love—but we love more—I
-think the world will go well, now, because
-we love one another so much.</p>
-
-<p>“The Gray Weed has solved the
-problems of poverty, envy, crime and
-strife, which have puzzled mankind
-for ages,” the professor said, just before
-he died. “Don’t cry, little Viva.
-Ah! But I felt a tear on my hand!
-There is nothing to cry about, my
-child. <i>They</i> have gone; and <i>I</i> am going;
-but <i>you</i> have learned to love. It is all
-for the best!”</p>
-
-<p>“All—for—the—best,” he repeated
-at the last, and smiled. That is his
-message to you to whom I write, dear
-friends.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[Pg 196]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="With_Caste_Against_Him" id="With_Caste_Against_Him">&nbsp;</a>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>With Caste Against Him</i></h2></div>
-
-<p class="center space-above1 space-below1">BY HUGH PENDEXTER</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">TIBERIUS Smith in love was a
-spectacle I had never conjured
-up. Billy Campbell, the strolling
-actor and his patron’s Boswell,
-had pictured the old showman to me
-as being arrested for a spy in Russia,
-for a madman in France, for a too
-active Carlist in Spain and for smuggling
-opium in China, but he had never
-hinted at sentiment. I had taken it
-for granted that Smith’s many wanderings
-over the face of the earth with his
-various theatrical enterprises and circuses
-had eliminated any inclination
-for love-sickness, and it seems it had
-until he met the lord’s daughter.</p>
-
-<p>That was like Smith. It was impossible
-to conceive of him as married
-and settled down, and when he did fall
-in love it was his characteristic to indulge
-in a hopeless passion. For all
-that, the lord’s daughter was forced to
-see him at his best, sturdy and resourceful,
-when others failed her, and
-I doubt not but that this knowledge
-was sadly sweet to the old showman,
-and that in after years he enjoyed diagnosing
-the climax and realizing it was
-superbly dramatic. If she ignored his
-existence at first, he had the keen pleasure
-of knowing she had only him to rely
-on at a most critical finale and that
-her world was better, much better, for
-his having lived.</p>
-
-<p>Possibly the trick could have been
-turned without him, turned in a prosaic
-manner with some bloodshed and
-a great waste of gunpowder. But
-when a lovely girl is the stake, be she
-a lord’s daughter or a queen from the
-masses, it is sometimes advisable to
-finesse. And Tiberius, if slightly melodramatic,
-solved the problem as he
-could only do, and as only he could
-do—that is, in an unusual manner.
-Campbell used to style him the “assassin
-of adversity,” and his peculiar
-faculty of rescuing the weak from undesirable
-situations was, perhaps, never
-better demonstrated than when, with
-cutter bars down, he restored the English
-girl to her people and incidentally
-introduced the uses and abuses of modern
-farming implements to some unsophisticated
-savages in a lonely Pacific
-isle.</p>
-
-<p>I had recurred to the time when
-Tiberius piloted an Uncle Tom’s Cabin
-company up and down the land, and
-Billy, gazing sadly into my open grate,
-irrelevantly observed:</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; and that was when Tib ought
-to have won her and settled down.
-He was clear daffy over that girl, and
-I’ll admit she was a hummer; one, you
-know, that would make a man abandon
-his grandmother in a blinding snowstorm
-if it pleased her. But I reckon
-Fate had other work cut out for Tiberius
-besides spooning, love in a cottage
-and no money for the iceman and all
-that sort of stuff. Yes, it was fully
-ten years ago that the <i>Kalanke</i> broke
-her propeller.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are speaking of a boat?” I
-inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord bless you, yes. The <i>Kalanke</i>
-was one of Lord Blam’s boats; ran
-from the Coast to Australia. You see,
-Tib got the bee that an Uncle Thomas
-show would take in Australia like four
-squaws in a no-limit game; and once
-he had outlined the bill of fare, there
-were plenty of us come-ons pushing
-out our plates and begging for a helping.
-I suppose that when it came to
-the realm of pure “con” there wasn’t
-a hypnotist doing a mail order business<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[Pg 197]</span>
-that could lay it on quite so succulent
-and plausible as he. Lord, we <i>had</i> to
-believe him. He believed in himself.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, Harriet,’ he cried, drawing
-up his dear, fat old form and looking
-more honest than any real estate dealer
-you ever kenned; ‘why, Harriet, don’t
-linger over the paltry twelve dollars a
-week I’m supposed to pay you. Don’t
-even hesitate. Forget that part of it.
-Imagine you are paying me for the
-chance to go. Picture, if you please,
-Opportunity, clean-shaven and bald-headed,
-gliding by your door in a seventy-eight
-horse-power gasolene romp-about
-at the mirk hour of midnight
-with you chloroformed and locked in
-your gilded cage. Picture me with a
-jiu-jitsu strangle hold on Oppo, detaining
-him until you can come to, slip
-into your Horse Show gown and come
-down and relieve me. Then you are
-feasting your magnetic orbs on truth.
-Why, the people down there will be
-so worked up over your “Papa, dear
-papa, set Uncle Tom free,” that they’ll
-wreck your hotel with showers of gold.’</p>
-
-<p>“She was a slim, ingrowing woman,
-who always played the Little Eva parts
-and was the teariest thing ever between
-the wings. Clarence, her husband,
-booked for Legree, balked a little
-and said he’d stand a blankety, blank,
-all blanks, nice chance of getting his
-showers in lead after he’d massacred
-Thomas. But Tib poured a little balm
-into his wounds, and that was how we
-came to hop the <i>Kalanke</i> for Australia.</p>
-
-<p>“The boat was one of Lord Blam’s
-new line and was fixed up regardless.
-Besides the passengers, she did quite a
-freight business and carried our lots of
-horses and farm implements. Our
-troupe traveled second class except
-Tib, who always went the limit—or
-walked. Besides the company there
-weren’t many passengers aboard, as it
-was in the dull season; but we hadn’t
-cuffed the deep blue for more than two
-days before Tib met his fate.</p>
-
-<p>“She was the English girl, all blue
-eyes, and peaches for complexion; and
-Tib haunted her usual promenade like
-a mosquito. She was the lord’s only
-daughter and was making a flying trip
-to Sydney, where her father lay ill.
-She had hurried from Washington to
-’Frisco and caught the boat with her
-maid. The Captain was the rest of her
-bodyguard. But Tib had the Captain
-solid at the go-in, and through him and
-his own gall he managed to speak to
-Miss Mary.</p>
-
-<p>“She was about as approachable as
-the Eiffel Tower. She was the first bit
-of peerage I had ever seen traveling
-alone, and I would prefer trying to get
-chummy with an iceberg to speaking to
-her. But a man or a woman had to be
-armor plate to withstand Tib when he
-put himself out, and at the end of one
-day he had made her laugh; then she
-got a bit interested in him and I knew
-he was spinning romance.</p>
-
-<p>“When he got to giving his Vermont
-family an old chateau environment and
-spoke of the good old days at ‘The
-Oaks,’ and his father’s pack of hounds,
-aristocracy wanted to crawl into a safe
-deposit vault and slam the door or get
-scalped. He could jam more poetry
-and <i>pâté de foie gras</i> breeding into his
-round form and look more dreamy passion
-from his pleading eyes than any
-man that ever made a house believe a
-bum show was a good one. He was all
-right, I tell you, and if Little Eva
-hadn’t butted in when we were doing
-things to the equator, and asked him
-to come down and play stud-poker in
-the smoking-room, I reckoned he’d
-have won a few plighted troths anyway.
-I shall always believe he had
-her clinging to the ropes when Eva
-made the fatal stab.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Do you know those people in the
-second cabin?’ demanded Her Lordship
-with an eighty-two degrees north
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Tib groaned and tore his brown
-hair and admitted he owned us. ‘The
-vase is broken,’ he cried. ‘I’ve got the
-bell and it’s back to the barriers.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he felt so bad over that girl
-that he almost wept. It wa’n’t her
-titled papa, or the coat of arms; it was
-just a case of She. When he was talking
-to her he forgot he was merely a
-showman. He believed all about the
-old ivy-covered manse and the hounds.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[Pg 198]</span>
-Why, I’ve even heard him call the pups
-by name. And his father never owned
-anything more blue-blooded than a
-sheepdog.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Billy,’ he said to me as we
-smoked down aft, ‘I never met a girl
-yet I felt so soft over. I know I’m
-older than she by some years, but I
-keep my age locked up in the baggage-room
-and we might have been happy if
-not for Little Eva.’</p>
-
-<p>“And Miss English was mad. She
-scolded the Captain for presenting Tib,
-and told him her father would do things
-once we’d sighted old earth. And the
-Captain was on the anxious seat, for
-her father was his meal ticket and had
-delegated him to fetch out his daughter
-O. K. But on the next night we
-began to forget it, when we steamed
-into the heart of a flying wedge of terrific
-winds.</p>
-
-<p>“I decided that if ever we got ashore
-it would be to have the folks come
-down to the beach and look at us and
-say, ‘How natural they look.’ Some
-of the gingerbread works were carried
-away the first night of the blow, and
-whenever the wind let up a bit the live
-stock would throw in a few <i>ensembles</i>
-that made one pray for more breeze.
-Yet the boat behaved well, and if something
-hadn’t happened to the propeller
-we’d have come through in rare form.
-But when the chief engineer began to
-parade out his kit and try to mend
-things while standing on his head I
-knew the game was getting serious.
-Now we were bumped by every billow,
-and I heard a petty officer whisper that
-we were being driven far from our
-course.</p>
-
-<p>“At last the kick stopped, or else
-we’d slipped out of the storm zone,
-and at about three o’clock in the morning
-we dropped anchor near a dear
-little island that the Captain couldn’t
-name with any great degree of exactness.</p>
-
-<p>“The anchorage was so good and the
-water so smooth that our engineer said
-it would be easy to take the boat to
-pieces and put it together without
-losing even a shingle nail. Well, you
-can indulge in a small wager that we
-were all up and happy when we came
-near enough to smell the land. The sky
-was clear and peppered over with incandescent
-lights, and Tib felt so good
-that he waltzed up to the She Saxon
-and observed: ‘I regret you have been
-inconvenienced by the storm.’</p>
-
-<p>“Say, she just turned and dragged
-her two sapphires up and down his
-anatomy as if he were a seven-leaf clover.
-Then she stabbed him four times
-with as many glances and turned and
-walked forward to the Captain. Cap
-wheeled around with his lips pursed up
-to say something unwholesome, but
-seeing who it was he swallowed it, and
-it hurt. Then she asked something
-in a low voice and he shook his head
-slowly. Then she stamped her hoof
-and he seemed to give way. At last
-he called a man to him and gave some
-orders. The next thing we knew a
-boat was dropped and she was being
-rowed ashore by four sailors.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Isn’t it rather dangerous to let the
-lady go ashore?’ asked Tib of the
-Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“This gave the Captain a fine chance
-to ease his mind, and he did it by pouring
-out his whole heart to Tib in a comprehensive
-flow of profanity. He
-cursed Tib up hill and down, but Tib
-was so round it all glanced off. Cap
-told him that Miss Mary had gone
-ashore to get rid of his presence. Tib
-shuddered. Then the Cap reminded
-him that a British skipper takes sass
-from no one except the owners, and ordered
-him back with the rest of us.
-Another gilt braid sneaked up and told
-Tib the Cap meant nothing, that he was
-only feeling cross at being delayed. As
-to Miss Mary, he swore she was as safe
-when guarded by the four tars as she
-would be on her father’s deck. Besides,
-the island was probably vacant,
-he added, and she would take a short
-stroll on the beach beneath the stars and
-then return. But Tib was uneasy.
-He said no one could ever diagnose
-the disposition of the average cut-up
-residing on an oceanian isle. ‘Billy,’
-he concluded, ‘I’m cut to the heart.
-She won’t even look at the same ocean
-with me.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[Pg 199]</span></p>
-
-<p>“In about an hour’s time, just as the
-sun was lazily crawling out of his bed
-of blue—say, old chap, that sounds voluptuous
-as well as poetic, doesn’t it?—well,
-as the sun appeared there came
-to our ears a loud cry from the beach,
-and we could see some dots bobbing up
-and down trying to act intelligent. In
-two jumps the Captain shot off in a
-boat, and, without seeming to touch
-land, was back again on the run.</p>
-
-<p>“The lord’s daughter had been carried
-off by the natives, was the startling
-intelligence he fed out to his officers.
-It seems she wanted to walk up
-a little hill and get a view of the sea,
-and, although the sailors protested, she
-had ordered them to remain behind;
-and, like idiots, they obeyed her. Then
-they heard a smothered scream and ran
-to the rescue, only to meet with a
-shower of spears and clubs and to witness
-a large band of barefooted taxpayers
-making off with the skirts. One
-of the sailors had his arm broken,
-another had a spear through his shoulder,
-and all were badly bruised and
-battered. The Captain was crazy. He
-ordered his men to arm and rush to
-the rescue. At first he was going to
-lead them, but some of his officers
-soothed him down a bit and made him
-see his place was with the boat. It
-was not only necessary to rescue Miss
-Mary, but the tub must be in condition
-to carry her away when she was
-recovered.</p>
-
-<p>“But when Tib asked permission to
-join the posse the Captain broke loose
-again and swore he’d have the boss in
-irons. If it hadn’t been for Tib it
-never would have happened, he cried.
-I chipped in then and reminded him
-Her Lordship was too high and mighty
-to hunt for an exit just to avoid a
-mere man, and I closed with the Stars
-and Stripes and our consul in Australia.
-This distracted his attention a bit, for
-he forgot Tib in swearing at our consular
-service.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Billy,’ groaned Tib, ‘I guess the
-Cap is right, and I’m to blame for her
-going ashore. But these volunteers
-will never get her by hunting the
-brownies with a brass band.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we put in several long hours
-of waiting, and then two men returned
-and said reinforcements were needed,
-as the men had discovered a large village
-a few miles inland, which they
-didn’t dare to attack alone.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Guess you’d better let some of the
-passengers chip into this game now,’
-advised Tib.</p>
-
-<p>“The Captain began to rave again,
-but, seeing that the men left were
-needed in making repairs, he had to
-give in. Just then some more of the
-crew came back to the beach and, once
-aboard, panted that the colored folk
-were getting aggressive and wouldn’t
-even wait to be attacked.</p>
-
-<p>“‘To the boats, men!’ cried the Captain,
-while the steward served out howitzers.</p>
-
-<p>“Before the order could be obeyed
-the officers and the rest of the gang
-rushed down to the beach. Their news
-was worst of all. They said the heathens
-had produced Her Lordship in view
-of all and had threatened to kill her if
-her friends didn’t beat a retreat.</p>
-
-<p>“‘If we show violence she’s lost,’
-sobbed one of the men.</p>
-
-<p>“The Captain was dazed. He was
-brave enough and would gladly fight
-to the last gasp; but he didn’t want to
-recover Miss Mary dead. He tried to
-mumble something about strategy, and
-Tib caught it. It was the psychological
-moment for him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘If you’ll turn the management of
-this show over to me I’ll go and get
-her,’ he said simply.</p>
-
-<p>“Some jeered him in wild anger, some
-eyed him in amazement, and others
-were ready to grasp at any suggestion.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I mean it,’ he repeated firmly,
-drawing up his fat form and beginning
-to radiate heart waves. ‘Force will
-avail nothing, except to kill the lady.
-Do as I say and let the galleries back
-me and a few of my men, and I honestly
-believe we can turn the riffle.’</p>
-
-<p>“Discipline was lost sight of as all
-clamored for pointers. ‘Hoist up a
-few mowing machines from the hold,
-drop twice as many horses over into
-the surf, while the carpenters are knocking
-together a float. Then ferry the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[Pg 200]</span>
-grass clippers ashore and have your
-mechanics put them together. That’s
-the scenario.’</p>
-
-<p>“Some said he was crazy, but I believed
-he could fill his hand if they let
-him alone, and the Captain asked if he
-intended to palm off the mowers as
-machine guns.</p>
-
-<p>“‘If they can’t recognize a mowing
-machine you don’t expect ’em to be
-conversant with Maxims, do you?’
-groaned Tib. ‘No; I’ll play ’em as
-mowing machines and win out at that.
-I believe they’ll be big medicine with
-the natives.’</p>
-
-<p>“Of course the Captain pooh-poohed
-the scheme. He said the niggers would
-kill the lass before the paraphernalia
-could be thrown together.</p>
-
-<p>“‘And while you’re doing nothing
-and can think of nothing to do, they
-may kill her,’ cried Tib. ‘And her
-blood be upon your head! Mine is the
-only plan that’s been advanced, and it
-is practical. It’s unusual, but you
-can’t impress these folks with shotguns.
-It’s got to be something new in the way
-of scenic effect. If I had an airship
-I’d use that. But I haven’t. We can
-use the mowing machines and stagger
-the banditti. We can start in three
-hours if you’ll only give the word. Besides,
-I shall want the full chorus to
-follow with their batteries. You lose
-nothing, unless it be me and some of
-my friends and the machines.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hoist ’em up,’ commanded the
-Captain, and the gang caught Tib’s enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Now, who’s game for a little
-romp?’ asked Tib gently of us actors,
-his brown eyes collecting in two
-needle points. ‘I want my own men
-for the leading parts in this deal. Now,
-who’s game?’</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I said I was, as I owed
-him poker money. Little Eva’s husband
-said if he could have one more
-drink he’d play tag with the devil, and
-Uncle Tom was on if he didn’t have
-to black up. Tib wanted one more
-operator, and a young fellow that was
-coming out to hold down a stool in his
-father’s branch house in Sydney agreed
-to chip in if he could have time to write
-something sad to his parents. Tib
-reminded him the postman wouldn’t
-have time to collect the mail before we
-returned, and so the five of us made
-ready. The Captain ached to go, but
-Tib reminded him he must take command
-of the rear-guard.</p>
-
-<p>“I was for grabbing up a papaw
-root and dashing blindly into the weeds,
-but Tib held us all back as he outlined
-his scheme more fully. The mowing
-machines would dazzle the natives, he
-contended, and while he and his men
-were trifling with the aborigines’ superstitions
-the Captain and his bullies
-were to rush in, surround the captive,
-or else cover Tib’s retreat, once he had
-rescued her. And say! You never saw
-men work as did those boys on the
-<i>Kalanke</i>. The donkey engine was
-mounted in a trice and the big crates,
-containing the mowing machines, intended
-for peaceful pastoral scenes,
-were yanked out on deck. By that time
-the carpenters had put a raft together
-and the clippers were soon
-ashore with a bevy of mechanics impatiently
-waiting to get in their
-work. When the different parts of the
-machines had been assembled and
-joined each to his neighbor, some half-crazed
-draft horses came through the
-surf and were promptly caught. Then
-boxes of harness were ripped open,
-and there we were, as gay a cluster
-of charioteers as you would meet with
-outside a star production of ‘Ben
-Hur.’</p>
-
-<p>“Tib, as the head Mazeppa, jumped
-onto the first auto completed and
-tested the gearing. Then with his hat
-tipped jauntily over his right ear he
-reminded the Captain that the crew
-should loiter not too far in the rear,
-but always out of sight of the enemy,
-until we gave the signal to advance,
-three pistol shots. Then he cried,
-‘Cutter bars up!’ and away we clanked
-around the base of the low hill.</p>
-
-<p>“We had received tips as to the
-course to take, and it would have done
-your heart good, sir, could you have
-seen us in that bringing-in-the-sheaves
-effect. We only needed wide-brimmed
-straw hats, with handkerchiefs knotted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[Pg 201]</span>
-carelessly about our throats, to be the
-village heroes in the average rural
-melodrama.</p>
-
-<p>“The land, lucky for us, lay flat and
-hard baked by the sun, once we were
-around the hill. Then Tib’s good
-sense in picking his own men was
-demonstrated. Always in the lead as
-we trundled over the hard ground, he
-had only to move his hand to cause us
-to catch the signal and obey. Back
-of us, scuttling through the occasional
-brush, was our bodyguard, and the
-glint of the sun on the gun metal was
-a wonderful antidote for homesickness.
-In advance a fringe of woods told where
-the English girl was held captive. We
-expected to encounter outposts, but I
-reckon the foe measured our love for
-a woman by their own standard and
-couldn’t conceive of a man risking his
-life to save a squaw.</p>
-
-<p>“At last we struck the shade and
-sure enough found a broad avenue between
-the trees, just as the boatswain
-had mapped out. Then came another
-level stretch, only not so long as the
-first, bounded by a slight rise. It was
-just beyond this that the village was
-located. We approached as slyly as we
-could and cautiously gained the top
-without being interrupted. Just below
-us was the encampment, consisting of
-several scores of low huts. They were
-arranged like the spokes of a wheel,
-with broad streets radiating from the
-centre. The voters were having a big
-powwow, and they made so much noise
-that they had failed to catch the sound
-of our steeds or wheels.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Now, children, list,’ commanded
-Tib. ‘I’m going to drive straight ahead.
-Billy will wend his way to the right
-and pick up the first spoor, followed
-by Simon Legree, who takes the second
-trail. Uncle Tom takes the first left
-aisle, followed by young Add Six and
-Carry Two. And we’ll form a cluster,
-God willing, in the centre of the exposition,
-where there seems to be a
-commodious green. Attention! Cutter
-bars down! Forward, trot!’</p>
-
-<p>“And we five chauffeurs dashed into
-the hippodrome in the most ridiculous
-fashion. Tib bounced up and down like
-a rubber ball, and to fall from the seat
-meant a badly sliced up white man.
-But the effect was stupendous. I
-reckon the brunettes never before gazed
-on such wags as we must have appeared
-to be. Bang! Smash! we rode through
-their rotten village, and the machines
-needed oiling. Of all the rasping, clattering
-noises you ever heard, sir!
-Black nightmares rushed to get out
-of the way as we cleaned out the
-lanes.</p>
-
-<p>“Snip! snip! and Tib had shaved off
-the corner of a mud villa. Crunch!
-and Simon picked up a totem pole.
-Every tooth in those five cutter bars
-was working and the collateral we
-chewed up didn’t do ’em a bit of good.
-But, as Tib said, it was only a one-night
-stand and our game was to sell tickets
-and ramble away. So on we careened,
-the horses wild with fright, now and
-then the shears picking up a brown
-toe as some devotee fell prostrate in
-his flight and babbled a cast-iron
-prayer to some burglar-proof god. It
-simply swept them off their feet, sir.
-Before they woke up we had entered
-the middle square.</p>
-
-<p>“And if there wasn’t Her Lordship,
-trussed up between two poles, white as
-death!</p>
-
-<p>“‘If you’ll pardon the bucolic style
-of my turnout, dear lady, I should be
-felicitated to have you accompany me
-back to the ship,’ cried Tib cheerily
-as he slashed her free and held her so
-she would not fall. And during it all
-he was apparently oblivious to the
-frescoes of black faces staring in stupid
-awe in the background.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Can it be I’m saved!’ she whimpered,
-brushing back her twenty-two-carat
-hair with an uncertain gesture.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Tut, tut,’ cried Tib heartily as he
-took her hand and tripped a merry
-morris toward his chariot. ‘I guess
-there’s no danger. These people are
-simply crude in their deportment and
-evidently believed you some wandering
-goddess and would detain you
-awhile.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You are a brave and a good man,’
-she choked.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I guess your hosts think me the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[Pg 202]</span>
-devil. Excuse me, lady,’ salaamed
-Tib.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Never a man took greater risk,’
-she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“‘An Uncle Tom’s Cabin company,
-lady, will take any risk, or anything
-outside a church,’ replied Tib. ‘Whoa,
-Montezuma. Now hop up here on my
-knee. These bronze pieces will come
-to their senses in a second.’</p>
-
-<p>“And when Her Lordship jumped
-up into his arms the wonder-stricken
-gang gave a howl and came out of their
-trance. We countermarched in those
-rigs so that Tib had the lead when we
-quit the plaza, but not before one big
-buck, attired in a war club and a workmanlike
-spear, gave a grunt of disapproval
-and raised his trowel behind
-Tib’s back. I had been expecting one
-of them would draw to that card, and
-while his arm was pulled back I pinked
-him from the hip, and the sunlight was
-turned off so far as he was concerned.
-But they didn’t mind crowding into
-hell so long as they could regain the
-woman, and my shot took the Japanese
-out of only one of them. And as we
-swarmed up the slight rise they came
-yowling along behind us, disturbing
-the peace in a variety of ways. But
-just as Simon Legree fired three shots
-in quick succession a fringe of strained-faced
-tars popped over the crest in
-front, preceded by the busy end of
-their repeaters. Under cover of their
-diversion we gained the top and bounced
-down on the other side with the neighbors
-renewing their pursuit.</p>
-
-<p>“Just as everything began to look
-cozy and homelike my pair of Jaspers
-decided they were afraid of the ocean,
-and, hang me, if they didn’t turn about
-and caper back right in the face of the
-dancing spearmen. I couldn’t hold
-’em, and so I just dropped the cutter
-bar and pulled out my junk, only expecting
-to muss a few of ’em up before
-I was registered. My friends began to
-howl behind me, and I tossed a glance
-over my shoulder and beheld old
-Tiberius coming along after me like a
-madman, his machine jumping and
-swaying, and he with a big gun in each
-hand yelling like a fiend. He had
-tossed Her Lordship to the sailors and
-was back to play in my drama. Then
-the heat of it got into my blood, and as
-Tib drew up beside me I gave a war
-cry and urged the brutes onward still
-faster.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew if we tried to turn we were
-down and out, and that our only show
-was to put up a bold front and scare
-the enemy off the ridge. The sailors
-were now popping away merrily, and
-just as we had gone the limit the foe
-threw up the sponge and scampered
-back down the other side of the rise.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe we were several hours retreating
-to the beach! When we got
-there the whole bunch fell on Tib’s
-neck and pawed his round form affectionately,
-the Captain leading in the
-demonstration. Tib drove them away,
-but when we got aboard and Her Lordship
-rushed upon him and throwing both
-arms about his neck, pressed her red
-lips with a resounding and most plebeian
-smack on his chin, you could have heard
-him blush. It was the first time I had
-ever known him to lose his nerve. He
-made a clean break-away and bowing
-low said something in a murmur and it
-was all over. Of course she thanked
-us all, but she realized that Tib was
-the guiding light.</p>
-
-<p>“To ring off; we left the machines and
-horses for the natives to get up guessing
-parties with, and with our machinery
-repaired steamed out to the open water.
-Tib never made any advances to Her
-Lordship after once aboard, although
-she eyed him with a soft look whenever
-they met on deck during the run to
-port.</p>
-
-<p>“‘My old heart got foolish, boy,’ he
-remarked to me the night we landed,
-‘but it’s beating all right now.’ Yet
-he always kept a handkerchief she
-dropped.</p>
-
-<p>“And wherever the show played Tib
-coined money by the barrel, for Her
-Lordship’s people boomed his game
-early and late. But Tib got to believing
-it was because the show was
-so good. For, you see, he’d explain
-to me as he counted the receipts,
-‘Little Eva is dying better every
-night.’”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[Pg 203]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="Corrupt_Practices_in_Elections" id="Corrupt_Practices_in_Elections">&nbsp;</a>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>Corrupt Practices in Elections</i></h2></div>
-
-<p class="center space-above1 space-below1">BY HON. LUCIUS F. C. GARVIN<br />
-<i>Ex-Governor of Rhode Island</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">EFFORTS to expose bribery and
-other corrupt practices in elections
-are met with the cry, You
-are defaming the state! If there are
-governmental evils, we are told, prove
-them to the bottom and correct them
-quietly. Such a course may be feasible
-if applied to a private business,
-but in public affairs, in the nature of
-the case, it cannot be successful. Certainly
-none of the persons who directly
-profit by such practices will correct
-them—not the “respectable” men of
-means who furnish the funds and who
-do so with a view to recouping themselves
-in some way as a result of the
-election; not the workers who handle
-the corruption fund, taking good care
-to see that they themselves are rewarded
-for the trouble and risk involved;
-not the individuals who pocket
-the money disbursed, and in this way
-become always morally, and often
-criminally, confederates; nor, finally,
-the few who secure the offices through
-fraudulent methods. In fact, nothing
-has been found effective outside of that
-strongest of all influences in a free
-country, the force of public opinion.
-The many, who are made aware of the
-iniquity by suffering from it, have
-every inducement to end it.</p>
-
-<p>Over and over again, in great crises,
-the American people have shown themselves
-to be patriotic, honest and wise.
-This has happened whenever the masses
-have been aroused by serious threats
-of danger, either external or internal.</p>
-
-<p>The real danger to our institutions
-lies, not in great crises, but rather in a
-gradual, almost insensible, deterioration
-of the government, due either to a
-lack of vigilance on the part of the
-people or to a paralysis of their latent
-powers.</p>
-
-<p>While it is possible that the immense
-fund of good will and good sense possessed
-by the American people may be
-expended in private pursuits and thus
-diverted from a control of their own
-government, the far greater danger is
-that the mighty influences being put
-forth at almost every election will rupture
-completely the natural dependence
-of public officials upon the electorate.</p>
-
-<p>In order to cure any wrongdoing it
-is needful, first, to ascertain definitely
-wherein the wrong consists, and, secondly,
-to fix with equal definiteness
-upon an adequate remedy.</p>
-
-<p>The crudest, the most demoralizing
-and the most common method of withholding
-the hands of the sovereign
-people from the control of their government
-is the direct bribery of voters.
-This means of thwarting the wishes of
-the majority dates back to the early
-history of the country. Our system of
-so-called majority election by districts,
-placing, as it often does, the balance of
-power in a small minority of the electorate,
-invites the purchase of the votes
-of individuals. It has proved easy
-both to estimate the number of votes
-needed to turn the scale and to find
-out the particular voters who can be so
-influenced.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the original plan of buying
-individual voters at retail, the improvement
-has been made of purchasing <i>en
-bloc</i>—the money to be paid over only
-in case of delivery of the goods. In
-this modern bribery by wholesale the
-venal voters organize, choose an agent
-to conduct negotiations and sell the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[Pg 204]</span>
-entire block of votes to the highest bidder.
-When success is achieved, as
-shown by the count of the ballots, hundreds
-of dollars are paid to the agent
-and by him distributed to the members
-of the gang.</p>
-
-<p>But, whatever the details of the
-transaction, a long experience has
-shown that, in a multitude of small
-constituencies a few dollars placed in
-the hand of a voter are sufficient to
-outweigh every consideration of patriotism
-or enlightened self-interest.
-Wherever this habitually occurs, the
-rule of a few moneyed men has been
-substituted for a government by the
-people.</p>
-
-<p>In the elections of large cities, of
-populous states and of the nation at
-large, it can seldom happen that bribery
-of voters, either by retail or wholesale,
-is sufficient to alter the result.
-To supply this deficiency other means
-are more and more being resorted to.
-To assure success, where the number
-of voters renders the simpler measure
-for overcoming the people’s will unreliable,
-party managers now make use
-of finesse and fraud.</p>
-
-<p>The finesse consists in “packing” the
-primary meetings and conventions of
-the rival party for the purpose of nominating
-weak opposing candidates.
-Nearly every local party may be differentiated
-into two factions, both desirous
-of success, but the one occupying
-morally a very much higher plane than
-the other. The rich party, taking advantage
-of this division in the ranks
-of its opponents, furnishes funds and
-votes to aid the baser faction, upon
-condition, of course, that, having gained
-control of the nomination, candidates
-will be put up of such a character as
-to drive away the better element from
-their support.</p>
-
-<p>In consequence of these manipulations,
-when election day comes around,
-the poorer party is found with a so-called
-“yellow dog” ticket in the field—that
-is to say, a ticket composed of
-unfit and unknown men, clearly inferior
-to the pliant respectabilities who have
-been placed in nomination by the richer
-party.</p>
-
-<p>It sometimes happens that even this
-political trick fails to assure success.
-Either the better faction of the opposing
-party wins, or, notwithstanding
-the inferiority of the ticket named, it
-may promise to receive a majority of
-the votes cast. In this exigency the
-managers of the party which is fully
-supplied with the sinews of war do
-not hesitate at direct fraud. That is
-to say, they expend large sums of
-money in hiring election officials to
-betray their trusts at the risk of going
-to jail.</p>
-
-<p>One method adopted, where the law
-provides an official ballot, is to get
-from the officials having charge of the
-ballots one or more to be marked for
-the voter by heelers outside of the
-polling-room. This furnishes a sure
-method of bribery, for the venal voter,
-after depositing the ballot thus prepared
-for him, returns an unmarked
-ballot to the briber, as a guarantee of
-good faith, to be marked by him for
-the use of the next person bought. In
-this way one or more endless chains
-of purchased votes may be run all day,
-through the connivance of some election
-officer. This was done in Pawtucket,
-R. I., and at other places in
-that state, on the eighth of last
-November.</p>
-
-<p>But as the number of venal voters
-in a polling precinct is limited, so there
-is a limit to the effect attainable by
-giving out to heelers the official ballots
-designed for use in the voting booth
-only.</p>
-
-<p>What more, then, can be done in the
-way of modern chicanery and criminality?</p>
-
-<p>Election officers may be bought, and
-are bought, to defraud their fellow-citizens
-in a variety of ways. For instance,
-there is a very considerable percentage
-of illiterate voters in most
-states, many of whom desire to give
-their suffrage to the candidates of one
-of the poorer parties. But the richest
-party has paid the election officials,
-who assist the illiterate voters, to
-mark all such ballots for its candidates.
-Evidence exists that this was done
-systematically at the recent Presidential<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[Pg 205]</span>
-and state election in the city of Providence,
-R. I., a sufficient number of
-voters thus being deceived to turn the
-scale in the filling of one or more important
-offices.</p>
-
-<p>Inasmuch as there is a limit to the
-number of illiterate voters, even that
-base fraud, added to direct bribery,
-may not effect the desired reversal of
-the people’s will. But the moneyed
-party has other resources.</p>
-
-<p>In order to annul votes already cast
-for opposing candidates, it may hire
-the election officers to make additional
-marks upon the ballots before they
-are counted. In this way in the city of
-Providence, R. I., at the last election
-many votes for Augustus S. Meller, the
-Democratic candidate for mayor, were
-rendered void—fortunately, however,
-not in sufficient numbers to prevent
-his election.</p>
-
-<p>And not even yet has the corrupted
-election officer reached the full extent
-of his ability to defraud. It still is
-possible for him to miscount votes; or
-he may announce the result falsely—for
-example, by revising the total number
-of votes given to the candidates,
-when the real majority proves to be
-adverse to his suborned wishes.</p>
-
-<p>In case there is a Returning Board,
-whose duty it is to make a second and
-final count of the votes cast, as is the
-law in the city of Providence and the
-state of Rhode Island, that board, too,
-or its controlling members, may be
-partisan and corrupt.</p>
-
-<p>At the late election in Rhode Island
-all the ballots for state officers and
-for Presidential electors were in possession
-of a partisan Returning Board,
-of which the chairman of the Republican
-State Central Committee was
-the head, for a period of three full
-weeks before the counting began. If
-there were miscounts in certain voting
-districts on election day, it was easily
-possible for members of that Returning
-Board to open the sealed packages
-of ballots, make such changes as were
-necessary in order to have the ballots
-conform roughly to the previously
-announced figures, and then to reseal
-without the fraud being detected.</p>
-
-<p>But, it may be asked, where are
-the courts while such frauds are being
-perpetrated? Why are not these criminal
-election officers punished? Unfortunately,
-the courts, too, are frequently
-partisan, especially the lower
-courts, before which the cases are first
-brought.</p>
-
-<p>After the election of last November
-in Rhode Island, three cases were
-brought before the inferior courts—one
-for bribery, one for posing as an
-illiterate voter and one against an
-election officer in charge of a ballot-box
-for allowing the deposit by voters
-of sham instead of official ballots.
-Each of these causes was brought before
-a different local judge, and all were
-thrown out of court. Several days
-before election it was known that
-immunity had been promised to hesitating
-and apprehensive election officers.
-“The Republican Party controls
-the courts,” they were told, “and
-would see that no punishment was
-meted out to them for unlawful acts.”</p>
-
-<p>It is needless to say that, if corrupt
-practices in elections continue to increase,
-the end of popular government
-in this country is in sight. Already
-there exists a widespread and deep-seated
-distrust of the result of elections.
-Instances could be given, occurring
-within the past ten years, in
-which a very large proportion of the
-voters interested, perhaps a majority
-of those voting, believe that the wrong
-candidate was inducted into office.</p>
-
-<p>Certainly no duty is more pressing
-than to see to it that in every election
-the unbiased and unbought will of the
-people be recorded.</p>
-
-<p>Is there a remedy? And, if so, what
-is it? My conviction is, that we only
-need to carry out the intent of the
-founders of this government. They
-blazed the way; we must make a clear
-and beaten track along that way.</p>
-
-<p>By a republican form of government
-the Revolutionary statesmen
-meant two things, which now are not
-carried out. They meant that every
-state, and the nation as well, should
-possess a legislative body, representative
-of the will of the people. Nowhere<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[Pg 206]</span>
-does this exist, not even where honest
-elections assure a free ballot and a fair
-count. Neither in ability nor in
-opinion do state legislatures by their
-acts represent a majority of their constituents,
-except by accident. Nor
-will they represent the people until
-each political party, whether large or
-small, elects its due proportion of the
-members. That is to say, a party
-which casts forty-five per cent. of the
-total vote for representatives must
-have forty per cent. of the legislature,
-and the party which casts five per cent.
-of the total vote must have five per cent.
-of the legislature. Then only will
-statute law be framed in accordance
-with the will of a majority of the
-people.</p>
-
-<p>The other part of our republican
-form of government, as understood and
-intended by American statesmen of
-the eighteenth century, was that a majority
-of the people should directly
-control the organic law. To this end
-they had the state constitutions framed
-by the people, acting through delegates
-chosen to conventions for that sole purpose,
-but not in effect until submitted
-to the electors and adopted by a majority
-of the votes cast for and against.
-In like manner the referendum was
-provided for in case of subsequent
-amendments.</p>
-
-<p>It was thought, also, that a popular
-initiative for constitutional changes
-was created, in the authority given to
-legislatures to submit amendments;
-but, alas, time has shown that those
-legislatures, being unrepresentative of
-the people, refuse to submit amendments,
-however extensively demanded
-by public sentiment.</p>
-
-<p>Hence the necessity of giving the
-power to propose constitutional amendments,
-as has lately been done in
-South Dakota, Utah and Oregon, to a
-reasonable minority (in those states
-eight per cent.) of the voters. When
-the popular initiative shall thus have
-been added to the referendum already
-existing for making changes in the organic
-law of our states, all else will
-take care of itself.</p>
-
-<p>The amendment pending in the
-Rhode Island Legislature, and known
-there as the constitutional initiative,
-reads in substance as follows:</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">Eight per cent. of the legal voters of the
-state may propose specific and particular
-amendments to this constitution by filing
-with the Secretary of State, not less than
-three months nor more than nine months
-prior to any state election, a petition that
-the electors may, at such election, cast their
-ballots for or against such amendments.
-Any proposition thus made shall be submitted
-to the electors by the Secretary of
-State at said election, and, if then approved
-by a majority of the electors of the state
-present and voting thereon, it shall, ninety
-days thereafter, become a part of the Constitution
-of the state.</p>
-
-<p>To elect a legislature in any state
-committed to such an amendment calls
-for not only a widespread but an aggressive
-public sentiment in its favor.
-As a rule the organization of the party
-dominant in the state will strenuously
-oppose the adoption of the amendment.</p>
-
-<p>A party continuously in power, no
-matter what its name or avowed principles,
-is sure to frown upon radical
-measures. The complete control of the
-organic law of a state by a majority of
-its voters means a future political situation
-hitherto unknown. The effect
-upon present party leaders and upon
-partisan organizations cannot be foreseen
-in full, but that it will be tremendous
-no one can doubt.</p>
-
-<p>But if the individuals, who are enjoying
-the state offices, are opposed to
-a political upheaval of any kind, the
-parties which are permanently in the
-minority feel very differently. Their
-organizations and their members will
-welcome any reasonable reform which
-promises to alter materially the existing
-unsatisfactory situation. Also
-in sympathy with a reform so meritorious
-and non-partisan would undoubtedly
-be found a considerable
-portion of the adherents of the dominant
-party.</p>
-
-<p>Yet even with a clear majority of the
-voters of any state earnestly in favor
-of a given amendment to the constitution,
-it does not follow that its adoption
-would be easy. In every state, with
-scarcely an exception, it is the party<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[Pg 207]</span>
-whose membership comprises nine-tenths
-of the total wealth, which, with
-few brief and partial interruptions,
-controls every department of the government.
-For the past decade this
-has been the situation more than ever
-before, and every year finds the power
-of money to determine the results of
-elections gaining in strength—notwithstanding
-a rising public sentiment
-against abuses which are ignored, if
-not encouraged, by the authorities.</p>
-
-<p>The situation seems almost hopeless,
-as is very near being the case, if the
-reforming elements pursue for the future
-the same course as in the past.</p>
-
-<p>If the leader of the party in power
-were permitted to dictate the action of
-opponents, his command would be:
-“Divide your forces.” Its boss would
-say: “Split among yourselves into several
-separate and distinct parties, attack
-one another with the same virulence
-that you attack me. Call yourselves
-Democrats, Populists, Socialists,
-Prohibitionists, Labor, and have whatever
-platforms or principles you please.
-In fact, the stronger and nobler the
-men and the issues over which the
-small parties wave their banners the
-better I am pleased, for the more minute
-will be the subdivision and the
-more attractive and combative each
-fractional part.”</p>
-
-<p>And these hopelessly minor parties
-offer few inducements to the dissatisfied
-members of the major party to
-change their political affiliations. Such
-a transfer is altogether too much like
-removing one’s bed on a bitter cold
-night from a warm room to a vacant
-lot. Discomforts, and even hardships,
-patriotic citizens may be willing to endure,
-but they can scarcely be blamed
-for refusing to embrace them merely
-for the fun of being come-outers.</p>
-
-<p>In order to contend successfully
-against the party in power, however
-well known its abuses, there must be a
-co-operation of the dissatisfied and antagonistic
-voters. By co-operation it
-is not meant that an attempt should be
-made to create a single party with a
-platform composed of the planks of
-half a dozen parties. Such a composite
-is but a rope of sand; and, in fact, the
-stringing together of a collection of unrelated
-questions, such as prohibition,
-socialism and labor, is quite as likely to
-end in mutual hostilities as in a combined
-charge upon the common enemy.</p>
-
-<p>The use of money for carrying a
-state election by corrupt practices can
-only be offset by the exercise of great
-wisdom on the part of those who depend
-upon other agencies. The second
-party, which in the Northern states
-generally means the Democratic, must
-furnish the nucleus about which the
-third, fourth and fifth parties gather.
-Indeed, it devolves upon the second
-party to invite the other minor parties
-to join forces with it. And, in order
-to have such invitation accepted, it
-must fix upon one or two paramount
-issues so fundamental and important
-as to attract strongly all who are offended
-with the doings of the party
-in power. If two issues are elected,
-one of them may well be a constitutional
-amendment such as has been
-outlined in this article, the other might
-be a legislative measure—such, for instance,
-as direct primaries, which serve
-excellently the purpose of a corrupt
-practices act.</p>
-
-<p>Each of the minor parties, besides
-educational work, wishes to preserve
-its organization and to measure its
-strength at each succeeding election by
-the number of votes cast in its support.
-The wish is natural and proper; but
-the objects aimed at can be accomplished
-in a state election without putting
-full tickets into the field. The
-nomination and support of a single
-candidate for a minor state office will
-fully answer both purposes.</p>
-
-<p>The means of stopping most surely
-and speedily corrupt practices by the
-party in power, lies in an open and
-aboveboard fusion of all its opponents
-upon a few issues, together with a
-united support of one set of candidates
-for all offices whose incumbents can aid
-or hinder the adoption of the measures
-agreed upon. This, I believe, offers
-the best chance of accomplishing the
-very difficult task of establishing in a
-state good and pure government.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[Pg 208]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="Pole_Baker" id="Pole_Baker">&nbsp;</a>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>Pole Baker</i></h2></div>
-
-<p class="center space-above1 space-below1">BY WILL N. HARBEN<br />
-<i>Author of “The Georgians,” “Abner Daniel,” etc.</i></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE planter alighted from the
-dusty little train under the
-crumbling brick car-shed at
-Darley, turned his heavy hand-luggage
-over to the negro porter and
-walked across the grass to the steps
-of the Johnston House. Here he was
-met by Jim Thornton, the dapper
-young clerk, who always had a curled
-mustache and hair smoothed flatly
-down over his brow.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, here you are, right side up,
-Captain Duncan!” he cried. “You
-can’t stay away from those level
-acres of yours very long at a time.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Jim.” The short, thick-set man
-smiled as he took the extended hand.
-“As soon as I heard spring had opened
-up here we left Florida. I had a bad
-case of homesickness. My wife and
-daughter came a week ago. I had to
-stop on business in Jacksonville. I
-always want to be here in planting
-season; my men never seem to know
-exactly what I want done when I am
-away. Jim, I’ve got a lot of land out
-there between the river and the mountains.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon you have,” laughed the
-clerk as he led his guest into the hotel
-office. “There’s a neighbor of yours
-over there at the stove, old Tom
-Mayhew, who runs the big store—Mayhew
-&amp; Floyd’s—at Springtown.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I know him mighty well,”
-said Duncan. “How are you, Mayhew?
-What are you doing away from
-your beat? I thought you’d be behind
-your counter such fine weather as this.”</p>
-
-<p>“Trade’s dull,” said the merchant,
-who was a tall, spare-made man about
-sixty-five years of age, with iron-gray
-hair and beard. “Farmers are all at
-the plow, and that’s where they
-ought to be if they expect to pay
-anything on their debts this fall. I
-had to lay in some stock, and so I ran
-down to Atlanta day before yesterday.
-My young partner, Nelson Floyd,
-usually does the replenishing, but the
-books got out of whack, and I left him
-to tussle with them; he’s got a better
-head for figures than I have. I’ve just
-sent to the livery-stable for a horse
-and buggy to take me out; how are you
-going?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I hardly know,” answered
-the planter as he took off his straw
-hat and wiped his bald head with a
-silk handkerchief. “I telegraphed
-Lawson, my head overseer, to send
-somebody to meet me, and I was just
-wondering——”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you’ll be attended to all
-right, Captain Duncan!” said the
-clerk, with a laugh as he stood at the
-register behind the counter. “Pole
-Baker was in here last night asking if
-you had arrived. He said he had
-brought a buggy and was going to
-drive you back. You will make it all
-right if Pole sobers up long enough to
-get out of town. He was thoroughly
-‘how-come-you-so’ last night. He was
-in Askew’s bar raising holy Cain.
-The marshal ordered Billy to close at
-twelve, but Pole wouldn’t hear to it,
-and they were within an inch of having
-a fight. I believe they would if
-Mrs. Johnston hadn’t heard them and
-come down. Pole has more respect for
-women than most men, and as soon
-as he saw her at the door he hushed up
-and went to bed.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[Pg 209]</span></p>
-
-<p>“He’s as straight as a shingle this
-morning, Captain,” put in Charlie
-Smith, a mulatto porter, who was
-rolling a pair of trucks across the room
-laden with a drummer’s enormous
-brass-bound trunk. “He was up
-before day asking if you got in durin’
-the night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m glad he’s sobered up if
-he’s to take me out,” said the planter.
-“He’s about the biggest daredevil
-out our way. You know him, don’t
-you, Mayhew?”</p>
-
-<p>“Know him? Humph! to the extent
-of over three hundred dollars. Floyd
-thinks the sun rises and sets in him
-and never will close down on him.
-They are great friends. Floyd will
-fight for him at the drop of a hat. He
-says Pole has more manhood in him
-to the square inch than any man in the
-county, white or black. He saw him
-in a knock-down-and-drag-out row in
-the public square last election. They
-say Pole whipped three bigger men
-than he is all in a bunch, and bare-handed
-at that. Nobody knows to this
-day how it started. Nelson doesn’t,
-but I heard it was some remark one of
-the fellows made about Nelson himself.
-You know my partner had a rather
-strange start in life—a poor boy with
-nobody to see to his bringing up, but
-that’s a subject that his best friends
-don’t mention to him.”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain nodded understandingly.
-“They tell me Pole used to be
-a moonshiner,” he said, “and I have
-heard that he was the shrewdest one
-in the mountains. His wife got him
-to quit it. I understand he fairly worships
-the ground she walks on, and
-there never was a better father to his
-children.”</p>
-
-<p>“He thinks well enough of them
-when he’s at himself,” said Mayhew,
-“but when he’s drinking he neglects
-them awfully. I’ve known the neighbors
-to feed them two weeks on a
-stretch. He’s got enemies out our way.
-When he quit moonshining he helped
-some of the government officers find
-some stills over there. That was funny.
-Pole held off from the job that was
-offered him for a month, during which
-time he sent word everywhere through
-the mountains that he would give all
-his old friends plenty of time to shut
-up and quit making whisky, but after
-his month was up he intended to do
-all he could against law-breakers. He
-had to testify against several, and they
-now certainly have it in for him. He’d
-have been shot long ago if his enemies
-weren’t afraid of him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see him coming now, Mr. Mayhew,”
-said the clerk. “Captain, he
-walks steady enough. I reckon he’ll
-take you through safe.”</p>
-
-<p>The tall countryman, about thirty-five
-years of age, without a coat, his
-coarse cotton shirt open at the neck,
-a slouch hat on his massive head
-and his tattered trousers stuffed into
-the tops of his high boots, came in. He
-had a brown, sweeping mustache, and
-his eyebrows were unusually heavy.
-On the heel of his right foot he
-wore an old riding-spur, very loosely
-strapped.</p>
-
-<p>“How are you, Captain Duncan?” he
-said to the planter as he extended his
-brawny hand. “You’ve come back to
-God’s country, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Baker,” the planter returned
-with a genial smile; “I had to see what
-sort of chance you fellows stand for a
-crop this year. I understand Lawson
-sent you over for me and my baggage.
-I’m certainly glad he engaged a man
-about whom I have heard such good
-reports.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t know about that,
-Captain,” said Pole, his bushy brows
-meeting in a frown of displeasure and
-his dark eyes flashing. “I don’t know
-as I’m runnin’ a hack-line, or totin’
-trunks about for the upper-ten set of
-humanity. I’m a farmer myself, in a
-sort of way—smaller’n you are, but a
-farmer. I was comin’ this way yesterday,
-and was about to take my own
-hoss out o’ the field, where he had
-plenty to do, when Lawson said, said
-he, ‘Baker, bein’ as you are goin’ to
-make the trip anyways, I’d feel under
-obligations ef you’d take my rig and
-fetch Captain Duncan back when you
-come.’ By gum, to tell you the truth,
-I’ve just come in to tell you, old hoss,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[Pg 210]</span>
-if you are ready right now, we’ll ride
-out together, if not I’ll leave you
-an’ go out with Nathan Porter. Engaged,
-the devil! I’m not goin’ to get
-any money out o’ this job.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I meant no offense at all,
-Baker,” said the planter in no little
-embarrassment, for the group was
-smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon you didn’t,” said
-Pole, slightly mollified, “but it’s always
-a good idea fer two men to know
-exactly where they stand, and I’m
-here to say I don’t take off my hat to
-no man on earth.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the right spirit,” Duncan
-said admiringly. “Now, I’m ready
-if you are, and it’s time we were on
-the move. Those two valises are mine
-and that big overcoat tied in a bundle.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here, Charlie!” Pole called out to
-the porter, “put them things o’ Duncan’s
-in the back end o’ the buggy, an’
-I’ll throw you a dime the next time
-I’m in town.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, boss,” the mulatto said,
-with a knowing wink and smile at
-Mayhew. “They’ll be in by the time
-you get there.”</p>
-
-<p>While the planter was at the counter,
-saying good-bye to the clerk, Pole
-looked down at Mayhew. “When are
-<i>you</i> goin’ out?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“In an hour or so,” answered the
-merchant as he spat into a cuspidor.
-“I’m waiting now for a turnout, and
-I’ve got some business to attend to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Collections to make, I’ll bet my
-hat,” Pole laughed. “I thought mighty
-few folks was out on Main Street jest
-now; they know you are abroad in the
-land an’ want to save the’r socks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you reckon that’s it, Pole?”
-said Mayhew as he spat again. “I
-thought maybe it was because they was
-afraid you’d paint the town, and
-wanted to keep their skins whole.”</p>
-
-<p>The clerk and the planter laughed.
-“He got you that time, Baker,” the
-latter said, with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll acknowledge the corn,” and
-the mountaineer joined in the laugh
-good-naturedly. “To look at the old
-skinflint, settin’ half asleep all the time,
-a body wouldn’t think his tongue had
-any life to it. I’ve seed the dern thing
-wiggle before, but it was mostly when
-thar was a trade up.”</p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER II</h3>
-
-<p>As they were driving into the country
-road, just beyond the straggling houses
-in the outskirts of the town, going toward
-the mountains, which lay along
-the western horizon like blue clouds
-nestling against the earth, the planter
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve seen you fishing and hunting
-with Mayhew’s young partner, Nelson
-Floyd. You and he are rather intimate,
-are you not?”</p>
-
-<p>“Jest about as friendly as two men
-can be,” said Pole, “when one’s rising
-in the world an’ t’other is eternally at
-a standstill, or goin’ down like a round
-rock on the side of a mountain. Or
-maybe, I ought to say, when one of
-’em has had the pluck to educate hisself
-an’ t’other hardly knows B from a
-bull’s foot. I don’t know, Captain,
-why Nelson Floyd’s friendly to me. I
-like him beca’se he is a man from his
-toe-nails to the end o’ the longest hair
-on his head.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve heard a lot of good things
-about him,” remarked the planter,
-“and I understand, too, that he has
-his faults.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re part of his manhood,”
-said Pole philosophically. “Show me
-a feller without faults and I’ll show
-you one that’s too weak to have ’em.
-Nelson’s got some o’ the dust o’ the
-broad road on his coat, an’ yet I’d take
-his place in the general bust-up when
-old Gabe blows his trumpet at the millennium
-a sight quicker than I’d stand
-in the shoes o’ some o’ these jack-leg
-preachers. I tell you, Captain Duncan,
-ef the Lord’s goin’ to make favorites
-o’ some o’ the long-face hypocrites I
-know, that is robbin’ widows an’
-orphans in the week an’ prayin’ an’
-shoutin’ on Sunday to pull the wool
-over folkses’ eyes, me an’ Him won’t gee
-in the hereafter. You know some’n
-about that boy’s start in life, don’t you,
-Captain?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[Pg 211]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Not much, I must own,” answered
-the planter.</p>
-
-<p>“Thar it is!” said Pole, with a condemning
-sneer; “ef the pore boy had
-belonged to one o’ the big families in
-yore ring out in Murray—the high an’
-mighty sort, that owned niggers, you’d
-’a’ heard all about him. Captain, nobody
-on earth knows how that feller
-has suffered. All his life he’s wanted
-to make some’n of hisself an’ has
-absolutely to my certain knowledge
-had more to contend with than any
-man alive today. He don’t even know
-the exact date of his birth, an’ ain’t
-plumb sure that his name really is
-Floyd. You see, jest at the close of the
-war a woman—so sick she could hardly
-walk—come through the Union lines
-in East Tennessee with a baby in her
-arms. The report is that she claimed
-that her name was Floyd, an’ that she
-called the baby ‘Nelson.’ She put up
-at a mountain cabin for the night, a
-shack where some pore razor-back
-whites lived by the name o’ Perdue.
-Old man Perdue was a lyin’, treacherous
-scamp, a bushwhacker and a
-mountain outlaw, an’ his wife was a
-good mate to him. Nelson’s mammy,
-as I say, was tuck in, but thar wasn’t
-no doctor nigh, an’ very little to eat,
-an’ the next mornin’ she was ravin’ out
-of her head, and late that day she died.
-I’m tellin’ you now all that Nelson
-Floyd ever was able to find out, as it
-came down to him from one person’s
-recollection to another’s. Well, the
-woman was buried som’ers, nobody
-knows whar, an’ old Mrs. Perdue kept
-the baby more beca’se she was afeared to
-put it out o’ the way than fer any pity
-fer it. She had a whole litter of brats of
-her own goin’ about winter an’ summer
-in the’r shirt-tails, an’ so they left
-Nelson to scratch fer hisself. Then
-the authorities made it hot fer Perdue
-on some charges agin ’im, and he left
-the child with another pore mountain
-family by name o’ Scott and moved
-clean out o’ the country. The Scotts
-couldn’t remember much more than
-hearsay about how Nelson got thar an’
-they didn’t care, though they tried to
-raise the boy along with three of their
-own. He had a tough time of it, for
-he was a plucky little devil and had a
-fight mighty nigh every day with somebody.
-And as he growed up he naturally
-fell into bad company, or it fell
-into him, like everything else did, an’
-he tuck to drinkin’ an’ become a regular
-young outlaw; he was a bloodthirsty
-rowdy before he was fifteen;
-shot at one man fer some cause or
-other an’ barely escaped bein’ put up
-fer life—nothin’ but bein’ so young
-got ’im off. But one day—now I’m
-givin’ it to you jest as Nelson told me—one
-day he said he got to thinkin’
-about the way he was a-goin’, and of his
-own accord he made up his mind to
-call a halt. He wanted to cut clean off
-from his old set, an’ so he went to
-Mayhew and told him he wanted to git
-work in the store. Old Mayhew would
-skin a flea fer its hide an’ tallow, an’
-seein’ his money in the boy, he bound
-’im to an agreement to work fer his
-bare board an’ clothes fer three
-years.”</p>
-
-<p>“Low enough wages, certainly!”
-exclaimed the planter.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but Nelson didn’t grumble,
-and Mayhew will tell you hisself that
-thar never was sech a worker sence the
-world was made. He was a general
-hand at ever’thing, and as bright as
-a new dollar and as quick as a steel
-trap. The Lord only knows when or
-how he did it, fer nobody ever seed a
-book in his hands in business hours,
-but he l’arned to read and write and
-figure. An’ that wasn’t all. Mayhew
-was sech an old skinflint, and so
-hard on folks who got in his debt, that
-nobody traded at his shebang except
-them that couldn’t go anywhars else;
-but lo and behold! Nelson made so
-many friends that they flocked around
-’im from all directions an’ the business
-of the house was more than doubled at
-a jump. Mayhew knowed the cause of
-it, fer lots o’ customers throwed it up
-to ’im. The prosperity was almost too
-much fer the old skunk; in fact, he got
-mighty nigh scared at it and actually
-tried to dam the stream o’ profit. To
-keep up such a business big credit had
-to be extended, and it was a new venture<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[Pg 212]</span>
-fer the cautious old scamp. But
-Nelson had perfect faith in all his
-friends, and thar it stood—a beardless
-boy holdin’ forth that it was the old
-man’s chance fer a lifetime to git rich,
-and old Mayhew half believin’ it,
-crazy to act on Nelson’s judgment, an’
-yet afraid it would be ruination. That
-was at the close of the boy’s three-year
-contract. He was then about twenty
-year old, and I was in the store and
-heard the talk between ’em. We was
-all a-settin’ at the big wood stove in
-the back end, me an’ the old man, an’
-Nelson and Joe Peters, a clerk, who
-is still with the firm. I shall never
-forgit that night as long as I live.
-I gloried in the boy’s spunk to sech
-an extent I could ’a’ throwed up my
-hat an’ hollered.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’ve been waitin’ to have a talk
-with you, Mr. Mayhew,’ Nelson said.
-‘Our contract is out today, and you
-an’ me disagree so much about runnin’
-the business that I hardly know what
-I ought to do an’ not stand in my own
-light. We’ve got to make a fresh contract
-anyway.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I knowed that was comin’,’ old
-Mayhew said, with one o’ his big,
-hoggish grunts. ‘People for miles
-around have made it the’r particular
-business to fill you up with ideas about
-what you are wuth. I’ve thought some
-about lettin’ you go an’ see ef me an’
-Joe cayn’t keep things a-movin’, but
-you know the trade round here, an’ I
-want to do the fair thing. What do
-you think yore time’s wuth?’” Pole
-laughed. “The old skunk was usin’
-exactly the same words he’d ’a’ used
-ef he was startin’ in to buy a load o’
-produce an’ wanted to kill expectation
-at the outset.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I want fifty dollars a month, under
-certain conditions,’ the boy said, lookin’
-the old skinflint straight in the
-eye.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Fifty—huh! yo’re crazy, stark’
-starin’ crazy—plumb off yore base!’
-the old man said, his lip twisted up
-like it is when he’s mad. ‘I see myse’f
-payin’ a beardless boy a Broadway
-salary to work in a shack like this out
-here in the mountains.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, I’ll jest be obliged to quit
-you then,’ Nelson said as steady as
-a millpond on a hot day in August,
-’an’ I’d sorter hate to do it. Moore &amp;
-Trotter, at Darley, offer me that fer
-the fust six months, with an increase
-later.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Moore &amp; Trotter!’ the old skunk
-grunted loud enough to be heard clean
-to the court-house. They was the only
-firm in this end o’ the state that controlled
-as much custom as Mayhew
-did, an’ it struck the old chap under
-the ribs. He got up from his chair an’
-walked clean down to the front door.
-It was shet an’ locked, but thar was a
-lamp on the show-case nigh whar he
-stopped, an’ I could see his old face
-a-workin’ under the influence o’ good
-an’ evil. Purty soon he grunted, an’
-come back, thumpin’ his old stick agin
-barrels an’ boxes along the way.</p>
-
-<p>“‘How am I goin’ to know whether
-they offered you that much or not?’
-he axed.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Beca’se I said so,’ Nelson told
-’im, an’ his dark eyes was flashin’ like
-lightnin’. He stood up an’ faced the
-old codger. ‘I’ll tell you one thing,
-Mr. Mayhew,’ he let fly at ’im, ’ef
-you don’t know whether I’m tellin’
-the truth or not you’d better let me
-go, fer a man that will lie will steal.
-I say they offered me fifty dollars.
-I’ve got the’r written proposition in
-my pocket, but I’ll be hanged ef I
-show it to you.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Good!” exclaimed Duncan.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it knocked the old man clean
-off his feet,” Pole went on. “He sat
-down in his chair again, all of a
-tremble an’ white about the mouth.
-Stingy people git scared to death at
-the very idea o’ payin’ out money,
-anyway, an’ stingy don’t fit that old
-cuss. Ef Noah Webster had known
-him he’d ’a’ made another word fer that
-meanin’. I don’t know but he’d simply
-’a’ spelled out the old man’s name an’
-’a’ been done with it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What answer did Mayhew give the
-young man, Baker?” asked the planter
-in a tone which indicated no little interest.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, he jest set still for awhile,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[Pg 213]</span>
-said Pole, “an’ me an’ Joe Peters was
-a-wonderin’ what he’d say. He never
-did do anything sudden. Ef he ever
-gits thar he’ll feel his way through
-heaven’s gate. I seed ’im keep a
-woman standin’ in the store once from
-breakfast to dinner-time while he was
-lookin’ fer a paper o’ needles she’d
-called fer. Every now an’ then he’d
-quit huntin’ fer the needles an’ go an’
-wait on some other customer, an’ then
-come back to ’er. She was a timid
-sort o’ thing, an’ didn’t seem to think
-she had the right to leave, bein’ as she
-had started the search. Whenever
-she’d go towards the door to see ef her
-hoss was standin’, he’d call ’er back
-an’ ax ’er about ’er crap an’ tell ’er
-not to be in a hurry—that Rome wasn’t
-built in a day, an’ the like. You know
-the old cuss has some education.
-Finally he found the needles an’ tuck
-another half an hour to select a scrap
-o’ paper little enough to wrap ’em up in.
-But you axed me what Mayhew said to
-’im. You bet the boy was too good a
-trader to push a matter like that to a
-head. He’d throwed down the bars, an’
-he jest waited fer the old man to go
-through of his own accord. Finally
-Mayhew axed, as indifferent as he
-could under all his excitement,
-‘When do you intend to answer the
-letter you say you got from Moore &amp;
-Trotter?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’ve already answered it,’ Nelson
-said. ‘I told ’em I appreciated the’r
-offer an’ would run over an’ see ’em
-day after tomorrow.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Good, very well said, Baker!”
-laughed Captain Duncan. “No wonder
-the young man’s become rich. You
-can’t keep talent like that down. But
-what did old Mayhew say?”</p>
-
-<p>“It was like pullin’ eye-teeth,” answered
-Pole, “but he finally come
-across. ‘Well,’ said he, ‘I reckon you
-kin make yorese’f as useful to me as
-you kin to them, an’ ef you are bent on
-ridin’ me to death, after I picked you
-up an’ give you a start an’ l’arnt
-you how to do business, I reckon I’ll
-have to put up with it.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I don’t feel like I owe you anything,’
-said Nelson as plucky as a
-banker demandin’ good security on a
-loan. ‘I’ve worked for you like a slave
-for three years for my bare livin’ an’
-my experience, an’ from now on I am
-goin’ to work for Number One. I said
-that I’d stay for fifty dollars a month
-on certain conditions.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Conditions?’ the old man growled.
-‘What conditions do you mean?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, it’s jest this,’ said Nelson.
-‘I’ve had my feelin’s, an’ the feelin’s o’
-my friends, hurt time after time by you
-turnin’ folks off without credit when
-I knowed they would meet the’r obligations.
-Now, ef I stay with you it is
-with the distinct understandin’ that
-I have the authority to give or refuse
-credit whenever I see fit.’</p>
-
-<p>“That knocked the old man off his
-perch agin. He wilted an’ sat thar as
-limp as a dish-rag. Joe Peters worships
-the ground Nelson walks on, an’
-as ’feard as he was o’ the old man, he
-busted out in a big chuckle, an’ rubbed
-his hands together. Besides he knowed
-the boy was talkin’ fer the interest o’
-the business. He’d seed no end o’ good
-customers sent off fer no reason in the
-world than that Mayhew was scared o’
-his shadow.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’ll never consent to <i>that!</i>’ Mayhew
-said, mighty nigh clean whipped
-out.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, Moore &amp; Trotter <i>will</i>,’ Nelson
-said. ‘That’s one o’ the things laid
-down in the’r proposition.’ An’ the
-boy went to the desk an’ drawed out a
-sheet o’ paper an’ dipped his pen in the
-ink. The old man set quivering awhile,
-an’ then got up an’ went an’ stood behind
-the boy. ‘Put down yore pen,’
-said he, with a sigh from away down
-inside of ’im. ‘It would ruin me fer
-you to go to Darley—half the trade
-would follow you. Go ahead; I’ll keep
-you an’ run the risk.’”</p>
-
-<p>The planter had been listening attentively,
-and he now said admiringly:
-“Even at that early age the boy was
-showing what developed later. It
-wasn’t long after that before he became
-the old man’s partner, I believe.”</p>
-
-<p>“The next year,” answered Pole.
-“He saved every dollar of his wages,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[Pg 214]</span>
-and made some good investments that
-turned out money. It wasn’t a big
-slice of the business at fust, but he now
-owns a half, an’, countin’ his outside
-interests, he’s wuth a great deal more
-than old Mayhew. He’s rich already,
-Captain.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I’ve heard the women say,”
-smiled the planter. “Women always
-keep track of well-to-do unmarried
-men.”</p>
-
-<p>“It hain’t spiled Nelson one bit,
-though,” added Baker. “He’s the
-same unselfish friend to me as he ever
-was, and I hain’t hardly got a roof to
-cover me an’ mine. But, as solid as he
-always was, he had a serious back-set
-about three years ago, and all his well-wishers
-thought it was goin’ to do him
-up.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean when he took to drinking,”
-said Captain Duncan interrogatively.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that’s what I mean. He’d
-formed the habit when he was a boy,
-and, along with his prosperity an’ late
-work hours, it begun to fasten its claws
-on ’im like it has on some other folks
-I know, Captain. He had a lot o’ night
-work to do, an’ Thigpen’s bar was right
-j’inin’ the store. Nelson used to slide in
-at the back door whenever the notion
-struck ’im, and he made the trail hot,
-I tell you. Old Mayhew kept a sharp
-eye on ’im, an’ ever’ now and then he’d
-git powerful blue over the way things
-was a-goin’. Finally the old cuss got
-desperate an’ called a halt. He had a
-straight talk with Nelson, an’ told ’im
-they would have to divide the’r
-interests, that he wasn’t a drinkin’
-man hisse’f, an’ he didn’t want to be
-yoked to one that was soaked half the
-time. It fetched the boy to his senses.
-He come over to my house that night
-an’ called me out to the fence.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I want to make a deal with you,
-Pole,’ said he.</p>
-
-<p>“‘With me?’ says I. ‘What sort of
-a deal?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why,’ said he, ‘I’ve made up my
-mind to swear off fer good an’ all, an’
-I want you to j’ine me.’</p>
-
-<p>“I agreed all right,” Pole laughed.
-“In fact, I was sorter in that business.
-I’d promised every preacher an’ temperance
-worker in the county to quit,
-an’ I couldn’t refuse a friend what I
-was dispensin’ so freely right an’ left.
-So I said, said I, ‘All right, Nelson;
-I’m with you.’”</p>
-
-<p>“And how did it come out?” questioned
-the planter as he bowed to a
-wagon full of farmers going in an opposite
-direction.</p>
-
-<p>“His vaccination tuck,” Pole smiled.
-“He had a mighty sore arm fer a week
-or so, but he held out. As fer me, I
-was so dern glad to see his success in
-abstainin’ that I started in to celebrate.
-I did try at fust, though. One mornin’
-I went in the store an’ seed Nelson have
-sech a clean, prosperous look an’ so well
-satisfied with his stand that I went out
-with fresh resolutions. What did I do?
-I went to the barroom an’ bought four
-pint bottles o’ red rye an’ tuck ’em
-home with me. I set ’em all in a
-straight row on the mantel-shelf, nigh
-the edge, in front o’ the clock, an’ was
-standin’ lookin’ at ’em when Sally, my
-wife, come in. She seed the display
-an’ jest set kerflop down in her chair
-an’ begun to whimper.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You hold on,’ said I; ‘don’t you
-cross a foot-log till the tree’s down.
-I’m tryin’ a new dicker. I’ve always
-heard that familiarity breeds contempt,
-an’ I’ve also heard that the hair
-o’ the dog is good fer the bite. Now,
-I’ve tried my level best to quit liquor
-by stayin’ away from it an’ I’m a-goin’
-to see ef I cayn’t do it with its red eye
-on me all the time.’ Well, Captain, the
-sweet little woman—she’s a sweet, dear
-little creature, Captain Duncan, ef I
-do say it myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve always heard so, Baker,” the
-planter said. “She’s very popular
-with your neighbors.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ I’m jest t’other way,” said
-Pole. “Well, Sally, she got up an’
-kissed me, an’ said that somehow she
-felt like my plan would work.”</p>
-
-<p>“And did it—I mean,” the Captain
-recalled Pole’s spree of only the night
-before, “I mean did it work for any
-length of time?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was goin’ on to tell you,” answered
-the mountaineer. “That night<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[Pg 215]</span>
-fer the fust time sence my marriage I
-woke smack dab in the middle o’ the
-night, an’ as I laid thar in the room
-filled with moonlight I couldn’t see
-a blessed thing but that row o’ bottles,
-an’ then my mouth set in to waterin’
-at sech a rate that I got afeard I’d
-ketch my death from sleepin’ on a wet
-pillow. It was certainly a struggle
-with the flesh. I’d put my thirst,
-when she’s good an’ dry, agin any that
-ever tickled a human throat. It ’ud
-take the blue ribbon at a state fair.
-It’s a rail thing; it kin walk an’ talk
-an’ kick an’ squirm, but it won’t be
-dictated to. Finally Sally woke up
-an’ said:</p>
-
-<p>“‘What’s the matter, Pole? Hain’t
-you comfortable?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Comfortable, the devil!’ said I. I’m
-usually polite to Sally, but I felt like
-that wasn’t no time an’ place to talk
-about little matters. ‘Comfortable,
-nothin’,’ said I; ‘Sally, ef you don’t
-take that “dog-hair” out o’ this house
-an’ hide it, I’ll be as drunk as a b’iled
-owl in ten minutes.’</p>
-
-<p>“’“Dog-hair?”’ said she, an’ then the
-little woman remembered an’ got up.
-I heard the bottles tinkle like sorrowful
-good-bye bells callin’ wanderin’
-friends back to the fold as she tuck ’em
-up an’ left. Captain, I felt jest like”—Pole
-laughed good-naturedly—“I felt
-like thar was a plot agin the best
-friends I ever had. I actually felt
-sorry fer them bottles, an’ I got up
-an’ stood at the window an’ watched
-Sally as she tuck ’em away out in the
-lonely moonlight to the barn. I seed
-’er climb over the fence o’ the cow-lot
-an’ go in the side whar I kept my hay
-an’ fodder an’ roughness fer my cattle.
-Then I laid down in bed agin.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was certainly a courageous
-thing to do,” said the planter, “and
-you deserve credit for putting your
-foot down so firmly on what you felt
-was so injurious, even, even—” the
-Captain came back again to reality—“even
-if you did not remain firm very
-long afterward.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll tell you one thing,” the
-ex-moonshiner laughed again, and his
-eyes twinkled in subtle enjoyment,
-“it tuck Sally longer, it seemed to me,
-to git to sleep after she got back than
-it ever had in all her life. Of all times
-on earth she wanted to talk. But I
-shet ’er off. I made like I was breathin’
-good an’ deep an’ then she set in
-too. What did I do? Captain Duncan,
-I spent the best half o’ that night
-out in the barn lookin’ fer hens’ nests.
-I found two an’ had to be put to bed
-at sun-up.”</p>
-
-<p>The planter laughed heartily.
-“There is one good thing about the
-situation, Baker,” he said, “and that
-is, your making a joke of it. I believe
-you will get the under-hold on the
-thing some day and throw it over.
-Coming back to your friend Floyd; it’s
-a fact that he gave up whisky, but if
-reports are true, he has another fault
-that is almost as bad.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you mean all that talk about
-Jeff Wade’s sister,” answered the
-mountaineer.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Baker, a reputation of that
-sort is not a desirable thing in any
-community. I know that many brainy
-and successful men hold that kind of
-thing lightly, but it will down anybody
-who tampers with it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, look here, Captain,” Pole
-said sharply, “don’t you be plumb
-foolish! Ain’t you got more sense
-’an to swallow everything that
-passes amongst idle women in these
-mountains? Nelson Floyd, I’ll admit,
-has got a backbone full o’ the
-fire o’ youth an’ strong-blooded manhood,
-but he’s, to my positive knowledge,
-one o’ the cleanest young men I
-ever come across. To tell you the
-truth, I don’t believe he ever made
-but that one slip. It got out, an’
-beca’se he was rich an’ prominent, it
-raised a regular whirlwind o’ gossip
-an’ exaggeration. If the same thing
-had happened to half a dozen other
-young men round about here, not a
-word would ’a’ been said.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I see!” smiled the planter.
-“He’s not as black as he’s painted,
-then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not by a jugful!” said the farmer.
-“I tell you he’s all right, Captain, an’
-folks will know it ’fore long.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[Pg 216]</span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER III</h3>
-
-<p>Springtown was about twelve miles
-west of Darley, only a mile from
-Captain Duncan’s house, and half a
-mile from Pole Baker’s humble cottage
-and small farm. The village had
-a population of about two hundred
-souls. It was the county seat; and
-the court-house, a simple, ante-bellum
-brick structure, stood in the centre of
-the public square, round which were
-clustered the one-storied shops, lawyers’
-offices, cotton warehouses, hotel
-and general stores.</p>
-
-<p>Chief among the last mentioned was
-the well-known establishment of Mayhew
-&amp; Floyd. It was a long frame
-building, once white but now a murky
-gray, a tone which nothing but the
-brush of time and weather could have
-given it.</p>
-
-<p>It was only a week since Captain
-Duncan’s talk with Pole Baker, and a
-bright, inspiring morning, well suited
-to the breaking of the soil and the
-planting of seed. The village was agog
-with the spirit of hope. The post-office
-was filled with men who had
-come for their mail, and they stood
-and chatted about the crops on the
-long veranda of the hotel and in the
-front part of Mayhew &amp; Floyd’s store.
-Pole Baker was in the store talking
-with Joe Peters, the clerk, about seed-potatoes,
-when a tall countryman in
-the neighborhood of forty-five years of
-age slouched in and leaned heavily
-against the counter.</p>
-
-<p>“I want a box o’ forty-four cartridges,”
-he said, drawing out a long
-revolver and rapping on the counter
-with the butt of it.</p>
-
-<p>“What! you goin’ squirrel huntin’?”
-Peters laughed and winked at Pole.
-“That gun’s got a long enough barrel
-to reach the top o’ the highest tree in
-these mountains.”</p>
-
-<p>“You slide around behind thar an’
-git me them cartridges!” retorted the
-customer. “Do yore talkin’ to somebody
-else. I’ll hunt what an’ whar
-I want to, I reckon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, come off yore perch, Jeff
-Wade!” the clerk said, with another
-easy laugh. “You hain’t nobody’s
-daddy. But here you are. Forty
-cents a box, full count, every one warranted
-to make a hole an’ a noise.
-Want me to charge ’em?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t; by God—I don’t! An’
-what’s more, I want to know exactly
-how much I owe this house. I went
-to a dozen money lenders ’fore I found
-what I wanted, but I got it an’ I want
-to pay what I owe Mayhew &amp; Floyd.”</p>
-
-<p>Just then Pole Baker stepped up to
-the man’s side and, peering under the
-broad brim of his hat, said:</p>
-
-<p>“Looky here, Jeff Wade, what you
-shootin’ off yore mouth fer? I ’lowed
-at fust that you was full, but you
-hain’t drinkin’; at least, you don’t
-seem that way to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Drinkin’, hell! No, I’m not drinkin’,
-an’ what’s more, I don’t intend to
-let a drap pass down my throat till
-I’ve done my duty to me an’ mine.
-Say, you look an’ see ef I’m drinkin’.
-See ef you think a man that’s in liquor
-would have as steady a nerve as I’ve
-got. You watch me! Maybe it’ll
-show you what I’m able to do.”</p>
-
-<p>Turning, he stalked out of the store,
-and Peters and Pole followed, watching
-him in wonder. He strode across the
-street to the court-house, loading his
-revolver as he went. Reaching the
-closed door of the public building he
-took an envelope from his pocket and
-fastened it to the panel by thrusting
-the blade of his big pocket-knife into
-it several times. The spectators heard
-the hollow, resounding blows like the
-strokes of a carpenter’s hammer, and
-then Wade turned and came back toward
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“By gum, he’s off his nut!” said
-Peters seriously. “He’s as crazy as a
-bedbug.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s my opinion he’s jest comin’ to
-his senses,” Pole mused, a thoughtful
-look in his eyes. “Yes, that’s about
-it; he’s jest wakin’ up, an’ the whole
-county will know it, too. By gum, I
-hate this—I hate it!”</p>
-
-<p>“You hate what?” asked Peters, his
-eyes on the farmer, who was now quite
-near them. Pole made no reply, for
-Wade was by his side on the brick<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[Pg 217]</span>
-walk beneath the wooden shed in front
-of the store, his revolver swinging at
-his side.</p>
-
-<p>“You fellows keep yore eye on that
-envelope,” said Wade, and he cocked
-his revolver.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, don’t make a dern fool
-o’ yorese’f,” said Pole Baker, and he
-laid a remonstrating hand on the tense
-arm of the gaunt mountaineer. “You
-know it’s agin the ordinance. You
-know you’ll git into trouble; you listen
-to the advice of a friend. Put that
-gun up an’ go home.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m my own boss!” snarled the
-man with the weapon.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a blamed fool too,” answered
-Baker.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s my lookout.” Wade
-glared over his shoulder and raised
-his voice significantly: “I want to show
-this town how easy it will be fer me
-to put three balls into the blackest
-heart that ever pumped human blood.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’d better mind what yo’re
-about, Jeff Wade.” Pole Baker was
-pale, his lips were tight, his eyes flashing.</p>
-
-<p>“I know what I’m about. I’m tryin’
-to draw a coward from his lair.
-I’m not shore—I’m not <i>dead</i> shore,
-mind you, but I’m mighty nigh it. Ef
-the guilty stand an’ hear what I’m
-a-sayin’ an’ don’t take it up, they are
-wuss than hell-tainted. You watch
-that white mark.”</p>
-
-<p>The bystanders, several comprehending,
-stood rigid. Pole Baker
-stared. Wade raised his revolver,
-aimed steadily at the mark and fired
-three shots in quick succession.</p>
-
-<p>“Thar!” said the marksman, with
-grim triumph, “as bad as my sight is,
-I kin see ’em from here.”</p>
-
-<p>“By gum, they are thar!” exclaimed
-Peters, with a strange look into Pole
-Baker’s set face. “They are thar,
-Pole.”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet they are thar, an’ some’ll
-be in another spot ’fore long,” said
-Wade. “Now, Peters, you go in the
-house an’ bring me my account. I’ve
-got the money.”</p>
-
-<p>Wonderingly the clerk obeyed. Pole
-went into the store behind him, and,
-as Peters stood at the big ledger figuring,
-Pole stepped up to Nelson Floyd,
-who sat near a window in the rear with
-a newspaper in front of him.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you hear all that, Nelson?” the
-farmer asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Did I? Of course I did; wasn’t it
-intended for—?” The young merchant
-glanced furtively at Peters and paused.
-His handsome, dark face was set as
-from some inward struggle.</p>
-
-<p>There was a pause. Peters went toward
-the front, a written account drying
-in the air as he waved it to and fro.</p>
-
-<p>“I was about to ask you if—?” the
-young merchant started to say, but
-he was interrupted by Baker.</p>
-
-<p>“Hush, listen!”</p>
-
-<p>There was the sound of clinking
-coin on the counter below. The bell
-on the cash-drawer rang as the clerk
-put the money away.</p>
-
-<p>“Thar, I’m even with this dirty
-shebang!” It was Jeff Wade’s raised
-voice. “An’ I kin act when the proper
-time comes. Oh, you all know what
-I’m talkin’ about! Nobody kin hide
-a thing in these mountains. But
-you’ll all understand it better ef it
-ever comes into yore families. I never
-had but one little sister—she was all
-the Lord ever allowed me to have.
-Well, she was married not more’n a
-month ago, an’ went off to Texas
-with a man who believes in ’er an’
-swears he will make her a good husband
-an’ protector. But no sooner
-was the pore little thing gone than the
-talk set in. It was writ out to her,
-an’ she writ back to me to stop it.
-She admitted it was true, but wouldn’t
-lay the blame. Folks say they know,
-but they won’t talk. They are afeared
-o’ the influence o’ money an’ power,
-I reckon, but it will git out. I have
-my suspicions, but I’m not dead sure,
-but I will be, an’ what I done fer that
-scrap o’ paper I will do fer that man,
-ef God don’t paralyze this right arm.
-Ef the black-hearted devil is within
-the sound o’ my voice at this minute,
-an’ stays still, he’s not only the thief
-of a woman’s happiness, but he’s wuss
-than a coward. He’s a sneakin’
-son——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[Pg 218]</span></p>
-
-<p>Nelson Floyd, his face rigid, sprang
-up and went into Joe Peters’s little
-bedroom, which was cut off in one
-corner of the store. Opening the top
-drawer of an old bureau, he took out
-a revolver. Turning, he met the
-stalwart form of Pole Baker in the
-doorway.</p>
-
-<p>“Put down that gun, Nelson; put
-it down!” Pole commanded. “Jeff
-Wade’s deliberately set this trap to
-draw you into it, an’ the minute you
-walk down thar it will be a public
-acknowledgment, an’ he’ll kill you ’fore
-you can bat an eye.”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt,” said Nelson Floyd;
-“but the fellow has his rights. I
-could never draw a free breath if this
-passes. I owe it to the poor devil,
-Pole, and I’ll pay. That has always
-been my rule. I’ll pay. Stand aside!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be damned ef I do!” Pole stood
-his ground firmly. “You must listen
-to reason. It’s deliberate death.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stand out of the way, Pole; don’t
-make me mad,” said Floyd. “I’m
-goin’ down. I’d expect him to pay
-me, and I shall him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stop! you are a fool—you are
-a hot-headed idiot, Nelson Floyd!
-Listen to me”—Pole caught the revolver
-and held on to the barrel of it,
-while the young merchant clutched
-the butt—“listen to me, I say.
-Are you a-goin’ back on a helpless little
-woman who gets married to a man
-who believes in her an’ goes away off
-an’ is on a fair road to happiness—are
-you, I say, a-goin’ to publicly advertise
-her shame, an’, no doubt, bust up
-a contented home?”</p>
-
-<p>“Great God, Pole!” exclaimed
-Floyd as he sank on to the edge of
-Peters’s bed, “do you think, if I give
-him satisfaction, it will——?”</p>
-
-<p>“Will it? It will be in every paper
-from Maine to California. Meddlesome
-devils will mark the articles an’ mail
-’em to the gal’s husband. A lot o’
-folks did the’r level best to bust up
-the match anyway, by talkin’ to him
-about you an’ others.”</p>
-
-<p>Nelson Floyd stared at the floor
-and slowly nodded his head.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s caught me in a more degrading
-trap than the other would
-have been, Pole,” he declared bitterly.
-“My conduct has branded me as a coward
-and left me without power to
-vindicate myself. That’s one of the
-ways Providence has of punishing a
-poor devil. He may have a good
-impulse, but can’t act upon it owing
-to the restrictions laid on him by his
-very sins.”</p>
-
-<p>Pole looked down into the store.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind,” he said gloomily.
-“Wade’s gone.”</p>
-
-<p>Floyd dropped the revolver into the
-drawer of the bureau and went back
-to his desk.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s only a question of time, Pole,”
-he said. “He suspects me now, but is
-not sure. It won’t be long before the
-full story will reach him, and then we’ll
-have to meet. As far as I am concerned,
-I’d rather have had it out
-with him. I’ve swallowed a bitter
-pill this mornin’, Pole.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it wasn’t a lead one.”
-Baker’s habitual sense of humor was
-rising to the surface. “Most any sort
-o’ physic is better’n cold metal shoved
-into the system the wrong way.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a step in the store. Pole
-looked down again.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s old Mayhew,” he said. “I’m
-powerful glad he was late this mornin’,
-Nelson. The old codger would have
-seed through that talk.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, he would have seen through
-it,” answered Floyd despondently as
-he opened a big ledger and bent over
-it.</p>
-
-<p>Mayhew trudged toward them, his
-heavy cane knocking against the long
-dry-goods counter.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll have the law on that fellow!”
-he growled as he hung his stick on its
-accustomed nail behind the stove.
-“No rampageous daredevil like that
-can stand right in my door and shoot
-for mere amusement at the county
-court-house. This isn’t a fort yet, and
-the war is over, thank the Lord.”</p>
-
-<p>Pole glanced at Floyd.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he’s jest a little hilarious this
-mornin’, Mr. Mayhew,” he said. “He
-must ’a’ met a mountain whisky wagon
-on his way to town. Anyways, you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[Pg 219]</span>
-needn’t complain; he come in here jest
-now an’ paid off his account in
-full.”</p>
-
-<p>“What? Paid off? Is that so, Nelson?”</p>
-
-<p>Floyd nodded, and then bent more
-closely over the ledger. “Yes, he
-paid up to date.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s queer—or I am, one
-or the other. Why, boys, I had that
-fellow on my dead-list. I didn’t think
-he’d ever raise any money, and if he
-did I had no idea it would drift our
-way.”</p>
-
-<p>Floyd left the desk and reached for
-his hat. Pole was watching him
-closely.</p>
-
-<p>“Post-office?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.” The two walked part of the
-way to the front door and paused.
-Joe Peters was attending a man on the
-grocery side of the house, and a young
-woman neatly dressed, with a pretty
-figure and graceful movement, stood
-waiting her turn.</p>
-
-<p>“By gum,” Pole exclaimed under
-his breath, “that’s my little neighbor,
-Cynthia Porter—the purtiest, neatest
-an’ best little trick that ever wore a bonnet.
-I needn’t tell you that, though,
-you old scamp. You’ve already found
-it out. Go wait on ’er, Nelson.
-Don’t keep ’er standin’ thar.”</p>
-
-<p>Pole sat on a bag of coffee and his
-friend went to the girl.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, Miss Cynthia,” he
-said, his hat in his hand. “Peters
-seems busy. I don’t know much about
-the stock, but if you’ll tell me what
-you want I’ll look for it.”</p>
-
-<p>Turning, she stared at him, her big
-brown eyes under their long lashes
-wide open as if in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Why—why—” She seemed to be
-making a valiant effort at self-control,
-and then he noticed that her voice was
-quivering and that she was quite
-pale.</p>
-
-<p>“I really didn’t want to buy anything,”
-she said. “Mother sent me to
-tell Mr. Peters that she couldn’t possibly
-have the butter ready before tomorrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, the butter!” Floyd said, studying
-her face and manner in perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” the girl went on, “she promised
-to have ten pounds ready to send
-to Darley, but the calves got to the cows
-and spoiled everything. That threw
-her at least a day behind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that don’t make a bit o’ difference
-to us, Miss Cynthia,” the clerk
-cried out from the scales, where he was
-weighing a parcel of sugar. “Our
-wagon ain’t going over till Saturday,
-nohow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, she will certainly be glad,”
-the girl returned in a tone of relief, and
-she moved toward the door. Floyd,
-still wondering, went with her to the
-sidewalk.</p>
-
-<p>“You look pale,” he said tentatively,
-“and—and, well, the truth is, I have
-never seen you just this way, Cynthia.
-Have you been having more trouble at
-home? Is your mother still determined
-that we sha’n’t have any more
-of those delightful buggy-rides?”</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t that—<i>today</i>,” she said,
-her eyes raised to his in a glance that,
-somehow, went straight to his heart.
-“I’ll tell you. As I came on, I had
-just reached Sim Tompkins’s field,
-where he was planting corn and burning
-stumps, when a negro—one of Captain
-Duncan’s hands—passed on a mule. I
-didn’t hear what he said, but when I
-came to Sim he had stopped plowing
-and was leaning over the fence saying,
-‘Awful, horrible!’ and so on. I asked
-him what had happened and he told
-me—” she dropped her eyes, her words
-hung in her throat and she put a slender,
-tapering, though firm and sun-browned,
-hand to her lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Go on,” Floyd urged her,
-“Tompkins said——”</p>
-
-<p>“He said,” the girl swallowed, “that
-you and Jeff Wade had had words in
-front of the store and that Wade had
-shot and killed you. I—I—didn’t
-stop to inquire of anyone—I thought
-it was true—and came on here.
-When I saw you just then absolutely
-unharmed I—I—of course—it surprised
-me—or—I mean——”</p>
-
-<p>“How ridiculous!” He laughed mechanically.
-“There must be some mistake, Cynthia.
-People always get things
-crooked. That shows how little truth<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[Pg 220]</span>
-there is in reports. Wade came in
-here and paid his bill, and did not even
-speak to me or I to him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I heard pistol shots myself away
-down the road,” said the girl, “and as
-I came in I saw a group of men right
-there. They were pointing down at the
-sidewalk, and one of them said, ‘He
-stood right there and fired three times.’”</p>
-
-<p>Floyd laughed again, while her lynx
-eyes slowly probed his face. He pointed
-at the court-house door. “Cynthia,
-do you see that envelope? Wade was
-shooting at it. I haven’t been over
-to see yet, but they say he put three
-balls close together in its centre. We
-ought to incorporate this place into
-a town so that a thing of that sort
-wouldn’t be allowed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that was it!” Cynthia exclaimed
-in a full breath of relief. “I
-suppose you think I’m a goose to be
-so scared at nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>Floyd’s face clouded over, his eyes
-went down. A customer was going into
-the store, and he walked on to the street
-corner with her before replying. Then
-he said tenderly: “I’m glad, though,
-Cynthia, that you felt badly, as I see
-you did, when you thought I was done
-for. Good-bye; I shall see you again
-some way, I hope, before long, even if
-your mother does object.”</p>
-
-<p>As they walked away out of his sight
-Pole Baker lowered his shaggy head
-to his brawny hands, his elbows resting
-on his knees.</p>
-
-<p>“Fool!” he exclaimed. “Right now
-with his head in the very jaws o’ death
-he goes on talkin’ sweet stuff to women.
-A purty face, a soft voice an’ a
-pair o’ dreamy eyes would lead that
-man right into the fire o’ hell itself.
-But that hain’t the p’int. Pole
-Baker, he’s yore friend, an’ Jeff Wade
-is a-goin’ to kill ’im jest as shore as
-preachin’.”</p>
-
-<p>When Pole left the store he saw nothing
-of Floyd, but he noticed something
-else. He was passing Thigpen’s bar
-and through the open doorway he
-caught sight of a row of bottles behind
-the counter. A seductive, soothing
-odor greeted him; there was a merry
-clicking of billiard balls in the rear,
-the joyous thumping of cues on the
-floor and merry laughter. Pole hesitated
-and then plunged in. At any
-rate, he told himself, one drink would
-steady his nerves and show him some
-way, perhaps, to rescue Floyd from
-his overhanging peril. Pole took his
-drink and sat down. Then a friend
-came in and gave him two or three
-more. Another of Pole’s sprees was
-beginning.</p>
-
-<p class="center">(<i>To be continued.</i>)</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="f120"><i>When Beauty Is a Fatal Gift</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">CRAWFORD—It seems to be impossible to convict a pretty woman of a
-capital crime.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Crabshaw</span>—It wouldn’t be if they allowed women to serve on the jury.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="f120"><i>Still Hope</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">JAGGLES—Even the doctors can’t kill off the mosquitoes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Waggles</span>—Perhaps they haven’t tried the same methods they use on the
-human race.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="f120"><i>All for the Best</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">SMITH—What do you think of the outcry against the childless rich?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Brown</span>—I don’t blame them. Look how their children turn out.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[Pg 221]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="How_I_Dined_With_President_Grant" id="How_I_Dined_With_President_Grant">&nbsp;</a>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>How I Dined With President Grant</i></h2></div>
-
-<p class="center space-above1 space-below1">BY B. F. RILEY</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT was in November, 1875. At
-that time I was a student in
-Crozer Theological Seminary,
-near Philadelphia. The country was
-just rallying from the effects of a long
-and disastrous war, and as the centenary
-of the nation would occur the
-following year, preparations were being
-made for the celebration of the event
-by a great exposition, which was to be
-held the next year in the City of Brotherly
-Love. This was the first of our
-great American expositions. It will
-be remembered that this was called the
-Centennial Exposition.</p>
-
-<p>General Hawley, now a senator from
-Connecticut, was made the superintendent
-of this first great national undertaking
-in the way of expositions. In
-order to procure an adequate appropriation
-from Congress, General Hawley
-and the Centennial Commission conceived
-the plan of bringing to Philadelphia
-all the dignitaries and celebrities
-from Washington. They were to
-be shown the grounds and the unfinished
-buildings, as well as the scope of
-the mammoth undertaking. It was
-further proposed that the people of
-Philadelphia should give a banquet
-to the distinguished visitors from
-Washington. This banquet was given
-in Horticultural Hall, the only building
-that was sufficiently completed for
-such a function. The sound of thousands
-of hammers and the swish of
-many saws resounded throughout the
-Centennial grounds in Fairmount
-Park.</p>
-
-<p>A magnificent train was to bring the
-distinguished guests from Washington,
-and it was to arrive in Philadelphia at a
-given hour of the evening. President
-Grant and his Cabinet, both branches
-of Congress and the judges of the
-Supreme Court were to constitute the
-excursion. They were of course the
-guests of the city of Philadelphia, and
-on their arrival were driven direct
-to the hotels. As might naturally be
-expected, such an event and occasion
-set the city all agog, and the Philadelphia
-press was filled with the manner
-of their coming as well as the purpose.
-Public excitement ran high, and the
-excursion was the subject of universal
-comment.</p>
-
-<p>At that time I was an occasional correspondent
-of two Alabama papers, one
-a religious journal and the other a
-secular one. Aware that this was the
-most favorable opportunity I should
-ever have for seeing so many of our
-distinguished men, I resolved to go to
-Philadelphia, and, if possible, come
-into contact with them. No better
-plan was suggested than to present
-myself as a member of the press. I
-imagined that there would not be the
-slightest difficulty in accomplishing
-this, and that all that was needed was
-to represent myself as such, and the
-opportunity sought of mingling with
-the great would be at once afforded.
-Decking myself in my best garb, which
-was none the better for its long service,
-I hied away to the city, fifteen miles
-distant, on reaching which the suggestion
-of a lean purse was followed in
-going to a cheap boarding-house.</p>
-
-<p>After a scanty supper I went to the
-chief hotels where the great guests were
-already arriving, bought an evening
-paper for two cents, and found that a
-committee of citizens had been appointed
-to give information to all
-strangers relative to the trip and the
-banquet of the next day, which committee
-was to be known by the red
-rosettes which they wore. I threaded<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[Pg 222]</span>
-my way as best I could through the
-jammed corridors of the hotel, jostling
-with army officers in brilliant uniforms,
-and elegantly dressed statesmen,
-until one of the committee wearing
-a rosette was found.</p>
-
-<p>Without apology, and perhaps in
-rather an assertive way, I began in a
-direct manner, telling him who I was,
-what I was, and what I wanted as a
-representative of the Southern press.
-In reply to his question as to what
-papers I represented, I frankly told
-him, when he asked for my credentials.
-But these were in the vocative, and so
-I could produce none. He eyed me
-very closely and with a distrustful
-look while I sought to atone for the
-absence of credentials by telling him
-that, being in the city at the time of
-learning fully of the event, I had not
-the means of obtaining the desired credentials.
-After hearing my statement
-he told me that he feared nothing
-could be done, and bluntly gave me to
-understand that he could do nothing.
-Once again I met him in the jam, but
-he declined to notice me, of course.</p>
-
-<p>Going across the street to the other
-hotel, I mingled with the crowd, and
-came upon two members of the committee
-standing together. I presented
-my request to them, and they said that
-they were members of the Philadelphia
-press and gave me a most cordial
-reception. When they asked for my
-authority to represent the Southern
-papers, and I had none, they requested
-my card, but I had not even a card.
-They were evidently embarrassed, for
-they showed a willingness to aid me,
-but found themselves unable to do so.
-After some courteous explanation they
-expressed regret at being unable to
-serve me, and one of them handed me
-his card and asked me to apply at
-Centennial headquarters, on Walnut
-Street, the next morning, at eight
-o’clock, and said that if anything could
-be done, they were sure the Commission
-would be glad to do it.</p>
-
-<p>Some time before eight I was at the
-Commission headquarters the next
-morning, and when the doors were
-opened I strode in, asking for the gentleman
-whose name had been given me
-the night before, and when I was presented
-to him he looked at me with a
-gaze of curiosity. I told my story as it
-had been now several times repeated;
-he listened with some impatience, and
-asked for the credentials. He listened
-to my explanation with a frown,
-which indicated that he thought me a
-fraud, and saying that he could do
-nothing under the circumstances,
-swung his chair around and gave me
-no more heed, until I more than hinted
-that perhaps I would be the only
-correspondent present from the South,
-and that I felt some consideration
-was due me, especially if the Commission
-cared to have the people of
-the South attend on the forthcoming
-exposition. The question of the
-North and South was a sensitive one at
-that time, and he replied that the
-South could come if it desired, and
-suggested that if I wished to remain
-away he did not object. I replied
-that the South was clearly being discriminated
-against in the matter, as
-representatives of the North were accorded
-the consideration which I
-sought. He demolished me with a
-single blow when he said that they
-came properly accredited.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing seemed left now but to
-hasten to the hotels and see what
-could be done there. I accosted another
-member of the committee of
-citizens, but in no wise succeeded.
-Already the carriages were drawn up
-along the side of the street for several
-blocks, awaiting the pleasure of the
-visitors from Washington to go out to
-Fairmount Park, where the buildings
-were going up. Baffled at every point
-here, I stepped into the street-car and
-reached the park in advance of the procession.
-Here I met a medical student
-from the University of Pennsylvania
-whom I had met before, and I told him
-of my ups and downs, very much to
-his amusement.</p>
-
-<p>I had now practically given up the
-hope of being thrown with the national
-magnates, but when they began filing
-through the great incomplete buildings,
-and I stood with many others staring<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[Pg 223]</span>
-at them, without distinguishing one
-from the other, there came an hour of
-growing anxiety, stronger than before,
-to know them, at least, by sight. I
-still felt within myself that I might succeed
-in getting into the banquet hall.
-I mentioned it to my companion, who
-sought to dissuade me from any further
-effort, and said that it was folly
-to attempt it. But when I saw the
-horses’ heads turn toward the Horticultural
-Hall, I bade the medical student
-good-bye, and scudded across the
-park through the cutting November
-wind toward Horticultural Hall, fully
-half a mile away. When I reached it,
-I found it strongly guarded by three
-cordons of policemen, standing about
-twenty yards apart, and surrounding
-the building. This did not inspire
-much encouragement, and nothing
-seemed so far away as the possibility
-of getting into the hall. Meanwhile
-the carriages were arriving, and the
-distinguished guests were alighting,
-and going rapidly into the hall. An
-eager crowd of gazers stood near
-where the carriages stopped and were
-looking for dear life at everyone as he
-stepped from the carriages. One Congressman
-raised a loud laugh when he
-leaped out and said:</p>
-
-<p>“That other fellow is Grant!”</p>
-
-<p>While I was thinking what I might
-do next, several members of the committee
-wearing rosettes were seen
-coming toward the hall. With some
-difficulty I reached them, and the
-many-times-told tale was repeated
-about my being a correspondent from
-the South, to which they listened with
-interest, and said:</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you go along in?”</p>
-
-<p>“The policemen,” I said.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you a badge?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” I innocently replied.</p>
-
-<p>“We are out of them, or we would
-give you one,” one of the group said.</p>
-
-<p>“Come along with us, and we will
-take you within the first line and send
-someone out to show you in.”</p>
-
-<p>Within the first line of policemen
-they left me, promising to see to it that
-I at once be shown in. Several minutes,
-that seemed hours, passed, and
-apprehensions began to arise that at
-last I might slip in my arrangements.
-My anxiety was quickened by a burly
-Irish policeman approaching me with
-his club, demanding to know what I
-was doing there. I assumed a great
-deal of courage and replied that one of
-the committee had left me there on
-business; and when he threatened to
-put me out, I replied rather stoutly
-that he might get himself into trouble
-by tinkering with the official matters
-of the commission. He used some ugly
-language, and said that he knew his
-business, and that he would let me
-stay only a few minutes longer and
-turned away on his beat. He again
-approached me and hinted that I had
-misled him by my statement, and that
-I must “get out right away.”</p>
-
-<p>Just at that moment a gentleman
-wearing a rosette, and one whom I
-had not before seen, appeared at the
-entrance of the hall and was giving
-some directions to policemen about the
-door, when I hailed him rather unceremoniously
-and laughingly told him that
-I was in a fix and he must help me out,
-that I was where the owl had the hen,
-where I could neither back nor squall.
-His face was a perfect interrogation
-point as he approached me, and he
-evidently thought fast while I told him
-that this was a funny predicament for
-a correspondent to be in. He listened
-to me throughout and said:</p>
-
-<p>“Why, yes, this will never do,” and,
-laying his hand on my shoulder, led
-me within the first door, and sent someone
-for somebody else to escort me into
-the banquet hall.</p>
-
-<p>A gentleman soon appeared on the
-scene and asked for that correspondent
-who wanted to get in. I told him I was
-the one, and he took my arm and led
-me straight into the hall of banquet.
-As I passed through suddenly I came
-wellnigh coming into collision with
-President Grant, who was standing
-over a grate warming his feet. He
-stared at me as though he was afraid
-I might run over him, and I caught a
-snatch of a conversation between himself
-and another gentleman, who was
-obviously twitting the President on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[Pg 224]</span>
-size of his feet by relating an anecdote
-of a Congressman on the streets of
-Washington, who was trying to trade
-with a bootblack for a polish, and the
-shiner of shoes said that the job was
-such a big one he would have to take
-it by separate contracts. At this bit
-of pleasantry Grant grimly smiled and
-said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>The improvised banquet hall was a
-scene of splendor. The walls were festooned
-with flags and bunting and pictures,
-and the floors at the base of the
-walls were adorned with flowers and
-evergreens, while the long tables were
-covered with gold and silver plate, cut-glass
-and branching golden candelabra.
-Running parallel with the wall on the
-left, on a raised platform, was a long
-table with sumptuous adornments
-stretching at right angles to the tables
-below. The seats of this elevated
-table fronted those occupying the seats
-on the floor. Immediately in the centre
-of the table was the chair in which
-John Hancock sat when he presided
-over the convention which adopted the
-Declaration of Independence. This antique
-and high-backed piece of furniture
-was overhung with silken banners
-woven into appropriate designs and
-a field of stars. This was the seat
-provided for the President. Just in
-front of him was an immense silver
-laver filled with perfumes, while in the
-centre was a beautifully dressed
-roasted pig.</p>
-
-<p>When the band began playing the
-guests took their seats, and I sat on
-the seat within easiest reach. When I
-looked over the hall I saw that I was
-the only one without a badge or decoration
-of some sort. Luckily for me
-I had a seat near a Congressman from
-Arkansas, a gentleman who had been
-a Confederate brigadier. He was
-warm in his greetings to a young
-Southerner and took great pains to
-point out to me the most distinguished
-of the guests. While we were admiring
-the dainty souvenirs a negro waiter
-borrowed one of mine, promising to
-return it soon, and when he disappeared
-the Congressman said:</p>
-
-<p>“You shouldn’t have allowed that
-rascal to fool you; he is not going to
-bring that back, but wants it for someone
-else.”</p>
-
-<p>He was correct, for I haven’t seen
-the negro waiter since.</p>
-
-<p>The banquet lasted more than an
-hour, and the effects of the champagne
-were soon manifest from the increased
-boisterousness of the guests. So far as
-I could observe, I was the only one
-who declined the wine. When the cigars
-were passed the guests dived their
-hands deep into the boxes and took
-hands full and filled their pockets. As
-I did not smoke, I took mine to the
-boys at the seminary who did.</p>
-
-<p>The banquet being over, the toasts
-began. After a neat speech by the
-toastmaster, he announced the first
-toast: “The President of the United
-States.”</p>
-
-<p>It was intended that this should be
-responded to by Grant, but he sat as
-unmoved as a statue. Cheer after
-cheer rang out, and Grant was called
-for in deafening chorus, but he was
-imperturbable still. My Congressman
-neighbor remarked in a whisper:</p>
-
-<p>“Now, wouldn’t I feel ashamed to
-be unable to say a word in response to
-such a demonstration as this!”</p>
-
-<p>As the President would not reply,
-the other toasts were responded to by
-Chief Justice Waite, the historian Bancroft,
-James G. Blaine, Senator Oliver
-P. Morton and one or two others of less
-distinction.</p>
-
-<p>The scene ended amid vociferous
-songs, oaths and other expressions of
-drunken disorder, which were not calculated
-to inspire much respect in
-the young theological student for the
-law-makers and statesmen of the
-country.</p>
-
-<p>Making my way out of the hall, I
-found that it was already dark on the
-outside. I boarded a street-car and
-was soon on board a train going toward
-Crozer, and at nine o’clock was
-in my room surrounded by a host of
-the boys, to whom I related the experiences
-of the day, while the smokers
-in the crowd smoked my fine cigars.</p>
-
-<p>And that is the way I dined with
-President Grant.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[Pg 225]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="The_New_York_Childrens_Court" id="The_New_York_Childrens_Court">&nbsp;</a>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>The New York Children’s Court</i></h2></div>
-
-<p class="center space-above1 space-below1">BY HON. JOSEPH M. DEUEL<br />
-<i>Author of the legislation creating the Court and a Justice therein</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">A TRIBUNAL with an age-limit
-for jurisdiction is a modern innovation.
-For two years one
-of that character has been passing
-through an experimental stage in the
-city of New York. It has fully justified
-its creation. It is experimental
-still, in the sense that two years have
-been insufficient to exploit all its useful
-possibilities. They are illimitable.
-More than any in the world, the success
-of this Court depends upon the personality
-of the individual who wields its
-powers; and, however capable, resourceful
-and aspiring, he cannot be
-eminently successful unless back of
-him stands a strong, healthy and encouraging
-public sentiment. This is
-rapidly developing as parents come to
-know that each justice is a willing and
-enthusiastic ally, ready at all times to
-join heartily with them to correct and
-encourage the boy or girl who has been
-tempted to go wrong, rather than an
-ordinary minister of justice who measures
-each infraction of law with statutory
-precision.</p>
-
-<p>When it is widely known that the
-primary object is not one of punishment,
-but of municipal and communal
-salvage, its possibilities for good will be
-greatly enhanced. No one has ever
-sat with its presiding justice through
-an entire session without some expression
-of satisfaction with the Court
-and the controlling policy in dealing
-with wayward youth. Said a minister
-of the Gospel recently, at the close of
-a forenoon session: “You are doing
-more good than all the ministers in the
-city.” This exaggerated commendation
-is cited simply to show that the
-experimental stage cannot be on the
-wrong tack when, after careful observation,
-men of intelligence give utterance
-to such convictions. But every member
-of the community cannot see and
-judge for himself, and this article is designed
-to give to all a correct idea of
-the Court, why created, and its policy
-in dealing with offenders. Many
-strangers, upon information not first-hand,
-have been somewhat severe in
-criticism of a supposed sentimental
-leniency; they have become warm supporters
-when brought into close range
-with its operations.</p>
-
-<p>No useful purpose will be served by
-tracing the origin of the Court or singling
-out and naming those who were
-instrumental in its creation. It came
-naturally by the process of evolution
-in the matter of juvenile legislation.
-Its advent was timely, for our civic
-conditions, three years ago, were
-breeding criminals more rapidly than
-at any other time in our history; and a
-court to deal solely with the source of
-criminal supply was imperatively demanded.
-One of the strongest arguments
-at Albany for the bill was based
-upon these conditions, and it was urged
-that when fairly in progress the prophylactic
-value of the Court would be
-manifested in a reduced crime rate for
-the city.</p>
-
-<p>No one then anticipated the volume
-and character of immigrants that have
-since deluged our ports. Parents
-with large families of growing children
-have edged into overcrowded tenement
-centres, where their native tongue
-is almost exclusively spoken, and have
-produced unwholesome social conditions,
-that destroy the American
-theory of home, by packing men,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[Pg 226]</span>
-women and children into one or two
-small and ill-ventilated rooms. They
-are without means of subsistence.
-The market demand for their labor is
-already supplied. No employment at
-wages can be found, and, however
-abundant in that respect may be the
-prospects in other localities, here the
-parents find themselves, and here they
-insist on staying and taking chances.
-Children swarm the streets, not only to
-get sunlight and air, but to pick up
-pennies, from whatever source available,
-to pay rent and buy food. And
-they are to become American citizens
-under such circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>The fault is not with parents, who
-are lured here by golden hopes, held
-before them by competing transportation
-agents, but is with the governmental
-policy that permits immigration
-to go on without intelligent direction.
-Possibly these people cannot be
-induced to go to parts of the country
-where there is a demand for the kind
-of labor they can give, but their
-crowding into New York is working
-endless mischief in the men and women
-produced.</p>
-
-<p>The records show that boys and
-girls who have lived here but a short
-time, many less than a year, others
-one, two and three years, get into
-difficulties and find their way to the
-Children’s Court, some for serious
-crimes and others for contravening
-state or local regulations of which
-both parents and child are ignorant.
-The child stays away from school to
-peddle, or beg, or get money in other
-ways, and, if he or she succeeds in
-evading the police, is hunted by a
-truant officer or runs foul of a “Gerry”
-agent. Be the infractions serious or
-trifling, they add materially to the
-volume of child prisoners, swell the
-inmates of reformatories, increase the
-expense of city government and furnish
-material for keeping up the army of
-criminals.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. David Blaustein estimates that
-the square mile of territory bounded
-by the Bowery, Mangin, East Houston
-and Cherry Streets contains a Jewish
-population of 350,000, largely composed
-of Russian immigrants. If it
-contained no other races there would
-be a superficial area for light, ventilation,
-business, recreation and living
-less than three yards square for each
-individual. Now for results. Mr.
-Coulter, Deputy Clerk of the Children’s
-Court, in a published article
-recently stated that twenty-six per
-cent. of child prisoners were of Russian
-parents, ninety-eight per cent. of them
-coming from the lower East Side and
-the largest majority from the square
-mile above mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>The Italian contingent is estimated
-at 400,000, which yields twenty-four
-per cent. of the juvenile arrests. Russian
-and Italian immigrants have a predilection
-for hiving like bees rather than
-for living like Americans. They have
-no inclination to go to those parts of
-the city where room, light and ventilation
-are in abundance, but select a
-locality where others speaking the
-same tongue have settled. Then begins
-the crowding process which drives
-other races from the neighborhood.
-Children run wild in the streets, form
-undesirable associations and become
-easy victims to rapacious Fagins
-everywhere abounding. The parents
-do not learn our language with any
-degree of efficiency, and acquire slight
-knowledge of our government, its
-policies or ideals. Instances occur
-daily of witnesses that have lived here
-fifteen to twenty years who require an
-official interpreter to give testimony.</p>
-
-<p>Russian and Italian nationalities
-furnish more than half of the business
-of the Children’s Court. It is not
-wholly racial, because ordinarily the
-Jew is devoted to his family, is law
-abiding and is not prone to active
-crime. Upon this point Mr. Coulter
-calls attention to the fact that with
-an estimated population of 75,000
-Jews in the Bronx that borough furnishes
-but few juvenile criminals of
-this race. He might have added that
-such as came were of a mischievous or
-trivial character except when boys
-from the congested centres made
-predatory excursions to that neighborhood.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[Pg 227]</span></p>
-
-<p>The statistics gathered at the Court
-do not furnish data from which to
-compute the length of time delinquents
-have been in the city. This is
-generally brought out in the course of
-trial or investigation. I have before me
-the trial record of several cases of
-recent occurrence. In December last
-Mrs. Rosie Rosenthal, of No. 329
-Stanton street, brought Isidore Weinstein
-into Court and asked that he be
-committed as incorrigible and ungovernable.
-In the course of the proceedings
-it was developed that the boy was
-so bad at home in Hungary that his
-parents sent him here to get rid of him.
-He came in September, 1904, with a
-man living in Nashville, Tenn., stopped
-one night with the aunt and then went
-South. Six weeks later the man
-shipped the boy back to the aunt
-because he was hopeless. Instead of
-committing him to an institution at
-an expense of two dollars a week to
-the taxpayers, the whole power and
-influence of the Court were bent on
-having him returned to Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Another case was Robert Pries, who
-pleaded guilty, January 13, to stealing
-jewelry valued at one hundred and
-fifty dollars from a guest in a city hotel
-where the boy was employed. He
-came from Germany alone last August
-and had no relatives in this country.
-He had been a bell-boy at the hotel
-three days and used a pass key to commit
-the offense.</p>
-
-<p>Raffael Basignano, illegitimate, came
-from Italy last July with a friend. He
-was brought up in San Malino by a
-woman, not his mother, known as
-Philomena. She came here, settled
-at Flushing and then sent money to
-pay his passage. She died before his
-arrival; he drifted to New York, and
-then reached the Children’s Court.
-Efforts to deport these last two are in
-progress.</p>
-
-<p>These are types of many coming
-to this Court for disposition.
-Taken in connection with the localities
-whence comes the largest amount of
-business, it may be concluded that two
-factors are producing prisoners to an
-extent dangerously menacing the future
-good order of this city: Immigration
-laws and congested tenement
-centres. If there be any fault with
-the former or in their administration
-the remedy lies with Congress; as to defects
-in the latter we must look both to
-Albany and the local government for
-relief. The Children’s Court is battling
-against odds not anticipated
-when created, and with creditable success.
-Scarcely a session passes without
-definite results, and a parole day
-never goes by without some demonstration
-of the Court’s usefulness.</p>
-
-<p>When the bill to create the Court
-was pending, its theoretical value had
-to be appraised by contrast with the
-system to be displaced. Its practical
-value is better understood by the same
-method. In fact, no true conception
-of its potency and usefulness otherwise
-can be realized. Formerly all children
-charged with crime, delinquency,
-want of proper guardianship or found
-in a state of destitution were taken to
-the various police courts. In the matter
-of guardianship, destitution and
-some of the minor offenses the magistrates
-had power to hear and determine.
-In cases of felony and misdemeanor
-the police court was simply a
-sieve to separate those crimes and to
-send the former to General Sessions and
-the latter to Special Sessions for trial.
-In General Sessions the cases had to
-be submitted to a grand jury and, if
-indicted, a trial followed before a
-petty jury.</p>
-
-<p>There were discouraging delays.
-Few were indicted and scarcely any
-convicted. Those youthful offenders
-on returning home unscathed became
-heroes in the estimation of companions;
-in their own minds they were
-immune to punishment because of
-superior skill and deftness. They did
-not understand that escape was due to
-sympathy. Each became a missionary
-in crime to corrupt others; became a
-chief of admiring associates and spent
-his time and energy in devising methods
-of pillage and robbery. In consequence
-organized bands of youthful
-desperadoes sprang up in various parts
-of the city which were known as “de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[Pg 228]</span>
-gang.” A vicious boy with goodly
-sums of money in his pockets to flash
-before and spend upon impecunious
-associates can do more moral damage
-in a week than Sunday schools can correct
-in a year.</p>
-
-<p>Ten years ago pickpockets in the
-teens were a rarity; a few years later
-frequent arrests made the subject somewhat
-conspicuous; in 1900 the arraignment
-of several in one day in the Essex
-Market Court was quite usual. Several
-youngsters acted in concert, each
-performed some important part in the
-process, and all shared in the spoils: a
-small percentage satisfied the younger
-lads who had slight experience in
-handling money. Ready money for
-theatres and cigarettes, besides something
-to quiet parental inquisitiveness,
-is an alluring bait to a child with slight
-moral supervision and guidance—far
-more fascinating than hard work or
-school drudgery and with promises of
-more freedom and luxury. And it is
-such a simple matter to deceive unsuspecting
-parents who are unable to
-speak our language. Besides, the
-young culprit knows how to weave
-fairy tales about some alleged employer
-that head off all investigations.</p>
-
-<p>It is charitable to assume that confiding
-parents in their simple trustfulness
-have no conception of the temptations
-to which their children are subjected,
-but the facts far too frequently
-indicate supreme indifference. I have
-known fathers of girls just verging into
-womanhood to appear in Court and
-testify that a disorderly house next
-door, or in the same building one
-flight down, was not a nuisance. A
-father of this character whose child,
-boy or girl brings home money never
-cares to know its source. If the money
-comes no questions are asked, or, if
-asked, the answers are never verified.</p>
-
-<p>This kind of parent is typical of
-many now coming here, and it is he or
-she whose progeny furnishes business
-for the Children’s Court and recruits
-for the criminal ranks. The youngster
-having started in with some weekly
-amount to carry home had to maintain
-it. If it was not available when
-Saturday came desperate chances were
-taken which often resulted in detection
-and arrest. But conviction and
-punishment were rare. Fagins multiplied
-and recruits were plentiful.
-Picking pockets with so many pickers
-at work was a little overdone and
-larceny in all its forms was studied and
-operated. We soon had the youthful
-burglar, highway robber, forger, till-tapper,
-wagon thief and pilfering
-employee.</p>
-
-<p>The old system was making no
-headway against crime, for the simple
-reason that it did not effectively
-operate against the source and lacked
-the requisite machinery for dealing
-therewith. Sympathetic leniency was
-too prevalent; the time and thought of
-judges were taken up with adult cases;
-little attention could be given to
-restraint and supervision. Even if
-these judges had the time and the
-inclination they were powerless because
-grand jurors failed to indict and
-petty jurors could not be persuaded to
-convict.</p>
-
-<p>Only recently a grand juror, speaking
-of his work, criticized a magistrate
-for sending a boy of seventeen
-to trial for larceny because the amount
-stolen was but a few dollars; it did not
-dawn upon him that the boy was not
-at fault for stealing so little; he probably
-took all he could. It is the thieving
-propensity in the young, not the
-amount stolen, that most vitally concerns
-the community. The amount, by
-statute and by Court custom, is one
-factor in admeasuring sentence in adult
-cases; with juveniles it is inconsequential,
-and in no way decisive of
-treatment after conviction. This is
-the spirit of the law also that permits
-felonious acts to be tried as misdemeanors
-if committed by children
-under sixteen.</p>
-
-<p>Treatment wisely can be determined
-only with some insight of the boy’s
-disposition, knowledge of his tendencies
-and information of home environment.
-In other words, thieving
-to some extent is a preventable evil,
-and the treatment several boys should
-have may vary as much as a physician’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[Pg 229]</span>
-prescriptions among an equal
-number afflicted with a like physical
-ailment. The old judicial plan, as it
-had continued for years, sent the
-youngster home without a reprimand
-or a warning, kept it up until all too
-late a hardened and confirmed criminal
-was the result, and upon him were
-visited punitive and vindictive powers.
-Criminal propensities are akin to
-physical appetites in that they become
-habits by indulgence. It is easier
-to keep a boy from smoking cigarettes
-than to break him of the habit after
-long practice. On the same principle
-a youthful offender may be checked
-much easier than a hardened criminal
-can be redeemed.</p>
-
-<p>Such were the conditions when the
-Children’s Court was created, and
-such were the principles upon which
-it was founded. It has been in existence
-and operation since September 2,
-1902. Its policies, plans and methods,
-while not perfect, stand in refreshing
-and encouraging contrast to those that
-preceded, and it is exerting power and
-influence that may be measured with
-some degree of accuracy and satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of delay ending in failures,
-we have promptness bringing results.
-Children are not lugged from court to
-court, often going to each several times
-before a hearing; they come up for
-trial not later than the day following
-arrest, and they do not have to return
-unless convicted; even then many are
-permitted to go home with some sense
-of what they have done, the reasons
-making it objectionable and the consequences
-sure to follow a repetition.
-The quickness with which conviction
-follows the commission of an offense
-is of the highest importance; especially
-if it be a serious crime, such as larceny,
-burglary, etc. It is one of the Court’s
-most valuable assets.</p>
-
-<p>There is a total suppression of sympathy
-or sentiment during trial. The
-prisoner is arraigned, the charge is explained
-and then he or she must plead
-guilty or not guilty. Each has the
-benefit of counsel—if not employed by
-a parent the Court invariably assigns
-one; the trial proceeds at once if
-the plea is “not guilty,” and at its
-close comes acquittal or conviction.
-During all this time a dispassionate
-and methodical inquiry is pursued by
-strict legal methods, in which the prisoner
-has the advantage of every technicality
-known to criminal practice.
-The justice presiding is both judge and
-jury. He has absolute control over
-future proceedings; if there be a conviction,
-therefore, he divests himself
-entirely of pity or prejudice. With
-him it is simply the elucidation of facts
-by strict legal evidence and reaching
-a conclusion that is logical and just.
-There are objections and rulings, demurrers
-to pleadings, motions for new
-trials and motions in arrest of judgment.
-Frequently some bright boy
-defendant watches the progress of the
-trial with interest and learns something
-which, never injurious, may be
-of advantage. The sad and possibly
-harmful thing is that he is on trial for
-a crime; and yet that one feature may
-save him from a disastrous career.</p>
-
-<p>The time for pity, sympathy and
-sentiment on the part of the justice
-comes when he pronounces the defendant
-guilty. Then the character and
-attitude of the man upon the bench
-undergo a complete change, for a duty
-far transcending that of weighing facts
-and reaching conclusions now devolves
-upon him. This duty is to determine
-what to do with the youngster who
-has been convicted, and upon this
-question the greatest mistakes may be
-made; it is the one that weighs most
-heavily on the conscience of the Court
-and is the most perplexing to the judicial
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>The controlling principle in the solution
-is, what is best for the boy is best
-for society; he must either be committed
-to some reformatory presided
-over by persons of like religious faith
-as the parents, or he must be permitted
-to return home. Either course may be
-dangerous. To commit may blast his
-future; to release may be iniquitous to
-him and a positive menace to others.
-In order to decide the judge must
-learn all that is possible about the individual;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[Pg 230]</span>
-his habits, disposition, associations,
-reputation, home environment
-and previous record. If the boy
-attends school his record there is obtained;
-if at work the opinion of the
-employer is sought, but in a way not
-to produce injury. Happily the law
-upon this subject permits the Court to
-get information through any channel,
-not even gossip, rumor or hearsay is
-excluded. In many cases several days
-are necessary to gather the material
-upon which the Court finally acts.</p>
-
-<p>The majority of the cases do not
-require postponement for this purpose.
-The records of the Society for the Prevention
-of Cruelty to Children are so
-complete and instantly available as to
-enable us to know at the close of the trial
-whether there has been a previous conviction,
-which is of the first importance.
-If there be none, a suspended sentence
-or a parole generally follows, for it is
-believed that with the majority better
-results are obtainable through fear under
-freedom than by discipline under
-restraint.</p>
-
-<p>There is a misunderstanding in the
-public mind, and unfortunately with
-some of the police officers, as to “suspended
-sentence.” It means that
-criminal punishment is not then inflicted,
-but may be the following week
-or month or some time thereafter, but
-will not be so long as the youngster is
-of good behavior. The boys understand
-that they will not be molested so
-long as no bad report reaches the Court,
-and the most of them act accordingly.
-Quite recently several on parole for
-engaging in street stone fights were
-separately asked what they did during
-the epidemic of stone battles that broke
-out in January. They replied that
-they ran home and stayed there while
-the fight lasted. A suspended sentence
-is quite apt to work in the same
-way with most boys, for a second conviction
-would surely disclose the former,
-and punishment then is severe.</p>
-
-<p>Occasionally a boy is sent to an institution
-on his first conviction as a
-safeguard against parents whose depravity
-and shameless indifference are
-positively detrimental, and sometimes
-a child is permitted to go home and
-remain so long as the mother avoids
-drink. Good work has been done in
-both directions—the boy removed
-from iniquitous surroundings, or these
-mended through parental affection.</p>
-
-<p>A child is rarely committed for the
-first offense, no matter how serious it
-may be; there is a remand to the Society
-for its officers to gather and report information
-of the individual and environment,
-and then sentence is deferred
-and the child put on parole. He
-goes home with an opportunity to earn
-a suspended sentence by his individual
-conduct, which covers a wide range. It
-is intended to correct every bad trait;
-evil associations are to be avoided;
-staying away from home nights must
-cease; conduct everywhere—in the
-house, on the streets and at school—must
-be exemplary. During this time
-he is under the supervision of the
-parole officer, to whom there must be a
-report each week and at the end of the
-period—four, five or six weeks—appearance
-and report in Court. If a
-high standard of excellence is reached,
-sentence is suspended; if there is improvement,
-parole is continued; if the
-boy continues in his old ways, sentence
-is imposed, or there may be a short
-parole with certain commitment at the
-end if a radical change is not shown.</p>
-
-<p>By these means the boy sees that
-others are interested in his welfare,
-and he gets encouragement in all directions,
-for neighbors, noting the change,
-treat him accordingly. Frequently he
-gets sufficient satisfaction out of the experience
-to determine that he will continue
-in the same way, and in all cases
-he learns what he can do by exercising
-self-control; it never works harm and
-often produces most gratifying results.
-I mention a few as indicative of many
-within the experience of every justice
-holding the Court.</p>
-
-<p>In October last a widow had her only
-child, a boy of fourteen, taken into custody
-by the police for absolute incorrigibility;
-he stayed out nights, associated
-with bad companions, would not
-work and was rude and insolent. On
-the following morning the mother appeared<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[Pg 231]</span>
-in Court to press the charge
-under oath and insisted that the boy
-be committed forthwith. The usual
-practice was followed; the boy was remanded
-to the Society and an investigation
-ordered; the report confirmed
-everything the mother had alleged,
-and the few days of separation had in
-no way changed her determination to
-have the boy committed, for, as she
-declared, she was completely discouraged,
-and he was past redemption.
-Something about the boy led me in the
-opposite direction and I said to her,
-“I think we had better give this young
-man just one more chance,” and, turning
-to him, I said, “Don’t you think so,
-my boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Judge,” was the quick response.</p>
-
-<p>After some conversation with the
-mother, who finally relented, a five
-weeks’ parole was ordered. On the
-return day both were in Court. The
-boy, tidy in appearance, stood erect and
-looked me manfully in the eye as he
-took his place before the bench. The
-parole officer’s report, in writing, told
-me that immediately following parole
-the boy had secured a position in a
-hardware store, and by industry, attention
-and intelligence had obtained a
-voluntary promise of increased wages;
-that he had spent his evenings, during
-parole, at home, which the mother confirmed
-and with moistened eyes she
-added:</p>
-
-<p>“I could not ask for a better boy, and
-we are both happy.” The boy had
-found what he could do by trying, and
-was satisfied. It would be difficult to
-determine which was the prouder and
-happier, the mother or son, as they left
-Court together.</p>
-
-<p>A disorderly boy at school, and an
-habitual truant, coming up for commitment
-asked me to try him on
-parole. He came back a month later
-with a school certificate of 100 per
-cent. in attendance and deportment.
-A father brought his boy of fourteen
-to Court for commitment because of
-prolonged disobedience, which could
-not be corrected by chastening; he was
-a nuisance in the neighborhood and
-the complaints sent to the house had
-utterly destroyed paternal confidence.
-He was put on parole against the
-father’s protest. A month later the
-father reported a satisfactory change,
-which, as the parole officer’s report
-stated, had been noticed by the neighbors.
-On request the parole was continued
-for a month, when the report
-of father and parole officer showed
-almost perfect conduct. On the
-father’s special request the parole
-period was extended two months.
-While these are exceptional cases they
-are by no means rare.</p>
-
-<p>From this extreme there is a gradual
-shading downward to the point of
-absolute hopelessness, when the subject
-is turned over to the disciplinary
-methods of a reformatory. During
-the year 1904 out of 1,098 paroles 170,
-or 15½ per cent., were subsequently
-committed, which shows satisfactory
-results of 84½ per cent. Nineteen
-hundred and three was a trifle better
-with its 1,117 paroles, of which 13⅕
-per cent. refused to be benefited. But
-if one-half of the lads can be redeemed
-or kept within reasonable bounds
-during character formative period, the
-Court will prove a success, and intelligent
-citizens will regard the parole
-system as worthy of continuance and
-extension. It is harmful to none and
-gives each a fair chance to test self-reliance
-and manhood; it does not
-injure the boy past redemption, but
-simply postpones commitment, and
-is a wholesome demonstration to him
-that his misfortune is of his own choosing.</p>
-
-<p>The boys generally understand that
-but one chance can be expected, and
-coming back a second time on a
-serious charge the benefit of parole will
-be withheld. This is not an inflexible
-rule. If there are good prospects a
-second or even a third parole would
-not be refused. But there must be
-more than mere possibility to secure
-a second and exceedingly strong assurances
-for a third parole. One good
-test of its beneficence is the frequency
-with which parents ask that
-it be extended rather than terminated;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[Pg 232]</span>
-always on the same ground that the
-boy is better behaved at home and at
-school, and is more careful of his associations.</p>
-
-<p>There is another factor that gives
-the boys considerable worry and serves
-somewhat as a deterrent: the “Gerry
-Society,” with its complete up-to-date
-record running back for thirty years.
-When the time comes for pronouncing
-judgment a Society representative—one
-or more always being in Court—is
-called upon for the record of the boy
-and his family. This is given in his
-presence, and sometimes involves older
-brothers or sisters. So that the
-youngster goes out of Court convinced
-that it is impossible to hide any misdeed.
-The services of the Society and
-its officers are of inestimable value in
-the conduct of this Court.</p>
-
-<p>A feature of the Court which would
-occur only to one who is a frequent
-visitor and careful observer of its
-proceedings is that of a practical
-kindergarten in civics to those most
-in need of instruction. As to offenses
-involving moral turpitude—larceny,
-burglary, picking pockets, etc.—the
-child and the parents know the act
-is wrong and why it calls for arrest and
-punishment. But this is not true of
-a great many arrests; possibly one-third
-of those made during any year.
-There are many acts forbidden in
-a crowded city that would be unobjectionable
-elsewhere. An arrest is
-sure to bring to the Court a surprised
-and indignant parent. Such acts come
-under the classification <i>mala prohibita</i>
-and include bonfires, ball playing,
-craps, cat, throwing missiles, jumping
-on and off street cars, truancy, peddling,
-etc. It is for the justice to
-explain why the act is condemned and
-forbidden.</p>
-
-<p>Bonfires may be taken as an illustration.
-Many arrests were made on
-the day of the last election, and each
-boy confessed that the fires were political.
-The boys assiduously gather
-fuel for days in advance and will burn
-it election night, whoever is elected.
-The lads were commended for political
-zeal, and were asked whether they
-wanted to become good or bad politicians.
-The answer, of course, was
-“good,” and then they were informed
-that they had started out wrong, because
-a good politician always studied
-how to save the people from needless
-expense; that fires on asphalt pavement
-ruin an area that may require twenty-five,
-fifty or a hundred dollars to repair,
-which has to be raised by taxation,
-and some portion of it each individual
-boy or man must pay either directly
-as a property owner or indirectly
-in the increased cost of rent, clothing,
-fuel, groceries and other purchases.
-Other matters are explained on similar
-lines, and often the eyes of some
-youngster will brighten as the explanation
-proceeds and at its close he will
-say, “I didn’t know it was so bad; I’ll
-never do it again.” Such a boy rarely
-comes back on a second charge. These
-explanations are not made purely for
-instruction, but to inform the child
-that behind all law interdicting ordinary
-acts there are good reasons and
-to state them so as to come within
-youthful comprehension.</p>
-
-<p>The child is not the only beneficiary,
-for the English-speaking parent absorbs
-some of the information, and
-each goes away knowing why it is unlawful
-to build bonfires, play crap or
-ball, or do other things which result in
-arrest. When time permits, the non-English-speaking
-parent gets his information
-on these topics through the
-official interpreter. To punish a child,
-or through him the parent, for an
-act when neither understands why
-it is forbidden, is extremely distasteful;
-but such instances occur, and punishment
-is inflicted because it is the
-only method for impressing clearly on
-their minds that the act must not be
-repeated.</p>
-
-<p>Thus far boys only have been mentioned;
-but a like method of treatment
-applies to girls whenever there is occasion,
-which is not often. Fortunately
-for the world in general and this city in
-particular, the female sex is far less
-prone to crime and venality. This is
-specially prominent in the Children’s
-Court, for, eliminating improper<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[Pg 233]</span>
-guardianship—neither boy nor girl being responsible
-therefor—girl prisoners constituted
-but four per cent. of the cases.
-In the police courts women make up
-twenty per cent. of arrests. There were
-but thirty-eight girl defendants in a
-total of 1,055 larcenies, six in a total
-of 2,870 disorderly conduct cases, two
-in the 50 robberies, two in 197 assaults,
-two in the 346 burglaries; of the three
-attempts at suicide all were girls. It
-may truthfully be said that womankind
-is the crowning glory of the race
-and the sheet-anchor of progressive
-civilization.</p>
-
-<p>Much time is consumed with questions
-of improper guardianship, of
-which during the year there were 1,983
-cases; during 1903, 1,582. These complaints
-are rapidly increasing, partially
-because of ignorant and indifferent
-aliens. But the machinery for dealing
-with such matters is so much better
-than formerly existed that more attention
-is given to the subject. During
-the year preceding the establishment
-of this Court there were but 539 such
-cases in the seven City Magistrates’
-courts of this division. There is greater
-firmness in dealing with them than
-with some transgression of the child.
-While the subject of inquiry is under
-sixteen years of age the cases practically
-are of parental adjudication; the
-fathers and mothers are on trial, and
-it is one or the other that is disciplined
-if the complaint is well founded. If
-the evil be drink, which is true as to
-many of the cases, it sometimes may
-be overcome if parental affection and
-desire to retain custody of the child
-are well developed; if in surroundings
-coming within parental means to correct
-or in restraint and supervision
-which parents neglect to exercise, the
-objection is overcome with most parents
-by a warning. While testing sincerity
-and ability the child is permitted
-to remain at home. In this
-way children are given approximately
-fair opportunity to develop proper and
-becoming tendencies. The world
-would be tremendously shocked if it
-could know how many of its criminals,
-paupers and vagrants are caused primarily
-by home environment and improper
-parental conduct.</p>
-
-<p>A short time since a visitors’ book
-was opened at the Court and in it those
-who remained long enough to form an
-opinion have given expression thereto.
-In closing I append the following
-excerpts:</p>
-
-<p>“A life-saving station”; Morris K.
-Jesup, president New York Chamber of
-Commerce. “Profoundly impressed
-with an institution in which there is
-the highest promise”; Bishop Henry C.
-Potter. “It does one good to appreciate
-how great an advance has been
-made as is evidenced by such courts”;
-Seth Low, ex-Mayor of New York.
-“The spirit of Christianity practically
-expressed”; Rev. Wm. C. Bittings.
-“A most pathetic and interesting
-scene”; R. Fulton Cutting. “A superb
-illustration of sanctified common sense
-and of applied religion”; Rev. R. S.
-MacArthur. “The Court is doing most
-excellent work”; George L. Rives, ex-Corporation
-Counsel. “A practical
-application of justice and Christian
-charity”; Dr. Norman Fox, ex-Mayor
-of Morristown. “Impressed by the
-hopefulness of the Children’s Court”;
-Adolf Hartmann, Berlin. “The best
-work is always the preventative work”;
-Rev. W. Merle Smith. “One of the
-best of the city’s methods of improving
-the conditions of the future citizens of
-New York”; Chas. R. Lamb. “A long
-step in advance in social progress”;
-Rev. Gaylord S. White. “This Court
-should be better understood”; Wm.
-T. Woods. “The work this Court is
-doing in sustaining the discipline of
-the Department of Education is invaluable”;
-Frank H. Partridge. Hon.
-Jacob H. Schiff, Rev. Rufus P. Johnston,
-Rev. E. S. Holloway and several
-other well-known citizens have visited
-the Court since the book was opened,
-but unfortunately their entries are so
-mixed with personal compliment as to
-make reproduction here inappropriate.</p>
-
-<p>Arguments on behalf of the Court
-from those officially interested in its
-success are not needed when its ordinary
-sessions call forth such commendations
-from representative men.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[Pg 234]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="What_Buzz-Saw_Morgan_Thinks" id="What_Buzz-Saw_Morgan_Thinks">&nbsp;</a>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>What Buzz-Saw Morgan Thinks</i></h2></div>
-
-<p class="center space-above1 space-below1">BY W. S. MORGAN</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">MUCH of our modern civilization
-is nothing more than refined
-savagery.</p>
-
-<p>The yellow metal kills more people
-than the yellow fever.</p>
-
-<p>Harmony is simply stopping the
-wheels of progress to get rid of the
-noise.</p>
-
-<p>Saying that a thing is settled does
-not settle it.</p>
-
-<p>All old party roads lead workingmen
-to roam.</p>
-
-<p>Shall our financial system be American
-or British?</p>
-
-<p>Don’t surrender until you see the
-size of the enemy—and then don’t
-surrender.</p>
-
-<p>A man must open his eyes in order
-to see even as bright an object as the
-sun.</p>
-
-<p>Corruption in the best form of
-government makes it the worst of all.</p>
-
-<p>The trusts owe their existence to
-yellow-dog politics.</p>
-
-<p>With the control of the currency
-turned over to the bankers, it will
-be in order to allow the hawks to
-feed the chickens.</p>
-
-<p>The independent vote is a nightmare
-to the yellow-dog politician.</p>
-
-<p>The Beef Trust is living in constant
-defiance of the law. It is a greater
-menace to the rights of the people
-than a thousand highwaymen.</p>
-
-<p>Democratic statesmanship has gone
-to seed, and the seed has germinated
-into a howl.</p>
-
-<p>Jefferson and Jackson placed the
-mark of Cain on bank money, and
-the bankers have never been able to
-remove it.</p>
-
-<p>The men who talk the most about
-“sound money” and the “nation’s
-honor” are the greatest tax-dodgers.</p>
-
-<p>Take the corporation lawyers out
-of the important offices in this country
-and about two-thirds of them would
-be vacant.</p>
-
-<p>The banker has no more right to
-regulate the quantity of currency that
-shall be used by the people than he
-has to limit the number of cattle that
-shall be raised.</p>
-
-<p>Enforced poverty is taking many
-a man out of the ranks of yellow-dog
-politics and making an independent
-voter out of him.</p>
-
-<p>It always gives me a pain in the
-left hind foot to hear a man who
-wears a hoot-owl look on his face, a
-quid of tobacco in his mouth and a
-double-barrel patch on the bosom
-of his pants talk about “money that is
-good in Yurrop.”</p>
-
-<p>About the only thing that Bryan
-can reorganize out of the Democratic
-Party is a bob-tail flush, and that
-is just what the Republicans want
-him to do.</p>
-
-<p>A stand-patter is a fellow who
-is too lazy to move, or who has plenty
-of feed in his own trough and doesn’t
-care for anyone else.</p>
-
-<p>The Beef Trust might possibly
-make good its plea of innocence, were
-it not for the fact that it has been
-“caught with the goods.”</p>
-
-<p>The cotton growers who met in New
-Orleans in January decided that the
-Wall Street “bear” was worse than
-the Texas weevil.</p>
-
-<p>Yellow-dog politics is the spirit that
-moves a man to ride to hell in a two-wheel
-cart drawn by the Democratic
-mule or Republican elephant, rather
-than to go to heaven by the independent
-route.</p>
-
-<p>It is gratifying to know that a real
-effort is being made to “control”
-the railroads. The failure of such an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[Pg 235]</span>
-effort is the best evidence that it
-can’t be done. Then will come public
-ownership.</p>
-
-<p>The government has no more right
-to farm out to the bankers the privilege
-of issuing money than it has to
-grant to a few rich farmers the exclusive
-privilege of breeding short-horn
-cattle.</p>
-
-<p>It is said that gold furnishes a
-stable currency, but history teaches
-that it is the most cowardly money
-ever used. In time of war, when it is
-needed most, it hides itself and paper
-money fights the battles.</p>
-
-<p>The glory of war is a relic of barbarism.
-It differs only in form from
-the ghoulish dances of the aborigines,
-or the fiend-like performances of the
-Dervishes. “War is hell.” Its spirit
-is of the devil. Nine-tenths of the
-wars could be avoided. They are
-caused by the selfishness of man.</p>
-
-<p>In this day of progress and invention
-no man can define radicalism. That
-which appears radical today is conservative
-tomorrow. The leaven of
-a higher and better civilization is
-working in the hearts of the people,
-and the day of emancipation from
-false systems draws near.</p>
-
-<p>In the past ten years in this country
-the railroads have killed and crippled
-more people than all the wars in
-which this government was ever engaged.
-Put that in your pipe and
-smoke it, and then howl against government
-ownership.</p>
-
-<p>It is urged that the greenbacks
-should be retired, because they constitute
-an “endless chain” to deplete
-the gold reserve in the Treasury. It
-should be remembered that no one
-ever uses the “endless chain” but the
-bankers. The people don’t want the
-gold; they would rather have the
-greenbacks, and they will take them
-without any gold behind them. The
-way to break the “endless chain” is
-to abolish the gold reserve.</p>
-
-<p>Bryan seems bent on building up a
-straw party for the Republicans to
-knock down. In doing so he is playing
-into the hands of the Republicans,
-and he is using some good men for
-straw. He is doing just what the
-Republican bosses want him to do.
-Whether he has sense enough to see it,
-does not alter the situation. Every
-move he makes tends to divide the
-Democratic Party and help the Republicans.</p>
-
-<p>The bold and brazen bag-barons of
-the Beef Trust will in all probability
-find some way to dodge the injunction
-issued against them. There is an old
-saying that runs something like “catch
-your cottontail before you cook it,”
-or words to that effect. If there is no
-change in prices of cattle and beef,
-you may rest assured that the beef
-barons are still robbing the people at
-both ends of the line.</p>
-
-<p>For thirty years I have heard this
-talk of the better class of men in the
-Democratic Party getting control of
-it and bringing it back to its old-time
-moorings, but the party is in a much
-worse condition today than it ever
-has been before. That there are good
-men in it, no one will attempt to deny.
-The rank and file of the party are
-honest and sincere, but the party is
-controlled by the most unscrupulous
-set of buccaneers that ever existed,
-and, under the system of primaries
-and conventions, the people have no
-more show to win against the professional
-politicians than a goose
-would have in a running match with a
-red fox. The party is not only divided
-and demoralized, but it is disgraced
-in the eyes of the people. The
-attempt of the party in the recent
-campaign to ape the methods of the
-Republican Party as practiced by Mr.
-Hanna in 1896 and 1900, and its bid
-for Wall Street support, were despicable
-beyond description. A party
-that has for years laid claim to being
-a reform party, that will stoop to
-such contemptible methods, deserves
-not only the distrust of the people, but
-their everlasting condemnation.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[Pg 236]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="The_Heritage_of_Maxwell_Fair" id="The_Heritage_of_Maxwell_Fair">&nbsp;</a>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>The Heritage of Maxwell Fair</i></h2></div>
-
-<p class="center space-above1 space-below1">BY VINCENT HARPER</p>
-
-<h3>SYNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS CHAPTERS</h3>
-
-<p class="blockquot space-below2">Maxwell Fair, an Englishman who has amassed a
-colossal fortune on ’Change, inherits from his ancestors
-a remarkable tendency to devote his life to some
-object, generally a worthy, if peculiar one, which is
-extravagantly chivalrous, even morbid. The story
-opens with Fair and Mrs. Fair standing over the body
-of a man who has just been shot in their house—a
-foreigner, who had claimed to be an old friend of Mrs.
-Fair. Fair sends her to her room, saying: “Leave
-everything to me.” He hides the body in a chest, and
-decides to close the house “for a trip on the Continent.”
-Fair tells the governess, Kate Mettleby, that he loves
-her, that there is no dishonor in his love, in spite of
-Mrs. Fair’s existence, and that, until an hour ago, he
-thought he could marry her—could “break the self-imposed
-conditions of his weird life-purpose.” They
-are interrupted before Kate, who really loves him, is
-made to understand. While the Fairs are entertaining
-a few old friends at dinner, Kate, not knowing that it
-contains Mrs. Fair’s blood-stained dress, is about to
-hide a parcel in the chest when she is startled by a
-sound.</p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER V (<i>Continued</i>)</h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">“HSS—hss,” once more came
-the noise, and this time she
-realized that it proceeded
-from the doorway. With a frightened
-look she saw a man peering and smiling
-at her between the portières.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, who are you?” she asked,
-involuntarily retreating toward the
-bell.</p>
-
-<p>“Sh-h. They are at dinner—a very
-good dinner, from the smell, too,”
-answered the stranger, entering the
-room with an air of such thorough
-good-nature and easy friendliness that
-Miss Mettleby gained courage. He
-was a little, wiry, dapper, insinuating
-fellow whose cockney smartness of
-attire and knowing, “between ourselves”
-manner suggested almost anything,
-from an upper groom or a
-veterinary’s assistant to a rising young
-follower of the turf or a successful
-burglar with aristocratic connections.</p>
-
-<p>“I will ring,” said Miss Mettleby,
-puzzled whether to scream or laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I wouldn’t do that, you know,”
-suggested the visitor pleasantly, more
-like one throwing out a friendly suggestion
-than a burglar intimidating
-a very frightened young governess.
-“You see, miss, I have business with
-Mr. Fair—rather nasty business, too,
-and I never broach a disagreeable
-subject until after dinner, do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“But what do you mean by prowling
-about people’s houses?” asked
-Kate, with a dignity born of growing
-assurance that the man did not contemplate
-her immediate murder.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I say, let up, miss, you know,”
-deprecated the invader ruefully. “You
-see, when you have passed a few hours
-back of pianos and under beds and
-in wardrobes you grow attached to a
-house, don’t you, miss? I’m that
-attached to this house that you’d be
-surprised if I was to tell you how
-much. You’ll be the governess now,
-I dare say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but on my word, you are the
-coolest thief—” replied Kate, and the
-cool one broke in:</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, oh, pretty young lady, recall
-that there wile insinuation, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, since you are so cool about
-it and come here where you are sure
-to be seen, I’ll believe you,” answered
-Miss Mettleby. “But what do you
-want? Really, this is refreshing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t it just, miss?” acquiesced
-the cool one, sitting down. “Askin’
-your pardon, I’ll smoke. Now, miss,
-that we’re so cozy like, I’ll ask you a
-few questions. A dark foreign gentlemen
-called here about an hour ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps he did—what of it?”
-asked Kate, with a very feeble effort
-to cover the alarm which his words
-created.</p>
-
-<p>“You saw him?” went on the
-stranger, with an exasperating coolness.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[Pg 237]</span></p>
-
-<p>“If I did, I don’t see what business
-that is of yours,” retorted Kate
-haughtily enough, but inwardly quaking.
-“Who are you, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am Ferret, miss,” he answered,
-rising and bowing; “Mr. Samuel
-Ferret, of the Scotland Yard private
-detective force—your servant.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good gracious,” cried Miss Mettleby,
-springing up in spite of her effort
-to betray no feeling. “A detective?
-But why should you come here?”</p>
-
-<p>Poor Kate’s alarm would have been
-considerably heightened had she only
-known that three or four other insinuating
-and evanescent gentlemen
-had been in and out of the premises for
-the past hour, and that still more of
-them were at that moment watching
-the house, front and rear.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you see, miss,” replied Ferret,
-trying by his manner to reassure the
-young woman, “I’ve been taking an interest
-in my foreign friend for a week.
-He came here today. I haven’t seen
-him go away again? Have you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” answered Kate, with an indifference
-which she did not feel; “but
-he must have gone, of course. There
-is no such person about the premises.
-I must ring and advise Mr. Fair.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, really, you know,” exclaimed
-Ferret, jumping up to intercept her;
-“I wouldn’t do that, would you?
-When a gent goes into a house and
-don’t come out again, it is just possible
-to imagine that he is somewhere
-near that house, not to say in that
-house. You follow me, I hope? Well,
-my dear foreign friend came into this
-here very elegant mansion and he
-didn’t go out of it again, so by a
-stretch of fancy I think he may be
-in London yet, and in that part of
-London which is up in your attic.
-Now, don’t jump. If you make a
-row, you’ll frighten the great folks
-at dinner—such a deucedly good
-dinner, too—and besides give my
-foreign friend advance knowledge of
-my little surprise party—I just love
-surprises, don’t you? And them there
-foreign gents can get out through a
-smaller hole than a self-respecting
-Englishman, let me tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>“But who is the man?” asked Kate,
-forgetting her alarm as Ferret, with
-the oddest winks and gestures with
-his long thumbs, delivered his speech.
-“And what is he doing here? And
-what do you propose to do about it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Me? What do I propose to do
-about it?” inquired Ferret as if the
-thought that he would be expected
-to do something about it had just
-struck him. “Well, first of all, I
-propose to ask you to be a nice young
-lady and help me a bit. You see,
-miss, my friend don’t mean any great
-kindness to Mr. and Mrs. Fair. Not
-a bit of it—that ain’t like my friend.
-In fact, there’s going to be a row—now,
-now, don’t jump, you know—I
-was saying that there is going to be
-a row, unless you and I prevent it,
-you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I insist upon telling Mr.
-Fair at once—this is awful,” cried
-Kate, beginning again to believe that
-the alleged detective was simply a
-clever sneak-thief who was playing
-upon her ignorance.</p>
-
-<p>“Hawful is it?” smiled Ferret,
-warning her to remain seated with a
-hand lifted eloquently; “but it won’t
-be hawful, but just a pleasant little
-picnic if you will do just what I tell
-you. Come now, don’t be a fool, miss,
-but a dear, good, cool-headed young
-lady. Will you help me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Miss Mettleby; “of
-course I will do anything to help Mr.
-Fair—I mean, Mrs. Fair.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you will,” said Ferret
-encouragingly. “I knew you was a
-Christian the minute I see you, miss.
-You stop in this room until I come
-back. I am going out to telephone,
-you see.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, we have a telephone in the
-house, you know,” eagerly remarked
-Kate, not liking the idea of being kept
-a prisoner in the library while this
-man roamed about the house at his
-leisure.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” jeered Ferret; “and it would
-be a fine thing, wouldn’t it, for me to
-yell through your telephone downstairs
-that I wanted the Yard to
-send me six constables at once to nab<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[Pg 238]</span>
-a foreign gentleman—with the foreign
-gent himself lying under the very mat
-on which I was standing. Innocent!
-No. I must go out to telephone—and
-if you sort of want to see me safe
-out of the house, why, come down
-to the door with me—yes, that’s it.
-I want you to sit in the little room
-by the street door, and when my
-friend goes out the door follow him—follow
-him, miss, you understand.
-He will go across the street, down the
-next street to the square, turn to the
-left, and call a cab at the corner.
-You call the next cab and direct the
-driver to follow the first one. Watch
-him, follow him, don’t lose sight of
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he wouldn’t be such a fool
-as to go out by the front door,” replied
-Kate, thoroughly puzzled by
-Ferret’s mysterious instructions, which
-she, of course, did not understand
-were merely attempts on his part to
-get her out of his way and fixed permanently
-in some known room.</p>
-
-<p>“Never fear,” answered Ferret;
-“that’s just what he will do. He’ll
-go out of the front door as if he owned
-the house. In all likelihood I’ll be
-over the way when he and you come
-out, and then of course I’ll follow
-him myself, but if I ain’t there, you
-must do as I say. Follow him no
-matter wherever he goes—and then
-come to Scotland Yard and report.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know about all this,”
-stoutly returned Kate, shaking her
-head. “Why can’t Mr. Fair be advised
-at once? This is all wrong—and
-strange.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you see, miss,” quickly protested
-Ferret, “Mr. Fair has private
-reasons for not wishing us to trouble
-the foreign gent, so he wouldn’t help
-us to nab him. Funny, isn’t it? But
-it often happens that we poor detectives
-has to catch all sorts of gents
-in spite of the very parties on whose
-accounts we wants ’em. The aristocracy
-has objections against appearing
-in court even against their own
-murderers. Now Mr. Fair does not
-know this gent’s little game and so
-he trusts him. We’ve got to do all
-this business ourselves—and, I tell
-you, it’s life and death. So, is it a
-go? Will you be a sensible young
-woman and not make a row, and
-help me?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will,” answered Kate, convinced
-by the fellow’s irresistibly frank air—and
-moved by the comforting
-thought that her consent to his plan
-would at least get him out of the house—when
-she would of course advise
-Mr. Fair of the whole matter, even
-if it did spoil a good dinner.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a real lady for you,”
-gallantly remarked Ferret. “Now I’m
-off. Come downstairs if you want
-to see me out of the house—you
-suspicious young thing. No? All
-right. Thanks, but you really must
-sit in that little room, you know, for
-he may be leaving the house at any
-minute.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll get my hat first,” replied Kate,
-“so that I can be ready to follow him
-if he goes out.”</p>
-
-<p>Ferret slid noiselessly out of the
-library with a warning finger at his
-lips, and Kate congratulated herself
-upon having so cleverly deceived him.
-She would hide the parcel containing
-the surprise and then send word to
-the dining-room that she must see
-Mr. Fair at once.</p>
-
-<p>She sat for a moment trying to think
-out the impressions which had been
-pouring in upon her in this hour
-of cataclysm and departure. What
-had brought the foreign gentleman
-to the house? What had he done to
-make him the subject of police suspicion?
-And why should Mr. Fair
-wish to protect him from the law?
-And—oh, how the thought came
-crushing back into her heart after
-being dislodged by the detective’s
-sudden appearance—of what crime
-had Mr. Fair spoken? The temporary
-calmness that the diversion had purchased
-for her gave way now to all
-the torment that had preceded it.
-Springing up to carry out her resolution—action
-being at all events less
-dreadful than idle horror—she took
-the parcel from the table, and going
-hurriedly across the room, lifted the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[Pg 239]</span>
-lid of the old carved chest. She
-dropped the parcel into it—and fell.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Allyne had just elicited a laugh by
-one of his characterizations of a certain
-great personage, when the party
-at dinner heard a shriek that brought
-them all to their feet. Mr. and Mrs.
-Fair dashed upstairs with who can
-say what horror of expectancy in
-their minds. They found the governess
-lying beside the chest in the library.
-Fair acted promptly.</p>
-
-<p>He heard the others running up the
-stairs, so as he raised Kate from the
-floor he said to Mrs. Fair; “Sit on the
-chest, Janet—never mind why—and
-do not rise from it until I get them
-all out of here. It is only Miss Mettleby,
-the governess—she has fainted,”
-he added as Mrs. March and Allyne
-entered followed by Travers.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my dear Mrs. Fair, how pale
-you look—what has really happened?”
-asked Mrs. March anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Mettleby has had a bad turn—that’s
-all. Pray, all of you go,”
-replied Fair, for Mrs. Fair, with a
-white face and vacant look, sat as if
-unconscious of what passed.</p>
-
-<p>“Allyne, take Mrs. March down,
-won’t you?” asked Travers, to relieve
-the situation, and then, after Allyne
-and Mrs. March were gone: “Is
-there nothing that I can do, Fair?
-My God, man, what does it all mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, old chap,” answered Fair
-as he laid Miss Mettleby upon the
-leather lounge; “nothing. Go down
-now, or Lady Poynter will fear there
-is something serious the matter. Janet,
-my love, let Travers see you down.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Fair suffered Travers to lead
-her away, walking in a trance.</p>
-
-<p>“Kate—Kate,” said Fair, bending
-over the governess and chafing her
-hands which now began to twitch
-convulsively.</p>
-
-<p>“Has he gone?” asked Kate, opening
-her eyes and staring nervously around
-the room.</p>
-
-<p>“There is nobody here, Miss Mettleby,”
-quietly answered Fair, helping
-her to her feet. “Are you better?”</p>
-
-<p>“I must have fainted—how stupid
-of me,” replied Miss Mettleby, getting
-herself together and shuddering as
-the reality came back upon her.
-“It is nothing, Mr. Fair. Now please
-go back to your dinner—oh, how
-foolish and annoying of me to disturb
-you all in this way! I will get
-my hat and take the air for a few
-minutes. Come.”</p>
-
-<p>They walked slowly out of the
-library, and in the passage Kate insisted
-on his returning to the dining-room
-while she ran up to her own
-room.</p>
-
-<p>Fair went down accordingly, tortured
-with the fear that she had opened
-the chest. Miss Mettleby, hastily
-preparing for the street, slipped out
-of the house and fled along to the
-corner, where she took a cab and was
-driven off at a mad pace.</p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER VI</h3>
-
-<p>About nine o’clock that evening
-Mr. Inspector Sharpe sat in his little
-office, running his eye over the
-records of a day’s departures from
-the steep and thorny path on the
-part of the very mixed and sorely
-tried people of London. At that
-hour he was on duty also on emergency
-cases that might be reported
-at the ever-expectant Yard.
-So he glanced at his reports casually,
-as one does who looks to be interrupted
-at any moment. The bells in the
-steeples were chiming nine when a
-constable entered, conducting a very
-agitated young woman who showed
-not only the usual nervousness of
-the layman in police offices, but also
-a great deal of not very clearly defined
-personal anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>“Well? Well?” asked the Inspector,
-without looking up from his reports.</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon—but is this—?”
-asked a timid voice in return.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, a lady,” exclaimed the Inspector
-on seeing her. “Beg pardon,
-ma’am. Have a seat, ma’am. And
-now what can I do for you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Is this where they report things?”
-asked the girl apologetically.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[Pg 240]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Bless us all,” cried out Sharpe,
-with a smile; “they report some
-things here, miss. Who are you,
-now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Does it matter? Must I say who
-I am?” inquired the lady anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Really, you know, I can’t say as
-to that, you know, miss,” replied the
-Inspector, with a merriment which he
-frowned at when the constable began
-to join in it. “If you have something
-to report, I must know who it is as
-reports it, wouldn’t you say? But
-there, now, miss, don’t you be afraid
-of nothing. Out with it. What seems
-to be a-troublin’ of such a quiet-looking
-young person as you, miss?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” answered the girl, much
-encouraged by the humanity of the
-terrible officer whose uniform and
-surroundings appalled her at first, “I
-just wanted to report that he did go
-out and I followed him, but he walked
-so fast that I couldn’t keep up with
-him, and he disappeared around the
-corner, please, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“He did, eh?” laughed the Inspector.
-“You wouldn’t have no objection
-to mentionin’ the gent’s name,
-now, would you? Must have somebody’s
-name.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you know who I mean,”
-answered the girl, with surprise, as it
-did not of course occur to her that a
-number of young women had been
-asked to follow strange gentlemen
-about the streets that very evening.
-“You know who it was—the foreign
-gentleman, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>The Inspector burst into a hearty
-laugh at this, but said sharply to
-his subordinate: “Bellows, if you
-laugh again, I’ll report you. No,
-miss, I really can’t say as I do know
-just who you mean. You see, we
-has such a lot of foreign gents to look
-after one way or another, that we
-gets ’em sort o’ mixed like, sometimes,
-you know. Who was your particular
-foreign gent and why did he walk so
-fast and why was you so keen to
-catch ’im?”</p>
-
-<p>“This is very strange,” replied the
-girl, beginning to think that, after
-all, she had been played upon by
-that horrid, suave thief. “Mr. Ferret
-told me to come here and tell you
-all about it, you know. At Mr.
-Maxwell Fair’s, you know—Carlton
-House Terrace—please say you understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, I see,” exclaimed Sharpe, at
-once showing the keenest interest and
-bristling with alert readiness both to
-hear and to act. “It’s Ferret, is it?
-Bellows, go and ask Ferret to come
-here.” The constable departed to do
-as he was bid in spite of a gesture of
-protest from Miss Mettleby and her
-statement that Mr. Ferret was not
-here but at Mr. Fair’s house.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, miss,” began the Inspector,
-when Bellows closed the door after him,
-“how do you come to be interested
-in this Spanish conspiracy? It was
-Señor Mendes that you followed, eh?
-Why? Speak out, now, plain and
-square. It’s an ugly business for the
-likes of you to get mixed up in.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Mettleby heard all this with a
-rapidly deepening feeling of guilty
-complicity in some dark plot, and yet,
-beneath this sickening dread, she
-felt a vague hope that now she would
-glean some intelligent idea of the
-mystery into which she, Mr. Fair—all
-her world, had been so suddenly
-plunged by the hurrying events of the
-past two hours.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you see, sir,” she began; “I
-assure you that I know absolutely
-nothing at all about what Mr. Ferret
-was about—nothing. I am the governess
-in Mr. Fair’s family, that’s all.
-And this evening when the family
-were at dinner Mr. Ferret came into
-the library—nearly frightening me
-to death—and told me that a foreign
-gentleman was in our house who intended
-some sort of mischief to my
-kind employer. So he asked me to
-watch the street door and to follow
-the man if he should go out before
-Mr. Ferret returned from telegraphing
-or something. And, of course, the
-whole thing is non——”</p>
-
-<p>Her pitiful little plot to divert police
-suspicion from her knight until the
-horrible evidence of someone’s guilt—not
-his, not his!—could be removed was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[Pg 241]</span>
-nipped at this point by the entrance,
-to her unspeakable surprise, of Ferret
-himself, smiling and unruffled.</p>
-
-<p>“Ferret, do you know this young
-lady?” asked the inspector perfunctorily.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” replied Ferret, with a
-salute—military to his chief and cavalier
-to the trembling Kate. “She’s the
-governess, sir, at Mr. Maxwell Fair’s.
-How are you again, miss? You are
-here rather earlier than I looked for
-you. She’s a regular corker, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Silence!” snapped the Inspector,
-to whom discipline was all. “This
-young person was telling me that she
-watched as you requested. Go on,
-miss.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Mr. Ferret had scarcely gone
-out when the foreign gentleman passed
-out of the street door and I immediately
-followed him,” went on poor Kate,
-with oozing hope that her blundering
-lie would be believed, now that that
-gimlet-eyed Ferret was here to observe
-her. “The man crossed the
-square and walked quickly down the
-next street.”</p>
-
-<p>She stopped. Ferret seemed to be
-whistling in mild but growing unbelief—conduct
-which he suddenly
-abandoned on receiving a wireless
-message of caution from the Inspector.
-The nimble mind of Ferret caught his
-superior’s point at once, so he fell in
-with his policy and said, as if to encourage
-Kate to proceed bravely
-with her transparent and useful lie:
-“Didn’t I tell you he would do so?”</p>
-
-<p>“Be quiet, Ferret!” cried Sharpe,
-fearing that Ferret would develop
-some new indiscretion. “Go on, miss,
-go on. You saw the gent turn the
-corner?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Kate, with fresh
-courage; “he turned the corner and
-I ran after him. There were many
-people in the narrow street into which
-he had turned, but I kept him in view
-and——”</p>
-
-<p>“And you jumped into the next
-cab as quick as a flash—” put in
-Ferret, when he noticed that her powers
-of creation were ebbing, “and followed
-him until you saw him go into—go
-on, go on, miss—you’re great, you
-are.”</p>
-
-<p>“Alas, no,” sighed Kate, fearing to
-venture to be so specific as to locate
-the mysterious man in a definite house
-anywhere. “Alas, no. When I reached
-Pall Mall he had disappeared.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dam—that is, you know, I beg
-pardon—what a pity you missed him,”
-exclaimed Ferret, rapidly calculating
-what her game was.</p>
-
-<p>“It is only just gone nine,” remarked
-the Inspector sternly. “When
-was it that you were at Mr. Fair’s
-house, Ferret? This is very strange.”</p>
-
-<p>It was Ferret’s turn now to fear
-that the course of affairs reflected on
-his discretion, and, while he could
-hardly believe that the Inspector had
-failed to perceive that the governess
-was fibbing, he could not risk being
-thought a bungler, for Sharpe was a
-man of few words, quick action, and
-little given to reopening cases once he
-had decided them.</p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid the young lady has
-made a mistake,” Ferret continued
-carefully. “It was dark and she probably
-mistook somebody else for the
-foreign gent. You see, sir, I changed
-my mind and didn’t go to telephone,
-but stood immediately opposite Mr.
-Fair’s house until ten minutes ago, and
-the gent had not come out of the door—that
-I can swear to.”</p>
-
-<p>Ferret hoped that this bit of information
-would so shake the girl’s confidence
-in her story that she would begin
-a new and contradictory one.</p>
-
-<p>“But he <i>did</i> go out,” sobbed Kate,
-truly shaken, but with a woman’s determination
-to see a thing through; “I
-say he did go out. Oh, Mr. Inspector,
-tell me that you believe me! There is
-no foreign gentleman at Mr. Fair’s
-house—so it will be very foolish for
-you to send any of those awful detectives
-there. Do, <i>do</i> believe me! I
-tell you, sir, that there has been no
-foreign gentleman at our house, and
-anyway I saw him go out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ferret, come into my private
-office a minute,” said Sharpe, trying to
-retain his customary solemn and impressive
-expression. “Please wait here<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[Pg 242]</span>
-for us, miss. Nobody will come in to
-molest you.”</p>
-
-<p>“My God, what have I done now?”
-cried Kate, when the two terrible men,
-with their cold, businesslike, lynx
-ways, had gone. “But he did not do it—he
-did NOT!” she moaned as she
-leaned her poor reeling head upon the
-edge of the Inspector’s desk.</p>
-
-<p>They came back after a few minutes.</p>
-
-<p>“We believe your story, miss,”
-began the Inspector kindly; “and Ferret
-will be severely reprimanded in the
-morning for having annoyed you by
-going into your house. Now tell me
-anything more that you may know
-about this silly rumor—but be careful
-what you say, for you may have to
-swear to the truth of it all in a court
-of law. I shall take down what you
-say. Come, now, what is your name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Kate Mettleby,” she replied, with
-uneasiness as she thought of perjury;
-“but really, truly, honestly, there
-has been no murder at our house, so I
-don’t see why you should want me
-to——”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not, of course not,” interrupted
-the Inspector, with a cordiality
-and candor that brought her
-immense relief; “but, you see, the law
-compels us to look sharp into the ways
-of all foreigners. The law is that all
-foreigners are guilty until they can
-prove themselves innocent—which is
-very seldom possible.”</p>
-
-<p>Ferret made a little movement as if
-he were going to protest against quite
-such a bald bit of cruel treatment of an
-innocent baby, but he remembered his
-duty and held his tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, is that the law?” asked Kate,
-with wide eyes. “But surely there must
-be some foreigners who are as good as
-English people.”</p>
-
-<p>“There may be,” admitted the Inspector
-sorrowfully; “but the law don’t
-believe it if it can help it. Now, Miss
-Mettleby, governesses and servants
-has opportunities. They sometimes
-hear and see a good deal that is said
-and done by the gentry. Mr. and Mrs.
-Fair never quarrel, I suppose, about a
-party by the name of Mendes, do they?”</p>
-
-<p>The shrewd officer of the law regretted
-his words as soon as he had
-spoken them, for Kate sprang to her
-feet, burning with shame and indignation.</p>
-
-<p>“You mistake, sir!” she cried
-fiercely. “I am not a servant, but
-the friend of Mrs. Maxwell Fair. And
-if I were a servant, do you suppose—I
-despise your insulting innuendo!
-And I tell you that Mr. Fair is utterly
-incapable of the crime which I can see
-that your bloodhound, Mr. Ferret
-there, thinks he has committed. I am
-going.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are going in a moment—when
-I allow you to do so,” returned
-the Inspector, anxious to retrieve his
-mistake, but also desirous to let her
-understand that he had authority.
-“Now don’t be foolish, miss. You
-fly off into a rage quite unnecessarily, I
-assure you. Mr. Ferret neither makes
-nor implies any charge of any sort
-against Mr. Fair, you know. Now be
-calm and simply answer my questions—you
-will have to answer them here or
-in court, remember. You have heard
-Mr. and Mrs. Fair speak of one Don
-Pablo Mendes, I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—many times, but always with
-kindness,” replied Kate stiffly.</p>
-
-<p>“Good,” said Sharpe benignly.
-“Now we are getting on. And this
-Don Pablo Mendes has been at the
-house frequently, has he not?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never, as far as I know, until
-today,” answered Kate, still far from
-mollified. “Mrs. Fair has been—but,
-no, I sha’n’t say that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I say, don’t half say things in
-that way, you know,” exclaimed the
-Inspector, nettled. Then, coaxingly:
-“You see, miss, when a witness says
-half of a thing, the law compels
-us to piece it out as we think best.
-So out with it. Mrs. Fair has seen
-Mendes somewhere away from home—you
-were going to say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Kate, scarlet with
-shame at the man’s seeming implication,
-and not a little annoyed by his
-almost supernatural ability to piece
-out, as he put it, her half sentences;
-“but, sir, I’d have you understand
-that Mrs. Fair always consulted Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[Pg 243]</span>
-Fair before meeting Mr. Mendes—always.”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt,” answered Sharpe, with
-a look of lofty elevation above her implied
-rebuke. “Now, miss, don’t please
-see more than is in my words. And
-don’t be afraid either. Remember, it
-is this Spanish gent, Mendes, and not
-either your Mr. or Mrs. Fair, that we
-are looking for.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank God for that,” murmured
-Kate, beginning to break down visibly.</p>
-
-<p>Sharpe, on a wink from Ferret,
-waited a few seconds while Ferret
-fetched a glass of water, which the
-wretched girl drank eagerly—with a
-poor little smile of thanks that made
-the susceptible Ferret wish Mendes
-had never been born. This diversion
-greatly cleared the atmosphere at
-once.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you happen to know who
-Mendes is and why we want him?”
-asked the Inspector finally, with the
-air of a gossip rather than that of an
-inquisitor, which had the effect he desired,
-for Kate looked up fearlessly now.</p>
-
-<p>“I have no idea,” she answered
-promptly, glad to be able again to tell
-the truth. Then, adding with the
-former tone of apology to truth: “All
-I ask is that you send nobody to our
-house—now that Mr. Mendes has gone
-away from it. You won’t, will you?
-Please, please, do not!”</p>
-
-<p>“It would be nonsense to look for
-him when he’s gone, wouldn’t it?”
-laughed Sharpe. “And you know we
-never do nonsensical things when we
-know it. That will do, I think, miss.
-You may go, if you wish.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, sir,” gasped Kate, with
-alacrity. “And don’t you see that if
-Mendes has committed some great
-crime he would be very likely to commit
-suicide? So I don’t see why you
-should think that—now, don’t laugh.”</p>
-
-<p>Her last words were addressed to
-Ferret, who did not know that she had
-an eye on him. When she closed the
-door and they heard her pass into the
-outer passage, it was with anything
-but a smile that Ferret looked up at his
-chief and said: “Well, by all that’s
-holy—did you ever?”</p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER VII</h3>
-
-<p>Miss Mettleby took a cab and
-was soon stretched upon her bed
-more than ever torn and tortured
-by the perfect vortex of vague conjecture
-and too actual knowledge
-which now dragged her and the man
-she loved and her whole world down
-to some indefinite but certain ruin.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime Inspector Sharpe
-disposed of two cases that had just
-been brought in, and then sending for
-Ferret, the two penetrating, cool,
-keen-scented gentlemen sat on opposite
-sides of the little table in the
-Inspector’s private office and discussed
-the rapidly developing situation.</p>
-
-<p>“But what the devil does it all
-mean?” inquired Sharpe, showing by his
-graver and tenser expression that the
-case was passing from an ordinary
-piece of blackmail, involving a few
-unimportant foreigners, to a very
-genuine mystery of much more serious
-aspect, involving not an English gentleman
-merely, but the particular
-English gentleman who was at that
-moment in the eye of the public.</p>
-
-<p>“Mean? Mean?” answered Ferret,
-leaning back with an air of immense
-professional eagerness. “Why, man,
-can’t you see what it means? In the
-first place, something happened after
-I left the house that changed the dear
-little governess lady’s mind. She was
-told to leave the house, to follow the
-Cuban, you see. Well, the Cuban
-didn’t go out as the little one so
-prettily lied to you. I know this
-because I had five of our trustiest
-men watching every entrance to the
-house. So, for some reason the girl
-has joined Fair in his unaccountable
-effort to keep the rum chap out of
-our hands. There was a row of some
-sort just after I left the house, for
-Wilson, whom I let into the place, saw
-them all suddenly rush up from the
-dinner-table, but, as they came back
-presently, Wilson didn’t go up to the
-library—especially as he saw pretty
-Kate slip out into the street. Getting
-thickish, eh? Well, sir, the shot that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[Pg 244]</span>
-we heard about seven o’clock was
-fired in Fair’s house, for I saw his
-revolver lying on the library-table with
-one chamber empty. How’s that for
-your little game?”</p>
-
-<p>“This is getting interesting,” muttered
-the Inspector.</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it just?” answered Ferret,
-sitting up triumphantly. “And what
-did I tell you? I knew there was a
-deal more than just an innocent bit
-of Mendes’s regular little practice.
-The papers will be worth reading, sir,
-tomorrow or the day after. I wish
-this governess, though, was out of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have the house well watched?”
-asked the Inspector.</p>
-
-<p>“Rather,” answered Ferret, with
-one of his expressive winks. “Wilson
-and Banks and Thorpe and two others.
-They won’t let very much get through
-their fingers. Another thing. The
-Fairs are closing the house tomorrow
-morning all of a sudden. All the servants
-have been notified. Fair himself
-will spend the day at Drayton Hall—you
-know, old Sir Nelson Poynter’s
-place in Surrey—and the missis and
-the kids will go to Paris. I quietly
-read the two telegrams that Fair sent
-off to engage the rooms for them in
-Paris. Wilson will follow them, while
-Thorpe will run down to Drayton Hall
-tonight to see how things lie. Tomorrow
-after they have gone I shall
-give the house a thorough looking
-over, I can promise you. Sharpe, my
-lad, we’ve struck a gold mine!”</p>
-
-<p>“But what do you make of it all?”
-asked Sharpe. “I confess that I’m in
-the dark. Have you got at the real
-situation?”</p>
-
-<p>“Walls have ears—and even minor
-police officials have a liking for knowing
-what their superiors are at—so,
-your ear,” replied Ferret, going to the
-Inspector’s side and whispering to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! You don’t mean that?” exclaimed
-Sharpe, jumping up.</p>
-
-<p>“How’s that for a bit of sensation
-for the newspapers? Maxwell Fair—Phew!”</p>
-
-<p>“But how ever did you come to
-talk to the young lady at the house?
-Was that quite prudent, do you think?
-Isn’t she a bit skittish?” asked the
-Inspector when he resumed his seat.
-“Poor little innocent!—what a fool
-she was to come here and tell us that
-he didn’t do it, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, the governess—ain’t she a
-circus?” laughed Ferret. “What a
-deep one to come and tell us not to
-send any horrid detectives! You see,
-she was in the library when I went up
-there during their dinner to have a
-look round for the cause of the shooting,
-and, incidentally, for the Cuban,
-though I knew he must be higher up
-in the house somewhere—attic probably.
-I had to get the blooming girlie
-out of the library, so I opened up
-my little plan about having her watch
-for the Cuban, and she took to it like
-a trout after a fly. That was before
-whatever happened a little while
-afterward which opened her eyes
-and changed her bearings. When I
-went out of the house I let Wilson into
-it, to be ready to investigate the
-library when pretty Kate came down
-to watch the door—but the row that
-sent them all hurrying from the dinner-table
-altered that. I stood just over
-the way under a tree, when out comes
-my little lady, not following the Cuban,
-for he hadn’t come out of the house,
-but all by her lone and all of a blue
-funk. She hops into a cab at the
-corner and I into the next one—and
-she got here half a minute ahead of
-me. Glory what luck we’re playing
-to; why, it’s better than——”</p>
-
-<p>He was interrupted by the telephone
-bell. The Inspector answered
-it: “Well? Who? Yes. Yes. Ferret
-is here—with me in my office. What?
-No? Wait—Ferret will speak to you.
-Good. All right.”</p>
-
-<p>Sharpe turned to Ferret: “Here,
-Ferret, it’s Wilson—says something’s
-up. Better get it yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>Ferret grabbed the instrument
-eagerly. The case was developing a
-trifle too rapidly. What could Wilson,
-whom he had left under the stairs at
-Mr. Fair’s, want so soon?</p>
-
-<p class="center">(<i>To be continued.</i>)</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[Pg 245]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="The_Say_of_Reform_Editors" id="The_Say_of_Reform_Editors">&nbsp;</a>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>The Say of Reform Editors</i></h2></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WHEN the German Emperor rides
-on the railroads a detailed bill
-for every locomotive and every
-car used is sent him and he pays
-the bill. In the United States when the
-President rides on the railroads no bill is
-sent him and no charge is made. In Germany
-the government owns the railroads
-and in this country they are private property.—<i>Nebraska
-Independent.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Government</span> ownership would adjust
-the matter of railroad rebates equitably.
-And it would do more. It would prevent
-the railroads extorting from the government
-untold thousands of money which
-they at present filch from the public treasury
-by excessive charge for hauling mail
-cars. This money would come mighty
-handy in extending the rural free mail delivery
-system. And it could be spent to
-good advantage in raising the salaries of the
-postal clerks who deserve so well at the
-hands of the people. Or it could be turned
-to account in lowering the price of letter
-postage. There’s a thousand and one better
-ways to spend the people’s money than
-handing it over to the corporations that are
-always soaking it to the government every
-time they get a chance.—<i>What’s The Use?</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">If</span> President Roosevelt sincerely and vigorously
-attempts to obtain any reform legislation
-during his administration, two-thirds
-of his support will come from the
-opposition. His own party, owned by and
-mortgaged to the few, is absolutely powerless
-to effect any good. There are a few
-prominent kittens in the party who simulate
-a little independent thinking, but
-when the mother cat gives them a collective
-swat in the face, they lie down and
-put their chins on their paws and mew in
-obedient accents that they are now good
-cats.—<i>Chadron (Neb.) Times.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A certain</span> Wall Street firm was engaged
-in doing business as curb brokers and “washing”
-a certain stock.</p>
-
-<p>Do you know exactly what “washing”
-stock is? It is simply a fake auction on a big
-scale. It is the kind of thing that puts a
-little man in jail if he is caught doing it.
-It is the kind of thing that makes respectable
-fortunes for some of the big men.</p>
-
-<p>This firm was engaged in “washing” a
-certain copper stock. An officer of the dignified
-National City Bank was interested in
-this stock. He had agreed to take a certain
-amount of it at a very low price, and he
-wanted to unload it on the public at a very
-much higher price.</p>
-
-<p>The brokers proceeded to “wash” the
-stock accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>Let us say that the stock was worth
-fifty cents per share. One broker bid
-fifty-five cents for a thousand shares,
-and they all pretended that it was a legitimate
-transaction—in reality it was a fake
-bid and a fake transaction.</p>
-
-<p>The other broker engaged in the skin
-game would then bid sixty cents for another
-thousand shares—and so it would go.</p>
-
-<p>Not one person engaged in the swindle
-was actually buying a single share of stock.
-They simply bid back and forth, pretending
-to buy it, and putting the price up day by
-day.</p>
-
-<p>The crowd of poor fools that believe
-in the “honor” of these disreputable
-Wall Street gamblers looked on at this mock
-auction, this fake selling and buying of
-stocks, amazed and excited by the constantly
-increasing values.</p>
-
-<p>Occasionally some gullible creature outside
-the combination that was doing the
-stock “washing” would come in and in good
-faith buy some shares, actually paying his
-good money for the worthless stuff.</p>
-
-<p>This went on until they had forced the
-price of the stock up to a high figure, ten
-times what it was worth. During this
-“washing” operation, they had succeeded
-in working off a good deal of this stock on
-the public that believed the crooked sales
-were really genuine.—<i>New York Journal.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Chicago Union Traction Street Railway
-Company has issued bonds and stocks
-to the amount of $112,500,000, or at the
-rate of $135,507 a mile. The capitalization
-of all the street railways in Massachusetts
-only amounts to $110,000,000. In Massachusetts,
-stock watering is prohibited, and
-the average capitalization of trolley lines
-in that state is only $390.67 per mile. The
-sort of work done in Chicago is theft, and
-the men who did it, although they occupy
-the chief seats in the churches, are thieves.
-There is not a preacher in the whole city
-that dare say so, and that makes them
-accomplices of the thieves.—<i>Nebraska Independent.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Chicago <i>Record-Herald</i>, a Republican
-paper, refers to the fact that the Federal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[Pg 246]</span>
-Grand Jury returned indictments against
-Senators Mitchell, Burton and Dietrich,
-and says: “In each of these deplorable
-instances the charges involve corruption
-and moral turpitude—a bitter reflection
-for a legislative body proud of its traditions
-and jealous of its prerogatives and reputation.
-The low tone of political morality
-receives a painful and striking illustration
-in these successive blows to senatorial prestige.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Record-Herald</i> adds: “The possibility
-of further disgrace and degradation would
-be greatly diminished by substituting for
-indirect elections the plan of popular election
-of Federal senators.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Record-Herald</i> might also have said
-that the fact that there are a number of
-prominent United States senators who have
-not yet been reached by indictment and
-will perhaps never be reached by indictment,
-who serve on the Senate floor as the
-representatives of special interests, provides
-another striking argument in favor of the
-popular election of senators.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Record-Herald</i> might also have said
-that the fact that New York, Minnesota and
-Nebraska have during the present year elected
-to the Senate men who were picked by
-the railroads provides another strong argument
-in favor of the popular election of
-senators.—<i>The Commoner.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">An</span> Eastern woman, who “wants to do
-something for the poor laboring man,”
-threatens to start a school of physical culture
-for them in New York City.—<i>Rocky
-Mountain News.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Bee</span> stings cure rheumatism, but a more
-drastic treatment is necessary for the man
-troubled with politics.—<i>Eastern Sunday Call.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> are persons who, with their backs
-to the future, see no objects but those that
-are past. Of history in the making they
-know nothing. Such are those public men,
-editors and statesmen who are now asserting
-that Jeffersonism has given way to
-Hamiltonism. The truth is that Jeffersonism
-has been giving way to Hamiltonism
-ever since Chief-Justice Marshall began on
-the judicial bench to retrieve for Hamiltonism
-the utter defeat it had suffered at the
-polls. Step by step the Hamiltonian principle
-was built up by judges until the Civil
-War, and by judges, Congresses and
-Presidents of all parties after that war.
-But the day of Hamiltonism is now passing.
-A new regime is setting in. The pendulum
-is poised for the swing back to Jeffersonism.
-Those who think they see Hamiltonism
-looming up ahead are really looking backward.—<i>Chicago
-Public.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> blame men for bribing legislators;
-yet sometimes they are in the position of
-the fellow who is “stood up” by a footpad,
-with the demand for his money or his life.—<i>San
-Francisco Star.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> pretentious Apes, in either finance,
-literature, religion or moral philosophy,
-are making faces at Thomas W. Lawson, of
-“Frenzied Finance” fame.</p>
-
-<p>Making faces, through such mediums as
-<i>Collier’s Weekly</i> and others of that ilk, is all
-they can do. The weekly tasks of a half-dozen
-of such writers, the rapidity and the
-versatility of Thomas W. Lawson shows that
-he could walk all over them in ten minutes.
-The exhibitions of these hirelings exemplifies
-the old story of the frog trying to swell
-himself up to the size of the ox.—<i>The Patriarch.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Populist ideas are well to the front.
-It is difficult to pick up a magazine or newspaper
-of any kind now without finding favorable
-opinions of some Populist measure,
-particularly as to the reforms in voting
-and the management of monopolies. The
-Populists never stood so high in the respect
-and admiration of the people. It is a time
-when state and local committees should be
-up and stirring. Whenever and wherever
-an improvement comes, the Populists will
-be the kernel of the problem. The Populists
-will be required to furnish the working
-plans and should be prepared to receive
-their friends.—<i>Joliet News.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is a lamentable fact, but true nevertheless,
-that there is more absolute want and
-poverty in these United States than ever
-before.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding we have made so much
-cotton here in the South that we cannot
-sell it for enough to pay the cost of production,
-there are thousands in our Southland
-who are shivering with cold for want
-of needed clothing. Though our prairies
-have furnished trainloads of choicest cattle,
-our people are forced to go hungry or
-pay robber prices for meat. Our coal mines
-have yielded coal enough to warm every hut
-in all the land, yet thousands are freezing
-for want of fuel. Our charity associations
-are snowed under by the inordinate demands
-for help from the unemployed. Even in
-New York there are forty per cent. more idle
-men today than ever before.</p>
-
-<p>We Southern people know but little of
-the effects of the concentration of wealth
-in the hands of a few men; of the grinding
-poverty which prevails in the congested
-centres of population; of the lavish
-extravagance of the pampered spawn of
-plutocracy and its parasites. It will come
-to us later unless we set to work measures
-to check it at once.—<i>Southern Mercury.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">While</span> the bacillus of populism is still at
-work in the Democratic Party, it has also
-attached the railroad arm of the Republican
-machine.—Our Standard.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[Pg 247]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Our</span> readers will remember the article
-we printed a short time ago by Mr. Eltweed
-Pomeroy, showing how the voters
-of one ward of the city of Los Angeles,
-Cal., “recalled” an alderman charged
-with corruption. That was the first time
-in the United States the Recall has been
-used. About six weeks ago San Diego
-voted to amend its constitution by adopting
-the Initiative, Referendum and the
-Recall, and the Legislature has just ratified
-this. We understand that Pasadena
-has also just adopted the Recall, though it
-has had the Initiative and Referendum
-for about a year. Thus government by
-the people extends itself. The evils of
-democracy can best be cured by more
-democracy.—<i>Independent (N. Y.).</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Reports</span> of suffering from poverty in
-London are harrowing. At a relief meeting
-on the 31st it was reported that 200,000
-people in that city alone are living on the
-verge of starvation. In the midst of all
-this suffering there is something shocking,
-in spite of the evident good intentions of
-those in attendance, about the self-satisfaction
-of the luxurious persons constituting
-the relief meeting at which this report was
-made. The meeting was held in the house
-of a duke, whose great income flows unearned
-into his private coffers from the common
-inheritance of all Londoners. A
-duchess, whose family lives in luxury on
-incomes also wrung unearned from people
-who work, occupied the chair. Among
-those participating were other titled personages
-whose luxurious incomes are enjoyed
-at the expense of their starving fellows
-whose sufferings they had assembled
-to relieve. But all they proposed to do was
-to spend pennies here and there for sweet
-charity. Sweet charity! Yes, sweet; so
-sweet to those who dole it out, and so bitter
-to those who must humbly take it or starve.
-Not one word escaped the lips of any of this
-charitable assemblage in recognition of the
-element of justice. To know that 200,000
-fellow men and women were on the verge of
-starvation excited their human sympathies;
-but that the starving horde were
-starving because privileged drones and
-titled parasites revel in unearned incomes,
-clearly manifest as is the relation here of
-cause and effect, did not concern the relief
-meeting. It was something like this that
-Tolstoy had in mind when with characteristic
-simplicity and directness he said: “The
-rich are willing to do anything for the poor
-people but get off their backs.”—<i>Chicago
-Public.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Democratic mule is dead.</p>
-
-<p>The last echo of his heroic brays has
-died away.</p>
-
-<p>His tail lies limp on the bare ground, like
-the banner of a defeated army.</p>
-
-<p>His ears lop together and lie stiff and
-lifeless, like fallen flagstaffs from the conquered
-walls of a dismantled fortress.</p>
-
-<p>There is no breath to moisten the lips
-that gave forth such pleasant music.</p>
-
-<p>Around him stand the doctors.</p>
-
-<p>The autopsy begins.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Bryan gently, almost lovingly, lifts
-the tail of the corpse and examines it carefully.</p>
-
-<p>“It was Spinal Belmontitis,” he says.
-“That’s what killed him.”</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Gumshoe Stone is down on the
-ground examining the ears.</p>
-
-<p>“I think it was Parkeritis.”</p>
-
-<p>“It might be a complication of both,”
-answered Dr. Bryan.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Tillman gritted his teeth and spit like
-a cat.</p>
-
-<p>“I know a name for it,” he hissed, “but
-I have no language to express it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I pronounce it damphoolishness,” answered
-Dr. Hogg, of Texas.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a slow disease,” chimed in Dr.
-Daniel.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s had it a long time,” said Dr.
-Hearst.</p>
-
-<p>“But it never affected his voice,” suggested
-Dr. Williams.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Bryan blushed and dropped the
-mule’s tail.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s try a reorganization battery on
-him,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s been organized and reorganized
-too often now,” grunted Hogg.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s prop him up anyhow; maybe we
-can ride him again,” insisted Dr. Bryan.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s rest,” the others said, and they all
-sat down.—<i>Morgan’s Buzz-Saw.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="f120"><i>Influence of Letters</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">JOHNSON—What do you think of those correspondence schools?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Bronson</span>—I guess love is about the only thing in this world you can learn
-by correspondence.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="f120"><i>A Bad Break</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">SUITOR—I’d marry your daughter if she didn’t have a single dollar.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Rocksey</span>—Then you’re a bigger fool even than I thought you were. Get
-out of my house at once.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[Pg 248]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="News_Record" id="News_Record">&nbsp;</a>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>News Record</i></h2></div>
-
-<p class="center">FROM FEBRUARY 7 TO MARCH 7, 1905</p>
-
-<div class="news">
-
-<h3><i>Government and Politics</i></h3>
-
-<p class="day">February 7.—The Navy Department awards
-contracts for armor plate to two companies
-belonging to the Steel Trust, notwithstanding
-the fact that the Midvale
-Steel Co., which is outside the Trust,
-underbid the other two companies $56
-per ton, or over $75,000 in the aggregate.
-Secretary of the Navy Paul Morton
-says the award was made because
-he feared the Midvale Steel Co. could
-not furnish the plates on time.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 8.—The charge is made in the
-Wyoming Legislature that United States
-Senator Francis E. Warren has three
-persons on the payroll who are never
-in Washington and that the salaries
-are turned over to Warren. A resolution
-to investigate the charge is tabled.</p>
-
-<p>The National Red Cross Society is reorganized
-with Honorable William H.
-Taft, Secretary of War, at its head.</p>
-
-<p>Honorable Judson Harmon, of Cincinnati,
-and F. M. Judson, of St. Louis, are appointed
-special attorneys to investigate
-the granting of rebates by the Santa
-Fé Railroad.</p>
-
-<p>Representative Comerford is expelled
-from the Illinois Legislature for making
-charges of graft against the members.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 9.—The President signs the bill
-providing for the building of railroads
-in the Philippines.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 10.—The United States takes over
-the custom house collections at Monte
-Cristi, Santo Domingo.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 11.—It is announced at the White
-House that all the members of the
-Cabinet will be reappointed except
-Postmaster-General Wynne, who will
-be made Consul-General at London.
-George B. Cortelyou, Chairman of the
-Republican National Committee, will be
-the new Postmaster-General.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 13.—Secretary of State Hay announces
-that the arbitration treaties,
-because of Senate amendments, will not
-be presented to the governments with
-which they were originally negotiated.</p>
-
-<p>President Roosevelt, speaking at a Lincoln
-Day banquet in New York, defines
-his position on the race question.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 15.—The President sends the Santo
-Domingo treaty to the Senate, with
-a letter upholding the Monroe Doctrine,
-but insisting that the smaller American
-republics must pay their debts.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 16.—President Roosevelt orders a
-thorough investigation of the Standard
-Oil Trust in accordance with the House
-resolution.</p>
-
-<p>Secretary of the Interior Hitchcock calls
-the lease of the oil lands of the Osage
-Indians to the Standard Oil interests
-“a public scandal.” This lease was
-made during President Cleveland’s second
-term.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 17.—Six supporters of J. Edward
-Addicks desert him in the Delaware
-Senatorial fight.</p>
-
-<p>Government agents start to Kansas to
-conduct the inquiry into the Standard
-Oil Co.</p>
-
-<p>The West Virginia State Senate appoints
-a committee to investigate the charges
-that the Governor of the State has been
-in collusion with Standard Oil agents.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 18.—Isthmian Canal Commissioners
-assert that they are authorized by
-the President to retain fees received as
-directors of the Panama Railway.</p>
-
-<p>President Roosevelt receives a portrait of
-the Empress Dowager of China, sent as
-an evidence of China’s good will to the
-United States.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 20.—Ex-Chief-Justice Alton B.
-Parker appears before the New York
-Court of Appeals to argue a case in
-favor of the New York City Interborough
-Railway Company, whose chief
-owner is August Belmont.</p>
-
-<p>The United States Supreme Court sustains
-the Kansas Anti-Trust law, affirming
-sentence of fine and imprisonment
-against Edmund J. Smiley, an
-agent of the Missouri Pacific Railway
-Company.</p>
-
-<p>A special committee of the California Legislature
-recommends the expulsion of
-five State Senators on the charge of
-soliciting and accepting bribes.</p>
-
-<p>The Kansas Legislature, by concurrent
-resolution, asks the annulment of the
-Government’s blanket lease of Osage
-lands to the Standard Oil Company.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 21.—The Government begins
-criminal prosecution of the Beef Trust
-before a Grand Jury at Chicago called
-especially for that purpose.</p>
-
-<p>Despite the protests against it, Secretary
-Hitchcock decides to extend the leases
-of the Osage Indian oil lands.</p>
-
-<p>The Illinois Legislature orders an investigation
-of the oil pipe lines of the State,
-and offers to loan the State of Kansas<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[Pg 249]</span>
-$100,000 to aid in the fight against the
-Standard Oil monopoly.</p>
-
-<p>While J. Edward Addicks has lost all
-but about fifteen of his supporters in
-the Delaware Legislature, these decide
-to make the deadlock permanent and
-thus prevent the election of a United
-States Senator at this session.</p>
-
-<p>President Truesdale, of the Lackawanna
-Railroad, criticizes President Roosevelt’s
-attitude on rate legislation.</p>
-
-<p>At a dinner of the National Roosevelt
-League given in New York a criticism
-of the President’s message of condolence
-on the death of the Grand Duke
-Sergius was loudly cheered.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 23.—The Interstate Commerce
-Commission hands down a decision that
-the Santa Fé and Southern Pacific railroads
-have violated the law by entering
-into a pool.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 24.—The Department of Justice
-begins an investigation of the Tobacco
-Trust.</p>
-
-<p>The Board of Trade of New York City
-decides to begin a campaign to force an
-investigation of the Telephone Trust.</p>
-
-<p>Governor Edwin Warfield, of Maryland, in
-a speech in New York warmly commends
-President Roosevelt’s policy on
-the negro question.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 25.—The Isthmian Canal Commission
-reports in favor of the Panama
-Canal being constructed at sea level
-with two or three sets of locks.</p>
-
-<p>Despite the higher offer made by Kansas
-citizens, President Roosevelt decides
-that the lease of Osage oil lands to the
-Standard Oil interests must stand.</p>
-
-<p>The Democrats of Chicago nominate Judge
-Edward F. Dunn for Mayor on a municipal
-ownership platform.</p>
-
-<p>Secretary of the Treasury Leslie M. Shaw
-defends the action of his predecessor,
-Lyman J. Gage, in selling the New
-York Custom House to the City Bank.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph V. Quarles, of Wisconsin, whose
-term as United States Senator ends
-March 4, is appointed United States
-District Judge. The La Follette men
-bitterly oppose the appointment.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 27.—Four members of the California
-State Senate are expelled from
-that body for accepting bribes.</p>
-
-<p>The United States Supreme Court sustains
-the Texas Anti-Trust Act under
-which two oil companies were forced to
-give up their licenses as a penalty for
-pooling.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 28.—Word is received at Washington
-that Colombia will resume diplomatic
-relations with the United States.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 1.—Secretary of State Hay, in a letter
-to the Haytian minister, says that
-the United States has no intention to
-annex Santo Domingo and “would not
-take it as a gift.”</p>
-
-<p>In the contest for the Governorship of
-Colorado, thirteen Republican members
-of the committee appointed to conduct
-the contest report in favor of
-seating ex-Governor James H. Peabody,
-nine Democratic members sign a report
-favorable to Governor Alva Adams and
-five Republican members refuse to sign
-either report.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 3.—Commissioner of Corporations
-James R. Garfield reports on the Beef
-Trust, his findings generally favoring
-the packers.</p>
-
-<p>Former Land Commissioner Binger Hermann,
-of Oregon, is indicted in Washington
-for destroying public records.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 4.—Theodore Roosevelt is sworn in
-as President of the United States in the
-presence of the largest assemblage and
-the most elaborate military display ever
-seen at an inauguration.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3><i>The Doings of Congress.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="news">
-
-<p class="day">February 7.—The Senate passes the Statehood
-bill, but amends it to admit New
-Mexico as one State, leaving Arizona
-as a Territory. Oklahoma and Indian
-Territory constitute one State, as in
-the House bill.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 8.—The electoral vote is canvassed
-by a joint session of the House and Senate,
-and the result is declared as 336
-for Roosevelt and Fairbanks, to 140 for
-Parker and Davis.</p>
-
-<p>The Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs
-disregards the wishes of the President
-and amends the arbitration treaties
-by striking out in each the word
-“agreement” and substituting therefor
-the word “treaty.”</p>
-
-<p>C. W. Post, of the Postal Progress League,
-asks the Senate to expel Thomas C.
-Platt, of New York, on the ground that
-Platt is the President of the United
-States Express Co., and is not a fair
-representative of the people on any
-question involving the interests of that
-corporation.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 9.—The Townsend-Esch bill, giving
-the Interstate Commerce Commission
-power to fix railroad rates, passes
-the House by a vote of 326 to 17.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 10.—The Senate begins the impeachment
-trial of Judge Charles
-Swayne, of Florida.</p>
-
-<p>The House Republicans decide to stand
-by their own Statehood bill, refusing to
-concur in the Senate amendments.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 11.—The Senate, by an overwhelming
-vote, amends the arbitration
-treaties, thus virtually breaking with
-the President. It insists that all treaties
-must be ratified by the Senate.</p>
-
-<p>Testimony was introduced in the Swayne
-impeachment trial to show that the defendant
-had falsely certified his expenses.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 13.—Representative John A. Sullivan,
-of Massachusetts, makes a sensational
-attack on Representative William<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[Pg 250]</span>
-R. Hearst, of New York, and Mr. Hearst
-in reply shows that Sullivan was once
-indicted for murder in Massachusetts.</p>
-
-<p>Senator Bacon, of Georgia, introduces a
-resolution calling for the facts relative
-to the United States seizing custom
-houses in Santo Domingo.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 14.—Senators Lodge and Spooner
-defend the action of the Senate in
-amending the arbitration treaties.</p>
-
-<p>Representative Littlefield, of Maine,
-warns Congress that it is riding for an
-$80,000,000 deficit.</p>
-
-<p>The Senate passes the Agricultural Appropriation
-bill, but amends it by prohibiting
-drawbacks on wheat imported
-to make flour for export.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 15.—The House, by unanimous
-vote, adopts a resolution introduced by
-Representative Campbell, of Kansas,
-which directs the Department of Commerce
-and Labor to investigate the
-Standard Oil Trust.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 16.—The House declares the Senate’s
-amendment of the Agricultural
-Appropriation bill a violation of the
-Constitution.</p>
-
-<p>The House passes the bill for the government
-of the Panama Canal zone.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 17.—The House Committee investigating
-the Panama Railway hears testimony
-to the effect that the commissioners
-pocket the fees paid them as
-directors. The Senate withdraws its
-amendment to the Agricultural Appropriation
-bill.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 20.—By the aid of 46 Democratic
-votes the Naval Appropriation bill, providing
-for two new battleships, passes
-the House.</p>
-
-<p>Representative Baker, of New York, denounces
-President Roosevelt for having
-sent a message of condolence on the
-death of the Grand Duke Sergius.</p>
-
-<p>Representative William R. Hearst introduces
-a bill to make oil pipe lines common
-carriers, thus taking them out of
-the exclusive control of the Standard
-Oil Company.</p>
-
-<p>Friends of the freight-rate bill announce
-that they have abandoned hope of its
-becoming a law at this session.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 21.—A letter is made public from
-former Senator William E. Chandler, of
-New Hampshire, to Senator Elkins,
-Chairman of the Senate Committee on
-Interstate Commerce, urging the passage
-of the rate bill and predicting that,
-if this is not done, government ownership
-of railroads will result.</p>
-
-<p>The Senate Committee on Naval Affairs
-decides to report favorably the House
-bill providing for two additional battleships.</p>
-
-<p>Senator T. M. Patterson, of Colorado, says
-that if the government does not control
-the railways the people will demand
-absolute government ownership.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 23.—The House Indian Committee
-decides to investigate the Osage oil
-land lease.</p>
-
-<p>Senator Chauncey M. Depew declares in
-favor of government regulation of railroad
-rates.</p>
-
-<p>Stuyvesant Fish, President of the Illinois
-Central Railroad, tells the Senate Committee
-on Interstate Commerce that
-President Roosevelt, in a private conference,
-urged reduction of freight rates
-as long ago as 1902.</p>
-
-<p>The House and Senate conferees on the
-Army Appropriation bill decide to give
-General Miles retired pay instead of full
-pay, as at present.</p>
-
-<p>The Senate passes the Panama Canal bill
-with the clause destroying the Panama
-Canal Commission stricken out. Representative
-Bishop, of Michigan, attacks
-the River and Harbor bill and accuses
-fellow-members of being under the influence
-of the Great Lakes dredge owners.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 24.—The item of $130,600 for the
-rent of the old New York Custom House
-from the City Bank (Standard Oil) is
-stricken from the Civil Appropriation
-bill by the Committee of the Whole
-House. Mr. Sulzer (Dem.) leads in the
-attack on this item, and the vote striking
-it out is 90 to 77.</p>
-
-<p>Representative Vandiver, of Missouri, attacks
-the Armor Plate Trust and asks
-the Attorney-General why it has not
-been prosecuted.</p>
-
-<p>Senator Morgan, of Alabama, starts a filibuster
-against the Statehood bill.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 25.—Senator Hale, of Maine,
-makes sarcastic references to the Administration
-policy of “browbeating
-smaller Powers.”</p>
-
-<p>Arguments are concluded in the impeachment
-case of Judge Charles Swayne.</p>
-
-<p>Senator Morgan, of Alabama, lodges with
-the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee
-a formal protest against the action of
-President Roosevelt relating to Santo
-Domingo.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 27.—Senator Dryden, of New Jersey,
-at the supposed request of the
-President, introduces a bill establishing
-Federal supervision of insurance.</p>
-
-<p>Democratic leaders bitterly attack the
-President’s foreign policy in both the
-House and Senate.</p>
-
-<p>The Senate votes in favor of the House
-appropriation for two additional battleships.</p>
-
-<p>The Democrats of the House prevent the
-reinstatement of the appropriation for
-rent to the City Bank of New York,
-enough Republicans joining them to
-reverse the ruling of the Chair.</p>
-
-<p>The Senate, sitting as an Impeachment
-Court, declares Judge Charles Swayne,
-of Florida, innocent of all the charges
-against him.</p>
-
-<p>The House Committee on Interstate and
-Foreign Commerce resumes its investigation
-of the Panama Canal and Railroad,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[Pg 251]</span>
-and brings out testimony to the
-effect that supplies were bought without
-bids, and that the President’s instructions
-were not always heeded.</p>
-
-<p>The Naval Appropriation bill, as amended
-by the Senate, directs the Secretary
-of the Navy to investigate the cost of
-armor plate and report to the next
-Congress.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 28.—The Senate votes an amendment
-to the Indian Appropriation bill
-providing that a portion of the educational
-fund may go to sectarian schools.</p>
-
-<p>Senator Kearns, of Utah, in his farewell
-speech, makes a sensational attack on
-the Mormon Church, which he says is
-ruled by a “monarchy.”</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 1.—The day is spent on the appropriation
-bills, a large number of which
-are agreed to in conference, and pass
-both houses. The Senate does not attempt
-to reinstate the item for the rent
-of the New York Custom House from
-the Rockefeller bank. An objection by
-Representative Baker, of New York,
-prevents the President’s salary from being
-raised to $75,000. The House votes
-itself $190,000 for mileage for the “constructive
-recess.”</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 2.—Both houses spend the day on
-the appropriation bills. The Senate
-adopts the Kean resolution for a railroad
-rate inquiry during the recess.</p>
-
-<p>The Senate kills the $190,000 mileage
-grab of the House.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 3.—The Fifty-eighth Congress practically
-completes its work, both houses
-agreeing on all appropriation bills.
-Freight-rate legislation and the Statehood
-bill go over to the next Congress.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 4.—The Fifty-eighth Congress ends
-and the new Senate convenes in special
-session.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3><i>General Home News</i></h3>
-
-<div class="news">
-
-<p class="day">February 7.—August W. Machen and the
-Groff brothers, the Post-Office Department
-officials convicted in the postal
-fraud cases, and whose sentence has
-just been confirmed by the United
-States Supreme Court, are taken to
-prison.</p>
-
-<p>It is announced that an international
-parcels post is to be established between
-Great Britain, France and the
-United States.</p>
-
-<p>The Standard Oil interests are reported
-to have made a $20,000,000 purchase
-of stock, thus securing control of the
-Santa Fé Railroad system.</p>
-
-<p>The Interstate Commerce Commission
-hears the charges brought against the
-Coal Trust by the Honorable William R.
-Hearst.</p>
-
-<p>The Board of Aldermen of New York
-City takes steps for the construction of
-a municipal electric-lighting plant.</p>
-
-<p>The State of Kansas continues its war on
-the Standard Oil Trust, the State
-Senate passing three bills providing for
-the erection of a State oil refinery, for
-making pipe lines common carriers,
-and for fixing freight rates in oil.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 8.—Henry C. Frick, of the Steel
-Trust, and Henry H. Rogers, of the
-Standard Oil Company, are elected
-directors of the Santa Fé Railroad.</p>
-
-<p>Elihu Root, former Secretary of War,
-leads an attack on the constitutionality
-of the New York State Barge
-Canal, which is opposed by the railroads,
-and which was supported by
-such an overwhelming majority in last
-fall’s election.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 10.—In the hearing of the Hearst
-case against the Coal Trust, the attorney
-of the Trust says in effect that
-the United States has no power over
-the corporation.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 13.—The Federal Grand Jury returns
-new indictments against Senator
-Mitchell and Representatives Hermann
-and Williamson, of Oregon, in the
-public land fraud cases.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 14.—A sensational war in high
-finance is begun between President
-Alexander, of the Equitable Life Assurance
-Association, and James H.
-Hyde, its First Vice-President and
-majority stockholder.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 15.—The Kansas House of Representatives
-passes the bill for a State
-oil refinery already passed by the
-Senate.</p>
-
-<p>The New York Legislature adopts a resolution
-directing an investigation of the
-Telephone Trust.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 16.—A truce is patched up between
-the warring factions of the
-Equitable Life Association on the
-promise of Vice-President Hyde to
-mutualize the company.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 17.—Governor Hoch, of Kansas,
-signs the bill appropriating $400,000
-for the erection of a State oil refinery.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 20.—Mrs. Jefferson Davis, in a
-letter to the public press, scores General
-Nelson A. Miles for having placed
-her husband in irons, and asks General
-Miles to publish a photographic copy of
-her alleged letter of thanks.</p>
-
-<p>An explosion in a coal mine at Virginia,
-Ala., entombs 160 men.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas W. Lawson, in <i>Everybody’s
-Magazine</i>, continues his story of the
-formation of the Amalgamated Copper
-Company, outlines its devious operations
-under Standard Oil, accuses
-James M. Beck, ex-Assistant Attorney-General
-of the United States, of perjury,
-and attacks James H. Eckels, ex-Comptroller
-of the Currency, for his
-part in the infamous Cleveland bond
-deal.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 21.—Mayor George B. McClellan
-and ex-Mayor Seth Low, of New York,
-appear before the Legislature at Albany<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[Pg 252]</span>
-to plead for a larger water supply for
-New York City, claiming that a few
-dry years would bring a water famine
-to the metropolis.</p>
-
-<p>President Mellen, of the New York, New
-Haven &amp; Hartford Railroad, refuses to
-arbitrate with the firemen who threaten
-a strike.</p>
-
-<p>Fifty of the 160 miners entombed by the
-explosion at Virginia, Ala., are known
-to be dead, and little hope is entertained
-for the remainder.</p>
-
-<p>A manuscript copy of one of Edgar Allan
-Poe’s poems sells for $1,000 in New
-York.</p>
-
-<p>John W. Gates and Joseph H. Hoadley
-claim to have secured control of the
-Tennessee Coal &amp; Iron Company.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 22.—Washington’s Birthday is
-generally celebrated throughout the
-United States and foreign nations.
-President Roosevelt is the chief orator
-at the University of Pennsylvania,
-which institution confers the degree of
-LL.D. on himself and Emperor William
-of Germany. A bust of Washington is
-presented to Congress by M. Jusserand,
-the French Ambassador.</p>
-
-<p>A “boodle fund” of $60,000 is produced
-in court at the trial of Charles Kratz at
-Butler, Mo. Thomas K.. Niedringhaus,
-Republican nominee for United
-States Senator, is summoned as a witness
-in the case.</p>
-
-<p>Professor William Osler, in his farewell
-address to Johns Hopkins University,
-states that men after forty years of age
-are “comparatively useless,” and after
-sixty are entirely so.</p>
-
-<p>President William R. Harper, of the University
-of Chicago, undergoes an operation
-for cancer while thousands of
-students and friends pray for his recovery.
-Physicians find cancer, but
-are unable to remove it.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel William F. Cody, “Buffalo Bill,”
-says he will apply to Howard Gould,
-the millionaire, for $125,000 furnished
-Mrs. Howard Gould when she was an
-actress.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 23.—General Nelson A. Miles, in
-the <i>Independent</i>, makes a rejoinder to
-those who had criticized him for placing
-Jefferson Davis in irons, publishing
-several letters, among them a note
-from Mrs. Davis thanking him for
-“kind answers,” and begging him to
-look after her husband’s health.</p>
-
-<p>Standard Oil stocks drop 10 points, or
-$41,000,000 in nine days.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 24.—The New York State Factory
-Inspector finds immigrant boys who
-are virtually made slaves and compelled
-to work twenty hours a day
-without pay.</p>
-
-<p>Governor Vardaman, of Mississippi, employs
-troops to protect from lynching a
-negro accused of having assaulted a
-white girl.</p>
-
-<p>Frank H. Monnett, ex-Attorney-General
-of Ohio, reaches Topeka, where he will
-assist in framing a case in the Supreme
-Court to oust the Standard Oil Company
-from the State.</p>
-
-<p>The plan for mutualizing the Equitable
-Life Assurance Society fails, and the
-war between the Hyde and Alexander
-factions goes on.</p>
-
-<p>The Vanderbilt interests purchase a majority
-of the stock of the Boston &amp;
-Maine Railroad.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 25.—Wall Street sees a wild day
-on the stock market because of a reported
-merger of the New York Central
-and Union Pacific railroads.</p>
-
-<p>Independent crude oil producers and refiners
-of Kansas, Ohio, Illinois and Indiana
-unite to fight the Standard Oil
-Company.</p>
-
-<p>A two-million-dollar fire sweeps Hot
-Springs, Ark., causing several deaths.</p>
-
-<p>Richard Croker, former chief of Tammany
-Hall, sails for Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>The Engineering Committee of the Isthmian
-Canal Commission estimates that
-a sea-level canal can be constructed for
-$230,500,000, and that the time occupied
-in building it will be ten or twelve
-years.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 26.—A five-million-dollar fire
-sweeps the river front at New Orleans.
-Elevators and piers destroyed, entailing
-future loss of export trade.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 27.—By the collapse of the second
-floor of the African Methodist Episcopal
-Zion Church, of Brooklyn, N. Y.,
-eleven persons are killed and several
-score injured.</p>
-
-<p>The Alexander-Hyde fight in the Equitable
-Life Assurance Society is carried
-into the courts.</p>
-
-<p>After making from $5,000,000 to $8,000,000
-in wheat, John W. Gates and his
-associates throw their holdings on the
-market, causing a sharp decline.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 1.—Three New York thieves testify
-that they have been dividing proceeds
-with the police to secure immunity
-from arrest.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 2.—H. Rider Haggard, the celebrated
-British novelist, visits the United States
-for the purpose of studying colonization
-plans for the poor.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 6.—A general strike is declared on all
-the Subway and Elevated lines of New
-York City.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3><i>The Russo-Japanese War</i></h3>
-
-<div class="news">
-
-<p class="day">February 7.—A growing peace sentiment is
-manifest in Russia, and press and public
-are becoming more outspoken
-against the further prosecution of a
-losing war.</p>
-
-<p>General Kuropatkin sends word of a raid
-in which fifty Japanese were killed.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 8.—Admiral Togo returns to his
-flagship, and resumes sea duty.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[Pg 253]</span></p>
-
-<p>Tokio hears of skirmishes near Mukden,
-in which the Russians were defeated.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 10.—The Russians retire from
-Songchin in Northeastern Corea.</p>
-
-<p>The Russian Baltic fleet is reported off
-Madagascar on its way to the Far East.</p>
-
-<p>General Stoessel says in answer to critics
-that he sacrificed glory to humanity in
-surrendering Port Arthur.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 12.—Field Marshal Oyama reports
-two skirmishes in which the
-Russians are defeated.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 13.—General Kuropatkin reports
-that a Japanese cavalry raid has destroyed
-several miles of railroad north
-of Mukden; also that the Japanese have
-resumed the bombardment of Lone
-Tree Hill.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 15.—A large force of Russian
-cavalry moves against the Japanese
-left in the vicinity of Heikontai.</p>
-
-<p>The Russian third Pacific squadron sails
-from Libau on its way east.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 16.—Russian attacks at Waitao
-Mountain are repulsed, and the cavalry
-force, which moved against the Japanese
-left, is forced to retreat.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 17.—General Grippenberg, who
-was removed from his command in the
-Russian army after the battle of Heikontai,
-is given an audience by the
-Czar, and says that General Kuropatkin
-refused to support him when victory
-was within reach.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 18.—The Russian strike closes a
-number of Government factories and
-interferes with manufacturing and shipping
-of war supplies.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 20.—Russian cavalry passes Japanese
-left flank near Hun River.
-Movement of no special importance,
-and losses insignificant.</p>
-
-<p>Russia’s third Pacific naval squadron
-passes through the Great Belt off Denmark
-on its way to join the Baltic
-squadron.</p>
-
-<p>Tokio gives out semi-official statement
-that Japanese casualties at the battle
-of Heikontai were near 10,000.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 21.—Lieutenant-General Stoessel,
-former commandant at Port Arthur,
-lands at Kaffa, Russia, on his return
-from the Far East, and is received by
-a cheering crowd.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 22.—A Cossack raid reaches
-nearly to the Yalu River, and destroys
-a Japanese depot of supplies.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 24.—The Japanese move northward
-along the eastern coast of Korea,
-fortify Port Lazareff and threaten
-Vladivostok.</p>
-
-<p>The Japanese move forward in the
-Tsinkhetchin district, and after desperate
-fighting force the Russians to
-abandon their base at Beresneff Hill.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 25.—A battle involving General
-Kuropatkin’s left flank opens south of
-Mukden.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Kogoro Takahira, Japanese Minister
-to the United States, says that his
-country has made no peace advances
-to Russia.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 26.—The battle brought on by
-the flank movement of the Russians is
-continued, and General Kuropatkin admits
-another defeat. Japanese capture
-the city of Tsinkhetchin, drive in
-the Russian outposts and cross the Sha
-River. It is reported that Oyama’s
-artillery is even throwing shells into
-Mukden.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 27.—A number of Russian naval
-officers returning from Port Arthur are
-entertained by Count Cassini in Washington.
-Other Russian officers from
-the same siege land at Victoria, British
-Columbia; in interviews they speak disparagingly
-of General Stoessel, one expressing
-the opinion that Stoessel
-showed himself to be “not a hero, but
-a coward.”</p>
-
-<p>Fighting continues about Mukden, the
-Japanese being the aggressors. It is
-now certain that General Kuroki has
-captured Tie Pass from the Russians.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 28.—The battle near Mukden becomes
-general along a 100-mile front,
-and involving 700,000 men.</p>
-
-<p>It is stated that the Cossacks lost 2,000
-men at Tsinkhetchin.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 1.—The Japanese make a terrific
-bombardment of Lone Tree or Putiloff
-Hill, employing for the purpose the
-great siege guns used at Port Arthur.</p>
-
-<p>Fierce fighting rages over the Sha River
-bridge, which is finally held by the
-Japanese.</p>
-
-<p>Field Marshal Oyama gradually forces the
-Russians back in the general battle
-about Mukden.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 2.—The Russian flanks are pushed
-backward and Kuropatkin’s entire
-army continues to retire before the
-onslaughts of the Japanese.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 3.—General Kuropatkin is in retreat
-toward Tie Pass and a portion of
-Oyama’s army reaches a point eleven
-miles west of Mukden.</p>
-
-<p>The battle around Mukden continues, the
-results generally favoring the Japanese.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 4.—General Kuropatkin’s left flank
-suffers and his position grows still more
-critical.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 5.—A fierce artillery engagement
-rages throughout the day and Marshal
-Oyama continues his flanking movement.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 6.—General Kuropatkin is hemmed
-in and vigorously attacks the Japanese
-left centre. Marshal Oyama relentlessly
-tightens his lines in an endeavor to trap
-his foe.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3><i>General Foreign News</i></h3>
-
-<div class="news">
-
-<p class="day">February 7.—As a result of the massacre of
-Russian citizens on January 22, the Social
-Democratic Party of Russia calls<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[Pg 254]</span>
-on workmen to march on the Czar’s
-palace with arms in their hands instead
-of ikons and petitions.</p>
-
-<p>Father Gapon, the Russian revolutionary
-leader, is reported to have escaped to
-Switzerland.</p>
-
-<p>General Trepoff, the “man of iron” who
-has been placed at the head of the police
-system at St. Petersburg, threatens to
-close the universities because of the revolutionary
-sentiment there existing.</p>
-
-<p>Disorders continue in Russian Poland,
-and several strikers are killed by the
-troops.</p>
-
-<p>The assassin of Soisalon Soininen, Procurator-General
-of Finland, is identified
-a former student at one of the Finnish
-universities.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 8.—Because of the failure of the
-employers to concede the demands of
-their workingmen, new strikes are declared
-at St. Petersburg, Vassili Ostroff
-and other points in Russia.</p>
-
-<p>Strikers tear up the Siberian Railway east
-of Irkutsk.</p>
-
-<p>Maxim Gorky, the Russian novelist, is
-questioned in court and afterward returned
-to prison.</p>
-
-<p>The students of one of the St. Petersburg
-schools refuse to attend lectures because
-of police interference.</p>
-
-<p>Because of the continued state of disorder
-in Russian Poland, many refugees leave
-the country.</p>
-
-<p>The new protocol between the United
-States and Santo Domingo is signed at
-Santo Domingo. It provides for the
-territorial integrity of the island republic
-and for ratification by the United
-States Senate.</p>
-
-<p>The British Government decides that John
-H. Gaynor and Benjamin H. Greene,
-American refugees in Canada, may be
-extradited and returned to the United
-States.</p>
-
-<p>King Oscar, of Sweden, turns over the
-government to Crown Prince Gustav.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 9.—Many strikers are killed by the
-troops at Sosnovice, Russian Poland.</p>
-
-<p>M. Rouvier, the new Premier of France,
-submits a bill absolutely divorcing
-church and state.</p>
-
-<p>German mine strikers denounce the action
-of their leaders in voting to return to
-work, and thousands decide to continue
-the struggle.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 10.—Over sixty strikers are killed
-and hundreds are wounded by troops
-at Sosnovice and Lodz in Russian Poland.</p>
-
-<p>Strikes are being renewed to such an extent
-in St. Petersburg that the authorities
-are growing apprehensive.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 11.—Prince Paul Dolgorouki says
-that the Czar must call a Zemsky Sober
-(a popular assembly) if he would avoid
-a revolution.</p>
-
-<p>The strike at Lodz now involves 100,000
-men.</p>
-
-<p>Four thousand ironworkers strike at
-Kharkoff.</p>
-
-<p>Disquieting conditions are reported at Batoum
-in the Caucasus, with a general
-tie-up of railway lines in the vicinity.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 12.—Three aeronauts make a balloon
-voyage from London to Paris in a
-little over six hours.</p>
-
-<p>The Czar promises a commission, including
-workingmen, to deal with the labor
-problem.</p>
-
-<p>Russian conscripts and reserves mutiny in
-several provinces. Cossacks kill eighteen
-at Kieff and wound over eighty.</p>
-
-<p>Franz Kossuth, the leader of the Hungarian
-Independence Party, is received in
-audience by the Austrian Emperor.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 13.—The Russian Cabinet decides
-to adopt reform measures, including
-some sort of concessions to the workingmen.</p>
-
-<p>Arguments are concluded in the North
-Sea case before the International Commission
-at Paris. Decision, it is announced,
-will be handed down at a later
-date.</p>
-
-<p>It is reported from Essen that the German
-coal strike, which has been one of the
-most important industrial struggles in
-German history, is ended.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 14.—King Edward opens the British
-Parliament. The speech from the
-throne contains no significant passages.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 15.—The strike in Warsaw again
-becomes general.</p>
-
-<p>The Emperor of China approves a plan
-for a parliament of the empire’s leading
-officials.</p>
-
-<p>President Castro, of Venezuela, refuses to
-arbitrate the asphalt claims and other
-disputes between that country and the
-United States.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 16.—The strike at St. Petersburg,
-which was reported to be abating,
-breaks out with renewed force.</p>
-
-<p>On a test vote the Balfour government is
-sustained in the British House of Commons
-by a majority of 63.</p>
-
-<p>The Venezuela Supreme Court reaffirms
-its order sequestrating the lands belonging
-to the American Asphalt Company.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 17.—The Grand Duke Sergius,
-uncle and brother-in-law of the Czar
-and the most reactionary and influential
-of the Grand Ducal clique, is blown
-to pieces by a bomb in the Kremlin,
-Moscow. The assassin, who is dressed
-in the garb of a workingman, is arrested.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 18.—The Russian strike spreads
-to the employees of many railways and
-to the telegraphers.</p>
-
-<p>Two Russian officials are assassinated in
-Transcaucasia.</p>
-
-<p>Consternation reigns among the rulers of
-Russia, and members of the royal family
-do not venture to appear in public.</p>
-
-<p>The British Government announces that
-in 1911 it will take over the entire<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[Pg 255]</span>
-property of the National Telephone
-Company.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 20.—Three thousand Russian students
-and professors, in mass meeting,
-denounce the Czar, demand constitutional
-government and shut up the
-University of St. Petersburg till September.</p>
-
-<p>Martial law is declared at Tsarskoe-Selo,
-the residence of the Czar.</p>
-
-<p>China expresses the desire to pay all her
-indemnity at once, but some of the
-Powers object, as it deprives certain
-officials of commissions and interest.</p>
-
-<p>Sir John E. Redmond leads an Irish attack
-on the British ministry.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 21.—The Home Rule amendment
-offered by Sir John E. Redmond is defeated
-in the British House of Commons,
-and the Balfour government is
-sustained, but by the reduced majority
-of 50.</p>
-
-<p>A general revolt against the Russian Government
-is reported throughout the entire
-Caucasus region.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 22.—The Armenians seize three
-towns in the Caucasus.</p>
-
-<p>Sir John E. Redmond renews his attack
-on the Balfour ministry, and the government
-majority is still further reduced
-to 42.</p>
-
-<p>Polish disturbances continue, and all
-trains from Warsaw on the Vienna line
-are discontinued.</p>
-
-<p>Many bodies of slain strikers are found
-in the streets of Baku, a town in the
-Caucasus.</p>
-
-<p>Workmen destroy factories at Riga,
-Southern Russia.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 23.—The London <i>Times</i> states
-that the Czar has decided to call a
-Zemsky Sober, or popular assembly, to
-decide, among other things, as to the
-continuation of the war in the Far East.
-The German Court, on the other hand,
-gives out the statement that the Czar
-is determined to continue the war.</p>
-
-<p>The Tartars are turned loose on the Armenians
-in the Caucasus revolt. The
-number of corpses found in the streets
-of Baku is reported as high as 300. The
-revolt continues in other towns in the
-region, 40,000 Georgians being involved.</p>
-
-<p>The strike extends at Warsaw and more
-railway lines are tied up.</p>
-
-<p>Leonide Andreef, a famous Moscow author,
-known as “The Little Gorky,” is
-arrested.</p>
-
-<p>Funeral services are held over the remains
-of Grand Duke Sergius at Moscow. The
-Czar attends a requiem at Tsarskoe-Selo.
-Both ceremonies pass without special
-incident.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 24.—An unsuccessful attempt is
-made to assassinate President Morales,
-of Santo Domingo. Five persons are
-arrested.</p>
-
-<p>The famous Simplon Tunnel through the
-Alps, leading from Switzerland to Italy,
-is completed.</p>
-
-<p>It is announced from London that Sir
-Henry Irving, the famous actor, is so
-broken in health that he may never
-again appear on the stage.</p>
-
-<p>A coffin believed to contain the long-sought
-remains of John Paul Jones, the American
-Revolutionary naval hero, has been
-found in Paris.</p>
-
-<p>Strikes and rioting continue practically
-throughout the entire Russian empire,
-many railway lines are tied up, and
-moujiks are becoming fired with the
-idea of a general land division.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 25.—The International Commission
-to inquire into the North Sea incident
-concludes its sittings in Paris and
-hands down its decision that the action
-of Admiral Rojestvensky, commander
-of the Russian Baltic fleet,
-in firing on the British fishing vessels
-was unjustified.</p>
-
-<p>The Warsaw railway strikes are reported
-partially settled, but a street railway
-strike begins and disturbances continue.</p>
-
-<p>Severe fighting between the Armenians
-and the Mussulmans continues in the
-Caucasus region; leading officials and
-merchants are assassinated at Batoum,
-and revolutionary manifestoes in favor
-of a republic are circulated broadcast.</p>
-
-<p>The Countess of Warwick begins an automobile
-tour of Great Britain for the
-purpose of assisting the various labor
-candidates for Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>A general railway strike begins in Italy,
-the workmen being dissatisfied with the
-treatment proposed to be given them
-under the bill creating State management
-of railways.</p>
-
-<p>It is announced that the Czar has decided
-not to call the Zemsky Sober, and that
-he has irrevocably decided that the war
-with Japan must go on.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 27.—Maxim Gorky, the famous
-Russian novelist, is released from prison
-only to be rearrested by order of General
-Trepoff and banished to Riga.</p>
-
-<p>President Morales lays before the Dominican
-Congress the protocol with the
-United States.</p>
-
-<p>Berlin’s new cathedral is dedicated in the
-presence of the Emperor and delegates
-from all parts of the world.</p>
-
-<p>The Czar, in an effort to break the strike,
-orders a raise of wages on State railroads
-and in Government arsenals.</p>
-
-<p>The disturbances in Russian Poland are
-augmented by a serious revolt of the
-peasantry in fifty villages.</p>
-
-<p>A second Kishineff horror is reported from
-Theodosia in the Crimea, where forty-seven
-Jews were killed and many more
-injured in a recent massacre.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 28.—The strike situation in Russia
-grows steadily worse, especially in
-Poland, where a coal famine is threatened.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[Pg 256]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Russian Council of Ministers decides
-on more repressive measures and definitely
-refuses to call the Zemsky Sober.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 1.—The workmen selected by the
-Czar to organize a commission on the
-labor situation meet and demand concessions
-from the Government before
-taking further action.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Selbourne is chosen British High
-Commissioner in South Africa in place
-of Lord Milner, resigned.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 2.—The Russian ministry votes to
-grant the people religious freedom.</p>
-
-<p>The majority for the present British ministry
-is reduced to 24.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 3.—The Czar calls a representative
-assembly, but without power except to
-consult and advise.</p>
-
-<p>Rioting continues in Russian Poland and
-a general strike is ordered at St. Petersburg.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 4.—Cossacks kill nine students and
-wound many more at Tomsk.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 5.—The Czar’s action in calling an
-assembly has little or no influence on
-the Russian situation, which grows more
-grave.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3><i>Obituary.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="news">
-
-<p class="day">February 7.—Joseph H. Manley, prominent
-Republican politician, dies at his home
-in Augusta, Me., aged 62.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 8.—Rear-Admiral Frank C. Cosby,
-of the United States Navy, dies at the
-age of 65.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 9.—Adolf von Menzel, famous German
-painter, dies in Berlin.</p>
-
-<p>Chief-Justice Pardon E. Tillinghast, of
-the Supreme Court of Rhode Island,
-dies at the age of 68.</p>
-
-<p>Henry W. Blodgett, former United States
-District Judge, dies at the age of 84.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 11.—Sylvester Scovel, the well-known
-war correspondent, dies in Havana,
-aged 36.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 14.—James C. Carter, leading New
-York lawyer, dies at the age of 78.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 15.—General Lew Wallace, the
-celebrated author, dies at his home in
-Crawfordsville, Ind., aged 78.</p>
-
-<p>William Cullen Bryant, publisher of the
-Brooklyn <i>Times</i>, dies at the age of 56.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 16.—Jay Cooke, once famous as a
-financier, dies at the age of 83.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 20.—Norton P. Otis, Member of
-Congress from New York, dies at the
-age of 65, at his home in Yonkers, N. Y.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 21.—Jacob Worth, well-known
-Brooklyn politician and race-track man,
-dies at Hot Springs, Ark.; age, 67.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 23.—W. F. G. Shanks, a well-known
-New York newspaper and magazine
-editor, dies in Bermuda, aged 68.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 24.—Sidney Dillon Ripley, Treasurer
-of the Equitable Life Assurance
-Society, dies from the effects of
-an operation for appendicitis, at New
-York.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 25.—Edward Cooper, ex-Mayor of
-New York and only son of Peter Cooper,
-dies at New York City, aged 81.</p>
-
-<p class="day">February 27.—Honorable George S. Boutwell,
-former Governor of Massachusetts,
-United States Senator and Secretary of
-the Treasury, dies at his home at Groton,
-Mass., aged 87.</p>
-
-<p>Harry Morris, well-known American comedian,
-dies at New York, aged 49.</p>
-
-<p>Henry C. Whitney, formerly one of Chicago’s
-leading lawyers, dies at Salem,
-Mass., aged 74.</p>
-
-<p>Richard A. Donnelly, Quartermaster-General
-of New Jersey since 1890, dies at
-his home in Trenton, aged 64.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 1.—Mrs. Jane Lathrop Stanford,
-widow of Leland Stanford and famous
-for her gifts to education, dies suddenly
-in Honolulu. Subsequent investigation
-shows she was poisoned.</p>
-
-<p>Edward O. Wolcott, former United States
-Senator from Colorado, dies at Monte
-Carlo, Monaco, aged 56.</p>
-
-<p class="day">March 4.—H. L. Muldrow, Assistant Secretary
-of the Interior under President
-Cleveland, dies at Starkville, Miss.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="f120"><i>Gobbled It All</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">SMITH—Some of our rich men claim it isn’t right to leave anything behind
-them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Smythe</span>—That’s their way exactly. Wherever they have been they have
-left mighty little behind them.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="f120"><i>The Legal Acrobat</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">JUDSON—How did that expert come to contradict himself on the second
-trial?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Bludson</span>—The other side hired him.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="space-above3">Extract from a three-column review in the
-<i>San Francisco Examiner</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot"> “Mr. Hastings has touched the very core of
-the matter respecting the proclivities of our doddering plutocracy.
-Throughout his book he has revealed that plutocracy in its true light
-and shown it to be something utterly conscienceless and debased. No
-more scathing review of the situation, as it is seen at present, could
-possibly be given in a work of fiction.”</p>
-
-<table summary=" " cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" border="0">
- <tbody><tr>
- <td class="tdc"><img src="images/king.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="354" /></td>
- <td class="tdc"><p class="f300"><b>SHALL WE<br /><span class="ws2">HAVE A</span>
- <br /><span class="ws5">KING?</span></b></p></td>
- </tr>
- </tbody>
-</table>
-
-<p class="blockquot">Will the United States be a monarchy in 1975? Have you read
-“THE FIRST AMERICAN KING,” by George Gordon Hastings?
-It is a dashing romance in which a scientist and a detective of today
-wake up seventy-five years later to find His Majesty, Imperial and
-Royal, William I, Emperor of the United States and King of the
-Empire State of New York, ruling the land, with the real power in the
-hands of half a dozen huge trusts. Automobiles have been replaced
-by phaërmobiles; air-ships sail above the surface of the earth; there
-has been a successful war against Russia; a social revolution is brewing.
-The book is both an enthralling romance and a serious sociological
-study, which scourges unmercifully the society and politics of the
-present time, many of whose brightest stars reappear in the future
-under thinly disguised names. There are wit and humor and sarcasm
-galore—a stirring tale of adventure and a charming love-story.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Net $1.00, postpaid. All Booksellers,<br />
-or sent postpaid upon receipt of price by</p>
-
-<p class="f150"><b>TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE</b></p>
-<p class="center">121 West 42d Street,<span class="ws4">NEW YORK CITY</span></p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="bigfont no-indent"><b>“TOM WATSON”</b></p>
-<p class="blockquot no-indent">is the one historian through whom we get the point
-of view of the laborer, the mechanic, the plain man, in a style that is
-bold, racy and unconventional. There is no other who traces so vividly
-the life of a <i>people</i> from the time they were savages until they
-became the most polite and cultured of European nations, as he does in</p>
-
-<p class="bigfont no-indent"><b>THE STORY OF FRANCE</b></p>
-<p class="center">In two handsome volumes, dark red cloth, gilt tops, price $5.00.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It is well called a story, for it reads like a fascinating
-romance.”—<i>Plaindealer</i>, Cleveland.</p>
-
-<p class="space-below2">“A most brilliant, vigorous, human-hearted story this:
-so broad in its sympathies, so vigorous in its presentations, so vital, so
-piquant, lively and interesting. It will be read wherever the history
-of France interests men, which is everywhere.”—<i>New York Times’ Sat. Review.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="bigfont no-indent"><b>NAPOLEON</b></p>
-<p class="center"><b>A SKETCH OF HIS LIFE, CHARACTER,<br />STRUGGLES AND ACHIEVEMENTS.</b></p>
-
-<p class="center">Illustrated with Portraits and Facsimiles.<br />
-Cloth, 8vo, $2.25 net. (Postage 20c.)</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>“The Splendid Study of a Splendid Genius” is the caption of a
-double-column editorial mention of this book in <i>The New York American
-and Journal</i> when it first appeared. The comment urged every reader of
-that paper to read the book and continued:</p>
-
-<p>“There does not live a man who will not be enlarged in his thinking
-processes, there does not live a boy who will not be made more
-ambitious by honest study of Watson’s Napoleon * * *</p>
-
-<p>“If you want the best obtainable, most readable, most intelligent,
-most genuinely American study of this great character, read Watson’s
-history of Napoleon.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="bigfont no-indent"><b>“TOM WATSON”</b></p>
-
-<p class="blockquot no-indent">in these books does far more than make
-history as readable as a novel of the best sort. He tells the truth
-with fire and life, not only of events and causes, but of their
-consequences to and their influence on the great mass of people at large.
-They are epoch-making books which every American should read and own.</p>
-
-<p class="center space-above2 space-below2">Orders for the above books will be filled by<br />
-<span class="smcap">Tom Watson’s Magazine</span>, 121 West 42nd Street, New York City.</p>
-
-<div class="transnote bbox">
-
-<p class="f120 space-above1">Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p class="indent">Antiquated spellings were preserved.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Typographical errors have been silently corrected.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TOM WATSON'S MAGAZINE, VOL. I, NO. 2, APRIL 1905 ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
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