Citizen (Berea, Ky.). (Berea, KY) 1906-12-20 [p ]....han could get bout on the West-ern ¬ Division...
Transcript of Citizen (Berea, Ky.). (Berea, KY) 1906-12-20 [p ]....han could get bout on the West-ern ¬ Division...
LUNSUBDUED MELANCHOLY
ffhe pessimist looked on the weather mapAnd a mournful a t U sighed he
For he wan a most unhappy chapUnhappy CUI could be
In January were frozen tightHo sang both sad and slowIn February thoVtttah wo fightAnd In March the chill winds blow
In April came the mud and rainAnd In May tho rain and mud
In June the heat bids mon compUInJuly tttll Ores the blood
September humidly depressedOctober threatens chin
Novembers cllmatd alt unbleatThat threat doth soon MaltAnd In December air severeOur aches and baltirf we nurse
And then wo hart another yearWhich probably la worse M
Washington Stars
THEGRAFTERS
nr-FRANCIS LYNDE
twhmtaetu erwaoraxaur owh
CIIAPTEIl xxvtCOiTINUEDMTosh was a man tor a crisis The
red taillights of the privatecar spe ¬
cial were yet wlthlaa sprinters dashof tile trackbcod but tho trainmasterlost no time chasing a tenwheel flyerwith Red Callahan at tho throttle
Up to myofflctey he shouted andten seconds later Kent was leaningbreathless over the desk In the dis ¬
patchers room while MTosh calledDargan over thtfyard limits telephone
Is that you Durgan he askedwhen tho reply came Then Dropthe board on Cha mail quick andsend somebody td tell TIscher to side-track leaving the main line WesternDivision clean dot thatT
The answer wAS evidently promptand satisfactory since he began againalmost in the camct breath
Now go out yourself and flag Calla ¬
han before he reaches the limits Tellhim tho timecards changed and he isto run west with the special to Meg ¬
lip as first section of tho mallnoMops or Tischer will run him downLeg It Hes hall way down the yard
nowThe trainmaster dropped the ear¬
piece of tho telephone and crossedquickly to the dispatchers table
Orders tor thE Western DivisionDonohue he said curtly and dontJet the gross grow Receivers carCallahan engineer runs to Megilp astin artlon of fast mall Fast mallHunt conductor Tischer engineerruns to tho end of the division with ¬
out stop making up all time possibleAdd to that last Py order of the receiver
The orders were sent as swiftly asthe dispatcher could rattle them offon his key and then followed an in ¬
terval of waiting more terrible than abattle Kent tried to speak but hislips were parched sad his tongue waslike a dry stick between his teethWhat was doing In the loWer yard tWould Durgan tall at the pinch andmismanage it so off to give the alarmtThe minutes drugged leadenwingedand even the sounders on the dispatch ¬
ers table were silentSuddenly the clicking began again
The operator at yard JImlU wassending the K to the two train or-ders So larao good Now if Calla ¬
han could get bout on the West-ern
¬
DivisionBut there was a hitch In the lower
yard Durgan had obeyed orderspromptly and precisely and had suc ¬
ceeded in stopping Callahan Durganclimbed to the cab of the 1010 andthe changed plan was explained in adozen words But now came thecrux
hI I stand here till youd be bringin mo my orders fit have the wholekit av thim buzzln round to knowwhats the maCther said Callahanbut there was not other thing to doand Durgan hurried back to the tele-graph office to play the messengerI He was too long about it Before hegot back rialkctt was under tho cabwindow of the lOltf demanding toknow with many objurgations whyCallahan had stopped In tho middleof the yards
Get Or move on you 1 he shoutedThe express W right behind us and
Itll run us down you damned bogtrotter
CaliahanV gaunlletcd hand shot upto the throttlebar
Im 1avini Mlsthcr Halkett hesaid mildly Will yes go back to thecar or ride wit molt
The general superintendent took noiV ance Of catching the Naughtsevensfcandralla la the darknesn c and hewhipped up liito the cab at the firstsharp cough of the exhaust
Ill go back when you stop for you-rordersIteaaid but iii shadowy figurehad upon the enginestep ascant halfsecond behind him andCallahan was stuffing the crumpledcopy of the order Into ills sweatbandof his C3pTha next instant the big1010 leaped forward like a bloodedhorse under an unmerited cut of thewhip slid past the yard limits tele ¬
graph omco and shot out upon theBjain line cC the Western Division
Sit down Mlsifier Halkett anmike yersclf aCiyt Jelled Callahan
cross tho cabTbumaU Use JimmyShrivel II have for his box this night
Shut off YOU Irish madman was
the shouted command Dont yousee youre on the wrong division
Callahan gave the throttlebar an ¬
other outward hitch tipped his seatand took a hammer from the tool ¬
boxI know where Im coin an thatsmore thin you know ye blandhanderln divlll Up on that box wit youan kape out nv Jimmy Shovels roador Ill be the death av yea Climb
nowIt was at this moment that the tensestrain of suspense was broken in thedispatchers room on the second floorof the Union station The telephoneIklrled joyously and the trainmastersnatched up the earpiece
What does he say asked KentIts all right He says Callahan Is
out on the Western Division withTlBcbcr chasing him according toprogramme Halketts in tho cab ofthe 1010 with Patsy andholdonUy George he says ono of themjumped the car as It was passing thelimits station
Which one was it asked Kentand he bad to watt tilt the reply camefrom Durgan
It was Hawk the rightofwayman He broke and ran for the near ¬
est electric car line the minute he hitthe ground Durgan says Does ho
countNosaid Kent but It is always
a mistake to underrate an enemyscaliber even that of his small arms
CIIAPTEIl XXVIITHE NIGHT OP ALARMS-
If Editor Hlldreth had said noth ¬
ing in his evening edition about theimpending strike on the TransWest-ern
¬
it was not because public Interestwas waning For a fortnight thenewspapers In the territory tributaryto the road had been full of strike talk
MT HEAVEN KENT YOLUE GOODFOR SO YEARS AT TUB VERYLEAST
and Hlldreth had said Ills say depre-cating
¬
the threatened appeal to forceas fearlessly as he condemned themismanagement which was provoking-It
But it was Kent who was responsi ¬
ble for the dearth of news on the eveof the event Early In the morningof the last day of the month he hadsought out the editor and begged himto close the columns of the EveningArgus to strike news no matter whatshould come in during the course ofthedayI go into the reasons asdeeply now as I hope to a little laterhe had said his secretive habit holding good to the final fathom of theslipping hawser of events But youmust bear with me once more andwhatever you hoar between now andthe time you go to press dont com-ment
¬
on it I have one more chanceto win out and It hangs in a balancethat a feathers weight might tip thewrong way Ill be with you between10 and 12 tonight and you cansafely save two columns of the morn ¬
ing paper for the sensation Im goingto give you
It was in fulfillment of this promisethat Kent bestirred himself after hehad sent a wire to Ormsby and MToshhad settled down to the task ofsmoothing Callahans way westwardover a division already twitching inthe preliminary rigor of the strikeconvulsionI to set the fuse for thenewspaper explosion he said to hisally Barring accidents thero Is noreason why we shouldnt begin Vo
figure definitely upon tho result is
thereMTosh was leaning over Dispatch-er
¬
Donahues shoulder Ho hadslipped Donahues fingers aside fromthe key to cut in with a peremptory
G S order suspending in favor ofthe fast mall the rule which requiresa station operator to drop his boardon a following section that is less thanten minutes behind its fileleader
Tho fun Is beginning said thetrainmaster Tischer has his tipfrom Durgan to keep Callahans taillights in sight With the mall tread-Ing
¬
on their heels the gentlemen Inthe Naughtseven will be chary aboutpulling Patsy down too suddenly inmid career They have Just passedMorning Dew and the operator re-ports Tischer for disregarding hisslow signal
Cant you fix that asked KentOh yes that Is ono of the things
I can fix But there are going to boplenty of others
Still we must take something forgranted Mr MTosh What r have todo uptiwn wont walt until Callahanhas finished his run I thought themain difficulty was safely overcome
Umphl said the trainmasterthe troubles are barely getting them ¬
selves born You mast remember thatwe swapped hones at the last minuteWe were ready for tho raw to thr natEverybody oa the Prairie Division hd
been notified that a special was to goI through tonight without stop from
junctionImeeting points to meta slow trains i
to sidetrack fool operators to holddown all on the dlrzy edge of a strikethat is making nvery man on the linelose his balance But you go aheadwith your newspaper business Illdo what a man can hero And if youcome across that rightofway agent-I wish youd make it a case of assaultIand battery and get himIm leery about him
Kent went his way dubiously re-
flective¬
In the moment of triumphwhen Durgan had announced the sue ¬
cess of the bold change In tho pro¬
gramme he had made light of Hawksescape But now be saw possibilitiesTrue tho junto was leaderless for themoment and Bucks had no very ablolieutenants But Hawk would give thealarm and there was the rank and fileof the machine to reckon with Andfor weapons tho ring controlled thepolice power of tile state and of thocity Let tho word be passed that theemployes of tho TransWestern werekidnaping their receiver and tho gov ¬
ernor and many things might happenbefore Red Callahan should finishhis long race to the westward
Thinking of these things David Kentwalked uptown when he might havetaken a car When the toxin of panicIs in the air there is no antidote likevigorous action
Passing the Western Union centraloffice he stopped to send Ormsby asecond telegram reporting progressand asking him to bo present in per¬
son at the denouement to put tho factson the wire at the earliest possibleinstant of time Everything dependsupon this he added when bo hadmade the message otherwise emphatic
If we miss tho morning papers we are
doneWhilehe was pocketing his change
at the receiving clerks pigeonhole acab rattled up wlth a horso at a gallop and Stephen Hawk sprang outKent saw him through the plateglassfront and turned quickly to the publicwritingdesk hoping to bo overlookedHe was For once In of way the exdIstrict attorney was too nearly rattledto be fully alert to his surroundingsThere were others at the standingdesk and Hawk wrote his messageafter two or three false starts almostat Kents elbow
Kent heard the chink of coin and thelowspoken urgings for haste at thereceiving clerks window but he for¬
bore to move until the cab had rattledaway Then he gathered up tho spoiledblanks left behind by Hawk andsmoothed them out Two of them borenothing but the date line mado illegi ¬
ble It would seem by the writershaste and nervousness But at thethird attempt Hawk had got as far asthe address To All TransWesternAgents on Western Division
Kent stepped quickly to the receiverswindow Tho only expedient ho couldthink of was open to reproach but itwas no time to be overscrupulous
Pardon mo he began but didntthe gentleman who was Just hero for¬
get to sign his messagesThe little hook caught Its minnow
The receiving clerk was folding Hawksmessage to place it in the leather car ¬
rier of tho pneumatic tube but heopened and examined it
No he said its all right M D
Halkett G SAh said Kent Thats a little
odd Mr Halkett is out of town andthis gentleman Mr Hawk Is not in hisdepartment I believe I should Investi ¬
gate a little before sending that It 1
were you-Having thus sown the small seed of
suspicion which by the by fell on bar ¬
fen soil Kent lost no time In callingup MTosh over the nearest telephone-
Do our agents on the Western Di ¬
vision handle Western Union bus ¬
ness hs askedThe reply came promptlyYes locally The WU has an in¬
dependent line to Breczeland Inn andpoints beyond
Well our rightofway man hasIjust sent a telegram to all agentssigning Halketts name I dont knowwhat he said in it but you can figurethat out for yourself
You bet I can II was tho emphaticrejoinder And then Where aroyou now
Im at the Clarendon public phonebut I am going over to the Argus of ¬
flee Ill let you know when I leavethere Goodby
When Kent reached the nighteditors den on tho third floor of theArgus building he found Hildreth im ¬
mersed chindeep in a sea of workBut he quickly extricated himself andcleared a chair for his visitor
Pralso bet ho ejaculated I wasbeginning to get anxious Largethings are happening and you didntturn up Ive had Manville wiring allover town for you
What are some of the largethings asked Kent lighting his firstcigar since dinner
Well for one do you know thatyour people are M the verge of therouchtalkedof stripe
Yes I knew it tits morning Thatwas what I wanted you to suppress inthe evening edition-
I suppressed it all right I didntknow Itday and date I mean Theykept it beautifully quiet But thatisnt all Something is happening atthe capitol I woo over at the cluba little while ago and Uendrlcks wasthere Somebody sent in a noto andhe positively ran to get out When I
came back I sent Rogers ovo toCassattls to see if he could find jouThere was a junto dinner crnfab onMelgs Senator Crowley three or fourof the ring aldermen and halt ti dozenwaward politicians Rogers has anose for newr and when he hadphoned me you werent there he hung
around on the edges
W
Good men you tare illrarctbWhat did the unimpeachable RogtriiscolHo saw on a large scale just whatI had seen on a small one somebodypuppassed a noto In and when it hadgone tho round of the dinnertabthose fellows tumbled over each othertrying to get away
Is that all Kent InquiredNo Apart from his nose Rogersgifted with horso sense When tin
118 crowd boarded an uptown carman paid fare to the same con
Ho wired mo from the HotelBrunswick n tow minutes uo ThereIs some sort of a caucus going on laHendrlcks office in the capital andmummessengers are flying in all di ¬
rectionsAnd you wanted me to come andtell you all tho whys and whereforesKent suggested-
I told the chief Ill bet a bubblindhorse to a brokendoom mule youcould do it if nnjboiy ccniiJ
All right listen acuncthvag rorsthan an hour ago tho governor his pri-vate
¬
secretary Gullford Hawk andHalkett started out on a special trainto go to Gaston
What ort interrupted the editorTo meet Judge MacFarlane Mr
Seraplo Falkland and the Overland of-
ficIals¬
You can guess what was to b4
doneSureYour railroad was to
out lock stock and barrel or lelsldIto the Overland for 49 years whichamounts to tho same thing
Precisely Well by some unitecountablo mishap the receivers spe¬
clal was switched over to the WesternDivision at yard limits and the cnglncer seems to think bo has orders to I
proceed westward At all events thatis what he is doing And the funnypart of It Is that ho cant stop to findout his blunder The fast matt is rightbehind him with the receivers orderto smash anything that gets in Its wayso you sce
That wilt do said the night editorWe dont print fairy stories in the
ArgusNone tho less you are going to
print this ono tomorrow morning justas Im tolling it to you Kent assertedconfidently And when you get theepilogue you will say that It makes mylittle preface wearisome t r contrast
Tho light was slowly dawning In theeditorial mind
My heaven I he exclaimed Kentyoure good for 20 years at tho verylulleast
Am It It occurs to me that theprosecuting attorney In the cato willhave a hard time proving anythingDooent it look that way to ou7 Attho worst it is only an unhappy mis ¬
understanding of orders And if theend should happen to justify themoans >
Hildreth shook his head gravelyITo Ha Continued
HOW POET SOUTHEY WORKED
Ilnil Six Tnllrn In III Library HunkDevoted to Special Clun
of Wrltlnir
Southey was a mehodlcal and rapidliterary craftsman I am a qulot pa¬
tient easygoing hack of tho mullbreed regular as clockwork in mypace surefooted bearing the burdenwhich is laid on me and only obstinatein choosing my own path he wrote ina friend But his method was by nomeans slmplo says the Cornhlll Maga-zine
He was a poet a historian a criticand a miscellaneous writer ho turnedout an enormous quantity of matterand succeeded in doing BO by working14 hours a day and diversifying his la ¬
bors within his dally round Ho hadsix tables in his library Ho wrotepoetry nt one history at another criti ¬
clam at a third and BO on with theother subjects upon which he was en ¬
gaged and when he was tired of spin-
ning his brains into verse be turnedto history and criticism
There is a story that he once des-
crIbed to Mme do Stall the divisionof his time two hours before break ¬
fast for history two hours for rendingafter two hours for the compositeof poetry two hours for criticism an4so on through all his working day
And pray Mr Southey queried theFrenchwoman somewhat unkindly
when do you think +
Having a IllrlhdnrDifferent customs prevail in differ
eat countries When it becomes ncccasary to celebrate a Japaneso victorythe mikado can always touch a butt-on and pull off a birthday althoughhe has had ono the week before andthreo during the previous month Itis all right there and they expect it
I
and the almanacmakers think nothingof getting out oh extra every tow dayto chronicle an event of this sortHowever the custom would never daIn this country and particularly amongthe young ladles It Is ono of thetcIjseebirthday when she has been billed forone by the family Bible While roy-
alty in tho abstract might hdvachsrswfor her yet that birthday habit Isfeature chi nevs could stand forIllinois State Journal
A Freak at NatureNot long ago Col Cody betty
known as Buffalo Bill was relatingto a professor of ethnology some of hitmany and varied experiences amongthe Indiana during his early day
By the way asked Col Cain ab-ruptly did you over see a redheadedIndianNever dltf and never heard of sucha freak colount was the reply
I saw one a Cherokee down osthe Fort Scott troll quietly answeredCody Then he stopped waiting for i
riseItcame Rather an nuasiial sight
that wasnt ittRather but you see this tndw
was bald Philadelphia Ledges
Hyacinths NnrdsausCrocus Tulips
Cut
IFerns
I
188 KY
FlowersDesigns
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