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authorwww-data <www-data@mail.pglaf.org>2026-04-03 09:26:14 -0700
committerwww-data <www-data@mail.pglaf.org>2026-04-03 09:26:14 -0700
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78352 ***
+
+
+
+
+THE EARLY WORM
+
+[Illustration: When they were held up by the jam, ... I would jeer.]
+
+
+
+
+THE
+EARLY WORM
+
+BY
+ROBERT BENCHLEY
+
+_Author of_
+
+OF ALL THINGS!
+LOVE CONQUERS ALL
+PLUCK AND LUCK
+
+WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
+GLUYAS WILLIAMS
+
+[Illustration]
+
+NEW YORK
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+
+
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1927,
+BY
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+_August, 1927_
+
+
+PRINTED IN THE
+UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+
+
+
+
+ACKNOWLEDGMENT
+
+
+The author wishes to thank the following periodicals for permission
+to reprint the articles in this book: _Life_, _The Detroit Athletic
+Club News_, _The New Yorker_, _Vanity Fair_, _College Humor_ and _The
+Bell Syndicate_. Thanks are also due to John Held, Jr., for permission
+to use his elegant engravings and to Carol Goodner for suggesting the
+title to the book.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ A TALK TO YOUNG MEN 3
+
+ THE SEED OF REVOLT 9
+
+ PAUL REVERE’S RIDE 13
+
+ FASCINATING CRIMES 21
+
+ UPSETS 27
+
+ AN INTERVIEW WITH MUSSOLINI 29
+
+ THE “LIFE” POLAR EXPEDITION 32
+
+ THE SAVING-“OLD-IRONSIDES” HABIT 39
+
+ A GOOD OLD-FASHIONED CHRISTMAS 41
+
+ LIFE IN THE RITZ TENEMENT 56
+
+ OLD PROGRAM FROM THE BENCHLEY COLLECTION 60
+
+ WHAT COLLEGE DID TO ME 69
+
+ AN INTERVIEW WITH THEODORE DREISER 78
+
+ FASCINATING CRIMES 80
+
+ LOUIS DOT DOPE 84
+
+ THE RISE AND FALL OF THE CHRISTMAS CARD 88
+
+ THE HENNA DECADE 96
+
+ A PLAN TO STABILIZE THE FRANC 100
+
+ SEX IS OUT 106
+
+ UNCLE EDITH’S GHOST STORY 109
+
+ FASCINATING CRIMES 115
+
+ THE END OF THE SEASON 120
+
+ EXAM TIME 124
+
+ THROWING BACK THE EUROPEAN OFFENSIVE 127
+
+ AN INTERVIEW WITH VICE-PRESIDENT DAWES 134
+
+ THE “LIFE” POLAR EXPEDITION 137
+
+ A GHOST STORY 142
+
+ DISCOVERING WEBER AND FIELDS 148
+
+ WATER FOOTBALL 150
+
+ MORE SONGS FOR MELLER 159
+
+ FASCINATING CRIMES 163
+
+ THE “LIFE” POLAR EXPEDITION 168
+
+ AN INTERVIEW WITH THE COUNTESS KAROLYI 172
+
+ THE BOYS’ CAMP BUSINESS 174
+
+ AT LAST A SUBSTITUTE FOR SNOW 183
+
+ THE NEW WING 190
+
+ UNCLE CALVIN’S NO-WASTE GAMES 195
+
+ THE WORLD OF GRANDPA BENCHLEY 200
+
+ THE “LIFE” POLAR EXPEDITION 209
+
+ HOW TO START A SUPPER CLUB 216
+
+ THE NEW VILLAINY 223
+
+ TIME-OFF FROM THE SHOW 230
+
+ THE “LIFE” POLAR EXPEDITION 237
+
+ SPYING ON THE VEHICULAR TUNNEL 241
+
+ COMPILING AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY 246
+
+ STORM WARNINGS FOR NEW YORK 251
+
+ THE “LIFE” POLAR EXPEDITION 259
+
+
+
+
+THE EARLY WORM
+
+
+
+
+A TALK TO YOUNG MEN
+
+_Graduation Address on “The Decline of Sex”_
+
+
+To you young men who only recently were graduated from our various
+institutions of learning (laughter), I would bring a message, a message
+of warning and yet, at the same time, a message of good cheer. Having
+been out in the world a whole month, it is high time that you learned
+something about the Facts of Life, something about how wonderfully
+Nature takes care of the thousand and one things which go to make up
+what some people jokingly call our “sex” life. I hardly know how to
+begin. Perhaps “Dear Harry” would be as good a way as any.
+
+You all have doubtless seen, during your walks in the country, how
+the butterflies and bees carry pollen from one flower to another? It
+is very dull and you should be very glad that you are not a bee or a
+butterfly, for where the fun comes in _that_ I can’t see. However, they
+think that they are having a good time, which is all that is necessary,
+I suppose. Some day a bee is going to get hold of a real book on the
+subject, and from then on there will be mighty little pollen-toting
+done or I don’t know my bees.
+
+Well, anyway, if you have noticed carefully how the bees carry pollen
+from one flower to another (and there is no reason why you should
+have noticed carefully as there is nothing to see), you will have
+wondered what connection there is between this process and that of
+animal reproduction. I may as well tell you right now that there is no
+connection at all, and so your whole morning of bee-stalking has been
+wasted.
+
+We now come to the animal world. Or rather, first we come to One
+Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street, but you don’t get off there. The
+animal world is next, and off you get. And what a sight meets your
+eyes! My, my! It just seems as if the whole world were topsy-turvy.
+
+The next time you are at your grocer’s buying gin, take a look at his
+eggs. They really are some hen’s eggs, but they belong to the grocer
+now, as he has bought them and is entitled to sell them. So they really
+_are_ his eggs, funny as it may sound to anyone who doesn’t know. If
+you will look at these eggs, you will see that each one is _almost_
+round, but not _quite_. They are more of an “egg-shape.” This may
+strike you as odd at first, until you learn that this is Nature’s way
+of distinguishing eggs from large golf balls. You see, Mother Nature
+takes no chances. She used to, but she learned her lesson. And that is
+a lesson that all of you must learn as well. It is called Old Mother
+Nature’s Lesson, and begins on page 145.
+
+Now, these eggs have not always been like this. That stands to reason.
+They once had something to do with a hen or they wouldn’t be called
+hen’s eggs. If they are called duck’s eggs, that means that they had
+something to do with a duck. Who can tell me what it means if they are
+called “ostrich’s eggs”?... That’s right.
+
+But the egg is not the only thing that had something to do with a hen.
+Who knows what else there was?... That’s right.
+
+Now the rooster is an entirely different sort of bird from the hen.
+It is very proud and has a red crest on the top of his head. This red
+crest is put there by Nature so that the hen can see the rooster coming
+in a crowd and can hop into a taxi or make a previous engagement if she
+wants to. A favorite dodge of a lot of hens when they see the red crest
+of the rooster making in their direction across the barnyard is to work
+up a sick headache. One of the happiest and most contented roosters I
+ever saw was one who had had his red crest chewed off in a fight with a
+dog. He also wore sneakers.
+
+But before we take up this phase of the question (for it is a
+question), let us go back to the fish kingdom. Fish are probably the
+worst example that you can find; in the first place, because they work
+under water, and in the second, because they don’t know anything. You
+won’t find one fish in a million that has enough sense to come in
+when it rains. They are just stupid, that’s all, and nowhere is their
+stupidity more evident than in their sex life.
+
+Take, for example, the carp. The carp is one of the least promising of
+all the fish. He has practically no forehead and brings nothing at all
+to a conversation. Now the mother carp is swimming around some fine
+spring day when suddenly she decides that it would be nice to have some
+children. So she makes out a deposit slip and deposits a couple million
+eggs on a rock (all this goes on _under_ water, mind you, of all
+places). This done, she adjusts her hat, powders her nose, and swims
+away, a woman with a past.
+
+It is not until all this is over and done with that papa enters the
+picture, and then only in an official capacity. Papa’s job is very
+casual. He swims over the couple of million eggs and takes a chance
+that by sheer force of personality he can induce half a dozen of them
+to hatch out. The remainder either go to waste or are blacked up to
+represent caviar.
+
+So you will see that the sex life of a fish is nothing much to brag
+about. It never would present a problem in a fish community as it does
+in ours. No committees ever have to be formed to regulate it, and about
+the only way in which a fish can go wrong is through drink or stealing.
+This makes a fish’s life highly unattractive, you will agree, for,
+after a time, one would get very tired of drinking and stealing.
+
+We have now covered the various agencies of Nature for populating the
+earth with the lesser forms of life. We have purposely omitted any
+reference to the reproduction of those unicellular organisms which
+reproduce by dividing themselves up into two, four, eight, etc., parts
+without any outside assistance at all. This method is too silly even to
+discuss.
+
+We now come to colors. You all know that if you mix yellow with blue
+you get green. You also get green if you mix cherries and milk. (Just
+kidding. Don’t pay any attention.) The derivation of one color from
+the mixture of two other colors is not generally considered a sexual
+phenomenon, but that is because the psychoanalysts haven’t got around
+to it yet. By next season it won’t be safe to admit that you like
+to paint, or you will be giving yourself away as an inhibited old
+uncle-lover and debauchee. The only thing that the sex-psychologists
+can’t read a sexual significance into is trap-shooting, and they are
+working on that now.
+
+All of which brings us to the point of wondering if it _all_ isn’t a
+gigantic hoax. If the specialists fall down on trap-shooting, they are
+going to begin to doubt the whole structure which they have erected,
+and before long there is going to be a reaction which will take the
+form of an absolute negation of sex. An Austrian scientist has already
+come out with the announcement that there is no such thing as a hundred
+per cent male or a hundred per cent female. If this is true, it is
+really a big step forward. It is going to throw a lot of people out of
+work, but think of the money that will be saved!
+
+And so, young men, my message to you is this: Think the thing over very
+carefully and examine the evidence with fair-minded detachment. And if
+you decide that, within the next ten years, sex is going out of style,
+make your plans accordingly. Why not be pioneers in the new movement?
+
+
+
+
+THE SEED OF REVOLT
+
+
+In the hearts of many New Yorkers there glowed a strange and savage
+sense of satisfaction when fire, a few weeks ago, destroyed the wooden
+staging which had encased the lower half of the new Aeolian Building
+under construction at the corner of Fifth Avenue and Fifty-fourth
+Street. That fire may prove to be the torch igniting a citizens’ revolt
+of city-wide proportions.
+
+For several years now, ever since they began tearing down most of the
+buildings in New York and erecting others in their places to be torn
+down next year, pedestrians have been practically excluded from the use
+of their sidewalks. On each corner, and in the middle of each block,
+it has been necessary to tunnel through great wooden passageways,
+dodging avalanches of bricks on one side and workmen darting out from
+clammy recesses with wheelbarrows of mortar on the other. These workmen
+have a system whereby they lie in wait in the ground floor of the new
+building, each with a wheelbarrow full of unpleasant material poised
+ready, until you and I are directly upon the plank which slopes across
+the sidewalk to the waiting truck. Then, at a signal from the boss,
+they charge out directly in your path, shouting the Fascist war cry and
+scraping the buttons off your waistcoat. At the same moment a landslide
+of gravel is let loose from the fifth floor crashing on top of the
+flimsy structure over your head and sending through a blinding shower
+of fine white powder which stirs up all that old catarrhal trouble
+which the doctor has assured you will cause your death one day.
+
+[Illustration: They lie in wait in the ground floor of the new
+building.]
+
+If you evolve some maneuver calculated to evade this ordeal by going
+around the structure on the outside, you are confronted by a line of
+trucks backed up against the curb, making it necessary for you to go
+way out to the middle of the street, where you are immediately run over
+in the traffic.
+
+For years now the supine citizens of New York have forgone the use of
+their sidewalks, having first been prohibited the use of their streets,
+until the fire in the new Aeolian Building chewed to pieces the wooden
+shanty and boardwalk and, it is to be hoped, did irreparable damage
+to dozens of wheelbarrows. It is said that the fire was caused by a
+workman leaving an acetylene torch burning in the basement. Whether it
+was really a workman or some nerve-racked patriot with the courage of
+his convictions does not matter now. The idea has been implanted in the
+minds of hundreds of citizens and it would not be surprising if, before
+autumn, construction companies had evolved some other way of erecting
+their buildings.
+
+[Illustration: Sending through a blinding shower of fine white powder.]
+
+
+
+
+PAUL REVERE’S RIDE
+
+_How a Modest Go-Getter Did His Bit for the Juno Acid Bath Corporation_
+
+
+Following are the salesman’s report sheets sent into the home office in
+New York by Thaddeus Olin, agent for the Juno Acid Bath Corporation.
+Mr. Olin had the New England territory during the spring of 1775 and
+these report sheets are dated April 16, 17, 18, and 19, of that year.
+
+
+ _April 16, 1775.
+ Boston._
+
+Called on the following engravers this a. m.: Boston Engraving Co., E.
+H. Hosstetter, Theodore Platney, Paul Revere, Benjamin B. Ashley and
+Roger Durgin.
+
+Boston Engraving Co. are all taken care of for their acid.
+
+E. H. Hosstetter took three tins of acid No. 4 on trial and renewed his
+old order of 7 Queen-Biters.
+
+Theodore Platney has gone out of business since my last trip.
+
+Paul Revere was not in. The man in his shop said that he was busy with
+some sort of local shin-dig. Said I might catch him in tomorrow morning.
+
+The Benjamin Ashley people said they were satisfied with their present
+product and contemplated no change.
+
+Roger Durgin died last March.
+
+Things are pretty quiet in Boston right now.
+
+
+ _April 17._
+
+Called on Boston Engraving people again to see if they might not want
+to try some Daisy No. 3. Mr. Lithgo was interested and said to come in
+tomorrow when Mr. Lithgo, Senior, would be there.
+
+Paul Revere was not in. He had been in for a few minutes before the
+shop opened and had left word that he would be up at Sam Adams’ in case
+anyone wanted him. Went up to the Adams place, but the girl there said
+that Mr. Revere and Mr. Adams had gone over to Mr. Dawes’ place on Milk
+Street. Went to Dawes’ place, but the man there said Dawes and Adams
+and Revere were in conference. There seems to be some sort of parade or
+something they are getting up, something to do with the opening of the
+new foot-bridge to Cambridge, I believe.
+
+Things are pretty quiet here in Boston, except for the trade from the
+British fleet which is out in the harbour.
+
+Spent the evening looking around in the coffee houses. Everyone here
+is cribbage-crazy. All they seem to think of is cribbage, cribbage,
+cribbage.
+
+
+ _April 18._
+
+To the Boston Engraving Company and saw Mr. Lithgo, Senior. He seemed
+interested in the Daisy No. 3 acid and said to drop in again later in
+the week.
+
+Paul Revere was out. His assistant said that he knew that Mr. Revere
+was in need of a new batch of acid and had spoken to him about our
+Vulcan No. 2 and said he might try some. I would have to see Mr. Revere
+personally, he said, as Mr. Revere makes all purchases himself. He said
+that he thought I could catch him over at the Dawes’ place.
+
+Tried the Dawes’ place but they said that he and Mr. Revere had gone
+over to the livery stable on State Street.
+
+Went to the livery stable but Revere had gone. They said he had engaged
+a horse for tonight for some sort of entertainment he was taking part
+in. The hostler said he heard Mr. Revere say to Mr. Dawes that they
+might as well go up to the North Church and see if everything was all
+set; so I gather it is a church entertainment.
+
+Followed them up to the North Church, but there was nobody there except
+the caretaker, who said that he thought I could catch Mr. Revere over
+at Charlestown late that night. He described him to me so that I would
+know him and said that he probably would be on horseback. As it seemed
+to me to be pretty important that we land the Revere order for Vulcan
+No. 2, I figured out that whatever inconvenience it might cause me to
+go over to Charlestown or whatever added expense to the firm, would be
+justified.
+
+Spent the afternoon visiting several printing establishments, but none
+of them do any engraving.
+
+Things are pretty quiet here in Boston.
+
+Went over to Charlestown after supper and hung around “The Bell in
+Hand” tavern looking for Mr. Revere. Met a man there who used to live
+in Peapack, N. J., and we got to talking about what a funny name for
+a town that was. Another man said that in Massachusetts there was
+actually a place called Podunk, up near Worcester. We had some very
+good cheese and talked over names of towns for a while. Then the second
+man, the one who knew about Podunk, said he had to go as he had a date
+with a man. After he had left I happened to bring the conversation
+around to the fact that I was waiting for a Mr. Paul Revere, and the
+first man told me that I had been talking to him for half an hour and
+that he had just gone.
+
+I rushed out to the corner, but the man who keeps the watering-trough
+there said that someone answering Mr. Revere’s description had just
+galloped off on a horse in the direction of Medford. Well, this just
+made me determined to land that order for Juno Acid Bath Corporation or
+die in the attempt. So I hired a horse at the Tavern stable and started
+off toward Medford.
+
+Just before I hit Medford I saw a man standing out in his night-shirt
+in front of his house looking up the road. I asked him if he had seen
+anybody who looked like Mr. Revere. He seemed pretty sore and said that
+some crazy coot had just ridden by and knocked at his door and yelled
+something that he couldn’t understand and that if he caught him he’d
+break his back. From his description of the horse I gathered that Mr.
+Revere was the man; so I galloped on.
+
+A lot of people in Medford Town were up and standing in front of their
+houses, cursing like the one I had just seen. It seems that Mr. Revere
+had gone along the roadside, knocking on doors and yelling something
+which nobody understood, and then galloping on again.
+
+“Some god-dam drunk,” said one of the Medfordites, and they all went
+back to bed.
+
+I wasn’t going to be cheated out of my order now, no matter what
+happened, and I don’t think that Mr. Revere could have been drunk,
+because while he was with us at “The Bell in Hand,” he had only four
+short ales. He had a lot of cheese, though.
+
+Something seemed to have been the matter with him, however, because in
+every town that I rode through I found people just going back to bed
+after having been aroused up out of their sleep by a mysterious rider.
+I didn’t tell them that it was Mr. Revere, or that it was probably some
+stunt to do with the shin-dig that he and Mr. Dawes were putting on for
+the North Church. I figured out that it was a little publicity stunt.
+
+Finally, just as I got into Lexington, I saw my man getting off his
+horse at a house right alongside the Green. I rushed up and caught
+him just as he was going in. I introduced myself and told him that I
+represented the Juno Acid Bath Corporation of New York and asked him if
+he could give me a few minutes, as I had been following him all the way
+from Charlestown and had been to his office three days in succession.
+He said that he was busy right at that minute, but that if I wanted
+to come along with him upstairs he would talk business on the way. He
+asked me if I wasn’t the man he had been talking to at “The Bell in
+Hand” and I said yes, and asked him how Podunk was. This got him in
+good humour and he said that we might as well sit right down then and
+that he would get someone else to do what he had to do. So he called a
+man-servant and told him to go right upstairs, wake up Mr. Hancock and
+Mr. Adams and tell them to get up, and no fooling. “Keep after them,
+Sambo,” he said, “and don’t let them roll over and go to sleep again.
+It’s very important.”
+
+So we sat down in the living room and I got out our statement of sales
+for 1774 and showed him that, in face of increased competition, Juno
+had practically doubled its output. “There must be some reason for
+an acid outselling its competitors three to one,” I said, “and that
+reason, Mr. Revere, is that a Juno product is a guaranteed product.”
+He asked me about the extra sixpence a tin and I asked him if he would
+rather pay a sixpence less and get an inferior grade of acid and he
+said, “No.” So I finally landed an order of three dozen tins of Vulcan
+No. 2 and a dozen jars of Acme Silver Polish, as Mr. Revere is a
+silversmith, also, on the side.
+
+Took a look around Lexington before I went back to Boston, but didn’t
+see any engraving plants. Lexington is pretty quiet right now.
+
+ Respectfully submitted,
+ THADDEUS OLIN.
+
+ Attached.
+ _Expense Voucher_
+ Juno Acid Bath Corp., New York
+
+ Thaddeus Olin, Agent.
+
+ Hotel in Boston 15s.
+ Stage fare 30s.
+ Meals (4 days) 28s.
+ Entertaining prospects £3 4s.
+ Horse rent. Charlestown to Lexington and return £2 6s.
+ ------
+ Total Expense £9 3s.
+
+ To Profit on three dozen tins of Vulcan No. 2 and 18s.
+ One dozen jars Acme Silver Polish 4s.
+ ------
+ £1 2s.
+
+ Net Loss £8 1s.
+
+
+
+
+FASCINATING CRIMES
+
+_I. The Odd Occurrence in the Life of Dr. Meethas_
+
+
+Early in the evening of October 14, 1879, Dr. Attemas Meethas, a
+physician of good repute in Elkhart, Indiana, went into the pantry of
+his home at 11 Elm Street, ostensibly to see if there was any of that
+cold roast pork left. The good doctor was given to nibbling cold roast
+pork when occasion offered.
+
+As he passed through the living-room on his way to the pantry, he spoke
+to his housekeeper, Mrs. Omphrey, and said that, if everything turned
+out all right, he would be at that cold roast pork in about half a
+minute (Elkhart time--an hour earlier than Eastern time). “Look out for
+the pits,” Mrs. Omphrey cautioned him, and went on with her stitching.
+Mrs. Omphrey, in her spare time, was a stitcher of uppers for the local
+shoe-factory.
+
+This is the last that was seen of Dr. Attemas Meethas alive. It is
+doubtful if he ever even reached the pantry, for the cold roast pork
+was found untouched on a plate, and Dr. Meethas was found, three days
+later, hanging from the top of the flag-pole on the roof of the
+Masonic Lodge. The mystery was even more puzzling in that Dr. Meethas
+was not a Mason.
+
+[Illustration: The revolting death of Dr. Meethas.
+
+ --_Courtesy of John Held, Jr., and Life._
+]
+
+Citizens of Elkhart, on being grilled, admitted having seen the
+doctor hanging from the flag-pole for two days, but thought that he
+was fooling and would come down soon enough when he got hungry. But
+when, after three days, he made no sign of descending, other than to
+drop off one shoe, a committee was formed to investigate. It was found
+that their fellow-citizen, far from playing a practical joke on them,
+had had one played on him, for he was quite dead, with manifold and
+singular abrasions. A particularly revolting feature of the case was
+that the little gold chain which the doctor wore over his right ear,
+to keep his pince-nez glasses in place, was still in position. This at
+once disposed of the possibility of suicide.
+
+Mrs. Omphrey and her uppers were held for examination, as it was
+understood that she had at one time made an attempt on the doctor’s
+life, on the occasion of his pushing her down when they were skating
+together. But her story in the present affair was impregnable. After
+the doctor had gone through the living-room on his way to the pantry,
+she said that she continued stitching at her machine until nine o’clock
+in the evening. She thought it a little odd that Dr. Meethas did not
+return from the pantry, but figured it out that there was probably
+quite a lot of cold roast pork there and that he was still busy
+nibbling. At nine o’clock, however, she stopped work and started on her
+rounds of the house to lock up for the night. On reaching the pantry,
+she found that her employer was not there, and had not been there;
+at least that he had not touched the pork. She thought nothing of it,
+however, as it occurred to her that the doctor had probably remembered
+an engagement and had left suddenly by the pantry window in order not
+to worry her. So, after finishing the cold pork herself, she locked
+the bread-box and retired for the night. The police, on investigation,
+found the bread-box locked just as she had said, and so released Mrs.
+Omphrey.
+
+When the news of Dr. Meethas’ accident reached La Porte, Amos W.
+Meethas, a brother of the victim and a respected citizen of the town,
+came directly to Elkhart and insisted on an investigation. He said that
+his brother had accumulated quite a fortune tinting postcards on the
+side, and was known to have this money hidden in a secret panel in the
+hammock which hung on the back porch. The police, guided by Mr. Amos
+Meethas, went to the hammock, slid the panel open and found nothing
+there but some old clippings telling of Dr. Meethas’ confirmation in
+1848. (He was a confirmed old bachelor.) This definitely established
+robbery as the motive for the crime. The next thing to do was to
+discover someone who could climb flag-poles.
+
+Neighbors of the doctor recalled that some weeks before a young man had
+gone from door to door asking if anybody wanted his flag-pole climbed.
+He said he was working his way through college climbing flag-poles
+and would be grateful for any work, however small. He was remembered to
+have been a short youth about six feet two or three, with hair blond on
+one side and dark on the other. This much the neighbors agreed upon.
+
+[Illustration: Dr. Meethas--The unfortunate victim.
+
+ --_Courtesy of John Held, Jr., and Life._
+]
+
+Working in South Bend at the time was a young man named Herman Trapp.
+He was apprehended by the authorities, who subsequently decided that he
+had no connection whatever with the tragedy.
+
+So the strange murder of Dr. Meethas (if indeed it _was_ a murder)
+rests to this day unsolved and forgotten, which is just as well, as it
+was at best a pretty dull case.
+
+
+
+
+UPSETS
+
+
+Thus far, the football season of 1927 has been one of upsets. Nothing
+has turned out according to the dope. Therefore, in its remaining
+weeks, we predict the following startling deviations from form:
+
+1. It will not rain the day of the Big Game.
+
+2. We shall have no more than a dozen requests for “a couple of seats.”
+
+3. Our own seats will be, not in the wooden stands behind the
+scoreboard, but out in full view of the field. (We have to laugh even
+when writing this in fun.)
+
+4. There will not be an intoxicated man in a rhinoceros coat directly
+in front of us who jumps up at the sound of the whistle.
+
+5. There will not be a small man with a 13½ collar behind us who has
+ideas on how the team should be run.
+
+6. The game will not have started while we are milling around in the
+crowd at the gate.
+
+7. Nobody will fall down the steps.
+
+8. Holding tickets for two seats, we shall find that there is space
+left in which two people can sit without being married to each other.
+
+9. We shall not be too hot above the waist and too cold below.
+
+10. Harvard will win and we shall see ten dollars of Donald Ogden
+Stewart’s money.
+
+
+
+
+AN INTERVIEW WITH MUSSOLINI
+
+
+Mussolini seemed to be a good man to interview; so I got an interview
+with him.
+
+“Mr. Mussolini,” I said, “as I understand your theory of government,
+while it is not without its Greek foundations, it dates even farther
+back, in its essence, to the Assyrian system.”
+
+“What?” asked Mussolini.
+
+“I said, as I understood your theory of government, while it is not
+without its Greek foundations, it dates even farther back to the
+ancient Assyrian system. Am I right?”
+
+“Assyrian here seen Kelly? K-E-double L-Y. That was a good song, too,”
+said Il Duce.
+
+“A good song is right,” I replied. “And now might I ask, how did you
+come by that beard?”
+
+“That is not a beard,” replied the Great Man. “That is my forehead. I
+am smooth-shaven, as a matter of fact.”
+
+“So you are, so you are,” I apologized. “I was forgetting.”
+
+We both sat silent for a while, thinking of the old days in Syracuse
+High.
+
+“Whatever became of her?” It was Il Kuce who broke the silence.
+
+“She married and went to Hingham to live,” I replied, watching him
+closely.
+
+He went white for the fraction of a second. Then he turned to me and
+said:
+
+“Give me your A, will you, please?”
+
+So I gave him my A and we played “_Yes Patineurs_” (“The Skaters”), and
+very pretty, too.
+
+“I had almost forgotten how it went,” he said.
+
+“You _have_ forgotten how it went,” I corrected him. “You play awful.”
+
+Laughter followed this remark of mine. But I noticed that Mussolini was
+not laughing.
+
+“But about your theory of government,” I said, hoping to bring the
+roses back into those cheeks. “A lot of people try to tell me that it
+is Phonician, but I always say ‘No!’”
+
+“What is it they say it is?” asked Il Huce, all a-tremble with
+excitement.
+
+“Phœnician,” I repeated, putting in the “e.”
+
+“That’s a tough one,” he said. “You’ll have to give me a couple of
+minutes on that. Phœnician, eh?... Phœnician drive up in a hack and ask
+yer.” He put this forward tentatively.
+
+“Not so good, Il Duce,” I commented.
+
+His eyes filled with tears.
+
+“Oh, well, then,” I compromised, “have it your own way.”
+
+“I’ll have it with plain water, please, and a little lemon-rind.” It
+was the Imperator who spoke.
+
+I signaled to the driver.
+
+“Stop the interview,” I said simply.
+
+
+
+
+THE LIFE POLAR EXPEDITION
+
+
+1
+
+In spite of the fact that already three polar expeditions are well
+under way in the air, _Life_ has decided that the interests of science
+demand, or at any rate, ask nicely for, an expedition to be conducted
+through some other medium. We have therefore decided on the bicycle.
+
+We realize that our expedition will have to hurry like everything on
+bicycles to catch up with the Amundsen and Byrd groups, but we are
+willing to make the try, and all our men are imbued with an enthusiasm
+and zeal to carry the banner of _Life_ to the Pole which cannot but
+result in _something_.
+
+Feverish preparations are now under way for the belated start of the
+_Life_ bicycle expedition to the North Pole. The tardy departure has
+been due to the failure of the contractors to finish the trousers-clips
+in time, but everything is now in readiness and it looks as if we
+might start at any minute now. The men are all eager to catch up with
+Amundsen and Byrd and we all feel that, by very fast pedaling and no
+fooling along the way, we can do it.
+
+“We _will_ do it,” Lieutenant Commander Marc Connelly said to me last
+night, and that just about expresses the spirit behind the whole trip.
+
+“Why did you choose the bicycle?” a lot of people have asked us. “Why
+_court_ danger?”
+
+We realize the risk that we are taking but feel that the bicycle is
+the logical means for a party of our description to reach the Pole.
+Three years ago it would have been impossible. But since then we have
+learned so much more about the earth’s magnetism and bicycle navigation
+that, with the improved technique in balancing which we have developed,
+we feel that the danger is merely nominal. The farthest that we can
+possibly fall, in case of an upset, is in an arc with a radius of six
+feet. Now in this latitude (or in any latitude in which we are likely
+to be for some time) the rate of acceleration of a falling body is
+thirty-two feet per second; so you will see that it can’t hurt much.
+
+Furthermore, we are using the new Radley model bicycle, which combines
+all the best features of the old Columbia bicycle with several modern
+inventions, such as the gyro-balancer and the flash tail-light. The
+gyro-balancer is a contraption attached to the saddle, by means of
+which the rider is enabled to doze or shell nuts as he rides and be
+assured that, unless he leans beyond an angle of forty-five degrees,
+his machine will right itself automatically. If dozing, however, he
+must not forget to pedal, as the gyro-balancer does not function unless
+the wheel is in motion. The flash tail-light is more for looks than
+anything else. It flashes red, green and vanilla.
+
+As at present planned, our course to the Pole will be as follows:
+
+Leave the _Life_ office at 598 Madison Ave., New York. Over to Fifth
+Ave. and up Fifth Ave. to 120th St., skirting Mount Morris Park,
+past 138th St. (Mott Haven), striking onto the Bronx River Parkway.
+Up through Morrisania, Woodlawn, Mount Vernon, Bronxville, Tuckahoe,
+Crestwood, Scarsdale, and Hartsdale to White Plains. From White Plains
+we continue north direct into Canada and through Canada to Victoria
+Island. A short carry across Melville Sound to Melville Island. Another
+carry to Borden Island, followed by a short carry to Axel Heiberg Land
+and a final carry to Grant Land on Ellesmere Island. Thence direct to
+the Pole.
+
+
+2
+
+_En route with_ LIFE’S _Polar Expedition, passing through 125th St.,
+Manhattan, May 12._--After a successful hop-off from the curbing in
+front of the office of _Life_ at 598 Madison Ave., New York City, we
+pedalled our bicycles slowly up Madison Ave. to 59th St., where it
+was discovered that Lieut.-Commander Connelly’s rear wheel was still
+locked, a precaution which had been taken while the machines were
+standing in the rack outside the office. This had made speed out of
+the question for Lieut.-Commander Connelly, and had resulted in an
+odd, dragging sensation which he was at a loss to account for until
+a passerby called his attention to the locked wheel. The trouble was
+immediately remedied, and the expedition proceeded at a much smarter
+pace up Madison Ave.
+
+This little incident, at the very outset of our trip, while unimportant
+in itself, just goes to show the spirit which is animating our men and
+the determination in their hearts to see this thing through at any
+cost. Lieut.-Commander Connelly might very well have become discouraged
+when he found that his rear wheel was not revolving at all and
+abandoned the thing entirely, but with characteristic bulldog grit he
+kept pedalling right ahead with only one wheel and would probably have
+stuck at it until the Pole was reached, do or die. It is such courage
+that makes us all optimistic.
+
+Proceeding up Madison Ave. to 60th St., we turned the wheels at a
+sharp right angle and cut across into Fifth Ave. This, while perhaps
+foolhardy on the face of it, was not the madcap move that it may seem
+to you sitting safely at home reading of our progress. For we had
+received wireless messages from the station at 72nd St. and Madison
+Ave. that at that corner there was a nasty excavation, into which we
+might very well have hurtled with disastrous results had we kept on
+our way up Madison. “I never before realized what a valuable service
+the wireless telegraph can accomplish,” said Ensign Thermaline to me.
+Ensign Thermaline was on the bicycle just ahead of me, and as he turned
+to make this remark, his front wheel struck the curbing a glancing
+blow, which threatened for a moment to result in a spill, but with rare
+presence of mind Ensign Thermaline turned his head front again without
+waiting for my corroboration of his remark (which I would have given
+willingly had there been time or had the occasion been more propitious)
+and, utilizing the gyro-balancer with which each of our Radley machines
+is equipped, righted himself and his wheel in no time at all. It was an
+exciting moment, however, and we all felt better when Ensign Thermaline
+was once again headed straight north up Fifth Ave.
+
+All of our instruments are in excellent working order except the flash
+tail-light on Lieut.-Commander Connelly’s wheel, which persists in
+flashing red, a signal that he is going the other way. It should be
+flashing green. This has caused a little confusion among vehicles
+following in our wake, for the printed directions in the daily papers
+stated that those vehicles encountering our expedition en route could
+tell the direction in which we were moving by watching our flash
+tail-lights, red if we were going south and green if we were going
+north. Something akin to a panic was caused among the passengers on a
+Fifth Ave. bus which was following close on behind Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly’s wheel when he suddenly flashed red, indicating that he
+was pedalling head-on for the bus. It was only when Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly yelled a cheery “Mistake, mistake!” that the bus-driver could
+be convinced that he ought not to turn aside and let the Connelly wheel
+pass.
+
+We are now approaching 125th St. and the difference in the atmospheric
+conditions between lower and upper Fifth Ave. is distinctly noticeable.
+The traffic, while just as heavy, is a little easier to steer through.
+Ensign Thermaline seems, at the moment, to be lost, but I have no doubt
+that he will turn up again as soon as that big van gets out of the way
+just beyond Capt. Nordney. Capt. Nordney joined the expedition at the
+Heckscher Foundation at 104th St. and Fifth Ave.
+
+It now looks as if we might be able to make 138th St. (Mott Haven) by
+night-fall, but I rather hope that we don’t as there probably wouldn’t
+be any place to spend the night. I certainly have never seen, or heard
+of, any hotels in that neighborhood.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_135th St., New York City, May 12._--At 5:58 p. m. today the _Life_
+Polar Expedition passed through this street, bearing N.E. by N. The
+members seemed a little tired and Lieut.-Commander Connelly’s wheel
+was dragging badly. Commander Benchley was sending out messages in all
+directions, asking if anyone knew where they could put up for the night.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Railroad Y. M. C. A., 140th St., New York City, May 12._--Preparations
+are being made here to take care of the _Life_ Polar Expedition, which
+is due to make a landing at 6:20 p. m. Searchlights are in readiness
+and hot baths are being run to accommodate at least two of the party.
+
+
+
+
+THE SAVING-“OLD-IRONSIDES” HABIT
+
+
+The annual campaign to “Save ‘Old Ironsides’” is on again. Every few
+years this ancient frigate is saved from some mysterious destruction,
+school children are lathered up into a foam of patriotic excitement
+in which they bring pennies from their banks to aid in the crisis,
+speeches are made and banners unfurled, and everybody sinks back with a
+sigh of relief. “Old Ironsides” has been saved again!
+
+And yet it hardly seems more than a couple of years before the cry goes
+up again: “The enemy!” and bang! a shot whistles across the bows of
+the famous ship. Then it’s “Save ‘Old Ironsides,’ boys!” and the whole
+thing begins all over again.
+
+Oliver Wendell Holmes, who aided the first “Save ‘Old Ironsides’”
+campaign by writing, “Ay, tear her tattered ensign down!” must smile
+a rather wan smile as he realizes that all that he did was save “Old
+Ironsides” for the fiscal year 1887-8 and that ever since then a Saving
+Committee has been kept busy night and day planning future campaigns.
+They say that the 1930 campaign is going to be the biggest and best yet.
+
+What are these malign forces that seem so persistent in their plots to
+wreck the good ship “Constitution”? Sometimes it is an unsentimental
+Government that threatens to junk the whole thing. At other times it
+is the forces of Nature, which seem to wait until our backs are turned
+after a money-raising campaign and then jump at the poor old sea-dog as
+she lies in safety at Charlestown and bid fair to tear her limb from
+limb.
+
+Whatever it is that we are constantly fighting off, would it not be
+possible to raise enough money at one crack to keep “Old Ironsides”
+afloat _forever_? We have a national surplus of $390,000,000. Couldn’t
+we just settle this whole thing once and for all by devoting, let
+us say, half of that to seeing that no more harm ever comes to this
+precious relic?
+
+Having saved her three times, and won three legs on the trophy, might
+we not be entitled to permanent possession of it?
+
+Or has the fact that there is a movie entitled “Old Ironsides” anything
+to do with what James Russell Lowell called “The Present Crisis”?
+
+
+
+
+A GOOD OLD-FASHIONED CHRISTMAS
+
+
+Sooner or later at every Christmas party, just as things are beginning
+to get good, someone shuts his eyes, puts his head back and moans
+softly: “Ah, well, this isn’t like the old days. We don’t seem to have
+any good old-fashioned Christmases any more.” To which the answer from
+my corner of the room is: “All right! That suits me!”
+
+Just what they have in mind when they say “old-fashioned Christmas” you
+never can pin them down to telling. “Lots of snow,” they mutter, “and
+lots of food.” Yet, if you work it right, you can still get plenty of
+snow and food today. Snow, at any rate.
+
+Then there seems to be some idea of the old-fashioned Christmas being,
+of necessity, in the country. It doesn’t make any difference whether
+you were raised on a farm or whether your ideas of a rural Christmas
+were gleaned from pictures in old copies of “Harper’s Young People,”
+you must give folks to understand that such were the surroundings in
+which you spent your childhood holidays. And that, ah, me, those days
+will never come again!
+
+Well, supposing you get your wish some time. Supposing, let us say,
+your wife’s folks who live up in East Russet, Vermont, write and
+ask you to come up and bring the children for a good old-fashioned
+Christmas, “while we are all still together,” they add cheerily with
+their flair for putting everybody in good humor.
+
+Hurray, hurray! Off to the country for Christmas! Pack up all the
+warm clothes in the house, for you will need them up there where the
+air is clean and cold. Snow-shoes? Yes, put them in, or better yet,
+Daddy will carry them. What fun! Take along some sleigh-bells to
+jangle in case there aren’t enough on the pung. There must be jangling
+sleigh-bells. And whisky for frost-bite. Or is it snake-bite that
+whisky is for? Anyway, put it in! We’re off! Good-by, all! Good-by!
+JANGLE-JANGLE-JANGLE-Jangle-Jangle-Jangle-jangle-jangle-jangle-jangle-
+jangle-jangle!
+
+In order to get to East Russet you take the Vermont Central as far as
+Twitchell’s Falls and change there for Torpid River Junction, where a
+spur line takes you right into Gormley. At Gormley you are met by a
+buckboard which takes you back to Torpid River Junction again. By this
+time a train or something has come in which will wait for the local
+from Besus. While waiting for this you will have time to send your
+little boy to school, so that he can finish the third grade.
+
+[Illustration: Esther Girl giddaps, and two suitcases fall out.]
+
+At East Russet Grandpa meets you with the sleigh. The bags are piled
+in and Mother sits in front with Lester in her lap while Daddy takes
+Junior and Ga-Ga in back with him and the luggage. Giddap, Esther Girl!
+
+Esther Girl giddaps, and two suitcases fall out. Heigh-ho! Out we get
+and pick them up, brushing the snow off and filling our cuffs with it
+as we do so. After all, there is nothing like snow for getting up one’s
+cuffs. Good clean snow never hurt anyone. Which is lucky, because after
+you have gone a mile or so, you discover that Ga-Ga is missing. Never
+mind, she is a self-reliant little girl and will doubtless find her way
+to the farm by herself. Probably she will be there waiting for you when
+you arrive.
+
+The farm is situated on a hill about eleven hundred miles from the
+center of town, just before you get into Canada. If there is a breeze
+in winter, they get it. But what do they care for breezes, so long as
+they have the Little Colonel oil-heater in the front room, to make
+everything cozy and warm within a radius of four inches! And the big
+open fireplace with the draught coming down it! Fun for everybody!
+
+You are just driving up to the farmhouse in the sleigh, with the
+entire right leg frozen where the lap robe has slipped out. Grandma is
+waiting for you at the door and you bustle in, all glowing with good
+cheer. “Merry Christmas, Grandma!” Lester is cross and Junior is asleep
+and has to be dragged by the hand upstairs, bumping against each step
+all the way. It is so late that you decide that you all might as well
+go to bed, especially as you learn that breakfast is at four-thirty. It
+usually is at four, but Christmas being a holiday everyone sleeps late.
+
+As you reach the top of the stairs you get into a current of cold
+air which has something of the quality of the temperature in a nice
+well-regulated crypt. This is the Bed Room Zone, and in it the
+thermometer never tops the zero mark from October fifteenth until the
+middle of May. Those rooms in which no one sleeps are used to store
+perishable vegetables in, and someone has to keep thumbing the tomatoes
+and pears every so often to prevent their getting so hard that they
+crack.
+
+The way to get undressed for bed in one of Grandpa’s bedrooms is as
+follows: Starting from the foot of the stairs where it is warm, run
+up two at a time to keep the circulation going as long as possible.
+Opening the bedroom door with one hand, tear down the curtains from the
+windows with the other, pick up the rugs from the floor and snatch the
+spread from the top of the bureau. Pile all these on the bed, cover
+with the closet door which you have wrenched from its hinges, and leap
+quickly underneath. It sometimes helps to put on a pair of rubbers over
+your shoes.
+
+And even when you are in bed, you have no guarantee of going to sleep.
+Grandpa’s mattresses seem to contain the overflow from the silo,
+cornhusks, baked-potato skins and long, stringy affairs which feel like
+pipe cleaners. On a cold night, snuggling down into these is about like
+snuggling down into a bed of damp pine cones out in the forest.
+
+Then there are Things abroad in the house. Shortly after you get into
+bed, the stairs start snapping. Next something runs along the roof
+over your head. You say to yourself: “Don’t be silly. It’s only Santa
+Claus.” Then it runs along in the wall behind the head of the bed.
+Santa Claus wouldn’t do that. Down the long hall which leads into
+the ell of the house you can hear the wind sighing softly, with an
+occasional reassuring bang of a door.
+
+The unmistakable sound of someone dying in great pain rises from just
+below the window-sill. It is a sort of low moan, with just a touch of
+strangulation in it. Perhaps Santa has fallen off the roof. Perhaps
+that story you once heard about Grandpa’s house having been a hang-out
+for Revolutionary smugglers is true, and one of the smugglers has come
+back for his umbrella. The only place at a time like this is down under
+the bedclothes. But the children become frightened and demand to be
+taken home, and Grandpa has to be called to explain that it is only
+Blue Bell out in the barn. Blue Bell has asthma, and on a cold night
+they have to be very patient with her.
+
+Christmas morning dawns cloudy and cold, with the threat of plenty
+more snow, and, after all, what would Christmas be without snow? You
+lie in bed for one hour and a quarter trying to figure out how you
+can get up without losing the covers from around you. A glance at the
+water pitcher shows that it is time for them to put the red ball up for
+skating. You think of the nice warm bathroom at home, and decide that
+you can wait until you get back there before shaving.
+
+This breaking the ice in the pitcher seems to be a feature of the
+early lives of all great men which they look back on with tremendous
+satisfaction. “When I was a boy, I used to have to break the ice in
+the pitcher every morning before I could wash,” is said with as much
+pride as one might say, “When I was a boy I stood at the head of my
+class.” Just what virtue there is in having to break ice in a pitcher
+is not evident, unless it lies in their taking the bother to break the
+ice and wash at all. Any time that I have to break ice in a pitcher
+as a preliminary to washing, I go unwashed, that’s all. And Benjamin
+Franklin and U. S. Grant and Rutherford B. Hayes can laugh as much as
+they like. I’m nobody’s fool about a thing like that.
+
+[Illustration: The entire family enters, purple and chattering and
+exceedingly cross.]
+
+Getting the children dressed is a lot of fun when you have to keep
+pumping their limbs up and down to keep them from freezing out stiff.
+The children love it and are just as bright and merry as little pixies
+when it is time to go downstairs and say “Good morning” to Grandpa and
+Grandma. The entire family enters the dining-room purple and chattering
+and exceedingly cross.
+
+After breakfast everyone begins getting dinner. The kitchen being the
+only warm place in the house may have something to do with it. But
+before long there are so many potato peelings and turkey feathers and
+squash seeds and floating bits of pie crust in the kitchen that the
+women-folk send you and the children off into the front part of the
+house to amuse yourselves and get out of the way.
+
+Then what a jolly time you and the kiddies and Grandpa have together!
+You can either slide on the horse-hair sofa, or play “The Wayside
+Chapel” on the piano (the piano has scroll-work on either side of the
+music rack with yellow silk showing through), or look out the window
+and see ten miles of dark gray snow. Perhaps you may even go out to
+the barn and look at the horses and cows, but really, as you walk down
+between the stalls, when you have seen one horse or one cow you have
+seen them all. And besides, the cold in the barn has an added flavor
+of damp harness leather and musty carriage upholstery which eats into
+your very marrow.
+
+Of course, there are the presents to be distributed, but that takes
+on much the same aspect as the same ceremony in the new-fashioned
+Christmas, except that in the really old-fashioned Christmas the
+presents weren’t so tricky. Children got mostly mittens and shoes, with
+a sled thrown in sometimes for dissipation. Where a boy today is bored
+by three o’clock in the afternoon with his electric grain-elevator and
+miniature pond with real perch in it, the old-fashioned boy was lucky
+if he got a copy of “Naval Battles of the War of 1812” and an orange.
+Now this feature is often brought up in praise of the old way of doing
+things. “I tell you,” says Uncle Gyp, “the children in my time never
+got such presents as you get today.” And he seems proud of the fact,
+as if there were some virtue accruing to him for it. If the children
+of today can get electric grain-elevators and tin automobiles for
+Christmas, why aren’t they that much better off than their grandfathers
+who got only wristlets? Learning the value of money, which seems to be
+the only argument of the stand-patters, doesn’t hold very much water
+as a Christmas slogan. The value of money can be learned in just about
+five minutes when the time comes, but Christmas is not the season.
+
+But to return to the farm, where you and the kiddies and Gramp’ are
+killing time. You can either bring in wood from the woodshed, or thaw
+out the pump, or read the books in the bookcase over the writing-desk.
+Of the three, bringing in the wood will probably be the most fun, as
+you are likely to burn yourself thawing out the pump, and the list of
+reading matter on hand includes “The Life and Deeds of General Grant,”
+“Our First Century,” “Andy’s Trip to Portland,” bound volumes of the
+Jersey Cattle Breeders’ Gazette and “Diseases of the Horse.” Then there
+are some old copies of “Round the Lamp” for the years 1850-54 and
+some colored plates showing plans for the approaching World’s Fair at
+Chicago.
+
+Thus the time passes, in one round of gayety after another, until
+you are summoned to dinner. Here all caviling must cease. The dinner
+lives up to the advertising. If an old-fashioned Christmas could
+consist entirely of dinner without the old-fashioned bedrooms, the
+old-fashioned pitcher, and the old-fashioned entertainments, we
+professional pessimists wouldn’t have a turkey-leg left to stand on.
+But, as has been pointed out, it is possible to get a good dinner
+without going up to East Russet, Vt., or, if it isn’t, then our
+civilization has been a failure.
+
+And the dinner only makes the aftermath seem worse. According to an
+old custom of the human race, everyone overeats. Deliberately and with
+considerable gusto you sit at the table and say pleasantly: “My, but I
+won’t be able to walk after this. Just a little more of the dark meat,
+please, Grandpa, just a dab of stuffing. Oh, dear, that’s too much!”
+You haven’t the excuse of the drunkard, who becomes oblivious to his
+excesses after several drinks. You know what you are doing, and yet you
+make light of it and even laugh about it as long as you _can_ laugh
+without splitting out a seam.
+
+[Illustration: Then you sit and moan.]
+
+And then you sit and moan. If you were having a good new-fashioned
+Christmas you could go out to the movies or take a walk, or a ride, but
+to be really old-fashioned you must stick close to the house, for in
+the old days there were no movies and no automobiles and if you wanted
+to take a walk you had to have the hired man go ahead of you with a
+snow-shovel and make a tunnel. There are probably plenty of things to
+do in the country today, and just as many automobiles and electric
+lights as there are in the city, but you can’t call Christmas with all
+these improvements “an old-fashioned Christmas.” That’s cheating.
+
+If you are going through with the thing right, you have got to retire
+to the sitting-room after dinner and _sit_. Of course, you can go out
+and play in the snow if you want to, but you know as well as I do that
+this playing in the snow is all right when you are small but a bit
+trying on anyone over thirty. And anyway, it always began to snow along
+about three in the afternoon an old-fashioned Christmas day, with a
+cheery old leaden sky overhead and a jolly old gale sweeping around
+the corners of the house.
+
+No, you simply must sit indoors, in front of a fire if you insist,
+but nevertheless with nothing much to do. The children are sleepy
+and snarling. Grandpa is just sleepy. Someone tries to start the
+conversation, but everyone else is too gorged with food to be able
+to move the lower jaw sufficiently to articulate. It develops that
+the family is in possession of the loudest-ticking clock in the world
+and along about four o’clock it begins to break its own record. A
+stenographic report of the proceedings would read as follows:
+
+ “Ho-hum! I’m sleepy! I shouldn’t have eaten so much.”
+
+ “Tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock--”
+
+ “It seems just like Sunday, doesn’t it?”
+
+ “Look at Grandpa! He’s asleep.”
+
+ “Here, Junior! Don’t plague Grandpa. Let him sleep.”
+
+ “Tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock--”
+
+ “Junior! Let Grandpa alone! Do you want Mamma to take you upstairs?”
+
+ “Ho-hum!”
+
+ “Tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock--”
+
+Louder and louder the clock ticks, until something snaps in your
+brain and you give a sudden leap into the air with a scream, finally
+descending to strangle each of the family in turn, and Grandpa as he
+sleeps. Then, as you feel your end is near, all the warm things you
+have ever known come back to you, in a flash. You remember the hot
+Sunday subway to Coney, your trip to Mexico, the bull-fighters of Spain.
+
+You dash out into the snowdrifts and plunge along until you sink
+exhausted. Only the fact that this article ends here keeps you from
+freezing to death, with an obituary the next day reading:
+
+“DIED suddenly, at East Russet, Vt., of an old-fashioned Christmas.”
+
+
+
+
+LIFE IN THE RITZ TENEMENT
+
+[A recent ruling of the Tenement House Commission places all of
+New York’s new apartment-houses in the technical classification of
+“tenements” for the enforcement of certain clauses of the Tenement
+House Law.]
+
+ SCENE: _The rear of Mr. Brisbane’s new apartment palace--the Ritz
+ Tower. It is Monday morning and the tenants are seen hanging out
+ their wash from the kitchen windows._
+
+TWENTY-FIRST FLOOR BACK: Good morning to you, Mrs. Van Cleve! A
+charming day, isn’t it?
+
+TWENTY-SECOND FLOOR BACK: The same to you, Mrs. Thornton-Martin. And
+too charming a day to be cooped up inside like this.
+
+TWENTY-FIRST FLOOR: My _dear_, the killingest thing! Speaking of being
+cooped up--did you hear that (_lowering the voice_) Freddie Welt was
+arrested Saturday?
+
+TWENTY-SECOND FLOOR: The Welts on the thirty-fifth floor! My _dear_,
+how frightful! What for?
+
+TWENTY-FIRST: Well, it seems that Freddie and some of the boys from the
+Linx Club had been playing polo--
+
+[Illustration: “Good morning to you, Mrs. Van Cleve!”]
+
+(_A delivery boy from Cartier’s clatters up the back stairway._)
+
+BOY: Van Buren live here?
+
+THIRTIETH FLOOR: Two flights up. They’re out now. You can leave the
+stuff here.
+
+BOY: Three thousand dollars collect on it.
+
+THIRTIETH FLOOR: Go on up and tuck it under the door.
+
+TWENTY-NINTH FLOOR: I’m going to speak to the janitor about those folks
+on the twenty-eighth.
+
+THIRTIETH FLOOR: A lot of good it will do. They’re his cousins. What
+have they done now?
+
+TWENTY-NINTH FLOOR: All their empty champagne bottles out by the back
+door where Reggie stumbles over them going to work in the morning! They
+had a lot of Roumanians up there last night till four in the morning.
+
+THIRTIETH FLOOR: Roumanians, eh? Why don’t those people go back where
+they came from if they don’t like it here?
+
+TWENTY-NINTH FLOOR: That’s what I’d like to know. I said to Reggie last
+night, I said, “Reggie, if you were half a man you’d go down there and
+tell them that if they can’t behave themselves why don’t they go over
+to the Racquet Club where they belong.”
+
+TWENTY-EIGHTH FLOOR (_flinging open her window_): Oh, is that so?
+
+TWENTY-NINTH FLOOR: Yes, that’s so!
+
+TWENTY-EIGHTH FLOOR: Well, if you’d keep that person with the fiddle
+quiet once in a while the rest of us might get some rest.
+
+TWENTY-NINTH FLOOR (_to the shaft in general_): She calls Jascha
+Heifetz “that person with a fiddle!”
+
+TWENTY-EIGHTH FLOOR: Jascha Heifetz or Mischa Elman--it’s all the same
+to me. Don’t he get enough money playing in concerts that he should
+come around playing at people’s tenements all the time?
+
+THIRTY-FOURTH FLOOR (_slamming open the window_): Shut up below there,
+will you! (_Throws out a pan full of alligator pear rinds._)
+
+THE POLICEMAN ON THE BEAT (_from below_): Come on up there, cut that
+out or I’ll run yez all in!
+
+(_All the heads are drawn in and the windows slammed shut._)
+
+A VOICE ON THE STAIRS WITH BELL ACCOMPANIMENT: Oyster-forks sharpened!
+Oyster-forks sharpened!
+
+
+
+
+OLD PROGRAM FROM THE BENCHLEY COLLECTION
+
+_A Glance Backward in the Manner of the Authors of Theatrical
+Reminiscences_
+
+
+Few, probably, of my readers, will remember the time when the old
+Forrest Theater stood where the Central Park Reservoir now is. In
+those days, Central Park was considered ’way downtown, or “crosstown,”
+as they called it then, and one of the larks of the period was going
+“down to Central Park to see the turtles.” There was a large turtle
+farm in the Park at that time, run by Anderson M. Ferderber, and it
+was this turtle farm, expanding and growing as the turtles became more
+venturesome, which later became the Zoological Exhibit.
+
+I remember very well the night when it was announced at the Forrest
+Theater that the building was to be torn down to make way for the new
+Reservoir. It was, as I recall, H. M. Ramus (“Henry” Ramus) who made
+the announcement. He was playing _Laertes_ at the time (_Laertes_ was
+played with the deuces wild and a ten-cent limit) when the manager of
+the theater (Arthur Semden, who later became Harrison Blashforth)
+came into the dressing-room and said: “Well, boys, it’s all over.
+They’re going to build the Reservoir here!” There was a silence for a
+full minute--probably more, for the manager had come into the wrong
+dressing-room and there was nobody there.
+
+At any rate, “Henry” Ramus was selected to go out and tell the
+audience. He did it with infinite tact, explaining that there was no
+need for alarm or panic, as the water could not possibly be let in
+until the theater was down and the Reservoir constructed, but the
+audience was evidently taking no chances on being drowned, for within
+three minutes from the time Ramus began speaking everyone in the
+theater was outdoors and in a hansom cab. Audience psychology is a
+queer thing, and possibly this audience knew best. At any rate, the old
+Forrest Theater is no more.
+
+Speaking of “Henry” Ramus, an amusing anecdote is told of Whitney
+Hersh. Hersh was playing with Booth in Philadelphia at the time, and
+was well known for his ability to catch cold, a characteristic which
+won him many new friends but lost him several old ones. The theater
+where Booth was playing in _The Queen’s Quandary, or What’s Open Can’t
+Be Shut_, was the old Chestnut Street Opera House which stood at the
+corner of what was then Arch, Chestnut, Spruce, Pine and Curly Maple
+Streets. This theater was noted in the profession for its slanting
+stage, so much so, in fact, that Booth, on hearing that they were to
+play there, is said to have remarked: “The Chestnut Street, eh?” On
+being assured that he had heard correctly, Booth simply smiled. He
+later founded the Player’s Club.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+UP AND AWAY
+
+OR NOBODY KNOWS BUT NERO
+
+OR THREE TIMES SIX IS EIGHTEEN
+
+(_Choice of any two titles_)
+
+ Jonathan Henchman, father of
+ Ralph Henchman and Mother
+ of Men, Old Yale MR. MACREADY
+
+ Ralph Henchman, father of
+ Jonathan Henchman and a
+ rather wild young chap MR. JUNIUS BOOTH
+
+ Jack Wyman, M.D., a doctor
+ who has more “patience”
+ than “patients” MR. EDMUND KEENE
+
+ Professor Hawksworth, an
+ irascible old fellow who specializes
+ in bird troubles MR. HORNBLOW
+
+ Professor Hawksworth, an
+ irascible old fellow who specializes
+ in bird troubles MR. JUNIUS BOOTH
+
+ Meeker, a party who lives by
+ his wits and not much of
+ that. MR. JONATHAN EDWARDS
+
+ Eugenia, daughter of Jonathan
+ Henchman MRS. SIDDONS
+
+ Mlle. de Bon-Ton, a young
+ lady who is not above drinking
+ a little champagne now
+ and then. MISS CUSHMAN
+
+ Eliza, maid at the Nortons. BY HERSELF
+
+ Hamlet, Prince of Denmark MR. WILLIAM A. BRADY
+]
+
+In _The Queen’s Quandary, or What’s Open Can’t Be Shut_, Hersh had to
+play the part of _Rodney Ransome_, the father of several people. In the
+second act there was a scene in which _Rodney_ had to say to _Marian_:
+
+“But I thought you said the Duke _had_ no moustache!”
+
+To which _Marian_ was supposed to reply: “I never was more serious in
+all my life.”
+
+On the night of the opening performance Hersh was, as usual, very
+nervous. He got through the first act all right, with the aid of
+several promptings from his mother who was sitting in the balcony. But
+when the second act came along, it was evident to the other members
+of the company that Hersh could not be relied upon. This feeling
+was strengthened by the fact that he was nowhere to be found. They
+searched high and low for him but, like the sword of Damocles, he
+had disappeared. At the curtain to the second act, however, he was
+discovered sitting out front in D-113 applauding loudly and calling
+out: “Hersh! We-want-Hersh!” The only way they could get him back on
+the stage was a ruse which was not without its pathetic side. The
+manager of the house stepped out in front of the curtain and asked if
+any member of the audience would volunteer to come upon the stage and
+be hypnotized. Hersh, who had always wanted to go on the stage, was one
+of the first to push his way up. Once behind the footlights again his
+nervousness left him and he went on with his part where he had left
+off. It did not fit in with the rest of the play, but they were all so
+glad to have him back in the cast again that they said nothing about it
+to him, and whenever, in later years, he himself mentioned the affair,
+it was always as “that time in Philadelphia when I was so nervous.”...
+And that little girl was Charlotte Cushman.
+
+It was at this time that Stopford’s _A New Way With Old Husbands, or
+The Mysterious Drummer-Boy_, was given its first performance at the
+old Garrick Theater in New York. The old Garrick Theater was torn down
+in 1878 to make way for the new Garrick Theater, which, in its turn,
+was torn down in 1880 to make way for the old Garrick again. It is the
+old, or new, Garrick which now stands at Broadway and Tenth Street on
+the spot known to passers-by as “Wanamaker’s.” Thus is the silver cord
+loosed and the pitcher broken at the well.
+
+_A New Way With Old Husbands, or The Mysterious Drummer-Boy_ was
+written for Ada Rehan, but she was in Fall River at the time; so the
+part was given to a young woman who had come to the theater that
+morning asking if a Mr. Wasserman lived there. On being told that
+it was not a private dwelling and that there was no one there named
+Wasserman, she had said:
+
+“Well, then, does anyone here want to subscribe to the _Saturday
+Evening Post_?”
+
+Those members of the cast who had gathered on the bare stage for
+rehearsal were so impressed by the young woman’s courage that a purse
+was taken up for her children in case she had any and, in case she had
+no children, for her next of kin.
+
+“I do not want money,” she said, taking it. “All I want is a chance to
+prove my ability on the stage.”
+
+“Can you make the sound of crashing glass?” asked Arthur Reese, the
+stage manager.
+
+“I think so,” replied the young woman without looking up.
+
+Reese looked at Meany, the assistant stage manager. “She is the one we
+want,” he said quietly.
+
+So the young woman was engaged.... Some thirty years later the Empire
+Theater in New York was aglow with lights on the occasion of the
+opening of _Call the Doctor_. Gay ladies, bejeweled and bejabbered,
+were running back and forth in the lobby, holding court, while tall,
+dark gentlemen in evening dress danced attendance. Those who couldn’t
+dance sat it out. It was the metropolitan season at its height.
+
+Suddenly a man burst excitedly through the crowd and made his way to
+the box-office.
+
+“This seat is ridiculous,” he exclaimed to the Treasurer of the theater
+(Roger M. Wakle, at the time). “I can’t even see the stage from it.”
+
+“That is not so strange as it may seem to you at first,” replied Wakle,
+“for the curtain is not up yet.”
+
+A hush fell over the crowded lobby. This was followed somewhat later
+by a buzz of excitement. This, in turn, was followed by a detail of
+mounted police. Men looked at women and at each other.... For that
+young man was Charlotte Cushman.
+
+It was about this time, as I remember it (or maybe later) that the
+old Augustin Daly Stock Company was at the top of its popularity and
+everyone was excited over the forthcoming production of _Up and Away_.
+It had been in rehearsal for several weeks when Tom Nevers asked Daly
+how much longer they were going to rehearse.
+
+“Oh, about another week,” replied Daly, with that old hat which later
+made him famous.
+
+You can imagine Nevers’ feelings!
+
+A glance at the cast assembled for this production might be of interest
+in the light of subsequent events (the completion of the vehicular
+tunnel and the Centennial Exposition). So anyway it is in the middle of
+page 57 to look at if you want to.
+
+As it turned out, _Up and Away_ was never produced, as it was found to
+be too much trouble. But the old Augustin Daly Stock Company will not
+soon be forgotten.
+
+My memories of St. Louis are of the pleasantest. We played there in
+Dante’s _Really Mrs. Warrington_--and _Twelfth Night_. The _St. Louis
+Post-Dispatch_, on the morning following our opening, said:
+
+“It is quite probable that before the end of the year we shall see the
+beginning of the end of the work on the McNaffen Dam. The project has
+been under construction now for three years and while there can be no
+suspicion thrown on the awarding of the contracts, nevertheless we must
+say that the work has progressed but slowly.”
+
+It was while we were playing in St. Louis that the news came of the
+capture of J. Wilkes Booth. A performance of _Richelieu_ was in
+progress, in which I was playing _Rafferty_, and Fanny Davenport the
+_Queen_. In the second act there is a scene in which _Rafferty_ says to
+_La Pouce_:
+
+ “_I can not, tho’ my tongue were free,
+ Repeat the message that my liege inspires,
+ And tho’ you ask it, were it mine,
+ And hope you’ll be my Valentine._”
+
+Following this speech, _Rafferty_ falls down and opens up a bad gash in
+his forehead.
+
+We had come to this scene on the night I mention, when I noticed that
+the audience was tittering. I could not imagine what the matter was,
+and naturally thought of all kinds of things--sheep jumping over a
+fence--anything. But strange as it may seem, the tittering continued,
+and I have never found out, from that day to this what amused them
+so.... This was in 1878.
+
+And now we come to the final curtain. For, after all, I sometimes think
+that Life is like a stage itself. The curtain rises on our little
+scene; we have our exits and our entrances, and each man in his time
+plays many parts. I must work this simile up sometime.
+
+Life and the Theater. Who knows? _Selah._
+
+
+
+
+WHAT COLLEGE DID TO ME
+
+_An Outline of Education_
+
+
+My college education was no haphazard affair. My courses were all
+selected with a very definite aim in view, with a serious purpose in
+mind--no classes before eleven in the morning or after two-thirty in
+the afternoon, and nothing on Saturday at all. That was my slogan. On
+that rock was my education built.
+
+As what is known as the Classical Course involved practically no
+afternoon laboratory work, whereas in the Scientific Course a man’s
+time was never his own until four p. m. anyway, I went in for the
+classic. But only such classics as allowed for a good sleep in the
+morning. A man has his health to think of. There is such a thing as
+being a studying fool.
+
+In my days (I was a classmate of the founder of the college) a student
+could elect to take any courses in the catalogue, provided no two of
+his choices came at the same hour. The only things he was not supposed
+to mix were Scotch and gin. This was known as the Elective System. Now
+I understand that the boys have to have, during the four years, at
+least three courses beginning with the same letter. This probably makes
+it very awkward for those who like to get away of a Friday afternoon
+for the week-end.
+
+Under the Elective System my schedule was somewhat as follows:
+
+ Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 11:00:
+
+ Botany 2a (The History of Flowers and Their Meaning)
+
+ Tuesdays and Thursdays at 11:00:
+
+ English 26 (The Social Life of the Minor Sixteenth Century Poets)
+
+ Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 12:00:
+
+ Music 9 (History and Appreciation of the Clavichord)
+
+ Tuesdays and Thursdays at 12:00:
+
+ German 12b (Early Minnesingers--Walter von Vogelweider, Ulric
+ Glannsdorf and Freimann von Stremhofen. Their Songs and Times)
+
+ Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 1:30:
+
+ Fine Arts 6 (Doric Columns: Their Uses, History and Various Heights)
+
+ Tuesdays and Thursdays at 1:30:
+
+ French 1c (Exceptions to the verb _être_)
+
+This was, of course, just one year’s work. The next year I followed
+these courses up with supplementary courses in the history of
+lace-making, Russian taxation systems before Catharine the Great,
+North American glacial deposits and Early Renaissance etchers.
+
+[Illustration: Some of the drawings in my economics notebook were the
+finest things I have ever done.]
+
+This gave me a general idea of the progress of civilization and a
+certain practical knowledge which has stood me in good stead in
+thousands of ways since my graduation.
+
+My system of studying was no less strict. In lecture courses I had my
+notebooks so arranged that one-half of the page could be devoted to
+drawings of five-pointed stars (exquisitely shaded), girls’ heads, and
+tick-tack-toe. Some of the drawings in my economics notebook in the
+course on Early English Trade Winds were the finest things I have ever
+done. One of them was a whole tree (an oak) with every leaf in perfect
+detail. Several instructors commented on my work in this field.
+
+These notes I would take home after the lecture, together with whatever
+supplementary reading the course called for. Notes and textbooks would
+then be placed on a table under a strong lamplight. Next came the
+sharpening of pencils, which would take perhaps fifteen minutes. I had
+some of the best sharpened pencils in college. These I placed on the
+table beside the notes and books.
+
+At this point it was necessary to light a pipe, which involved going to
+the table where the tobacco was. As it so happened, on the same table
+was a poker hand, all dealt, lying in front of a vacant chair. Four
+other chairs were oddly enough occupied by students, also preparing to
+study. It therefore resolved itself into something of a seminar, or
+group conference, on the courses under discussion. For example, the
+first student would say:
+
+“I can’t open.”
+
+The second student would perhaps say the same thing.
+
+The third student would say: “I’ll open for fifty cents.”
+
+And the seminar would be on.
+
+At the end of the seminar, I would go back to my desk, pile the notes
+and books on top of each other, put the light out, and go to bed, tired
+but happy in the realization that I had not only spent the evening
+busily but had helped put four of my friends through college.
+
+An inventory of stock acquired at college discloses the following bits
+of culture and erudition which have nestled in my mind after all these
+years.
+
+
+THINGS I LEARNED FRESHMAN YEAR
+
+ 1. Charlemagne either died or was born or did something with the Holy
+ Roman Empire in 800.
+
+ 2. By placing one paper bag inside another paper bag you can carry
+ home a milk shake in it.
+
+ 3. There is a double l in the middle of “parallel.”
+
+ 4. Powder rubbed on the chin will take the place of a shave if the
+ room isn’t very light.
+
+ 5. French nouns ending in “aison” are feminine.
+
+ 6. Almost everything you need to know about a subject is in the
+ encyclopedia.
+
+ 7. A tasty sandwich can be made by spreading peanut butter on raisin
+ bread.
+
+ 8. A floating body displaces its own weight in the liquid in which it
+ floats.
+
+ 9. A sock with a hole in the toe can be worn inside out with
+ comparative comfort.
+
+ 10. The chances are against filling an inside straight.
+
+ 11. There is a law in economics called _The Law of Diminishing
+ Returns_, which means that after a certain margin is reached returns
+ begin to diminish. This may not be correctly stated, but there _is_ a
+ law by that name.
+
+ 12. You begin tuning a mandolin with A and tune the other strings
+ from that.
+
+
+SOPHOMORE YEAR
+
+ 1. A good imitation of measles rash can be effected by stabbing the
+ forearm with a stiff whiskbroom.
+
+ 2. Queen Elizabeth was not above suspicion.
+
+ 3. In Spanish you pronounce z like th.
+
+ 4. Nine-tenths of the girls in a girls’ college are not pretty.
+
+ 5. You can sleep undetected in a lecture course by resting the head
+ on the hand as if shading the eyes.
+
+ 6. Weakness in drawing technique can be hidden by using a wash
+ instead of black and white line.
+
+ 7. Quite a respectable bun can be acquired by smoking three or four
+ pipefuls of strong tobacco when you have no food in your stomach.
+
+ 8. The ancient Phœnicians were really Jews, and got as far north as
+ England where they operated tin mines.
+
+ 9. You can get dressed much quicker in the morning if the night
+ before when you are going to bed you take off your trousers and
+ underdrawers at once, leaving the latter inside the former.
+
+
+JUNIOR YEAR
+
+ 1. Emerson left his pastorate because he had some argument about
+ communion.
+
+ 2. All women are untrustworthy.
+
+ 3. Pushing your arms back as far as they will go fifty times each day
+ increases your chest measurement.
+
+ 4. Marcus Aurelius had a son who turned out to be a bad boy.
+
+ 5. Eight hours of sleep are not necessary.
+
+ 6. Heraclitus believed that fire was the basis of all life.
+
+ 7. A good way to keep your trousers pressed is to hang them from the
+ bureau drawer.
+
+ 8. The chances are that you will never fill an inside straight.
+
+ 9. The Republicans believe in a centralized government, the Democrats
+ in a de-centralized one.
+
+ 10. It is not necessarily effeminate to drink tea.
+
+
+SENIOR YEAR
+
+ 1. A dinner coat looks better than full dress.
+
+ 2. There is as yet no law determining what constitutes trespass in an
+ airplane.
+
+ 3. Six hours of sleep are not necessary.
+
+ 4. Bicarbonate of soda taken before retiring makes you feel better
+ the next day.
+
+ 5. You needn’t be fully dressed if you wear a cap and gown to a
+ nine-o’clock recitation.
+
+ 6. Theater tickets may be charged.
+
+ 7. Flowers may be charged.
+
+ 8. May is the shortest month in the year.
+
+The foregoing outline of my education is true enough in its way, and is
+what people like to think about a college course. It has become quite
+the cynical thing to admit laughingly that college did one no good.
+It is part of the American Credo that all that the college student
+learns is to catch punts and dance. I had to write something like that
+to satisfy the editors. As a matter of fact, I learned a great deal in
+college and have those four years to thank for whatever I know today.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+(The above note was written to satisfy those of my instructors and
+financial backers who may read this. As a matter of fact, the original
+outline is true, and I had to look up the date about Charlemagne at
+that.)
+
+
+
+
+AN INTERVIEW WITH THEODORE DREISER
+
+
+I found the author of “An American Tragedy” reading a large volume of
+law reports.
+
+“Working on a new book?” I asked.
+
+“It’s a new book to me,” replied Dreiser. “I don’t know about you.”
+
+“Oh, I’m all right,” I retorted. “A little dizzy when I stand up--but
+then, one doesn’t have to stand up much, does one?”
+
+“Does two, does three, does four,” sallied the author, up to one
+hundred.
+
+I could see that we were treading on dangerous ground and, fearful lest
+the interview be ruined, I continued, wetting my thumb:
+
+“Do you get around to the night clubs much?”
+
+“Much more than what?” asked Mr. Dreiser.
+
+“I didn’t say ‘much more than’ anything. I just said ‘much.’”
+
+“Well, you took a very funny way of saying it,” said the pioneer. And
+added, “I _must_ say.”
+
+Things had reached an _impasse_. The storm which had been gathering for
+centuries between Church and State was about to break, and with it the
+temporal power of Rome.
+
+“Let’s get out of here!” I said, taking Dreiser by the arm. “I don’t
+like the looks of things.”
+
+“Someone was saying that very thing to me only yesterday,” said the
+author of “The Genius.” “Now who was it?”
+
+“George Erlich?” I suggested.
+
+“No,” said Dreiser.
+
+“Roger Hatney?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Mrs. Federber?”
+
+“No, no! For God’s sake, man, try and _think_!”
+
+“Wentworth Whamer?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Ernst Timmerley?”
+
+“That’s who it was! Ernst Timmerley! How stupid of me not to remember.
+Ernst Timmerley, that’s who it was.”
+
+“I thought of suggesting him at first,” I said, “but it slipped my
+mind.”
+
+“You can’t tell me that was just a coincidence,” said the author of
+“Sister Carrie.”
+
+“Oh, I can’t, can’t I?” I retorted, not a little piqued. “Well, _it was
+just a coincidence_.”
+
+Dreiser looked at me half quizzically.
+
+“You win,” he said simply.
+
+Outside the snow was blowing down the street like an army of fireflies,
+but inside, by the fire, it was warm.
+
+
+
+
+FASCINATING CRIMES
+
+_II. The Wallack Disappearances_
+
+
+Shortly after the Civil War the residents of Wallack, Connecticut, were
+awakened by the barking of a dog belonging to James Lenn, a visiting
+farmer. The dog was an old one, so they thought nothing of it, and went
+back to sleep again.
+
+Later it was discovered that James Lenn was missing, and that the dog
+also had disappeared, but in the opposite direction. A search of the
+countryside was instituted which resulted in the finding of twenty-five
+empty tins, several old brooms, enough newspapers to make a fair-sized
+bale, and one old buggy top. None of these seemed to have any value as
+clews in the mysterious disappearance of James Lenn. Some importance
+was attached to the discovery of the buggy-top until it was found that
+the missing farmer was not hiding under it.
+
+The police, however, were not satisfied. There had been several
+violations of the State Fishing and Gaming ordinances in and around
+Wallack and public censure of the police was at its height. Chief of
+Police Walter M. Turbot determined to carry this case through to a
+finish. Thus it was that the search for Farmer James Lenn was begun
+afresh, a search which was destined to end in Innsbruck, Austria.
+
+In the little town of Innsbruck there had been living an old garbler
+named Leon Nabgratz, a sort of town character, if such a thing were
+possible. Nabgratz had never been to America, but his young nephew,
+Gurling Nabgratz, son of Leon’s brother Meff, was born in that country
+and had lived there all his life. Late in December, 1867, he had moved
+to Wallack, Connecticut, where he was sold as a slave to one James Lenn.
+
+[Illustration: The principles in the famous Wallack disappearances.
+
+ --_Courtesy of John Held, Jr., and Life._
+]
+
+One day, while reading the newspaper, Gurling Nabgratz came across an
+item indicating that slavery had been abolished four years previously
+and figured out that he was just a sap to be working for James Lenn
+for nothing. He mentioned the matter to his master, but Lenn maintained
+that it was only the Negro slaves who had been freed, and that Lincoln
+was no longer President anyway.
+
+Nabgratz went away grumbling but did his chores that day as usual.
+He was seen late in the evening of April 17 in the poolroom of the
+village, where he is said to have made _sotto-voce_ remarks and sung
+several slave songs of the ante-bellum South with such inflammatory
+refrains as “We’se all gwine ter be free!”
+
+That night Gurling Nabgratz disappeared and was never seen again in
+Wallack.
+
+This having preceded the disappearance of James Lenn by about two
+years, nothing was thought of it at the time. During the search for
+Lenn, however, the incident was recalled, and a search for Nabgratz was
+instituted. This made two searches going on at once in the little town
+of Wallack, and resulted in considerable hard feeling between the rival
+searching-parties. The town was divided into two camps, the “Find Lenn”
+faction and the “Find Nabgratz” faction, and on at least one occasion
+shots were exchanged.
+
+In the meantime, in Innsbruck, Austria, Leon Nabgratz, the old garbler,
+was quietly pursuing his way, quite unconscious of the stir that he was
+causing four thousand miles away. His brother Meff had written him
+about Gurling’s disappearance, but, as the old man never bothered to
+read his brother’s letters, he was just as much in the dark as he had
+been before. More so, in fact, because he was older.
+
+His surprise can well be imagined, therefore, when one day in the
+spring of 1869 the police entered his house in the Schmalzgasse and
+began a search for James Lenn of Wallack, Connecticut, U. S. A. In
+vain Nabgratz protested that he had never heard the name of Lenn and
+that, even if he had, it was not interesting to him. The arm of the
+law reaching across the Atlantic was inexorable. Leon Nabgratz’s
+house was searched and in it was found an old trunk of suspiciously
+large proportions. In spite of the fact that this trunk was labeled
+“_Weihnachtsgeschenke_” (“Christmas presents”) it was opened, and in it
+were found James Lenn _and_ Gurling Nabgratz, together with a copy of
+the New York _Times_ of October 12, 1868.
+
+The mysterious Wallack disappearances were thus explained, and Leon
+Nabgratz was arrested for having in his possession a trunk with a
+misleading label on it.
+
+Art is long and time is fleeting.
+
+
+
+
+LOUIS DOT DOPE
+
+
+On his recent return from France, Mr. Robert Benchley gave the
+following statement to reporters who met him at Quarantine with bail.
+
+“Things in France are in a deplorable condition,” said Mr. Benchley.
+“If Louis XVI keeps on as he has been going for the past few years, I
+predict a revolution. I can give you no idea of the licentiousness and
+waste of the French Court at Versailles or of the pitiable state of the
+common people in Paris. Yes, I can too give you _some_ idea, and, what
+is more, I _will_.
+
+“This Louis XVI is nothing but a wastrel. He drinks a great deal, too.
+And he has gathered about him at Versailles (where he lives) a group
+of sycophants who are just as bad as he is, according to all reports.
+I am not one to retail gossip, but I could tell you some of the things
+that go on out there at Versailles that would make your hair stand on
+end. And, in the meantime, the people in Paris are actually starving.
+You can’t get an oyster stew in Paris for love or money, and I have
+seen the _canaille_ (as the log-rolling wits of the Court call the
+citizenry) standing in line for hours for something, I couldn’t quite
+make out what.
+
+“One little incident that I heard of from a pretty good source
+(Carlyle: page 375) may serve to illustrate the way the wind is
+blowing. It seems that Louis (as his toadiers call him) was out driving
+through Paris with his--pardon me--mistress (I mention no names) when
+the people began crying out for bread. The ‘lady’ in question, who can
+read French and speak it but who has difficulty in understanding it
+when it is spoken fast, asked what it was that they were yelling. Louis
+told her that they said they had no more bread. ‘Let them eat cake
+then,’ said this certain party. ‘And how about us taking a look in at
+Cartier’s window?’
+
+“I don’t know how true this is, but I got it from someone on the inside
+and it shows pretty well the attitude of the nobles towards the common
+people.
+
+“But there is an undercurrent of discontent which I predict will make
+itself felt before many months. I happened to go to lunch with a couple
+of chaps whose names, for obvious reasons, I promised not to mention in
+this connection, and there was a great deal of talk about how easy it
+would be to burn down the Bastille (the government jail over there). ‘A
+couple of good pushes and the Bastille would fall,’ said one of them
+jokingly. But behind all their joking there was a note of seriousness,
+and I would recommend that you send a good man over to Paris pretty
+soon to cover the story, for when it breaks it is going to be a hot
+one. This is just a tip.
+
+“But, as I was saying, it is out there at Versailles that the big
+doings go on. I took a trip out there with a letter from Whitney
+Warren, but they were all out at Chantilly at the races that day and
+I didn’t see anyone but the Head Guide. He said that if I wanted to
+come back Sunday the fountains would be playing, but unfortunately I
+had to sail on Saturday. I did get some inside dope on the situation
+out there, however, and let me tell you that what goes on out there on
+a good night is nobody’s business. All these people, it seems, live
+right out there in the palace together and carry on some pretty rough
+stuff, I gather. Drinking, gambling, necking, _everything_. A lot of
+the married men are out there without their wives, and _vice versa_.
+Some nights the parties don’t break up until two and three o’clock. No
+wonder the taxpayers in Paris are sore. You can mark my words, there
+will be a reaction.
+
+“I myself didn’t have time to get around much. I was over on business
+and I like to keep my head clear when I have business to attend to.
+Summer is when I have my fun. I did go to the theater a couple of
+times, but everything was in French. And then, too, the coffee is so
+bad there. The trip back was pretty rough. One day the waves were
+mountain-high. It certainly seems good to be back in the U. S. A.
+again.”
+
+
+
+
+THE RISE AND FALL OF THE CHRISTMAS CARD
+
+
+Twenty-five years ago (December 21, 1685, to be exact) a man named
+Ferderber awoke after a week’s business trip and realized that he
+hadn’t bought any Christmas presents for his relatives and friends.
+Furthermore, all he had left from the business trip was eighty cents,
+two theater-ticket stubs, and a right shoe.
+
+So he cut up some cardboard to fit envelopes and on each card wrote
+some little thought for the season. Being still a trifle groggy, he
+thought that it would be nice to make them rhyme although, as he
+expressed it, with a modest smile, “I am no poet.”
+
+The one to his aunt read as follows:
+
+ “_Just a little thought of cheer,
+ A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year._”
+
+He liked this one so well that he just copied it on all the others.
+Then he got excited about the thing and drew a sprig of holly on each
+card. He mailed them on Christmas Eve and discovered that he still had
+twenty-eight cents left.
+
+This man Ferderber is now wanted in thirty-two states on the same
+charge: Starting the Christmas Card Menace. His idea immediately took
+hold of the public imagination and the next Christmas all his friends
+and relatives sent cards to their friends and relatives, for, taking
+the old lie that “it isn’t so much the gift as the spirit i.w.i.i.g.”
+at its face value, they felt that people would be much better pleased
+with a friendly greeting than with a nasty old gift. And, for a while,
+the custom really was quite a relief.
+
+[Illustration: He liked this one so well he just copied it on all the
+others.]
+
+Then the thing began to get out of hand. Big Christmas card
+manufacturing concerns sprang up all over the country and factory sites
+adjacent to freight sidings were at a premium. Millions and millions of
+cards were printed and millions and millions of people began sending
+them to each other. Along about December 15, the blight began and, like
+locusts, the envelopes started drifting in from the mail. Seventy-five
+thousand extra mail carriers were drafted into service and finally the
+Government was forced to commandeer all males under 25 who did not have
+flat feet. Even at that, all the Christmas cards couldn’t be delivered
+until the first of the year, and by that time the flood of New Year’s
+cards had begun, for everyone who received Christmas cards from people
+to whom they had sent none rushed out and bought New Year’s cards to
+send them the next week just as if that was what they had intended to
+do all along.
+
+It became impossible to read all these cards, and finally even to open
+them. Great stacks of unopened envelopes covered desks and hall tables
+throughout the country. Some of the wealthier citizens had chutes built
+on the outside of their houses into which the post men dumped the cards
+and by means of which they were conveyed direct to the furnace. The
+poorer people, unable to convert their mail matter into fuel in this
+manner, unable sometimes to clear away a path from their front door to
+the street, often starved to death before their provisions could be got
+to them. The winter of 1927 was known as the Winter of the Red Death,
+for all over the country families were snowed in with envelopes and
+perished before help could be brought to them. In some towns fires were
+accidentally started with results too horrible to relate.
+
+
+UNEARTH VALUABLE SCIENTIFIC DATA
+
+Excavators who have recently been at work in the Middle West digging
+through mounds of petrified envelopes have furnished valuable data on
+the nature of these _objets d’art_. The most popular design seems to
+have been that involving a fireplace with stockings hanging from it,
+with the slogan, evidently satirical, “A Merry Christmas and a Happy
+New Year.” Candles were also highly considered as decoration; candles
+and bells. When human figures were introduced, they were of the most
+unpleasant types: short, fat, bearded men dressed in red, offensively
+gay little children in pajamas carrying lighted candles, stagecoaches
+filled with steaming travelers, sleigh rides and coasting parties, and
+street musicians annoying householders with Christmas carols. The text
+was usually in Old English type, so that fortunately it was difficult,
+if not impossible, to read.
+
+Evidently the tide began to turn when some one, perhaps a descendant
+of the very Ferderber who had brought all this distress on the land,
+thought of the idea of venting his personal spleen in his Christmas
+cards. He thought that, since no one read them anyway, he might as well
+say what he really felt, so long as he said it in Old English type. It
+would be a satisfaction to him, anyway. So near the top of these mounds
+of Early Twentieth Century cards we find some on this order:
+
+A picture of a holly wreath with a large hammer stuck through it and
+the following legend:
+
+ “_Just to Wish You the Measles.
+ Christmas 1931._”
+
+Another showed a little cottage on the brow of a snow-covered hill with
+the sun setting behind it. On the cottage was a sign: “For Sale.” The
+sentiment underneath was:
+
+ “_Peace on Earth, Good Will Toward Men;
+ Heh! Heh!_”
+
+A New Year’s card, with “Greetings” embossed at the top, read:
+
+ “_If I don’t see you in 1933
+ 1934 will be soon enough for me._”
+
+As soon as this fad caught on, the pendulum swung the other way.
+The sentiments, beginning with the mildly abusive, gradually became
+actually vicious.
+
+We find one, dated 1938, which says:
+
+ “_This Christmas Eve I want you to know,
+ That if you don’t leave $50,000 in Box 115 before
+ New Year’s, I’ll sell your letters, you crook, you._”
+
+Another, in a wreath of mistletoe, bore the following explicit legend:
+
+ “_Watch Your Wife._”
+
+It was naturally but a step from these to downright obscene
+vituperation, and at this point, the reform societies stepped in. A
+campaign was carried on throughout the country, which, unlike other
+reform campaigns, had the backing of a majority of the public. It
+was but the work of a year or so to induce the necessary two-thirds of
+the state legislatures to consent to an amendment to the constitution
+forbidding the manufacture and sale of Christmas cards. Naturally
+this was followed by a period of widespread bootlegging, but it was
+half-heartedly supported and soon collapsed.
+
+[Illustration: This was followed by a period of widespread bootlegging.]
+
+All of which is merely a historical summary of what has been done in
+the past, preliminary to launching a campaign against the sale and
+manufacture of all Christmas presents, with the exception of toys. What
+our fathers did, we can do.
+
+
+
+
+THE HENNA DECADE
+
+_What May Happen to Our Age When Thomas Beer Catches Up to It_
+
+
+1
+
+They put William Anderson in jail and Suzanne Lenglen tottered into the
+club-house with a heart-attack.
+
+There was a pistol shot in 1922 and across silver screens from
+Hollywood to Lynn, Massachusetts, a resentful wraith barred attachable
+curls snuggling on movie lapels. “William D. Taylor has been killed,”
+a young detective announced to his lavender mother at their California
+supper. And his mother smiled, for she was to hear Marion Talley before
+nervous wreckers dragged to earth the old Metropolitan, like avid
+vultures of architectural progress.
+
+On the same border of the Pacific a blue-eyed foreman said, “Not
+guilty,” and Roscoe Arbuckle walked out into obese freedom, cleansed
+with hyssop by two words from a drowsy jurist on a stool by his
+predecessor’s desk.
+
+
+2
+
+A little boy, stooping on Central Park West, pressed cracked knuckles
+into creole mud and snapped roseate marbles in what passed for straight
+lines, while across the country in Dayton men slid against turbid
+waters and the National Cash Register served corporate coffee to clammy
+survivors. The little boy’s knuckle-pressing ceased, like young leaves
+which refuse to burn. His father raised brown glove to lift soft
+fedora. “Put away your marbles,” he said to the little boy, “Warren
+Harding has been nominated.”
+
+
+3
+
+Through easy October the short French statesman in silk gloves forgot
+the late war in onion soup for breakfast. A very large peanut crackled
+in the Southern fist of Irvin Cobb and his bearded companion hailed a
+brown-and-white taxi. Together they swept the folio-studded Brentano’s,
+discussing Twenty-third Street. The clerk smiled. His father had been
+mayor of Seattle. Would Twenty-third Street ever reach to Seattle? But
+Cobb had lost the large peanut and his bearded companion had lost his
+garter, and they left Brentano’s to stand in dual proximity watching
+the slightly paralytic progress of a Number 8 Fifth Avenue bus. In the
+distance, the verdant blob of Thorley’s hung like a mossy acorn--green
+sin on a purple republic.
+
+
+4
+
+Milt Gross stood talking with Ring Lardner and another on the steps
+of the American Indian Museum. He had under his arm a bulbous bundle
+and this dropped incontinently to the granite pedestal as he shrugged
+his shoulders. “A peckage skelps,” he said. “Heendian skelps, witt
+blad.” Lardner raised a thermal eyebrow. “What of it?” he asked, and
+in Chicago two young Jewish psychopathics drew up to the curb in a
+Dodge looking for someone to give a ride to. That night the Alabama
+delegation in the steaming reaches of Madison Square Garden threw
+twenty-five dogged votes for Oscar Underwood.
+
+
+5
+
+Standing, occasionally sitting, Lutitia lay in the window seat of the
+Colony Club.... A blonde reticence sat beside her. In the right hand
+of the blonde reticence swirled a cup of tea. In her left, a copy of
+November’s _American Mercury_. From its greenish covers H. L. Mencken
+spoke impatiently of the native _Americanus_, while George Nathan dug
+sadistic pins into American colleagues. Herbert Parrish disparaged the
+American God and words of bile were Leland H. Jenks’s dole for the
+American Constitution and its interpreters. Fiction jetted from between
+these cynical rocks with gloomy disclosures of American small-town
+unpleasantries. Yes, Lutitia, or rather....
+
+So while Irving Berlin, a wispy figure fingering the black notes on a
+piano in West 46th Street, sang “Not for just a year, but always,” the
+tugboat, crazily bearing Mayor Hylan’s Welcoming Committee, pugged to
+greet, with beaver boisterousness, the New Year, a rough beard swinging
+low over rhinestone studs.
+
+
+
+
+A PLAN TO STABILIZE THE FRANC
+
+
+To the Members of the Paris Bourse (of whom it has been said, “Bourse
+Will Be Bourse”), Monsieur Poincare, and Fellow Guests:
+
+I have been asked by a deputation from your delightful country to
+present a plan for stabilizing the franc. I feel in this connection
+like the three men who found themselves in a row-boat in the middle of
+the ocean. One was a Frenchman, one an Irishman, and one a Scotchman.
+
+But, seriously, the problem of the franc is a vital one. And I know of
+no better way to handle it than the way in which we, in my household,
+have handled the problem of the American dollar, an even more vital
+problem to us, as you may well imagine. There are, at this writing,
+approximately twenty-five francs to each American dollar. There are
+also, to each American dollar, thirty-one hungry mouths. Three times
+six is eighteen and one to carry, six times seven is forty-two and one
+is forty-three and four to carry, giving a result of four hundred and
+sixty-one.... No, that can’t be right.... Well, anyway, the life of one
+American dollar has been estimated at one-third that of a sugar lozenge
+under a faucet. This estimate gives the dollar the breaks.
+
+Now, it was only through the most rigid household economy that we
+were able to stabilize the dollar in our family. Several of the older
+and more infirm members of the family died from under-nourishment and
+exposure, being unable to fight for the food or bed-clothing. But
+that is the Law of the Tribe, that the weaker shall give way to the
+stronger and those with protective coloring survive the assaults of
+the predatory land animals and the constant action of the tides. “Easy
+come, easy go,” is what the old folks must remember.
+
+Our first move toward putting our household on a gold basis was to
+make out a budget, and that is what you dear people of France must
+do, too. It is much simpler for a nation to go on a budget than for
+a private family, because a nation never uses real money anyway. A
+nation says, “Here are twenty million francs,” or “Give me a hundred
+million dollars’ worth of chips,” and, if you push right up close
+to the counter and ask to _see_ it, what do you find? A couple of
+theater-ticket stubs, a right-hand glove, and a piece of paper saying,
+“I.O.U. $100,000,000.... A. Mellon.” There probably isn’t $125 in
+actual cash in the whole United States Treasury at this very minute.
+And $45 of that belongs by rights to me, on account of the Government
+having disallowed my deduction for hotel expenses in my 1925 income
+tax. I’ll get that back yet, you wait and see. The big bullies!
+
+[Illustration: Then hell breaks loose--telephone calls, registered
+letters, night sweats.]
+
+This system of dealing in dream-dollars, which seems to be the special
+prerogative of governments and large corporations, is called “Credit,”
+and a pretty how-do-you-do it is, too. “Credit,” as applied to you
+and me, means that we have until the fifteenth of the month to dig
+up the actual gold ore with which to pay our bills. But for a large
+corporation or a nation it means that, so long as the Treasurer can
+sign his name, they are on Easy Street. I sign a check, in a kidding
+way, and give it to Altmeyer’s Meat Market. And what does Altmeyer
+do? Right away _he presents it at my bank_! And then hell breaks
+loose. Telephone-calls, registered letters, night-sweats--you’d
+think the whole world had gone money-mad. And I have to go and get a
+printing-press and _print_ him his money in half a day.
+
+But let Mr. Mellon sign a check for a billion dollars and no one even
+looks at the signature to see if it is genuine. It is folded up and
+put in the vest-pocket and never touched again for years. Is it ever
+presented for payment? Oh, no! Mr. Mellon signed it, never mind the
+money! You’d think Mr. Mellon was Richard Dix or Button Gwinnett. I
+could get pretty sore about the whole thing and so could you, if you
+had any spunk about you.
+
+Now, in our family, there are four people, exclusive of the servant
+(who is lame). We have only three really to figure on, however, as the
+baby works.
+
+In France, there are of course more people than that, but none nicer.
+It has been estimated that in each French sock there are fifteen
+thousand francs. In the southern provinces, where they don’t wear
+socks, the money is stored away in the peasants’ cheeks, or in hollow
+trees. This is going to make it hard to keep exact accounts because you
+can’t tell how much you have on hand. But nothing is worth while unless
+you have to work for it, which is one of the least true things that
+ever was said. So what I would advise would be for every French peasant
+to get a little pocket notebook (the J. C. Hall Co. of Providence, R.
+I., sell a neat little set for a dollar, a book for each month) and
+keep a strict personal account of everything spent--and, what is more
+important, everything received.
+
+For instance, let us take a typical French shopkeeper (and wouldn’t
+I _like_ to take one, and push him into the Somme!) named Jaques
+Duquesne. If we could get him to keep a personal account-book, marking
+down so much for _tabac_, so much for _vin_, so much for _lavabo_, and
+then, on the opposite page, received so much from sale to American
+tourist, so much from non-sale to American tourist, etc., etc., then
+the government officials would have a record of his financial status
+not one word of which could be deciphered.
+
+But personal accounts are the only solution of the French situation,
+just as they were the only solution to our family crisis. My own
+personal account book is a joy to behold, especially if you are in the
+mood for a good laugh. Sometimes I get to laughing so that I can’t
+jot down the items. “Car-fare” I put down, and I haven’t ridden in a
+street-car since I used to go to dancing-school. Another good item is
+“Personal Improvement.” You’d be surprised at what you can crowd into
+Personal Improvement. If you are anything like me practically anything
+you do to yourself would be an improvement. My Personal Improvement
+account is going to run into thousands of dollars a year, and I don’t
+begrudge a cent of it.
+
+To summarize then:
+
+ 1. The franc is the monetary unit of France.
+ 2. The franc is not so stable.
+ 3. Verbs ending in _aître_ retain the circumflex on the _i_
+ whenever it is followed by _t_.
+ 4. And how are _you?_
+
+
+
+
+SEX IS OUT
+
+
+According to Dr. Max Hartmann (I used to have a dentist named Dr.
+Hartmann, but he was a dentist) there is no such thing as absolute sex.
+If 60% of your cells are masculine, you rate as a male. If 60% are
+feminine, you sit with the girls. All combinations are possible up to
+99 and 1, but the 100 percenter in either sex is a myth. Dr. Hartmann
+says so.
+
+This is going to be a big surprise to a lot of people. If the
+Government should ever take it into its head to make public lists of
+sex-percentages, as it now does income taxes, whole communities would
+be upset and perhaps “topsy-turvy” would not be too strong a word for
+what things would be.
+
+We are concerned in this course, however, merely with the effect of
+this negation of sex on the drama. It looks from where we are sitting
+(G-112-113) like the death blow to the Living Theater in this country.
+And in France--well, it will simply mean that they can’t give even
+Punch and Judy shows. What would be the fun in sitting through a scene
+like the following?
+
+(The scene isn’t quite set yet; so the orchestra will play the overture
+over again.)
+
+ROGER: Ever since that night I met you at the dance, my male percentage
+has been increasing. I used to register 65%. Yesterday in Liggetts I
+took a test and it was eighty-one.
+
+MARY: You had your heavier overcoat on.
+
+ROGER: Please, dear, this is no time for joking. I never was more
+serious in all my life. And that means only one thing. Haven’t
+you--aren’t you--do you register just the same as you did?
+
+MARY (_looking at her finger-nails_): No. I have gone up seven points.
+But I thought it was because I had cut down on my starches.
+
+ROGER: Starches nothing! Can’t you see, dear? Don’t you understand what
+it all means?
+
+MARY (_pulling away_): Why am I letting you talk to me like this? We
+mustn’t. Fred will be home at any minute.
+
+ROGER: Fred! Hah! I suppose you know what his last test was? I suppose
+he told you?
+
+MARY: Why--er--no. That is--of course he did. Fred tells me everything.
+
+ROGER: Well, then, I suppose you know that when he was examined for
+life insurance last week they found that his masculine cells totaled up
+to forty-seven and that included his American Legion button, too.
+
+MARY: Fred? Forty-seven? Why, it isn’t possible. Why, only yesterday--
+
+ROGER: Never mind that! Figures don’t lie. The best that Fred can ever
+be to you from now on is a sister.
+
+MARY: This is all so sudden. I must have time to think. Fred my sister!
+It seems incredible!
+
+ROGER: Don’t you see, Mary dear, what the percentages tell us? (_Song
+Cue_)
+
+
+_You and I Total Up to a Hundred_
+
+ Oh, Love brings a message of roses,
+ And Love a sweet litany tells,
+ Of the girls I have known, and the girls who have blown,
+ And their respective number of cells.
+
+
+_Cho._
+
+ There was Alice who rated a cool sixty-two,
+ She wore knickers and called me her “matey,”
+ There was Betty so true, with her large eyes of blue,
+ On a clear day she registered eighty.
+ There was Norma, my queen, who gave seventeen,
+ As her quota of masculine units,
+ But my heart it now yearns, on the latest returns,
+ (_Spoken_: Ninety-seven, ninety-eight, ninety-nine!)
+ For M-A-R-Y, my sweet Winona.
+
+You can see for yourself, there is going to be no fun in figuring out
+sex on the back of an envelope. We might as well give the whole thing
+up and go in for hockey.
+
+
+
+
+UNCLE EDITH’S GHOST STORY
+
+
+“Tell us a ghost story, Uncle Edith,” cried all the children late
+Christmas afternoon when everyone was cross and sweaty.
+
+“Very well, then,” said Uncle Edith, “it isn’t much of a ghost story,
+but you will take it--and like it,” he added, cheerfully. “And if I
+hear any whispering while it is going on, I will seize the luckless
+offender and baste him one.
+
+“Well, to begin, my father was a poor wood-chopper, and we lived in a
+charcoal-burner’s hut in the middle of a large, dark forest.”
+
+“That is the beginning of a fairy story, you big sap,” cried little
+Dolly, a fat, disagreeable child who never should have been born, “and
+what we wanted was a _ghost_ story.”
+
+“To be sure,” cried Uncle Edith, “what a stupid old woopid I was. The
+ghost story begins as follows:
+
+“It was late in November when my friend Warrington came up to me in the
+club one night and said: ‘Craige, old man, I want you to come down to
+my place in Whoopshire for the week-end. There is greffle shooting to
+be done and grouse no end. What do you say?’
+
+“I had been working hard that week, and the prospect pleased. And so it
+was that the 3:40 out of Charing Cross found Warrington and me on our
+way into Whoopshire, loaded down with guns, plenty of flints, and two
+of the most beautiful snootfuls ever accumulated in Merrie England.
+
+“It was getting dark when we reached Breeming Downs, where Warrington’s
+place was, and as we drove up the shadowy path to the door, I felt
+Warrington’s hand on my arm.
+
+“‘Cut that out!’ I ordered, peremptorily. ‘What is this I’m getting
+into?’
+
+“‘Sh-h-h!’ he replied, and his grip tightened. With one sock I knocked
+him clean across the seat. There are some things which I simply will
+not stand for.
+
+“He gathered himself together and spoke. ‘I’m sorry,’ he said. ‘I was a
+bit unnerved. You see, there is a shadow against the pane in the guest
+room window.’
+
+“‘Well, what of it?’ I asked. It was my turn to look astonished.
+
+“Warrington lowered his voice. ‘Whenever there is a shadow against the
+windowpane as I drive up with a guest, that guest is found dead in bed
+the next morning--dead from fright,’ he added, significantly.
+
+“I looked up at the window toward which he was pointing. There,
+silhouetted against the glass, was the shadow of a gigantic man. I say,
+‘a man,’ but it was more the figure of a large weasel except for a
+fringe of dark-red clappers that it wore suspended from its beak.”
+
+“How do you know they were dark red,” asked little Tom-Tit, “if it was
+the shadow you saw?”
+
+“You shut your face,” replied Uncle Edith. “I could hardly control my
+astonishment at the sight of this thing, it was so astonishing. ‘That
+is in my room?’ I asked Warrington.
+
+“‘Yes,’ he replied, ‘I am afraid that it is.’
+
+“I said nothing, but got out of the automobile and collected my bags.
+‘Come on,’ I announced cheerfully, ‘I’m going up and beard Mr. Ghost in
+his den.’
+
+“So up the dark, winding stairway we went into the resounding corridors
+of the old seventeenth-century house, pausing only when we came to the
+door which Warrington indicated as being the door to my room. I knocked.
+
+“There was a piercing scream from within as we pushed the door open.
+But when we entered, we found the room empty. We searched high and low,
+but could find no sign of the man with the shadow. Neither could we
+discover the source of the terrible scream, although the echo of it was
+still ringing in our ears.
+
+“‘I guess it was nothing,’ said Warrington, cheerfully. ‘Perhaps the
+wind in the trees,’ he added.
+
+“‘But the shadow on the pane?’ I asked.
+
+“He pointed to a fancily carved piece of guest soap on the washstand.
+‘The light was behind that,’ he said, ‘and from outside it looked like
+a man.’
+
+“‘To be sure,’ I said, but I could see that Warrington was as white as
+a sheet.
+
+“‘Is there anything that you need?’ he asked. ‘Breakfast is at nine--if
+you’re lucky,’ he added, jokingly.
+
+“‘I think that I have everything,’ I said. ‘I will do a little reading
+before going to sleep, and perhaps count my laundry.... But stay,’ I
+called him back, ‘you might leave that revolver which I see sticking
+out of your hip pocket. I may need it more than you will.’
+
+“He slapped me on the back and handed me the revolver as I had asked.
+‘Don’t blow into the barrel,’ he giggled, nervously.
+
+“‘How many people have died of fright in this room?’ I asked, turning
+over the leaves of a copy of _Town and Country_.
+
+“‘Seven,’ he replied. ‘Four men and three women.’
+
+“‘When was the last one here?’
+
+“‘Last night,’ he said.
+
+“‘I wonder if I might have a glass of hot water with my breakfast,’ I
+said. ‘It warms your stomach.’
+
+“‘Doesn’t it though?’ he agreed, and was gone.
+
+“Very carefully I unpacked my bag and got into bed. I placed the
+revolver on the table by my pillow. Then I began reading.
+
+“Suddenly the door to the closet at the farther end of the room opened
+slowly. It was in the shadows and so I could not make out whether
+there was a figure or not. But nothing appeared. The door shut again,
+however, and I could hear footfalls coming across the soft carpet
+toward my bed. A chair which lay between me and the closet was upset as
+if by an unseen shin, and, simultaneously, the window was slammed shut
+and the shade pulled down. I looked, and there, against the shade, as
+if thrown from the _outside_, was the same shadow that we had seen as
+we came up the drive that afternoon.”
+
+“I have to go to the bathroom,” said little Roger, aged six, at this
+point.
+
+“Well, go ahead,” said Uncle Edith. “You know where it is.”
+
+“I don’t want to go alone,” whined Roger.
+
+“Go with Roger, Arthur,” commanded Uncle Edith, “and bring me a glass
+of water when you come back.”
+
+“And whatever was this horrible thing that was in your room, Uncle
+Edith?” asked the rest of the children in unison when Roger and Arthur
+had left the room.
+
+“I can’t tell you that,” replied Uncle Edith, “for I packed my bag and
+got the 9:40 back to town.”
+
+“That is the lousiest ghost story I have ever heard,” said Peterkin.
+
+And they all agreed with him.
+
+
+
+
+FASCINATING CRIMES
+
+_III. The Missing Floor_
+
+
+It has often been pointed out that murderers are given to revisiting
+the scenes of their crimes. The case of Edny Pastelle is the only one
+on record where the scene of the crime revisited the murderer.
+
+Edny Pastelle was a Basque elevator woman who ran one of the first
+elevators installed in the old Fifth Avenue Hotel, which stood at the
+corner of Twenty-third Street and Fifth Avenue, New York City. The
+elevator was of the surrey type, and was pushed from floor to floor by
+the operator, who was underneath climbing on a ladder. It was Mlle.
+Pastelle’s daily task to hoist such personages as Chauncey M. Depew,
+Boss Tweed and Harriet Beecher Stowe up to their rooms in the Fifth
+Avenue Hotel. In fact, she is said to have been Miss Stowe’s model for
+_Uncle Tom_ in the novel of that name (with the word “Cabin” added to
+it).
+
+In the evenings, when Edny Pastelle was not on duty, she carried Punch
+and Judy shows about town for whoever wanted them. As not many people
+wanted them, Edny’s evenings were pretty much her own.
+
+[Illustration: Edny Pastelle and Max Sorgossen in the gallery of human
+fiends and their victims.
+
+ _--Courtesy of John Held, Jr., and Life._
+]
+
+The evening of July 7, 1891, however, is on record as being not Edny’s,
+but Max Sorgossen’s.
+
+Max Sorgossen worked in the Eden Musée, which was situated on
+Twenty-third Street just below the Fifth Avenue Hotel. His job was
+to put fresh cuffs on the wax figure of Chester A. Arthur in the
+Presidential Group. At five o’clock every afternoon he also took
+“Ajeeb,” the mechanical chess player, out in the back yard for his
+exercise.
+
+At five-thirty on the afternoon in question Max Sorgossen had just
+knocked off work and was strolling up Twenty-third Street in search
+of diversion. In the back of his mind was an idea that perhaps he
+might find another mechanical chess player for “Ajeeb” and a girl for
+himself and that the four of them might go down to Coney Island for the
+evening, as the weather was warm. As he passed the service entrance of
+the Fifth Avenue Hotel he met Edny Pastelle, who was likewise calling
+it a day. (She called it a _jour_, but that is the Basque of it.)
+
+Edny and Max had known each other in finishing school, and so there
+seemed no impropriety in his speaking to her and asking her if she knew
+of a mechanical chess player for “Ajeeb” and if she would look with
+favor on an evening at Coney.
+
+The two were seen entering a restaurant on Twenty-first Street to talk
+it over at 6:10. At 9:20 the next morning guests of the hotel, on
+trying to descend in the elevator, found it stuck between the first
+and third floors. When the car was finally dislodged, it was found to
+contain the body of Max Sorgossen. Furthermore, _the second floor,
+where the elevator should have stopped, was gone_!
+
+Edny was arrested and the trial took place in the Court of Domestic
+Relations, since she was a domestic and there had evidently been
+relations, albeit unfriendly. The prosecuting attorney was a young
+lawyer named William T. Jerome, later William Travers Jerome. Following
+is a transcript of the cross-examination:
+
+ _Q._ What did you do after Sorgossen spoke to you on Twenty-third
+ Street?
+
+ _A._ Pardon.
+
+ _Q._ What did you do after Sorgossen spoke to you on Twenty-third
+ Street?
+
+ _A._ Plenty.
+
+ _Q._ Very good, Mr. Bones. And now tell me, why _is_ a man with a
+ silk hat on like Mary Queen of Scots?
+
+ _A._ What Scots?
+
+ _Q._ I’m asking _you_.
+
+ _A._ Animal, vegetable or mineral?
+
+ _Q._ Mineral.
+
+ _A._ The tidy on the back of that chair?
+
+ _Q._ No.
+
+ _A._ Cyrus W. Field?
+
+ _Q._ Give up?
+
+ _A._ Three spades.
+
+ _Q._ Double three spades.
+
+At this point, counsel for the defense objected and the case was thrown
+out into a higher court, where Edny Pastelle was acquitted, or whatever
+you call it.
+
+It was some thirty years later that the missing second floor of the
+old Fifth Avenue Hotel was discovered. A workman laying wagers on the
+sixteenth floor of the Fifth Avenue Building (erected on the site of
+the old Fifth Avenue Hotel) came across a floor which was neither the
+fifteenth, sixteenth nor seventeenth. The police were called in and,
+after several weeks of investigation and grilling, it was identified
+as the missing floor of the old hotel, the floor at which the little
+romance of Edny Pastelle had come to such an abrupt end. How it came to
+be on the sixteenth floor of the Fifth Avenue Building nobody knows.
+Perhaps Max Sorgossen could tell.
+
+
+
+
+THE END OF THE SEASON
+
+ The William K. Vanderbilt mansion at Fifty-second Street and Fifth
+ Avenue is, according to report, not to be torn down, but will be
+ transported bodily to Long Island where it will be re-erected as a
+ country home. The same fate is also reported to await the Cornelius
+ Vanderbilt “château” at Fifty-seventh Street and Fifth Avenue which
+ was sold last Spring for $7,100,000. Both mansions are, it is said,
+ to be moved to Long Island and re-assembled by purchasers as yet
+ unnamed.
+
+ --_News Item._
+
+
+SCENE
+
+Fifth Avenue between Fifty-second and Fifty-seventh Streets 3 a. m.
+
+
+CHARACTERS
+
+ Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt’s House.
+ Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt’s House.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MRS. W. K.’S HOUSE: You-hoo!
+
+MRS. CORNELIUS’ HOUSE: You-hoo!
+
+MRS. W. K.’S HOUSE: Are you awake?
+
+MRS. C.’S HOUSE: Am I awake? I should say I am. We’re moving down to
+the country tomorrow, you know.
+
+MRS. W. K.’S HOUSE: We move down next week. How are you going down?
+
+MRS. C.’S HOUSE: The Herman W. Oberholzer Wrecking Company, I think--if
+it’s pleasant. The men said they would be here at seven. _Imagine!_ The
+front steps are going down first; so there will be something there when
+we get there. The little towers are crazy to go down with the front
+steps, but I don’t think I’ll let them. I think they ought to stay and
+go down with the rest of the house. You’re all going down together,
+aren’t you?
+
+MRS. W. K.’S HOUSE: Oh, I suppose so. I dread the whole thing and will
+be glad when it’s over. We’ve had all those impossible people tramping
+through the house all week--charity, you know. Some days it just seemed
+as if I couldn’t stand it. One man actually wanted to take a bath in
+the marble tub! My dear, I was _furious_! I think that when we do get
+to the country, I’ll just go to bed and stay there.
+
+MRS. C.’S HOUSE: Why don’t you hurry up and come down with us tomorrow?
+The Oberholzer people are awfully nice and I’m sure there’d be room.
+
+MRS. W. K.’S HOUSE: Oh, I don’t know. I’m so tired I just can’t think.
+
+MRS. C.’S HOUSE: My dear, you could do it just as easily as not. Just
+throw together the things you’ll need--the Blashfield murals and the
+Caen stair-case--and have them ready at seven-thirty. Then, just as
+soon as we are all on the truck, I’ll tell the Oberholzer men to come
+right over and get you and we can all go down together.
+
+MRS. W. K.’S HOUSE: Oh, dear, I’ve half a mind to do it; I do so want
+to get out of the city. Somehow I’ve been awfully depressed about
+things lately. New York isn’t what it used to be. And then the selling
+of the lot and everything, and all these big business buildings coming
+into the neighborhood. A thirty-three story one here, you know.
+
+MRS. C.’S HOUSE: My dear, what do you think of _us_! A forty-two story
+_hotel_, if you please! We got rather used to the Plaza, but I’m glad
+that I sha’n’t be here to see this new thing.
+
+MRS. W. K.’S HOUSE: Do you know, I think I’ll just _tear_ and get ready
+to go down with you in the morning. We have practically no front-steps,
+you know, and we can just sort of camp out down there until the roof
+and other things come down. Seven-thirty, you say?
+
+MRS. C.’S HOUSE: That’s what the wrecking people said, I suppose that
+means eight or half-past. We’ll have to eat luncheon on the way. We’ll
+have plenty of chicken for you.
+
+MRS. W. K.’S HOUSE: My dear, don’t be silly. I’ll bring the sandwiches,
+and perhaps when they tear the cellar up they may find enough champagne
+for just the two of us.
+
+MRS. C.’S HOUSE: That will be _divine_! Seven-thirty, then.
+
+MRS. W. K.’S HOUSE: Good night, my dear. And don’t forget, I’m bringing
+the sandwiches!
+
+
+
+
+EXAM TIME
+
+
+What ought to be the last word in our national craze for examinations
+and tests is found in the announcement of an aged man in North Carolina
+that he is ready to take the “Charlie Ross Test.”
+
+“The Charlie Ross Test” seems to have for its object the examination
+of the candidate to see whether or not he is the Charlie Ross who was
+kidnaped, as a little boy, from his home in Germantown, Pa., in 1873.
+The successful candidate is to receive an embossed certificate with the
+name “Charlie Ross” in Old English type at the top. He is also allowed
+to say, “I am Charlie Ross,” when introducing himself to people.
+
+Candidates in the Charlie Ross Test are given two hours in which to
+complete the examination, and a choice of seven questions out of ten.
+Question No. 4, however (“Are you white or black?”), must be answered,
+as the Charlie Ross who was kidnaped was known to have been white.
+
+Mr. Julius Dellinger, the present contestant, has been cramming for the
+test for over six months, and feels fairly confident that he will pass
+with flying colors. A question of ruling came up last week, when it was
+discovered that Mr. Dellinger had been tutoring on the side with a man
+supposed to have been the original Charlie Ross’s uncle, but it was
+decided to allow this provided that the candidate does not take notes
+into the examination-room with him.
+
+“What will you do if you win?” Mr. Dellinger was asked.
+
+“I will be just the happiest man in the world,” was the reply. “First
+of all, I will have stationery made with ‘C. R.’ on it, and then I will
+look up all my new relatives in the Ross family and perhaps visit them
+for a while.”
+
+“When you have passed the Charlie Ross Test, do you expect to take the
+Ambrose Bierce Test?” the reporter asked.
+
+“I looked into the Ambrose Bierce Test before I decided on the Charlie
+Ross one,” Mr. Dellinger said, “but as Bierce was quite well on in
+years when he disappeared in Mexico, it would be rather a tough
+examination to take. So many people knew what Bierce looked like, and
+then, too, there would always be the possibility that I might _not_ be
+Bierce after all. It would be very humiliating to get up before the
+Board of Regents and discover that you were Charlie Ross when you were
+taking the Ambrose Bierce examination, or vice versa.”
+
+“Had you ever thought that perhaps you might be the Man with the Iron
+Mask?” Mr. Dellinger was asked.
+
+“Well, that would hardly be possible,” he said with a smile, “as
+the Man with the Iron Mask lived in the seventeenth century and
+spoke French. I speak no French. Still,” he added with a touch of
+wistfulness, “I might learn.”
+
+“Aside from the language,” the reporter suggested, “it ought to be an
+easier test than either the Ross or Bierce one, for no one knows what
+the Man with the Iron Mask looked like.”
+
+Mr. Dellinger thought for a minute. Then a look of determination came
+into his eyes. “I’ll send for a set of last year’s examination papers
+tomorrow,” he said. And into his bearing there crept something of the
+grand manner, a slightly imperious gesture with the hand, a courtly
+toss to the head. For the Man with the Iron Mask was said by some to
+have been the son of Cardinal Mazarin and Anne of Austria.
+
+With a low bow the reporter withdrew.
+
+
+
+
+THROWING BACK THE EUROPEAN OFFENSIVE
+
+
+This is probably the hardest time of year for for those of us who
+didn’t go to Europe last summer. It was bad enough when the others were
+packing and outlining their trips for you. It was pretty bad when the
+postcards from Lausanne and Venice began coming in. But now, in the
+fall, when the travelers are returning with their Marco Polo travelogs,
+now is when we must be brave and give a cheer for the early frost.
+
+There are several ways to combat this menace of returning travelers.
+The one that I have found most effective is based on the old football
+theory that a strong offense is the best defense. I rush them right off
+their feet, before they can get started.
+
+In carrying out this system, it is well to remember that very few
+travelers know anything more about the places they have visited than
+the names of one hotel, two points of interest, and perhaps one street.
+You can bluff them into insensibility by making up a name and asking
+them if they saw that when they were in Florence. My whole strategy
+is based on my ability to make up names. You can do it, too, with
+practice.
+
+Thus, let us say that I am confronted by Mrs. Reetaly who has just
+returned from a frantic tour of Spain, southern France, and the Ritz
+Hotel, Paris. You are inextricably cornered with her at a tea, or beer
+night, or something. Following is a transcript of the conversation.
+(Note the gathering power of my offense.)
+
+MRS. R.: Well, we have just returned from Europe, and everything seems
+so strange here. I simply can’t get used to our money.
+
+MR. B.: I never see enough of it to get used to it myself. (_Just a
+pleasantry._)
+
+MRS. R.: When we were in Madrid, I just gave up trying to figure out
+the Spanish money. You see, they have _pesetas_ and--
+
+MR. B.: A very easy way to remember Spanish money is to count ten
+_segradas_ to one _mesa_, ten _mesas_ to one _rintilla_ and twenty
+_rintillas_ to one _peseta_.
+
+MRS. R.: Oh, you have been to Spain? Did you go to Toledo?
+
+MR. B.: Well, of course, Toledo is just the beginning. You pushed on to
+Mastilejo, of course?
+
+MRS. R.: Why--er--no. We were in quite a hurry to get to Granada and--
+
+MR. B.: You didn’t see Mastilejo? That’s too bad. Mastilejo is Toledo
+multiplied by a hundred. Such mountains! Such coloring! Leaving
+Mastilejo, one ascends by easy stages to the ridge behind the town from
+which is obtained an incomparable view of the entire Bobadilla Valley.
+It was here that, in 1476, the Moors--
+
+[Illustration: “Unless you have seen Tuna, you haven’t seen Spain.”]
+
+MRS. R.: The Moorish relics in Granada--
+
+MR. B.: The Moorish relics in Granada are like something you buy from
+Sears-Roebuck compared to the remains in Tuna. You saw Tuna, of course?
+
+MRS. R.: Well, no (_lying her head off_), we were going there, but
+Harry thought that it would just be repeating what--
+
+MR. B.: The biggest mistake of your life, Mrs. Reetaly, the biggest
+mistake of your life! Unless you have seen Tuna, you haven’t seen Spain.
+
+MRS. R.: But Carcassonne--
+
+MR. B.: Ah, Carcassonne! Now you’re talking! Did you ever see anything
+to beat that old diamond mill in the _Vielle Ville_? Would they let you
+go through it when you were there?
+
+MRS. R.: Why, I don’t think that we saw any old diamond mill. We saw an
+old--
+
+MR. B.: I know what you’re going to say! You saw the old wheat sifter.
+Isn’t that fascinating? Did you talk with the old courier there?
+
+MRS. R.: Why, I don’t remember--
+
+MR. B.: And the hole in the wall where Louis the Neurotic escaped from
+the Saracens?
+
+MRS. R.: Yes, wasn’t that--? (_Very weak._)
+
+MR. B.: And the stream where they found the sword and buckler of the
+Man with the Iron Abdomen?
+
+MRS. R. (_edging away_): Yes, indeed.
+
+MR. B.: And old Vastelles? You visited Vastelles, surely?... Mrs.
+Reetaly, come back here, please! I just love talking over these dear
+places with someone who has just been there.... May I call on you some
+day soon and we’ll just have a feast of reminiscence?... Thank you. How
+about tomorrow?
+
+And from that day to this, I am never bothered by Mrs. Reetaly’s
+European trip, and you needn’t be, either, if you will only study the
+above plan carefully.
+
+The other method is based on just the opposite theory--that of no
+offense, or defense, at all. It is known as “dumb submission,” and
+should be tried only by very phlegmatic people who can deaden their
+sensibilities so that they don’t even hear the first ten minutes of the
+traveler’s harangue. The idea is to let them proceed at will for a time
+and then give unmistakable evidence of not having heard a word they
+have said. Let us say that Mr. Thwomly has accosted me on the train.
+
+MR. T.: It certainly seems funny to be riding in trains like this
+again. We have been all summer in France, you know, and those
+French trains are all divided up into compartments. You get into a
+compartment--_compartimon_, they call them--and there you are with
+three or five other people, all cooped up together. On the way from
+Paris to Marseilles we had a funny experience. I was sitting next to a
+Frenchman who was getting off at Lyons--Lyons is about half way between
+Paris and Marseilles--and he was dozing when we got in. So I--
+
+MR. B.: Did you get to France at all when you were away?
+
+MR. T.: This was in _France_ that I’m telling you about. On the way
+from Paris to Marseilles. We got into a railway carriage--
+
+[Illustration: “Did you get to France at all when you were away?”]
+
+MR. B.: The railway carriages there aren’t like ours here, are they?
+I’ve seen pictures of them, and they seem to be more like compartments
+of some sort.
+
+MR. T. (_a little discouraged_): That was a French railway carriage I
+was just describing to you. I sat next to a man--
+
+MR. B.: A Frenchman?
+
+MR. T.: Sure, a Frenchman. That’s the _point_.
+
+MR. B.: Oh, I see.
+
+MR. T.: Well, the Frenchman was asleep, and when we got in I stumbled
+over his feet. So he woke up and said something in French, which I
+couldn’t understand, and I excused myself in English, which _he_
+couldn’t understand, but I saw by his ticket that he was going only as
+far as Lyons--
+
+MR. B.: You were across the border into France, then?
+
+MR. T. (_giving the whole thing up as a bad job_): And what did _you_
+do this summer?
+
+Whichever way you pick to defend yourself against the assaults of
+people who want to tell you about Europe, don’t forget that it was I
+who told you how. I’m going to Europe myself next year, and if you
+try to pull either of these systems on _me_ when I get back, I will
+recognize them at once, and it will just go all the harder with you.
+But, of course, _I_ will have something to tell that will be worth
+hearing.
+
+
+
+
+AN INTERVIEW WITH VICE-PRESIDENT DAWES
+
+
+Interviewing Vice-Presidents is always a ticklish business, unless you
+happen to find one who isn’t ticklish.
+
+So I took General Dawes into my confidence right at the start.
+
+“General Dawes,” I said, “what is your feeling about the Senate?”
+
+“You mean the Roman Senate, do you not?” asked the grizzled warrior.
+
+“Well, yes, now that you speak of it,” I replied. Here was a chance to
+have some fun at the expense of Catiline.
+
+“The Senate is all right,” said General Dawes. “It is the tribunes of
+the people that cause all the trouble. They and the lictors.”
+
+“How would you lictor have a glass of beer?” I asked the Vice-President.
+
+Well, that got us to giggling, as you may very well imagine. First I
+would hit him, and then he would hit me.
+
+“If the Senate rules were to be changed, so that for ‘quorum’ it should
+read ‘jorum,’ what would you think?” I asked him, spitting out two
+teeth (good ones, too).
+
+“‘Jorum’ instead of ‘quorum’?” he asked, stalling for time. “What would
+I think?”
+
+“You heard me, Mr. Vice-President,” I retorted.
+
+“I should say, suh--” he began.
+
+“I didn’t know that you were from the South,” I interrupted.
+
+“I’m not. That was just something caught in my throat.”
+
+At this point, General Dawes looked out the window. “Where are we?”
+he asked, peering into the darkness. “Is this New Haven we are coming
+into, porter?”
+
+But the porter was just as much puzzled as General Dawes was, being a
+Southern Pacific porter on his first trip on the N. Y., N. H. & H. R. R.
+
+“I could tell with a bit of litmus paper,” he said.
+
+Quickly I clapped my hand over General Dawes’ mouth.
+
+“Do you ever wonder, Mr. Vice-President,” I asked him, “just what life
+is all about?”
+
+“_Do_ I?” said General Dawes from behind my palm. “That’s all I ever
+wonder about.”
+
+“Wasn’t it Voltaire who asked ‘_Que suis-je, ou suis-je, ou vais-je, et
+d’ou suis-je tiré?_’”
+
+“That all sounds very silly,” retorted the General in a rage. “And
+besides, there should be an accent over all those ‘u’s’.”
+
+“The General did not have his nap today,” I explained to the conductor.
+“He is cross.”
+
+“This is my street anyway,” said the Vice-President, hopping up and
+getting into his middy-blouse. And, without a word, he was gone.
+
+
+
+
+THE _LIFE_ POLAR EXPEDITION
+
+
+_En route with “Life’s” Bicycle Expedition to the North Pole.--May 17._
+
+We are now just between Woodlawn and Mt. Vernon, at a point where there
+seems to be some sort of road-digging going on. This means that we
+shall have to sit down and wait for them to finish, or else go back and
+take a roundabout route. We are just a little discouraged.
+
+“Chief,” Lieut.-Commander Connelly said to me as we were pedalling
+through Morrisania (168th Street), “do you ever have any doubts about
+our catching up with the others--Amundsen and Byrd, I mean?”
+
+I felt a strange little chill creep around my heart. Was this mutiny?
+
+“Have you heard any of the men talking?” I asked, without looking at
+him.
+
+“Well, no, not exactly,” he replied, “but Ensign Thermaline asked me
+yesterday how long I figured out that it would be before we sighted one
+of the other expeditions.”
+
+“You can tell Ensign Thermaline,” I said, “that if he will keep his
+feet pedalling ’round and ’round just as fast as he can and maintain
+his balance, the rest of us will do the same.”
+
+Lieut.-Commander Connelly looked at me with tears in his eyes. “Aye,
+aye, sir,” was all that he said, but it spoke volumes.
+
+From Mott Haven, where we spent the night, we have pedalled due north
+over the Grand Concourse, stopping only once at a repair shop to get
+a new thumb-piece for Ensign Thermaline’s bell. Ensign Thermaline had
+been using the bell almost constantly since leaving 57th Street, being
+one of the most cautious pilots in the expedition.
+
+A peculiarity of the country which we all have noticed since crossing
+over the Harlem River is the rows upon rows of large apartment houses
+which have sprung up along the route. At first none of us spoke of
+it, but finally Lieut.-Commander Connelly could keep his thoughts to
+himself no longer. “Have you noticed the large number of apartment
+houses along the way?” he asked. We all admitted that we had.
+
+In front of one of these apartment houses an interesting sight met our
+eyes. A little boy was seen riding along in what looked like a very
+small automobile and it was in effect really an automobile except
+that it was propelled by the little boy’s feet, which were in direct
+contact with the sidewalk. Some members of the expedition were in favor
+of stopping and getting the little boy to join, but wiser counsel
+prevailed and we decided that it would take him too long to get his
+winter things packed and that we ought not to incur any more delays
+than we should run into in the natural course of events. “He would have
+been cute, though,” said Lieut-Commander Connelly wistfully.
+
+Just the other side of Williamsbridge we ran into an obstacle which for
+a while threatened to hold us up indefinitely. Right in our path we
+came to a high wall surrounding a reservoir. We sent Ensign Thermaline
+up to take soundings and he returned, making a long face, and reporting
+that the reservoir was practically ten feet deep.
+
+“What a place to build a reservoir anyway!” I said, and the other
+joined me in my disgust.
+
+Fording the darned thing being out of the question, we decided that it
+would be better to take one of the roads which seemed to lead around
+it. We chose the one to the left because left is Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly’s favorite direction. And Dame Fortune was with us in our
+choice, for it led, after a while, right into the Bronx River Parkway,
+which was _just_ where we wanted to be. Had we taken the road to the
+right, there is no telling where we should have ended up.[1]
+
+It was in passing Woodlawn Cemetery that we got into the discussion
+which is still raging as we sit by the roadside before Mt. Vernon.
+The sight of the miles and miles of monuments in Woodlawn depressed
+Lieut.-Commander Connelly and set him thinking.
+
+“Man’s span is _so_ short,” he said, drawing up alongside my “bike” (as
+we call our wheels). “Man’s span is so short that it seems hardly worth
+all the fuss and pother of trying, doesn’t it?” he whispered.
+
+“I think that word is ‘bother,’” I said.
+
+“Which word?” he asked.
+
+“The word you called ‘pother,’” I replied, a little cruelly, I am
+afraid.
+
+“Are you _sure_?” he asked.
+
+“As sure as one can be of anything in this old world,” I said.
+
+“That’s just it,” the lieutenant-commander returned, “what _can_ one
+be sure of? We are born, grow up, make our little plans--and what sad,
+brave little plans they are, too--and then just as we think we are
+succeeding”--the young explorer stopped and looked at the rows of
+tombstones on our left.
+
+“I know, Lieutenant-Commander,” I said, sympathetically. “You don’t
+have to say it.”
+
+And so we rode on in silence, until we reached this sort of digging-up
+they are doing in the road. Then I said: “Oh, the devil!” And at this
+rather pat climax to a discussion on philosophy, we both laughed.
+
+But if we are held up very long here it will be no laughing matter, for
+in the papers we read that Amundsen is already on his way to the Pole
+from Spitsbergen.
+
+(_The brave boys of the “Life” Polar Expedition are pedalling furiously
+in a northerly direction and expect to reach Mt. Vernon any day now.
+Another despatch from Commander Benchley will appear next week._)
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] The right road also leads to the Bronx River Parkway.--EDITOR.
+
+
+
+
+A GHOST STORY
+
+(_As Sherwood Anderson Would Write It If He Weren’t Prevented_)
+
+
+1
+
+David Perk sat on the edge of his bed. It was nearly midnight and in
+a few minutes the ghost would come. The ghost would come, all right,
+all right. Why not? Milt Neevis had seen it here in this very room,
+and Milt got drunk every Thursday night and rolled in the bran-mash
+they had fixed for the horses out in Rob McCarver’s barn. And Milt knew
+women, too. When Spring came to Panis Junction, and the soft smell of
+honeysuckle drifted into town over Ernest Tamson’s tannery down by the
+tracks, Milt used to sneak out at eleven o’clock every night and go in
+swimming alone in the Women’s Public Baths. Naked. Milt knew women all
+right. Lordy!
+
+And Milt Neevis had told David Perk that at midnight the ghost would be
+sure to come. And what’s more, it might be a female ghost, Milt said.
+Male and female. Hot dickety-dog!
+
+
+2
+
+David Perk was sitting on the edge of his bed waiting for the ghost.
+Why should he--David Perk--be afraid? Why should anyone be afraid? Why
+should you be afraid? Why should I be afraid? Sex was sex, wasn’t it?
+That night in Chicago. Why had he left Ella? Ella had been his first
+wife and every Friday night she used to bake potatoes and cut them open
+to put butter in them. David had liked to see her cut open the baked
+potatoes. Perhaps it hurt them to be cut open. Why not? Potatoes had
+sex, just the same as you and me or old Milt Neevis rolling in the
+bran-mash out in Rob McCarver’s barn. Male potatoes. Female potatoes.
+Cut them open and put butter in them. And paprika. Ella had cut them
+open and put butter in them that night back in Chicago. And David had
+left her. Not because she did that. David had liked that. It had made
+him feel all queer all over. Lordy! Ella would never understand how it
+made him feel. So he had left her. Male potatoes in the same dish with
+female potatoes. Milt Neevis swimming alone naked in the Women’s Public
+Baths on a Spring night. Slicky-slicky!
+
+
+3
+
+David Perk sitting on the edge of his bed waiting for the ghost.
+Perhaps a girl ghost. He was a man, wasn’t he? Secretary Stanton of
+Lincoln’s cabinet had been a man, hadn’t he? Why Stanton? Well, why
+not Stanton? He, David Perk, had never seen Stanton, had he? Nor G. A.
+Henty. Nor Cyrus W. Field. All men, weren’t they? And what were men
+made for if not for women?
+
+ “_Hill-dill, come over the hill,
+ Or else I’ll catch you standing still._”
+
+That night in Detroit. When he had left Irma. Irma had been his second
+wife. Irma had large bones and cried easily. One night in the Spring
+she and David had gone out into the fields and pulled up all the grass.
+A mare and a stallion pulling up grass in the fields and chewing it.
+They had chewed grass all night. Big sensation. Grass between your
+teeth. Green, sharp grass. Big male moon in the sky looking for its
+mate. Little female stars skipping about looking for their mates. Never
+finding them. David never finding anyone. Twenty-three! Skidoo!
+
+
+4
+
+That night in Boston when David had met Theresa. Theresa was his third
+wife. The State House dome in the moonlight. Niggers singing on the
+Common. Niggers who had been freed. Irishmen singing on the Common.
+Sailors with girls on their laps on the benches. Spooning. Tremont
+Street. Boylston Street. Trolley cars. English sparrows with Spring
+in their veins. Men and women. Boys and girls. Male babies and female
+babies. Sex! America!
+
+And here was he, David Perk, sitting--all hot and bothered--on the edge
+of his bed waiting for the ghost to come. And old Milt Neevis down in
+Rob McCarver’s barn rolling in the bran-mash.
+
+
+5
+
+Downstairs Edith was asleep. Edith was David Perk’s fourth wife. Edith
+slept on her right side with the right arm stretched out behind her and
+her left hand under her cheek. And after that--what? After _what_ what?
+What did it matter what? Here was the ghost. The ghost that Milt Neevis
+had told him about. And Milt had said it might be a female!
+
+David felt all queer. He felt as he had felt that night in Toronto when
+he had left Marian, his fifth wife. “All alone by the telephone waiting
+for a ring, a ting-a-ling.” Things hadn’t gone right--for him and
+Marian--not right at all.
+
+ “_Higgledy-piggledy, my black hen.
+ She lays eggs for gentlemen._”
+
+Eggs for gentlemen, eh? Lord, what a time! But what was a fellow to do?
+What had she been thinking about? What had he--David--been thinking
+about? Chinks jabbering in their laundry. Chinks jabbering out in front
+of their laundry. The War. The Red Cross. The Fifth Liberty Loan. Was
+he--David--afraid? Was he--or was she--jealous of her? Not by a damn
+sight. Well, he and Irma had certainly messed things up. And he smiled
+to himself. Would the ghost know? Would she understand what Irma hadn’t
+understood? What Marian hadn’t understood? What Edith--downstairs
+sleeping this very minute with her right arm stretched out behind
+her--wasn’t understanding? How come?
+
+
+6
+
+It was Spring outside and the warm breeze over the lilac bushes carried
+the smell of Ernest Tamson’s tannery to David. Did the ghost smell it
+too? “Come in.” David was out of bed now, standing beside the ghost.
+She was a woman all right. And David was a man. God’s man. Flames in
+her eyes--deep red flames--deep blue flames. The old oaken bucket. The
+iron-bound bucket. The moss-covered bucket. Heigh-ho! Old Black Joe!
+
+David was packing his grip. His two military brushes. One male. The
+other female. Male and female created He them. Why be ashamed of it?
+The ghost was looking at David with a queer look in her eyes. She knows
+what’s what, old man. Sure thing. She wants me to go with her. Why
+not? Male and Female created He them. And the evening and the morning
+were the sixth day. “And ’twas from Aunt Dinah’s quilting party, I was
+seeing Nelly home.”
+
+
+7
+
+David Perk and the girl ghost were leaving the house. He felt her close
+to him. It was! It wasn’t! It was! He knew that she was thinking the
+long, long thoughts of a woman. And he--David--was thinking the long,
+long thoughts of a man. They were across Nalbro Harris’ backyard now.
+Now they were on the train for Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. David Perk. And
+back in the gray house Edith was sleeping with her right arm stretched
+out behind her and her left hand under her cheek. On her right side.
+Well, toodle-oo!
+
+
+
+
+DISCOVERING WEBER AND FIELDS
+
+_If There Had Been Erudite Criticism in the Nineties_
+
+
+From the lowly precincts of the music halls has arisen a new pair of
+pragmatists. The names that appear on the bills are Weber and Fields,
+but the hands are the hands of William James. And so and so and so and
+so.
+
+The method of these zanies is eclectic. From Zeno the Stoic they have
+taken the doctrine of “six-times-six-is-thirty-six.” From Anaxagoras
+the theory that the Whole is less than any of its parts. From Francis
+Bacon the denial of Truth as a substantive. From L. G. B. three dozen
+woolen stockings and a crate of oranges.
+
+Take for example the scene where _Mike_ and _Meyer_ are discussing
+occupations (in itself pure dialectics):
+
+ MEYER: Vot are you doing?
+
+ MIKE: Voiking in a nut factory.
+
+ MEYER: Doing vot?
+
+ MIKE: Nutting.
+
+ MEYER: Sure--but vot are you _doing_?
+
+ MIKE: Nutting.
+
+ MEYER: I know, but vot voik are you doing?
+
+ MIKE: Nutting, I tole you.
+
+ MEYER (_poking his finger in Mike’s eye_): Ou-u-u-u, how I lofe you!
+
+Here we have the new philosophy of the subconscious, the stirrings of
+a new American humor which derives from the modern German school of
+_Merkwürdigkeit_, or _Es-giebt-also-es-ist_. In the American mind is
+being born, through the medium of the music hall, a consciousness of
+national social satire which bids fair to revolutionize thought on
+this side of the Atlantic. Could a better example be found than the
+following dialogue between these two super-clowns in their latest show:
+
+ MIKE (_referring to off-stage noises_): A soldier has been shot.
+
+ MEYER: Vere vos he shot?
+
+ MIKE: In de eggcitement!
+
+Here, in these words, lies America. The America of today, with its
+flaring gas lights, its thundering cable cars, the clatter of its
+hansoms, and the deafening whistle of its peanut stands. The young,
+vibrant spirit of America, locked in the message of two clowns! And,
+with the coming of jazz, twenty years from now, we shall see the full
+expression of the young nation’s strivings toward the Greater Smooch.
+
+
+
+
+WATER FOOTBALL
+
+_Suggestions to the Rules Committee for Making Use of Rain_
+
+
+Whatever it is that the football rules committee does during that week
+in the spring that it spends in New York (and you can’t tell me that
+a group of healthy men can stay in a New York hotel room all the time
+and think of nothing but football, football, football) it certainly
+makes no provision for rain on the day of a big game. And anyone who
+has sat through four two-hour periods in a downpour will tell you that
+football, as it is played today, is essentially a fair-weather sport.
+
+I had a cousin who went to the Harvard-Yale game last year and
+contracted gelatin-trouble, owing to the sizing in his fur coat having
+soaked through into his spine and gone the rounds of his entire system.
+He sat in a large puddle (one of the largest in the Yale Bowl, he tells
+me, and you know what a big place the Yale Bowl is) and along about six
+o’clock, on the way home in the machine, he felt a queer sort of spinal
+disintegration. “As if I were going to pieces,” is the way he expressed
+it. He thought nothing of it until his arms and legs began to come off
+and then he went somewhere and lay down. Whatever it was that finally
+became of him, the point is that watching football in the rain is no
+darned fun and the least that the rules committee can do is to make
+some regulations covering a situation that so frequently exists.
+
+For instance, when it is found that the field is going to be knee-deep
+in mud and water, there ought to be some way of changing the nature of
+the game entirely, so that the very elements which would, under the
+old rules, work toward a spoiling of the game, might be turned into
+favorable factors for all concerned.
+
+Thus we might have a play (to be called “left half around the sandbar”)
+in which, at the signal, the left halfback takes the ball from the
+quarter, tosses it into a dory, shoves off, and rows around right end.
+His interference, also in dories, could ward off tacklers by splashing
+water in their faces, use of the oars as clubs to be called illegal. To
+meet this play, it would be the function of the defensive backs to row
+through and, if possible, force the man with the ball in his boat to
+row onto a sandbar or else create such a wash that it upsets him.
+
+Or, there might be an entirely different ball used during a rain
+storm--a large, red rubber ball such as some nuisance always has at
+the beach in the summer. This could be tossed back and forth, the
+players screaming with excitement the while, until one side or the
+other gets tired. With this type of ball, a very neat trick play
+could be utilized, the “U-56, or concealed ball play” in which the
+quarterback, immediately on receiving the pass, would shove the ball
+under the surface of the water, sit on it, and paddle himself around
+left end or through left tackle, if a hole could be opened up for him.
+The fun here would be for the defense to drown the runner.
+
+Of course, the rain is not always sufficiently heavy to make the water
+deep enough for the two plays outlined above. Sometimes it merely
+drizzles and there is nothing but mud on the field. This would call for
+an entirely new list of plays. Under these conditions, the old Carlisle
+Indian trick could be revived, each of the backs scooping up an armful
+of mud and running with it, the defense being unable to tell in which
+armful the ball is hidden. Or, as an alternate play, the backfield
+could daub their faces with mud to look like a negro quartette and
+could start humming old plantation melodies. Then, while the defense
+stopped and listened, enchanted, the right end could pick up the
+leather and slide down the field with it.
+
+The big spectacular play, however, for a muddy day is the “sappers’
+wedge” or “East Side subway.” In this trick, the linemen throw up
+breastworks of mud in front of the line of scrimmage. When the ball is
+put into play, the backs burrow down into the soft ground and tunnel
+themselves under the line, digging out on the other side for a gain
+of perhaps five yards. This play can be used effectively when within
+five yards of the goal, as the back carrying the ball has made, _ipso
+facto_, a touchdown.
+
+This outline of aquatic football has, however, not taken the spectators
+into account. Who ever does? But there they are, millions and millions
+of them, and something must be done for _them_ on a rainy day.
+
+Since there is always someone in front of you who has an umbrella up,
+you might as well give up any idea you may have had of watching the
+game. Don’t torture yourself by trying to peek around the umbrella,
+catching sight of the beginning of a play and never knowing until
+you hear the cheering whether or not it succeeded. In this way lies
+madness. Just give up trying to spy on the field maneuvers and get your
+neighbors to enter into a few little games with you to pass the time
+away.
+
+There is, for example, the game of “Neck Cisterns.” In this game, all
+the people sitting in a row open out the collars of their coats in the
+back, sitting hunched forward so as to make the opening as big as
+possible. The idea is to see who can catch the most rain water down the
+back of the neck. Drippings from an umbrella are not allowed. The water
+must come directly down and into the collar. The winner is the one
+whose collar runs over first.
+
+This may seem like a very simple game to play, and one dependent
+entirely on the capacity of the coat of the contestant. This is not
+so. A great deal of skill can be brought into playing it by adjusting
+the angle of the body to meet the angle of the rain at a point where
+the maximum amount of water will drive into the collar. An old hand at
+“Neck Cisterns” can fill his coat up to overflowing before a beginner
+has got even his shoulder blades wet.
+
+Another similar game is that of “Brimming.” The players in this turn
+the brims of their hats up so as to catch the rain water. At a given
+signal, the brims are suddenly turned down and the heads thrust
+forward, the idea being to project the deluge of water as far out as
+possible. The one hitting the person farthest in front wins and is
+the champion “brimmer” of the section. During the final period of the
+football game, the champion “brimmers” from each section meet and play
+off the finals.
+
+Of course, one of the chief features of watching a contest in the rain
+is the wet seat. You hop up in your excitement at seeing the boys pull
+off a forward pass (which is grounded) and, by the time you have got
+around to sitting down again, the place which you have been keeping dry
+up until the forward pass is now a tiny lily pond with swan boats in
+it. Into this you sink back exhausted from your cheering, and in it you
+sit for the rest of the game while, starting from the pond as a base,
+a series of chills race up your spine to a spot directly behind your
+ears, where they break ranks.
+
+[Illustration: The one hitting the person farthest in front wins.]
+
+One of the most interesting by-products of watching a football game in
+the rain occurred in Lawrence, Massachusetts, in 1919. It had rained
+all during the first three periods of the game and everyone was sitting
+in individual pools, giving the matter no more thought. Several hundred
+of them had been fighting a brave fight against the cold and damp by
+means of that greatest little cold and damp fighter of them all, the
+pocket flask, and these brothers didn’t even _know_ that they were
+sitting in water. They knew that they were sitting pretty and it didn’t
+make any difference to them where. Suddenly, at the beginning of the
+fourth period, the weather changed and grew much colder. There was a
+great deal of time out and dull playing, and no one felt called upon to
+hop up for quite some time. As a matter of fact, the game ended with
+the ball in mid-field and a lot of substitutes running in to get their
+letter. When the whistle blew, the fans started to get up to go home,
+but found that they were frozen to the stands. The entire Lawrence fire
+department came with axes and worked until eleven that night chopping
+the people out. A couple of old grads, who had very poor seats down in
+the corner behind the goal posts, were overlooked and had to stay there
+until spring.
+
+[Illustration: ... found they were frozen to the stands.]
+
+In order to avoid a recurrence of this unfortunate accident, and in
+general to keep the seats dry, it has been suggested that the rules
+committee make it illegal for any spectator to jump to his feet during
+a game. This would apply even when two rival rooters started a fist
+fight in the stand. Coincident with the passage of this rule, similar
+prohibitions might be put on a man’s falling when dropped out of a
+window, and on the earth’s rotating on its axis.
+
+
+
+
+MORE SONGS FOR MELLER
+
+
+As Señorita Raquel Meller sings entirely in Spanish, it is again
+explained, the management prints little synopses of the songs on the
+program, telling what each is all about and why she is behaving the way
+she is. They make delightful reading during those periods when Señorita
+Meller is changing mantillas, and, in case she should run out of songs
+before she runs out of mantillas, we offer a few new synopses for her
+repertoire.
+
+
+(1) ¿VOY BIEN?
+
+(AM I GOING IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION?)
+
+When the acorns begin dropping in Spain there is an old legend that
+for every acorn which drops there is a baby born in Valencia. This
+is so silly that no one pays any attention to it now, not even the
+gamekeeper’s daughter, who would pay attention to anything. She goes
+from house to house, ringing doorbells and then running away. She hopes
+that some day she will ring the right doorbell and will trip and fall,
+so that Prince Charming will catch her. So far, no one has even come
+to the door. Poor Pepita! if that is her name.
+
+
+(2) CAMISETAS DE FLANELA
+
+(FLANNEL VESTS)
+
+Princess Rosamonda goes nightly to the Puerta del Sol to see if the
+early morning edition of the papers is out yet. If it isn’t she hangs
+around humming to herself. If it is, she hangs around humming just the
+same. One night she encounters a young matador who is returning from
+dancing school. The finches are singing and there is Love in the air.
+Princess Rosamonda ends up in the Police Station.
+
+
+(3) LA GUIA
+
+(THE TIME-TABLE)
+
+It is the day of the bull fight in Madrid. Everyone is cock-eyed. The
+bull has slipped out by the back entrance to the arena and has gone
+home, disgusted. Nobody notices that the bull has gone except Nina,
+a peasant girl who has come to town that day to sell her father. She
+looks with horror at the place in the Royal Box where the bull ought to
+be sitting and sees there instead her algebra teacher whom she had told
+that she was staying at home on account of a sick headache. You can
+imagine her feelings!
+
+
+(4) NO PUEDO COMER ESO
+
+(I CAN NOT EAT THAT!)
+
+A merry song of the Alhambra--of the Alhambra in the moonlight--of a
+girl who danced over the wall and sprained her ankle. Lititia is the
+ward of grouchy old Pampino, President of the First National Banco.
+She has never been allowed further away than the edge of the piazza
+because she teases people so. Her lover has come to see her and finds
+that she is fast asleep. He considers that for once he has the breaks,
+and tiptoes away without waking her up. Along about eleven o’clock she
+awakes, and is sore as all get-out.
+
+
+(5) LA LAVANDERA
+
+(THE LAUNDRYMAN)
+
+A coquette, pretending to be very angry, bites off the hand of her
+lover up to the wrist. Ah, naughty Cirinda! Such antics! However does
+she think she can do her lessons if she gives up all her time to
+love-making? But Cirinda does not care. Heedless, heedless Cirinda!
+
+
+(6) ABRA VD. ESA VENTANA
+
+(OPEN THAT WINDOW)
+
+The lament of a mother whose oldest son is too young to vote. She walks
+the streets singing: “My son can not vote! My son is not old enough!”
+There seems to be nothing that can be done about it.
+
+
+
+
+FASCINATING CRIMES
+
+_IV. The Lynn Horse-Car Murders_
+
+
+Early in the morning of August 7th, 1896, a laborer named George
+Raccid, while passing the old street-car barns at Fleeming and Main
+Streets, Lynn, Massachusetts, noticed a crowd of conductors and drivers
+(horse-cars were all the rage in 1896) standing about a car in the
+doorway to the barn. Mr. Raccid was too hurried to stop and see what
+the excitement was, and so it was not until the following Wednesday,
+when the bi-weekly paper came out, that he learned that a murder had
+been committed in the car-barn. And at this point, Mr. Raccid drops out
+of our story.
+
+The murder in question was a particularly odd one. In the first place,
+it was the victim who did the killing. And in the second, the killing
+occurred in a horse-car, an odd conveyance at best. And finally, the
+murderer had sought to conceal his handiwork by cramming his victim
+into the little stove in the middle of the car, a feat practically
+impossible without the aid of scissors and a good eye for snipping.
+
+The horse-car in which the murder occurred was one of the older types,
+even for a horse-car. It was known in the trade as one of the “chummy
+roadster” models and was operated by one man only. This man drove the
+horses, stoked the fire, and collected the fares. He also held the
+flooring of the car together with one foot braced against a “master”
+plank. On his day off he read quite a lot.
+
+[Illustration: The murder car and its driver, Swelf Yoffsen.
+
+ --_Courtesy of John Held, Jr., and Life._
+]
+
+The driver of the murder-car was named Swelf Yoffsen, a Swedish
+murder-car driver. He had come to this country four years before, but,
+not liking it here, had returned to Sweden. It is not known how he
+happened to be back in Lynn at this late date.
+
+If we have neglected to state the name of the victim thus far, it
+is because nobody seemed able to identify him. Some said that he was
+Charlie Ross, who had disappeared shortly before. Others (the witty
+ones) said it was Lon Chaney. A vote taken among all those present
+designated him as the one least likely to succeed.
+
+An interesting feature of this crime was that it was the sixth of a
+series of similar crimes, all of which had occurred in Swelf Yoffsen’s
+horse-car. In the other five cases, the victims had been found
+inadequately packed in the stove at the end of the run, but as Yoffsen,
+on being questioned, had denied all knowledge of how they got there,
+the matter had been dropped. After the discovery of the sixth murder,
+however, Yoffsen was held on a technical charge of homicide.
+
+The trial was one of the social events of the Lynn Mi-Careme season.
+Yoffsen, on the stand, admitted that the victim was a passenger in his
+car; in fact, that he was the only passenger. He had got on at the
+end of the line and had tried to induce Yoffsen to keep on going in
+the same direction, even though the tracks stopped there. He wanted
+to see a man in Maine, he had said. But Yoffsen, according to his own
+story, had refused and had turned his horses around and started for
+Lynn again. The next he saw of him, people were trying to get him out
+of the stove. It was Yoffsen’s theory that the man, in an attempt to
+get warm, had tried to crowd his way into the stove and had smothered.
+On being reminded that the affair took place during a very hot week in
+August, Yoffsen said that no matter how hot it got during the day in
+Lynn, the nights were always cool.
+
+Attorney Hammis, for the State, traced the movements of Yoffsen on the
+morning of the murder and said that they checked up with his movements
+on the occasions of the five other murders. He showed that Yoffsen,
+on each occasion, had stopped the horse-car at a particularly lonely
+spot and asked the occupants if they minded making a little detour,
+as there was a bad stretch of track ahead. He had then driven his
+horses across a cornfield and up a nearby hill on the top of which, in
+the midst of a clump of bayberry bushes, stood a deserted house. He
+pointed out that on four out of the six occasions Yoffsen had driven
+his horses right into the house and asked the passengers (when there
+were any, other than his victim) if they would step into the front
+room for a few minutes, giving them some magazines to read while they
+waited. According to the testimony of seven of these passengers, after
+about fifteen minutes Yoffsen had appeared and yelled “All aboard!”
+in a cheery voice and everyone had piled back into the horse-car and
+away they had gone, over the cornfield and down the hill to Lynn. It
+was noted that on each occasion, one of the passengers was missing, and
+that, oddly enough, this very passenger was always the one to be found
+in the stove on the way back.
+
+It was the State’s contention that Yoffsen killed his victims for their
+insurance, _which is double when the deceased has met his death in a
+common carrier_.
+
+On April 14th, the ninth day of the trial, the jury went out and
+shortly after asked for a drink of water. After eighteen hours of
+deliberation they returned with a verdict of guilty, but added that,
+as it was not sure whether Yoffsen had actually killed his victims
+_in_ the car or had killed them outside and _then_ stuffed them in the
+stove, he was not entitled to the double insurance.
+
+When they went to inform Yoffsen of the verdict, he was nowhere to be
+found.
+
+
+
+
+THE _LIFE_ POLAR EXPEDITION
+
+_En route with “Life’s” Bicycle Polar Expedition.--May 24._
+
+
+We chose this route northward, through Mt. Vernon, Tuckahoe and
+Scarsdale, because we figured out that it might be pleasant to stop off
+at my house in Scarsdale for maybe a bite to eat, or, in case there was
+not time for that, at any rate to let the boys see our bicycles. But I
+guess now that we would have done better to take the Hudson River road.
+
+We reached Scarsdale late yesterday afternoon, intending to put in
+at my side-yard, get a drink of cool water and perhaps a pocketful
+of Rosa’s cookies, show my two boys how the gyro-balancer works, and
+then push on to White Plains for the night. The cool-water-and-cookies
+part of the plan worked out to the dot, but in demonstrating the
+gyro-balancer to the boys we ran into a snag which has held us up for
+an entire day.
+
+It was really due to the kind-heartedness of Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly that the whole thing happened. He insisted on removing his
+gyro-balancer from the frame of his “bike” in order to show Nathaniel,
+my older boy, just how it worked, and, as he did so, he laid the loose
+nuts on a piece of paper on the ground. Robert, my younger boy (who is
+only six and so mustn’t be blamed too much), claims that he didn’t go
+near the paper or the nuts. And he probably doesn’t realize that he
+did. But one of the nuts was found over a nail on a boat that he was
+working on a few feet away, and the other had disappeared completely.
+
+A search was immediately instituted which covered every square inch of
+the lawn and extended into the street--those things roll so. But when
+darkness came we were no nearer to finding it than we had been at the
+beginning, and it was necessary to telephone back into New York for an
+extra nut, which they said they would send out the first thing in the
+morning. It is now 4:17 in the afternoon and the man hasn’t come yet.
+We are very discouraged.
+
+It was while we were searching for the nut that a neighbor came up and
+asked us if we had heard anything about the Byrd expedition’s having
+flown over the Pole. I got him aside out of earshot of the other men
+and asked him if he was sure. He said no, but that he had seen a
+cartoon in some paper which seemed to have reference to a successful
+flight by Byrd. I, however, laughed his fears away and went back to
+the search. Even if Byrd _does_ beat us to it, his victory will have
+been by flying-machine, while ours will be by bicycle--two entirely
+different things.
+
+The trip from Mt. Vernon to Scarsdale was one of great beauty and was
+accomplished without a mishap. The route led along the Bronx River
+Parkway, through woods and across streams, which made up in a way for
+the rough time we had in the traffic in New York City.
+
+While passing through Tuckahoe, Lieut.-Commander Connelly saw a scarlet
+tanager perched on a bush overhanging the stream. Thinking that it
+might be interesting to have it for our collection of flora and fauna
+which we are making for the Museum, we dismounted and crept up very
+quietly beside it, thinking to bag it before it could collect its wits.
+But it heard us coming and flew away.
+
+There is a particularly odd family of ferns which grows along the bank
+of the Bronx River, and, ferns not being as agile as birds, we were
+able to pick great quantities of it. I wish that some of my readers
+could tell me what the name of it is. It is green, like other ferns,
+but it seems to have a sort of flower which looks like a carnation.
+The blossom was still in bud and so we were unable to tell exactly
+what it does look like, but I should say that a carnation would just
+about fit it. Any naturalist who happens to have run across this fern,
+and who knows what it is, would relieve our minds considerably if he,
+or she, would write to the _Life_ Polar Expedition, General Delivery,
+White Plains, N. Y., and tell us. Just a regular fern, with a carnation
+blossom.
+
+We are now going out into the side-yard again with a flashlight to take
+another look for the missing nut, as evidently the man from town isn’t
+going to bring out that extra one today, and we _must_ get started
+early tomorrow morning.
+
+Every cloud, they say, has a silver lining, and, as a result of our
+being held up here in Scarsdale like this, we have been able to have
+some of Rosa’s excellent baked-beans. I find it almost impossible to
+get _real_ New England baked-beans in this region, unless you tell
+someone just how they should be done. In the first place, it must be
+a California pea-bean that is used, and these should be put to soak
+the night before and then baked in a slow fire all the next day. If we
+had got away when we expected, the beans would not have been ready. So
+perhaps we were a little harsh with Bobbie.
+
+
+
+
+AN INTERVIEW WITH THE COUNTESS KAROLYI
+
+
+An interview with Countess Karolyi was very difficult to get, as she is
+not allowed to enter this country and I am not allowed to leave it. So
+we met at the drug store on the corner.
+
+The Countess being Hungarian, it seemed that the least I could do would
+be to conduct the interview in her native tongue. It certainly wasn’t
+the _best_ I could do.
+
+“_Hogy szercted americat?_” I began, as a feeler. It wasn’t much, as
+feelers go, but I am not very strong.
+
+“_Közönöm nomigon nagyon_,” she replied, blushing prettily. I had not
+looked for this frankness. I glanced out over the blue Mediterranean,
+obviously waiting for her to break the silence. I had not long to wait.
+
+“_Asz önök epülitegi igon maghsak_,” she said, so low that I could
+hardly hear her. It was like a bombshell.
+
+I wheeled and confronted her.
+
+“_Gindolja hogy a Ni holgye ink szójeck talán?_” The situation
+demanded it. I have no apologies to offer.
+
+Fortunately for the interview, the bell in the monastery tolled eleven
+at just this moment. There was one extra stroke--for the war tax.
+
+“_Hánz ora?_” I asked, more for something to say than anything else.
+
+Countess Karolyi glanced over her shoulder apprehensively. I had
+evidently confused her.
+
+“_Tisz peresel mult öt_,” was all that she could reply. But it was
+enough. I had fainted.
+
+“Do you mind if we speak English from now on?” she said when I had
+opened my eyes. “You speak Hungarian so fast that it is difficult to
+follow you.”
+
+I smiled. “Look!” I said, pointing to the courtyard below. They were
+changing the guard, a ceremony which consisted of putting a false beard
+and blue glasses on the watchman. It certainly changed him, except that
+his nose gave him away.
+
+“_Maqyen szcretez Te enzom?_” I asked. It was a silly thing to say, but
+it seemed pat at the moment. Now I realize that it was mike.
+
+Her reply was characteristic. “_Nom magyen_,” she said and hid her face.
+
+We reached home at eight o’clock, tired but happy, and all agreed that
+it had been the most interesting hike the Club had taken thus far.
+
+
+
+
+THE BOYS’ CAMP BUSINESS
+
+
+There seems to be an idea prevalent among parents that a good way to
+solve the summer problem for the boy is to send him to a boys’ camp. At
+any rate, the idea seems to be prevalent in the advertising pages of
+the magazines.
+
+If all the summer camps for boys and girls turn out the sterling
+citizens-in-embryo that they claim to do, the future of this country
+is as safe as if it were in the hands of a governing board consisting
+of the Twelve Apostles. From the folders and advertisements, we learn
+that “Camp Womagansett--in the foothills of the White Mountains” sends
+yearly into the world a bevy of “strong, manly boys, ready for the
+duties of citizenship and equipped to face life with a clear eye and
+a keen mind.” It doesn’t say anything about their digestions, but I
+suppose they are in tiptop shape, too.
+
+The outlook for the next generation of mothers is no less dazzling.
+“Camp Wawilla for Girls,” we learn, pays particular attention to the
+spiritual development of Tomorrow’s Women and compared to the civic
+activities of the majority of alumnæ of Wawilla, those of Florence
+Nightingale or Frances Willard would have to be listed under the head
+of “Junior Girls’ Work.”
+
+[Illustration: Holding you under water until you are as good as
+drowned.]
+
+Now this is all very splendid, and it is comforting to think that
+when every boy and girl goes to Womagansett or Wawilla there will be
+no more Younger Generation problem and probably no crime waves worth
+mentioning. But there are several other features that go hand in hand
+with sending the boy to camp which I would like to take up from the
+parents’ point of view, if I may. I will limit myself to twenty minutes.
+
+In the first place, when your boy comes home from camp he is what is
+known in the circular as “manly and independent.” This means that
+when you go swimming with him he pushes you off the raft and jumps
+on your shoulders, holding you under water until you are as good as
+drowned--better, in fact. Before he went to camp, you used to take
+a kindly interest in his swimming and tell him to “take your time,
+take it easy,” with a feeling of superiority which, while it may have
+had no foundation in your own natatorial prowess, nevertheless was
+one of the few points of pride left to you in your obese middle-age.
+After watching one of those brown heroes in one-piece suits and rubber
+helmets dive off a tower and swim under water to the raft and back,
+there was a sort of balm in being able to turn to your son and show
+him how to do the crawl stroke, even though you yourself weren’t one of
+the seven foremost crawl experts in the country. You could do it better
+than your son could, and that was something.
+
+[Illustration: “Now watch Daddy. See? Hands like this, bend your knees.
+See?”]
+
+It was also very comforting to be able to stand on the springboard and
+say: “Now watch Daddy. See? Hands like this, bend your knees. See?” The
+fact that such exhibitions usually culminated in your landing heavily
+on the area bounded by the knees and the chest was embarrassing,
+perhaps, but at that you weren’t quite so bad as the boy when he tried
+the same thing.
+
+But after a summer at camp, the “manly, independent” boy comes back and
+makes you look like Horace Greeley in his later years. “Do this one,
+Dad!” he says, turning a double flip off the springboard and cutting
+into the water like a knife blade. If you try it, you sprain your back.
+If you don’t try it, your self-respect and prestige are shattered. The
+best thing to do is not to hear him. You can do this by disappearing
+under the surface every time it looks as if he were going to pull a
+new one. After a while, however, this ruse gets you pretty soggy and
+waterlogged and you might better just go in and get dressed as rapidly
+as possible.
+
+The worst phase of this new-found “independence” is the romping
+instinct that seems to be developed to a high state of obnoxiousness
+at all boys’ camps. I went to camp when I was a boy, but I don’t
+remember being as unpleasant about my fun as boys today seem to be. I
+have done many mean things in my time. I have tortured flies and kicked
+crutches out from under cripples’ arms. But I have never, so help me,
+Confucius, pushed anybody off a raft or come up behind anyone in the
+water and jumped up on his shoulders. And I don’t think that Lincoln
+ever did, either.
+
+There is evidently a course in raft pushing and back jumping in boys’
+camps today. Those photographs that you see in the camp advertisements,
+if you examine them closely, will disclose, in nine cases out of ten,
+a lot of boys pushing each other off rafts. You can’t see the ones who
+are jumping on others’ shoulders, as they are under water. But I want
+to serve notice right now that the next boy who pushes me off a raft
+when I am not looking, or tries to play leapfrog over me in ten feet of
+water, is going to be made practically useless as Tomorrow’s Citizen,
+and I am going to do it myself, too. If it happens to be my own son, it
+will just make the affair the sadder.
+
+Another thing that these manly boys learn at camp is a savage habit
+of getting up at sunrise. The normal, healthy boy should be a very
+late sleeper. Who does not remember in his own normal, healthy boyhood
+having to be called three, four, or even five times in the morning
+before it seemed sensible to get up? One of the happiest memories of
+childhood is that of the maternal voice calling up from downstairs,
+fading away into silence, and the realization that it would be possibly
+fifteen minutes before it called again.
+
+[Illustration: You’d be surprised at the sound two bicycle wheels can
+make on a gravel path.]
+
+All this is denied to the boy who goes to a summer camp. When he comes
+home, he is so steeped in the pernicious practice of early rising
+that he can’t shake it off. Along about six o’clock in the morning he
+begins dropping shoes and fixing up a new stand for the radio in his
+room. Then he goes out into the back yard and practices tennis shots up
+against the house. Then he runs over a few whistling arrangements of
+popular songs and rides his bicycle up and down the gravel path. You
+would be surprised at the sound two bicycle wheels can make on a gravel
+path at six-thirty in the morning. A forest fire might make the same
+crackling sound, but you probably wouldn’t be having a forest fire out
+in your yard at six-thirty in the morning. Not if you had any sense,
+you wouldn’t.
+
+Just what the boys do at camp when they get up at six is a mystery.
+They seem to have some sort of setting-up exercises and a swim--more
+pushing each other off the raft--but they could do that by getting up
+at eight and still have a good long day ahead of them. I never knew
+anyone yet who got up at six who did anything more useful between that
+time and breakfast than banging a tennis ball up against the side of
+the house, waiting for the civilized members of the party to get up. We
+have to do enough waiting in this life without getting up early to wait
+for breakfast.
+
+Next summer I have a good mind to run a boys’ camp of my own. It
+will be on Lake Chabonagogchabonagogchabonagungamog--yes, there
+is, too, in Webster, Massachusetts--and I will call it Camp
+Chabonagogchabonagogchabonagungamog for Manly Boys. And by the word
+“manly,” I will mean “like men.” In other words, everyone shall sleep
+just as long as he wants, and when he does get up there will be no
+depleting “setting-up” exercises. The day will be spent just as the
+individual camper gosh-darned pleases. No organized “hikes”--I’d like a
+word on the “hike” problem some day, too--no camp spirit, no talk about
+Tomorrow’s Manhood, and _no pushing people off rafts_.
+
+
+
+
+AT LAST A SUBSTITUTE FOR SNOW
+
+
+While rummaging through my desk-drawer the other night I came upon a
+lot of old snow. I do not know how long it had been there. Possibly it
+was a memento of some college prank long forgotten. But it suddenly
+struck me what a funny thing snow is, in a way, and how little need
+there really is for it in the world.
+
+And then I said to myself, “I wonder if it would not be possible to
+work up some sort of mock snow, a substitute which would satisfy the
+snow people and yet cause just as much trouble as real snow.” And that,
+my dears, is how I came to invent “Sno.”
+
+As you know, real snow is a compound of hydrogen, oxygen, soot, and
+some bleaching agent. (There is a good bleaching agent who has an
+office in Room 476, Mechanics’ Bank Building. He was formerly General
+Passenger Agent for the Boston and Maine, but decided that bleaching
+was more fun. As a matter of fact, his name is A. E. Roff, or some such
+thing.)
+
+Again, as you know, real snow is formed by the passage of clouds
+through pockets of air which are lighter than the air itself, if such
+a phenomenon were possible. That is to say, these clouds (A) passing
+through these air-pockets (C) create a certain atmospheric condition
+known as a “French vacuum.” This, in turn, creates a certain amount of
+ill-feeling, and the result is what we call “snow,” or, more often,
+what we call “this lousy snow.”
+
+Now in figuring out what I would have to do to concoct a mock snow, it
+was necessary to run over in my mind the qualities of snow as we know
+it. What are the characteristic functions of snow?
+
+Well, first, to block traffic. Any adequate substitute for snow must
+be of such a nature that it can be applied to the streets of a city in
+such a way as to tie up all vehicular movement for at least two days.
+“This,” I thought, “requires distribution.” Our new snow must be easily
+and quickly distributed to all parts of town. This will necessitate
+trucks, and trucks will necessitate the employment of drivers. _Now_,
+if the weather is cold (and what good is snow unless the weather is
+cold enough to make it uncomfortable?) these drivers (B) will have
+to have mittens. So mittens are the first thing that we must get in
+the way of equipment.... And I took a piece of paper and wrote down
+“Mittens.” This I crossed out and in its place I wrote “Mittens” again.
+So far, so good.
+
+Next, one of the chief functions of real snow is to get up in under
+the cuffs to your sleeves and down inside the collar to your overcoat.
+Here was a tough one! How to work up something which could be placed
+up the sleeves and inside the overcoat-collars of pedestrians without
+causing them the inconvenience of stopping and helping the process.
+For no substitute for snow could ever be popular which called for any
+effort on the part of the public. The public wants all the advantages
+of a thing. Oh, yes! But it doesn’t want to go to any trouble to get
+them. Oh, no! No trouble! If it is going to have snow up its sleeves
+and in its collars, it wants it put there while it is walking along the
+street, and no stopping to unbutton or roll back.
+
+[Illustration: ... hire boys to run along beside people to tuck the
+substitute in their sleeves.]
+
+So it was evident that, if this function of snow was to be imitated, it
+would be necessary to hire boys to run along beside people and tuck the
+substitute in their sleeves and collars as they walked. One boy could
+perhaps tuck two hundred handsful in an afternoon, and when you figure
+out the number of people abroad on a good snowy afternoon, you will
+realize the enormous number of boys it would take to do the job. Girls
+would be even worse, because they would stop to talk with people.
+
+The problem of distribution thus unsuccessfully met with, the next
+thing was to decide what other attribute our “Sno” should have that
+would give it a place in the hearts of millions of snow-lovers
+throughout the country. Someone suggested “wetness” and in half a
+second the cry had been taken up in all corners of the conference-room
+(for we were in conference by now), “Wetness! Wetness! Our ‘Sno’ must
+be wet!”
+
+It was decided that the place in which we should have to simulate
+wetness the most was under bedroom windows. Who does not remember
+getting up to shut the bedroom windows and stepping into a
+generous assortment of snow-flakes in their prettiest form of
+disintegration--water? Or even into a drift ’way, ’way out in the
+middle of the room right where Daddy could slip in it on his way to and
+from the office? This is perhaps the most difficult feature of snow
+to imitate--this bedroom drifting, and if, in addition to getting our
+composition snow into bedroom windows, we could manage some appliance
+whereby it could be shot into the folds of whatever underclothing might
+be lying on the chair nearest the window, then indeed might we cry
+“Eureka!”
+
+The way in which we decided on the name “Sno” for our product would
+make a story all in itself. The copyright laws forbid one from naming
+anything “Snow” or “Gold” or “Rolls-Royce,” or any noun. This law was
+passed by some fanatics who took advantage of our boys being away at
+war to plunge the country into an orgy of blue laws. However, we have
+no other curse than to abide by the code as it stands.
+
+We therefore decided that, by dropping the _W_, we could make a
+word which would sound almost like the real word and yet evade the
+technical provisions of the law. Some of the backers held out for a
+dressier-sounding name, like “Flakies” or “Lumpps,” but our advertising
+man, who specializes on Consumer Light Refractions, told us that the
+effect of a word like “Sno” on the eye of the reader would telegraph a
+more favorable message to his brain than that of a longer word ending
+in “ies” or “umpps.” Look at the word “Ford,” for instance. The success
+of the Ford product is almost entirely due to the favorable light
+refractions of the name on the consumer’s retina.
+
+This decided us on the trade-name “Sno” and left nothing more for us to
+do but work out the actual physical make-up of the product and the sort
+of package to put it out in. The package is also an important feature
+of any merchandising scheme, and it was decided that a miniature
+snow-show would be appropriate and rather smart for our particular
+article. If we could work out some way in which “Sno” could be wrapped
+up in a six-inch snow-shoe it would not only give the dealer something
+snappy to display, but would make a nice-looking package for the
+consumer to take home--nicer-looking than a snootful of scotch, for
+example. You would be surprised, however, to find how difficult it is
+to wrap up a unit of imitation snow in a snow-shoe, unless you put
+them both in a box together.
+
+And now all that remains to divulge is the physical make-up of “Sno.”
+That is what we are working on now.
+
+
+
+
+THE NEW WING
+
+(_Or That Sagredo Bed_)
+
+
+Although the new wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Art (“Wing K,” if
+that makes it any easier for you) was opened on April 5th, I have only
+just this week got around to inspecting it. I’m sorry.
+
+“Wing K” has, since 1916, been empty, and, although passers-by late at
+night have often reported strange noises coming from its vast recesses,
+the Museum officials stubbornly maintain that it has been put to
+absolutely no use at all. This sounds a little fishy to me, however,
+and if those old walls could talk we might learn a little something
+more about where Mr. Munsey’s money went. It is said that only a couple
+of hundred dollars remain of all the millions that he bequeathed to the
+Museum. Money doesn’t _fly_ away, you know.
+
+At any rate, “Wing K” is full now and it takes a good twenty minutes of
+fast walking to see everything in it. This does not include the time
+taken up in getting lost or in walking through the same hall twice.
+
+[Illustration: As Mr. MacGreggor got tired and cross he began
+sniveling.]
+
+My inspection was somewhat hampered by having Mr. Charles MacGreggor
+along with me. Mr. MacGreggor kept constantly asking to see Dr.
+Crippen. “I want to see Dr. Crippen,” he would say, or “Where is Dr.
+Crippen?” I told him that the waxworks were in another wing of the
+Museum, but someone had told him that a replica of Dr. Crippen was
+to be found in “Wing K” and nothing would do but he must see it.
+Along toward the end, as Mr. MacGreggor got tired and cross, he began
+sniveling and crying, “I want to see Dr. Crippen” so loudly that an
+attendant put us out. So we probably missed some of the funniest parts
+of the exhibit. If you want me to I will go up again sometime without
+Mr. MacGreggor. Or maybe Dr. Crippen _is_ there, after all.
+
+The feature of the new wing is, of course, the Bedroom from the Palazzo
+Sagredo at Venice. The best way that I can describe it is to say
+that it is fully twice the size of our guest room in Scarsdale, and
+fifty per cent fancier. The chief point in favor of our guest room in
+Scarsdale is that there isn’t a whole troop of people strolling through
+it at all hours of the day, peeking under the bed and asking questions
+about it. If you want to sleep after nine in the morning in Scarsdale
+you can do it without being made an exhibition of. My two little boys
+may romp into the room three or four times during the morning to show
+you an engine or a snake, but all that you have to do is to tell them
+to get the hell out or you will tell me on them.
+
+The owner of the Palazzo Sagredo was a great cupid fancier. Over the
+doorway to the alcove where the bed is, there are over a dozen great,
+big cupids stuck on the wall, like mosquitoes in a summer hotel. They
+are heavy, hulking things and seem to have fulfilled no good purpose
+except possibly to confuse any guest who may have retired to the
+fancy bed with a snootful of good red Sagredo wine. To awaken from
+the first heavy sleep of a Venetian bun and see fifteen life-sized
+cupids dangling from the doorway must have been an experience to send
+the eighteenth century guest into a set of early eighteenth century
+or late seventeenth century heebes. The comic strip on the ceiling is
+catalogued as “Diziani’s Dawn.” It may very well be.
+
+This, in a general way, covers pretty well the Bedroom from the Palazzo
+Sagredo. In another month the Gideons will have slipped a Bible onto
+the table by the bed and it will be ready for occupancy, but not by
+_me_, thank you.
+
+Walking rapidly through the rest of the new wing, you come to lots of
+things in cases which, frankly, do _not_ look very interesting. There
+is a bit of sculpture labeled “Head of Zeus(?)” showing that even the
+Museum officials don’t know whom it is meant to represent. Under the
+circumstances, it seems as if they might have cheated a little and
+thrown a bluff by just calling it arbitrarily “Head of Zeus” without
+the question mark. Certainly no one could have called them on it, and
+it would have made them seem a little less afraid to take a chance.
+Suppose that it turned out _not_ to be Zeus. What is the worst that
+could happen to them?
+
+Then, too, there is “A Relief from a Roman Sarcophagus.” As we remember
+Roman sarcophagi, _anything_ would be a relief from them.
+
+We could go on like this for page after page making wise-cracks about
+the various uninteresting features of the new wing, but perhaps you
+have already got the idea. It may have been the absence of Dr. Crippen,
+or it may have been a new pair of shoes, but the truth is that we
+weren’t _put_ out of the new wing. We _asked_ an attendant how to _get_
+out. And here we are.
+
+
+
+
+UNCLE CALVIN’S NO-WASTE GAMES
+
+ There is a time for play as well as a time for work. But even in
+ play it is possible to cultivate the art of well-doing. Games are
+ useful to train the eye, the hand and the muscles, and bring the
+ body more completely under the control of the mind. When this is
+ done, instead of being a waste of time, play becomes a means of
+ education.--_President Coolidge’s Christmas Message to the boys and
+ girls of the nation._
+
+
+And now come, boys and girls, it’s play-time! You have worked hard
+_enough_ for one day, and Uncle Calvin is going to teach you some
+peachy games to clear the cobwebs out of those brains of yours.
+Play-time! Play-time!
+
+But first of all we must remember that play in itself is a waste of
+time. And who remembers what we learned yesterday about Wasted Time?
+The boy or girl who wastes time, or anything else, is just as naughty
+as the boy or girl who steals, for, after all, wasting _is_ stealing,
+isn’t it? And play, just for the sake of play, is stealing time which
+belongs rightfully to our parents, our teachers or our country. And we
+don’t want to be known as _thieves_, do we?
+
+So the games which Uncle Calvin is going to teach us are games which
+will do us good in one way or another. While we are playing them we
+shall, at the same time, be helping to make our eyes, our hands, and
+our minds more efficient. And, as we play, we must keep thinking: “Is
+this helping me? Or am I wasting time which I ought to be devoting to
+my lessons or my work or my country?”
+
+The first game that we are going to play is called
+
+
+EYE-SPY
+
+This is just lots and lots of fun--and good for your eyes, too. The
+boys line up on one side, and the girls on the other. Now Uncle Calvin
+will stand over here and write on the board a lot of little teeny-weeny
+figures, problems in percentage, and we will see which can read them
+off and answer the problems the faster--the boys or the girls. Come
+now, boys, you don’t want the girls to beat you, do you? All right ...
+ready, get set ... _go!_
+
+Now we are going to play a dandy game called
+
+
+DRY, TOM, DRY
+
+We must remember in playing this game not to get all hot and sweaty and
+too excited, for it is _really_ a game to train our hands. Three girls
+come over here to the sink, and three boys stand in a line from the
+sink to the table. Now each boy gets a brand new wiper and each girl a
+little tub full of hot water and dirty dishes. Now the game is to see
+which girl and her boy-partner can wash and dry her dishes first. As
+each dish is cleaned it is handed to the boy with the towel and when
+he has dried it he places it on the table. You must be very careful in
+passing the dishes not to drop them. Here is where the excitement comes
+in. For if you drop and break a plate, Uncle Calvin will lick hell out
+of you.... Now, no giggling, Walter Pearson! You don’t see Uncle Calvin
+giggling, do you? All ready?... Then--_play_!
+
+And now for our final game we have a big surprise for you. The game is
+called
+
+
+PRINTER’S-PIE
+
+and what do you think? You are all actually going to take part in the
+Government of this big country which we all love so well! We are going
+to play a game called “type-setting” and, when we have finished, we
+will find that we have not only had loads and loads of fun, but that we
+have saved the Government thousands and thousands of dollars. Now here
+is how the game is played:
+
+Each child brings his little savings-bank to Uncle Calvin and with
+what Uncle Calvin finds in there he will buy a box of type and a
+“galley” for each one. Then you stand in front of a high sort of
+desk and take a piece of paper which Uncle Calvin will give you. On
+this paper will be written something--different things--which your
+government wants to have printed. You will follow this very, very
+carefully, and try and find the little pieces of type in the box to
+correspond with the letters in the “copy.” When you find the right
+letter, place it in a little case which you hold in your hand until all
+the letters form the same words as those in your “copy.” Now put these
+words and sentences in the “galley,” or “holder” and pretty soon you
+will find that you have an exact duplicate _in type_ of the page which
+Uncle Calvin has given you. Isn’t that exciting! An _exact_ duplicate!
+This page of type will then be taken from you and plates made from
+it and then it will be _printed_ and you will see your own work in
+the _Congressional Record_ and all the little pamphlets that your
+congressman sends you. Just think! Your own work in print!
+
+And, just because you have had all this fun, your government will have
+been able to cut down its printing appropriation to almost nothing and
+you will have trained your eyes and your hands and your minds which
+will please Uncle Calvin more than he can say.
+
+And now that we have had our play, we must scamper back to work, for,
+as Uncle Calvin said in his cheery Christmas message, there is a time
+for play as well as a time for work, and, so long as you don’t _waste_
+time when playing, you will be able to work all the better for your
+parents, your schools, and your country.
+
+
+
+
+THE WORLD OF GRANDPA BENCHLEY
+
+_Thinking Out Loud in the Manner of Mr. Wells’ Hero_
+
+
+§1
+
+I am eighty-nine years old, and I think I would like to write a book. I
+don’t know--maybe I wouldn’t.
+
+
+§2
+
+Eighty-nine this year, ninety next year, eighty-eight last year. That
+makes three years accounted for. Three into fourteen goes four times
+and two to carry. The Assyrians were probably the first people to
+evolve mathematics. I sometimes get to thinking about mathematics.
+
+The average Englishman at the age of eighty-nine is dead--has been dead
+for several years. The average depth of the Caspian Sea is 3,000 feet.
+The average rainfall in Canada is 1.03 inches. During the Inter-Glacial
+Period it was 9.01 inches. Think of that--9.01 inches!
+
+
+§3
+
+[Illustration: Grandpa Benchley.]
+
+All this has made me stop and think, think about the world I live in.
+I sometimes wonder what it is all about--this world I mean. I am not
+so sure about the next world. Sometimes I think there is one and
+sometimes I think there isn’t. I’ll be darned if _I_ can make it out.
+
+I am not so sure about my wanting to write a book, either. But
+something has got to be done about this world--something explanatory, I
+mean. Here I am, eighty-nine years old, and I haven’t explained about
+the world to anyone yet--that is, not to anyone in this room.
+
+
+§4
+
+It is a beautiful day outside. The sun, that luminous body 95,000,000
+miles from the earth, without which we should never be able to dry
+hides or bake biscuits, is shining through the trees outside my
+window, much as it used to shine through the trees outside the cave of
+Neolithic Man, ten thousand years before Christ. In fact, Neolithic Man
+sometimes built himself houses on piles driven in the water, but this
+was not until almost five thousand years before Christ.
+
+Sometimes I get to thinking about Neolithic Man. Sometimes I get to
+thinking about Cro-Magnon Man. Sometimes it just seems as if I should
+go crazy thinking about things. There are so _many_ things! And I am
+only eighty-nine.
+
+
+§5
+
+I remember when I was a very small boy my mother used to forbid me to
+go out when it was raining. My mother was a very quiet woman, who never
+spoke unless it was to figure out how long it would take to reach the
+nearest star by train.
+
+“Nipper,” she would say to me on such days as the rain would prevent
+my going out, “Nipper, I guess you don’t know that thousands of years
+before modern civilization there was a period known as the Pluvial or
+Lacustrine Age, the rain or pond period.”
+
+I remember my crying myself to sleep the first night after she told me
+about the Pluvial or Lacustrine Age. It seemed so long ago--and nothing
+to be done about it.
+
+
+§6
+
+One night my father came home with a queer light in his eyes. He said
+nothing during dinner, except to note, as he passed me the salt, that
+salt is an essential to all grain-consuming and herbivorous animals
+but that on a meat-diet man can do without it. “There have been bitter
+tribal wars,” he said, “between the tribes of the Soudan for possession
+of the salt deposits between Fezzan and Murzuk.”
+
+“Arthur,” said my mother, quietly, “remember the boys are present.”
+
+“It is time they knew,” was his reply.
+
+At last my mother, sensing that something was troubling him, said:
+
+“Arthur, are you holding something back from me?”
+
+He laid down his knife and fork and looked at her.
+
+“I have just heard,” he said, “that the molecule is no longer the
+indivisible unit that it was supposed to be.”
+
+My mother bit her lip.
+
+“You tell me this,” she said, “after all these years!”
+
+“I have just learned it myself,” replied my father. “The National
+Molecule Society found it out themselves only last month. The new unit
+is to be called the ‘atom.’”
+
+“A fine time to tell me!” said my mother, her eyes blazing. “You have
+known it for a month.”
+
+“I wasn’t sure until just now,” said my father. “I didn’t want to worry
+you.”
+
+My mother took my brother and me by the hand. “Come, boys,” she said,
+“we are going away.”
+
+Two days later the three of us left for the Continent. We never saw my
+father again.
+
+
+§7
+
+This set me to thinking about atoms. I don’t think that I have it
+straight even now. And then, just as I was getting accustomed to the
+idea that molecules _could_ be divided into atoms, along comes somebody
+a few years ago and says that you can divide atoms into electrons. And,
+although I was about seventy-five at the time, I went out into the park
+and had a good cry.
+
+I mean, what is an old fellow going to do? No sooner does he get
+something all thought out than something happens to make him begin all
+over again. I get awfully sore sometimes.
+
+
+§8
+
+Then there is this question of putting studs in a dress-shirt. Here is
+the problem as I see it:
+
+If you put the studs in _before_ you put the shirt on, you muss your
+hair putting it on over your head. If you wait until you have the shirt
+on before putting in the studs, you have to put your hand up under the
+front of the shirt and punch them through with the other. This musses
+the shirt bosom nine times out of ten. Eight times out of ten, perhaps.
+
+All right. Suppose you put the studs in first and muss your hair. Then
+you have to brush it again. That is not so hard to do, except that if
+you put tonic on your hair before you brush it, as I do, you are quite
+likely to spatter drops down the bosom. And there you are, with a good
+big blister right where it shows--and it’s 8 o’clock already.
+
+Now here _is_ a problem. I have spent hours trying to figure some way
+to getting around it and am nowhere near the solution. I think I will
+go to the Riviera where it is quiet and just think and think and think.
+
+
+§9
+
+I am sitting at my window in the _Villa a Vendre_ at Cagnes. If it
+were not for the Maritime Alps I could see Constantinople. How do you
+suppose the Alps got there, anyway? Some giant cataclysm of Nature I
+suppose. I guess it is too late to do anything about it now.
+
+Irma is down in the garden gathering snails for dinner. Irma is cross
+at me because this morning, when she suggested running up to Paris for
+the shooting, I told her that the ancient name of Paris was Lutitia.
+
+I get to thinking about women sometimes. From eight in the evening
+on. They are funny. Female characteristics differ so from male
+characteristics. This was true even in the Pleistocene Age, so they
+tell me.
+
+
+§10
+
+Next Wednesday I am going back to thinking about God. I didn’t anywhere
+near finish thinking about God the last time. The man came for the
+trunks and I had to go with him to the station.
+
+It is quite a problem. I don’t think there is any doubt about there
+being some Motive Power which governs the World. But I can’t seem to
+get much beyond that. Maybe I’ll begin again on that Monday. Monday is
+a good day to begin thinking. Your laundry is just back and everything
+is sort of pristine and new. I hope that, by beginning Monday, I can
+get everything cleaned up by Friday, for Friday I am going over to
+Monte Carlo.
+
+
+§11
+
+It is six years now since I began writing this book. I am almost
+ninety-seven. According to the statistics of the Royal Statistical
+Society I can’t expect much longer in which to think things over.
+
+The big thing that is worrying me now is about putting sugar on my
+oatmeal. I find that if I put the sugar on first and then the cream,
+the sugar all disappears, and I like to see it, nice and white, there
+on the cereal. But if I put the cream on first and _then_ the sugar,
+it doesn’t taste so good. I asked Irma about this the other day and she
+told me to shut up and go back to bed.
+
+
+§12
+
+After thinking the whole thing over, I have come to the conclusion that
+I don’t want to write a book at all. When a man is ninety-seven it is
+high time he was doing something else with his time besides writing
+books. I guess I’ll go out and roll down hill.
+
+
+
+
+THE _LIFE_ POLAR EXPEDITION
+
+
+1
+
+_At the Hop-off of_ LIFE’S _Polar Expedition, Scarsdale, N. Y. (Second
+Lap)_--Here we are, much to our surprise, all set for the second big
+lap on our expedition to the North Pole by bicycle, begun last spring.
+Those of you with a scientific turn of mind who have followed us
+thus far will remember that we were held up in my home in Scarsdale
+by a lost nut and that, by the time we were ready to start on again,
+news had come of the so-called successful completion of the Byrd and
+Amundsen expeditions.
+
+The positive assurance that we had been beaten in the race to the
+Pole, with our goal practically within pedaling distance, as you might
+say, was naturally very depressing. Lieutenant-Commander Connelly
+took the thing particularly to heart, as he had _so_ wanted us to be
+first. We found him that afternoon in the Bronx River Parkway, kicking
+a tree much bigger than himself and half-sobbing, half-laughing:
+“Darn-darn-double-darn!” and “You old _tree_, you!”
+
+I myself was quite disheartened but tried not to show it to the
+brave boys who had come so far and had shown such splendid spirit. So
+I proposed that we go back to the house and sing some songs. I wish
+that you might have seen the will with which the rest of the crew
+took up my suggestion, and have heard the room ring with the sounds
+of “Upidee” and “Solomon Levi” when we finally got down to it. Both
+Lieutenant-Commander Connelly and Ensign Thermaline sang tenor.
+
+It was Ensign Thermaline who finally spoke the words which gave us
+new courage to continue on our expedition in spite of the self-styled
+winners, Byrd and Amundsen.
+
+“Why should we stop,” he asked, toppling off the piano bench, “just
+because some wise-cracking aviators have flown over the Pole? Our aim
+was not to _fly_. It was to bicycle. That popular interest in polar
+expeditions has died down should mean nothing to us. That the New
+York _Times_ will not take any more expedition articles until it uses
+up those it has on hand means nothing to us. We can get to the Pole
+and back before the George Palmer Putnam series has even been got
+together in book form. We can still be the first to bicycle across the
+Pole--and, by the Eternal, we will!”
+
+At this we were on our feet and cheering. Rosa brought in a plate of
+hermits and we sat over these until far into the night making plans
+for our second dash to the Pole.
+
+It was decided that, since the Putnam expedition on the _Morrissey_ was
+being written up by Mr. Putnam’s little boy David, we should take my
+little boy Bobby along as official yeoman and that all reports should
+be written by him. He is seven, and no one, not even his teacher, can
+read his writing; so he seemed practically ideal.
+
+We also decided that we ought to have names for our bicycles (like the
+Putnam’s _Morrissey_), and Lieutenant-Commander Connelly immediately
+chose “The O’Toole” for his, and Ensign Thermaline “Mavourneen” for
+his. Mine was to be “The Banshee.”
+
+The next thing to do was to buy a small bicycle for Bobby, and, believe
+it or not, it took until just this week to find one small enough.
+However, Scarsdale was very pleasant during the summer and we all were
+very happy and brave, and here we are ready to start tomorrow, “rain or
+shine,” as Lieutenant-Commander Connelly expressed it, laughing to hide
+his tears.
+
+
+2
+
+_Special North Pole Correspondence from Bobby Benchley, Juvenile Member
+of_ LIFE’S _Bicycle Expedition. En route to Pole._
+
+North White Plains, N. Y.--When we left Scarsdale on the second dash to
+the Pole my father told me that he would write the account of our trip
+and that I should sign my name to it, as every expedition has to have a
+little boy along who writes a book about it later.
+
+“You write it and I sign it?” I asked him.
+
+“That’s right, Bobby,” he said. “Daddy writes it and Bobby signs it and
+Bobby gets all the publicity.”
+
+“Publicity me eye,” was my answer. “If I sign it, I write it. I’ll take
+no responsibility for your drivel. I know your stuff and I prefer to
+write my own, _if_ you don’t mind. The rest of the school would kid the
+pants off me if one of your books came out with my name signed to it.”
+
+This angered my father and he made as if to hit me, but I ducked and
+ran into the house.
+
+“All right for you, you big bully!” I yelled out at him. “Just for that
+I won’t _go_ on your old expedition.”
+
+This sobered him up and he agreed to let me write my own stuff and sign
+it and take ten per cent. of the royalties. If the book sells as it
+ought to, with any kind of pushing at all from the publishers, I ought
+to clean up enough to marry Ruthie Henshel in the spring.
+
+So here we are, as far as North White Plains, and very dull it has been
+up till now, too. We left Scarsdale at ten o’clock Wednesday morning, I
+on my new Demon with special coaster-brake attachment and a swell cap
+with a big visor on it to keep the Artic sun out of my eyes. It is my
+private opinion that all the Artic sun we see on this trip you could
+_put_ in my right eye and I’d never notice it.
+
+ (_Proofreading note by Benchley, Sr._--I _told_ Bobby he ought to let
+ me write out a rough draft for him first. You see what he has done
+ with “Arctic.” However, if he is going to be just stubborn about the
+ thing--)
+
+The trouble with the expedition so far is that my father and
+Lieut.-Commander Connelly get winded so soon. They can’t pump up even a
+little hill without having to get off at the top and rest. We’re lucky
+to be at North White Plains, let alone the North Pole. I began by going
+on ahead as fast as I could, but this just made them sore and I lost
+them going through Hartsdale and had to sit down by the roadside and
+wait for them to come up. They both got pretty fat during the summer
+hanging around at the base in Scarsdale, and my father especially has
+got to look out or he’ll look something awful in another year. I told
+him so, too, and he told me to shut up or he’d send me away to military
+school.
+
+Well, anyway, what with the old folks puffing along behind and Ensign
+Thermaline having to stop off in White Plains to see an old girl of
+his, it has taken us just four days to get this far.
+
+Coming through White Plains, my father tried to tell me about the
+battle that was fought there during the Revolutionary War.
+
+“What battle was that?” I asked.
+
+“The Battle of White Plains, of course,” he said. “What did you think
+it was, the Battle of Princeton, N. J.?”
+
+“Princeton beat Harvard, didn’t they?” I came back at him.
+
+At this he made a lunge for me, and fell off his bicycle, which got me
+to laughing so hard I had to stop, too.
+
+“And who won the Battle of White Plains, Father dear?” I asked him,
+trying to change the subject.
+
+“The Americans did, of course,” he said, brushing himself off.
+
+“Yeah?” I said. “So the Americans won, did they? Well, that shows what
+_you_ know about it. The British won. We had it in school only last
+week.”
+
+“What school?” asked my father, very sore now.
+
+“Not Harvard, anyway,” I said. “Yale beat Harvard, too.”
+
+“Yeah?” he said, getting redder and redder. “Yale beat Harvard by
+playing twelve men against Harvard’s eleven.... And if you aren’t a
+better boy, Daddy’s going to send you right back to Scarsdale on the
+4:10 from White Plains.”
+
+“The 4:10 doesn’t stop at Scarsdale,” I said. “It’s an express to 125th
+St.”
+
+“Let’s be getting on,” interrupted Lieut.-Commander Connelly. “This is
+no way to get to the North Pole--arguing about Harvard and Yale.”
+
+So we all got on our wheels again and pushed ahead, but I think
+I’ll drop off at Mt. Kisco and see the Barry kids. My time is worth
+_something_.
+
+
+
+
+HOW TO START A SUPPER CLUB
+
+
+You think that the housing problem in New York is pretty critical,
+don’t you? Well, that just shows how much you know about it. The
+problem isn’t how to take care of all the people who live in New York;
+it’s how to take care of all the people who dance there. Night clubs
+are springing up like mushrooms (not exactly like mushrooms but near
+enough) and still there is a shortage. A lot of people have to go home
+every night without dancing. And you know what that leads to.
+
+A man can’t turn his back on a block between Fiftieth and Fifty-ninth
+Streets without three new supper clubs appearing before he looks back
+again. I left my house in Fifty-fifth Street one Wednesday morning (it
+was the Wednesday morning I left my house in Fifty-fifth Street) and
+after a hard day at the office returned Friday night to find that four
+stables on our block (I am a horse writing this: “Black Beauty”) had
+been transformed into “La Vache Noire,” “Sally Sobel’s Cellar,” “The
+Old Oaken Bucket,” and “Club O’Hara.” It has got so that you can’t
+leave your ice box out on the back porch without someone coming along
+and turning it into a night club.
+
+The process of transforming a stable or an ice box or a fair-sized
+umbrella closet into a supper club is pretty simple, once you get the
+hang of it.
+
+First comes the coat room. This has to be the first feature on the
+way in, in order to be the last one on the way out, so that the coat
+room girl can get that last fifty-cent piece that the patron has been
+holding out for taxi fare. You wouldn’t believe the number of cheap
+skates that try to sneak out with fifty cents or a dollar hidden away
+in their clothes. It kind of makes you lose your faith in human nature.
+
+From the coat room you arrange a hidden step so that the guest stumbles
+down into what used to be the place where they kept the mops and brooms
+and into the arms of the head waiter. This gives the head waiter the
+chance to accuse the patron of being drunk and refuse him admission.
+
+The choice of a head waiter is very important. Go down to the wharves
+when a fruit steamer is docking and pick out a stevedore who is less
+polite than his fellows. Take him uptown and teach him how to put studs
+into a dress shirt and station him at the entrance to your club. Tell
+him that he has just been unanimously chosen governor of the State
+of New York and that it is up to him to maintain the prestige of the
+office. Also tell him that any patron is a bum until he proves himself
+otherwise. Show him what you mean by proof and then put it back into
+the cash drawer.
+
+[Illustration: The choice of a head waiter is very important.]
+
+The interior of your club need cause you no worry--or expense. Hang
+some old awnings from the ceiling--good and low so as to shut off
+the air--and paint the walls red and yellow, with perhaps a figure
+or two in Russian costume, if you can draw--or even if you can’t.
+In the center of the room build a dance floor just big enough for a
+medium-sized man to lie down on and roll over three times. Not that
+any medium-sized man is going to do it, but those are the standard
+measurements for night club dance floors. Fill the rest of the room
+with small tables which wabble, erect a platform for your jazz band,
+and you are set.
+
+Now comes your big problem--the entertainment. There was a time when
+the patrons were satisfied to mill around on the dance floor and bump
+each other’s hips. Then some foolish proprietor started in giving them
+a little show in between dances and they got spoiled. Now they all
+want a show for their money. This injustice to proprietors is somewhat
+mitigated by the fact that the patrons don’t care what kind of show it
+is, so long as they don’t have to dance.
+
+There has to be some sort of master of ceremonies, and the proprietor
+can save a salary right there by doing this himself. All that he has to
+do is wear a dinner coat and act as if he believes that he has a good
+line.
+
+“Ladies and gentlemen--and Gentiles. I have the very great honor to
+present to you tonight two of America’s foremost ballroom dancers,
+two very charming and very talented young people who are filling an
+engagement at this club before beginning in the new Ziegfeld ‘Follies.’
+They come fresh from a very successful season on the Riviera and I
+am sure that you will find them very, very delightful. So’s your old
+man!... Come on, now, give these charming young people a good hand!...
+[_Lead the applause._] Delacroix and Feeney, ladies and gentlemen!”
+
+For Delacroix and Feeney it will be necessary to procure a young man
+and a young woman named Hyman and Gatz, respectively, who can waltz
+holding each other at arm’s length. The young man must look at the
+young lady while they are waltzing and smile as if he really liked her,
+and the young lady must smile modestly back at him, just as if she were
+not thinking: “You big bum, I hope you trip and fall and break your
+shirt front.” At the end of the waltz she curtsies so low that she has
+a good chance of not getting up again--which would be small loss. The
+master of ceremonies should then lead the applause again, what there is.
+
+The entertainment over, you can turn the patrons loose again, with
+instructions to the orchestra to play so long that the dancers will
+fall exhausted by their tables and have to order refreshments. For food
+a forty-cent chop suey can be served for two dollars and a half and a
+ten-cent lemonade for a dollar. This will help you to clear expenses
+and maybe make a little profit.
+
+Now in the matter of dispensing alcoholic drinks a great deal of
+caution must be used. It is, as many of you know, against the law
+to sell liquor, a fact which complicates its sale and makes for
+considerable inconvenience. The authorities are more and more on the
+alert and consequently the risk of getting caught remains about the
+same. A night club proprietor cannot be too careful to whom he sells
+strong drinks. For instance, if a man in the uniform of chief of
+police, with gold braid and a sword, comes in with a friend who has a
+flag in his hand on which is written “U. S. Revenue Service,” no drinks
+should be served to that table until it has been definitely ascertained
+that the men are “all right.” As for regular patrons, always wait until
+they ask for liquor before serving it, as a lot of people have their
+own with them and don’t like to be bothered by representatives of the
+house standing at their elbows every minute trying to get them to buy.
+The chief thing to find out about a man before you sell him any illicit
+beverage is whether or not he has got $12. Once this is made sure, the
+thing is not so foolhardy.
+
+With these few suggestions to those of you who might be in a position
+to start a night club, it is to be hoped that more and more citizens
+will lend a hand to help solve New York’s big problem.
+
+
+
+
+THE NEW VILLAINY
+
+
+Although the new fall season in the drama is only just under way, it
+is not too early to view with alarm. Some Viewers-with-Alarm begin as
+early as September to view, but that doesn’t give you much time to
+collect data. Perhaps all that you can get is a _datum_, but a good,
+healthy datum is enough to base a sizable alarm-view on, and, as you
+go along, you can make up a datum or two, so that you can refer to the
+whole as data.
+
+This month we are chiefly worried about the status (or stata) of what
+used to be known as “the old-time religion.” That is, its status in the
+world of drama. If the new season keeps on as the past two seasons have
+gone, being under suspicion of harboring religious thoughts will place
+one in the psychopathic class. For two years now, eight out of ten
+villains have been preachers and any layman with excessive religious
+tendencies has turned out to be just a repressed old sex-addict.
+
+There was a time when the entrance of the preachers on the stage was
+the signal for a sigh of relief to go up, for you knew that so long
+as he stuck around, things were pretty sure to go as they should.
+The lowest he ever reached in the dramatic scale was when he was
+occasionally used for comedy purposes. Once in a while there was a
+comic bishop, but that was only natural. And any member of the cast
+who showed signs of quoting the Scriptures, or going to church, was
+pretty certain to be one of those whom you could trust to help foil the
+adventuress in the last act.
+
+Then along about the time that “Rain” settled down for a run, we began
+to find preachers sneaking into plays whose minds were not on their
+work in the vineyard. Under the guise of evangelism they started in
+to cut up. At first we thought: “Oh, well, this is just an exception.
+Our Dr. Murnie at home wouldn’t do anything like this.” But gradually,
+after we had seen dozens and dozens of preachers come on in the first
+act, make a few sanctimonious remarks, and then sprout little horns
+and a goat’s tail, we began to look askance at even Dr. Murnie of the
+Second Congregational Church.
+
+Then the lay members of the congregation came in for analysis. The
+hand of Freud reached out and touched the brethren and sistren and we
+learned that whenever anyone is excessively religious, it is a sign
+that they are suffering from an inhibition which is likely some day to
+break loose and leave Broadway strewn with bits of broken bottles and
+confetti. The more religious they are, the more they crave a good,
+rip-snorting week-end at Atlantic City, registering under the wrong
+name. It is all very confusing.
+
+[Illustration: If you were highly strung you whispered out loud to the
+heroine.]
+
+In the old days, the minute a man came on with a mustache like Adolphe
+Menjou’s and wearing a pair of riding boots with a crop to slap them
+with, you could be pretty sure that he was up to no good. If you were
+highly strung you whispered out loud to the heroine not to go to the
+city with him as he had no more intention of marrying her than--well,
+than anything at all, and you know how little that is.
+
+Today, whenever a character in clerical cloth makes his entrance, the
+orchestra starts picking at the violin strings in the old _pizzicato_
+villain-entrance music, the young-lady members of the cast pick their
+exits and the audience settles back in preparation for the dirty work.
+
+Pretty soon we may have a scene like this:
+
+ SCENE.--_Living room of the DeViblis home. Father, mother, and
+ daughter are seated around the table, splicing rope._
+
+DAUGHTER: Pa, there’s somethin’ I been a-wantin’ to ask you fer a long
+time.
+
+MOTHER: For heaven’s sake, daughter, talk straight. This isn’t a New
+England farm play we’re in. You know how to talk better than that.
+
+DAUGHTER: Well, anyway, I want to marry Arthur Arthritis.
+
+FATHER: What does he do for a living?
+
+DAUGHTER: Well, he’s changing his job in a few months.
+
+FATHER: What does he do now?
+
+DAUGHTER: Why--er--well, I’ll tell you; just now he’s a preacher, but
+he’s going to change--
+
+MOTHER: A preacher! Oh, my!
+
+FATHER: A minister of the gospel? Where did you meet him? I thought I
+told you not to run around with them religious folks. They are every
+one of them inhibited.
+
+DAUGHTER: Oh, that’s just because you don’t know them, dad. They’re
+just as decent as you or I when you get to know them. And Arthur isn’t
+_really_ a preacher. He’s just filling-in.
+
+FATHER: Just filling-in, eh? I suppose you know what that leads to?
+Next he’ll be having a little parish of his own, then he’ll get a call
+to a big city, or perhaps he’ll even sink so low as to be a missionary.
+Them preachers are all missionaries at heart, and you know what
+missionaries are. No, sir, no daughter of mine gets mixed up in that
+crowd.
+
+DAUGHTER: Well, he’s coming here in a few minutes to hear your answer.
+There he is now!
+
+(_Enter the Rev. Heemerson._)
+
+FATHER: Well, what do you want here?
+
+THE REV. H.: Why, Brother--
+
+FATHER: Don’t you “brother” me.
+
+THE REV. H.: I love your daughter and I want to marry her.
+
+FATHER: You want to _marry_ her, eh? When you get to New York, I
+suppose?
+
+THE REV. H.: Why, I thought--
+
+FATHER (_stepping to the telephone_): Oh, you thought, did you? (_To
+central_): Give me police headquarters ... hello, police headquarters?
+Well, there’s a preacher in my house. Send an officer up right away!
+
+THE REV. H. (_leaving_): I’m sorry, sir, that you feel this way, so I
+think I’ll be saying “good-by.”
+
+FATHER: Good-by, and go back to your religious crowd and their loose
+ways and never darken my door again.
+
+ (_Curtain with daughter crying, and father and mother getting down
+ the family volume of Freud to read by the lamplight._)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All this is perhaps the result of years and years of bullyragging the
+stage and stage folk by preachers and religious zealots. The stage folk
+have found a comeback and are using it. It will be nip and tuck for a
+while, with the stage folk slightly in the lead until it is discovered
+that all stage folk are not really saints and all religious zealots not
+really satyrs and nymphs. Then things will settle down again. In the
+meantime, let’s have some more of that chicken potpie, please.
+
+
+
+
+TIME-OFF FROM THE SHOW
+
+_New York Sights Which the Visitor Should Not Miss_
+
+
+You can’t expect the visitor to New York during the automobile show
+to stand in front of automobiles all day and all night. He’s got to
+look at something else _once_ in a while, just so that he can see the
+automobiles better when he goes back to look at them. That’s only
+common sense.
+
+Now comes the big question--what to look at? New York is a big city
+now, and unless you are careful you will look at the wrong things and
+before you know it, it will be time to go back and you will have seen
+nothing. Or practically nothing. Or next to nothing.
+
+Let us say (Oh, go on! Be a good sport! _Let_ us), let us say that you
+are to be in New York four days and six nights. Here is a schedule
+which you may follow or not, but, at any rate, look it over. It
+suggests something for you to do every evening and, in case you have
+any spare time during the day, there are one or two extra hints.
+
+
+MONDAY EVENING
+
+Of course, the very first night that you have free you will want to
+see the new Reinach collection of tapestries at the Metropolitan Art
+Museum. This collection is one of the most valuable in the world, and
+one of the hardest to hide under. The tapestries hang some four feet
+off the ground, so the minute you try to hide under one of them you are
+quite exposed up to at least your chest, maybe oftener than that.
+
+Most of the tapestries in the exhibit are French, and consequently
+are kept in a little room off the main hall, to which admission is
+obtained only by conference with the curator. Of the others, the most
+interesting is that which depicts the hunting of a stag in the Middle
+Ages. In the lower left-hand corner you see the huntsmen starting out
+after the stag, carrying hauberks and falcons. As you work up through
+the tapestry, from left to right, it gets even less interesting, until,
+by the time they have caught the stag in the upper right-hand corner,
+you aren’t looking at it at all and have passed on to the next tapestry
+which shows huntsmen of the Middle Ages chasing a fox.
+
+It has just occurred to us that the Art Museum is not open evenings;
+so this plan for Monday night is out. You will have to find something
+else to do. There is a good place on West Fifty-sixth Street.
+
+
+TUESDAY EVENING
+
+The Public Library, at Forty-second Street and Fifth Avenue, is open
+until 11 o’clock. You will surely want to see this. Enter by the side
+door on the Forty-second Street side, as there are two of the nastiest
+lions you ever saw guarding the front entrance. Ring the little bell
+by the side entrance and when the man comes ask for Joe Delaney. He
+will ask who wants to see him and you say that Bob Benchley sent you.
+He will then let you in to the downstairs lobby, where there is an
+elevator to take you up to the reading room. This elevator is not
+running; so you will have to walk up three flights of marble stairs,
+and a pretty tough pull it is, too.
+
+You will find the reading room brilliantly lighted and practically
+full of books. Go straight to the case marked “Biography M-TO.”
+Beginning at the top shelf, left-hand corner, pull all the books out,
+from left to right, and throw them in a pile on the floor. Pretty
+soon you will have quite a big pile and can begin on the case marked
+“History-Renaissance.” This will make another big pile. By this time,
+you will have several attendants helping you and you can work faster.
+If you stick to it until 11 o’clock, you will be able to pull out all
+the books on that side of the room and scuffle through them. Then you
+can go back to your hotel, tired but happy.
+
+
+WEDNESDAY EVENING
+
+By this time, you will be perhaps ready to see a little of the
+so-called “night life” of the metropolis. There is no better place
+to do this than at the Woman’s Exchange, on Madison Avenue between
+Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Streets. The specialty here is breads and
+cakes, and if you can get a table by the window you can eat your fill
+while watching the Madison Avenue trolley cars go thundering by. It
+would be well to wear your old clothes to this place, as along about 9
+o’clock in the evening things begin to rough up quite a bit, and, by
+the time the fresh batch of cup cakes is ready at 10, the joint is a
+regular bedlam. It was here that Harry Thaw had been dining the night
+he shot Stanford White.
+
+
+THURSDAY EVENING
+
+We have saved until your last night in New York the big thrill of the
+week--riding on the Shetland ponies in Central Park. They usually put
+the ponies to bed at sundown, but by slipping the pony-man a dollar
+bill you can get him to leave as many of the little fellows out as you
+may require.
+
+[Illustration: About nine o’clock things begin to rough up quite a bit.]
+
+Get to the park at about 8 p. m., wearing red coat and riding breeches.
+You might as well take along a good, big whip, too, in case your pony
+gets fresh. Carrying children about all day as they do, they are quite
+apt to think that they can do anything they like, and you must be ready
+to show them that they can’t. They will respect you all the more after
+a couple of good belts.
+
+Once aboard the ponies, the best course is around the reservoir. Five
+times around at a brisk canter makes a nice ride. In case your feet
+drag on the ground (the ponies are pretty small) you can tuck them in
+under the saddle or else let them drag. For steeplechase racing it
+will be better to let them drag, as it makes it harder for the little
+animals to get over the hurdles. If you have lots of money to spend on
+the thing, you can give a hunt breakfast at the Central Park Casino.
+
+
+ALTERNATE ENTERTAINMENT
+
+Although you may have seen something of the automobile at the show,
+you will get a better idea of what the automobile really means to our
+civilization by coming with me to a little private exhibition which I
+will be glad to stage any afternoon between the hours of 4 and 6:30.
+I wish that every automobile manufacturer and salesman could join in,
+because I want them to see just what it is that they have done. If I
+had my way, I would get them all reservations on a train leaving the
+Pennsylvania station at 5:30 p. m. Then, at 4:45, I would start them
+from Forty-fourth Street in taxicabs or private cars and say: “Now, you
+big automobile men, you have got forty-five minutes to go half a mile
+in. And there isn’t another train until tomorrow morning.”
+
+I would follow behind on foot, and when they were held up by the jam
+of automobiles at Forty-second Street for five minutes, I would jeer.
+When they were held up at Fortieth Street, I would hoot. During their
+five-minute holdup at Thirty-ninth Street, I would taunt them with:
+“What price automobiles, now?” and while they were chafing at the tieup
+at Thirty-eighth Street, I would call out: “Get a horse!” I would make
+them so sore at the automobile as an institution that they would swear
+never to make another.
+
+
+
+
+THE _LIFE_ POLAR EXPEDITION
+
+
+_Continuation of the log of Bobby Benchley, Juvenile Yoeman on_ LIFE’S
+_North Pole Expedition._
+
+MT. KISCO, N. Y.--_En route to North Pole by bicycle._
+
+Things have been going from bad to worse in this expedition and I
+doubt very much if I can stick it out any longer. My father has been
+unbearable ever since we left North White Plains, harping continually
+on the fact that I am only seven years old and small for my age at
+that. If parents only knew it, it is that sort of talk which makes for
+radicalism and debauchery in the younger generation.
+
+Then he began insisting that I mention the names of firms which have
+contributed stuff for our expedition. When I say that we stopped at
+the roadside for lunch I must add “which was so kindly contributed
+by the Alexander Hamilton Peanut Butter Sandwich Co., of 1145 North
+Rumsey Street, Chicago.” Or if I mention tipping our hats to a lady,
+acknowledgment must be given to the “Bon Ton Arctic Hat Co., who were
+generous enough to supply the expedition with hats.”
+
+Now this is a lot of hooey and I told my father so and refused
+point-blank to lend myself to any such cheap advertising gag as that.
+It was then that he brought up the point that I was only seven and that
+I should busy myself with only those thoughts which a seven-year-old
+boy should have. And he added, furthermore, that I could keep a civil
+tongue in my head. So I have determined to stop off here at Mt. Kisco
+and spend a week or so with the Barry kids and then go on back home
+to Scarsdale. That expedition is never going to get to the North Pole
+anyway. My father and Lieut.-Commander Connelly are too fat--especially
+my father. You ought to see him.
+
+ _Insert in log made by Benchley, Sr._
+
+Bobby has proved quite a disappointment to us so far, and I am not sure
+that I would be sorry to see him leave the expedition here. Our idea in
+having him along was to give the boy a little publicity and to have him
+write a book which could be sold to the juvenile trade around Christmas
+time, but a little boy who behaves as badly as he does doesn’t deserve
+any publicity and he can’t write for a darn anyway.
+
+Furthermore, I am _not_ getting fat. I always put on a little weight
+in the winter, because I can’t play tennis, but every one says that it
+is becoming to me. I weigh only 160 when I am ready for my cold-bath
+(which I very seldom am, _these_ mornings) and for a man of my height,
+that is not a pound too much. As a matter of fact, Bobby is probably a
+little sore because he is so small for his age. You’d never think he
+was seven. He looks more like a child of three. He must get that from
+his mother’s side of the family, because all the Benchleys have shot
+right up to a good height before they were seven. His older brother Nat
+is a fine tall boy. And a great deal smarter in school than Bobby.
+
+Then, too, another sign that I am not too fat is that people who
+haven’t seen me for several years all remark “How well you look!” You
+don’t say that to a man who is _too_ fat, do you?
+
+But there is no reason for having our expedition torn with dissension
+just because a little boy has no respect for his father. I suggested
+sending him back to Scarsdale, but Lieut.-Commander Connelly said why
+not give him another chance, he is so cute. It is all very well for an
+outsider to call a child cute, but when a man has reached my age he is
+entitled to a little respect from his own children--it seems to me.
+
+ (_Resumption of the log by Bobby._)
+
+It is very nice here in Mt. Kisco at the Barrys’ and I wouldn’t be
+surprised if the whole expedition stayed here until the snow gets out
+of the roads. Mr. Barry has some very good stuff that he brought from
+France last year and I heard my father say last night that he wouldn’t
+care if he _never_ saw the North Pole or anything else for that matter.
+He and Lieut.-Commander Connelly think they are pretty good at two-part
+singing and as Lieut.-Commander Connelly said, “It looks as if it were
+going to be a fine winter for two-part singing, especially ‘Sleep,
+Kentucky Babe.’” Mr. Barry hasn’t said anything yet except that he has
+to take his family to Cannes early in March. All he expected us to do
+was stop here overnight, and while he is very nice about it, I guess he
+knows what he is in for, all right, all right.
+
+On the way up from North White Plains I saw a snow-bird, but didn’t say
+anything about it as I knew it would mean taking out pencils and making
+notes for the Museum. A hot lot of good the Museum is going to get out
+of _this_ expedition.
+
+
+
+
+SPYING ON THE VEHICULAR TUNNEL
+
+
+Before the formal opening of the Holland Vehicular Tunnel under the
+Hudson River, it behooves New Yorkers to study up a little on the
+subject and see why it is that 46,000 vehicles are going to _want_ to
+go to Jersey City every day.
+
+In order to present this problem fairly to the readers of this paper,
+the writer of this article (you must guess) took a tour of inspection
+of the tube, which is now completed with the exception of installing
+a ventilation system and hanging the curtains. Curtains make such a
+difference that it will probably be simply another tunnel when they are
+up.
+
+Your investigator was not asked by the authorities to make this tour
+of inspection, but somebody from the New York _Times_ went through
+the thing and wrote a story about it; so there didn’t seem to be any
+good reason why a reporter from _The New Yorker_ shouldn’t. Not having
+the permission of the tunnel authorities, he went alone into this
+vast-two-mile submarine passageway, with the result that he got lost
+and is still in there. This story is being sent out to _The New Yorker_
+by a code of tappings executed on the roof of the giant shell by the
+lost investigator. As soon as he finishes sending in copy (which
+will be relayed to the publication offices by a special tugboat and
+automobile service) the reporter will turn his energies again to the
+problem of getting out of the tube. After all, there are only two ways
+possible in which to go; so it ought not to be very difficult. The big
+problem comes in trying to decide which way to take.
+
+Now that we are well acquainted it might be less formal if I use the
+first person. You probably knew that it was I all along anyway. These
+little editorial subterfuges are rather futile.
+
+But to get back to the tunnel--or rather to get _out_ of the tunnel.
+Sneaking in by the entrance at Canal Street, Manhattan, I made my way
+through the tiled passageway for what must have been a mile before I
+realized that, really, when you have seen the first hundred feet of a
+vehicular tunnel you have seen all 9250. I had got the idea by then.
+The next problem was whether to go on ahead to the Jersey City exit or
+turn and go back to Canal Street. Not knowing how far I had come, I
+couldn’t figure out which way would be the shorter. Then, in turning
+around several times to see if I could make out any light at either
+end, I forgot which was the way to New York and which the way to Jersey
+City. This was quite terrifying and I began to cry softly. I made
+frantic little starts, first in one direction and then in the other,
+and finally sat down on the ground and sobbed myself to sleep.
+
+[Illustration: I attracted the attention of a passing tug.]
+
+When I awoke, it was high time that my story was in; so I attracted
+the attention of a passing tug by tapping on the roof of the tube and
+indicated that I had a story to file for _The New Yorker_. The rest is
+history.
+
+Well, anyway.
+
+The Holland Vehicular Tunnel is a dandy tunnel, all right, all right.
+The roadways are 20 feet wide and there is 13 feet, 6 inches of
+headroom. The extra six inches is for wedding parties in which there
+are men in silk hats. It is estimated that in one year 15,000,000
+vehicles will pass through the tube. Wouldn’t you like to have a dollar
+for every vehicle! A dollar and a _half_ would be even better. _Boy!_
+What I couldn’t do with $22,500,000!
+
+I was pleased to note that there are to be telephone stations along the
+route. This will make it possible to call up and say:
+
+“Look here! I’m held up in the vehicular tunnel and probably can’t get
+anything before the 8:15. Don’t wait dinner. I’ll eat in Jersey City.”
+
+This question of being held up in the tunnel is one which must present
+itself to everyone who gives the matter any thought at all. There
+aren’t many things certain in this life, but there is one event I
+can predict without even adding “maybe.” On my first trip through the
+vehicular tunnel at the wheel of my high-powered car, just as I get
+halfway between New York and New Jersey, with a line of impatient
+Sunday automobilists behind me, I am going to run out of gas. I’ll
+bet that the engineers in charge have never once thought of this
+contingency, and when it arises, it is going to make their tunnel look
+pretty silly. It was a silly idea anyway, in the first place.
+
+
+
+
+COMPILING AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY
+
+_Suggestions as to How Theodore Dreiser Might Write His Next Human
+Document and Save Five Years’ Work_
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+Up East Division Street, on a hot day in late July, walked two men,
+one five feet four, the other, the taller of the two, five feet six,
+the first being two inches shorter than his more elongated companion,
+and consequently giving the appearance to passers-by on East Division
+Street, or, whenever the two reached a cross-street, to the passers-by
+on the cross-street, of being at least a good two inches shorter than
+the taller of the little group.
+
+Walking up East Division Street they came, in two or three minutes, to
+Division Street proper, which runs at right angles and a little to the
+left of East Division Street, but not so much to the left as Marcellus
+Street, or Ransome Street, for that matter. As the two continued
+strolling, in that fashion in which two men of their respective heights
+are likely to stroll, they came in succession to--
+
+(NOTE TO PRINTER: _Attached find copy of Thurston’s Street Guide. Print
+names of every street listed therein, beginning with East Division and
+up to, and including, Dawson._)
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+That these two men, presented in the last chapter, would eventually
+stop walking up Division Street and enter a house of some sort or
+description, might well be anticipated by the reader, and, in fact,
+such was the case.
+
+It was, indeed, the house of the shorter of the two, of the one whom
+we have seen in the last chapter to have been five feet four, if,
+indeed, he was. It was a typical dwelling, or home, of a man of the
+middle-class in a medium-sized city such as the one in which these men
+found themselves living.
+
+(NOTE TO PRINTER: _Attached find insurance inventory of household
+effects and architect’s specifications. Reproduce in toto._)
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+Reaching the living-room described above, Tom Rettle, for such was
+the name of the shorter of the two--the one to whom the house, or
+home, or dwelling, belonged--was greeted by his wife, Anna, a buxom
+woman of perhaps thirty-four or thirty-five, certainly not _more_ than
+thirty-five, if one were to judge by her fresh, wholesome color and the
+sparkle of her brownish-gray eyes, or even by her well-rounded form,
+her--
+
+(_Print attached passport description of Anna Rettle._)
+
+“Well, hello, Anna,” said Tom, pleasantly, for Tom Rettle was, as a
+matter of fact, a very pleasant man unless he were angered, and his
+blue eyes smiled in a highly agreeable manner.
+
+“Well, hello, Tom,” replied Anna, for it was indeed Anna who spoke, in
+a soft, well-modulated voice, too, giving the impression of being an
+extremely agreeable sort of a woman.
+
+“Anna, I want you to meet a very good friend of mine, Arthur Berolston,
+a very good friend of mine,” said Tom, politely, looking, at the same
+time, at both Anna and Berolston.
+
+“I’m very happy to meet Mr. Berolston,” added Anna, genially, although
+one could see that in her heart she wished that Tom would bring a
+little different type of friends home, a thing she had often spoken to
+him about when they were alone, as they often were.
+
+“Dat’s very good of yer ter say, Missus Rettle,” replied Berolston, in
+modern slang, which made him sound even more uncouth than he looked,
+which was uncouth enough. “For de love o’ Mike!”
+
+At this indication of a rough bringing-up on the part of her husband’s
+acquaintance, Anna Rettle winced slightly but showed no other sign
+of her emotions. Tom was such a kind-hearted fellow! So good! So
+kind-hearted! Tom was.
+
+“What is there for supper tonight, Anna?” asked Tom, when the wincing
+had died down. “You know how well I like cole slaw, and have always
+liked it.”
+
+“I certainly do know your fondness for cole slaw, Tom,” replied his
+wife, but with a note of regret in her voice, for she was thinking that
+she had no cole slaw for supper on the particular night of which we are
+speaking. “But you will remember that we had cole slaw last night with
+the cold tongue, and night before last with the baked beans and--”
+
+(_Run attached “Fifteen Midsummer Menus for Cole Slaw Lovers.”_)
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+Prepared as Tom was not to have cole slaw for supper, he could not hide
+his disappointment. Anna had been a good wife to him.
+
+But somehow tonight, when he had brought Arthur Berolston home to
+supper, his disappointment was particularly keen, for he and Arthur had
+been discussing cole slaw all the way up East Division Street, across
+Division Street and through to the southwest corner of Dawson and
+Margate, where Tom lived, and each had said how much he liked it.
+
+Should he strike Anna for failing him at this juncture? He, Tom Rettle,
+strike his wife, Anna Rettle? And, even if he should decide to strike
+her, _where_ should he direct the blow? Tom’s mind was confused with
+all these questions.
+
+(_Reprint the above paragraph twenty-five times._)
+
+
+CHAPTERS V-LXXXII INCLUSIVE
+
+TO PRINTER: _With the above copy you will find a brief-case containing
+newspaper clippings giving the complete testimony of Anna Rettle,
+Thomas Rettle and Arthur Berolston in the case of_ “ANNA RETTLE VS.
+THOMAS RETTLE,” _tried in the Criminal Court of Testiman County,
+September 2-28, 1925. There is also a transcript of the testimony of
+three neighbors of the Rettles’ (Herman Nordquist, Ethel Nordquist
+and Junior Nordquist), and of Officer Louis M. Hertzog of the Fifth
+Precinct. Reprint all these and, at the bottom of the last page, put
+“THE END.”_
+
+
+
+
+STORM WARNINGS FOR NEW YORK
+
+
+Anyone wishing to see New York summer shows, or any other New York
+shows for that matter, had better run like everything. Any day now
+the walls of the city are going to topple in, and, with a blare of
+trumpets, the Forces of the Lord are going to smite New York, even as
+Sodom and Gomorrah were smitten. New York is riding for its Big Fall,
+and it wouldn’t be surprising if it came around the end of this week.
+
+Probably never before in the history of disrobing (see Taine’s “A
+Short History of Unhooking and Unbuttoning,” Harpers’, 1897, 1 vol.,
+345-pp. octavo) have so many young ladies appeared with so few clothes
+before so many people at once. It is recorded that in ancient Rome the
+_puellæ_ wore fewer clothes at the annual outings, but their audiences
+were comparatively small and selected from a list of socially possible
+people. Today, in the Borough of Manhattan, the young folks appear
+before a Winter Garden full of practical strangers--that is, they are
+strangers at the beginning of the show. By the end of the first act,
+it is as if they had known them all their lives. Just as no man is a
+stranger (or a hero) to his Swedish rubber, so, by the price of a
+ticket to “The Great Temptations” you can have at least twenty people
+in New York whom you know awfully, awfully well. And yet they say that
+New York is cold and aloof!
+
+All this levity on my part is just whistling past the graveyard. I,
+personally, am pretty worried. You can push the Forces of Vengeance
+just so far and then--buckety-buckety--down comes the ceiling. Ask the
+Sodom Chamber of Commerce. And the worst of it is, that just as the
+rain sheds its benefits on the just and the unjust alike, the fact that
+you have been home and in bed every night at ten o’clock isn’t going to
+help you a bit when your whole city begins to smell as if something was
+burning and then suddenly goes up in a puff of brimstone. You can’t go
+out and argue with a Pillar of Fire and explain that you, personally,
+have been spending your evenings building bookcases. If your town goes,
+you go too, and no back-talk.
+
+Now, in my case, the prospects are even more depressing, because the
+job from which I eke out barely enough money to buy gin for my children
+makes it necessary that I attend the opening performances of all these
+wrath-provoking shows. I don’t like them. I would never go to see
+them if it were not for the fact that it is my life-work. Often I sit
+through them with my eyes shut. But I _am_ unquestionably on record
+in the office of the Snooping Angel as sitting in D-113 at the Winter
+Garden. And when they are making out their lists for culprits to be hit
+on the head by falling walls or swirled up into the skies on a fiery
+horse with nine heads, my name probably is right there among the “B’s”
+as a constant and incorrigible attendant at these festivals of sin. The
+angel probably doesn’t do more than take a look over the audience. You
+can’t expect him to go to the box-office and see who paid to get in or
+find out why they are there.
+
+[Illustration: I _am_ unquestionably on record as sitting in D-113.]
+
+If I get through this summer all right, I am going to hire an
+assistant. Then, whenever a Shubert show is announced or something
+called “A Nuit in Paree,” I will slip him the seats and say: “Here,
+Joe, go and enjoy yourself.” In this way I may be able to escape the
+extra heavy punishment in store for participants and get out of the
+general cataclysm with perhaps just a broken ankle or singed eyelashes.
+It is going to be bad enough for the simple bystanders without getting
+mixed up in the private showing. The only break that I have ever had
+in this line was that I was in France at the time of Earl Carroll’s
+champagne-bath party in New York. When I got back I found my invitation
+on my desk. If I _had_ been there, covering the affair for my paper,
+they would have taken flashlight photographs.
+
+And, after all, what fun is there in going to these displays? “The
+Great Temptations,” for example, probably contains fewer real
+temptations than a Christian Endeavor convention. The thing is too
+unreal ever to constitute actual menace. You hear somebody announcing
+that, if the audience will remain seated, there will now be a parade
+showing the way parsnips are cooked in all the different countries of
+the world. Then eight girls walk across the stage, one representing
+Nell Gwyn cooking parsnips, one Cleopatra, one Thaïs, and so forth.
+It is very dull indeed, and the fact that the girls are clad as if
+they were just getting ready to turn on the hot water doesn’t help, or
+hurt, anything. The whole thing is highly academic, and unless you are
+interested in the cooking of parsnips, you are going to find yourself
+looking at your program to see how long it will take to empty the
+theater with every seat filled. If the Forces of Judgment only knew it,
+the display of what the advertisements call “feminine pulchritude” is
+one of the most innocuous of all forms of theatrical entertainment. It
+is like looking in at a delicatessen window. It is too much.
+
+However, try to tell that to the Watch and Ward Society. Try to
+convince that great, big old Nine-Headed Horse, when he comes snorting
+down out of a cloud of fire with a flaming subpoena made out in your
+name, that these exhibitions bore you. Just say to him, if you can make
+your voice heard above the thunder and lightning and bellowing rocks,
+that a show where a nine-tenths naked lady walks across the stage
+means no more to you than watching the Stamford local go through New
+Rochelle, and listen to him laugh. Why, you will probably get a million
+years extra in the biscuit oven just for saying such a thing.
+
+You see, he has heard that line a good many times and he is getting
+a little tired of it, just as you would, yourself, after the first
+few million years. He knows that nobody ever will admit that he goes
+where he shouldn’t because he likes it. Every single time it is a
+case of being on duty, as you might say; making an investigation for
+some reform agency, or getting material for a book, or showing an
+out-of-town customer a good time. Even the out-of-town customer has
+the alibi that he is just trying to find out whether things are really
+as bad in New York as the papers have been saying they are. He would
+much rather have spent the evening writing a report to the firm about
+conditions in the textile industry, but he didn’t think that he could
+afford to miss an opportunity to get some first-hand information about
+the decadence of the present age.
+
+So the only thing that there is left to do, if we are going to save
+ourselves and the biggest city in the country from a horrible fate, is
+to stop the Messrs. Shubert from putting on shows like that. And the
+way to stop them from putting on shows like that is to go to them and
+say: “Messrs. Shubert, put down that mending for just a minute, I want
+to talk to you. I am a married man with a family and I have a lot of
+work that I have to do before I die. I have insurance to pay up and I
+have a house which has to be painted before it can be sold. Now, you
+and your shows are leading this whole city into inevitable destruction
+at the hands of the Forces of Vengeance. No city can go on as New York
+is going on giving pageants about the twelve different ways of cooking
+parsnips, without incurring Divine Wrath to a fatal extent. Won’t you,
+for the sake of the wife and kiddies, put, let us say, a girdle of
+large hydrangeas on your choruses and perhaps an old-fashioned shawl?
+Won’t you arrange it so that it won’t be quite so incriminating for a
+man who wants to go straight to be numbered among the patrons of your
+entertainments?”
+
+And if the Messrs. Shubert just laugh and go on with their mending
+or whatever it is that they happen to be doing at the time, the
+only thing left for me to do, at any rate, is to do my duty without
+flinching--accept my complimentary tickets, and go to these shows
+wearing a tin helmet and carrying a letter from my pastor in my pocket
+against the Day of Judgment.
+
+
+
+
+THE _LIFE_ POLAR EXPEDITION
+
+
+Mt. Kisco, New York, January 21st.--At a meeting of the older members
+of the expedition last night it was voted to ask Bobby for his
+resignation, not in any spirit of anger but simply because it was felt
+that he wasn’t in sympathy with the aims and policies of those in
+command. Lieut.-Commander Connelly was elected to inform Bobby and to
+see that he got his carfare back to Scarsdale.
+
+Bobby had anticipated our action, however, by resigning on his own hook
+and was already on his way home with one of the Barry children in the
+Barrys’ car, leaving a note to the effect that he was pretty tired of
+the whole thing and doubted whether the expedition would reach the Pole
+at all because of having so many fat men on it.
+
+And so ends the first really unfortunate episode of our trip. As Bobby
+grows older he probably will acquire more repression and will learn
+that individual whims must sometimes give way to the common good. I
+also hope that he starts growing tall pretty soon.
+
+With the discordant element out of the way, the next thing to do was
+to plan for our hop-off. We still have quite a distance to go before
+we even get in sight of the Pole and we must be moving. So a meeting
+was called in the Barrys’ study, to which Mr. Barry was, _ex-officio_,
+invited, as it was thought that he might have some suggestions. His
+very first suggestion was excellent; it was, in part, to concoct an
+eggnog, a hot eggnog. He had some very good eggs, he said, and added
+that that was one of the advantages of living in the country--you get
+good eggs. This was voted on, and it was decided that Mr. Barry was
+right. So the eggnog was made hot and the meeting called to order.
+
+Lieut.-Commander Connelly said that we ought to decide how we were to
+overcome the retarding action of deep snow on our wheels. We have made
+several trial spins around the house here, just to see that our cycles
+were in good order, and found (_a_) that they were not, and (_b_) that
+even if they had been, the snow would have made any kind of progress at
+all very difficult. As Lieut.-Commander Connelly said, “It is almost as
+if someone were actually holding the wheels back!”
+
+From there the discussion got around to cases in which wheels actually
+_had_ been held back by some unseen force, but nobody had ever heard of
+such cases. Ensign Thermaline said that he knew of a case once where
+a man with hypnotic power had put a friend under a spell and made it
+impossible for him to move his hand away from his face. Mr. Barry asked
+whose face it was the man’s hand was on, his own or the hypnotizer’s,
+and Ensign Thermaline said that he had never thought to inquire, but
+that he could get the man on the telephone in a jiffy and find out. We
+all said that it would be interesting to know. So a telephone book was
+sent for and Ensign Thermaline set about looking up his friend’s number.
+
+While this was going on, we got back to the business of the expedition
+and the question of when we should start on. Our route lies pretty
+fairly straight ahead of us, on up through Westchester County to
+Massachusetts, then on up through New Hampshire to Canada, and from
+there to the Pole. “It ought to be very pretty up around Williamstown
+at this time of year,” said Lieut.-Commander Connelly. “That’s where
+Williams College is.” Everyone agreed to this and it was remembered
+that the Williams song, “The Royal Purple,” has some very neat harmony
+to it. Furthermore, it was discovered that Mr. Barry sings a very
+passable baritone, and a baritone is the one thing that our expedition
+has lacked, for Lieut.-Commander Connelly twists out a very tricky
+tenor, and with me leading and Ensign Thermaline on a low but fairly
+accurate bass it began to look as if we might do something worth while
+after all.
+
+“Here’s a funny thing,” spoke up Ensign Thermaline, still buried in
+the telephone book. “There are two people by the name of ‘Gepp,’ both
+living in Jersey City. A ‘Ben F. Gepp’ at 218 Belvidere Ave., and a
+‘William A. Gepp’ at 82 Jewett Ave.”
+
+“Probably brothers,” suggested Mr. Barry.
+
+“Not necessarily,” retorted Lieut.-Commander Connelly, a little testily.
+
+“All right; cousins then,” said Mr. Barry, and the threatened
+hard-feeling was avoided. Mr. Barry would be a very good man to
+have come along with us to the Pole as he is very conciliatory and
+diplomatic, and after Bobby we need somebody like that.
+
+As a matter of fact, I suggested to him that he come with us and he
+said that he really ought to take his family to Cannes in March as he
+had promised them. But he added that he was almost persuaded to give
+that plan up and come along with us. I suggested that we go right
+then and sound out Mrs. Barry on the subject because I was sure that
+we could make her see the thing in the right light. So we all went
+upstairs to look for Mrs. Barry, but she was asleep. Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly suggested a little serenade, on the ground that married women
+get little or no romance in their lives, and said that if he knew
+married women at all Mrs. Barry would be very glad to have a serenade
+sung outside her door, asleep or not. So we did “The Royal Purple” for
+her, very soft the first time through and then crescendo on the repeat.
+
+Then, at Mrs. Barry’s suggestion, we went to bed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber’s note
+
+
+Minor punctuation errors have been changed without notice. Hyphenation
+was standardized.
+
+Some illustrations were moved so as to not break up paragraphs.
+
+Spelling was retained as in the original except for the following
+change:
+
+ Page 23: “She though it a” “She thought it a”
+ Page 252: “the Forces of Vengea ce” “the Forces of Vengeance”
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78352 ***
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+ The early worm | Project Gutenberg
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+</head>
+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78352 ***</div>
+
+
+<h1>
+THE EARLY WORM
+</h1>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+<figure class="figcenter illowp47" id="frontispiece" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/frontispiece.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>When they were held up by the jam, ... I would jeer.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="ph2">THE
+EARLY WORM</p>
+
+<p class="ph4">BY</p>
+
+<p class="ph3">
+ROBERT BENCHLEY</p>
+
+<p class="ph4"><i>Author of</i></p>
+
+<p class="ph4">OF ALL THINGS!<br>
+LOVE CONQUERS ALL<br>
+PLUCK AND LUCK</p>
+
+<p class="ph4">WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY</p>
+
+<p class="ph3">
+GLUYAS WILLIAMS</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp100" id="title_decor" style="width: 6.25em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/title_decor.jpg" alt="">
+</figure>
+
+<p class="ph3">NEW YORK</p>
+
+<p class="ph3">
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="ph4">
+<p class="center">COPYRIGHT, 1927,<br>
+BY<br>
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY</p>
+
+<p class="ph4"><i>August, 1927</i></p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">PRINTED IN THE<br>
+UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="ACKNOWLEDGMENT">
+ ACKNOWLEDGMENT
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The author wishes to thank the following periodicals
+for permission to reprint the articles in this
+book: <i>Life</i>, <i>The Detroit Athletic Club News</i>, <i>The
+New Yorker</i>, <i>Vanity Fair</i>, <i>College Humor</i> and <i>The
+Bell Syndicate</i>. Thanks are also due to John Held,
+Jr., for permission to use his elegant engravings and
+to Carol Goodner for suggesting the title to the book.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">
+ CONTENTS
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<table class="autotable">
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+PAGE
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">A Talk to Young Men</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_3">3</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">The Seed of Revolt</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_9">9</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Paul Revere’s Ride</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_13">13</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Fascinating Crimes</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_21">21</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Upsets</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_27">27</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">An Interview with Mussolini</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_29">29</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">The “Life” Polar Expedition</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_32">32</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">The Saving-“Old-Ironsides” Habit</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_39">39</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">A Good Old-Fashioned Christmas</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_41">41</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Life in the Ritz Tenement</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_56">56</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Old Program from the Benchley Collection</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_60">60</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">What College Did to Me</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_69">69</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">An Interview with Theodore Dreiser</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_78">78</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Fascinating Crimes</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_80">80</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Louis Dot Dope</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_84">84</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">The Rise and Fall of the Christmas Card</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_88">88</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">The Henna Decade</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_96">96</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">A Plan to Stabilize the Franc</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_100">100</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Sex Is Out</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_106">106</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Uncle Edith’s Ghost Story</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_109">109</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Fascinating Crimes</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_115">115</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">The End of the Season</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_120">120</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Exam Time</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_124">124</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Throwing Back the European Offensive</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_127">127</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">An Interview with Vice-President Dawes</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_134">134</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</span>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">The “Life” Polar Expedition</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_137">137</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">A Ghost Story</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_142">142</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Discovering Weber and Fields</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_148">148</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Water Football</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_150">150</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">More Songs for Meller</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_159">159</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Fascinating Crimes</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_163">163</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">The “Life” Polar Expedition</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_168">168</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">An Interview with the Countess Karolyi</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_172">172</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">The Boys’ Camp Business</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_174">174</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">At Last a Substitute for Snow</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_183">183</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">The New Wing</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_190">190</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Uncle Calvin’s No-Waste Games</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_195">195</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">The World of Grandpa Benchley</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_200">200</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">The “Life” Polar Expedition</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_209">209</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">How to Start a Supper Club</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_216">216</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">The New Villainy</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_223">223</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Time-off from the Show</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_230">230</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">The “Life” Polar Expedition</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_237">237</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Spying on the Vehicular Tunnel</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_241">241</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Compiling an American Tragedy</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_246">246</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Storm Warnings for New York</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_251">251</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">The “Life” Polar Expedition</span>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+<a href="#Page_259">259</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_EARLY_WORM">
+ THE EARLY WORM
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[Pg 2]</span>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[Pg 3]</span></p>
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="A_TALK_TO_YOUNG_MEN">
+ A TALK TO YOUNG MEN
+ <br>
+ <i>Graduation Address on “The Decline of Sex”</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>To you young men who only recently were
+graduated from our various institutions of
+learning (laughter), I would bring a message, a
+message of warning and yet, at the same time, a
+message of good cheer. Having been out in the
+world a whole month, it is high time that you learned
+something about the Facts of Life, something about
+how wonderfully Nature takes care of the thousand
+and one things which go to make up what some
+people jokingly call our “sex” life. I hardly know
+how to begin. Perhaps “Dear Harry” would be as
+good a way as any.</p>
+
+<p>You all have doubtless seen, during your walks
+in the country, how the butterflies and bees carry
+pollen from one flower to another? It is very dull
+and you should be very glad that you are not a bee
+or a butterfly, for where the fun comes in <i>that</i> I can’t
+see. However, they think that they are having a
+good time, which is all that is necessary, I suppose.
+Some day a bee is going to get hold of a real book
+on the subject, and from then on there will be
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span>mighty little pollen-toting done or I don’t know my
+bees.</p>
+
+<p>Well, anyway, if you have noticed carefully how
+the bees carry pollen from one flower to another
+(and there is no reason why you should have noticed
+carefully as there is nothing to see), you will have
+wondered what connection there is between this
+process and that of animal reproduction. I may as
+well tell you right now that there is no connection at
+all, and so your whole morning of bee-stalking has
+been wasted.</p>
+
+<p>We now come to the animal world. Or rather,
+first we come to One Hundred and Twenty-fifth
+Street, but you don’t get off there. The animal world
+is next, and off you get. And what a sight meets
+your eyes! My, my! It just seems as if the whole
+world were topsy-turvy.</p>
+
+<p>The next time you are at your grocer’s buying
+gin, take a look at his eggs. They really are some
+hen’s eggs, but they belong to the grocer now, as he
+has bought them and is entitled to sell them. So
+they really <i>are</i> his eggs, funny as it may sound to
+anyone who doesn’t know. If you will look at these
+eggs, you will see that each one is <i>almost</i> round, but
+not <i>quite</i>. They are more of an “egg-shape.” This
+may strike you as odd at first, until you learn that
+this is Nature’s way of distinguishing eggs from
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span>large golf balls. You see, Mother Nature takes no
+chances. She used to, but she learned her lesson.
+And that is a lesson that all of you must learn as
+well. It is called Old Mother Nature’s Lesson, and
+begins on page 145.</p>
+
+<p>Now, these eggs have not always been like this.
+That stands to reason. They once had something to
+do with a hen or they wouldn’t be called hen’s eggs.
+If they are called duck’s eggs, that means that they
+had something to do with a duck. Who can tell me
+what it means if they are called “ostrich’s eggs”?...
+That’s right.</p>
+
+<p>But the egg is not the only thing that had something
+to do with a hen. Who knows what else there
+was?... That’s right.</p>
+
+<p>Now the rooster is an entirely different sort of
+bird from the hen. It is very proud and has a red
+crest on the top of his head. This red crest is put
+there by Nature so that the hen can see the rooster
+coming in a crowd and can hop into a taxi or make a
+previous engagement if she wants to. A favorite
+dodge of a lot of hens when they see the red crest of
+the rooster making in their direction across the barnyard
+is to work up a sick headache. One of the
+happiest and most contented roosters I ever saw was
+one who had had his red crest chewed off in a fight
+with a dog. He also wore sneakers.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span></p>
+
+<p>But before we take up this phase of the question
+(for it is a question), let us go back to the fish kingdom.
+Fish are probably the worst example that
+you can find; in the first place, because they work
+under water, and in the second, because they don’t
+know anything. You won’t find one fish in a million
+that has enough sense to come in when it rains.
+They are just stupid, that’s all, and nowhere is their
+stupidity more evident than in their sex life.</p>
+
+<p>Take, for example, the carp. The carp is one of
+the least promising of all the fish. He has practically
+no forehead and brings nothing at all to a
+conversation. Now the mother carp is swimming
+around some fine spring day when suddenly she decides
+that it would be nice to have some children.
+So she makes out a deposit slip and deposits a
+couple million eggs on a rock (all this goes on <i>under</i>
+water, mind you, of all places). This done, she adjusts
+her hat, powders her nose, and swims away, a
+woman with a past.</p>
+
+<p>It is not until all this is over and done with that
+papa enters the picture, and then only in an official
+capacity. Papa’s job is very casual. He swims
+over the couple of million eggs and takes a chance
+that by sheer force of personality he can induce
+half a dozen of them to hatch out. The remainder
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span>either go to waste or are blacked up to represent
+caviar.</p>
+
+<p>So you will see that the sex life of a fish is nothing
+much to brag about. It never would present a problem
+in a fish community as it does in ours. No committees
+ever have to be formed to regulate it, and
+about the only way in which a fish can go wrong is
+through drink or stealing. This makes a fish’s life
+highly unattractive, you will agree, for, after a time,
+one would get very tired of drinking and stealing.</p>
+
+<p>We have now covered the various agencies of
+Nature for populating the earth with the lesser
+forms of life. We have purposely omitted any reference
+to the reproduction of those unicellular organisms
+which reproduce by dividing themselves up into
+two, four, eight, etc., parts without any outside assistance
+at all. This method is too silly even to
+discuss.</p>
+
+<p>We now come to colors. You all know that if you
+mix yellow with blue you get green. You also get
+green if you mix cherries and milk. (Just kidding.
+Don’t pay any attention.) The derivation of one
+color from the mixture of two other colors is not
+generally considered a sexual phenomenon, but that
+is because the psychoanalysts haven’t got around to
+it yet. By next season it won’t be safe to admit that
+you like to paint, or you will be giving yourself
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>away as an inhibited old uncle-lover and debauchee.
+The only thing that the sex-psychologists can’t read
+a sexual significance into is trap-shooting, and they
+are working on that now.</p>
+
+<p>All of which brings us to the point of wondering if
+it <i>all</i> isn’t a gigantic hoax. If the specialists fall
+down on trap-shooting, they are going to begin to
+doubt the whole structure which they have erected,
+and before long there is going to be a reaction which
+will take the form of an absolute negation of sex.
+An Austrian scientist has already come out with the
+announcement that there is no such thing as a hundred
+per cent male or a hundred per cent female.
+If this is true, it is really a big step forward. It
+is going to throw a lot of people out of work, but
+think of the money that will be saved!</p>
+
+<p>And so, young men, my message to you is this:
+Think the thing over very carefully and examine the
+evidence with fair-minded detachment. And if you
+decide that, within the next ten years, sex is going
+out of style, make your plans accordingly. Why not
+be pioneers in the new movement?</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_SEED_OF_REVOLT">
+ THE SEED OF REVOLT
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>In the hearts of many New Yorkers there glowed
+a strange and savage sense of satisfaction when
+fire, a few weeks ago, destroyed the wooden staging
+which had encased the lower half of the new Aeolian
+Building under construction at the corner of Fifth
+Avenue and Fifty-fourth Street. That fire may
+prove to be the torch igniting a citizens’ revolt of
+city-wide proportions.</p>
+
+<p>For several years now, ever since they began tearing
+down most of the buildings in New York and
+erecting others in their places to be torn down next
+year, pedestrians have been practically excluded
+from the use of their sidewalks. On each corner,
+and in the middle of each block, it has been necessary
+to tunnel through great wooden passageways,
+dodging avalanches of bricks on one side and workmen
+darting out from clammy recesses with wheelbarrows
+of mortar on the other. These workmen
+have a system whereby they lie in wait in the ground
+floor of the new building, each with a wheelbarrow
+full of unpleasant material poised ready, until you
+and I are directly upon the plank which slopes
+across the sidewalk to the waiting truck. Then, at
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>a signal from the boss, they charge out directly in
+your path, shouting the Fascist war cry and scraping
+the buttons off your waistcoat. At the same moment
+a landslide of gravel is let loose from the fifth floor
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>crashing on top of the flimsy structure over your
+head and sending through a blinding shower of fine
+white powder which stirs up all that old catarrhal
+trouble which the doctor has assured you will cause
+your death one day.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp64" id="p010" style="max-width: 49.8125em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p010.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>They lie in wait in the ground floor of the new building.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>If you evolve some maneuver calculated to evade
+this ordeal by going around the structure on the outside,
+you are confronted by a line of trucks backed
+up against the curb, making it necessary for you to
+go way out to the middle of the street, where you
+are immediately run over in the traffic.</p>
+
+<p>For years now the supine citizens of New York
+have forgone the use of their sidewalks, having first
+been prohibited the use of their streets, until the
+fire in the new Aeolian Building chewed to pieces the
+wooden shanty and boardwalk and, it is to be hoped,
+did irreparable damage to dozens of wheelbarrows.
+It is said that the fire was caused by a workman
+leaving an acetylene torch burning in the basement.
+Whether it was really a workman or some nerve-racked
+patriot with the courage of his convictions
+does not matter now. The idea has been implanted
+in the minds of hundreds of citizens and it would
+not be surprising if, before autumn, construction
+companies had evolved some other way of erecting
+their buildings.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span></p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp52" id="p012" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p012.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>Sending through a blinding shower of fine white powder.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="PAUL_REVERES_RIDE">
+ PAUL REVERE’S RIDE
+ <br>
+ <i>How a Modest Go-Getter Did His Bit for the Juno
+ Acid Bath Corporation</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Following are the salesman’s report sheets
+sent into the home office in New York by
+Thaddeus Olin, agent for the Juno Acid Bath Corporation.
+Mr. Olin had the New England territory
+during the spring of 1775 and these report sheets
+are dated April 16, 17, 18, and 19, of that year.</p>
+
+
+<p class="author">
+ <i>April 16, 1775.</i><br>
+ <i>Boston.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>Called on the following engravers this a. m.:
+Boston Engraving Co., E. H. Hosstetter, Theodore
+Platney, Paul Revere, Benjamin B. Ashley and
+Roger Durgin.</p>
+
+<p>Boston Engraving Co. are all taken care of for
+their acid.</p>
+
+<p>E. H. Hosstetter took three tins of acid No. 4
+on trial and renewed his old order of 7 Queen-Biters.</p>
+
+<p>Theodore Platney has gone out of business since
+my last trip.</p>
+
+<p>Paul Revere was not in. The man in his shop
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>said that he was busy with some sort of local shin-dig.
+Said I might catch him in tomorrow morning.</p>
+
+<p>The Benjamin Ashley people said they were satisfied
+with their present product and contemplated no
+change.</p>
+
+<p>Roger Durgin died last March.</p>
+
+<p>Things are pretty quiet in Boston right now.</p>
+
+
+<p class="author">
+ <i>April 17.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>Called on Boston Engraving people again to see
+if they might not want to try some Daisy No. 3.
+Mr. Lithgo was interested and said to come in tomorrow
+when Mr. Lithgo, Senior, would be there.</p>
+
+<p>Paul Revere was not in. He had been in for a
+few minutes before the shop opened and had left
+word that he would be up at Sam Adams’ in case
+anyone wanted him. Went up to the Adams place,
+but the girl there said that Mr. Revere and Mr.
+Adams had gone over to Mr. Dawes’ place on Milk
+Street. Went to Dawes’ place, but the man there
+said Dawes and Adams and Revere were in conference.
+There seems to be some sort of parade or
+something they are getting up, something to do with
+the opening of the new foot-bridge to Cambridge,
+I believe.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span></p>
+
+<p>Things are pretty quiet here in Boston, except for
+the trade from the British fleet which is out in the
+harbour.</p>
+
+<p>Spent the evening looking around in the coffee
+houses. Everyone here is cribbage-crazy. All they
+seem to think of is cribbage, cribbage, cribbage.</p>
+
+
+<p class="author">
+ <i>April 18.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>To the Boston Engraving Company and saw Mr.
+Lithgo, Senior. He seemed interested in the Daisy
+No. 3 acid and said to drop in again later in the
+week.</p>
+
+<p>Paul Revere was out. His assistant said that he
+knew that Mr. Revere was in need of a new batch
+of acid and had spoken to him about our Vulcan
+No. 2 and said he might try some. I would have to
+see Mr. Revere personally, he said, as Mr. Revere
+makes all purchases himself. He said that he
+thought I could catch him over at the Dawes’ place.</p>
+
+<p>Tried the Dawes’ place but they said that he and
+Mr. Revere had gone over to the livery stable on
+State Street.</p>
+
+<p>Went to the livery stable but Revere had gone.
+They said he had engaged a horse for tonight for
+some sort of entertainment he was taking part in.
+The hostler said he heard Mr. Revere say to Mr.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>Dawes that they might as well go up to the North
+Church and see if everything was all set; so I gather
+it is a church entertainment.</p>
+
+<p>Followed them up to the North Church, but there
+was nobody there except the caretaker, who said that
+he thought I could catch Mr. Revere over at
+Charlestown late that night. He described him to
+me so that I would know him and said that he probably
+would be on horseback. As it seemed to me to
+be pretty important that we land the Revere order
+for Vulcan No. 2, I figured out that whatever inconvenience
+it might cause me to go over to Charlestown
+or whatever added expense to the firm, would
+be justified.</p>
+
+<p>Spent the afternoon visiting several printing establishments,
+but none of them do any engraving.</p>
+
+<p>Things are pretty quiet here in Boston.</p>
+
+<p>Went over to Charlestown after supper and hung
+around “The Bell in Hand” tavern looking for Mr.
+Revere. Met a man there who used to live in Peapack,
+N. J., and we got to talking about what a
+funny name for a town that was. Another man said
+that in Massachusetts there was actually a place
+called Podunk, up near Worcester. We had some
+very good cheese and talked over names of towns
+for a while. Then the second man, the one who
+knew about Podunk, said he had to go as he had
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>a date with a man. After he had left I happened
+to bring the conversation around to the fact that
+I was waiting for a Mr. Paul Revere, and the first
+man told me that I had been talking to him for half
+an hour and that he had just gone.</p>
+
+<p>I rushed out to the corner, but the man who keeps
+the watering-trough there said that someone answering
+Mr. Revere’s description had just galloped off
+on a horse in the direction of Medford. Well, this
+just made me determined to land that order for Juno
+Acid Bath Corporation or die in the attempt. So
+I hired a horse at the Tavern stable and started
+off toward Medford.</p>
+
+<p>Just before I hit Medford I saw a man standing
+out in his night-shirt in front of his house looking
+up the road. I asked him if he had seen anybody
+who looked like Mr. Revere. He seemed
+pretty sore and said that some crazy coot had just
+ridden by and knocked at his door and yelled something
+that he couldn’t understand and that if he
+caught him he’d break his back. From his description
+of the horse I gathered that Mr. Revere was
+the man; so I galloped on.</p>
+
+<p>A lot of people in Medford Town were up and
+standing in front of their houses, cursing like the
+one I had just seen. It seems that Mr. Revere had
+gone along the roadside, knocking on doors and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>yelling something which nobody understood, and
+then galloping on again.</p>
+
+<p>“Some god-dam drunk,” said one of the Medfordites,
+and they all went back to bed.</p>
+
+<p>I wasn’t going to be cheated out of my order now,
+no matter what happened, and I don’t think that
+Mr. Revere could have been drunk, because while
+he was with us at “The Bell in Hand,” he had only
+four short ales. He had a lot of cheese, though.</p>
+
+<p>Something seemed to have been the matter with
+him, however, because in every town that I rode
+through I found people just going back to bed after
+having been aroused up out of their sleep by a
+mysterious rider. I didn’t tell them that it was Mr.
+Revere, or that it was probably some stunt to do
+with the shin-dig that he and Mr. Dawes were putting
+on for the North Church. I figured out that
+it was a little publicity stunt.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, just as I got into Lexington, I saw my
+man getting off his horse at a house right alongside
+the Green. I rushed up and caught him just as he
+was going in. I introduced myself and told him
+that I represented the Juno Acid Bath Corporation
+of New York and asked him if he could give me a
+few minutes, as I had been following him all the
+way from Charlestown and had been to his office
+three days in succession. He said that he was busy
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span>right at that minute, but that if I wanted to come
+along with him upstairs he would talk business on
+the way. He asked me if I wasn’t the man he had
+been talking to at “The Bell in Hand” and I said
+yes, and asked him how Podunk was. This got
+him in good humour and he said that we might as
+well sit right down then and that he would get
+someone else to do what he had to do. So he called
+a man-servant and told him to go right upstairs,
+wake up Mr. Hancock and Mr. Adams and tell
+them to get up, and no fooling. “Keep after them,
+Sambo,” he said, “and don’t let them roll over and
+go to sleep again. It’s very important.”</p>
+
+<p>So we sat down in the living room and I got out
+our statement of sales for 1774 and showed him
+that, in face of increased competition, Juno had
+practically doubled its output. “There must be
+some reason for an acid outselling its competitors
+three to one,” I said, “and that reason, Mr. Revere,
+is that a Juno product is a guaranteed product.” He
+asked me about the extra sixpence a tin and I asked
+him if he would rather pay a sixpence less and get
+an inferior grade of acid and he said, “No.” So I
+finally landed an order of three dozen tins of Vulcan
+No. 2 and a dozen jars of Acme Silver Polish, as
+Mr. Revere is a silversmith, also, on the side.</p>
+
+<p>Took a look around Lexington before I went back
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span>to Boston, but didn’t see any engraving plants.
+Lexington is pretty quiet right now.</p>
+
+<p class="author">
+ Respectfully submitted,<br>
+ <span class="smcap">Thaddeus Olin</span>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+ Attached.<br>
+ <i>Expense Voucher</i><br>
+ Juno Acid Bath Corp., New York<br>
+ </p>
+ <p class="author">Thaddeus Olin, Agent.</p>
+
+<table class="autotable">
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Hotel in Boston
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+15s.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Stage fare
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+30s.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Meals (4 days)
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+28s.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Entertaining prospects
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+£3&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4s.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Horse rent. Charlestown to Lexington and return
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+£2&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6s.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+———
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Total Expense
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+£9&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3s.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+To Profit on three dozen tins of Vulcan No. 2 and
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+18s.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+One dozen jars Acme Silver Polish
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+4s.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+———
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+£1&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2s.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Net Loss
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">
+£8&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1s.
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="FASCINATING_CRIMES">
+ FASCINATING CRIMES
+ <br>
+ <i>I. The Odd Occurrence in the Life of Dr. Meethas</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Early in the evening of October 14, 1879, Dr.
+Attemas Meethas, a physician of good repute
+in Elkhart, Indiana, went into the pantry of his
+home at 11 Elm Street, ostensibly to see if there was
+any of that cold roast pork left. The good doctor
+was given to nibbling cold roast pork when occasion
+offered.</p>
+
+<p>As he passed through the living-room on his way
+to the pantry, he spoke to his housekeeper, Mrs.
+Omphrey, and said that, if everything turned out all
+right, he would be at that cold roast pork in about
+half a minute (Elkhart time—an hour earlier than
+Eastern time). “Look out for the pits,” Mrs. Omphrey
+cautioned him, and went on with her stitching.
+Mrs. Omphrey, in her spare time, was a stitcher of
+uppers for the local shoe-factory.</p>
+
+<p>This is the last that was seen of Dr. Attemas
+Meethas alive. It is doubtful if he ever even
+reached the pantry, for the cold roast pork was
+found untouched on a plate, and Dr. Meethas was
+found, three days later, hanging from the top of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>the flag-pole on the roof of the Masonic Lodge. The
+mystery was even more puzzling in that Dr. Meethas
+was not a Mason.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp71" id="p022" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p022.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>The revolting death of Dr. Meethas.</p>
+ <p>
+ —<i>Courtesy of John Held, Jr., and Life.</i></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>Citizens of Elkhart, on being grilled, admitted
+having seen the doctor hanging from the flag-pole
+for two days, but thought that he was fooling and
+would come down soon enough when he got hungry.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span>But when, after three days, he made no sign of
+descending, other than to drop off one shoe, a committee
+was formed to investigate. It was found that
+their fellow-citizen, far from playing a practical
+joke on them, had had one played on him, for he was
+quite dead, with manifold and singular abrasions. A
+particularly revolting feature of the case was that
+the little gold chain which the doctor wore over his
+right ear, to keep his pince-nez glasses in place, was
+still in position. This at once disposed of the possibility
+of suicide.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Omphrey and her uppers were held for examination,
+as it was understood that she had at one
+time made an attempt on the doctor’s life, on the
+occasion of his pushing her down when they were
+skating together. But her story in the present affair
+was impregnable. After the doctor had gone through
+the living-room on his way to the pantry, she said
+that she continued stitching at her machine until
+nine o’clock in the evening. She thought it a little
+odd that Dr. Meethas did not return from the pantry,
+but figured it out that there was probably quite
+a lot of cold roast pork there and that he was
+still busy nibbling. At nine o’clock, however, she
+stopped work and started on her rounds of the house
+to lock up for the night. On reaching the pantry,
+she found that her employer was not there, and had
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>not been there; at least that he had not touched the
+pork. She thought nothing of it, however, as it occurred
+to her that the doctor had probably remembered
+an engagement and had left suddenly by the
+pantry window in order not to worry her. So, after
+finishing the cold pork herself, she locked the bread-box
+and retired for the night. The police, on investigation,
+found the bread-box locked just as she had
+said, and so released Mrs. Omphrey.</p>
+
+<p>When the news of Dr. Meethas’ accident reached
+La Porte, Amos W. Meethas, a brother of the victim
+and a respected citizen of the town, came directly to
+Elkhart and insisted on an investigation. He said
+that his brother had accumulated quite a fortune
+tinting postcards on the side, and was known to have
+this money hidden in a secret panel in the hammock
+which hung on the back porch. The police, guided
+by Mr. Amos Meethas, went to the hammock, slid
+the panel open and found nothing there but some old
+clippings telling of Dr. Meethas’ confirmation in
+1848. (He was a confirmed old bachelor.) This
+definitely established robbery as the motive for the
+crime. The next thing to do was to discover someone
+who could climb flag-poles.</p>
+
+<p>Neighbors of the doctor recalled that some weeks<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[Pg 25]</span>
+before a young man had gone from door to door
+asking if anybody wanted his flag-pole climbed. He
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[Pg 26]</span>said he was working his way through college climbing
+flag-poles and would be grateful for any work,
+however small. He was remembered to have been a
+short youth about six feet two or three, with hair
+blond on one side and dark on the other. This much
+the neighbors agreed upon.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp57" id="p025" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p025.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>Dr. Meethas—The unfortunate victim.</p>
+ <p>
+ —<i>Courtesy of John Held, Jr., and Life.</i></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>Working in South Bend at the time was a young
+man named Herman Trapp. He was apprehended
+by the authorities, who subsequently decided that he
+had no connection whatever with the tragedy.</p>
+
+<p>So the strange murder of Dr. Meethas (if indeed
+it <i>was</i> a murder) rests to this day unsolved and forgotten,
+which is just as well, as it was at best a
+pretty dull case.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="UPSETS">
+ UPSETS
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Thus far, the football season of 1927 has been
+one of upsets. Nothing has turned out according
+to the dope. Therefore, in its remaining
+weeks, we predict the following startling deviations
+from form:</p>
+
+<p>1. It will not rain the day of the Big Game.</p>
+
+<p>2. We shall have no more than a dozen requests
+for “a couple of seats.”</p>
+
+<p>3. Our own seats will be, not in the wooden stands
+behind the scoreboard, but out in full view of the
+field. (We have to laugh even when writing this
+in fun.)</p>
+
+<p>4. There will not be an intoxicated man in a rhinoceros
+coat directly in front of us who jumps up
+at the sound of the whistle.</p>
+
+<p>5. There will not be a small man with a 13½ collar
+behind us who has ideas on how the team
+should be run.</p>
+
+<p>6. The game will not have started while we are
+milling around in the crowd at the gate.</p>
+
+<p>7. Nobody will fall down the steps.</p>
+
+<p>8. Holding tickets for two seats, we shall find
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>that there is space left in which two people can sit
+without being married to each other.</p>
+
+<p>9. We shall not be too hot above the waist and
+too cold below.</p>
+
+<p>10. Harvard will win and we shall see ten dollars
+of Donald Ogden Stewart’s money.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="AN_INTERVIEW_WITH_MUSSOLINI">
+ AN INTERVIEW WITH MUSSOLINI
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Mussolini seemed to be a good man to
+interview; so I got an interview with him.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Mussolini,” I said, “as I understand your
+theory of government, while it is not without its
+Greek foundations, it dates even farther back, in
+its essence, to the Assyrian system.”</p>
+
+<p>“What?” asked Mussolini.</p>
+
+<p>“I said, as I understood your theory of government,
+while it is not without its Greek foundations,
+it dates even farther back to the ancient Assyrian
+system. Am I right?”</p>
+
+<p>“Assyrian here seen Kelly? K-E-double L-Y.
+That was a good song, too,” said Il Duce.</p>
+
+<p>“A good song is right,” I replied. “And now
+might I ask, how did you come by that beard?”</p>
+
+<p>“That is not a beard,” replied the Great Man.
+“That is my forehead. I am smooth-shaven, as a
+matter of fact.”</p>
+
+<p>“So you are, so you are,” I apologized. “I was
+forgetting.”</p>
+
+<p>We both sat silent for a while, thinking of the
+old days in Syracuse High.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Whatever became of her?” It was Il Kuce who
+broke the silence.</p>
+
+<p>“She married and went to Hingham to live,” I
+replied, watching him closely.</p>
+
+<p>He went white for the fraction of a second. Then
+he turned to me and said:</p>
+
+<p>“Give me your A, will you, please?”</p>
+
+<p>So I gave him my A and we played “<i>Yes Patineurs</i>”
+(“The Skaters”), and very pretty, too.</p>
+
+<p>“I had almost forgotten how it went,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“You <i>have</i> forgotten how it went,” I corrected
+him. “You play awful.”</p>
+
+<p>Laughter followed this remark of mine. But I
+noticed that Mussolini was not laughing.</p>
+
+<p>“But about your theory of government,” I said,
+hoping to bring the roses back into those cheeks.
+“A lot of people try to tell me that it is Phonician,
+but I always say ‘No!’”</p>
+
+<p>“What is it they say it is?” asked Il Huce, all
+a-tremble with excitement.</p>
+
+<p>“Phœnician,” I repeated, putting in the “e.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s a tough one,” he said. “You’ll have to
+give me a couple of minutes on that. Phœnician,
+eh?... Phœnician drive up in a hack and ask
+yer.” He put this forward tentatively.</p>
+
+<p>“Not so good, Il Duce,” I commented.</p>
+
+<p>His eyes filled with tears.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Oh, well, then,” I compromised, “have it your
+own way.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll have it with plain water, please, and a little
+lemon-rind.” It was the Imperator who spoke.</p>
+
+<p>I signaled to the driver.</p>
+
+<p>“Stop the interview,” I said simply.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_LIFE_POLAR_EXPEDITION">
+ THE LIFE POLAR EXPEDITION
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">1</p>
+
+<p>In spite of the fact that already three polar expeditions
+are well under way in the air, <i>Life</i> has
+decided that the interests of science demand, or at
+any rate, ask nicely for, an expedition to be conducted
+through some other medium. We have therefore
+decided on the bicycle.</p>
+
+<p>We realize that our expedition will have to hurry
+like everything on bicycles to catch up with the
+Amundsen and Byrd groups, but we are willing to
+make the try, and all our men are imbued with an
+enthusiasm and zeal to carry the banner of <i>Life</i> to
+the Pole which cannot but result in <i>something</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Feverish preparations are now under way for the
+belated start of the <i>Life</i> bicycle expedition to the
+North Pole. The tardy departure has been due to
+the failure of the contractors to finish the trousers-clips
+in time, but everything is now in readiness and
+it looks as if we might start at any minute now.
+The men are all eager to catch up with Amundsen
+and Byrd and we all feel that, by very fast pedaling
+and no fooling along the way, we can do it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span></p>
+
+<p>“We <i>will</i> do it,” Lieutenant Commander Marc
+Connelly said to me last night, and that just about
+expresses the spirit behind the whole trip.</p>
+
+<p>“Why did you choose the bicycle?” a lot of people
+have asked us. “Why <i>court</i> danger?”</p>
+
+<p>We realize the risk that we are taking but feel
+that the bicycle is the logical means for a party of
+our description to reach the Pole. Three years ago
+it would have been impossible. But since then we
+have learned so much more about the earth’s magnetism
+and bicycle navigation that, with the improved
+technique in balancing which we have developed,
+we feel that the danger is merely nominal.
+The farthest that we can possibly fall, in case of an
+upset, is in an arc with a radius of six feet. Now
+in this latitude (or in any latitude in which we are
+likely to be for some time) the rate of acceleration
+of a falling body is thirty-two feet per second; so
+you will see that it can’t hurt much.</p>
+
+<p>Furthermore, we are using the new Radley model
+bicycle, which combines all the best features of the
+old Columbia bicycle with several modern inventions,
+such as the gyro-balancer and the flash tail-light.
+The gyro-balancer is a contraption attached
+to the saddle, by means of which the rider is enabled
+to doze or shell nuts as he rides and be assured that,
+unless he leans beyond an angle of forty-five degrees,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>his machine will right itself automatically. If dozing,
+however, he must not forget to pedal, as the
+gyro-balancer does not function unless the wheel is
+in motion. The flash tail-light is more for looks than
+anything else. It flashes red, green and vanilla.</p>
+
+<p>As at present planned, our course to the Pole
+will be as follows:</p>
+
+<p>Leave the <i>Life</i> office at 598 Madison Ave., New
+York. Over to Fifth Ave. and up Fifth Ave. to
+120th St., skirting Mount Morris Park, past 138th
+St. (Mott Haven), striking onto the Bronx River
+Parkway. Up through Morrisania, Woodlawn,
+Mount Vernon, Bronxville, Tuckahoe, Crestwood,
+Scarsdale, and Hartsdale to White Plains. From
+White Plains we continue north direct into Canada
+and through Canada to Victoria Island. A short
+carry across Melville Sound to Melville Island. Another
+carry to Borden Island, followed by a short
+carry to Axel Heiberg Land and a final carry to
+Grant Land on Ellesmere Island. Thence direct to
+the Pole.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">2</p>
+
+<p><i>En route with</i> <span class="allsmcap">LIFE’S</span> <i>Polar Expedition, passing
+through 125th St., Manhattan, May 12.</i>—After a
+successful hop-off from the curbing in front of the
+office of <i>Life</i> at 598 Madison Ave., New York City,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span>we pedalled our bicycles slowly up Madison Ave. to
+59th St., where it was discovered that Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly’s rear wheel was still locked, a precaution
+which had been taken while the machines
+were standing in the rack outside the office. This
+had made speed out of the question for Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly, and had resulted in an odd, dragging
+sensation which he was at a loss to account for
+until a passerby called his attention to the locked
+wheel. The trouble was immediately remedied, and
+the expedition proceeded at a much smarter pace up
+Madison Ave.</p>
+
+<p>This little incident, at the very outset of our trip,
+while unimportant in itself, just goes to show the
+spirit which is animating our men and the determination
+in their hearts to see this thing through at any
+cost. Lieut.-Commander Connelly might very well
+have become discouraged when he found that his
+rear wheel was not revolving at all and abandoned
+the thing entirely, but with characteristic bulldog
+grit he kept pedalling right ahead with only one
+wheel and would probably have stuck at it until the
+Pole was reached, do or die. It is such courage
+that makes us all optimistic.</p>
+
+<p>Proceeding up Madison Ave. to 60th St., we
+turned the wheels at a sharp right angle and cut
+across into Fifth Ave. This, while perhaps foolhardy
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span>on the face of it, was not the madcap move
+that it may seem to you sitting safely at home reading
+of our progress. For we had received wireless
+messages from the station at 72nd St. and Madison
+Ave. that at that corner there was a nasty excavation,
+into which we might very well have hurtled
+with disastrous results had we kept on our way up
+Madison. “I never before realized what a valuable
+service the wireless telegraph can accomplish,” said
+Ensign Thermaline to me. Ensign Thermaline was
+on the bicycle just ahead of me, and as he turned
+to make this remark, his front wheel struck the
+curbing a glancing blow, which threatened for a
+moment to result in a spill, but with rare presence
+of mind Ensign Thermaline turned his head front
+again without waiting for my corroboration of his
+remark (which I would have given willingly had
+there been time or had the occasion been more propitious)
+and, utilizing the gyro-balancer with which
+each of our Radley machines is equipped, righted
+himself and his wheel in no time at all. It was an
+exciting moment, however, and we all felt better
+when Ensign Thermaline was once again headed
+straight north up Fifth Ave.</p>
+
+<p>All of our instruments are in excellent working
+order except the flash tail-light on Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly’s wheel, which persists in flashing
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>red, a signal that he is going the other way. It
+should be flashing green. This has caused a little
+confusion among vehicles following in our wake, for
+the printed directions in the daily papers stated that
+those vehicles encountering our expedition en route
+could tell the direction in which we were moving by
+watching our flash tail-lights, red if we were going
+south and green if we were going north. Something
+akin to a panic was caused among the passengers on
+a Fifth Ave. bus which was following close on behind
+Lieut.-Commander Connelly’s wheel when he suddenly
+flashed red, indicating that he was pedalling
+head-on for the bus. It was only when Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly yelled a cheery “Mistake,
+mistake!” that the bus-driver could be convinced
+that he ought not to turn aside and let the Connelly
+wheel pass.</p>
+
+<p>We are now approaching 125th St. and the difference
+in the atmospheric conditions between lower
+and upper Fifth Ave. is distinctly noticeable. The
+traffic, while just as heavy, is a little easier to steer
+through. Ensign Thermaline seems, at the moment,
+to be lost, but I have no doubt that he will turn up
+again as soon as that big van gets out of the way
+just beyond Capt. Nordney. Capt. Nordney joined
+the expedition at the Heckscher Foundation at 104th
+St. and Fifth Ave.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span></p>
+
+<p>It now looks as if we might be able to make 138th
+St. (Mott Haven) by night-fall, but I rather hope
+that we don’t as there probably wouldn’t be any
+place to spend the night. I certainly have never
+seen, or heard of, any hotels in that neighborhood.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p><i>135th St., New York City, May 12.</i>—At 5:58
+p. m. today the <i>Life</i> Polar Expedition passed through
+this street, bearing N.E. by N. The members
+seemed a little tired and Lieut.-Commander Connelly’s
+wheel was dragging badly. Commander
+Benchley was sending out messages in all directions,
+asking if anyone knew where they could put up for
+the night.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p><i>Railroad Y. M. C. A., 140th St., New York City,
+May 12.</i>—Preparations are being made here to take
+care of the <i>Life</i> Polar Expedition, which is due to
+make a landing at 6:20 p. m. Searchlights are in
+readiness and hot baths are being run to accommodate
+at least two of the party.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_SAVING-OLD-IRONSIDES_HABIT">
+ THE SAVING-“OLD-IRONSIDES” HABIT
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The annual campaign to “Save ‘Old Ironsides’”
+is on again. Every few years this
+ancient frigate is saved from some mysterious destruction,
+school children are lathered up into a foam
+of patriotic excitement in which they bring pennies
+from their banks to aid in the crisis, speeches are
+made and banners unfurled, and everybody sinks
+back with a sigh of relief. “Old Ironsides” has
+been saved again!</p>
+
+<p>And yet it hardly seems more than a couple of
+years before the cry goes up again: “The enemy!”
+and bang! a shot whistles across the bows of the
+famous ship. Then it’s “Save ‘Old Ironsides,’
+boys!” and the whole thing begins all over again.</p>
+
+<p>Oliver Wendell Holmes, who aided the first “Save
+‘Old Ironsides’” campaign by writing, “Ay, tear her
+tattered ensign down!” must smile a rather wan
+smile as he realizes that all that he did was save
+“Old Ironsides” for the fiscal year 1887-8 and that
+ever since then a Saving Committee has been kept
+busy night and day planning future campaigns.
+They say that the 1930 campaign is going to be the
+biggest and best yet.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span></p>
+
+<p>What are these malign forces that seem so persistent
+in their plots to wreck the good ship “Constitution”?
+Sometimes it is an unsentimental Government
+that threatens to junk the whole thing. At
+other times it is the forces of Nature, which seem
+to wait until our backs are turned after a money-raising
+campaign and then jump at the poor old
+sea-dog as she lies in safety at Charlestown and bid
+fair to tear her limb from limb.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever it is that we are constantly fighting off,
+would it not be possible to raise enough money at
+one crack to keep “Old Ironsides” afloat <i>forever</i>?
+We have a national surplus of $390,000,000.
+Couldn’t we just settle this whole thing once and for
+all by devoting, let us say, half of that to seeing
+that no more harm ever comes to this precious relic?</p>
+
+<p>Having saved her three times, and won three legs
+on the trophy, might we not be entitled to permanent
+possession of it?</p>
+
+<p>Or has the fact that there is a movie entitled
+“Old Ironsides” anything to do with what James
+Russell Lowell called “The Present Crisis”?</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="A_GOOD_OLD-FASHIONED_CHRISTMAS">
+ A GOOD OLD-FASHIONED CHRISTMAS
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Sooner or later at every Christmas party, just
+as things are beginning to get good, someone
+shuts his eyes, puts his head back and moans softly:
+“Ah, well, this isn’t like the old days. We don’t
+seem to have any good old-fashioned Christmases
+any more.” To which the answer from my corner of
+the room is: “All right! That suits me!”</p>
+
+<p>Just what they have in mind when they say “old-fashioned
+Christmas” you never can pin them down
+to telling. “Lots of snow,” they mutter, “and lots
+of food.” Yet, if you work it right, you can still
+get plenty of snow and food today. Snow, at any
+rate.</p>
+
+<p>Then there seems to be some idea of the old-fashioned
+Christmas being, of necessity, in the country.
+It doesn’t make any difference whether you
+were raised on a farm or whether your ideas of a
+rural Christmas were gleaned from pictures in old
+copies of “Harper’s Young People,” you must give
+folks to understand that such were the surroundings
+in which you spent your childhood holidays. And
+that, ah, me, those days will never come again!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span></p>
+
+<p>Well, supposing you get your wish some time.
+Supposing, let us say, your wife’s folks who live up
+in East Russet, Vermont, write and ask you to come
+up and bring the children for a good old-fashioned
+Christmas, “while we are all still together,” they add
+cheerily with their flair for putting everybody in
+good humor.</p>
+
+<p>Hurray, hurray! Off to the country for Christmas!
+Pack up all the warm clothes in the house,
+for you will need them up there where the air is
+clean and cold. Snow-shoes? Yes, put them in, or
+better yet, Daddy will carry them. What fun!
+Take along some sleigh-bells to jangle in case
+there aren’t enough on the pung. There must be
+jangling sleigh-bells. And whisky for frost-bite.
+Or is it snake-bite that whisky is for? Anyway,
+put it in! We’re off! Good-by, all! Good-by!
+<span class="allsmcap">JANGLE-JANGLE-JANGLE</span>-Jangle-Jangle-Jangle-jangle-jangle-jangle-jangle-jangle-jangle!</p>
+
+<p>In order to get to East Russet you take the Vermont
+Central as far as Twitchell’s Falls and change
+there for Torpid River Junction, where a spur line<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[Pg 43]</span>
+takes you right into Gormley. At Gormley you are
+met by a buckboard which takes you back to Torpid
+River Junction again. By this time a train or something
+has come in which will wait for the local from
+Besus. While waiting for this you will have time to
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[Pg 44]</span>send your little boy to school, so that he can finish
+the third grade.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp49" id="p043" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p043.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>Esther Girl giddaps, and two suitcases fall out.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>At East Russet Grandpa meets you with the
+sleigh. The bags are piled in and Mother sits in
+front with Lester in her lap while Daddy takes
+Junior and Ga-Ga in back with him and the luggage.
+Giddap, Esther Girl!</p>
+
+<p>Esther Girl giddaps, and two suitcases fall out.
+Heigh-ho! Out we get and pick them up, brushing
+the snow off and filling our cuffs with it as we do so.
+After all, there is nothing like snow for getting up
+one’s cuffs. Good clean snow never hurt anyone.
+Which is lucky, because after you have gone a mile
+or so, you discover that Ga-Ga is missing. Never
+mind, she is a self-reliant little girl and will doubtless
+find her way to the farm by herself. Probably she
+will be there waiting for you when you arrive.</p>
+
+<p>The farm is situated on a hill about eleven hundred
+miles from the center of town, just before you
+get into Canada. If there is a breeze in winter, they
+get it. But what do they care for breezes, so long
+as they have the Little Colonel oil-heater in the
+front room, to make everything cozy and warm
+within a radius of four inches! And the big open
+fireplace with the draught coming down it! Fun for
+everybody!</p>
+
+<p>You are just driving up to the farmhouse in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>sleigh, with the entire right leg frozen where the lap
+robe has slipped out. Grandma is waiting for you
+at the door and you bustle in, all glowing with good
+cheer. “Merry Christmas, Grandma!” Lester is
+cross and Junior is asleep and has to be dragged by
+the hand upstairs, bumping against each step all
+the way. It is so late that you decide that you all
+might as well go to bed, especially as you learn that
+breakfast is at four-thirty. It usually is at four, but
+Christmas being a holiday everyone sleeps late.</p>
+
+<p>As you reach the top of the stairs you get into a
+current of cold air which has something of the
+quality of the temperature in a nice well-regulated
+crypt. This is the Bed Room Zone, and in it the
+thermometer never tops the zero mark from October
+fifteenth until the middle of May. Those rooms in
+which no one sleeps are used to store perishable
+vegetables in, and someone has to keep thumbing
+the tomatoes and pears every so often to prevent
+their getting so hard that they crack.</p>
+
+<p>The way to get undressed for bed in one of
+Grandpa’s bedrooms is as follows: Starting from
+the foot of the stairs where it is warm, run up two
+at a time to keep the circulation going as long as
+possible. Opening the bedroom door with one hand,
+tear down the curtains from the windows with the
+other, pick up the rugs from the floor and snatch
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>the spread from the top of the bureau. Pile all
+these on the bed, cover with the closet door which
+you have wrenched from its hinges, and leap quickly
+underneath. It sometimes helps to put on a pair
+of rubbers over your shoes.</p>
+
+<p>And even when you are in bed, you have no
+guarantee of going to sleep. Grandpa’s mattresses
+seem to contain the overflow from the silo, cornhusks,
+baked-potato skins and long, stringy affairs
+which feel like pipe cleaners. On a cold night,
+snuggling down into these is about like snuggling
+down into a bed of damp pine cones out in the
+forest.</p>
+
+<p>Then there are Things abroad in the house.
+Shortly after you get into bed, the stairs start snapping.
+Next something runs along the roof over your
+head. You say to yourself: “Don’t be silly. It’s
+only Santa Claus.” Then it runs along in the wall
+behind the head of the bed. Santa Claus wouldn’t
+do that. Down the long hall which leads into the ell
+of the house you can hear the wind sighing softly,
+with an occasional reassuring bang of a door.</p>
+
+<p>The unmistakable sound of someone dying in
+great pain rises from just below the window-sill. It
+is a sort of low moan, with just a touch of strangulation
+in it. Perhaps Santa has fallen off the roof.
+Perhaps that story you once heard about Grandpa’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>house having been a hang-out for Revolutionary
+smugglers is true, and one of the smugglers has
+come back for his umbrella. The only place at a
+time like this is down under the bedclothes. But
+the children become frightened and demand to be
+taken home, and Grandpa has to be called to explain
+that it is only Blue Bell out in the barn. Blue Bell
+has asthma, and on a cold night they have to be
+very patient with her.</p>
+
+<p>Christmas morning dawns cloudy and cold, with
+the threat of plenty more snow, and, after all, what
+would Christmas be without snow? You lie in bed
+for one hour and a quarter trying to figure out how
+you can get up without losing the covers from
+around you. A glance at the water pitcher shows
+that it is time for them to put the red ball up for
+skating. You think of the nice warm bathroom at
+home, and decide that you can wait until you get
+back there before shaving.</p>
+
+<p>This breaking the ice in the pitcher seems to be a
+feature of the early lives of all great men which
+they look back on with tremendous satisfaction.
+“When I was a boy, I used to have to break the
+ice in the pitcher every morning before I could
+wash,” is said with as much pride as one might say,
+“When I was a boy I stood at the head of my class.”
+Just what virtue there is in having to break ice in a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>pitcher is not evident, unless it lies in their taking
+the bother to break the ice and wash at all. Any
+time that I have to break ice in a pitcher as a preliminary
+to washing, I go unwashed, that’s all. And
+Benjamin Franklin and U. S. Grant and Rutherford
+B. Hayes can laugh as much as they like. I’m nobody’s
+fool about a thing like that.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp71" id="p048" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p048.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>The entire family enters, purple and chattering and
+ exceedingly cross.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span></p>
+
+<p>Getting the children dressed is a lot of fun when
+you have to keep pumping their limbs up and down
+to keep them from freezing out stiff. The children
+love it and are just as bright and merry as little
+pixies when it is time to go downstairs and say
+“Good morning” to Grandpa and Grandma. The
+entire family enters the dining-room purple and
+chattering and exceedingly cross.</p>
+
+<p>After breakfast everyone begins getting dinner.
+The kitchen being the only warm place in the house
+may have something to do with it. But before long
+there are so many potato peelings and turkey
+feathers and squash seeds and floating bits of pie
+crust in the kitchen that the women-folk send you
+and the children off into the front part of the house
+to amuse yourselves and get out of the way.</p>
+
+<p>Then what a jolly time you and the kiddies and
+Grandpa have together! You can either slide on the
+horse-hair sofa, or play “The Wayside Chapel” on
+the piano (the piano has scroll-work on either side
+of the music rack with yellow silk showing through),
+or look out the window and see ten miles of dark
+gray snow. Perhaps you may even go out to the
+barn and look at the horses and cows, but really,
+as you walk down between the stalls, when you have
+seen one horse or one cow you have seen them all.
+And besides, the cold in the barn has an added
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>flavor of damp harness leather and musty carriage
+upholstery which eats into your very marrow.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, there are the presents to be distributed,
+but that takes on much the same aspect as the same
+ceremony in the new-fashioned Christmas, except
+that in the really old-fashioned Christmas the presents
+weren’t so tricky. Children got mostly mittens
+and shoes, with a sled thrown in sometimes for dissipation.
+Where a boy today is bored by three
+o’clock in the afternoon with his electric grain-elevator
+and miniature pond with real perch in it,
+the old-fashioned boy was lucky if he got a copy
+of “Naval Battles of the War of 1812” and an orange.
+Now this feature is often brought up in praise
+of the old way of doing things. “I tell you,” says
+Uncle Gyp, “the children in my time never got such
+presents as you get today.” And he seems proud
+of the fact, as if there were some virtue accruing to
+him for it. If the children of today can get electric
+grain-elevators and tin automobiles for Christmas,
+why aren’t they that much better off than their
+grandfathers who got only wristlets? Learning the
+value of money, which seems to be the only argument
+of the stand-patters, doesn’t hold very much
+water as a Christmas slogan. The value of money
+can be learned in just about five minutes when the
+time comes, but Christmas is not the season.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span></p>
+
+<p>But to return to the farm, where you and the
+kiddies and Gramp’ are killing time. You can either
+bring in wood from the woodshed, or thaw out the
+pump, or read the books in the bookcase over the
+writing-desk. Of the three, bringing in the wood will
+probably be the most fun, as you are likely to burn
+yourself thawing out the pump, and the list of reading
+matter on hand includes “The Life and Deeds of
+General Grant,” “Our First Century,” “Andy’s Trip
+to Portland,” bound volumes of the Jersey Cattle
+Breeders’ Gazette and “Diseases of the Horse.”
+Then there are some old copies of “Round the
+Lamp” for the years 1850-54 and some colored
+plates showing plans for the approaching World’s
+Fair at Chicago.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the time passes, in one round of gayety after
+another, until you are summoned to dinner. Here
+all caviling must cease. The dinner lives up to the
+advertising. If an old-fashioned Christmas could
+consist entirely of dinner without the old-fashioned
+bedrooms, the old-fashioned pitcher, and the old-fashioned
+entertainments, we professional pessimists
+wouldn’t have a turkey-leg left to stand on. But, as
+has been pointed out, it is possible to get a good
+dinner without going up to East Russet, Vt., or, if
+it isn’t, then our civilization has been a failure.</p>
+
+<p>And the dinner only makes the aftermath seem
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>worse. According to an old custom of the human
+race, everyone overeats. Deliberately and with considerable
+gusto you sit at the table and say pleasantly:
+“My, but I won’t be able to walk after this.
+Just a little more of the dark meat, please, Grandpa,
+just a dab of stuffing. Oh, dear, that’s too
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>much!” You haven’t the excuse of the drunkard,
+who becomes oblivious to his excesses after several
+drinks. You know what you are doing, and yet
+you make light of it and even laugh about it as long
+as you <i>can</i> laugh without splitting out a seam.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp67" id="p052" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p052.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>Then you sit and moan.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>And then you sit and moan. If you were having
+a good new-fashioned Christmas you could go out
+to the movies or take a walk, or a ride, but to be
+really old-fashioned you must stick close to the
+house, for in the old days there were no movies and
+no automobiles and if you wanted to take a walk
+you had to have the hired man go ahead of you
+with a snow-shovel and make a tunnel. There are
+probably plenty of things to do in the country
+today, and just as many automobiles and electric
+lights as there are in the city, but you can’t call
+Christmas with all these improvements “an old-fashioned
+Christmas.” That’s cheating.</p>
+
+<p>If you are going through with the thing right, you
+have got to retire to the sitting-room after dinner
+and <i>sit</i>. Of course, you can go out and play in the
+snow if you want to, but you know as well as I do
+that this playing in the snow is all right when you
+are small but a bit trying on anyone over thirty.
+And anyway, it always began to snow along about
+three in the afternoon an old-fashioned Christmas
+day, with a cheery old leaden sky overhead and a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>jolly old gale sweeping around the corners of the
+house.</p>
+
+<p>No, you simply must sit indoors, in front of a fire
+if you insist, but nevertheless with nothing much to
+do. The children are sleepy and snarling. Grandpa
+is just sleepy. Someone tries to start the conversation,
+but everyone else is too gorged with food to be
+able to move the lower jaw sufficiently to articulate.
+It develops that the family is in possession of the
+loudest-ticking clock in the world and along about
+four o’clock it begins to break its own record. A
+stenographic report of the proceedings would read as
+follows:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“Ho-hum! I’m sleepy! I shouldn’t have eaten so
+much.”</p>
+
+<p>“Tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock—”</p>
+
+<p>“It seems just like Sunday, doesn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Look at Grandpa! He’s asleep.”</p>
+
+<p>“Here, Junior! Don’t plague Grandpa. Let him
+sleep.”</p>
+
+<p>“Tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock—”</p>
+
+<p>“Junior! Let Grandpa alone! Do you want Mamma
+to take you upstairs?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ho-hum!”</p>
+
+<p>“Tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock—”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Louder and louder the clock ticks, until something
+snaps in your brain and you give a sudden leap into
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>the air with a scream, finally descending to strangle
+each of the family in turn, and Grandpa as he sleeps.
+Then, as you feel your end is near, all the warm
+things you have ever known come back to you, in a
+flash. You remember the hot Sunday subway to
+Coney, your trip to Mexico, the bull-fighters of
+Spain.</p>
+
+<p>You dash out into the snowdrifts and plunge
+along until you sink exhausted. Only the fact that
+this article ends here keeps you from freezing to
+death, with an obituary the next day reading:</p>
+
+<p>“DIED suddenly, at East Russet, Vt., of an old-fashioned
+Christmas.”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="LIFE_IN_THE_RITZ_TENEMENT">
+ LIFE IN THE RITZ TENEMENT
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+<p>[A recent ruling of the Tenement House Commission
+ places all of New York’s new apartment-houses in the
+ technical classification of “tenements” for the enforcement
+ of certain clauses of the Tenement House Law.]</p>
+
+
+<p class="hanging-indent1"><span class="smcap">Scene</span>: <i>The rear of Mr. Brisbane’s new apartment
+palace—the Ritz Tower. It is Monday morning
+and the tenants are seen hanging out their wash
+from the kitchen windows.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Twenty-first Floor Back</span>: Good morning to
+you, Mrs. Van Cleve! A charming day, isn’t it?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Twenty-second Floor Back</span>: The same to you,
+Mrs. Thornton-Martin. And too charming a day to
+be cooped up inside like this.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Twenty-first Floor</span>: My <i>dear</i>, the killingest
+thing! Speaking of being cooped up—did you hear
+that (<i>lowering the voice</i>) Freddie Welt was arrested
+Saturday?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Twenty-second Floor</span>: The Welts on the thirty-fifth
+floor! My <i>dear</i>, how frightful! What for?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Twenty-first</span>: Well, it seems that Freddie and
+some of the boys from the Linx Club had been playing
+polo—</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span></p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp27" id="p057" style="max-width: 25.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p057.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>“Good morning to you, Mrs. Van Cleve!”</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span></p>
+
+<p>(<i>A delivery boy from Cartier’s clatters up the
+back stairway.</i>)</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Boy</span>: Van Buren live here?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Thirtieth Floor</span>: Two flights up. They’re out
+now. You can leave the stuff here.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Boy</span>: Three thousand dollars collect on it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Thirtieth Floor</span>: Go on up and tuck it under
+the door.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Twenty-ninth Floor</span>: I’m going to speak to the
+janitor about those folks on the twenty-eighth.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Thirtieth Floor</span>: A lot of good it will do.
+They’re his cousins. What have they done now?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Twenty-ninth Floor</span>: All their empty champagne
+bottles out by the back door where Reggie
+stumbles over them going to work in the morning!
+They had a lot of Roumanians up there last night
+till four in the morning.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Thirtieth Floor</span>: Roumanians, eh? Why don’t
+those people go back where they came from if they
+don’t like it here?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Twenty-ninth Floor</span>: That’s what I’d like to
+know. I said to Reggie last night, I said, “Reggie, if
+you were half a man you’d go down there and tell
+them that if they can’t behave themselves why don’t
+they go over to the Racquet Club where they belong.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Twenty-eighth Floor</span> (<i>flinging open her window</i>):
+Oh, is that so?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Twenty-ninth Floor</span>: Yes, that’s so!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Twenty-eighth Floor</span>: Well, if you’d keep that
+person with the fiddle quiet once in a while the rest
+of us might get some rest.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Twenty-ninth Floor</span> (<i>to the shaft in general</i>):
+She calls Jascha Heifetz “that person with a fiddle!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Twenty-eighth Floor</span>: Jascha Heifetz or
+Mischa Elman—it’s all the same to me. Don’t he
+get enough money playing in concerts that he should
+come around playing at people’s tenements all the
+time?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Thirty-fourth Floor</span> (<i>slamming open the window</i>):
+Shut up below there, will you! (<i>Throws out
+a pan full of alligator pear rinds.</i>)</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Policeman on the Beat</span> (<i>from below</i>):
+Come on up there, cut that out or I’ll run yez all in!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>All the heads are drawn in and the windows
+slammed shut.</i>)</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Voice on the Stairs with Bell Accompaniment</span>:
+Oyster-forks sharpened! Oyster-forks sharpened!</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="OLD_PROGRAM_FROM_THE_BENCHLEY">
+ OLD PROGRAM FROM THE BENCHLEY
+ COLLECTION
+ <br>
+ <i>A Glance Backward in the Manner of the Authors of
+ Theatrical Reminiscences</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Few, probably, of my readers, will remember the
+time when the old Forrest Theater stood where
+the Central Park Reservoir now is. In those days,
+Central Park was considered ’way downtown, or
+“crosstown,” as they called it then, and one of the
+larks of the period was going “down to Central Park
+to see the turtles.” There was a large turtle farm
+in the Park at that time, run by Anderson M. Ferderber,
+and it was this turtle farm, expanding and
+growing as the turtles became more venturesome,
+which later became the Zoological Exhibit.</p>
+
+<p>I remember very well the night when it was announced
+at the Forrest Theater that the building
+was to be torn down to make way for the new
+Reservoir. It was, as I recall, H. M. Ramus
+(“Henry” Ramus) who made the announcement.
+He was playing <i>Laertes</i> at the time (<i>Laertes</i> was
+played with the deuces wild and a ten-cent limit)
+when the manager of the theater (Arthur Semden,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>who later became Harrison Blashforth) came into
+the dressing-room and said: “Well, boys, it’s all
+over. They’re going to build the Reservoir here!”
+There was a silence for a full minute—probably
+more, for the manager had come into the wrong
+dressing-room and there was nobody there.</p>
+
+<p>At any rate, “Henry” Ramus was selected to go
+out and tell the audience. He did it with infinite
+tact, explaining that there was no need for alarm or
+panic, as the water could not possibly be let in until
+the theater was down and the Reservoir constructed,
+but the audience was evidently taking no chances
+on being drowned, for within three minutes from the
+time Ramus began speaking everyone in the theater
+was outdoors and in a hansom cab. Audience psychology
+is a queer thing, and possibly this audience
+knew best. At any rate, the old Forrest Theater is
+no more.</p>
+
+<p>Speaking of “Henry” Ramus, an amusing anecdote
+is told of Whitney Hersh. Hersh was playing
+with Booth in Philadelphia at the time, and was well
+known for his ability to catch cold, a characteristic
+which won him many new friends but lost him several
+old ones. The theater where Booth was playing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[Pg 62]</span>
+in <i>The Queen’s Quandary, or What’s Open Can’t Be
+Shut</i>, was the old Chestnut Street Opera House
+which stood at the corner of what was then Arch,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[Pg 63]</span>Chestnut, Spruce, Pine and Curly Maple Streets.
+This theater was noted in the profession for its
+slanting stage, so much so, in fact, that Booth, on
+hearing that they were to play there, is said to have
+remarked: “The Chestnut Street, eh?” On being
+assured that he had heard correctly, Booth simply
+smiled. He later founded the Player’s Club.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp52" id="p062" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p062.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>UP AND AWAY</p>
+ <p>OR NOBODY KNOWS BUT NERO</p>
+ <p>OR THREE TIMES SIX IS EIGHTEEN</p>
+ <p>(<i>Choice of any two titles</i>)</p>
+
+<table class="autotable">
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Jonathan Henchman, father of Ralph Henchman and Mother of Men, Old Yale
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Macready</span>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Ralph Henchman, father of Jonathan Henchman and a rather wild young chap
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Junius Booth</span>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Jack Wyman, M.D., a doctor who has more “patience” than “patients”
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Edmund Keene</span>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Professor Hawksworth, an irascible old fellow who specializes in bird troubles
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Hornblow</span>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Professor Hawksworth, an irascible old fellow who specializes in bird troubles
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Junius Booth</span>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Meeker, a party who lives by his wits and not much of that.
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Jonathan Edwards</span>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Eugenia, daughter of Jonathan Henchman
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Mrs. Siddons</span>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Mlle. de Bon-Ton, a young lady who is not above drinking a little champagne now and then.
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Miss Cushman</span>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Eliza, maid at the Nortons.
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">By Herself</span>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+<span class="smcap">Mr. William A. Brady</span>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>In <i>The Queen’s Quandary, or What’s Open Can’t
+Be Shut</i>, Hersh had to play the part of <i>Rodney
+Ransome</i>, the father of several people. In the second
+act there was a scene in which <i>Rodney</i> had to
+say to <i>Marian</i>:</p>
+
+<p>“But I thought you said the Duke <i>had</i> no moustache!”</p>
+
+<p>To which <i>Marian</i> was supposed to reply: “I
+never was more serious in all my life.”</p>
+
+<p>On the night of the opening performance Hersh
+was, as usual, very nervous. He got through the
+first act all right, with the aid of several promptings
+from his mother who was sitting in the balcony.
+But when the second act came along, it was evident
+to the other members of the company that Hersh
+could not be relied upon. This feeling was strengthened
+by the fact that he was nowhere to be found.
+They searched high and low for him but, like the
+sword of Damocles, he had disappeared. At the
+curtain to the second act, however, he was discovered
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span>sitting out front in D-113 applauding loudly
+and calling out: “Hersh! We-want-Hersh!” The
+only way they could get him back on the stage was
+a ruse which was not without its pathetic side. The
+manager of the house stepped out in front of the
+curtain and asked if any member of the audience
+would volunteer to come upon the stage and be
+hypnotized. Hersh, who had always wanted to go
+on the stage, was one of the first to push his way
+up. Once behind the footlights again his nervousness
+left him and he went on with his part where
+he had left off. It did not fit in with the rest of
+the play, but they were all so glad to have him back
+in the cast again that they said nothing about it to
+him, and whenever, in later years, he himself mentioned
+the affair, it was always as “that time in
+Philadelphia when I was so nervous.”... And
+that little girl was Charlotte Cushman.</p>
+
+<p>It was at this time that Stopford’s <i>A New Way
+With Old Husbands, or The Mysterious Drummer-Boy</i>,
+was given its first performance at the old
+Garrick Theater in New York. The old Garrick
+Theater was torn down in 1878 to make way for
+the new Garrick Theater, which, in its turn, was
+torn down in 1880 to make way for the old Garrick
+again. It is the old, or new, Garrick which now
+stands at Broadway and Tenth Street on the spot
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>known to passers-by as “Wanamaker’s.” Thus is
+the silver cord loosed and the pitcher broken at the
+well.</p>
+
+<p><i>A New Way With Old Husbands, or The Mysterious
+Drummer-Boy</i> was written for Ada Rehan, but
+she was in Fall River at the time; so the part was
+given to a young woman who had come to the theater
+that morning asking if a Mr. Wasserman lived
+there. On being told that it was not a private
+dwelling and that there was no one there named
+Wasserman, she had said:</p>
+
+<p>“Well, then, does anyone here want to subscribe
+to the <i>Saturday Evening Post</i>?”</p>
+
+<p>Those members of the cast who had gathered on
+the bare stage for rehearsal were so impressed by
+the young woman’s courage that a purse was taken
+up for her children in case she had any and, in case
+she had no children, for her next of kin.</p>
+
+<p>“I do not want money,” she said, taking it. “All
+I want is a chance to prove my ability on the stage.”</p>
+
+<p>“Can you make the sound of crashing glass?”
+asked Arthur Reese, the stage manager.</p>
+
+<p>“I think so,” replied the young woman without
+looking up.</p>
+
+<p>Reese looked at Meany, the assistant stage manager.
+“She is the one we want,” he said quietly.</p>
+
+<p>So the young woman was engaged.... Some
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>thirty years later the Empire Theater in New York
+was aglow with lights on the occasion of the opening
+of <i>Call the Doctor</i>. Gay ladies, bejeweled and bejabbered,
+were running back and forth in the lobby,
+holding court, while tall, dark gentlemen in evening
+dress danced attendance. Those who couldn’t dance
+sat it out. It was the metropolitan season at its
+height.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly a man burst excitedly through the crowd
+and made his way to the box-office.</p>
+
+<p>“This seat is ridiculous,” he exclaimed to the
+Treasurer of the theater (Roger M. Wakle, at the
+time). “I can’t even see the stage from it.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is not so strange as it may seem to you at
+first,” replied Wakle, “for the curtain is not up yet.”</p>
+
+<p>A hush fell over the crowded lobby. This was
+followed somewhat later by a buzz of excitement.
+This, in turn, was followed by a detail of mounted
+police. Men looked at women and at each other....
+For that young man was Charlotte Cushman.</p>
+
+<p>It was about this time, as I remember it (or
+maybe later) that the old Augustin Daly Stock
+Company was at the top of its popularity and everyone
+was excited over the forthcoming production of
+<i>Up and Away</i>. It had been in rehearsal for several
+weeks when Tom Nevers asked Daly how much
+longer they were going to rehearse.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Oh, about another week,” replied Daly, with that
+old hat which later made him famous.</p>
+
+<p>You can imagine Nevers’ feelings!</p>
+
+<p>A glance at the cast assembled for this production
+might be of interest in the light of subsequent events
+(the completion of the vehicular tunnel and the
+Centennial Exposition). So anyway it is in the
+middle of page 57 to look at if you want to.</p>
+
+<p>As it turned out, <i>Up and Away</i> was never produced,
+as it was found to be too much trouble. But
+the old Augustin Daly Stock Company will not soon
+be forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>My memories of St. Louis are of the pleasantest.
+We played there in Dante’s <i>Really Mrs. Warrington</i>—and
+<i>Twelfth Night</i>. The <i>St. Louis Post-Dispatch</i>,
+on the morning following our opening, said:</p>
+
+<p>“It is quite probable that before the end of the
+year we shall see the beginning of the end of the
+work on the McNaffen Dam. The project has been
+under construction now for three years and while
+there can be no suspicion thrown on the awarding of
+the contracts, nevertheless we must say that the
+work has progressed but slowly.”</p>
+
+<p>It was while we were playing in St. Louis that
+the news came of the capture of J. Wilkes Booth.
+A performance of <i>Richelieu</i> was in progress, in
+which I was playing <i>Rafferty</i>, and Fanny Davenport
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span>the <i>Queen</i>. In the second act there is a scene in
+which <i>Rafferty</i> says to <i>La Pouce</i>:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“<i>I can not, tho’ my tongue were free,</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent2"><i>Repeat the message that my liege inspires,</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>And tho’ you ask it, were it mine,</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent2"><i>And hope you’ll be my Valentine.</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Following this speech, <i>Rafferty</i> falls down and
+opens up a bad gash in his forehead.</p>
+
+<p>We had come to this scene on the night I mention,
+when I noticed that the audience was tittering. I
+could not imagine what the matter was, and naturally
+thought of all kinds of things—sheep jumping
+over a fence—anything. But strange as it may
+seem, the tittering continued, and I have never
+found out, from that day to this what amused them
+so.... This was in 1878.</p>
+
+<p>And now we come to the final curtain. For, after
+all, I sometimes think that Life is like a stage itself.
+The curtain rises on our little scene; we have our
+exits and our entrances, and each man in his time
+plays many parts. I must work this simile up sometime.</p>
+
+<p>Life and the Theater. Who knows? <i>Selah.</i></p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="WHAT_COLLEGE_DID_TO_ME">
+ WHAT COLLEGE DID TO ME
+ <br>
+ <i>An Outline of Education</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>My college education was no haphazard affair.
+My courses were all selected with a very
+definite aim in view, with a serious purpose in mind—no
+classes before eleven in the morning or after
+two-thirty in the afternoon, and nothing on Saturday
+at all. That was my slogan. On that rock
+was my education built.</p>
+
+<p>As what is known as the Classical Course involved
+practically no afternoon laboratory work,
+whereas in the Scientific Course a man’s time was
+never his own until four p. m. anyway, I went in
+for the classic. But only such classics as allowed
+for a good sleep in the morning. A man has his
+health to think of. There is such a thing as being
+a studying fool.</p>
+
+<p>In my days (I was a classmate of the founder of
+the college) a student could elect to take any courses
+in the catalogue, provided no two of his choices came
+at the same hour. The only things he was not supposed
+to mix were Scotch and gin. This was known
+as the Elective System. Now I understand that the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>boys have to have, during the four years, at least
+three courses beginning with the same letter. This
+probably makes it very awkward for those who like
+to get away of a Friday afternoon for the week-end.</p>
+
+<p>Under the Elective System my schedule was somewhat
+as follows:</p>
+
+
+<p>Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 11:00:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Botany 2a (The History of Flowers and Their Meaning)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Tuesdays and Thursdays at 11:00:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>English 26 (The Social Life of the Minor Sixteenth
+Century Poets)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 12:00:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Music 9 (History and Appreciation of the Clavichord)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Tuesdays and Thursdays at 12:00:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>German 12b (Early Minnesingers—Walter von
+Vogelweider, Ulric Glannsdorf and Freimann von
+Stremhofen. Their Songs and Times)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 1:30:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Fine Arts 6 (Doric Columns: Their Uses, History
+and Various Heights)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Tuesdays and Thursdays at 1:30:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>French 1c (Exceptions to the verb <i>être</i>)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<p>This was, of course, just one year’s work. The
+next year I followed these courses up with supplementary
+courses in the history of lace-making, Russian
+taxation systems before Catharine the Great,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span>North American glacial deposits and Early Renaissance
+etchers.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp50" id="p071" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p071.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>Some of the drawings in my economics notebook were the
+ finest things I have ever done.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>This gave me a general idea of the progress of
+civilization and a certain practical knowledge which
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span>has stood me in good stead in thousands of ways
+since my graduation.</p>
+
+<p>My system of studying was no less strict. In
+lecture courses I had my notebooks so arranged that
+one-half of the page could be devoted to drawings
+of five-pointed stars (exquisitely shaded), girls’
+heads, and tick-tack-toe. Some of the drawings in
+my economics notebook in the course on Early
+English Trade Winds were the finest things I have
+ever done. One of them was a whole tree (an oak)
+with every leaf in perfect detail. Several instructors
+commented on my work in this field.</p>
+
+<p>These notes I would take home after the lecture,
+together with whatever supplementary reading the
+course called for. Notes and textbooks would then
+be placed on a table under a strong lamplight.
+Next came the sharpening of pencils, which would
+take perhaps fifteen minutes. I had some of the
+best sharpened pencils in college. These I placed
+on the table beside the notes and books.</p>
+
+<p>At this point it was necessary to light a pipe,
+which involved going to the table where the tobacco
+was. As it so happened, on the same table was a
+poker hand, all dealt, lying in front of a vacant
+chair. Four other chairs were oddly enough occupied
+by students, also preparing to study. It
+therefore resolved itself into something of a seminar,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span>or group conference, on the courses under discussion.
+For example, the first student would say:</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t open.”</p>
+
+<p>The second student would perhaps say the same
+thing.</p>
+
+<p>The third student would say: “I’ll open for fifty
+cents.”</p>
+
+<p>And the seminar would be on.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the seminar, I would go back to my
+desk, pile the notes and books on top of each other,
+put the light out, and go to bed, tired but happy in
+the realization that I had not only spent the evening
+busily but had helped put four of my friends
+through college.</p>
+
+<p>An inventory of stock acquired at college discloses
+the following bits of culture and erudition which
+have nestled in my mind after all these years.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">THINGS I LEARNED FRESHMAN YEAR</p>
+
+<p>1. Charlemagne either died or was born or did
+something with the Holy Roman Empire in 800.</p>
+
+<p>2. By placing one paper bag inside another paper
+bag you can carry home a milk shake in it.</p>
+
+<p>3. There is a double l in the middle of “parallel.”</p>
+
+<p>4. Powder rubbed on the chin will take the place
+of a shave if the room isn’t very light.</p>
+
+<p>5. French nouns ending in “aison” are feminine.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span></p>
+
+<p>6. Almost everything you need to know about a
+subject is in the encyclopedia.</p>
+
+<p>7. A tasty sandwich can be made by spreading
+peanut butter on raisin bread.</p>
+
+<p>8. A floating body displaces its own weight in the
+liquid in which it floats.</p>
+
+<p>9. A sock with a hole in the toe can be worn inside
+out with comparative comfort.</p>
+
+<p>10. The chances are against filling an inside
+straight.</p>
+
+<p>11. There is a law in economics called <i>The Law
+of Diminishing Returns</i>, which means that after a
+certain margin is reached returns begin to diminish.
+This may not be correctly stated, but there <i>is</i> a law
+by that name.</p>
+
+<p>12. You begin tuning a mandolin with A and tune
+the other strings from that.</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="ph3">SOPHOMORE YEAR</p>
+
+
+<p>1. A good imitation of measles rash can be
+effected by stabbing the forearm with a stiff whiskbroom.</p>
+
+<p>2. Queen Elizabeth was not above suspicion.</p>
+
+<p>3. In Spanish you pronounce z like th.</p>
+
+<p>4. Nine-tenths of the girls in a girls’ college are
+not pretty.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span></p>
+
+<p>5. You can sleep undetected in a lecture course
+by resting the head on the hand as if shading the
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>6. Weakness in drawing technique can be hidden
+by using a wash instead of black and white line.</p>
+
+<p>7. Quite a respectable bun can be acquired by
+smoking three or four pipefuls of strong tobacco
+when you have no food in your stomach.</p>
+
+<p>8. The ancient Phœnicians were really Jews, and
+got as far north as England where they operated
+tin mines.</p>
+
+<p>9. You can get dressed much quicker in the morning
+if the night before when you are going to bed
+you take off your trousers and underdrawers at once,
+leaving the latter inside the former.</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="ph3">JUNIOR YEAR</p>
+
+
+<p>1. Emerson left his pastorate because he had
+some argument about communion.</p>
+
+<p>2. All women are untrustworthy.</p>
+
+<p>3. Pushing your arms back as far as they will
+go fifty times each day increases your chest measurement.</p>
+
+<p>4. Marcus Aurelius had a son who turned out to
+be a bad boy.</p>
+
+<p>5. Eight hours of sleep are not necessary.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span></p>
+
+<p>6. Heraclitus believed that fire was the basis of
+all life.</p>
+
+<p>7. A good way to keep your trousers pressed is
+to hang them from the bureau drawer.</p>
+
+<p>8. The chances are that you will never fill an inside
+straight.</p>
+
+<p>9. The Republicans believe in a centralized government,
+the Democrats in a de-centralized one.</p>
+
+<p>10. It is not necessarily effeminate to drink tea.</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="ph3">SENIOR YEAR</p>
+
+<p>1. A dinner coat looks better than full dress.</p>
+
+<p>2. There is as yet no law determining what constitutes
+trespass in an airplane.</p>
+
+<p>3. Six hours of sleep are not necessary.</p>
+
+<p>4. Bicarbonate of soda taken before retiring
+makes you feel better the next day.</p>
+
+<p>5. You needn’t be fully dressed if you wear a cap
+and gown to a nine-o’clock recitation.</p>
+
+<p>6. Theater tickets may be charged.</p>
+
+<p>7. Flowers may be charged.</p>
+
+<p>8. May is the shortest month in the year.</p>
+
+
+<p>The foregoing outline of my education is true
+enough in its way, and is what people like to think
+about a college course. It has become quite the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span>cynical thing to admit laughingly that college did
+one no good. It is part of the American Credo that
+all that the college student learns is to catch punts
+and dance. I had to write something like that to
+satisfy the editors. As a matter of fact, I learned a
+great deal in college and have those four years to
+thank for whatever I know today.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>(The above note was written to satisfy those of
+my instructors and financial backers who may read
+this. As a matter of fact, the original outline is
+true, and I had to look up the date about Charlemagne
+at that.)</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="AN_INTERVIEW_WITH_THEODORE">
+ AN INTERVIEW WITH THEODORE
+ DREISER
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I found the author of “An American Tragedy”
+reading a large volume of law reports.</p>
+
+<p>“Working on a new book?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a new book to me,” replied Dreiser. “I
+don’t know about you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I’m all right,” I retorted. “A little dizzy
+when I stand up—but then, one doesn’t have to
+stand up much, does one?”</p>
+
+<p>“Does two, does three, does four,” sallied the
+author, up to one hundred.</p>
+
+<p>I could see that we were treading on dangerous
+ground and, fearful lest the interview be ruined, I
+continued, wetting my thumb:</p>
+
+<p>“Do you get around to the night clubs much?”</p>
+
+<p>“Much more than what?” asked Mr. Dreiser.</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t say ‘much more than’ anything. I just
+said ‘much.’”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you took a very funny way of saying it,”
+said the pioneer. And added, “I <i>must</i> say.”</p>
+
+<p>Things had reached an <i>impasse</i>. The storm which
+had been gathering for centuries between Church
+and State was about to break, and with it the temporal
+power of Rome.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Let’s get out of here!” I said, taking Dreiser
+by the arm. “I don’t like the looks of things.”</p>
+
+<p>“Someone was saying that very thing to me only
+yesterday,” said the author of “The Genius.” “Now
+who was it?”</p>
+
+<p>“George Erlich?” I suggested.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Dreiser.</p>
+
+<p>“Roger Hatney?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Federber?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, no! For God’s sake, man, try and <i>think</i>!”</p>
+
+<p>“Wentworth Whamer?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ernst Timmerley?”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s who it was! Ernst Timmerley! How
+stupid of me not to remember. Ernst Timmerley,
+that’s who it was.”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought of suggesting him at first,” I said,
+“but it slipped my mind.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can’t tell me that was just a coincidence,”
+said the author of “Sister Carrie.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I can’t, can’t I?” I retorted, not a little
+piqued. “Well, <i>it was just a coincidence</i>.”</p>
+
+<p>Dreiser looked at me half quizzically.</p>
+
+<p>“You win,” he said simply.</p>
+
+<p>Outside the snow was blowing down the street
+like an army of fireflies, but inside, by the fire, it
+was warm.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="FASCINATING_CRIMES_1">
+ FASCINATING CRIMES
+ <br>
+ <i>II. The Wallack Disappearances</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Shortly after the Civil War the residents of
+Wallack, Connecticut, were awakened by the
+barking of a dog belonging to James Lenn, a visiting
+farmer. The dog was an old one, so they thought
+nothing of it, and went back to sleep again.</p>
+
+<p>Later it was discovered that James Lenn was missing,
+and that the dog also had disappeared, but in
+the opposite direction. A search of the countryside
+was instituted which resulted in the finding of
+twenty-five empty tins, several old brooms, enough
+newspapers to make a fair-sized bale, and one old
+buggy top. None of these seemed to have any value
+as clews in the mysterious disappearance of James
+Lenn. Some importance was attached to the discovery
+of the buggy-top until it was found that the
+missing farmer was not hiding under it.</p>
+
+<p>The police, however, were not satisfied. There
+had been several violations of the State Fishing and
+Gaming ordinances in and around Wallack and public
+censure of the police was at its height. Chief of
+Police Walter M. Turbot determined to carry this
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>case through to a finish. Thus it was that the search
+for Farmer James Lenn was begun afresh, a search
+which was destined to end in Innsbruck, Austria.</p>
+
+<p>In the little town of Innsbruck there had been
+living an old garbler named Leon Nabgratz, a sort
+of town character, if such a thing were possible.
+Nabgratz had never been to America, but his young
+nephew, Gurling Nabgratz, son of Leon’s brother
+Meff, was born in that country and had lived there
+all his life. Late in December, 1867, he had moved
+to Wallack, Connecticut, where he was sold as a
+slave to one James Lenn.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp100" id="p081" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p081.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>The principles in the famous Wallack disappearances.</p>
+ <p>
+ —<i>Courtesy of John Held, Jr., and Life.</i></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>One day, while reading the newspaper, Gurling
+Nabgratz came across an item indicating that slavery
+had been abolished four years previously and figured
+out that he was just a sap to be working for James
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>Lenn for nothing. He mentioned the matter to his
+master, but Lenn maintained that it was only the
+Negro slaves who had been freed, and that Lincoln
+was no longer President anyway.</p>
+
+<p>Nabgratz went away grumbling but did his chores
+that day as usual. He was seen late in the evening
+of April 17 in the poolroom of the village, where
+he is said to have made <i>sotto-voce</i> remarks and sung
+several slave songs of the ante-bellum South with
+such inflammatory refrains as “We’se all gwine ter
+be free!”</p>
+
+<p>That night Gurling Nabgratz disappeared and was
+never seen again in Wallack.</p>
+
+<p>This having preceded the disappearance of James
+Lenn by about two years, nothing was thought of it
+at the time. During the search for Lenn, however,
+the incident was recalled, and a search for Nabgratz
+was instituted. This made two searches going on at
+once in the little town of Wallack, and resulted in
+considerable hard feeling between the rival searching-parties.
+The town was divided into two camps,
+the “Find Lenn” faction and the “Find Nabgratz”
+faction, and on at least one occasion shots were
+exchanged.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, in Innsbruck, Austria, Leon
+Nabgratz, the old garbler, was quietly pursuing his
+way, quite unconscious of the stir that he was causing
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>four thousand miles away. His brother Meff
+had written him about Gurling’s disappearance, but,
+as the old man never bothered to read his brother’s
+letters, he was just as much in the dark as he had
+been before. More so, in fact, because he was older.</p>
+
+<p>His surprise can well be imagined, therefore, when
+one day in the spring of 1869 the police entered his
+house in the Schmalzgasse and began a search for
+James Lenn of Wallack, Connecticut, U. S. A. In
+vain Nabgratz protested that he had never heard the
+name of Lenn and that, even if he had, it was not
+interesting to him. The arm of the law reaching
+across the Atlantic was inexorable. Leon Nabgratz’s
+house was searched and in it was found an
+old trunk of suspiciously large proportions. In spite
+of the fact that this trunk was labeled “<i>Weihnachtsgeschenke</i>”
+(“Christmas presents”) it was opened,
+and in it were found James Lenn <i>and</i> Gurling Nabgratz,
+together with a copy of the New York <i>Times</i>
+of October 12, 1868.</p>
+
+<p>The mysterious Wallack disappearances were thus
+explained, and Leon Nabgratz was arrested for having
+in his possession a trunk with a misleading label
+on it.</p>
+
+<p>Art is long and time is fleeting.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="LOUIS_DOT_DOPE">
+ LOUIS DOT DOPE
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>On his recent return from France, Mr. Robert
+Benchley gave the following statement to reporters
+who met him at Quarantine with bail.</p>
+
+<p>“Things in France are in a deplorable condition,”
+said Mr. Benchley. “If Louis XVI keeps on as he
+has been going for the past few years, I predict a
+revolution. I can give you no idea of the licentiousness
+and waste of the French Court at Versailles or
+of the pitiable state of the common people in Paris.
+Yes, I can too give you <i>some</i> idea, and, what is more,
+I <i>will</i>.</p>
+
+<p>“This Louis XVI is nothing but a wastrel. He
+drinks a great deal, too. And he has gathered about
+him at Versailles (where he lives) a group of sycophants
+who are just as bad as he is, according to
+all reports. I am not one to retail gossip, but I
+could tell you some of the things that go on out there
+at Versailles that would make your hair stand on
+end. And, in the meantime, the people in Paris are
+actually starving. You can’t get an oyster stew in
+Paris for love or money, and I have seen the <i>canaille</i>
+(as the log-rolling wits of the Court call the citizenry)
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span>standing in line for hours for something, I
+couldn’t quite make out what.</p>
+
+<p>“One little incident that I heard of from a pretty
+good source (Carlyle: page 375) may serve to illustrate
+the way the wind is blowing. It seems that
+Louis (as his toadiers call him) was out driving
+through Paris with his—pardon me—mistress (I
+mention no names) when the people began crying
+out for bread. The ‘lady’ in question, who can read
+French and speak it but who has difficulty in understanding
+it when it is spoken fast, asked what it was
+that they were yelling. Louis told her that they said
+they had no more bread. ‘Let them eat cake then,’
+said this certain party. ‘And how about us taking a
+look in at Cartier’s window?’</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know how true this is, but I got it from
+someone on the inside and it shows pretty well the
+attitude of the nobles towards the common people.</p>
+
+<p>“But there is an undercurrent of discontent which
+I predict will make itself felt before many months.
+I happened to go to lunch with a couple of chaps
+whose names, for obvious reasons, I promised not
+to mention in this connection, and there was a great
+deal of talk about how easy it would be to burn
+down the Bastille (the government jail over there).
+‘A couple of good pushes and the Bastille would fall,’
+said one of them jokingly. But behind all their
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>joking there was a note of seriousness, and I would
+recommend that you send a good man over to Paris
+pretty soon to cover the story, for when it breaks it
+is going to be a hot one. This is just a tip.</p>
+
+<p>“But, as I was saying, it is out there at Versailles
+that the big doings go on. I took a trip out there
+with a letter from Whitney Warren, but they were
+all out at Chantilly at the races that day and I didn’t
+see anyone but the Head Guide. He said that if I
+wanted to come back Sunday the fountains would
+be playing, but unfortunately I had to sail on Saturday.
+I did get some inside dope on the situation out
+there, however, and let me tell you that what goes
+on out there on a good night is nobody’s business.
+All these people, it seems, live right out there in the
+palace together and carry on some pretty rough
+stuff, I gather. Drinking, gambling, necking, <i>everything</i>.
+A lot of the married men are out there without
+their wives, and <i>vice versa</i>. Some nights the
+parties don’t break up until two and three o’clock.
+No wonder the taxpayers in Paris are sore. You
+can mark my words, there will be a reaction.</p>
+
+<p>“I myself didn’t have time to get around much.
+I was over on business and I like to keep my head
+clear when I have business to attend to. Summer
+is when I have my fun. I did go to the theater a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>couple of times, but everything was in French. And
+then, too, the coffee is so bad there. The trip back
+was pretty rough. One day the waves were mountain-high.
+It certainly seems good to be back in the
+U. S. A. again.”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_RISE_AND_FALL_OF_THE">
+ THE RISE AND FALL OF THE
+ CHRISTMAS CARD
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Twenty-five years ago (December 21,
+1685, to be exact) a man named Ferderber
+awoke after a week’s business trip and realized that
+he hadn’t bought any Christmas presents for his relatives
+and friends. Furthermore, all he had left from
+the business trip was eighty cents, two theater-ticket
+stubs, and a right shoe.</p>
+
+<p>So he cut up some cardboard to fit envelopes and
+on each card wrote some little thought for the season.
+Being still a trifle groggy, he thought that it would
+be nice to make them rhyme although, as he expressed
+it, with a modest smile, “I am no poet.”</p>
+
+<p>The one to his aunt read as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“<i>Just a little thought of cheer,</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>He liked this one so well that he just copied it on
+all the others. Then he got excited about the thing
+and drew a sprig of holly on each card. He mailed
+them on Christmas Eve and discovered that he still
+had twenty-eight cents left.</p>
+
+<p>This man Ferderber is now wanted in thirty-two
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>states on the same charge: Starting the Christmas
+Card Menace. His idea immediately took hold of
+the public imagination and the next Christmas all
+his friends and relatives sent cards to their friends
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>and relatives, for, taking the old lie that “it isn’t so
+much the gift as the spirit i.w.i.i.g.” at its face value,
+they felt that people would be much better
+pleased with a friendly greeting than with a nasty
+old gift. And, for a while, the custom really was
+quite a relief.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp61" id="p089" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p089.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>He liked this one so well he just copied it on all the others.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>Then the thing began to get out of hand. Big
+Christmas card manufacturing concerns sprang up
+all over the country and factory sites adjacent to
+freight sidings were at a premium. Millions and
+millions of cards were printed and millions and millions
+of people began sending them to each other.
+Along about December 15, the blight began and,
+like locusts, the envelopes started drifting in from
+the mail. Seventy-five thousand extra mail carriers
+were drafted into service and finally the Government
+was forced to commandeer all males under
+25 who did not have flat feet. Even at that, all the
+Christmas cards couldn’t be delivered until the first
+of the year, and by that time the flood of New
+Year’s cards had begun, for everyone who received
+Christmas cards from people to whom they had sent
+none rushed out and bought New Year’s cards to
+send them the next week just as if that was what
+they had intended to do all along.</p>
+
+<p>It became impossible to read all these cards, and
+finally even to open them. Great stacks of unopened
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>envelopes covered desks and hall tables throughout
+the country. Some of the wealthier citizens had
+chutes built on the outside of their houses into
+which the post men dumped the cards and by means
+of which they were conveyed direct to the furnace.
+The poorer people, unable to convert their mail
+matter into fuel in this manner, unable sometimes to
+clear away a path from their front door to the street,
+often starved to death before their provisions could
+be got to them. The winter of 1927 was known as
+the Winter of the Red Death, for all over the country
+families were snowed in with envelopes and
+perished before help could be brought to them. In
+some towns fires were accidentally started with
+results too horrible to relate.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">UNEARTH VALUABLE SCIENTIFIC DATA</p>
+
+<p>Excavators who have recently been at work in the
+Middle West digging through mounds of petrified
+envelopes have furnished valuable data on the nature
+of these <i>objets d’art</i>. The most popular design
+seems to have been that involving a fireplace with
+stockings hanging from it, with the slogan, evidently
+satirical, “A Merry Christmas and a Happy New
+Year.” Candles were also highly considered as
+decoration; candles and bells. When human figures
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>were introduced, they were of the most unpleasant
+types: short, fat, bearded men dressed in red, offensively
+gay little children in pajamas carrying
+lighted candles, stagecoaches filled with steaming
+travelers, sleigh rides and coasting parties, and street
+musicians annoying householders with Christmas
+carols. The text was usually in Old English type,
+so that fortunately it was difficult, if not impossible,
+to read.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently the tide began to turn when some one,
+perhaps a descendant of the very Ferderber who
+had brought all this distress on the land, thought of
+the idea of venting his personal spleen in his Christmas
+cards. He thought that, since no one read them
+anyway, he might as well say what he really felt, so
+long as he said it in Old English type. It would be
+a satisfaction to him, anyway. So near the top of
+these mounds of Early Twentieth Century cards we
+find some on this order:</p>
+
+<p>A picture of a holly wreath with a large hammer
+stuck through it and the following legend:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“<i>Just to Wish You the Measles.</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent8"><i>Christmas 1931.</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Another showed a little cottage on the brow of a
+snow-covered hill with the sun setting behind it. On
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>the cottage was a sign: “For Sale.” The sentiment
+underneath was:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“<i>Peace on Earth, Good Will Toward Men;</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>Heh! Heh!</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>A New Year’s card, with “Greetings” embossed at
+the top, read:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“<i>If I don’t see you in 1933</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>1934 will be soon enough for me.</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>As soon as this fad caught on, the pendulum
+swung the other way. The sentiments, beginning
+with the mildly abusive, gradually became actually
+vicious.</p>
+
+<p>We find one, dated 1938, which says:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“<i>This Christmas Eve I want you to know,</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>That if you don’t leave $50,000 in Box 115 before</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>New Year’s, I’ll sell your letters, you crook, you.</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Another, in a wreath of mistletoe, bore the following
+explicit legend:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“<i>Watch Your Wife.</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>It was naturally but a step from these to downright<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+obscene vituperation, and at this point, the
+reform societies stepped in. A campaign was carried
+on throughout the country, which, unlike other reform
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>campaigns, had the backing of a majority of
+the public. It was but the work of a year or so to
+induce the necessary two-thirds of the state legislatures
+to consent to an amendment to the constitution
+forbidding the manufacture and sale of Christmas
+cards. Naturally this was followed by a period of
+widespread bootlegging, but it was half-heartedly
+supported and soon collapsed.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp53" id="p094" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p094.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>This was followed by a period of widespread bootlegging.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>All of which is merely a historical summary of
+what has been done in the past, preliminary to
+launching a campaign against the sale and manufacture
+of all Christmas presents, with the exception of
+toys. What our fathers did, we can do.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_HENNA_DECADE">
+ THE HENNA DECADE
+ <br>
+ <i>What May Happen to Our Age When Thomas Beer
+ Catches Up to It</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">1</p>
+
+<p>They put William Anderson in jail and Suzanne
+Lenglen tottered into the club-house
+with a heart-attack.</p>
+
+<p>There was a pistol shot in 1922 and across silver
+screens from Hollywood to Lynn, Massachusetts, a
+resentful wraith barred attachable curls snuggling
+on movie lapels. “William D. Taylor has been
+killed,” a young detective announced to his lavender
+mother at their California supper. And his mother
+smiled, for she was to hear Marion Talley before
+nervous wreckers dragged to earth the old Metropolitan,
+like avid vultures of architectural progress.</p>
+
+<p>On the same border of the Pacific a blue-eyed
+foreman said, “Not guilty,” and Roscoe Arbuckle
+walked out into obese freedom, cleansed with hyssop
+by two words from a drowsy jurist on a stool by his
+predecessor’s desk.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">2</p>
+
+<p>A little boy, stooping on Central Park West,
+pressed cracked knuckles into creole mud and
+snapped roseate marbles in what passed for straight
+lines, while across the country in Dayton men slid
+against turbid waters and the National Cash Register
+served corporate coffee to clammy survivors.
+The little boy’s knuckle-pressing ceased, like young
+leaves which refuse to burn. His father raised
+brown glove to lift soft fedora. “Put away your
+marbles,” he said to the little boy, “Warren Harding
+has been nominated.”</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">3</p>
+
+<p>Through easy October the short French statesman
+in silk gloves forgot the late war in onion soup
+for breakfast. A very large peanut crackled in the
+Southern fist of Irvin Cobb and his bearded companion
+hailed a brown-and-white taxi. Together
+they swept the folio-studded Brentano’s, discussing
+Twenty-third Street. The clerk smiled. His father
+had been mayor of Seattle. Would Twenty-third
+Street ever reach to Seattle? But Cobb had lost the
+large peanut and his bearded companion had lost his
+garter, and they left Brentano’s to stand in dual
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>proximity watching the slightly paralytic progress
+of a Number 8 Fifth Avenue bus. In the distance,
+the verdant blob of Thorley’s hung like a mossy
+acorn—green sin on a purple republic.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">4</p>
+
+<p>Milt Gross stood talking with Ring Lardner and
+another on the steps of the American Indian Museum.
+He had under his arm a bulbous bundle and
+this dropped incontinently to the granite pedestal as
+he shrugged his shoulders. “A peckage skelps,” he
+said. “Heendian skelps, witt blad.” Lardner raised
+a thermal eyebrow. “What of it?” he asked, and in
+Chicago two young Jewish psychopathics drew up
+to the curb in a Dodge looking for someone to give
+a ride to. That night the Alabama delegation in
+the steaming reaches of Madison Square Garden
+threw twenty-five dogged votes for Oscar Underwood.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">5</p>
+
+<p>Standing, occasionally sitting, Lutitia lay in the
+window seat of the Colony Club.... A blonde
+reticence sat beside her. In the right hand of the
+blonde reticence swirled a cup of tea. In her left,
+a copy of November’s <i>American Mercury</i>. From
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span>its greenish covers H. L. Mencken spoke impatiently
+of the native <i>Americanus</i>, while George Nathan dug
+sadistic pins into American colleagues. Herbert
+Parrish disparaged the American God and words of
+bile were Leland H. Jenks’s dole for the American
+Constitution and its interpreters. Fiction jetted
+from between these cynical rocks with gloomy disclosures
+of American small-town unpleasantries.
+Yes, Lutitia, or rather....</p>
+
+<p>So while Irving Berlin, a wispy figure fingering
+the black notes on a piano in West 46th Street, sang
+“Not for just a year, but always,” the tugboat,
+crazily bearing Mayor Hylan’s Welcoming Committee,
+pugged to greet, with beaver boisterousness,
+the New Year, a rough beard swinging low over
+rhinestone studs.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="A_PLAN_TO_STABILIZE_THE_FRANC">
+ A PLAN TO STABILIZE THE FRANC
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>To the Members of the Paris Bourse (of whom
+it has been said, “Bourse Will Be Bourse”),
+Monsieur Poincare, and Fellow Guests:</p>
+
+<p>I have been asked by a deputation from your delightful
+country to present a plan for stabilizing the
+franc. I feel in this connection like the three men
+who found themselves in a row-boat in the middle of
+the ocean. One was a Frenchman, one an Irishman,
+and one a Scotchman.</p>
+
+<p>But, seriously, the problem of the franc is a vital
+one. And I know of no better way to handle it
+than the way in which we, in my household, have
+handled the problem of the American dollar, an even
+more vital problem to us, as you may well imagine.
+There are, at this writing, approximately twenty-five
+francs to each American dollar. There are also, to
+each American dollar, thirty-one hungry mouths.
+Three times six is eighteen and one to carry, six
+times seven is forty-two and one is forty-three and
+four to carry, giving a result of four hundred and
+sixty-one.... No, that can’t be right.... Well,
+anyway, the life of one American dollar has been
+estimated at one-third that of a sugar lozenge under
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>a faucet. This estimate gives the dollar the breaks.</p>
+
+<p>Now, it was only through the most rigid household
+economy that we were able to stabilize the dollar in
+our family. Several of the older and more infirm
+members of the family died from under-nourishment
+and exposure, being unable to fight for the food or
+bed-clothing. But that is the Law of the Tribe, that
+the weaker shall give way to the stronger and those
+with protective coloring survive the assaults of the
+predatory land animals and the constant action of
+the tides. “Easy come, easy go,” is what the old
+folks must remember.</p>
+
+<p>Our first move toward putting our household on a
+gold basis was to make out a budget, and that is
+what you dear people of France must do, too. It is
+much simpler for a nation to go on a budget than
+for a private family, because a nation never uses
+real money anyway. A nation says, “Here are
+twenty million francs,” or “Give me a hundred million dollars’
+worth of chips,” and, if you push right
+up close to the counter and ask to <i>see</i> it, what do
+you find? A couple of theater-ticket stubs, a right-hand
+glove, and a piece of paper saying, “I.O.U.
+$100,000,000.... A. Mellon.” There probably<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[Pg 102]</span>
+isn’t $125 in actual cash in the whole United States
+Treasury at this very minute. And $45 of that
+belongs by rights to me, on account of the Government
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[Pg 103]</span>having disallowed my deduction for hotel expenses
+in my 1925 income tax. I’ll get that back
+yet, you wait and see. The big bullies!</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp49" id="p102" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p102.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>Then hell breaks loose—telephone calls, registered letters,
+ night sweats.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>This system of dealing in dream-dollars, which
+seems to be the special prerogative of governments
+and large corporations, is called “Credit,” and a
+pretty how-do-you-do it is, too. “Credit,” as applied
+to you and me, means that we have until the
+fifteenth of the month to dig up the actual gold ore
+with which to pay our bills. But for a large corporation
+or a nation it means that, so long as the
+Treasurer can sign his name, they are on Easy
+Street. I sign a check, in a kidding way, and give it
+to Altmeyer’s Meat Market. And what does Altmeyer
+do? Right away <i>he presents it at my bank</i>!
+And then hell breaks loose. Telephone-calls, registered
+letters, night-sweats—you’d think the whole
+world had gone money-mad. And I have to go and
+get a printing-press and <i>print</i> him his money in half
+a day.</p>
+
+<p>But let Mr. Mellon sign a check for a billion
+dollars and no one even looks at the signature to
+see if it is genuine. It is folded up and put in
+the vest-pocket and never touched again for years.
+Is it ever presented for payment? Oh, no! Mr.
+Mellon signed it, never mind the money! You’d
+think Mr. Mellon was Richard Dix or Button Gwinnett.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span>I could get pretty sore about the whole thing
+and so could you, if you had any spunk about you.</p>
+
+<p>Now, in our family, there are four people, exclusive
+of the servant (who is lame). We have only
+three really to figure on, however, as the baby works.</p>
+
+<p>In France, there are of course more people than
+that, but none nicer. It has been estimated that in
+each French sock there are fifteen thousand francs.
+In the southern provinces, where they don’t wear
+socks, the money is stored away in the peasants’
+cheeks, or in hollow trees. This is going to make it
+hard to keep exact accounts because you can’t tell
+how much you have on hand. But nothing is worth
+while unless you have to work for it, which is one
+of the least true things that ever was said. So what
+I would advise would be for every French peasant to
+get a little pocket notebook (the J. C. Hall Co. of
+Providence, R. I., sell a neat little set for a dollar,
+a book for each month) and keep a strict personal
+account of everything spent—and, what is more important,
+everything received.</p>
+
+<p>For instance, let us take a typical French shopkeeper
+(and wouldn’t I <i>like</i> to take one, and push
+him into the Somme!) named Jaques Duquesne. If
+we could get him to keep a personal account-book,
+marking down so much for <i>tabac</i>, so much for <i>vin</i>,
+so much for <i>lavabo</i>, and then, on the opposite page,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span>received so much from sale to American tourist, so
+much from non-sale to American tourist, etc., etc.,
+then the government officials would have a record of
+his financial status not one word of which could be
+deciphered.</p>
+
+<p>But personal accounts are the only solution of
+the French situation, just as they were the only solution
+to our family crisis. My own personal account
+book is a joy to behold, especially if you are in the
+mood for a good laugh. Sometimes I get to laughing
+so that I can’t jot down the items. “Car-fare” I put
+down, and I haven’t ridden in a street-car since I
+used to go to dancing-school. Another good item is
+“Personal Improvement.” You’d be surprised at
+what you can crowd into Personal Improvement.
+If you are anything like me practically anything you
+do to yourself would be an improvement. My Personal
+Improvement account is going to run into
+thousands of dollars a year, and I don’t begrudge
+a cent of it.</p>
+
+<p>To summarize then:</p>
+
+<p>
+ 1. The franc is the monetary unit of France.<br>
+ 2. The franc is not so stable.<br>
+ 3. Verbs ending in <i>aître</i> retain the circumflex on the <i>i</i> whenever it is followed by <i>t</i>.<br>
+ 4. And how are <i>you?</i>
+</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="SEX_IS_OUT">
+ SEX IS OUT
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>According to Dr. Max Hartmann (I used
+to have a dentist named Dr. Hartmann, but
+he was a dentist) there is no such thing as absolute
+sex. If 60% of your cells are masculine, you rate as
+a male. If 60% are feminine, you sit with the girls.
+All combinations are possible up to 99 and 1, but
+the 100 percenter in either sex is a myth. Dr. Hartmann
+says so.</p>
+
+<p>This is going to be a big surprise to a lot of
+people. If the Government should ever take it into
+its head to make public lists of sex-percentages, as
+it now does income taxes, whole communities would
+be upset and perhaps “topsy-turvy” would not be
+too strong a word for what things would be.</p>
+
+<p>We are concerned in this course, however, merely
+with the effect of this negation of sex on the drama.
+It looks from where we are sitting (G-112-113) like
+the death blow to the Living Theater in this country.
+And in France—well, it will simply mean that they
+can’t give even Punch and Judy shows. What would
+be the fun in sitting through a scene like the following?</p>
+
+<p>(The scene isn’t quite set yet; so the orchestra
+will play the overture over again.)</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Roger</span>: Ever since that night I met you at the
+dance, my male percentage has been increasing. I
+used to register 65%. Yesterday in Liggetts I took
+a test and it was eighty-one.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mary</span>: You had your heavier overcoat on.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Roger</span>: Please, dear, this is no time for joking. I
+never was more serious in all my life. And that
+means only one thing. Haven’t you—aren’t you—do
+you register just the same as you did?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mary</span> (<i>looking at her finger-nails</i>): No. I have
+gone up seven points. But I thought it was because
+I had cut down on my starches.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Roger</span>: Starches nothing! Can’t you see, dear?
+Don’t you understand what it all means?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mary</span> (<i>pulling away</i>): Why am I letting you talk
+to me like this? We mustn’t. Fred will be home at
+any minute.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Roger</span>: Fred! Hah! I suppose you know what
+his last test was? I suppose he told you?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mary</span>: Why—er—no. That is—of course he did.
+Fred tells me everything.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Roger</span>: Well, then, I suppose you know that when
+he was examined for life insurance last week they
+found that his masculine cells totaled up to forty-seven
+and that included his American Legion button,
+too.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mary</span>: Fred? Forty-seven? Why, it isn’t possible.
+Why, only yesterday—</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Roger</span>: Never mind that! Figures don’t lie.
+The best that Fred can ever be to you from now on
+is a sister.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mary</span>: This is all so sudden. I must have time
+to think. Fred my sister! It seems incredible!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Roger</span>: Don’t you see, Mary dear, what the percentages
+tell us? (<i>Song Cue</i>)</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>You and I Total Up to a Hundred</i></p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Oh, Love brings a message of roses,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And Love a sweet litany tells,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Of the girls I have known, and the girls who have blown,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And their respective number of cells.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Cho.</i></p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">There was Alice who rated a cool sixty-two,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">She wore knickers and called me her “matey,”</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">There was Betty so true, with her large eyes of blue,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">On a clear day she registered eighty.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">There was Norma, my queen, who gave seventeen,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">As her quota of masculine units,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">But my heart it now yearns, on the latest returns,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">(<i>Spoken</i>: Ninety-seven, ninety-eight, ninety-nine!)</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">For M-A-R-Y, my sweet Winona.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>You can see for yourself, there is going to be no
+fun in figuring out sex on the back of an envelope.
+We might as well give the whole thing up and go in
+for hockey.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="UNCLE_EDITHS_GHOST_STORY">
+ UNCLE EDITH’S GHOST STORY
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>“Tell us a ghost story, Uncle Edith,” cried all
+the children late Christmas afternoon when
+everyone was cross and sweaty.</p>
+
+<p>“Very well, then,” said Uncle Edith, “it isn’t much
+of a ghost story, but you will take it—and like it,”
+he added, cheerfully. “And if I hear any whispering
+while it is going on, I will seize the luckless offender
+and baste him one.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, to begin, my father was a poor wood-chopper,
+and we lived in a charcoal-burner’s hut in the
+middle of a large, dark forest.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is the beginning of a fairy story, you big
+sap,” cried little Dolly, a fat, disagreeable child who
+never should have been born, “and what we wanted
+was a <i>ghost</i> story.”</p>
+
+<p>“To be sure,” cried Uncle Edith, “what a stupid
+old woopid I was. The ghost story begins as follows:</p>
+
+<p>“It was late in November when my friend Warrington
+came up to me in the club one night and
+said: ‘Craige, old man, I want you to come down to
+my place in Whoopshire for the week-end. There is
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span>greffle shooting to be done and grouse no end. What
+do you say?’</p>
+
+<p>“I had been working hard that week, and the
+prospect pleased. And so it was that the 3:40 out
+of Charing Cross found Warrington and me on our
+way into Whoopshire, loaded down with guns, plenty
+of flints, and two of the most beautiful snootfuls
+ever accumulated in Merrie England.</p>
+
+<p>“It was getting dark when we reached Breeming
+Downs, where Warrington’s place was, and as we
+drove up the shadowy path to the door, I felt Warrington’s
+hand on my arm.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Cut that out!’ I ordered, peremptorily. ‘What
+is this I’m getting into?’</p>
+
+<p>“‘Sh-h-h!’ he replied, and his grip tightened.
+With one sock I knocked him clean across the seat.
+There are some things which I simply will not stand
+for.</p>
+
+<p>“He gathered himself together and spoke. ‘I’m
+sorry,’ he said. ‘I was a bit unnerved. You see,
+there is a shadow against the pane in the guest
+room window.’</p>
+
+<p>“‘Well, what of it?’ I asked. It was my turn to
+look astonished.</p>
+
+<p>“Warrington lowered his voice. ‘Whenever there
+is a shadow against the windowpane as I drive up
+with a guest, that guest is found dead in bed the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span>next morning—dead from fright,’ he added, significantly.</p>
+
+<p>“I looked up at the window toward which he was
+pointing. There, silhouetted against the glass, was
+the shadow of a gigantic man. I say, ‘a man,’ but
+it was more the figure of a large weasel except for a
+fringe of dark-red clappers that it wore suspended
+from its beak.”</p>
+
+<p>“How do you know they were dark red,” asked
+little Tom-Tit, “if it was the shadow you saw?”</p>
+
+<p>“You shut your face,” replied Uncle Edith. “I
+could hardly control my astonishment at the sight of
+this thing, it was so astonishing. ‘That is in my
+room?’ I asked Warrington.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Yes,’ he replied, ‘I am afraid that it is.’</p>
+
+<p>“I said nothing, but got out of the automobile and
+collected my bags. ‘Come on,’ I announced cheerfully,
+‘I’m going up and beard Mr. Ghost in his
+den.’</p>
+
+<p>“So up the dark, winding stairway we went into
+the resounding corridors of the old seventeenth-century
+house, pausing only when we came to the door
+which Warrington indicated as being the door to my
+room. I knocked.</p>
+
+<p>“There was a piercing scream from within as we
+pushed the door open. But when we entered, we
+found the room empty. We searched high and low,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span>but could find no sign of the man with the shadow.
+Neither could we discover the source of the terrible
+scream, although the echo of it was still ringing in
+our ears.</p>
+
+<p>“‘I guess it was nothing,’ said Warrington, cheerfully.
+‘Perhaps the wind in the trees,’ he added.</p>
+
+<p>“‘But the shadow on the pane?’ I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“He pointed to a fancily carved piece of guest soap
+on the washstand. ‘The light was behind that,’ he
+said, ‘and from outside it looked like a man.’</p>
+
+<p>“‘To be sure,’ I said, but I could see that Warrington
+was as white as a sheet.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Is there anything that you need?’ he asked.
+‘Breakfast is at nine—if you’re lucky,’ he added,
+jokingly.</p>
+
+<p>“‘I think that I have everything,’ I said. ‘I will
+do a little reading before going to sleep, and perhaps
+count my laundry.... But stay,’ I called him
+back, ‘you might leave that revolver which I see
+sticking out of your hip pocket. I may need it more
+than you will.’</p>
+
+<p>“He slapped me on the back and handed me the
+revolver as I had asked. ‘Don’t blow into the barrel,’
+he giggled, nervously.</p>
+
+<p>“‘How many people have died of fright in this
+room?’ I asked, turning over the leaves of a copy of
+<i>Town and Country</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span></p>
+
+<p>“‘Seven,’ he replied. ‘Four men and three
+women.’</p>
+
+<p>“‘When was the last one here?’</p>
+
+<p>“‘Last night,’ he said.</p>
+
+<p>“‘I wonder if I might have a glass of hot water
+with my breakfast,’ I said. ‘It warms your
+stomach.’</p>
+
+<p>“‘Doesn’t it though?’ he agreed, and was gone.</p>
+
+<p>“Very carefully I unpacked my bag and got into
+bed. I placed the revolver on the table by my pillow.
+Then I began reading.</p>
+
+<p>“Suddenly the door to the closet at the farther
+end of the room opened slowly. It was in the
+shadows and so I could not make out whether there
+was a figure or not. But nothing appeared.
+The door shut again, however, and I could hear footfalls
+coming across the soft carpet toward my bed.
+A chair which lay between me and the closet was
+upset as if by an unseen shin, and, simultaneously,
+the window was slammed shut and the shade pulled
+down. I looked, and there, against the shade, as
+if thrown from the <i>outside</i>, was the same shadow
+that we had seen as we came up the drive that afternoon.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have to go to the bathroom,” said little Roger,
+aged six, at this point.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Well, go ahead,” said Uncle Edith. “You know
+where it is.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t want to go alone,” whined Roger.</p>
+
+<p>“Go with Roger, Arthur,” commanded Uncle
+Edith, “and bring me a glass of water when you
+come back.”</p>
+
+<p>“And whatever was this horrible thing that was in
+your room, Uncle Edith?” asked the rest of the
+children in unison when Roger and Arthur had left
+the room.</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t tell you that,” replied Uncle Edith, “for
+I packed my bag and got the 9:40 back to town.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is the lousiest ghost story I have ever
+heard,” said Peterkin.</p>
+
+<p>And they all agreed with him.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="FASCINATING_CRIMES_2">
+ FASCINATING CRIMES
+ <br>
+ <i>III. The Missing Floor</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>It has often been pointed out that murderers are
+given to revisiting the scenes of their crimes.
+The case of Edny Pastelle is the only one on record
+where the scene of the crime revisited the murderer.</p>
+
+<p>Edny Pastelle was a Basque elevator woman who
+ran one of the first elevators installed in the old
+Fifth Avenue Hotel, which stood at the corner of
+Twenty-third Street and Fifth Avenue, New York
+City. The elevator was of the surrey type, and was
+pushed from floor to floor by the operator, who was
+underneath climbing on a ladder. It was Mlle.
+Pastelle’s daily task to hoist such personages as
+Chauncey M. Depew, Boss Tweed and Harriet
+Beecher Stowe up to their rooms in the Fifth Avenue
+Hotel. In fact, she is said to have been Miss
+Stowe’s model for <i>Uncle Tom</i> in the novel of that
+name (with the word “Cabin” added to it).</p>
+
+<p>In the evenings, when Edny Pastelle was not on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[Pg 116]</span>
+duty, she carried Punch and Judy shows about town
+for whoever wanted them. As not many people
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[Pg 117]</span>wanted them, Edny’s evenings were pretty much her
+own.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp100" id="p116" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p116.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>Edny Pastelle and Max Sorgossen in the gallery of human fiends and their victims.</p>
+ <p>
+ <i>—Courtesy of John Held, Jr., and Life.</i></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>The evening of July 7, 1891, however, is on record
+as being not Edny’s, but Max Sorgossen’s.</p>
+
+<p>Max Sorgossen worked in the Eden Musée, which
+was situated on Twenty-third Street just below the
+Fifth Avenue Hotel. His job was to put fresh cuffs
+on the wax figure of Chester A. Arthur in the Presidential
+Group. At five o’clock every afternoon he
+also took “Ajeeb,” the mechanical chess player, out
+in the back yard for his exercise.</p>
+
+<p>At five-thirty on the afternoon in question Max
+Sorgossen had just knocked off work and was strolling
+up Twenty-third Street in search of diversion.
+In the back of his mind was an idea that perhaps
+he might find another mechanical chess player for
+“Ajeeb” and a girl for himself and that the four of
+them might go down to Coney Island for the evening,
+as the weather was warm. As he passed the service
+entrance of the Fifth Avenue Hotel he met Edny
+Pastelle, who was likewise calling it a day. (She
+called it a <i>jour</i>, but that is the Basque of it.)</p>
+
+<p>Edny and Max had known each other in finishing
+school, and so there seemed no impropriety in his
+speaking to her and asking her if she knew of a
+mechanical chess player for “Ajeeb” and if she
+would look with favor on an evening at Coney.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span></p>
+
+<p>The two were seen entering a restaurant on
+Twenty-first Street to talk it over at 6:10. At 9:20
+the next morning guests of the hotel, on trying to
+descend in the elevator, found it stuck between the
+first and third floors. When the car was finally dislodged,
+it was found to contain the body of Max
+Sorgossen. Furthermore, <i>the second floor, where the
+elevator should have stopped, was gone</i>!</p>
+
+<p>Edny was arrested and the trial took place in the
+Court of Domestic Relations, since she was a domestic
+and there had evidently been relations, albeit
+unfriendly. The prosecuting attorney was a young
+lawyer named William T. Jerome, later William
+Travers Jerome. Following is a transcript of the
+cross-examination:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p><i>Q.</i> What did you do after Sorgossen spoke to you on
+Twenty-third Street?</p>
+
+<p><i>A.</i> Pardon.</p>
+
+<p><i>Q.</i> What did you do after Sorgossen spoke to you on
+Twenty-third Street?</p>
+
+<p><i>A.</i> Plenty.</p>
+
+<p><i>Q.</i> Very good, Mr. Bones. And now tell me, why <i>is</i>
+a man with a silk hat on like Mary Queen of Scots?</p>
+
+<p><i>A.</i> What Scots?</p>
+
+<p><i>Q.</i> I’m asking <i>you</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>A.</i> Animal, vegetable or mineral?</p>
+
+<p><i>Q.</i> Mineral.</p>
+
+<p><i>A.</i> The tidy on the back of that chair?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Q.</i> No.</p>
+
+<p><i>A.</i> Cyrus W. Field?</p>
+
+<p><i>Q.</i> Give up?</p>
+
+<p><i>A.</i> Three spades.</p>
+
+<p><i>Q.</i> Double three spades.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>At this point, counsel for the defense objected and
+the case was thrown out into a higher court, where
+Edny Pastelle was acquitted, or whatever you call it.</p>
+
+<p>It was some thirty years later that the missing
+second floor of the old Fifth Avenue Hotel was discovered.
+A workman laying wagers on the sixteenth
+floor of the Fifth Avenue Building (erected on the
+site of the old Fifth Avenue Hotel) came across a
+floor which was neither the fifteenth, sixteenth nor
+seventeenth. The police were called in and, after
+several weeks of investigation and grilling, it was
+identified as the missing floor of the old hotel, the
+floor at which the little romance of Edny Pastelle
+had come to such an abrupt end. How it came to
+be on the sixteenth floor of the Fifth Avenue Building
+nobody knows. Perhaps Max Sorgossen could
+tell.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_END_OF_THE_SEASON">
+ THE END OF THE SEASON
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>The William K. Vanderbilt mansion at Fifty-second
+Street and Fifth Avenue is, according to report, not
+to be torn down, but will be transported bodily to Long
+Island where it will be re-erected as a country home.
+The same fate is also reported to await the Cornelius
+Vanderbilt “château” at Fifty-seventh Street and Fifth
+Avenue which was sold last Spring for $7,100,000. Both
+mansions are, it is said, to be moved to Long Island and
+re-assembled by purchasers as yet unnamed.</p>
+
+<p class="author">
+ —<i>News Item.</i>
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<p class="ph4"><span class="smcap">Scene</span></p>
+
+<p>Fifth Avenue between Fifty-second and Fifty-seventh
+Streets 3 a. m.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4"><span class="smcap">Characters</span></p>
+
+<p>
+ Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt’s House.<br>
+ Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt’s House.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="r5">
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. W. K.’s House</span>: You-hoo!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Cornelius’ House</span>: You-hoo!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. W. K.’s House</span>: Are you awake?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. C.’s House</span>: Am I awake? I should say I
+am. We’re moving down to the country tomorrow,
+you know.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. W. K.’s House</span>: We move down next week.
+How are you going down?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. C.’s House</span>: The Herman W. Oberholzer
+Wrecking Company, I think—if it’s pleasant. The
+men said they would be here at seven. <i>Imagine!</i>
+The front steps are going down first; so there will
+be something there when we get there. The little
+towers are crazy to go down with the front steps,
+but I don’t think I’ll let them. I think they ought
+to stay and go down with the rest of the house.
+You’re all going down together, aren’t you?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. W. K.’s House</span>: Oh, I suppose so. I dread
+the whole thing and will be glad when it’s over.
+We’ve had all those impossible people tramping
+through the house all week—charity, you know.
+Some days it just seemed as if I couldn’t stand it.
+One man actually wanted to take a bath in the marble
+tub! My dear, I was <i>furious</i>! I think that
+when we do get to the country, I’ll just go to bed
+and stay there.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. C.’s House</span>: Why don’t you hurry up and
+come down with us tomorrow? The Oberholzer
+people are awfully nice and I’m sure there’d be
+room.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. W. K.’s House</span>: Oh, I don’t know. I’m so
+tired I just can’t think.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. C.’s House</span>: My dear, you could do it just
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>as easily as not. Just throw together the things
+you’ll need—the Blashfield murals and the Caen
+stair-case—and have them ready at seven-thirty.
+Then, just as soon as we are all on the truck, I’ll
+tell the Oberholzer men to come right over and get
+you and we can all go down together.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. W. K.’s House</span>: Oh, dear, I’ve half a mind
+to do it; I do so want to get out of the city. Somehow
+I’ve been awfully depressed about things lately.
+New York isn’t what it used to be. And then the
+selling of the lot and everything, and all these big
+business buildings coming into the neighborhood.
+A thirty-three story one here, you know.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. C.’s House</span>: My dear, what do you think
+of <i>us</i>! A forty-two story <i>hotel</i>, if you please! We
+got rather used to the Plaza, but I’m glad that I
+sha’n’t be here to see this new thing.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. W. K.’s House</span>: Do you know, I think I’ll
+just <i>tear</i> and get ready to go down with you in the
+morning. We have practically no front-steps, you
+know, and we can just sort of camp out down there
+until the roof and other things come down. Seven-thirty,
+you say?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. C.’s House</span>: That’s what the wrecking people
+said, I suppose that means eight or half-past.
+We’ll have to eat luncheon on the way. We’ll have
+plenty of chicken for you.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. W. K.’s House</span>: My dear, don’t be silly.
+I’ll bring the sandwiches, and perhaps when they
+tear the cellar up they may find enough champagne
+for just the two of us.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. C.’s House</span>: That will be <i>divine</i>! Seven-thirty,
+then.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. W. K.’s House</span>: Good night, my dear. And
+don’t forget, I’m bringing the sandwiches!</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="EXAM_TIME">
+ EXAM TIME
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>What ought to be the last word in our national
+craze for examinations and tests is
+found in the announcement of an aged man in North
+Carolina that he is ready to take the “Charlie Ross
+Test.”</p>
+
+<p>“The Charlie Ross Test” seems to have for its
+object the examination of the candidate to see
+whether or not he is the Charlie Ross who was kidnaped,
+as a little boy, from his home in Germantown,
+Pa., in 1873. The successful candidate is to receive
+an embossed certificate with the name “Charlie
+Ross” in Old English type at the top. He is also
+allowed to say, “I am Charlie Ross,” when introducing
+himself to people.</p>
+
+<p>Candidates in the Charlie Ross Test are given
+two hours in which to complete the examination, and
+a choice of seven questions out of ten. Question
+No. 4, however (“Are you white or black?”), must
+be answered, as the Charlie Ross who was kidnaped
+was known to have been white.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Julius Dellinger, the present contestant, has
+been cramming for the test for over six months, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span>feels fairly confident that he will pass with flying
+colors. A question of ruling came up last week,
+when it was discovered that Mr. Dellinger had been
+tutoring on the side with a man supposed to have
+been the original Charlie Ross’s uncle, but it was
+decided to allow this provided that the candidate
+does not take notes into the examination-room with
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“What will you do if you win?” Mr. Dellinger
+was asked.</p>
+
+<p>“I will be just the happiest man in the world,”
+was the reply. “First of all, I will have stationery
+made with ‘C. R.’ on it, and then I will look up all
+my new relatives in the Ross family and perhaps
+visit them for a while.”</p>
+
+<p>“When you have passed the Charlie Ross Test,
+do you expect to take the Ambrose Bierce Test?”
+the reporter asked.</p>
+
+<p>“I looked into the Ambrose Bierce Test before I
+decided on the Charlie Ross one,” Mr. Dellinger
+said, “but as Bierce was quite well on in years when
+he disappeared in Mexico, it would be rather a tough
+examination to take. So many people knew what
+Bierce looked like, and then, too, there would always
+be the possibility that I might <i>not</i> be Bierce after
+all. It would be very humiliating to get up before
+the Board of Regents and discover that you were
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>Charlie Ross when you were taking the Ambrose
+Bierce examination, or vice versa.”</p>
+
+<p>“Had you ever thought that perhaps you might
+be the Man with the Iron Mask?” Mr. Dellinger
+was asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, that would hardly be possible,” he said
+with a smile, “as the Man with the Iron Mask lived
+in the seventeenth century and spoke French. I
+speak no French. Still,” he added with a touch of
+wistfulness, “I might learn.”</p>
+
+<p>“Aside from the language,” the reporter suggested,
+“it ought to be an easier test than either the Ross
+or Bierce one, for no one knows what the Man
+with the Iron Mask looked like.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dellinger thought for a minute. Then a look
+of determination came into his eyes. “I’ll send for
+a set of last year’s examination papers tomorrow,”
+he said. And into his bearing there crept something
+of the grand manner, a slightly imperious gesture
+with the hand, a courtly toss to the head. For the
+Man with the Iron Mask was said by some to have
+been the son of Cardinal Mazarin and Anne of
+Austria.</p>
+
+<p>With a low bow the reporter withdrew.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THROWING_BACK_THE_EUROPEAN">
+ THROWING BACK THE EUROPEAN
+ OFFENSIVE
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>This is probably the hardest time of year for
+for those of us who didn’t go to Europe last
+summer. It was bad enough when the others were
+packing and outlining their trips for you. It was
+pretty bad when the postcards from Lausanne and
+Venice began coming in. But now, in the fall, when
+the travelers are returning with their Marco Polo
+travelogs, now is when we must be brave and give a
+cheer for the early frost.</p>
+
+<p>There are several ways to combat this menace of
+returning travelers. The one that I have found most
+effective is based on the old football theory that a
+strong offense is the best defense. I rush them right
+off their feet, before they can get started.</p>
+
+<p>In carrying out this system, it is well to remember
+that very few travelers know anything more about
+the places they have visited than the names of one
+hotel, two points of interest, and perhaps one street.
+You can bluff them into insensibility by making up
+a name and asking them if they saw that when they
+were in Florence. My whole strategy is based on
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span>my ability to make up names. You can do it, too,
+with practice.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, let us say that I am confronted by Mrs.
+Reetaly who has just returned from a frantic tour of
+Spain, southern France, and the Ritz Hotel, Paris.
+You are inextricably cornered with her at a tea, or
+beer night, or something. Following is a transcript
+of the conversation. (Note the gathering power of
+my offense.)</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. R.</span>: Well, we have just returned from
+Europe, and everything seems so strange here. I
+simply can’t get used to our money.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: I never see enough of it to get used to
+it myself. (<i>Just a pleasantry.</i>)</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. R.</span>: When we were in Madrid, I just gave
+up trying to figure out the Spanish money. You see,
+they have <i>pesetas</i> and—</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: A very easy way to remember Spanish
+money is to count ten <i>segradas</i> to one <i>mesa</i>, ten
+<i>mesas</i> to one <i>rintilla</i> and twenty <i>rintillas</i> to one
+<i>peseta</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. R.</span>: Oh, you have been to Spain? Did you
+go to Toledo?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: Well, of course, Toledo is just the beginning.
+You pushed on to Mastilejo, of course?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. R.</span>: Why—er—no. We were in quite a
+hurry to get to Granada and—</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: You didn’t see Mastilejo? That’s too
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span>bad. Mastilejo is Toledo multiplied by a hundred.
+Such mountains! Such coloring! Leaving Mastilejo,
+one ascends by easy stages to the ridge behind
+the town from which is obtained an incomparable
+view of the entire Bobadilla Valley. It was here
+that, in 1476, the Moors—</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp100" id="p129" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p129.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>“Unless you have seen Tuna, you haven’t seen Spain.”</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. R.</span>: The Moorish relics in Granada—</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: The Moorish relics in Granada are like
+something you buy from Sears-Roebuck compared to
+the remains in Tuna. You saw Tuna, of course?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. R.</span>: Well, no (<i>lying her head off</i>), we were
+going there, but Harry thought that it would just be
+repeating what—</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: The biggest mistake of your life, Mrs.
+Reetaly, the biggest mistake of your life! Unless
+you have seen Tuna, you haven’t seen Spain.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. R.</span>: But Carcassonne—</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: Ah, Carcassonne! Now you’re talking!
+Did you ever see anything to beat that old diamond
+mill in the <i>Vielle Ville</i>? Would they let you go
+through it when you were there?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. R.</span>: Why, I don’t think that we saw any
+old diamond mill. We saw an old—</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: I know what you’re going to say! You
+saw the old wheat sifter. Isn’t that fascinating?
+Did you talk with the old courier there?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. R.</span>: Why, I don’t remember—</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: And the hole in the wall where Louis
+the Neurotic escaped from the Saracens?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. R.</span>: Yes, wasn’t that—? (<i>Very weak.</i>)</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: And the stream where they found the
+sword and buckler of the Man with the Iron Abdomen?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. R.</span> (<i>edging away</i>): Yes, indeed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: And old Vastelles? You visited Vastelles,
+surely?... Mrs. Reetaly, come back here,
+please! I just love talking over these dear places
+with someone who has just been there.... May I
+call on you some day soon and we’ll just have a
+feast of reminiscence?... Thank you. How
+about tomorrow?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span></p>
+
+<p>And from that day to this, I am never bothered
+by Mrs. Reetaly’s European trip, and you needn’t
+be, either, if you will only study the above plan
+carefully.</p>
+
+<p>The other method is based on just the opposite
+theory—that of no offense, or defense, at all. It is
+known as “dumb submission,” and should be tried
+only by very phlegmatic people who can deaden their
+sensibilities so that they don’t even hear the first ten
+minutes of the traveler’s harangue. The idea is to
+let them proceed at will for a time and then give unmistakable
+evidence of not having heard a word they
+have said. Let us say that Mr. Thwomly has accosted
+me on the train.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. T.</span>: It certainly seems funny to be riding in
+trains like this again. We have been all summer in
+France, you know, and those French trains are all
+divided up into compartments. You get into a compartment—<i>compartimon</i>,
+they call them—and there
+you are with three or five other people, all cooped up
+together. On the way from Paris to Marseilles we
+had a funny experience. I was sitting next to a
+Frenchman who was getting off at Lyons—Lyons is
+about half way between Paris and Marseilles—and
+he was dozing when we got in. So I—</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: Did you get to France at all when you
+were away?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. T.</span>: This was in <i>France</i> that I’m telling you
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span>about. On the way from Paris to Marseilles. We
+got into a railway carriage—</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp68" id="p132" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p132.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>“Did you get to France at all when you were away?”</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: The railway carriages there aren’t like
+ours here, are they? I’ve seen pictures of them, and
+they seem to be more like compartments of some
+sort.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. T.</span> (<i>a little discouraged</i>): That was a
+French railway carriage I was just describing to you.
+I sat next to a man—</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: A Frenchman?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. T.</span>: Sure, a Frenchman. That’s the <i>point</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: Oh, I see.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. T.</span>: Well, the Frenchman was asleep, and
+when we got in I stumbled over his feet. So he woke
+up and said something in French, which I couldn’t
+understand, and I excused myself in English, which
+<i>he</i> couldn’t understand, but I saw by his ticket that
+he was going only as far as Lyons—</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span>: You were across the border into France,
+then?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. T.</span> (<i>giving the whole thing up as a bad job</i>):
+And what did <i>you</i> do this summer?</p>
+
+<p>Whichever way you pick to defend yourself
+against the assaults of people who want to tell you
+about Europe, don’t forget that it was I who told
+you how. I’m going to Europe myself next year,
+and if you try to pull either of these systems on <i>me</i>
+when I get back, I will recognize them at once, and
+it will just go all the harder with you. But, of
+course, <i>I</i> will have something to tell that will be
+worth hearing.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="AN_INTERVIEW_WITH_VICE-PRESIDENT">
+ AN INTERVIEW WITH VICE-PRESIDENT
+ DAWES
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Interviewing Vice-Presidents is always a
+ticklish business, unless you happen to find one
+who isn’t ticklish.</p>
+
+<p>So I took General Dawes into my confidence
+right at the start.</p>
+
+<p>“General Dawes,” I said, “what is your feeling
+about the Senate?”</p>
+
+<p>“You mean the Roman Senate, do you not?”
+asked the grizzled warrior.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, yes, now that you speak of it,” I replied.
+Here was a chance to have some fun at the expense
+of Catiline.</p>
+
+<p>“The Senate is all right,” said General Dawes.
+“It is the tribunes of the people that cause all the
+trouble. They and the lictors.”</p>
+
+<p>“How would you lictor have a glass of beer?” I
+asked the Vice-President.</p>
+
+<p>Well, that got us to giggling, as you may very
+well imagine. First I would hit him, and then he
+would hit me.</p>
+
+<p>“If the Senate rules were to be changed, so that
+for ‘quorum’ it should read ‘jorum,’ what would you
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>think?” I asked him, spitting out two teeth (good
+ones, too).</p>
+
+<p>“‘Jorum’ instead of ‘quorum’?” he asked, stalling
+for time. “What would I think?”</p>
+
+<p>“You heard me, Mr. Vice-President,” I retorted.</p>
+
+<p>“I should say, suh—” he began.</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t know that you were from the South,”
+I interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not. That was just something caught in my
+throat.”</p>
+
+<p>At this point, General Dawes looked out the window.
+“Where are we?” he asked, peering into the
+darkness. “Is this New Haven we are coming into,
+porter?”</p>
+
+<p>But the porter was just as much puzzled as General
+Dawes was, being a Southern Pacific porter on
+his first trip on the N. Y., N. H. &amp; H. R. R.</p>
+
+<p>“I could tell with a bit of litmus paper,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Quickly I clapped my hand over General Dawes’
+mouth.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you ever wonder, Mr. Vice-President,” I
+asked him, “just what life is all about?”</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Do</i> I?” said General Dawes from behind my
+palm. “That’s all I ever wonder about.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wasn’t it Voltaire who asked ‘<i>Que suis-je, ou
+suis-je, ou vais-je, et d’ou suis-je tiré?</i>’”</p>
+
+<p>“That all sounds very silly,” retorted the General
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span>in a rage. “And besides, there should be an
+accent over all those ‘u’s’.”</p>
+
+<p>“The General did not have his nap today,” I
+explained to the conductor. “He is cross.”</p>
+
+<p>“This is my street anyway,” said the Vice-President,
+hopping up and getting into his middy-blouse.
+And, without a word, he was gone.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_LIFE_POLAR_EXPEDITION_1">
+ THE <i>LIFE</i> POLAR EXPEDITION
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p><i>En route with “Life’s” Bicycle Expedition to
+the North Pole.—May 17.</i></p>
+
+<p>We are now just between Woodlawn and Mt.
+Vernon, at a point where there seems to be some
+sort of road-digging going on. This means that we
+shall have to sit down and wait for them to finish,
+or else go back and take a roundabout route. We
+are just a little discouraged.</p>
+
+<p>“Chief,” Lieut.-Commander Connelly said to me
+as we were pedalling through Morrisania (168th
+Street), “do you ever have any doubts about our
+catching up with the others—Amundsen and Byrd,
+I mean?”</p>
+
+<p>I felt a strange little chill creep around my heart.
+Was this mutiny?</p>
+
+<p>“Have you heard any of the men talking?” I
+asked, without looking at him.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, no, not exactly,” he replied, “but Ensign
+Thermaline asked me yesterday how long I figured
+out that it would be before we sighted one of the
+other expeditions.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span></p>
+
+<p>“You can tell Ensign Thermaline,” I said, “that
+if he will keep his feet pedalling ’round and ’round
+just as fast as he can and maintain his balance, the
+rest of us will do the same.”</p>
+
+<p>Lieut.-Commander Connelly looked at me with
+tears in his eyes. “Aye, aye, sir,” was all that he
+said, but it spoke volumes.</p>
+
+<p>From Mott Haven, where we spent the night, we
+have pedalled due north over the Grand Concourse,
+stopping only once at a repair shop to get a new
+thumb-piece for Ensign Thermaline’s bell. Ensign
+Thermaline had been using the bell almost constantly
+since leaving 57th Street, being one of the
+most cautious pilots in the expedition.</p>
+
+<p>A peculiarity of the country which we all have
+noticed since crossing over the Harlem River is the
+rows upon rows of large apartment houses which
+have sprung up along the route. At first none of us
+spoke of it, but finally Lieut.-Commander Connelly
+could keep his thoughts to himself no longer. “Have
+you noticed the large number of apartment houses
+along the way?” he asked. We all admitted that
+we had.</p>
+
+<p>In front of one of these apartment houses an interesting
+sight met our eyes. A little boy was seen
+riding along in what looked like a very small automobile
+and it was in effect really an automobile
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span>except that it was propelled by the little boy’s feet,
+which were in direct contact with the sidewalk.
+Some members of the expedition were in favor of
+stopping and getting the little boy to join, but wiser
+counsel prevailed and we decided that it would take
+him too long to get his winter things packed and that
+we ought not to incur any more delays than we
+should run into in the natural course of events. “He
+would have been cute, though,” said Lieut-Commander
+Connelly wistfully.</p>
+
+<p>Just the other side of Williamsbridge we ran into
+an obstacle which for a while threatened to hold us
+up indefinitely. Right in our path we came to a
+high wall surrounding a reservoir. We sent Ensign
+Thermaline up to take soundings and he returned,
+making a long face, and reporting that the reservoir
+was practically ten feet deep.</p>
+
+<p>“What a place to build a reservoir anyway!” I
+said, and the other joined me in my disgust.</p>
+
+<p>Fording the darned thing being out of the question,
+we decided that it would be better to take one
+of the roads which seemed to lead around it. We
+chose the one to the left because left is Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly’s favorite direction. And Dame
+Fortune was with us in our choice, for it led, after
+a while, right into the Bronx River Parkway, which
+was <i>just</i> where we wanted to be. Had we taken the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span>road to the right, there is no telling where we should
+have ended up.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_1_1" href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>&#x2060;</p>
+
+<p>It was in passing Woodlawn Cemetery that we got
+into the discussion which is still raging as we sit by
+the roadside before Mt. Vernon. The sight of the
+miles and miles of monuments in Woodlawn depressed
+Lieut.-Commander Connelly and set him
+thinking.</p>
+
+<p>“Man’s span is <i>so</i> short,” he said, drawing up
+alongside my “bike” (as we call our wheels).
+“Man’s span is so short that it seems hardly worth
+all the fuss and pother of trying, doesn’t it?” he
+whispered.</p>
+
+<p>“I think that word is ‘bother,’” I said.</p>
+
+<p>“Which word?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“The word you called ‘pother,’” I replied, a little
+cruelly, I am afraid.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you <i>sure</i>?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“As sure as one can be of anything in this old
+world,” I said.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s just it,” the lieutenant-commander returned,
+“what <i>can</i> one be sure of? We are born,
+grow up, make our little plans—and what sad, brave
+little plans they are, too—and then just as we think
+we are succeeding”—the young explorer stopped
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span>and looked at the rows of tombstones on our left.</p>
+
+<p>“I know, Lieutenant-Commander,” I said, sympathetically.
+“You don’t have to say it.”</p>
+
+<p>And so we rode on in silence, until we reached this
+sort of digging-up they are doing in the road. Then
+I said: “Oh, the devil!” And at this rather pat
+climax to a discussion on philosophy, we both
+laughed.</p>
+
+<p>But if we are held up very long here it will be no
+laughing matter, for in the papers we read that
+Amundsen is already on his way to the Pole from
+Spitsbergen.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>The brave boys of the “Life” Polar Expedition
+are pedalling furiously in a northerly direction and
+expect to reach Mt. Vernon any day now. Another
+despatch from Commander Benchley will appear
+next week.</i>)</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_1_1" href="#FNanchor_1_1" class="label">[1]</a> The right road also leads to the Bronx River Parkway.—<span class="smcap">Editor.</span></p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="A_GHOST_STORY">
+ A GHOST STORY
+ <br>
+ (<i>As Sherwood Anderson Would Write It If He
+ Weren’t Prevented</i>)
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">1</p>
+
+<p>David Perk sat on the edge of his bed. It
+was nearly midnight and in a few minutes the
+ghost would come. The ghost would come, all
+right, all right. Why not? Milt Neevis had seen
+it here in this very room, and Milt got drunk every
+Thursday night and rolled in the bran-mash they
+had fixed for the horses out in Rob McCarver’s
+barn. And Milt knew women, too. When Spring
+came to Panis Junction, and the soft smell of honeysuckle
+drifted into town over Ernest Tamson’s tannery
+down by the tracks, Milt used to sneak out at
+eleven o’clock every night and go in swimming alone
+in the Women’s Public Baths. Naked. Milt knew
+women all right. Lordy!</p>
+
+<p>And Milt Neevis had told David Perk that at
+midnight the ghost would be sure to come. And
+what’s more, it might be a female ghost, Milt said.
+Male and female. Hot dickety-dog!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">2</p>
+
+<p>David Perk was sitting on the edge of his bed
+waiting for the ghost. Why should he—David Perk—be
+afraid? Why should anyone be afraid? Why
+should you be afraid? Why should I be afraid?
+Sex was sex, wasn’t it? That night in Chicago.
+Why had he left Ella? Ella had been his first wife
+and every Friday night she used to bake potatoes
+and cut them open to put butter in them. David
+had liked to see her cut open the baked potatoes.
+Perhaps it hurt them to be cut open. Why not?
+Potatoes had sex, just the same as you and me or
+old Milt Neevis rolling in the bran-mash out in Rob
+McCarver’s barn. Male potatoes. Female potatoes.
+Cut them open and put butter in them. And
+paprika. Ella had cut them open and put butter in
+them that night back in Chicago. And David had
+left her. Not because she did that. David had
+liked that. It had made him feel all queer all over.
+Lordy! Ella would never understand how it made
+him feel. So he had left her. Male potatoes in
+the same dish with female potatoes. Milt Neevis
+swimming alone naked in the Women’s Public Baths
+on a Spring night. Slicky-slicky!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">3</p>
+
+<p>David Perk sitting on the edge of his bed waiting
+for the ghost. Perhaps a girl ghost. He was a man,
+wasn’t he? Secretary Stanton of Lincoln’s cabinet
+had been a man, hadn’t he? Why Stanton?
+Well, why not Stanton? He, David Perk, had never
+seen Stanton, had he? Nor G. A. Henty. Nor
+Cyrus W. Field. All men, weren’t they? And
+what were men made for if not for women?</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“<i>Hill-dill, come over the hill,</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>Or else I’ll catch you standing still.</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>That night in Detroit. When he had left Irma.
+Irma had been his second wife. Irma had large
+bones and cried easily. One night in the Spring
+she and David had gone out into the fields and
+pulled up all the grass. A mare and a stallion pulling
+up grass in the fields and chewing it. They had
+chewed grass all night. Big sensation. Grass between
+your teeth. Green, sharp grass. Big male
+moon in the sky looking for its mate. Little female
+stars skipping about looking for their mates.
+Never finding them. David never finding anyone.
+Twenty-three! Skidoo!</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">4</p>
+
+<p>That night in Boston when David had met
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span>Theresa. Theresa was his third wife. The State
+House dome in the moonlight. Niggers singing on
+the Common. Niggers who had been freed. Irishmen
+singing on the Common. Sailors with girls on
+their laps on the benches. Spooning. Tremont
+Street. Boylston Street. Trolley cars. English
+sparrows with Spring in their veins. Men and
+women. Boys and girls. Male babies and female
+babies. Sex! America!</p>
+
+<p>And here was he, David Perk, sitting—all hot and
+bothered—on the edge of his bed waiting for the
+ghost to come. And old Milt Neevis down in Rob
+McCarver’s barn rolling in the bran-mash.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">5</p>
+
+<p>Downstairs Edith was asleep. Edith was David
+Perk’s fourth wife. Edith slept on her right side
+with the right arm stretched out behind her and
+her left hand under her cheek. And after that—what?
+After <i>what</i> what? What did it matter
+what? Here was the ghost. The ghost that Milt
+Neevis had told him about. And Milt had said it
+might be a female!</p>
+
+<p>David felt all queer. He felt as he had felt that
+night in Toronto when he had left Marian, his fifth
+wife. “All alone by the telephone waiting for a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span>ring, a ting-a-ling.” Things hadn’t gone right—for
+him and Marian—not right at all.</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“<i>Higgledy-piggledy, my black hen.</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>She lays eggs for gentlemen.</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Eggs for gentlemen, eh? Lord, what a time!
+But what was a fellow to do? What had she been
+thinking about? What had he—David—been
+thinking about? Chinks jabbering in their laundry.
+Chinks jabbering out in front of their laundry.
+The War. The Red Cross. The Fifth Liberty
+Loan. Was he—David—afraid? Was he—or was
+she—jealous of her? Not by a damn sight. Well,
+he and Irma had certainly messed things up. And
+he smiled to himself. Would the ghost know?
+Would she understand what Irma hadn’t understood?
+What Marian hadn’t understood? What
+Edith—downstairs sleeping this very minute with
+her right arm stretched out behind her—wasn’t understanding?
+How come?</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">6</p>
+
+<p>It was Spring outside and the warm breeze over
+the lilac bushes carried the smell of Ernest Tamson’s
+tannery to David. Did the ghost smell it too?
+“Come in.” David was out of bed now, standing
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span>beside the ghost. She was a woman all right. And
+David was a man. God’s man. Flames in her
+eyes—deep red flames—deep blue flames. The old
+oaken bucket. The iron-bound bucket. The moss-covered
+bucket. Heigh-ho! Old Black Joe!</p>
+
+<p>David was packing his grip. His two military
+brushes. One male. The other female. Male and
+female created He them. Why be ashamed of it?
+The ghost was looking at David with a queer look
+in her eyes. She knows what’s what, old man. Sure
+thing. She wants me to go with her. Why not?
+Male and Female created He them. And the evening
+and the morning were the sixth day. “And
+’twas from Aunt Dinah’s quilting party, I was seeing
+Nelly home.”</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">7</p>
+
+<p>David Perk and the girl ghost were leaving the
+house. He felt her close to him. It was! It
+wasn’t! It was! He knew that she was thinking
+the long, long thoughts of a woman. And he—David—was
+thinking the long, long thoughts of a
+man. They were across Nalbro Harris’ backyard
+now. Now they were on the train for Chicago. Mr.
+and Mrs. David Perk. And back in the gray house
+Edith was sleeping with her right arm stretched out
+behind her and her left hand under her cheek. On
+her right side. Well, toodle-oo!</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="DISCOVERING_WEBER_AND_FIELDS">
+ DISCOVERING WEBER AND FIELDS
+ <br>
+ <i>If There Had Been Erudite Criticism in the Nineties</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>From the lowly precincts of the music halls
+has arisen a new pair of pragmatists. The
+names that appear on the bills are Weber and
+Fields, but the hands are the hands of William
+James. And so and so and so and so.</p>
+
+<p>The method of these zanies is eclectic. From
+Zeno the Stoic they have taken the doctrine of “six-times-six-is-thirty-six.”
+From Anaxagoras the theory
+that the Whole is less than any of its parts. From
+Francis Bacon the denial of Truth as a substantive.
+From L. G. B. three dozen woolen stockings and a
+crate of oranges.</p>
+
+<p>Take for example the scene where <i>Mike</i> and
+<i>Meyer</i> are discussing occupations (in itself pure
+dialectics):</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p><span class="smcap">Meyer</span>: Vot are you doing?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mike</span>: Voiking in a nut factory.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Meyer</span>: Doing vot?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mike</span>: Nutting.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Meyer</span>: Sure—but vot are you <i>doing</i>?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mike</span>: Nutting.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Meyer</span>: I know, but vot voik are you doing?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mike</span>: Nutting, I tole you.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Meyer</span> (<i>poking his finger in Mike’s eye</i>): Ou-u-u-u,
+how I lofe you!</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Here we have the new philosophy of the subconscious,
+the stirrings of a new American humor
+which derives from the modern German school of
+<i>Merkwürdigkeit</i>, or <i>Es-giebt-also-es-ist</i>. In the
+American mind is being born, through the medium
+of the music hall, a consciousness of national social
+satire which bids fair to revolutionize thought on
+this side of the Atlantic. Could a better example
+be found than the following dialogue between these
+two super-clowns in their latest show:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p><span class="smcap">Mike</span> (<i>referring to off-stage noises</i>): A soldier has
+been shot.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Meyer</span>: Vere vos he shot?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mike</span>: In de eggcitement!</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Here, in these words, lies America. The America
+of today, with its flaring gas lights, its thundering
+cable cars, the clatter of its hansoms, and the deafening
+whistle of its peanut stands. The young,
+vibrant spirit of America, locked in the message of
+two clowns! And, with the coming of jazz, twenty
+years from now, we shall see the full expression of
+the young nation’s strivings toward the Greater
+Smooch.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="WATER_FOOTBALL">
+ WATER FOOTBALL
+ <br>
+ <i>Suggestions to the Rules Committee for Making
+ Use of Rain</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Whatever it is that the football rules committee
+does during that week in the spring
+that it spends in New York (and you can’t tell me
+that a group of healthy men can stay in a New York
+hotel room all the time and think of nothing but
+football, football, football) it certainly makes no provision
+for rain on the day of a big game. And anyone
+who has sat through four two-hour periods in a
+downpour will tell you that football, as it is played
+today, is essentially a fair-weather sport.</p>
+
+<p>I had a cousin who went to the Harvard-Yale
+game last year and contracted gelatin-trouble, owing
+to the sizing in his fur coat having soaked through
+into his spine and gone the rounds of his entire
+system. He sat in a large puddle (one of the largest
+in the Yale Bowl, he tells me, and you know what a
+big place the Yale Bowl is) and along about six
+o’clock, on the way home in the machine, he felt a
+queer sort of spinal disintegration. “As if I were
+going to pieces,” is the way he expressed it. He
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>thought nothing of it until his arms and legs began
+to come off and then he went somewhere and lay
+down. Whatever it was that finally became of him,
+the point is that watching football in the rain is no
+darned fun and the least that the rules committee
+can do is to make some regulations covering a situation
+that so frequently exists.</p>
+
+<p>For instance, when it is found that the field is
+going to be knee-deep in mud and water, there ought
+to be some way of changing the nature of the game
+entirely, so that the very elements which would,
+under the old rules, work toward a spoiling of the
+game, might be turned into favorable factors for all
+concerned.</p>
+
+<p>Thus we might have a play (to be called “left
+half around the sandbar”) in which, at the signal,
+the left halfback takes the ball from the quarter,
+tosses it into a dory, shoves off, and rows around
+right end. His interference, also in dories, could
+ward off tacklers by splashing water in their faces,
+use of the oars as clubs to be called illegal. To meet
+this play, it would be the function of the defensive
+backs to row through and, if possible, force the man
+with the ball in his boat to row onto a sandbar or
+else create such a wash that it upsets him.</p>
+
+<p>Or, there might be an entirely different ball used
+during a rain storm—a large, red rubber ball such as
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span>some nuisance always has at the beach in the summer.
+This could be tossed back and forth, the players
+screaming with excitement the while, until one
+side or the other gets tired. With this type of ball,
+a very neat trick play could be utilized, the “U-56,
+or concealed ball play” in which the quarterback,
+immediately on receiving the pass, would shove the
+ball under the surface of the water, sit on it, and
+paddle himself around left end or through left tackle,
+if a hole could be opened up for him. The fun here
+would be for the defense to drown the runner.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, the rain is not always sufficiently heavy
+to make the water deep enough for the two plays
+outlined above. Sometimes it merely drizzles and
+there is nothing but mud on the field. This would
+call for an entirely new list of plays. Under these
+conditions, the old Carlisle Indian trick could be
+revived, each of the backs scooping up an armful of
+mud and running with it, the defense being unable to
+tell in which armful the ball is hidden. Or, as an
+alternate play, the backfield could daub their faces
+with mud to look like a negro quartette and could
+start humming old plantation melodies. Then, while
+the defense stopped and listened, enchanted, the
+right end could pick up the leather and slide down
+the field with it.</p>
+
+<p>The big spectacular play, however, for a muddy
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span>day is the “sappers’ wedge” or “East Side subway.”
+In this trick, the linemen throw up breastworks of
+mud in front of the line of scrimmage. When the
+ball is put into play, the backs burrow down into the
+soft ground and tunnel themselves under the line,
+digging out on the other side for a gain of perhaps
+five yards. This play can be used effectively when
+within five yards of the goal, as the back carrying
+the ball has made, <i>ipso facto</i>, a touchdown.</p>
+
+<p>This outline of aquatic football has, however, not
+taken the spectators into account. Who ever does?
+But there they are, millions and millions of them,
+and something must be done for <i>them</i> on a rainy day.</p>
+
+<p>Since there is always someone in front of you who
+has an umbrella up, you might as well give up any
+idea you may have had of watching the game. Don’t
+torture yourself by trying to peek around the umbrella,
+catching sight of the beginning of a play and
+never knowing until you hear the cheering whether
+or not it succeeded. In this way lies madness. Just
+give up trying to spy on the field maneuvers and get
+your neighbors to enter into a few little games with
+you to pass the time away.</p>
+
+<p>There is, for example, the game of “Neck Cisterns.”
+In this game, all the people sitting in a row
+open out the collars of their coats in the back, sitting
+hunched forward so as to make the opening as big
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span>as possible. The idea is to see who can catch the
+most rain water down the back of the neck. Drippings
+from an umbrella are not allowed. The water
+must come directly down and into the collar. The
+winner is the one whose collar runs over first.</p>
+
+<p>This may seem like a very simple game to play,
+and one dependent entirely on the capacity of the
+coat of the contestant. This is not so. A great deal
+of skill can be brought into playing it by adjusting
+the angle of the body to meet the angle of the rain
+at a point where the maximum amount of water will
+drive into the collar. An old hand at “Neck Cisterns”
+can fill his coat up to overflowing before a
+beginner has got even his shoulder blades wet.</p>
+
+<p>Another similar game is that of “Brimming.” The
+players in this turn the brims of their hats up so as
+to catch the rain water. At a given signal, the brims
+are suddenly turned down and the heads thrust forward,
+the idea being to project the deluge of water
+as far out as possible. The one hitting the person
+farthest in front wins and is the champion “brimmer”
+of the section. During the final period of the
+football game, the champion “brimmers” from each
+section meet and play off the finals.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, one of the chief features of watching a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[Pg 155]</span>
+contest in the rain is the wet seat. You hop up in
+your excitement at seeing the boys pull off a forward
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[Pg 156]</span>pass (which is grounded) and, by the time you have
+got around to sitting down again, the place which
+you have been keeping dry up until the forward pass
+is now a tiny lily pond with swan boats in it. Into
+this you sink back exhausted from your cheering,
+and in it you sit for the rest of the game while,
+starting from the pond as a base, a series of chills
+race up your spine to a spot directly behind your
+ears, where they break ranks.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp54" id="p155" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p155.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>The one hitting the person farthest in front wins.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>One of the most interesting by-products of watching
+a football game in the rain occurred in Lawrence,
+Massachusetts, in 1919. It had rained all during
+the first three periods of the game and everyone was
+sitting in individual pools, giving the matter no more
+thought. Several hundred of them had been fighting
+a brave fight against the cold and damp by means of
+that greatest little cold and damp fighter of them all,
+the pocket flask, and these brothers didn’t even <i>know</i>
+that they were sitting in water. They knew that
+they were sitting pretty and it didn’t make any difference
+to them where. Suddenly, at the beginning
+of the fourth period, the weather changed and grew
+much colder. There was a great deal of time out
+and dull playing, and no one felt called upon to hop
+up for quite some time. As a matter of fact, the
+game ended with the ball in mid-field and a lot of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>substitutes running in to get their letter. When the
+whistle blew, the fans started to get up to go home,
+but found that they were frozen to the stands. The
+entire Lawrence fire department came with axes and
+worked until eleven that night chopping the people
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>out. A couple of old grads, who had very poor seats
+down in the corner behind the goal posts, were overlooked
+and had to stay there until spring.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp69" id="p157" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p157.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>... found they were frozen to the stands.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>In order to avoid a recurrence of this unfortunate
+accident, and in general to keep the seats dry, it
+has been suggested that the rules committee make it
+illegal for any spectator to jump to his feet during
+a game. This would apply even when two rival
+rooters started a fist fight in the stand. Coincident
+with the passage of this rule, similar prohibitions
+might be put on a man’s falling when dropped out
+of a window, and on the earth’s rotating on its
+axis.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="MORE_SONGS_FOR_MELLER">
+ MORE SONGS FOR MELLER
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>As Señorita Raquel Meller sings entirely in
+Spanish, it is again explained, the management
+prints little synopses of the songs on the program,
+telling what each is all about and why she is behaving
+the way she is. They make delightful reading
+during those periods when Señorita Meller is changing
+mantillas, and, in case she should run out of
+songs before she runs out of mantillas, we offer a
+few new synopses for her repertoire.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">(1) <span class="smcap">¿Voy Bien?</span></p>
+
+<p class="ph4">(AM I GOING IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION?)</p>
+
+<p>When the acorns begin dropping in Spain there is
+an old legend that for every acorn which drops there
+is a baby born in Valencia. This is so silly that no
+one pays any attention to it now, not even the gamekeeper’s
+daughter, who would pay attention to anything.
+She goes from house to house, ringing doorbells
+and then running away. She hopes that some
+day she will ring the right doorbell and will trip
+and fall, so that Prince Charming will catch her.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span>So far, no one has even come to the door. Poor
+Pepita! if that is her name.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">(2) <span class="smcap">Camisetas de Flanela</span></p>
+
+<p class="ph4">(FLANNEL VESTS)</p>
+
+<p>Princess Rosamonda goes nightly to the Puerta
+del Sol to see if the early morning edition of the
+papers is out yet. If it isn’t she hangs around humming
+to herself. If it is, she hangs around humming
+just the same. One night she encounters a young
+matador who is returning from dancing school. The
+finches are singing and there is Love in the air.
+Princess Rosamonda ends up in the Police Station.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">(3) <span class="smcap">La Guia</span></p>
+
+<p class="ph4">(THE TIME-TABLE)</p>
+
+<p>It is the day of the bull fight in Madrid. Everyone
+is cock-eyed. The bull has slipped out by the
+back entrance to the arena and has gone home, disgusted.
+Nobody notices that the bull has gone except
+Nina, a peasant girl who has come to town
+that day to sell her father. She looks with horror
+at the place in the Royal Box where the bull ought
+to be sitting and sees there instead her algebra
+teacher whom she had told that she was staying at
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span>home on account of a sick headache. You can imagine
+her feelings!</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">(4) <span class="smcap">No Puedo Comer Eso</span></p>
+
+<p class="ph4">(I CAN NOT EAT THAT!)</p>
+
+<p>A merry song of the Alhambra—of the Alhambra
+in the moonlight—of a girl who danced over the wall
+and sprained her ankle. Lititia is the ward of
+grouchy old Pampino, President of the First National
+Banco. She has never been allowed further
+away than the edge of the piazza because she teases
+people so. Her lover has come to see her and finds
+that she is fast asleep. He considers that for once
+he has the breaks, and tiptoes away without waking
+her up. Along about eleven o’clock she awakes, and
+is sore as all get-out.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">(5) <span class="smcap">La Lavandera</span></p>
+
+<p class="ph4">(THE LAUNDRYMAN)</p>
+
+<p>A coquette, pretending to be very angry, bites off
+the hand of her lover up to the wrist. Ah, naughty
+Cirinda! Such antics! However does she think she
+can do her lessons if she gives up all her time to
+love-making? But Cirinda does not care. Heedless,
+heedless Cirinda!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">(6) <span class="smcap">Abra Vd. Esa Ventana</span></p>
+
+<p class="ph4">(OPEN THAT WINDOW)</p>
+
+<p>The lament of a mother whose oldest son is too
+young to vote. She walks the streets singing: “My
+son can not vote! My son is not old enough!”
+There seems to be nothing that can be done about it.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="FASCINATING_CRIMES_3">
+ FASCINATING CRIMES
+ <br>
+ <i>IV. The Lynn Horse-Car Murders</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Early in the morning of August 7th, 1896, a
+laborer named George Raccid, while passing
+the old street-car barns at Fleeming and Main
+Streets, Lynn, Massachusetts, noticed a crowd of
+conductors and drivers (horse-cars were all the rage
+in 1896) standing about a car in the doorway to the
+barn. Mr. Raccid was too hurried to stop and see
+what the excitement was, and so it was not until
+the following Wednesday, when the bi-weekly paper
+came out, that he learned that a murder had been
+committed in the car-barn. And at this point, Mr.
+Raccid drops out of our story.</p>
+
+<p>The murder in question was a particularly odd
+one. In the first place, it was the victim who did
+the killing. And in the second, the killing occurred
+in a horse-car, an odd conveyance at best. And
+finally, the murderer had sought to conceal his handiwork
+by cramming his victim into the little stove in
+the middle of the car, a feat practically impossible
+without the aid of scissors and a good eye for
+snipping.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span></p>
+
+<p>The horse-car in which the murder occurred was
+one of the older types, even for a horse-car. It was
+known in the trade as one of the “chummy roadster”
+models and was operated by one man only. This
+man drove the horses, stoked the fire, and collected
+the fares. He also held the flooring of the car together
+with one foot braced against a “master”
+plank. On his day off he read quite a lot.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp100" id="p164" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p164.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>The murder car and its driver, Swelf Yoffsen.</p>
+ <p>
+ —<i>Courtesy of John Held, Jr., and Life.</i></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>The driver of the murder-car was named Swelf
+Yoffsen, a Swedish murder-car driver. He had come
+to this country four years before, but, not liking it
+here, had returned to Sweden. It is not known how
+he happened to be back in Lynn at this late date.</p>
+
+<p>If we have neglected to state the name of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span>victim thus far, it is because nobody seemed able to
+identify him. Some said that he was Charlie Ross,
+who had disappeared shortly before. Others (the
+witty ones) said it was Lon Chaney. A vote taken
+among all those present designated him as the one
+least likely to succeed.</p>
+
+<p>An interesting feature of this crime was that it
+was the sixth of a series of similar crimes, all of
+which had occurred in Swelf Yoffsen’s horse-car.
+In the other five cases, the victims had been found
+inadequately packed in the stove at the end of the
+run, but as Yoffsen, on being questioned, had denied
+all knowledge of how they got there, the matter had
+been dropped. After the discovery of the sixth
+murder, however, Yoffsen was held on a technical
+charge of homicide.</p>
+
+<p>The trial was one of the social events of the
+Lynn Mi-Careme season. Yoffsen, on the stand,
+admitted that the victim was a passenger in his car;
+in fact, that he was the only passenger. He had got
+on at the end of the line and had tried to induce
+Yoffsen to keep on going in the same direction, even
+though the tracks stopped there. He wanted to see
+a man in Maine, he had said. But Yoffsen, according
+to his own story, had refused and had
+turned his horses around and started for Lynn again.
+The next he saw of him, people were trying to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span>get him out of the stove. It was Yoffsen’s theory
+that the man, in an attempt to get warm, had tried
+to crowd his way into the stove and had smothered.
+On being reminded that the affair took place during
+a very hot week in August, Yoffsen said that
+no matter how hot it got during the day in Lynn,
+the nights were always cool.</p>
+
+<p>Attorney Hammis, for the State, traced the movements
+of Yoffsen on the morning of the murder and
+said that they checked up with his movements on
+the occasions of the five other murders. He showed
+that Yoffsen, on each occasion, had stopped the
+horse-car at a particularly lonely spot and asked the
+occupants if they minded making a little detour, as
+there was a bad stretch of track ahead. He had
+then driven his horses across a cornfield and up a
+nearby hill on the top of which, in the midst of a
+clump of bayberry bushes, stood a deserted house.
+He pointed out that on four out of the six occasions
+Yoffsen had driven his horses right into the house
+and asked the passengers (when there were any,
+other than his victim) if they would step into the
+front room for a few minutes, giving them some
+magazines to read while they waited. According to
+the testimony of seven of these passengers, after
+about fifteen minutes Yoffsen had appeared and
+yelled “All aboard!” in a cheery voice and everyone
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span>had piled back into the horse-car and away they had
+gone, over the cornfield and down the hill to Lynn.
+It was noted that on each occasion, one of the passengers
+was missing, and that, oddly enough, this
+very passenger was always the one to be found in
+the stove on the way back.</p>
+
+<p>It was the State’s contention that Yoffsen killed
+his victims for their insurance, <i>which is double when
+the deceased has met his death in a common carrier</i>.</p>
+
+<p>On April 14th, the ninth day of the trial, the jury
+went out and shortly after asked for a drink of
+water. After eighteen hours of deliberation they returned
+with a verdict of guilty, but added that, as it
+was not sure whether Yoffsen had actually killed his
+victims <i>in</i> the car or had killed them outside and
+<i>then</i> stuffed them in the stove, he was not entitled to
+the double insurance.</p>
+
+<p>When they went to inform Yoffsen of the verdict,
+he was nowhere to be found.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_LIFE_POLAR_EXPEDITION_2">
+ THE <i>LIFE</i> POLAR EXPEDITION
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+<p> <i>En route with “Life’s” Bicycle Polar Expedition.—May 24.</i></p>
+
+<p>We chose this route northward, through Mt. Vernon,
+Tuckahoe and Scarsdale, because we figured out
+that it might be pleasant to stop off at my house in
+Scarsdale for maybe a bite to eat, or, in case there
+was not time for that, at any rate to let the boys see
+our bicycles. But I guess now that we would have
+done better to take the Hudson River road.</p>
+
+<p>We reached Scarsdale late yesterday afternoon,
+intending to put in at my side-yard, get a drink
+of cool water and perhaps a pocketful of Rosa’s
+cookies, show my two boys how the gyro-balancer
+works, and then push on to White Plains for the
+night. The cool-water-and-cookies part of the plan
+worked out to the dot, but in demonstrating the
+gyro-balancer to the boys we ran into a snag which
+has held us up for an entire day.</p>
+
+<p>It was really due to the kind-heartedness of Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly that the whole thing happened.
+He insisted on removing his gyro-balancer
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span>from the frame of his “bike” in order to show
+Nathaniel, my older boy, just how it worked, and,
+as he did so, he laid the loose nuts on a piece of
+paper on the ground. Robert, my younger boy (who
+is only six and so mustn’t be blamed too much),
+claims that he didn’t go near the paper or the nuts.
+And he probably doesn’t realize that he did. But
+one of the nuts was found over a nail on a boat that
+he was working on a few feet away, and the other
+had disappeared completely.</p>
+
+<p>A search was immediately instituted which covered
+every square inch of the lawn and extended into
+the street—those things roll so. But when darkness
+came we were no nearer to finding it than we had
+been at the beginning, and it was necessary to telephone
+back into New York for an extra nut, which
+they said they would send out the first thing in the
+morning. It is now 4:17 in the afternoon and the
+man hasn’t come yet. We are very discouraged.</p>
+
+<p>It was while we were searching for the nut that a
+neighbor came up and asked us if we had heard
+anything about the Byrd expedition’s having flown
+over the Pole. I got him aside out of earshot of
+the other men and asked him if he was sure. He
+said no, but that he had seen a cartoon in some paper
+which seemed to have reference to a successful
+flight by Byrd. I, however, laughed his fears away
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span>and went back to the search. Even if Byrd <i>does</i>
+beat us to it, his victory will have been by flying-machine,
+while ours will be by bicycle—two entirely
+different things.</p>
+
+<p>The trip from Mt. Vernon to Scarsdale was one
+of great beauty and was accomplished without a
+mishap. The route led along the Bronx River Parkway,
+through woods and across streams, which made
+up in a way for the rough time we had in the traffic
+in New York City.</p>
+
+<p>While passing through Tuckahoe, Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly saw a scarlet tanager perched on a
+bush overhanging the stream. Thinking that it
+might be interesting to have it for our collection of
+flora and fauna which we are making for the
+Museum, we dismounted and crept up very quietly
+beside it, thinking to bag it before it could collect
+its wits. But it heard us coming and flew away.</p>
+
+<p>There is a particularly odd family of ferns which
+grows along the bank of the Bronx River, and, ferns
+not being as agile as birds, we were able to pick
+great quantities of it. I wish that some of my
+readers could tell me what the name of it is. It is
+green, like other ferns, but it seems to have a sort
+of flower which looks like a carnation. The blossom
+was still in bud and so we were unable to tell exactly
+what it does look like, but I should say that a carnation
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span>would just about fit it. Any naturalist who
+happens to have run across this fern, and who knows
+what it is, would relieve our minds considerably if
+he, or she, would write to the <i>Life</i> Polar Expedition,
+General Delivery, White Plains, N. Y., and tell us.
+Just a regular fern, with a carnation blossom.</p>
+
+<p>We are now going out into the side-yard again
+with a flashlight to take another look for the missing
+nut, as evidently the man from town isn’t going to
+bring out that extra one today, and we <i>must</i> get
+started early tomorrow morning.</p>
+
+<p>Every cloud, they say, has a silver lining, and, as
+a result of our being held up here in Scarsdale like
+this, we have been able to have some of Rosa’s excellent
+baked-beans. I find it almost impossible to
+get <i>real</i> New England baked-beans in this region,
+unless you tell someone just how they should be
+done. In the first place, it must be a California
+pea-bean that is used, and these should be put to
+soak the night before and then baked in a slow fire
+all the next day. If we had got away when we
+expected, the beans would not have been ready. So
+perhaps we were a little harsh with Bobbie.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="AN_INTERVIEW_WITH_THE_COUNTESS">
+ AN INTERVIEW WITH THE COUNTESS
+ KAROLYI
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>An interview with Countess Karolyi was very
+difficult to get, as she is not allowed to enter
+this country and I am not allowed to leave it. So
+we met at the drug store on the corner.</p>
+
+<p>The Countess being Hungarian, it seemed that
+the least I could do would be to conduct the interview
+in her native tongue. It certainly wasn’t the
+<i>best</i> I could do.</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Hogy szercted americat?</i>” I began, as a feeler.
+It wasn’t much, as feelers go, but I am not very
+strong.</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Közönöm nomigon nagyon</i>,” she replied, blushing
+prettily. I had not looked for this frankness.
+I glanced out over the blue Mediterranean, obviously
+waiting for her to break the silence. I had not long
+to wait.</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Asz önök epülitegi igon maghsak</i>,” she said, so
+low that I could hardly hear her. It was like a
+bombshell.</p>
+
+<p>I wheeled and confronted her.</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Gindolja hogy a Ni holgye ink szójeck talán?</i>”
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span>The situation demanded it. I have no apologies to
+offer.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately for the interview, the bell in the
+monastery tolled eleven at just this moment. There
+was one extra stroke—for the war tax.</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Hánz ora?</i>” I asked, more for something to say
+than anything else.</p>
+
+<p>Countess Karolyi glanced over her shoulder apprehensively.
+I had evidently confused her.</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Tisz peresel mult öt</i>,” was all that she could
+reply. But it was enough. I had fainted.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mind if we speak English from now on?”
+she said when I had opened my eyes. “You speak
+Hungarian so fast that it is difficult to follow you.”</p>
+
+<p>I smiled. “Look!” I said, pointing to the courtyard
+below. They were changing the guard, a ceremony
+which consisted of putting a false beard and
+blue glasses on the watchman. It certainly changed
+him, except that his nose gave him away.</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Maqyen szcretez Te enzom?</i>” I asked. It was
+a silly thing to say, but it seemed pat at the moment.
+Now I realize that it was mike.</p>
+
+<p>Her reply was characteristic. “<i>Nom magyen</i>,”
+she said and hid her face.</p>
+
+<p>We reached home at eight o’clock, tired but
+happy, and all agreed that it had been the most
+interesting hike the Club had taken thus far.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_BOYS_CAMP_BUSINESS">
+ THE BOYS’ CAMP BUSINESS
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>There seems to be an idea prevalent among
+parents that a good way to solve the summer
+problem for the boy is to send him to a boys’ camp.
+At any rate, the idea seems to be prevalent in the
+advertising pages of the magazines.</p>
+
+<p>If all the summer camps for boys and girls turn
+out the sterling citizens-in-embryo that they claim to
+do, the future of this country is as safe as if it were
+in the hands of a governing board consisting of the
+Twelve Apostles. From the folders and advertisements,
+we learn that “Camp Womagansett—in the
+foothills of the White Mountains” sends yearly into
+the world a bevy of “strong, manly boys, ready for
+the duties of citizenship and equipped to face life
+with a clear eye and a keen mind.” It doesn’t say
+anything about their digestions, but I suppose they
+are in tiptop shape, too.</p>
+
+<p>The outlook for the next generation of mothers is
+no less dazzling. “Camp Wawilla for Girls,” we
+learn, pays particular attention to the spiritual development
+of Tomorrow’s Women and compared to
+the civic activities of the majority of alumnæ of
+Wawilla, those of Florence Nightingale or Frances
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a><a id="Page_176"></a>[Pg 176]</span>Willard would have to be listed under the head of
+“Junior Girls’ Work.”</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp56" id="p175" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p175.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>Holding you under water until you are as good as drowned.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>Now this is all very splendid, and it is comforting
+to think that when every boy and girl goes to
+Womagansett or Wawilla there will be no more
+Younger Generation problem and probably no crime
+waves worth mentioning. But there are several
+other features that go hand in hand with sending the
+boy to camp which I would like to take up from the
+parents’ point of view, if I may. I will limit myself
+to twenty minutes.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, when your boy comes home from
+camp he is what is known in the circular as “manly
+and independent.” This means that when you go
+swimming with him he pushes you off the raft and
+jumps on your shoulders, holding you under water
+until you are as good as drowned—better, in fact.
+Before he went to camp, you used to take a kindly
+interest in his swimming and tell him to “take your
+time, take it easy,” with a feeling of superiority
+which, while it may have had no foundation in your
+own natatorial prowess, nevertheless was one of the
+few points of pride left to you in your obese middle-age.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[Pg 177]</span>
+After watching one of those brown heroes in
+one-piece suits and rubber helmets dive off a tower
+and swim under water to the raft and back, there
+was a sort of balm in being able to turn to your son
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[Pg 178]</span>and show him how to do the crawl stroke, even
+though you yourself weren’t one of the seven foremost
+crawl experts in the country. You could do it
+better than your son could, and that was something.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp49" id="p177" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p177.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>“Now watch Daddy. See? Hands like this, bend your
+ knees. See?”</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>It was also very comforting to be able to stand on
+the springboard and say: “Now watch Daddy. See?
+Hands like this, bend your knees. See?” The fact
+that such exhibitions usually culminated in your
+landing heavily on the area bounded by the knees
+and the chest was embarrassing, perhaps, but at that
+you weren’t quite so bad as the boy when he tried
+the same thing.</p>
+
+<p>But after a summer at camp, the “manly, independent”
+boy comes back and makes you look like
+Horace Greeley in his later years. “Do this one,
+Dad!” he says, turning a double flip off the springboard
+and cutting into the water like a knife blade.
+If you try it, you sprain your back. If you don’t
+try it, your self-respect and prestige are shattered.
+The best thing to do is not to hear him. You can do
+this by disappearing under the surface every time it
+looks as if he were going to pull a new one. After
+a while, however, this ruse gets you pretty soggy
+and waterlogged and you might better just go in and
+get dressed as rapidly as possible.</p>
+
+<p>The worst phase of this new-found “independence”
+is the romping instinct that seems to be developed
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>to a high state of obnoxiousness at all boys’
+camps. I went to camp when I was a boy, but I
+don’t remember being as unpleasant about my fun
+as boys today seem to be. I have done many mean
+things in my time. I have tortured flies and kicked
+crutches out from under cripples’ arms. But I have
+never, so help me, Confucius, pushed anybody off
+a raft or come up behind anyone in the water and
+jumped up on his shoulders. And I don’t think that
+Lincoln ever did, either.</p>
+
+<p>There is evidently a course in raft pushing and
+back jumping in boys’ camps today. Those photographs
+that you see in the camp advertisements, if
+you examine them closely, will disclose, in nine cases
+out of ten, a lot of boys pushing each other off rafts.
+You can’t see the ones who are jumping on others’
+shoulders, as they are under water. But I want to
+serve notice right now that the next boy who pushes
+me off a raft when I am not looking, or tries to play
+leapfrog over me in ten feet of water, is going to be
+made practically useless as Tomorrow’s Citizen, and
+I am going to do it myself, too. If it happens to be
+my own son, it will just make the affair the sadder.</p>
+
+<p>Another thing that these manly boys learn at camp
+is a savage habit of getting up at sunrise. The normal,
+healthy boy should be a very late sleeper. Who
+does not remember in his own normal, healthy boyhood
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>having to be called three, four, or even five
+times in the morning before it seemed sensible to get
+up? One of the happiest memories of childhood is
+that of the maternal voice calling up from downstairs,
+fading away into silence, and the realization
+that it would be possibly fifteen minutes before it
+called again.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp100" id="p180" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p180.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>You’d be surprised at the sound two bicycle wheels can make
+ on a gravel path.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>All this is denied to the boy who goes to a summer
+camp. When he comes home, he is so steeped in the
+pernicious practice of early rising that he can’t shake
+it off. Along about six o’clock in the morning he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>begins dropping shoes and fixing up a new stand for
+the radio in his room. Then he goes out into the
+back yard and practices tennis shots up against the
+house. Then he runs over a few whistling arrangements
+of popular songs and rides his bicycle up and
+down the gravel path. You would be surprised at
+the sound two bicycle wheels can make on a gravel
+path at six-thirty in the morning. A forest fire
+might make the same crackling sound, but you
+probably wouldn’t be having a forest fire out in
+your yard at six-thirty in the morning. Not if you
+had any sense, you wouldn’t.</p>
+
+<p>Just what the boys do at camp when they get up
+at six is a mystery. They seem to have some sort of
+setting-up exercises and a swim—more pushing each
+other off the raft—but they could do that by getting
+up at eight and still have a good long day ahead of
+them. I never knew anyone yet who got up at six
+who did anything more useful between that time and
+breakfast than banging a tennis ball up against the
+side of the house, waiting for the civilized members
+of the party to get up. We have to do enough waiting
+in this life without getting up early to wait for
+breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>Next summer I have a good mind to run a boys’
+camp of my own. It will be on Lake Chabonagogchabonagogchabonagungamog—yes,
+there is, too, in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span>Webster, Massachusetts—and I will call it Camp
+Chabonagogchabonagogchabonagungamog for Manly
+Boys. And by the word “manly,” I will mean “like
+men.” In other words, everyone shall sleep just as
+long as he wants, and when he does get up there will
+be no depleting “setting-up” exercises. The day will
+be spent just as the individual camper gosh-darned
+pleases. No organized “hikes”—I’d like a word on
+the “hike” problem some day, too—no camp spirit,
+no talk about Tomorrow’s Manhood, and <i>no pushing
+people off rafts</i>.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="AT_LAST_A_SUBSTITUTE_FOR_SNOW">
+ AT LAST A SUBSTITUTE FOR SNOW
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>While rummaging through my desk-drawer
+the other night I came upon a lot of old
+snow. I do not know how long it had been there.
+Possibly it was a memento of some college prank
+long forgotten. But it suddenly struck me what a
+funny thing snow is, in a way, and how little need
+there really is for it in the world.</p>
+
+<p>And then I said to myself, “I wonder if it would
+not be possible to work up some sort of mock snow,
+a substitute which would satisfy the snow people
+and yet cause just as much trouble as real snow.”
+And that, my dears, is how I came to invent “Sno.”</p>
+
+<p>As you know, real snow is a compound of hydrogen,
+oxygen, soot, and some bleaching agent. (There
+is a good bleaching agent who has an office in Room
+476, Mechanics’ Bank Building. He was formerly
+General Passenger Agent for the Boston and Maine,
+but decided that bleaching was more fun. As a
+matter of fact, his name is A. E. Roff, or some such
+thing.)</p>
+
+<p>Again, as you know, real snow is formed by the
+passage of clouds through pockets of air which are
+lighter than the air itself, if such a phenomenon
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>were possible. That is to say, these clouds (A)
+passing through these air-pockets (C) create a certain
+atmospheric condition known as a “French
+vacuum.” This, in turn, creates a certain amount of
+ill-feeling, and the result is what we call “snow,”
+or, more often, what we call “this lousy snow.”</p>
+
+<p>Now in figuring out what I would have to do to
+concoct a mock snow, it was necessary to run over
+in my mind the qualities of snow as we know it.
+What are the characteristic functions of snow?</p>
+
+<p>Well, first, to block traffic. Any adequate substitute
+for snow must be of such a nature that it can
+be applied to the streets of a city in such a way as
+to tie up all vehicular movement for at least two
+days. “This,” I thought, “requires distribution.”
+Our new snow must be easily and quickly distributed
+to all parts of town. This will necessitate trucks,
+and trucks will necessitate the employment of drivers.
+<i>Now</i>, if the weather is cold (and what good is
+snow unless the weather is cold enough to make it
+uncomfortable?) these drivers (B) will have to have
+mittens. So mittens are the first thing that we must
+get in the way of equipment.... And I took a
+piece of paper and wrote down “Mittens.” This I
+crossed out and in its place I wrote “Mittens” again.
+So far, so good.</p>
+
+<p>Next, one of the chief functions of real snow is to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span>get up in under the cuffs to your sleeves and down
+inside the collar to your overcoat. Here was a
+tough one! How to work up something which could
+be placed up the sleeves and inside the overcoat-collars
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span>of pedestrians without causing them the inconvenience
+of stopping and helping the process.
+For no substitute for snow could ever be popular
+which called for any effort on the part of the public.
+The public wants all the advantages of a thing. Oh,
+yes! But it doesn’t want to go to any trouble to
+get them. Oh, no! No trouble! If it is going to
+have snow up its sleeves and in its collars, it wants
+it put there while it is walking along the street, and
+no stopping to unbutton or roll back.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp61" id="p185" style="max-width: 41.3125em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p185.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>... hire boys to run along beside people to tuck the substitute
+ in their sleeves.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>So it was evident that, if this function of snow
+was to be imitated, it would be necessary to hire
+boys to run along beside people and tuck the substitute
+in their sleeves and collars as they walked. One
+boy could perhaps tuck two hundred handsful in an
+afternoon, and when you figure out the number of
+people abroad on a good snowy afternoon, you will
+realize the enormous number of boys it would take
+to do the job. Girls would be even worse, because
+they would stop to talk with people.</p>
+
+<p>The problem of distribution thus unsuccessfully
+met with, the next thing was to decide what other
+attribute our “Sno” should have that would give it
+a place in the hearts of millions of snow-lovers
+throughout the country. Someone suggested “wetness”
+and in half a second the cry had been taken
+up in all corners of the conference-room (for we
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>were in conference by now), “Wetness! Wetness!
+Our ‘Sno’ must be wet!”</p>
+
+<p>It was decided that the place in which we should
+have to simulate wetness the most was under bedroom
+windows. Who does not remember getting up
+to shut the bedroom windows and stepping into a
+generous assortment of snow-flakes in their prettiest
+form of disintegration—water? Or even into a
+drift ’way, ’way out in the middle of the room right
+where Daddy could slip in it on his way to and from
+the office? This is perhaps the most difficult feature
+of snow to imitate—this bedroom drifting, and
+if, in addition to getting our composition snow into
+bedroom windows, we could manage some appliance
+whereby it could be shot into the folds of whatever
+underclothing might be lying on the chair nearest
+the window, then indeed might we cry “Eureka!”</p>
+
+<p>The way in which we decided on the name “Sno”
+for our product would make a story all in itself.
+The copyright laws forbid one from naming anything
+“Snow” or “Gold” or “Rolls-Royce,” or any noun.
+This law was passed by some fanatics who took advantage
+of our boys being away at war to plunge
+the country into an orgy of blue laws. However, we
+have no other curse than to abide by the code as it
+stands.</p>
+
+<p>We therefore decided that, by dropping the <i>W</i>,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span>we could make a word which would sound almost
+like the real word and yet evade the technical provisions
+of the law. Some of the backers held out
+for a dressier-sounding name, like “Flakies” or
+“Lumpps,” but our advertising man, who specializes
+on Consumer Light Refractions, told us that the
+effect of a word like “Sno” on the eye of the reader
+would telegraph a more favorable message to his
+brain than that of a longer word ending in “ies” or
+“umpps.” Look at the word “Ford,” for instance.
+The success of the Ford product is almost entirely
+due to the favorable light refractions of the name on
+the consumer’s retina.</p>
+
+<p>This decided us on the trade-name “Sno” and left
+nothing more for us to do but work out the actual
+physical make-up of the product and the sort of
+package to put it out in. The package is also an
+important feature of any merchandising scheme, and
+it was decided that a miniature snow-show would be
+appropriate and rather smart for our particular article.
+If we could work out some way in which
+“Sno” could be wrapped up in a six-inch snow-shoe
+it would not only give the dealer something snappy
+to display, but would make a nice-looking package
+for the consumer to take home—nicer-looking than
+a snootful of scotch, for example. You would be
+surprised, however, to find how difficult it is to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>wrap up a unit of imitation snow in a snow-shoe,
+unless you put them both in a box together.</p>
+
+<p>And now all that remains to divulge is the physical
+make-up of “Sno.” That is what we are working on
+now.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_NEW_WING">
+ THE NEW WING
+ <br>
+ (<i>Or That Sagredo Bed</i>)
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Although the new wing of the Metropolitan
+Museum of Art (“Wing K,” if that makes it
+any easier for you) was opened on April 5th, I have
+only just this week got around to inspecting it.
+I’m sorry.</p>
+
+<p>“Wing K” has, since 1916, been empty, and, although
+passers-by late at night have often reported
+strange noises coming from its vast recesses, the
+Museum officials stubbornly maintain that it has
+been put to absolutely no use at all. This sounds a
+little fishy to me, however, and if those old walls
+could talk we might learn a little something more
+about where Mr. Munsey’s money went. It is said
+that only a couple of hundred dollars remain of all
+the millions that he bequeathed to the Museum.
+Money doesn’t <i>fly</i> away, you know.</p>
+
+<p>At any rate, “Wing K” is full now and it takes a
+good twenty minutes of fast walking to see everything
+in it. This does not include the time taken
+up in getting lost or in walking through the same
+hall twice.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span></p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp49" id="p191" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p191.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>As Mr. MacGreggor got tired and cross he began sniveling.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span></p>
+
+<p>My inspection was somewhat hampered by having
+Mr. Charles MacGreggor along with me. Mr. MacGreggor
+kept constantly asking to see Dr. Crippen.
+“I want to see Dr. Crippen,” he would say, or
+“Where is Dr. Crippen?” I told him that the waxworks
+were in another wing of the Museum, but
+someone had told him that a replica of Dr. Crippen
+was to be found in “Wing K” and nothing would do
+but he must see it. Along toward the end, as Mr.
+MacGreggor got tired and cross, he began sniveling
+and crying, “I want to see Dr. Crippen” so loudly
+that an attendant put us out. So we probably
+missed some of the funniest parts of the exhibit. If
+you want me to I will go up again sometime without
+Mr. MacGreggor. Or maybe Dr. Crippen <i>is</i> there,
+after all.</p>
+
+<p>The feature of the new wing is, of course, the
+Bedroom from the Palazzo Sagredo at Venice. The
+best way that I can describe it is to say that it is
+fully twice the size of our guest room in Scarsdale,
+and fifty per cent fancier. The chief point in favor
+of our guest room in Scarsdale is that there isn’t a
+whole troop of people strolling through it at all hours
+of the day, peeking under the bed and asking questions
+about it. If you want to sleep after nine in the
+morning in Scarsdale you can do it without being
+made an exhibition of. My two little boys may
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span>romp into the room three or four times during the
+morning to show you an engine or a snake, but all
+that you have to do is to tell them to get the hell
+out or you will tell me on them.</p>
+
+<p>The owner of the Palazzo Sagredo was a great
+cupid fancier. Over the doorway to the alcove
+where the bed is, there are over a dozen great, big
+cupids stuck on the wall, like mosquitoes in a summer
+hotel. They are heavy, hulking things and seem
+to have fulfilled no good purpose except possibly to
+confuse any guest who may have retired to the fancy
+bed with a snootful of good red Sagredo wine. To
+awaken from the first heavy sleep of a Venetian
+bun and see fifteen life-sized cupids dangling from
+the doorway must have been an experience to send
+the eighteenth century guest into a set of early eighteenth
+century or late seventeenth century heebes.
+The comic strip on the ceiling is catalogued as “Diziani’s
+Dawn.” It may very well be.</p>
+
+<p>This, in a general way, covers pretty well the
+Bedroom from the Palazzo Sagredo. In another
+month the Gideons will have slipped a Bible onto
+the table by the bed and it will be ready for occupancy,
+but not by <i>me</i>, thank you.</p>
+
+<p>Walking rapidly through the rest of the new wing,
+you come to lots of things in cases which, frankly,
+do <i>not</i> look very interesting. There is a bit of sculpture
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span>labeled “Head of Zeus(?)” showing that even
+the Museum officials don’t know whom it is meant
+to represent. Under the circumstances, it seems as
+if they might have cheated a little and thrown a
+bluff by just calling it arbitrarily “Head of Zeus”
+without the question mark. Certainly no one could
+have called them on it, and it would have made them
+seem a little less afraid to take a chance. Suppose
+that it turned out <i>not</i> to be Zeus. What is the worst
+that could happen to them?</p>
+
+<p>Then, too, there is “A Relief from a Roman
+Sarcophagus.” As we remember Roman sarcophagi,
+<i>anything</i> would be a relief from them.</p>
+
+<p>We could go on like this for page after page
+making wise-cracks about the various uninteresting
+features of the new wing, but perhaps you have
+already got the idea. It may have been the absence
+of Dr. Crippen, or it may have been a new pair of
+shoes, but the truth is that we weren’t <i>put</i> out of the
+new wing. We <i>asked</i> an attendant how to <i>get</i> out.
+And here we are.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="UNCLE_CALVINS_NO-WASTE_GAMES">
+ UNCLE CALVIN’S NO-WASTE GAMES
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>There is a time for play as well as a time for work.
+But even in play it is possible to cultivate the art of well-doing.
+Games are useful to train the eye, the hand and
+the muscles, and bring the body more completely under
+the control of the mind. When this is done, instead of
+being a waste of time, play becomes a means of education.—<i>President
+Coolidge’s Christmas Message to the
+boys and girls of the nation.</i></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<p>And now come, boys and girls, it’s play-time!
+You have worked hard <i>enough</i> for one day,
+and Uncle Calvin is going to teach you some peachy
+games to clear the cobwebs out of those brains of
+yours. Play-time! Play-time!</p>
+
+<p>But first of all we must remember that play in
+itself is a waste of time. And who remembers what
+we learned yesterday about Wasted Time? The
+boy or girl who wastes time, or anything else, is just
+as naughty as the boy or girl who steals, for, after
+all, wasting <i>is</i> stealing, isn’t it? And play, just for
+the sake of play, is stealing time which belongs rightfully
+to our parents, our teachers or our country.
+And we don’t want to be known as <i>thieves</i>, do we?</p>
+
+<p>So the games which Uncle Calvin is going to teach
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span>us are games which will do us good in one way or
+another. While we are playing them we shall, at
+the same time, be helping to make our eyes, our
+hands, and our minds more efficient. And, as we
+play, we must keep thinking: “Is this helping me?
+Or am I wasting time which I ought to be devoting
+to my lessons or my work or my country?”</p>
+
+<p>The first game that we are going to play is called</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">EYE-SPY</p>
+
+<p>This is just lots and lots of fun—and good for
+your eyes, too. The boys line up on one side, and
+the girls on the other. Now Uncle Calvin will stand
+over here and write on the board a lot of little teeny-weeny
+figures, problems in percentage, and we will
+see which can read them off and answer the problems
+the faster—the boys or the girls. Come now, boys,
+you don’t want the girls to beat you, do you? All
+right ... ready, get set ... <i>go!</i></p>
+
+<p>Now we are going to play a dandy game called</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">DRY, TOM, DRY</p>
+
+<p>We must remember in playing this game not to
+get all hot and sweaty and too excited, for it is <i>really</i>
+a game to train our hands. Three girls come over
+here to the sink, and three boys stand in a line
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span>from the sink to the table. Now each boy gets a
+brand new wiper and each girl a little tub full of
+hot water and dirty dishes. Now the game is to see
+which girl and her boy-partner can wash and dry
+her dishes first. As each dish is cleaned it is
+handed to the boy with the towel and when he has
+dried it he places it on the table. You must be very
+careful in passing the dishes not to drop them. Here
+is where the excitement comes in. For if you drop
+and break a plate, Uncle Calvin will lick hell out of
+you.... Now, no giggling, Walter Pearson! You
+don’t see Uncle Calvin giggling, do you? All ready?...
+Then—<i>play</i>!</p>
+
+<p>And now for our final game we have a big surprise
+for you. The game is called</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">PRINTER’S-PIE</p>
+
+<p>and what do you think? You are all actually going
+to take part in the Government of this big country
+which we all love so well! We are going to play a
+game called “type-setting” and, when we have finished,
+we will find that we have not only had loads
+and loads of fun, but that we have saved the Government
+thousands and thousands of dollars. Now here
+is how the game is played:</p>
+
+<p>Each child brings his little savings-bank to Uncle
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span>Calvin and with what Uncle Calvin finds in there
+he will buy a box of type and a “galley” for each
+one. Then you stand in front of a high sort of desk
+and take a piece of paper which Uncle Calvin will
+give you. On this paper will be written something—different
+things—which your government wants to
+have printed. You will follow this very, very carefully,
+and try and find the little pieces of type in
+the box to correspond with the letters in the “copy.”
+When you find the right letter, place it in a little
+case which you hold in your hand until all the
+letters form the same words as those in your “copy.”
+Now put these words and sentences in the “galley,”
+or “holder” and pretty soon you will find that you
+have an exact duplicate <i>in type</i> of the page which
+Uncle Calvin has given you. Isn’t that exciting!
+An <i>exact</i> duplicate! This page of type will then
+be taken from you and plates made from it and then
+it will be <i>printed</i> and you will see your own work in
+the <i>Congressional Record</i> and all the little pamphlets
+that your congressman sends you. Just think!
+Your own work in print!</p>
+
+<p>And, just because you have had all this fun, your
+government will have been able to cut down its printing
+appropriation to almost nothing and you will
+have trained your eyes and your hands and your
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span>minds which will please Uncle Calvin more than he
+can say.</p>
+
+<p>And now that we have had our play, we must
+scamper back to work, for, as Uncle Calvin said in
+his cheery Christmas message, there is a time for
+play as well as a time for work, and, so long as you
+don’t <i>waste</i> time when playing, you will be able to
+work all the better for your parents, your schools,
+and your country.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_WORLD_OF_GRANDPA_BENCHLEY">
+ THE WORLD OF GRANDPA BENCHLEY
+ <br>
+ <i>Thinking Out Loud in the Manner of
+ Mr. Wells’ Hero</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">§1</p>
+
+<p>I am eighty-nine years old, and I think I would
+like to write a book. I don’t know—maybe I
+wouldn’t.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">§2</p>
+
+<p>Eighty-nine this year, ninety next year, eighty-eight
+last year. That makes three years accounted
+for. Three into fourteen goes four times and two
+to carry. The Assyrians were probably the first
+people to evolve mathematics. I sometimes get to
+thinking about mathematics.</p>
+
+<p>The average Englishman at the age of eighty-nine
+is dead—has been dead for several years. The
+average depth of the Caspian Sea is 3,000 feet. The
+average rainfall in Canada is 1.03 inches. During
+the Inter-Glacial Period it was 9.01 inches. Think
+of that—9.01 inches!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">§3</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp60" id="p201" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p201.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>Grandpa Benchley.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>All this has made me stop and think, think about
+the world I live in. I sometimes wonder what it is
+all about—this world I mean. I am not so sure
+about the next world. Sometimes I think there is
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span>one and sometimes I think there isn’t. I’ll be darned
+if <i>I</i> can make it out.</p>
+
+<p>I am not so sure about my wanting to write a
+book, either. But something has got to be done
+about this world—something explanatory, I mean.
+Here I am, eighty-nine years old, and I haven’t explained
+about the world to anyone yet—that is, not
+to anyone in this room.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">§4</p>
+
+<p>It is a beautiful day outside. The sun, that luminous
+body 95,000,000 miles from the earth, without
+which we should never be able to dry hides or bake
+biscuits, is shining through the trees outside my window,
+much as it used to shine through the trees outside
+the cave of Neolithic Man, ten thousand years
+before Christ. In fact, Neolithic Man sometimes
+built himself houses on piles driven in the water, but
+this was not until almost five thousand years before
+Christ.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes I get to thinking about Neolithic Man.
+Sometimes I get to thinking about Cro-Magnon
+Man. Sometimes it just seems as if I should go
+crazy thinking about things. There are so <i>many</i>
+things! And I am only eighty-nine.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">§5</p>
+
+<p>I remember when I was a very small boy my
+mother used to forbid me to go out when it was
+raining. My mother was a very quiet woman, who
+never spoke unless it was to figure out how long
+it would take to reach the nearest star by train.</p>
+
+<p>“Nipper,” she would say to me on such days as
+the rain would prevent my going out, “Nipper, I
+guess you don’t know that thousands of years before
+modern civilization there was a period known as the
+Pluvial or Lacustrine Age, the rain or pond period.”</p>
+
+<p>I remember my crying myself to sleep the first
+night after she told me about the Pluvial or Lacustrine
+Age. It seemed so long ago—and nothing to
+be done about it.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">§6</p>
+
+<p>One night my father came home with a queer light
+in his eyes. He said nothing during dinner, except
+to note, as he passed me the salt, that salt is an
+essential to all grain-consuming and herbivorous animals
+but that on a meat-diet man can do without it.
+“There have been bitter tribal wars,” he said, “between
+the tribes of the Soudan for possession of the
+salt deposits between Fezzan and Murzuk.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Arthur,” said my mother, quietly, “remember the
+boys are present.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is time they knew,” was his reply.</p>
+
+<p>At last my mother, sensing that something was
+troubling him, said:</p>
+
+<p>“Arthur, are you holding something back from
+me?”</p>
+
+<p>He laid down his knife and fork and looked at her.</p>
+
+<p>“I have just heard,” he said, “that the molecule is
+no longer the indivisible unit that it was supposed
+to be.”</p>
+
+<p>My mother bit her lip.</p>
+
+<p>“You tell me this,” she said, “after all these
+years!”</p>
+
+<p>“I have just learned it myself,” replied my father.
+“The National Molecule Society found it out themselves
+only last month. The new unit is to be called
+the ‘atom.’”</p>
+
+<p>“A fine time to tell me!” said my mother, her eyes
+blazing. “You have known it for a month.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wasn’t sure until just now,” said my father.
+“I didn’t want to worry you.”</p>
+
+<p>My mother took my brother and me by the hand.
+“Come, boys,” she said, “we are going away.”</p>
+
+<p>Two days later the three of us left for the Continent.
+We never saw my father again.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">§7</p>
+
+<p>This set me to thinking about atoms. I don’t
+think that I have it straight even now. And then,
+just as I was getting accustomed to the idea that
+molecules <i>could</i> be divided into atoms, along comes
+somebody a few years ago and says that you can
+divide atoms into electrons. And, although I was
+about seventy-five at the time, I went out into the
+park and had a good cry.</p>
+
+<p>I mean, what is an old fellow going to do? No
+sooner does he get something all thought out than
+something happens to make him begin all over
+again. I get awfully sore sometimes.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">§8</p>
+
+<p>Then there is this question of putting studs in a
+dress-shirt. Here is the problem as I see it:</p>
+
+<p>If you put the studs in <i>before</i> you put the shirt
+on, you muss your hair putting it on over your head.
+If you wait until you have the shirt on before putting
+in the studs, you have to put your hand up under the
+front of the shirt and punch them through with the
+other. This musses the shirt bosom nine times out
+of ten. Eight times out of ten, perhaps.</p>
+
+<p>All right. Suppose you put the studs in first and
+muss your hair. Then you have to brush it again.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span>That is not so hard to do, except that if you put
+tonic on your hair before you brush it, as I do, you
+are quite likely to spatter drops down the bosom.
+And there you are, with a good big blister right
+where it shows—and it’s 8 o’clock already.</p>
+
+<p>Now here <i>is</i> a problem. I have spent hours trying
+to figure some way to getting around it and am nowhere
+near the solution. I think I will go to the
+Riviera where it is quiet and just think and think
+and think.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">§9</p>
+
+<p>I am sitting at my window in the <i>Villa a Vendre</i>
+at Cagnes. If it were not for the Maritime Alps I
+could see Constantinople. How do you suppose the
+Alps got there, anyway? Some giant cataclysm of
+Nature I suppose. I guess it is too late to do anything
+about it now.</p>
+
+<p>Irma is down in the garden gathering snails for
+dinner. Irma is cross at me because this morning,
+when she suggested running up to Paris for the
+shooting, I told her that the ancient name of Paris
+was Lutitia.</p>
+
+<p>I get to thinking about women sometimes. From
+eight in the evening on. They are funny. Female
+characteristics differ so from male characteristics.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span>This was true even in the Pleistocene Age, so they
+tell me.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">§10</p>
+
+<p>Next Wednesday I am going back to thinking
+about God. I didn’t anywhere near finish thinking
+about God the last time. The man came for the
+trunks and I had to go with him to the station.</p>
+
+<p>It is quite a problem. I don’t think there is any
+doubt about there being some Motive Power which
+governs the World. But I can’t seem to get much
+beyond that. Maybe I’ll begin again on that Monday.
+Monday is a good day to begin thinking.
+Your laundry is just back and everything is sort of
+pristine and new. I hope that, by beginning Monday,
+I can get everything cleaned up by Friday, for
+Friday I am going over to Monte Carlo.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">§11</p>
+
+<p>It is six years now since I began writing this book.
+I am almost ninety-seven. According to the statistics
+of the Royal Statistical Society I can’t expect
+much longer in which to think things over.</p>
+
+<p>The big thing that is worrying me now is about
+putting sugar on my oatmeal. I find that if I put
+the sugar on first and then the cream, the sugar all
+disappears, and I like to see it, nice and white, there
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span>on the cereal. But if I put the cream on first and
+<i>then</i> the sugar, it doesn’t taste so good. I asked
+Irma about this the other day and she told me to
+shut up and go back to bed.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph4">§12</p>
+
+<p>After thinking the whole thing over, I have come
+to the conclusion that I don’t want to write a book
+at all. When a man is ninety-seven it is high time
+he was doing something else with his time besides
+writing books. I guess I’ll go out and roll down hill.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_LIFE_POLAR_EXPEDITION_3">
+ THE <i>LIFE</i> POLAR EXPEDITION
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">1</p>
+
+<p><i>At the Hop-off of</i> <span class="allsmcap">LIFE’S</span> <i>Polar Expedition,
+Scarsdale, N. Y. (Second Lap)</i>—Here we
+are, much to our surprise, all set for the second big
+lap on our expedition to the North Pole by bicycle,
+begun last spring. Those of you with a scientific
+turn of mind who have followed us thus far will remember
+that we were held up in my home in Scarsdale
+by a lost nut and that, by the time we were
+ready to start on again, news had come of the so-called
+successful completion of the Byrd and Amundsen
+expeditions.</p>
+
+<p>The positive assurance that we had been beaten
+in the race to the Pole, with our goal practically
+within pedaling distance, as you might say, was
+naturally very depressing. Lieutenant-Commander
+Connelly took the thing particularly to heart, as he
+had <i>so</i> wanted us to be first. We found him that
+afternoon in the Bronx River Parkway, kicking a
+tree much bigger than himself and half-sobbing,
+half-laughing: “Darn-darn-double-darn!” and “You
+old <i>tree</i>, you!”</p>
+
+<p>I myself was quite disheartened but tried not to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span>show it to the brave boys who had come so far and
+had shown such splendid spirit. So I proposed that
+we go back to the house and sing some songs. I
+wish that you might have seen the will with which
+the rest of the crew took up my suggestion, and have
+heard the room ring with the sounds of “Upidee”
+and “Solomon Levi” when we finally got down to it.
+Both Lieutenant-Commander Connelly and Ensign
+Thermaline sang tenor.</p>
+
+<p>It was Ensign Thermaline who finally spoke the
+words which gave us new courage to continue on our
+expedition in spite of the self-styled winners, Byrd
+and Amundsen.</p>
+
+<p>“Why should we stop,” he asked, toppling off the
+piano bench, “just because some wise-cracking aviators
+have flown over the Pole? Our aim was not to
+<i>fly</i>. It was to bicycle. That popular interest in
+polar expeditions has died down should mean nothing
+to us. That the New York <i>Times</i> will not take any
+more expedition articles until it uses up those it
+has on hand means nothing to us. We can get to
+the Pole and back before the George Palmer Putnam
+series has even been got together in book form. We
+can still be the first to bicycle across the Pole—and,
+by the Eternal, we will!”</p>
+
+<p>At this we were on our feet and cheering. Rosa
+brought in a plate of hermits and we sat over these
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span>until far into the night making plans for our second
+dash to the Pole.</p>
+
+<p>It was decided that, since the Putnam expedition
+on the <i>Morrissey</i> was being written up by Mr. Putnam’s
+little boy David, we should take my little boy
+Bobby along as official yeoman and that all reports
+should be written by him. He is seven, and no one,
+not even his teacher, can read his writing; so he
+seemed practically ideal.</p>
+
+<p>We also decided that we ought to have names for
+our bicycles (like the Putnam’s <i>Morrissey</i>), and
+Lieutenant-Commander Connelly immediately chose
+“The O’Toole” for his, and Ensign Thermaline
+“Mavourneen” for his. Mine was to be “The Banshee.”</p>
+
+<p>The next thing to do was to buy a small bicycle
+for Bobby, and, believe it or not, it took until just
+this week to find one small enough. However, Scarsdale
+was very pleasant during the summer and we
+all were very happy and brave, and here we are
+ready to start tomorrow, “rain or shine,” as Lieutenant-Commander
+Connelly expressed it, laughing
+to hide his tears.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">2</p>
+
+<p><i>Special North Pole Correspondence from Bobby
+Benchley, Juvenile Member of</i> <span class="allsmcap">LIFE’S</span> <i>Bicycle Expedition.
+En route to Pole.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span></p>
+
+<p>North White Plains, N. Y.—When we left Scarsdale
+on the second dash to the Pole my father told
+me that he would write the account of our trip and
+that I should sign my name to it, as every expedition
+has to have a little boy along who writes a book
+about it later.</p>
+
+<p>“You write it and I sign it?” I asked him.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s right, Bobby,” he said. “Daddy writes
+it and Bobby signs it and Bobby gets all the publicity.”</p>
+
+<p>“Publicity me eye,” was my answer. “If I sign
+it, I write it. I’ll take no responsibility for your
+drivel. I know your stuff and I prefer to write my
+own, <i>if</i> you don’t mind. The rest of the school
+would kid the pants off me if one of your books
+came out with my name signed to it.”</p>
+
+<p>This angered my father and he made as if to hit
+me, but I ducked and ran into the house.</p>
+
+<p>“All right for you, you big bully!” I yelled out at
+him. “Just for that I won’t <i>go</i> on your old expedition.”</p>
+
+<p>This sobered him up and he agreed to let me write
+my own stuff and sign it and take ten per cent. of
+the royalties. If the book sells as it ought to, with
+any kind of pushing at all from the publishers, I
+ought to clean up enough to marry Ruthie Henshel
+in the spring.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span></p>
+
+<p>So here we are, as far as North White Plains, and
+very dull it has been up till now, too. We left
+Scarsdale at ten o’clock Wednesday morning, I on
+my new Demon with special coaster-brake attachment
+and a swell cap with a big visor on it to keep
+the Artic sun out of my eyes. It is my private
+opinion that all the Artic sun we see on this trip
+you could <i>put</i> in my right eye and I’d never notice it.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>(<i>Proofreading note by Benchley, Sr.</i>—I <i>told</i>
+Bobby he ought to let me write out a rough draft
+for him first. You see what he has done with
+“Arctic.” However, if he is going to be just stubborn
+about the thing—)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The trouble with the expedition so far is that my
+father and Lieut.-Commander Connelly get winded
+so soon. They can’t pump up even a little hill without
+having to get off at the top and rest. We’re
+lucky to be at North White Plains, let alone the
+North Pole. I began by going on ahead as fast as
+I could, but this just made them sore and I lost
+them going through Hartsdale and had to sit down
+by the roadside and wait for them to come up.
+They both got pretty fat during the summer hanging
+around at the base in Scarsdale, and my father
+especially has got to look out or he’ll look something
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span>awful in another year. I told him so, too, and he
+told me to shut up or he’d send me away to military
+school.</p>
+
+<p>Well, anyway, what with the old folks puffing
+along behind and Ensign Thermaline having to stop
+off in White Plains to see an old girl of his, it has
+taken us just four days to get this far.</p>
+
+<p>Coming through White Plains, my father tried to
+tell me about the battle that was fought there during
+the Revolutionary War.</p>
+
+<p>“What battle was that?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“The Battle of White Plains, of course,” he said.
+“What did you think it was, the Battle of Princeton,
+N. J.?”</p>
+
+<p>“Princeton beat Harvard, didn’t they?” I came
+back at him.</p>
+
+<p>At this he made a lunge for me, and fell off his
+bicycle, which got me to laughing so hard I had to
+stop, too.</p>
+
+<p>“And who won the Battle of White Plains, Father
+dear?” I asked him, trying to change the subject.</p>
+
+<p>“The Americans did, of course,” he said, brushing
+himself off.</p>
+
+<p>“Yeah?” I said. “So the Americans won, did
+they? Well, that shows what <i>you</i> know about it.
+The British won. We had it in school only last
+week.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span></p>
+
+<p>“What school?” asked my father, very sore now.</p>
+
+<p>“Not Harvard, anyway,” I said. “Yale beat
+Harvard, too.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yeah?” he said, getting redder and redder.
+“Yale beat Harvard by playing twelve men against
+Harvard’s eleven.... And if you aren’t a better
+boy, Daddy’s going to send you right back to Scarsdale
+on the 4:10 from White Plains.”</p>
+
+<p>“The 4:10 doesn’t stop at Scarsdale,” I said.
+“It’s an express to 125th St.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let’s be getting on,” interrupted Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly. “This is no way to get to the
+North Pole—arguing about Harvard and Yale.”</p>
+
+<p>So we all got on our wheels again and pushed
+ahead, but I think I’ll drop off at Mt. Kisco and
+see the Barry kids. My time is worth <i>something</i>.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="HOW_TO_START_A_SUPPER_CLUB">
+ HOW TO START A SUPPER CLUB
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>You think that the housing problem in New
+York is pretty critical, don’t you? Well, that
+just shows how much you know about it. The problem
+isn’t how to take care of all the people who
+live in New York; it’s how to take care of all the
+people who dance there. Night clubs are springing
+up like mushrooms (not exactly like mushrooms but
+near enough) and still there is a shortage. A lot of
+people have to go home every night without dancing.
+And you know what that leads to.</p>
+
+<p>A man can’t turn his back on a block between
+Fiftieth and Fifty-ninth Streets without three new
+supper clubs appearing before he looks back again.
+I left my house in Fifty-fifth Street one Wednesday
+morning (it was the Wednesday morning I left my
+house in Fifty-fifth Street) and after a hard day at
+the office returned Friday night to find that four
+stables on our block (I am a horse writing this:
+“Black Beauty”) had been transformed into “La
+Vache Noire,” “Sally Sobel’s Cellar,” “The Old
+Oaken Bucket,” and “Club O’Hara.” It has got so
+that you can’t leave your ice box out on the back
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span>porch without someone coming along and turning it
+into a night club.</p>
+
+<p>The process of transforming a stable or an ice box
+or a fair-sized umbrella closet into a supper club is
+pretty simple, once you get the hang of it.</p>
+
+<p>First comes the coat room. This has to be the
+first feature on the way in, in order to be the last
+one on the way out, so that the coat room girl can
+get that last fifty-cent piece that the patron has been
+holding out for taxi fare. You wouldn’t believe the
+number of cheap skates that try to sneak out with
+fifty cents or a dollar hidden away in their clothes.
+It kind of makes you lose your faith in human
+nature.</p>
+
+<p>From the coat room you arrange a hidden step so
+that the guest stumbles down into what used to be
+the place where they kept the mops and brooms and
+into the arms of the head waiter. This gives the
+head waiter the chance to accuse the patron of being
+drunk and refuse him admission.</p>
+
+<p>The choice of a head waiter is very important.
+Go down to the wharves when a fruit steamer is
+docking and pick out a stevedore who is less polite<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[Pg 218]</span>
+than his fellows. Take him uptown and teach him
+how to put studs into a dress shirt and station him
+at the entrance to your club. Tell him that he has
+just been unanimously chosen governor of the State
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[Pg 219]</span>of New York and that it is up to him to maintain
+the prestige of the office. Also tell him that any
+patron is a bum until he proves himself otherwise.
+Show him what you mean by proof and then put it
+back into the cash drawer.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp48" id="p218" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p218.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>The choice of a head waiter is very important.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>The interior of your club need cause you no worry—or
+expense. Hang some old awnings from the
+ceiling—good and low so as to shut off the air—and
+paint the walls red and yellow, with perhaps a figure
+or two in Russian costume, if you can draw—or even
+if you can’t. In the center of the room build a
+dance floor just big enough for a medium-sized
+man to lie down on and roll over three times. Not
+that any medium-sized man is going to do it, but
+those are the standard measurements for night club
+dance floors. Fill the rest of the room with small
+tables which wabble, erect a platform for your jazz
+band, and you are set.</p>
+
+<p>Now comes your big problem—the entertainment.
+There was a time when the patrons were satisfied to
+mill around on the dance floor and bump each other’s
+hips. Then some foolish proprietor started in giving
+them a little show in between dances and they got
+spoiled. Now they all want a show for their money.
+This injustice to proprietors is somewhat mitigated
+by the fact that the patrons don’t care what kind of
+show it is, so long as they don’t have to dance.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span></p>
+
+<p>There has to be some sort of master of ceremonies,
+and the proprietor can save a salary right there by
+doing this himself. All that he has to do is wear a
+dinner coat and act as if he believes that he has a
+good line.</p>
+
+<p>“Ladies and gentlemen—and Gentiles. I have the
+very great honor to present to you tonight two of
+America’s foremost ballroom dancers, two very
+charming and very talented young people who are
+filling an engagement at this club before beginning
+in the new Ziegfeld ‘Follies.’ They come fresh from
+a very successful season on the Riviera and I am
+sure that you will find them very, very delightful.
+So’s your old man!... Come on, now, give these
+charming young people a good hand!... [<i>Lead
+the applause.</i>] Delacroix and Feeney, ladies and
+gentlemen!”</p>
+
+<p>For Delacroix and Feeney it will be necessary to
+procure a young man and a young woman named
+Hyman and Gatz, respectively, who can waltz holding
+each other at arm’s length. The young man
+must look at the young lady while they are waltzing
+and smile as if he really liked her, and the young
+lady must smile modestly back at him, just as if
+she were not thinking: “You big bum, I hope you
+trip and fall and break your shirt front.” At the
+end of the waltz she curtsies so low that she has a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>good chance of not getting up again—which would
+be small loss. The master of ceremonies should then
+lead the applause again, what there is.</p>
+
+<p>The entertainment over, you can turn the patrons
+loose again, with instructions to the orchestra to
+play so long that the dancers will fall exhausted by
+their tables and have to order refreshments. For
+food a forty-cent chop suey can be served for two
+dollars and a half and a ten-cent lemonade for a
+dollar. This will help you to clear expenses and
+maybe make a little profit.</p>
+
+<p>Now in the matter of dispensing alcoholic drinks
+a great deal of caution must be used. It is, as many
+of you know, against the law to sell liquor, a fact
+which complicates its sale and makes for considerable
+inconvenience. The authorities are more and
+more on the alert and consequently the risk of getting
+caught remains about the same. A night club
+proprietor cannot be too careful to whom he sells
+strong drinks. For instance, if a man in the uniform
+of chief of police, with gold braid and a sword,
+comes in with a friend who has a flag in his hand on
+which is written “U. S. Revenue Service,” no drinks
+should be served to that table until it has been
+definitely ascertained that the men are “all right.”
+As for regular patrons, always wait until they ask
+for liquor before serving it, as a lot of people have
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span>their own with them and don’t like to be bothered by
+representatives of the house standing at their elbows
+every minute trying to get them to buy. The chief
+thing to find out about a man before you sell him
+any illicit beverage is whether or not he has got
+$12. Once this is made sure, the thing is not so
+foolhardy.</p>
+
+<p>With these few suggestions to those of you who
+might be in a position to start a night club, it is to
+be hoped that more and more citizens will lend a
+hand to help solve New York’s big problem.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_NEW_VILLAINY">
+ THE NEW VILLAINY
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Although the new fall season in the drama
+is only just under way, it is not too early to
+view with alarm. Some Viewers-with-Alarm begin
+as early as September to view, but that doesn’t give
+you much time to collect data. Perhaps all that you
+can get is a <i>datum</i>, but a good, healthy datum is
+enough to base a sizable alarm-view on, and, as you
+go along, you can make up a datum or two, so that
+you can refer to the whole as data.</p>
+
+<p>This month we are chiefly worried about the status
+(or stata) of what used to be known as “the old-time
+religion.” That is, its status in the world of drama.
+If the new season keeps on as the past two seasons
+have gone, being under suspicion of harboring religious
+thoughts will place one in the psychopathic
+class. For two years now, eight out of ten villains
+have been preachers and any layman with excessive
+religious tendencies has turned out to be just a repressed
+old sex-addict.</p>
+
+<p>There was a time when the entrance of the
+preachers on the stage was the signal for a sigh of
+relief to go up, for you knew that so long as he stuck
+around, things were pretty sure to go as they should.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span>The lowest he ever reached in the dramatic scale
+was when he was occasionally used for comedy
+purposes. Once in a while there was a comic bishop,
+but that was only natural. And any member of the
+cast who showed signs of quoting the Scriptures, or
+going to church, was pretty certain to be one of
+those whom you could trust to help foil the adventuress
+in the last act.</p>
+
+<p>Then along about the time that “Rain” settled
+down for a run, we began to find preachers sneaking
+into plays whose minds were not on their work in
+the vineyard. Under the guise of evangelism they
+started in to cut up. At first we thought: “Oh,
+well, this is just an exception. Our Dr. Murnie at
+home wouldn’t do anything like this.” But gradually,
+after we had seen dozens and dozens of
+preachers come on in the first act, make a few sanctimonious
+remarks, and then sprout little horns and
+a goat’s tail, we began to look askance at even Dr.
+Murnie of the Second Congregational Church.</p>
+
+<p>Then the lay members of the congregation came
+in for analysis. The hand of Freud reached out and
+touched the brethren and sistren and we learned that
+whenever anyone is excessively religious, it is a sign<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[Pg 225]</span>
+that they are suffering from an inhibition which is
+likely some day to break loose and leave Broadway
+strewn with bits of broken bottles and confetti. The
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[Pg 226]</span>more religious they are, the more they crave a good,
+rip-snorting week-end at Atlantic City, registering
+under the wrong name. It is all very confusing.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp52" id="p225" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p225.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>If you were highly strung you whispered out loud to the
+ heroine.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>In the old days, the minute a man came on with a
+mustache like Adolphe Menjou’s and wearing a pair
+of riding boots with a crop to slap them with, you
+could be pretty sure that he was up to no good. If
+you were highly strung you whispered out loud to
+the heroine not to go to the city with him as he had
+no more intention of marrying her than—well, than
+anything at all, and you know how little that is.</p>
+
+<p>Today, whenever a character in clerical cloth
+makes his entrance, the orchestra starts picking at
+the violin strings in the old <i>pizzicato</i> villain-entrance
+music, the young-lady members of the cast pick their
+exits and the audience settles back in preparation for
+the dirty work.</p>
+
+<p>Pretty soon we may have a scene like this:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="hanging-indent1"><span class="smcap">Scene.</span>—<i>Living room of the DeViblis home. Father,
+mother, and daughter are seated around the table,
+splicing rope.</i></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Daughter</span>: Pa, there’s somethin’ I been a-wantin’
+to ask you fer a long time.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mother</span>: For heaven’s sake, daughter, talk
+straight. This isn’t a New England farm play we’re
+in. You know how to talk better than that.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Daughter</span>: Well, anyway, I want to marry Arthur
+Arthritis.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Father</span>: What does he do for a living?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Daughter</span>: Well, he’s changing his job in a few
+months.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Father</span>: What does he do now?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Daughter</span>: Why—er—well, I’ll tell you; just
+now he’s a preacher, but he’s going to change—</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mother</span>: A preacher! Oh, my!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Father</span>: A minister of the gospel? Where did
+you meet him? I thought I told you not to run
+around with them religious folks. They are every
+one of them inhibited.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Daughter</span>: Oh, that’s just because you don’t
+know them, dad. They’re just as decent as you or
+I when you get to know them. And Arthur isn’t
+<i>really</i> a preacher. He’s just filling-in.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Father</span>: Just filling-in, eh? I suppose you know
+what that leads to? Next he’ll be having a little
+parish of his own, then he’ll get a call to a big city,
+or perhaps he’ll even sink so low as to be a missionary.
+Them preachers are all missionaries at
+heart, and you know what missionaries are. No, sir,
+no daughter of mine gets mixed up in that crowd.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Daughter</span>: Well, he’s coming here in a few minutes
+to hear your answer. There he is now!</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Enter the Rev. Heemerson.</i>)</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Father</span>: Well, what do you want here?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Rev. H.</span>: Why, Brother—</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Father</span>: Don’t you “brother” me.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Rev. H.</span>: I love your daughter and I want to
+marry her.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Father</span>: You want to <i>marry</i> her, eh? When you
+get to New York, I suppose?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Rev. H.</span>: Why, I thought—</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Father</span> (<i>stepping to the telephone</i>): Oh, you
+thought, did you? (<i>To central</i>): Give me police
+headquarters ... hello, police headquarters? Well,
+there’s a preacher in my house. Send an officer up
+right away!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Rev. H.</span> (<i>leaving</i>): I’m sorry, sir, that you
+feel this way, so I think I’ll be saying “good-by.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Father</span>: Good-by, and go back to your religious
+crowd and their loose ways and never darken my
+door again.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="hanging-indent1">(<i>Curtain with daughter crying, and father and
+mother getting down the family volume of Freud
+to read by the lamplight.</i>)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>All this is perhaps the result of years and years of
+bullyragging the stage and stage folk by preachers
+and religious zealots. The stage folk have found a
+comeback and are using it. It will be nip and tuck
+for a while, with the stage folk slightly in the lead
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span>until it is discovered that all stage folk are not
+really saints and all religious zealots not really
+satyrs and nymphs. Then things will settle down
+again. In the meantime, let’s have some more of
+that chicken potpie, please.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="TIME-OFF_FROM_THE_SHOW">
+ TIME-OFF FROM THE SHOW
+ <br>
+ <i>New York Sights Which the Visitor Should Not Miss</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>You can’t expect the visitor to New York during
+the automobile show to stand in front of automobiles
+all day and all night. He’s got to look at
+something else <i>once</i> in a while, just so that he can
+see the automobiles better when he goes back to look
+at them. That’s only common sense.</p>
+
+<p>Now comes the big question—what to look at?
+New York is a big city now, and unless you are
+careful you will look at the wrong things and before
+you know it, it will be time to go back and you will
+have seen nothing. Or practically nothing. Or next
+to nothing.</p>
+
+<p>Let us say (Oh, go on! Be a good sport! <i>Let</i>
+us), let us say that you are to be in New York four
+days and six nights. Here is a schedule which you
+may follow or not, but, at any rate, look it over. It
+suggests something for you to do every evening and,
+in case you have any spare time during the day, there
+are one or two extra hints.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">MONDAY EVENING</p>
+
+<p>Of course, the very first night that you have free
+you will want to see the new Reinach collection of
+tapestries at the Metropolitan Art Museum. This
+collection is one of the most valuable in the world,
+and one of the hardest to hide under. The tapestries
+hang some four feet off the ground, so the
+minute you try to hide under one of them you are
+quite exposed up to at least your chest, maybe
+oftener than that.</p>
+
+<p>Most of the tapestries in the exhibit are French,
+and consequently are kept in a little room off the
+main hall, to which admission is obtained only by
+conference with the curator. Of the others, the most
+interesting is that which depicts the hunting of a
+stag in the Middle Ages. In the lower left-hand
+corner you see the huntsmen starting out after the
+stag, carrying hauberks and falcons. As you work
+up through the tapestry, from left to right, it gets
+even less interesting, until, by the time they have
+caught the stag in the upper right-hand corner, you
+aren’t looking at it at all and have passed on to the
+next tapestry which shows huntsmen of the Middle
+Ages chasing a fox.</p>
+
+<p>It has just occurred to us that the Art Museum is
+not open evenings; so this plan for Monday night
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span>is out. You will have to find something else to do.
+There is a good place on West Fifty-sixth Street.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">TUESDAY EVENING</p>
+
+<p>The Public Library, at Forty-second Street and
+Fifth Avenue, is open until 11 o’clock. You will
+surely want to see this. Enter by the side door on
+the Forty-second Street side, as there are two of the
+nastiest lions you ever saw guarding the front entrance.
+Ring the little bell by the side entrance and
+when the man comes ask for Joe Delaney. He will
+ask who wants to see him and you say that Bob
+Benchley sent you. He will then let you in to the
+downstairs lobby, where there is an elevator to take
+you up to the reading room. This elevator is not
+running; so you will have to walk up three flights of
+marble stairs, and a pretty tough pull it is, too.</p>
+
+<p>You will find the reading room brilliantly lighted
+and practically full of books. Go straight to the
+case marked “Biography M-TO.” Beginning at the
+top shelf, left-hand corner, pull all the books out,
+from left to right, and throw them in a pile on the
+floor. Pretty soon you will have quite a big pile
+and can begin on the case marked “History-Renaissance.”
+This will make another big pile. By this
+time, you will have several attendants helping you
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span>and you can work faster. If you stick to it until
+11 o’clock, you will be able to pull out all the
+books on that side of the room and scuffle through
+them. Then you can go back to your hotel, tired
+but happy.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">WEDNESDAY EVENING</p>
+
+<p>By this time, you will be perhaps ready to see a
+little of the so-called “night life” of the metropolis.
+There is no better place to do this than at the
+Woman’s Exchange, on Madison Avenue between
+Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Streets. The specialty
+here is breads and cakes, and if you can get a table
+by the window you can eat your fill while watching
+the Madison Avenue trolley cars go thundering by.
+It would be well to wear your old clothes to this
+place, as along about 9 o’clock in the evening things
+begin to rough up quite a bit, and, by the time
+the fresh batch of cup cakes is ready at 10, the joint
+is a regular bedlam. It was here that Harry Thaw
+had been dining the night he shot Stanford White.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">THURSDAY EVENING</p>
+
+<p>We have saved until your last night in New York<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[Pg 234]</span>
+the big thrill of the week—riding on the Shetland
+ponies in Central Park. They usually put the ponies
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[Pg 235]</span>to bed at sundown, but by slipping the pony-man a
+dollar bill you can get him to leave as many of the
+little fellows out as you may require.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp38" id="p234" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p234.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>About nine o’clock things begin to rough up quite a bit.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>Get to the park at about 8 p. m., wearing red coat
+and riding breeches. You might as well take along
+a good, big whip, too, in case your pony gets fresh.
+Carrying children about all day as they do, they are
+quite apt to think that they can do anything they
+like, and you must be ready to show them that they
+can’t. They will respect you all the more after a
+couple of good belts.</p>
+
+<p>Once aboard the ponies, the best course is around
+the reservoir. Five times around at a brisk canter
+makes a nice ride. In case your feet drag on the
+ground (the ponies are pretty small) you can tuck
+them in under the saddle or else let them drag. For
+steeplechase racing it will be better to let them drag,
+as it makes it harder for the little animals to get
+over the hurdles. If you have lots of money to
+spend on the thing, you can give a hunt breakfast at
+the Central Park Casino.</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">ALTERNATE ENTERTAINMENT</p>
+
+<p>Although you may have seen something of the
+automobile at the show, you will get a better idea
+of what the automobile really means to our civilization
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span>by coming with me to a little private exhibition
+which I will be glad to stage any afternoon between
+the hours of 4 and 6:30. I wish that every automobile
+manufacturer and salesman could join in, because
+I want them to see just what it is that they
+have done. If I had my way, I would get them all
+reservations on a train leaving the Pennsylvania
+station at 5:30 p. m. Then, at 4:45, I would start
+them from Forty-fourth Street in taxicabs or private
+cars and say: “Now, you big automobile men, you
+have got forty-five minutes to go half a mile in.
+And there isn’t another train until tomorrow morning.”</p>
+
+<p>I would follow behind on foot, and when they were
+held up by the jam of automobiles at Forty-second
+Street for five minutes, I would jeer. When they
+were held up at Fortieth Street, I would hoot. During
+their five-minute holdup at Thirty-ninth Street,
+I would taunt them with: “What price automobiles,
+now?” and while they were chafing at the tieup at
+Thirty-eighth Street, I would call out: “Get a
+horse!” I would make them so sore at the automobile
+as an institution that they would swear never
+to make another.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_LIFE_POLAR_EXPEDITION_4">
+ THE <i>LIFE</i> POLAR EXPEDITION
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p><i>Continuation of the log of Bobby Benchley,
+Juvenile Yoeman on</i> <span class="allsmcap">LIFE’S</span> <i>North Pole
+Expedition.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mt. Kisco, N. Y.</span>—<i>En route to North Pole by
+bicycle.</i></p>
+
+<p>Things have been going from bad to worse in this
+expedition and I doubt very much if I can stick it
+out any longer. My father has been unbearable
+ever since we left North White Plains, harping continually
+on the fact that I am only seven years old
+and small for my age at that. If parents only knew
+it, it is that sort of talk which makes for radicalism
+and debauchery in the younger generation.</p>
+
+<p>Then he began insisting that I mention the names
+of firms which have contributed stuff for our expedition.
+When I say that we stopped at the roadside
+for lunch I must add “which was so kindly contributed
+by the Alexander Hamilton Peanut Butter
+Sandwich Co., of 1145 North Rumsey Street, Chicago.”
+Or if I mention tipping our hats to a lady,
+acknowledgment must be given to the “Bon Ton
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span>Arctic Hat Co., who were generous enough to supply
+the expedition with hats.”</p>
+
+<p>Now this is a lot of hooey and I told my father so
+and refused point-blank to lend myself to any such
+cheap advertising gag as that. It was then that he
+brought up the point that I was only seven and that
+I should busy myself with only those thoughts which
+a seven-year-old boy should have. And he added,
+furthermore, that I could keep a civil tongue in my
+head. So I have determined to stop off here at Mt.
+Kisco and spend a week or so with the Barry kids
+and then go on back home to Scarsdale. That
+expedition is never going to get to the North Pole
+anyway. My father and Lieut.-Commander Connelly
+are too fat—especially my father. You ought
+to see him.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Insert in log made by Benchley, Sr.</i></p>
+
+<p>Bobby has proved quite a disappointment to us so
+far, and I am not sure that I would be sorry to see
+him leave the expedition here. Our idea in having
+him along was to give the boy a little publicity and
+to have him write a book which could be sold to
+the juvenile trade around Christmas time, but a
+little boy who behaves as badly as he does doesn’t
+deserve any publicity and he can’t write for a darn
+anyway.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span></p>
+
+<p>Furthermore, I am <i>not</i> getting fat. I always put
+on a little weight in the winter, because I can’t play
+tennis, but every one says that it is becoming to me.
+I weigh only 160 when I am ready for my cold-bath
+(which I very seldom am, <i>these</i> mornings) and for
+a man of my height, that is not a pound too much.
+As a matter of fact, Bobby is probably a little sore
+because he is so small for his age. You’d never
+think he was seven. He looks more like a child of
+three. He must get that from his mother’s side of
+the family, because all the Benchleys have shot right
+up to a good height before they were seven. His
+older brother Nat is a fine tall boy. And a great
+deal smarter in school than Bobby.</p>
+
+<p>Then, too, another sign that I am not too fat is
+that people who haven’t seen me for several years
+all remark “How well you look!” You don’t say
+that to a man who is <i>too</i> fat, do you?</p>
+
+<p>But there is no reason for having our expedition
+torn with dissension just because a little boy has no
+respect for his father. I suggested sending him
+back to Scarsdale, but Lieut.-Commander Connelly
+said why not give him another chance, he is so cute.
+It is all very well for an outsider to call a child
+cute, but when a man has reached my age he is
+entitled to a little respect from his own children—it
+seems to me.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="center">(<i>Resumption of the log by Bobby.</i>)</p>
+
+
+<p>It is very nice here in Mt. Kisco at the Barrys’
+and I wouldn’t be surprised if the whole expedition
+stayed here until the snow gets out of the roads.
+Mr. Barry has some very good stuff that he brought
+from France last year and I heard my father say
+last night that he wouldn’t care if he <i>never</i> saw the
+North Pole or anything else for that matter. He
+and Lieut.-Commander Connelly think they are
+pretty good at two-part singing and as Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly said, “It looks as if it were going
+to be a fine winter for two-part singing, especially
+‘Sleep, Kentucky Babe.’” Mr. Barry hasn’t said
+anything yet except that he has to take his family
+to Cannes early in March. All he expected us to do
+was stop here overnight, and while he is very nice
+about it, I guess he knows what he is in for, all right,
+all right.</p>
+
+<p>On the way up from North White Plains I saw a
+snow-bird, but didn’t say anything about it as I
+knew it would mean taking out pencils and making
+notes for the Museum. A hot lot of good the
+Museum is going to get out of <i>this</i> expedition.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="SPYING_ON_THE_VEHICULAR_TUNNEL">
+ SPYING ON THE VEHICULAR TUNNEL
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Before the formal opening of the Holland
+Vehicular Tunnel under the Hudson River, it
+behooves New Yorkers to study up a little on the
+subject and see why it is that 46,000 vehicles are
+going to <i>want</i> to go to Jersey City every day.</p>
+
+<p>In order to present this problem fairly to the
+readers of this paper, the writer of this article (you
+must guess) took a tour of inspection of the tube,
+which is now completed with the exception of installing
+a ventilation system and hanging the curtains.
+Curtains make such a difference that it will
+probably be simply another tunnel when they are up.</p>
+
+<p>Your investigator was not asked by the authorities
+to make this tour of inspection, but somebody from
+the New York <i>Times</i> went through the thing and
+wrote a story about it; so there didn’t seem to be
+any good reason why a reporter from <i>The New
+Yorker</i> shouldn’t. Not having the permission of
+the tunnel authorities, he went alone into this vast-two-mile
+submarine passageway, with the result that
+he got lost and is still in there. This story is being
+sent out to <i>The New Yorker</i> by a code of tappings
+executed on the roof of the giant shell by the lost
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span>investigator. As soon as he finishes sending in copy
+(which will be relayed to the publication offices by a
+special tugboat and automobile service) the reporter
+will turn his energies again to the problem of getting
+out of the tube. After all, there are only two ways
+possible in which to go; so it ought not to be very
+difficult. The big problem comes in trying to decide
+which way to take.</p>
+
+<p>Now that we are well acquainted it might be less
+formal if I use the first person. You probably knew
+that it was I all along anyway. These little editorial
+subterfuges are rather futile.</p>
+
+<p>But to get back to the tunnel—or rather to get <i>out</i>
+of the tunnel. Sneaking in by the entrance at Canal
+Street, Manhattan, I made my way through the tiled
+passageway for what must have been a mile before I
+realized that, really, when you have seen the first
+hundred feet of a vehicular tunnel you have seen all
+9250. I had got the idea by then. The next problem
+was whether to go on ahead to the Jersey City
+exit or turn and go back to Canal Street. Not
+knowing how far I had come, I couldn’t figure out
+which way would be the shorter. Then, in turning
+around several times to see if I could make out any<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[Pg 243]</span>
+light at either end, I forgot which was the way to
+New York and which the way to Jersey City. This
+was quite terrifying and I began to cry softly. I
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[Pg 244]</span>made frantic little starts, first in one direction and
+then in the other, and finally sat down on the ground
+and sobbed myself to sleep.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp39" id="p243" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p243.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>I attracted the attention of a passing tug.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>When I awoke, it was high time that my story was
+in; so I attracted the attention of a passing tug by
+tapping on the roof of the tube and indicated that I
+had a story to file for <i>The New Yorker</i>. The rest is
+history.</p>
+
+<p>Well, anyway.</p>
+
+<p>The Holland Vehicular Tunnel is a dandy tunnel,
+all right, all right. The roadways are 20 feet wide
+and there is 13 feet, 6 inches of headroom. The
+extra six inches is for wedding parties in which there
+are men in silk hats. It is estimated that in one
+year 15,000,000 vehicles will pass through the tube.
+Wouldn’t you like to have a dollar for every vehicle!
+A dollar and a <i>half</i> would be even better. <i>Boy!</i>
+What I couldn’t do with $22,500,000!</p>
+
+<p>I was pleased to note that there are to be telephone
+stations along the route. This will make it
+possible to call up and say:</p>
+
+<p>“Look here! I’m held up in the vehicular tunnel
+and probably can’t get anything before the 8:15.
+Don’t wait dinner. I’ll eat in Jersey City.”</p>
+
+<p>This question of being held up in the tunnel is
+one which must present itself to everyone who gives
+the matter any thought at all. There aren’t many
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span>things certain in this life, but there is one event I
+can predict without even adding “maybe.” On my
+first trip through the vehicular tunnel at the wheel
+of my high-powered car, just as I get halfway between
+New York and New Jersey, with a line of
+impatient Sunday automobilists behind me, I am
+going to run out of gas. I’ll bet that the engineers
+in charge have never once thought of this contingency,
+and when it arises, it is going to make their
+tunnel look pretty silly. It was a silly idea anyway,
+in the first place.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="COMPILING_AN_AMERICAN_TRAGEDY">
+ COMPILING AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY
+ <br>
+ <i>Suggestions as to How Theodore Dreiser Might
+ Write His Next Human Document and
+ Save Five Years’ Work</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">CHAPTER I</p>
+
+<p>Up East Division Street, on a hot day in late
+July, walked two men, one five feet four, the
+other, the taller of the two, five feet six, the first
+being two inches shorter than his more elongated
+companion, and consequently giving the appearance
+to passers-by on East Division Street, or, whenever
+the two reached a cross-street, to the passers-by
+on the cross-street, of being at least a good two
+inches shorter than the taller of the little group.</p>
+
+<p>Walking up East Division Street they came, in
+two or three minutes, to Division Street proper,
+which runs at right angles and a little to the left
+of East Division Street, but not so much to the left
+as Marcellus Street, or Ransome Street, for that
+matter. As the two continued strolling, in that
+fashion in which two men of their respective heights
+are likely to stroll, they came in succession to—</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span></p>
+
+<p>(<span class="smcap">Note to printer</span>: <i>Attached find copy of Thurston’s
+Street Guide. Print names of every street
+listed therein, beginning with East Division and up
+to, and including, Dawson.</i>)</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">CHAPTER II</p>
+
+<p>That these two men, presented in the last chapter,
+would eventually stop walking up Division
+Street and enter a house of some sort or description,
+might well be anticipated by the reader, and, in fact,
+such was the case.</p>
+
+<p>It was, indeed, the house of the shorter of the
+two, of the one whom we have seen in the last
+chapter to have been five feet four, if, indeed, he
+was. It was a typical dwelling, or home, of a man
+of the middle-class in a medium-sized city such as
+the one in which these men found themselves living.</p>
+
+<p>(<span class="smcap">Note to printer</span>: <i>Attached find insurance inventory
+of household effects and architect’s specifications.
+Reproduce in toto.</i>)</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">CHAPTER III</p>
+
+<p>Reaching the living-room described above, Tom
+Rettle, for such was the name of the shorter of the
+two—the one to whom the house, or home, or dwelling,
+belonged—was greeted by his wife, Anna, a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span>buxom woman of perhaps thirty-four or thirty-five,
+certainly not <i>more</i> than thirty-five, if one were to
+judge by her fresh, wholesome color and the sparkle
+of her brownish-gray eyes, or even by her well-rounded
+form, her—</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Print attached passport description of Anna
+Rettle.</i>)</p>
+
+<p>“Well, hello, Anna,” said Tom, pleasantly, for
+Tom Rettle was, as a matter of fact, a very pleasant
+man unless he were angered, and his blue eyes
+smiled in a highly agreeable manner.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, hello, Tom,” replied Anna, for it was indeed
+Anna who spoke, in a soft, well-modulated
+voice, too, giving the impression of being an extremely
+agreeable sort of a woman.</p>
+
+<p>“Anna, I want you to meet a very good friend
+of mine, Arthur Berolston, a very good friend of
+mine,” said Tom, politely, looking, at the same time,
+at both Anna and Berolston.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m very happy to meet Mr. Berolston,” added
+Anna, genially, although one could see that in her
+heart she wished that Tom would bring a little different
+type of friends home, a thing she had often
+spoken to him about when they were alone, as they
+often were.</p>
+
+<p>“Dat’s very good of yer ter say, Missus Rettle,”
+replied Berolston, in modern slang, which made him
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span>sound even more uncouth than he looked, which was
+uncouth enough. “For de love o’ Mike!”</p>
+
+<p>At this indication of a rough bringing-up on the
+part of her husband’s acquaintance, Anna Rettle
+winced slightly but showed no other sign of her
+emotions. Tom was such a kind-hearted fellow!
+So good! So kind-hearted! Tom was.</p>
+
+<p>“What is there for supper tonight, Anna?” asked
+Tom, when the wincing had died down. “You know
+how well I like cole slaw, and have always liked it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I certainly do know your fondness for cole slaw,
+Tom,” replied his wife, but with a note of regret in
+her voice, for she was thinking that she had no cole
+slaw for supper on the particular night of which we
+are speaking. “But you will remember that we had
+cole slaw last night with the cold tongue, and night
+before last with the baked beans and—”</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Run attached “Fifteen Midsummer Menus for
+Cole Slaw Lovers.”</i>)</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">CHAPTER IV</p>
+
+<p>Prepared as Tom was not to have cole slaw for
+supper, he could not hide his disappointment. Anna
+had been a good wife to him.</p>
+
+<p>But somehow tonight, when he had brought
+Arthur Berolston home to supper, his disappointment
+was particularly keen, for he and Arthur had
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span>been discussing cole slaw all the way up East Division
+Street, across Division Street and through to
+the southwest corner of Dawson and Margate, where
+Tom lived, and each had said how much he liked it.</p>
+
+<p>Should he strike Anna for failing him at this
+juncture? He, Tom Rettle, strike his wife, Anna
+Rettle? And, even if he should decide to strike
+her, <i>where</i> should he direct the blow? Tom’s mind
+was confused with all these questions.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Reprint the above paragraph twenty-five times.</i>)</p>
+
+
+<p class="ph3">CHAPTERS V-LXXXII INCLUSIVE</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">To printer</span>: <i>With the above copy you will find
+a brief-case containing newspaper clippings giving
+the complete testimony of Anna Rettle, Thomas
+Rettle and Arthur Berolston in the case of</i> “<span class="smcap">Anna
+Rettle vs. Thomas Rettle</span>,” <i>tried in the Criminal
+Court of Testiman County, September 2-28,
+1925. There is also a transcript of the testimony
+of three neighbors of the Rettles’ (Herman Nordquist,
+Ethel Nordquist and Junior Nordquist), and
+of Officer Louis M. Hertzog of the Fifth Precinct.
+Reprint all these and, at the bottom of the last page,
+put “THE END.”</i></p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="STORM_WARNINGS_FOR_NEW_YORK">
+ STORM WARNINGS FOR NEW YORK
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Anyone wishing to see New York summer
+shows, or any other New York shows for that
+matter, had better run like everything. Any day
+now the walls of the city are going to topple in, and,
+with a blare of trumpets, the Forces of the Lord are
+going to smite New York, even as Sodom and Gomorrah
+were smitten. New York is riding for its
+Big Fall, and it wouldn’t be surprising if it came
+around the end of this week.</p>
+
+<p>Probably never before in the history of disrobing
+(see Taine’s “A Short History of Unhooking and
+Unbuttoning,” Harpers’, 1897, 1 vol., 345-pp. octavo)
+have so many young ladies appeared with so
+few clothes before so many people at once. It is
+recorded that in ancient Rome the <i>puellæ</i> wore fewer
+clothes at the annual outings, but their audiences
+were comparatively small and selected from a list of
+socially possible people. Today, in the Borough of
+Manhattan, the young folks appear before a Winter
+Garden full of practical strangers—that is, they are
+strangers at the beginning of the show. By the end
+of the first act, it is as if they had known them all
+their lives. Just as no man is a stranger (or a hero)
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span>to his Swedish rubber, so, by the price of a ticket to
+“The Great Temptations” you can have at least
+twenty people in New York whom you know awfully,
+awfully well. And yet they say that New York is
+cold and aloof!</p>
+
+<p>All this levity on my part is just whistling past the
+graveyard. I, personally, am pretty worried. You
+can push the Forces of Vengeance just so far and
+then—buckety-buckety—down comes the ceiling.
+Ask the Sodom Chamber of Commerce. And the
+worst of it is, that just as the rain sheds its benefits
+on the just and the unjust alike, the fact that you
+have been home and in bed every night at ten o’clock
+isn’t going to help you a bit when your whole city
+begins to smell as if something was burning and then
+suddenly goes up in a puff of brimstone. You can’t
+go out and argue with a Pillar of Fire and explain
+that you, personally, have been spending your evenings
+building bookcases. If your town goes, you go
+too, and no back-talk.</p>
+
+<p>Now, in my case, the prospects are even more depressing,
+because the job from which I eke out barely
+enough money to buy gin for my children makes it
+necessary that I attend the opening performances<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[Pg 253]</span>
+of all these wrath-provoking shows. I don’t like
+them. I would never go to see them if it were not
+for the fact that it is my life-work. Often I sit
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[Pg 254]</span>through them with my eyes shut. But I <i>am</i> unquestionably
+on record in the office of the Snooping
+Angel as sitting in D-113 at the Winter Garden.
+And when they are making out their lists for culprits
+to be hit on the head by falling walls or swirled
+up into the skies on a fiery horse with nine heads,
+my name probably is right there among the “B’s” as
+a constant and incorrigible attendant at these festivals
+of sin. The angel probably doesn’t do more
+than take a look over the audience. You can’t expect
+him to go to the box-office and see who paid to get
+in or find out why they are there.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp46" id="p253" style="max-width: 43.75em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/p253.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p>I <i>am</i> unquestionably on record as sitting in D-113.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>If I get through this summer all right, I am going
+to hire an assistant. Then, whenever a Shubert show
+is announced or something called “A Nuit in Paree,”
+I will slip him the seats and say: “Here, Joe, go and
+enjoy yourself.” In this way I may be able to
+escape the extra heavy punishment in store for participants
+and get out of the general cataclysm with
+perhaps just a broken ankle or singed eyelashes. It
+is going to be bad enough for the simple bystanders
+without getting mixed up in the private showing.
+The only break that I have ever had in this line was
+that I was in France at the time of Earl Carroll’s
+champagne-bath party in New York. When I got
+back I found my invitation on my desk. If I <i>had</i>
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</span>been there, covering the affair for my paper, they
+would have taken flashlight photographs.</p>
+
+<p>And, after all, what fun is there in going to these
+displays? “The Great Temptations,” for example,
+probably contains fewer real temptations than a
+Christian Endeavor convention. The thing is too
+unreal ever to constitute actual menace. You hear
+somebody announcing that, if the audience will remain
+seated, there will now be a parade showing the
+way parsnips are cooked in all the different countries
+of the world. Then eight girls walk across the stage,
+one representing Nell Gwyn cooking parsnips, one
+Cleopatra, one Thaïs, and so forth. It is very dull
+indeed, and the fact that the girls are clad as if they
+were just getting ready to turn on the hot water
+doesn’t help, or hurt, anything. The whole thing is
+highly academic, and unless you are interested in the
+cooking of parsnips, you are going to find yourself
+looking at your program to see how long it will take
+to empty the theater with every seat filled. If the
+Forces of Judgment only knew it, the display of
+what the advertisements call “feminine pulchritude”
+is one of the most innocuous of all forms of theatrical
+entertainment. It is like looking in at a
+delicatessen window. It is too much.</p>
+
+<p>However, try to tell that to the Watch and Ward
+Society. Try to convince that great, big old Nine-Headed
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</span>Horse, when he comes snorting down out of
+a cloud of fire with a flaming subpoena made out in
+your name, that these exhibitions bore you. Just
+say to him, if you can make your voice heard above
+the thunder and lightning and bellowing rocks, that
+a show where a nine-tenths naked lady walks across
+the stage means no more to you than watching the
+Stamford local go through New Rochelle, and listen
+to him laugh. Why, you will probably get a million
+years extra in the biscuit oven just for saying such
+a thing.</p>
+
+<p>You see, he has heard that line a good many times
+and he is getting a little tired of it, just as you would,
+yourself, after the first few million years. He knows
+that nobody ever will admit that he goes where he
+shouldn’t because he likes it. Every single time it
+is a case of being on duty, as you might say; making
+an investigation for some reform agency, or getting
+material for a book, or showing an out-of-town customer
+a good time. Even the out-of-town customer
+has the alibi that he is just trying to find out whether
+things are really as bad in New York as the papers
+have been saying they are. He would much rather
+have spent the evening writing a report to the firm
+about conditions in the textile industry, but he didn’t
+think that he could afford to miss an opportunity to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</span>get some first-hand information about the decadence
+of the present age.</p>
+
+<p>So the only thing that there is left to do, if we
+are going to save ourselves and the biggest city in
+the country from a horrible fate, is to stop the
+Messrs. Shubert from putting on shows like that.
+And the way to stop them from putting on shows
+like that is to go to them and say: “Messrs. Shubert,
+put down that mending for just a minute, I want
+to talk to you. I am a married man with a family
+and I have a lot of work that I have to do before
+I die. I have insurance to pay up and I have a
+house which has to be painted before it can be sold.
+Now, you and your shows are leading this whole
+city into inevitable destruction at the hands of the
+Forces of Vengeance. No city can go on as New
+York is going on giving pageants about the twelve
+different ways of cooking parsnips, without incurring
+Divine Wrath to a fatal extent. Won’t you, for the
+sake of the wife and kiddies, put, let us say, a girdle
+of large hydrangeas on your choruses and perhaps
+an old-fashioned shawl? Won’t you arrange it so
+that it won’t be quite so incriminating for a man
+who wants to go straight to be numbered among the
+patrons of your entertainments?”</p>
+
+<p>And if the Messrs. Shubert just laugh and go on
+with their mending or whatever it is that they happen
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</span>to be doing at the time, the only thing left for
+me to do, at any rate, is to do my duty without
+flinching—accept my complimentary tickets, and go
+to these shows wearing a tin helmet and carrying a
+letter from my pastor in my pocket against the Day
+of Judgment.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_LIFE_POLAR_EXPEDITION_5">
+ THE <i>LIFE</i> POLAR EXPEDITION
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Mt. Kisco, New York, January 21st.—At a
+meeting of the older members of the expedition
+last night it was voted to ask Bobby for his
+resignation, not in any spirit of anger but simply
+because it was felt that he wasn’t in sympathy with
+the aims and policies of those in command. Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly was elected to inform Bobby
+and to see that he got his carfare back to Scarsdale.</p>
+
+<p>Bobby had anticipated our action, however, by resigning
+on his own hook and was already on his way
+home with one of the Barry children in the Barrys’
+car, leaving a note to the effect that he was pretty
+tired of the whole thing and doubted whether the
+expedition would reach the Pole at all because of
+having so many fat men on it.</p>
+
+<p>And so ends the first really unfortunate episode of
+our trip. As Bobby grows older he probably will
+acquire more repression and will learn that individual
+whims must sometimes give way to the
+common good. I also hope that he starts growing
+tall pretty soon.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</span></p>
+
+<p>With the discordant element out of the way, the
+next thing to do was to plan for our hop-off. We
+still have quite a distance to go before we even get
+in sight of the Pole and we must be moving. So a
+meeting was called in the Barrys’ study, to which
+Mr. Barry was, <i>ex-officio</i>, invited, as it was thought
+that he might have some suggestions. His very first
+suggestion was excellent; it was, in part, to concoct
+an eggnog, a hot eggnog. He had some very good
+eggs, he said, and added that that was one of the
+advantages of living in the country—you get good
+eggs. This was voted on, and it was decided that
+Mr. Barry was right. So the eggnog was made hot
+and the meeting called to order.</p>
+
+<p>Lieut.-Commander Connelly said that we ought to
+decide how we were to overcome the retarding action
+of deep snow on our wheels. We have made several
+trial spins around the house here, just to see that our
+cycles were in good order, and found (<i>a</i>) that they
+were not, and (<i>b</i>) that even if they had been, the
+snow would have made any kind of progress at all
+very difficult. As Lieut.-Commander Connelly said,
+“It is almost as if someone were actually holding the
+wheels back!”</p>
+
+<p>From there the discussion got around to cases in
+which wheels actually <i>had</i> been held back by some
+unseen force, but nobody had ever heard of such
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</span>cases. Ensign Thermaline said that he knew of a
+case once where a man with hypnotic power had put
+a friend under a spell and made it impossible for
+him to move his hand away from his face. Mr.
+Barry asked whose face it was the man’s hand was
+on, his own or the hypnotizer’s, and Ensign Thermaline
+said that he had never thought to inquire, but
+that he could get the man on the telephone in a jiffy
+and find out. We all said that it would be interesting
+to know. So a telephone book was sent for
+and Ensign Thermaline set about looking up his
+friend’s number.</p>
+
+<p>While this was going on, we got back to the business
+of the expedition and the question of when we
+should start on. Our route lies pretty fairly straight
+ahead of us, on up through Westchester County to
+Massachusetts, then on up through New Hampshire
+to Canada, and from there to the Pole. “It ought
+to be very pretty up around Williamstown at this
+time of year,” said Lieut.-Commander Connelly.
+“That’s where Williams College is.” Everyone
+agreed to this and it was remembered that the Williams
+song, “The Royal Purple,” has some very neat
+harmony to it. Furthermore, it was discovered that
+Mr. Barry sings a very passable baritone, and a baritone
+is the one thing that our expedition has lacked,
+for Lieut.-Commander Connelly twists out a very
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</span>tricky tenor, and with me leading and Ensign Thermaline
+on a low but fairly accurate bass it began
+to look as if we might do something worth while
+after all.</p>
+
+<p>“Here’s a funny thing,” spoke up Ensign Thermaline,
+still buried in the telephone book. “There are
+two people by the name of ‘Gepp,’ both living in
+Jersey City. A ‘Ben F. Gepp’ at 218 Belvidere Ave.,
+and a ‘William A. Gepp’ at 82 Jewett Ave.”</p>
+
+<p>“Probably brothers,” suggested Mr. Barry.</p>
+
+<p>“Not necessarily,” retorted Lieut.-Commander
+Connelly, a little testily.</p>
+
+<p>“All right; cousins then,” said Mr. Barry, and
+the threatened hard-feeling was avoided. Mr. Barry
+would be a very good man to have come along with
+us to the Pole as he is very conciliatory and diplomatic,
+and after Bobby we need somebody like that.</p>
+
+<p>As a matter of fact, I suggested to him that he
+come with us and he said that he really ought to
+take his family to Cannes in March as he had promised
+them. But he added that he was almost persuaded
+to give that plan up and come along with us.
+I suggested that we go right then and sound out
+Mrs. Barry on the subject because I was sure that
+we could make her see the thing in the right light.
+So we all went upstairs to look for Mrs. Barry, but
+she was asleep. Lieut.-Commander Connelly suggested
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</span>a little serenade, on the ground that married
+women get little or no romance in their lives, and
+said that if he knew married women at all Mrs.
+Barry would be very glad to have a serenade sung
+outside her door, asleep or not. So we did “The
+Royal Purple” for her, very soft the first time
+through and then crescendo on the repeat.</p>
+
+<p>Then, at Mrs. Barry’s suggestion, we went to bed.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="tnote">
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="Transcribers_note">
+ Transcriber’s note
+ </h2>
+
+
+
+<p>Minor punctuation errors have been changed without notice.
+Hyphenation was standardized.</p>
+
+<p>Some illustrations were moved so as to not break up paragraphs.</p>
+
+<p>Spelling was retained as in the original except for the following
+change:</p>
+
+
+<table class="autotable">
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Page <a href="#Page_23">23</a>: “She though it a”
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+“She thought it a”
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">
+Page <a href="#Page_252">252</a>: “the Forces of Vengea ce”
+</td>
+<td class="tdl">
+“the Forces of Vengeance”
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+</div>
+</div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78352 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+This book, 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
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #78352
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78352)