<h2 id="III" class="vspace">III<br/> <span class="subhead">THE MASCOT OF THE GRAYS<br/> <span class="subhead">A BASE-BALL GAME AND THE SUBSEQUENT PROCEEDINGS</span></span></h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">“Why</span>, yes!” said Mr. Perkins, “I’ll tell
you all about it, if you’ve got the
time to spare. I was managing the Grays—that
was the club from the west side of the
river, you know—and we thought ourselves
the prettiest things that ever played base-ball
in Dakota; for a while. And then we had
hard luck. Our fancy pitcher was an ex-soldier
named Fitzeben; a well-built, pale, handsome
fellow, with lots of style, and no heart.
As long as things were coming his way, he
could put up a game of base-ball that would
make a man forget his religion; but if they began
to find him on the other side, Fitz would
go to slops on the run. First-base was this man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span>
Falk you was speaking about. There was a
Hoodoo playing second. ‘Hindoo?’ Yes,
that’s it. You’ve got it. He’d come a long
ways to our town. Nice, pleasant little man
he was, too, with a name that would have
made him an overcoat and a pair of pants, and
then something left for the babies—‘Dammerjoodeljubberjubberchah,’
or words to that
effect. The boys called him ‘Jub,’ so it didn’t
matter so much about that.”</p>
<p>Mr. Perkins stopped to crook his elbow,
as they say in the vernacular, and stood a while
in silence, as the tears of ecstasy gathered in
his eyes.</p>
<p>“Whoo, Jimmy!” said he, “there ought to
go a damper with that whisky—it’s almost
<em>too</em> good with the full draft on. Blast
your seltzer! Give me water. I like my
whisky and my water straight, just as God
made ’em. Well, I was telling you about
our outfit. One of our fellows was crooked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
as a ram’s horn—Jim Burke, that played
short. Darn his buttons! He couldn’t keep
his hands off other people’s property to save
his neck. And gall!—say, that man was
nothing but one big gall with a thin wrapper
of meat around it. One day old Solomon,
that had the clothing store, comes to
me oozing trouble.</p>
<p>“‘Misder Berkints,’ says he, ‘dere ain’t
nubuddy vich dakes more pleasure in der
pall-blaying as I do. If you vant ten tollar
or dwenty tollar vor der club, vy, dake id!
dake id! I gif it midout some vords, but I
ain’t going to stand such monkey-doodle peesnesses.’</p>
<p>“‘What’s the matter now, Sol?’</p>
<p>“‘Vot ees der madder? I tell you vat ees
der madder. Dot feller Burke, he goom by
der store, unt he valk off mid a case. A case!
Mein Gott! A whole case of zusbenders,
und gollar-puttons, unt so fort! I find him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span>
in Gurley’s blace, puddin’ it oop vor der
drinks. I don’t vant to sboil der pall-blaying,
bud dot feller ort to bin in chail.’</p>
<p>“I went with him, and we hunted brother
Burke up. I read him the riot act, but he
was brassy.</p>
<p>“‘Why, he give me the case!’ says he.</p>
<p>“‘Gif you der case!’ yells old Solomon, ‘I!
Vich ees me? Dis shentleman right here?’
tapping himself on the chest. ‘I gif you dot
case? Gott! Mein frendt! You talk like
a sausage!”</p>
<p>“There was no use of my trying to keep
my face straight. Talking like a sausage hit
me on the funny-bone, and I had to holler.</p>
<p>“But as soon as I could get my face shut,
I went for Burke bald-headed. I told him
I’d knock fourteen different styles of doctrine
in him if he didn’t behave better.</p>
<p>“There’s where that big stiff Falk and I
came together for the first time.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
“‘What have you got to do with it?’ says
he. ‘No harm done if he cleaned the d——d
Jew out entirely.’ Well, now mostly I hate
a Jew as well as the next man, but old Sol was
a free spender. He’d put up for anything
that was going, and, Jew or no Jew, it made
me hot to hear Falk talk like that. More
especially as his tone wasn’t any too pleasant.</p>
<p>“‘Who the devil are you talking to,’ says
I, ‘me, or the hired man? I want you to
understand I’m running this thing, pardner!’</p>
<p>“‘Little chance anybody has to forget it,’
he says with a big jarring laugh. Don’t you
know that dirty, sneering laugh he had?</p>
<p>“Well, I was some warm. First off, I
thought I would walk away and not make any
trouble; then I thought to myself, ‘Here, I
fought Jack Dempsey sixteen rounds the last
time I appeared in the ring, and I reckon I’m
not going to let any big swaggering stiff of a
Dutchman get away with any such a crack<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span>
as that!’ Those fellers didn’t know about
my being a profesh. I changed my name
when I quit, after Dempsey licked me, and I
never was much of a hand to talk.</p>
<p>“So without any words, I drove a right-hander
into Mr. Falk’s Adam’s apple. You’ll
hear this and that place spoken of as a tender
spot, but when you want to settle a man quick
and thorough, jam him in the Adam’s apple.
Falk must have weighed a hundred pounds
more than I did, but he went down like a
load of bricks. I wasn’t taking any chances
with such odds in weight against me. To
be sure, I had the science, but the only science
I ever saw that was worth a cuss in a street
fight is to hit the other man early and often,
and with all the enthusiasm you can bring
to bear. Falk laid on his back, very thoughtful,
wondering where he was going to get
his next breath of air from. A crack in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span>
Adam’s apple does a good many things at the
same time: It stops your wind; gives you a
pain in the head; a ringing in your ears; a
cramp in the stomach, and a looseness in the
joints, all at once. I realized that Mr. Falk
wouldn’t be in condition to do business for
some time, and as I was right in the spirit of
the thing, now that I’d got started, I thought
I might as well head Burke up, too.</p>
<p>“I cut him on the end of his Irish nose, and
stood it up in the air like the stack of an old
wood-burner. Then I whaled him in the
butt of the jaw for keeps.</p>
<p>“He fell all over Solomon, and down they
went together.</p>
<p>“‘Don’d you mindt me, Mr. Berkints,’ says
old Sol, as he scrambled after his hat; ‘Id’s
all righd. Dot’s for der zusbenders; gif him
a vew vor der gollar-puttons.’ He was a
funny motzer, that Solomon. It broke me<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span>
up so the fight all went out of me. But I
up-ended Burke and gave him a medicine
talk.</p>
<p>“I’ve been too easy with you fellers, and
I see it,’ says I. ‘From this on, however,
there won’t be any complaint on that score.
You’ll feel like a lost heathen god in the wilderness,
if you try any more playing horse
with me; I think that blasted stubborn
Dutchman is beyond reason—perhaps I’ll
have to really hurt him yet—but I think
there’s reason in <em>you</em>, and you’d better use it,
unless you want me to spread you all over
the fair face of nature.’</p>
<p>“You see, the citizens of the town had been
liberal in coming through for the ball team,
and naturally they took the greatest pride in
it. We were like soldiers going out to fight.
Every time we went away from home to play,
the town saw us off with the band, and welcomed
us back with the same—winner or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span>
loser. Now, I was the manager, and of
course, everybody looked to me to see that
things were run right; consequently, when
fellers cut up like Burke and Falk, it wasn’t
to be stood.</p>
<p>“Well, Burke said he’d give the matter his
careful consideration.</p>
<p>“‘All right, see that you do,’ says I. ‘Now
screw your nut home, and put your face in a
sling till you look better. We don’t want any
such picture of hard times as you are on the
ball field.’</p>
<p>“When Falk got so he could understand
language, I gave him a few passages of the
strongest conversation I had on tap.</p>
<p>“He listened, to be sure, and didn’t give me
any slack; but it was a sullen kind of listening—just
that he was afraid to do different,
that’s all.</p>
<p>“I forgot to tell you that these two fellers
was really hired to play ball. The superintendent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
of the division gave them a job in
the shops, and we paid ’em extra. Falk, he
was a painter; and I wish you could see the
blue, green and yaller ruin he made of a
passenger car. The boss painter wasn’t onto
the game, and took the supe’s talk in earnest,
therefore he starts Falk out single-handed to
paint the car. The boss painter was a quiet
man usually, but when he saw that work of
art, he let go of some expressions that would
have done credit to a steamboat rooster.
More, he heaved a can of red paint on
brother Falk, and swore he’d kill him too
dead to skin, if he dared put foot in the shop
again. This boss painter was a sandy little
man, even if he wasn’t as big as a pint of cider,
and had been leaded so many times that he
shook like a quaking asp. The supe had to
argue with him loud and long before he’d
hear of Falk’s coming back.</p>
<p>“Burke went into the round-house, where<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
all the fellers were more or less sports, and
understood the play.</p>
<p>“Not square to hire ’em? Well, it wasn’t
exactly, but the crowd across the river taught
us the game—they did it first.</p>
<p>“Well, now I’ll tell you how we came by
the Injun—the mascot. He was an old feller—the
Lord only knows how old—who used
to hang around the station selling Injun trinkets
to the passengers. He had a stick with
notches cut into it to tell how old he was, but
the boys used to get the stick and cut more
notches when his nibs wasn’t looking, until
Methusalom was a suckling kid alongside of
that record. ‘Me so old—huh,’ the Injun
used to say, and hand the stick to the passengers.
They’d be full of interest until they
counted up to four or five hundred, when
they would smile in a sickly way, and go
about their business, feeling that they had
been taken in shameful, and much regretting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
the quarter, or whatever chicken-feed it was
they contributed to old Bloody-Ripping-Thunder’s
support. No, ‘Bloody-Ripping-Thunder’
probably wasn’t his name; but
that’s what young Solomon christened him.</p>
<p>“Young Solomon was nephew to the old
feller, and his pardner in the clothing store.
He was a great sport. A darned decent
young lad. It was his idea that we needed
a mascot. We sure did need something about
that time, for if there was anything in Dakota
that hadn’t beaten us, it was only because they
didn’t know our address.</p>
<p>“Ike Solomon takes Rip—that’s short for
the aforesaid Injun—into his store one day,
a bent, white-haired old man, clad in a dirty
blanket, moccasins, and a hat that looked as
if it had come off the rag heap, and he works
a miracle with him. He wouldn’t let nary
one of us inside until he’d carried out his
plans.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
“When we did go in, there stood as spruce
a young gent of a hundred or so as ever you
see. That Injun had on a cheap but decent
light hand-me-down suit, b’iled shirt and
paper collar, red necktie, canvas shoes—mighty
small they were; he had feet like a
lady—pocket-handkercher with red border
sticking out of his pocket, cane in his hand,
a white plug hat on his head and a pair of
specs on his nose. We were simply dumfounded;
that’s the only word for it. The
old cuss carried himself pretty well. Darned
if you’d find a white man of his years that had
as much style to him. And proud! Well,
that don’t give you any idea of it. He
strutted around like a squint-eyed girl that’s
just hooked a feller.</p>
<p>“When he started off down the street to
give the folks a benefit, we had our laugh out.</p>
<p>“Into every store of the place goes Mr.
Rip. Walks up and down and says ‘Huh!’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span>
After he thinks the folks have had a fair show
to take in his glory, ‘Huh!’ says he again,
and tries next door. The whole town was
worked up over it. The fellers would shake
him by the hand, bowing and scraping and
giving him all sorts of steers.</p>
<p>“Well, we had our mascot now, so there
was no particular reason why we shouldn’t
try to get somebody’s scalp.</p>
<p>“We sent a challenge to the Maroons, which
they accepted, too quick. The game was to
be played on our grounds, and with the eyes
of our friends on us, you bet we meant to do
our little best; but luck was against us. Our
second base, the Hoodoo, had got snake bit.
Rattler struck him in the right hand. He
had a mighty close squeak for his life. The
right field, Doctor Andis, the nicest gentleman
that ever wore shoes, was coming down
with the fever that carried him off.</p>
<p>“To crown all, just when I should have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
been rustling around the liveliest, I had one
of my headaches—the worst I ever had.
Lord! For three days I couldn’t see, and
then a fool of a man told me whisky was
good for it, and I took his advice. When
the drink started my heart up, darned if I
didn’t think the top of my head was coming
off. I ought to have been in bed the day
of the game, but of course that wasn’t to be
thought of.</p>
<p>“Well, the boys were nervous, and I was
sick, and though I tried my best to put a
good foot forward, I’m afraid I didn’t help
matters any.</p>
<p>“Everybody and his grandmother turned
out. The town knocked off business altogether.
The weather was fine for ball,
with this exception, the wind blew strong up-field.
That was dead against <em>us</em>, though it
helped their pitcher mightily, as he was weak
on curves, and pitching into the wind added<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
at least a foot to his range. With our man,
Fitzeben, it was different; he had a tremendous
knack on curves; blamed if he couldn’t
almost send a ball around a tree, and the
extra twist threw him off his reckoning so
badly that he lost all command of the ball,
and finally got so rattled that we had to put
another man in, in the fifth inning. They
were slaughtering us then—the score was fifteen
to two. We picked up a little after
that, and in the ninth it looked as if we might
tie them, if we had barrels of good luck.</p>
<p>“Falk went to bat. I cautioned him to
wait for his chance; but you know what a
grand-stand player he was; he had the gallery
in his eye all the time. He was a big,
fine looking feller, in a way, but stuck on
his shape beyond all reason; so, instead of taking
it easy, he swipes at everything that came,
keeping up a running fire of brag all the
time that made everybody very tired.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span>
“Just before the last ball crossed the plate,
he gave the folks to understand that he was
going to belt the cover off it, and the remains
would land down by the river. He
made a fierce pass at it; missed it a mile,
caught his toe and waltzed off on his ear.
He got a dirty fall and everybody was glad of
it. We all laughed ‘Haw! Haw!’ just as
loud as we could. Falk got up, boiling mad.
He looked at us as if he’d like to eat us raw;
but there wasn’t any one round there he felt
safe to make trouble with, until his eyes fell
on old Ripping-Thunder, sitting up straight
in his new clothes and specs and plug hat
and cane, and laughing as fine as anybody.
Then that big Dutchman did the cowardliest
thing I ever saw; he walks up and smashes
poor Rip in the face, just as hard as he could
drive. ‘Now laugh! you d—d Injun!’ says
he. There was a riot in a minute, and I
had to keep the fellers off of Falk, though<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
the Lord knows my mind was different! The
other captain refused to play the game out.
He didn’t want any truck with such people,
he said, and, while our boys were crying hot,
we couldn’t do a thing but let ’em go.</p>
<p>“I picked up old Rip and asked him if
he was hurt. He tried to smile—although
his mouth looked like an accident to a balloon,
where that big lubber hit him—and told me
no, not hurt.</p>
<p>“But his eyes were on Falk all the time,
following every move he made. I tell you
what, my son, never you hit an Injun unawares.
No matter how old or helpless he
may seem, it ain’t safe. An Injun’s not out
of it till he’s dead, and then it’s just as well
to be careful. I know one buck that lashed
the trigger of his rifle to his arm with his
dying hands, and blew a hole like a railroad
tunnel through the feller that tried to take
his gun away from him, as well as changing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>
the appearance of the next man behind, which
was me; you can see the mark running back
from my eyebrow. I’ll tell you about that
skirmish sometime. It was the liveliest I
ever got into. Well, the Injun’s eyes were
a little bleary from age before, but they were
bright enough now. I know I thought it
won’t be well for you, brother Falk, if the
old man gets a crack at you; but being so
disgusted with the way things come out, and
sick besides, I didn’t pay much attention.</p>
<p>“The next day was prairie-chicken day.
Fifteenth of August the law’s up, ain’t it?
I can remember the day all right, but I’m
never quite sure of the date—and all of the
fellers turned out in force to reduce the visible
supply of chicken; me and my friend
Stevens among the rest. We got a later start
than most of the boys, and it must have been
ten or after before we reached McMillan’s
flat, where we were going to do our shooting.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span>
We drove around here and there, but
we never flushed a feather.</p>
<p>“‘Now, Jay,’ says Stevens, ‘let’s cut for old
man Simon’s shack; there is likely to be some
birds in his wheat stubble.’ So off we went.
We were sailing down the little sharp coulée
which opens on Simon bottom when we
heard a gun-shot to the right, and not far off.</p>
<p>“‘Hello!’ says Stevens, ‘there’s a fellow in
luck; we’ll give him a lift if he’s got more
than he can handle.’</p>
<p>“‘Sounded more like a rifle to me, Steve,’
says I.</p>
<p>“‘Well, let’s investigate anyhow—what the
blazes is that?’ For just then riz up a wild
howl, ‘Don’t shoot! Don’t shoot!’ it says.</p>
<p>“‘I could swear that that was the voice of
that sweet gentleman, Mr. Falk,’ says I. ‘Tie
up, and we’ll creep to the top of the bank
and see what’s going on; if Falk’s in trouble,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
I wouldn’t miss it for anything.’ We made
our sneak and looked down. Beneath us was a
sort of big pot-hole, say forty foot across.
On one side was brother Falk, his face as
serious as though he was playing a rubber
with the gent that always wins, but stepping
it high, wide, and frolicsome. Gee! what
pigeon wings and didoes he cut! And the
reason of it sat on the other side of the pot-hole
watching him—Brother Ripping-Thunder,
with a rifle in his hand, enjoying himself
much, and smiling as good as the damaged
condition of his mouth would allow.</p>
<p>“‘Hunh!’ says he, ‘that’s plenty dance—now
stand on head.’</p>
<p>“‘I can’t!’ says Falk, ‘I don’t know how!’</p>
<p>“‘Learn!’ says the Injun, ‘now good time.’</p>
<p>“Falk started to make some objections, but
old Rip raised the rifle, and Falk, with a
wild, despairing cuss, up-ended himself. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
was a big man, as I’ve told you, and when he
keeled over he come down so hard it jarred
the earth.</p>
<p>“‘Wakstashonee!’ cries Rip, ‘that worst I
ever see! Got to do better, or I shoot anyhow!’</p>
<p>“So up goes Falk, and down he comes, and
up he goes and down he comes, in all kinds
of shapes and styles till Steve and me, we
had to jam our handkerchers in our mouths
for fear we’d snort out loud and spoil the
game.</p>
<p>“‘Holy sufferin’!’ says Steve, ‘but ain’t he
just everlastingly run up against the worst of
it this heat! We couldn’t have wished no
better if we tried, Jay!’</p>
<p>“Well, I should say that there wasn’t a
piece as big as a quarter on Falk that wasn’t
black and blue when at last he seemed to get
the knack of it, and held himself up in a
wobbly sort of way.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
“‘There,’ says Rip, ‘that’s more like business.
Just keep feet still—I going to shoot
heels off boots.’</p>
<p>“Falk hollered murder.</p>
<p>“Old Rip shook his head. ‘You make such
noise I get rattled and shoot hole through
foot,’ he complained. Falk shut up like a
clam.</p>
<p>“‘Here we go fresh!’ says Rip. ‘Now
don’t move feet.’</p>
<p>“Blam! And the right heel zipped into
space. Blim! And away went the left one.</p>
<p>“‘Good shooting for old man!’ says Rip.
‘Now you rest. Bimeby we have some more
fun.’</p>
<p>“You should have seen Falk’s face as he sat
there resting, with the pleasant future in his
mind. He wasn’t happy, and he showed it.
As soon as he got his wind he tried to bribe
Rip, but it didn’t go. He promised him
money and ponies and whisky and tobacco,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
and everything under the sun. Rip simply
shook his head. ‘Don’t want!’ says he.
‘Having plenty good time now. Don’t talk
any more. Want think what do next.’</p>
<p>“So there they sat, and whenever Rip
looked at a place, Falk, he looked too, for
he had a large interest in the matter, and it
was pretty medium hard to figure out what
was passing through Rip’s head.</p>
<p>“There was a mud-puddle with about six
inches of water and six foot of mud at the
end of the pot-hole. Rip took that in very
earnest.</p>
<p>“‘Hunh,’ says he, ‘you rested now!’</p>
<p>“‘No, I ain’t!’ cries Falk, with the sweat
starting out all over him. ‘I ain’t rested a
little bit. Now, just wait a minute—honest,
I’m all played out!’</p>
<p>“‘No ask question—tell you about it. I
say rested, you <em>rested</em>,’ answers Rip, in a tone
of voice that wasn’t to be argued with. Falk<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
knuckled. ‘For God’s sake! What’s it going
to be now?’ he asked.</p>
<p>“‘You <em>fish</em>,’ says Rip. ‘Plenty dam big fat
fish, you!’ He pointed to the puddle. ‘Now
swim!’</p>
<p>“I may have mentioned that Falk was stuck
on his appearance? Well, he was—powerful.
So when it came to wallowing around
in a mud-puddle with his brand new hunting
clothes on, he beefed for fair. Moses!
How he cussed!</p>
<p>“Then old Rip raised the rifle again, and
there was a bad light in his old eyes. I
can’t give you no idea of the satisfaction he
expressed as he simply repeated the one word,
‘swim!’</p>
<p>“Brother Falk ground his teeth till the slivers
flew; Rip moved his forefinger. That
was enough. Into the mud, ker-sock! goes
Falk, and the slime splashed a rod around.</p>
<p>“All this time the Injun had been sort of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span>
quiet and sneering, but now he entered into
the spirit of the thing. He capered like a
school-boy. ‘Leelah ouashtay!’ He hollered.
‘Swim, fish! Kick, fat fish! Kick!
Make hand go! Make head go! Make
foot go! Wyupee! Chantay meatow leelah
ouashtayda!’ Then he took to spanking Falk
with the butt of the rifle. It was ‘a animated
scene,’ as the poet says. You don’t often get
a chance to see a two-hundred-and-twenty
pound bully lying on his stomach in a mud-puddle
swimming for dear life, so Steve and
me made the most of it.</p>
<p>“There was Falk hooking mud like a raving
maniac—fountains and geysers and waterspouts
of mud—while Rip pranced around
him, war-whooping and yelling, and laying
it on to him with the rifle-butt until each
crack sounded like a pistol-shot. It seldom
falls to the lot of man or boy to get such a
thorough, heartfelt, soul-searching spanking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span>
as that ugly Dutchman received. My! I
could feel every swat clear down to my toes,
and there isn’t a shadow of doubt in my mind
that Falk did too.</p>
<p>“And that Injun looked so comical flying
around in his high hat and specs and new
clothes and canvas shoes! It was a sight to
make a horse laugh. By and by Steve
couldn’t stand it and he roared right out.
That stopped the matinée. Rip looked up at
us and grinned. ‘I got openers, this pot,’ says
he, tapping the rifle. ‘Play nice game with
friend—stand up, big, fat fish.’</p>
<p>“Well, we had a conniption fit when Falk
made himself perpendicular. He <em>was</em> a
sight! If there ever a man lived whose name
ought to be Mud, ’twas Falk. His hair was
full of it; his face was gobbed with it, and
drops of it fell off the end of his trickling
Dutch <em>muss</em>-tash. To say nothing of them
nice new clothes! Steve hollered, and I hollered,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span>
and the Injun hollered. We <em>more’n</em>
hollered; we rocked on our heels and laid
back our ears and screeched—Falk looking
from one to the other, oozing slough-juice at
every vein, and wishing he had been buried
young.</p>
<p>“At last he kind of whimpers out, ‘Well,
what are you going to do with me now?’</p>
<p>“‘Kika-lap!’ says Rip, ‘fly.’</p>
<p>“And Falk flew, like a little bird; up the
side of the pot-hole, over the coulée and
across the prairie—vanished, vamoosed,
faded, gone for ever. He didn’t even stop to
pack his clothes. The first train out was soon
enough for him.</p>
<p>“So now you say he’s fallen into a bushel
of money, and has a fine house, and drives
his trotters in New York? Well! By gum!
But this <em>is</em> a strange world! Why couldn’t
some decent man have gotten the rocks? I
tell you what we ought to do; we ought to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span>
take a nice photograph of that pot-hole, of
which the general features are impressed on
his memory perfect enough not to need no
label, I guess, and send it on to him with the
compliments of Bloody-Ripping-Thunder,
for him to hang as the principal ornament
in his art gallery! Old Falk a millionaire!
Well, wouldn’t that cramp you! I’ve got to
have something to take the taste of that out of
my mouth. Yes, the same, Jimmy, with
plain water on the side. Well, here’s luck,
young feller, even to old Falk!”</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span></p>
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