<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h1> KILO </h1>
<p><br/></p>
<h2> Being the Love Story of Eliph' Hewlitt Book Agent </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h2> By Ellis Parker Butler </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<h2> Contents </h2>
<h4>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>KILO</b> </SPAN>
</h4>
<table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
Eliph' Hewlitt
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
Susan
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
“How to Win the Affections”
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
Kilo
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
Sammy Mills
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
The Castaway
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
The Colonel
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
The Medium-Sized Box
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
The Witness
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
The Boss Grafter
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
The False Gods of Doc Weaver
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
Getting Acquainted
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
“Second: A Small Present”
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
Something Turns Up
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
Difficulties
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
Two Lovers, and a Third
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
According to Jarby's
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
Another Trial
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </SPAN>
</td>
<td>
Pap Briggs' Hen Food
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"></SPAN></p>
<h1> KILO </h1>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER I. Eliph' Hewlitt </h2>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt, book agent, seated in his weather-beaten top buggy, drove
his horse, Irontail, carefully along the rough Iowa hill road that leads
from Jefferson to Clarence. The Horse, a rusty gray, tottered in a
loose-jointed manner from side to side of the road, half asleep in the
sun, and was indolent in every muscle of his body, except his tail, which
thrashed violently at the flies. Eliph' Hewlitt drove with his hands held
high, almost on a level with his sandy whiskers, for he was well
acquainted with Irontail.</p>
<p>The road seemed to pass through a region of large farms, offering few
opportunities for selling books, the houses being so far apart, but Eliph'
knew the small settlement of Clarence was a few miles farther on, and he
was carrying enlightenment to the benighted. He glowed with missionary
zeal. In his eagerness he thoughtlessly slapped the reins on the back of
Irontail.</p>
<p>Instantly the plump, gray tail of the horse flashed over the rein and
clamped it fast. Eliph' Hewlitt leaned over the dashboard of his buggy and
grasped the hair of the tail firmly. He pulled it upward with all his
strength, but the tail did not yield. Instead, Irontail kicked vigorously.
Eliph' Hewlitt, knowing his horse as well as he knew human nature, climbed
out of the buggy, and taking the rein close by the bit led Irontail to the
side of the road. Then he took from beneath the buggy seat a bulky,
oil-cloth-wrapped parcel and seated himself near the horse's head. There
was no safety for a timid driver when Irontail had thus assumed command of
the rein. There was no way to get a rein from beneath that tail but to
ignore it. In an hour or so Irontail would grow forgetful, carelessly
begin flapping flies, and release the rein himself.</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt unwrapped the oilcloth from the object it enfolded. It was
a book. It was Jarby's 'Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of
Literature, Science, Art, Comprising Useful Information on One Thousand
and One Subjects, Including A History of the World, the Lives of all
Famous Men, Quotations From the World's Great Authors, One Thousand and
One Recipes, Et Cetera'. One Volume, five dollars bound in cloth; seven
fifty in morocco. Eliph' Hewlitt passed his hand affectionately over the
gilt-stamped cover, and then opened it at random and read.</p>
<p>For years he had been reading Jarby's Encyclopedia, and among its ten
thousand and one subjects he always found something new. It opened now at
“Courtship—How to Make Love—How to Win the Affections—How to
Hold Them When Won,” and although he had read the pages often before, he
found in all parts of the book, whenever he read it, a new meaning. It
occurred to him that even a book agent might have reason to use the
helpful words set for in clear type in the chapter on “Courtship—How
to Make Love,” and he realized that sometime he must reach the age when he
would need a home of his own. For years he had thought of woman only as a
possible customer for Jarby's Encyclopedia. Every woman, not already
married, he now saw, might be a possible Mrs. Eliph' Hewlitt.</p>
<p>Suddenly he raised his head. On the breeze there was borne to him the
sound of voices—many voices. He closed the book with a bang. His
small body became tense; his eyes glittered. He scented prey. He wrapped
the book in its oilcloth, laid it upon the buggy seat, and taking Irontail
by the bridle, started in the direction of the voices.</p>
<p>Half a mile down the road he came upon a scene of merriment. In a cleared
grove men, women and children were gathered; it was a church picnic.
Eliph' Hewlitt took his hitching strap from beneath the buggy seat and
secured Irontail to a tree.</p>
<p>“Church picnic,” he said to himself; “one, two, sixteen, twenty-four, AND
the minister. Good for twelve copies of Jarby's Encyclopedia or I'm no
good myself. I love church picnics. What so lovely as to see the pastor
and his flock gathered together in a bunch, as I may say, like ten-pins,
ready to be scooped in, all at one shot?”</p>
<p>He walked up to the rail fence and leaned against it so that he might be
seen and invited in. It was better policy than pushing himself forward,
and it gave him time to study the faces. He did not find them hopeful
subjects. They were not the faces of readers. They were not even the faces
of buyers. Even in their holiday finery, the women were shabby and the men
were careworn. The minister himself, white-bearded and gray-haired, showed
more signs of spiritual grace than intellectual strength.</p>
<p>One woman, fresh and bright as a butterfly, appeared among them, and
Eliph' Hewlitt knew her at once as a city dweller, who had somehow got
into this dull and hard-working community. Almost at the same moment she
noticed him, and approached him. She smiled kindly and extended her hand.</p>
<p>“Won't you come in?” she asked. “I don't seem to remember your face, but
we would be glad to have you join us.”</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt shook his head.</p>
<p>“No'm,” he said sadly. “I'd better not come in. Not that I don't want to,
but I wouldn't be welcome. There ain't anything I like so much as church
picnics, and when I was a boy I used to cry for them, but I wouldn't dare
join you. I'm a”—he looked around cautiously, and said in a whisper—“I'm
a book agent.”</p>
<p>The lady laughed.</p>
<p>“Of course,” she said, “that DOES make a difference; but you needn't be a
book agent to-day. You can forget it for a while and join us.”</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt shook his head again.</p>
<p>“That's it,” he said. “That's just the reason. I CAN'T forget it. I try
to, but I can't. Just when I don't want to, I break out, and before I know
it I've sold everybody a book, and then I feel like I'd imposed on good
nature. They take me in as a friend and then I sell 'em a copy of Jarby's
'Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art,'
ten thousand and one subjects, from A to Z, including recipes for every
known use, quotations from famous authors, lives of famous men, and, in
one word, all the world's wisdom condensed into one volume, five dollars,
neatly bound in cloth, one dollar down and one dollar a month until paid.”</p>
<p>He paused, and the lady looked at him with an amused smile.</p>
<p>“Or seven fifty, handsomely bound in morocco,” he added. “So you see I
don't feel like I ought to impose. I know how I am. You take my mother
now. She hadn't seen me for eight years. I'd been traveling all over these
United States, carrying knowledge and culture into the homes of the people
at five dollars, easy payments, per home, and I got a telegram saying,
'Come home. Mother very ill.'” He nodded his head slowly. “Wonderful
invention, the telegraph,” he said. “It tells all about it on page 562 of
Jarby's 'Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science
and Art,'—who invented; when first used; name of every city, town,
village and station in the U.S. that has a telegraph office; complete
explanation of the telegraph system, telling how words are carried over a
slender wire, et cetery, et cetery. This and ten thousand other useful
facts in one volume, only five dollars, bound in cloth. So when I got that
telegram I took the train for home. Look in the index under T. 'Train,
Railway—see Railway.' 'Railway; when first operated; inventor of the
locomotive engine; railway accidents from 1892 to 1904, giving number of
fatal accidents per year, per month, per week, per day, and per miles; et
cetery, et cetery. Every subject known to man fully and interestingly
treated, WITH illustrations.”</p>
<p>“I don't believe I care for a copy to-day,” said the lady.</p>
<p>“No,” said Eliph' Hewlitt, meekly. “I know it. Nor I don't want to sell
you one. I just mentioned it to show you that when you have a copy of
Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge you have an entire library in one book,
arranged and indexed by the greatest minds of the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries. One dollar down and one dollar a month until paid. But—when
I got home I found mother low—very low. When I went in she was just
able to look up and whisper, 'Eliph'?' 'Yes, mother,' I says. 'Is it
really you at last?' she says. 'Yes, mother,' I says, 'it's me at last,
mother, and I couldn't get here sooner. I was out in Ohio, carrying joy to
countless homes and introducing to them Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge
and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art. It is a book, mother,' I
says, 'suited for rich or poor, young or old. No family is complete
without it. Ten thousand and one subjects, all indexed from A to Z,
including an appendix of the Spanish War brought down to the last moment,
and maps of Europe, Asia, Africa, North and South America and Australia.
This book, mother,' I says, 'is a gold mine of information for the young,
and a solace for the old. Pages 201 to 263 filled with quotations from the
world's great poets, making select and helpful reading for the fireside
lamp. Pages 463 to 468, dying sayings of famous men and women. A book,' I
says, 'that teaches us how to live and how to die. All the wisdom of the
world in one volume, five dollars, neatly bound in cloth, one dollar down
and one dollar a month until paid.' Mother looked up at me and says,
'Eliph', put me down for one copy.' So I did. I hope I may do the same for
you.”</p>
<p>The lady was about to speak, but Eliph' Hewlitt held up his hand
warningly.</p>
<p>“No,” he said. “I beg your pardon. I didn't MEAN to say that. I couldn't
think of taking your order. I didn't mean to ask it any more than I meant
to ask mother. It's habit, and that's what I'm afraid of. I'd better not
intrude.”</p>
<p>The lady evidently did not agree with him. He amused her because he was
what she called a “type,” and she was always on the lookout for “types.”
She urged him to join the picnic, and said he could try not to talk books,
and reminded him that no one could do more than try. He climbed the fence
with a reluctance that was the more noticeable because his climbing was
retarded by the oilcloth-covered parcel he held beneath his arm. The lady
smiled as she noticed that he had not feared his soliciting habits
sufficiently to leave the book in the buggy, and she made a mental note of
this to be used in the story she meant to write about this book-agent
type.</p>
<p>“My name is Smith,” she told him, as she tripped lightly toward the group
about the lunch baskets.</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt was a small man and his movements were short and jerky. He
drew his hand over his red whiskers and coughed gently when she mentioned
her name, and as she hurried on before him he looked at her tall, straight
figure; noticed the stylish mode of her simple summer gown, and caught a
glimpse of low, white shoes and neat ankles covered by delicately woven
silk.</p>
<p>“Courtship—How to Make Love—How to Win the Affections—How
to Hold Them When Won,” he meditated. “Lovely, but she will not suit. She
is an encyclopedia of knowledge and compendium of literature, science and
art, but she is not the edition I can afford. She is gilt-edged and
morocco bound, and an ornament to any parlor, but I can't afford her. My
style is cloth, good substantial cloth, one dollar down and one dollar a
month until paid. As I might say.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER II. Susan </h2>
<p>Mrs. Tarbro-Smith had arranged the picnic herself, hoping to bring a
little pleasure into the dullness of the summer, enliven the interest in
the little church, and make a pleasant day for the people of Clarence, and
she had succeeded in this as in everything she had undertaken during her
summer in Iowa. As the leader of her own little circle of bright people in
New York, she was accustomed to doing things successfully, and perhaps she
was too sure of always having things her own way. As sister of the
world-famous author, Marriott Nolan Tarbro, she was always received with
consideration in New York, even by editors, but in seeking out a dead eddy
in middle Iowa she had been in search of the two things that the woman
author most desires, and best handles: local color and types. The editor
of MURRAY'S MAGAZINE had told her that his native ground—middle Iowa—offered
fresh material for her pen, and, intent on opening this new mine of local
color, she had stolen away without letting even her most intimate friends
know where she was going. To have her coming heralded would have put her
“types” on their guard, and for that reason she had assumed as an
impenetrable incognito one-half her name. No rays of reflected fame
glittered on plain Mrs. Smith.</p>
<p>While her literary side had found some pleasure in studying the people she
had fallen among, she was not able to recognize the distinctness of type
in them that the editor of MURRAY'S had led her to believe she should
find. She had hoped to discover in Clarence a type as sharply defined as
the New England Yankee or the York County Dutch of Pennsylvania, but she
could not see that the middle Iowan was anything but the average country
person such as is found anywhere in Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio, a type
that is hard to portray with fidelity, except with rather more skill than
she felt she had, since it is composed of innumerable ingredients drawn
not only from New England, but from nearly every State, and from all the
nations of Europe. However, her kindness of heart had been able to exert
itself bountifully, and she had had enough experience in her sundry
searches for local color to know that a lapse of time and of distance
would emphasize the types she was now seeing, and that by the middle of
the winter, when once more in her New York apartment, her present
experiences and observations would have the right perspective, and their
salient features would stand out more plainly. So she won the hearts of
her hostess, and of the dozen or more children of the house, with small
gifts, and overjoyed with this she set about making the whole community
happier. Little presents, smiles, and kind words meant so much to the
overworked, hopeless women, and her cheery manner was so pleasant to men
and children, that all worshipped her—clumsily and mutely, but
whole-heartedly. She was a fairy lady to them.</p>
<p>The truth was that, in her eagerness to secure the most vivid kind of
local color, she had gone a step too far. Clarence, with its decayed
sidewalks and rotting buildings, was not typical of middle Iowa any more
than a stagnant pool left by a receded river after a flood is typical of
the river itself. Before the days of railroads Clarence had been a lively
little town, but it was on the top of a hill, and, when the engineer of
the Jefferson Western Railroad had laid his ruler on the map and had drawn
a straight line across Iowa to represent the course of the road, Clarence
had been left ten or twelve miles to one side, and, as the town was not
important enough to justify spoiling the beauty of the straight line by
putting a curve in it, a station was marked on the road at the point
nearest Clarence, and called Kilo. For a while the new station was merely
a sidetrack on the level prairie, a convenience for the men of Clarence,
but before Clarence knew how it had happened Kilo was a flourishing town,
and the older town on the hill had begun to decay. Even while Clarence was
still sneering at Kilo as a sidetrack village, Kilo had begun to sneer at
Clarence as a played-out crossroads settlement. Clarence, when Mrs.
Tarbro-Smith visited it, was no more typical of middle Iowa than a sunfish
really resembles the sun.</p>
<p>In Clarence Mrs. Smith's best loved and best loving admirer was Susan,
daughter of her hostess, and, to Mrs. Smith, Susan was the long sought and
impossible—a good maid. From the first Susan had attached herself to
Mrs. Smith, and, for love and two dollars a week, she learned all that a
lady's maid should know. When Mrs. Smith asked her if she would like to go
to New York, Susan jumped up and down and clapped her hands. Susan was as
sweet and lovable as she was useful, and under Mrs. Smith's care she had
been transformed into such a thing of beauty that Clarence could hardly
recognize her. Instead of tow-colored hair, crowded back by means of a
black rubber comb, Susan had been taught a neat arrangement of her blonde
locks—so great is the magic of a few deft touches. Instead of being
a gawky girl of seventeen, in a faded blue calico wrapper, Susan, as
transformed by one of Mrs. Smith's simple white gowns, was a young lady.
She so worshipped Mrs. Smith that she imitated her in everything, even to
the lesser things, like motions of the hand, and tossings of the head.</p>
<p>When Mrs. Smith broached the matter of taking Susan to New York, she
received a shock from Mr. and Mrs. Bell. She had not for one moment
doubted that they would be delighted to find that Susan could have a good
home, good wages, and a city life, instead of the existence in such a town
as Clarence.</p>
<p>“Well, now,” Mr. Bell said, “we gotter sort o' talk it over, me an' ma,
'fore we decide that. Susan's a'most our baby, she is. T'hain't but four
of 'em younger than what she is in our fambly. We'll let you know, hey?”</p>
<p>Ma and Pa Bell talked it over carefully and came to a decision. The
decision was that they had better talk it over with some of the neighbors.
The neighbors met at Bell's and talked it over openly in the presence of
Mrs. Smith.</p>
<p>They agreed that it would be a great chance for Susan, and they said that
no one could want a nicer, kinder lady for boss than what Mrs. Smith was—“but
'tain't noways right to take no risks.”</p>
<p>“You see, ma'am,” said Ma Bell, “WE don't know who you are no more than
nothin', do we? And we do know how as them big towns is ungodly to beat
the band, don't we? I remember my grandma tellin' me when I was a little
girl about the awful goin's on she heard tell of one time when she was
down to Pittsburg, and I reckon New York must be twice the size of
Pittsburg was them days, so it must be twice as wicked. So we tell you
plain, without meanin' no harm, that WE don't know who you are, nor what
you'd do with Susan, once you got her to New York.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I now what you want,” said Mrs. Smith; “you want references.”</p>
<p>“Them's it,” said Mrs. Bell, with great relief.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Mrs. Smith, “that is easy. I know EVERYBODY in New York.”</p>
<p>She thought a moment.</p>
<p>“There's Mr. Murray, of MURRAY'S MAGAZINE,” she suggested, mentioning her
friend of the great monthly magazine.</p>
<p>“Guess we never heard of that,” said Mrs. Bell doubtfully.</p>
<p>“Then do you know the AEON MAGAZINE? I know the editor of AEON.”</p>
<p>The neighbors and Mrs. Bell looked at each other blankly, and shook their
heads.</p>
<p>Mrs. Smith named ALL the magazines. She had contributed stories to most of
them, but not one was known, even by name, to her inquisitors. One shy old
lady asked faintly if she had ever heard of Mr. Tweed. She thought she had
heard of a Mister Tweed of New York, once.</p>
<p>Then, quite suddenly, Mrs. Smith remembered her own brother, the great
Marriott Nolan Tarbro, whose romances sold in editions of hundreds of
thousands, and who was, beyond all doubt, the greatest living novelist.
Kings had been glad to meet him, and newsboys and gamins ran shouting at
his heels when he walked the streets.</p>
<p>“How silly of me,” she said. “You must have heard of my brother, Marriott
Nolan Tarbro, you know, who wrote 'The Marquis of Glenmore' and 'The Train
Wreckers'?”</p>
<p>Mrs. Bell coughed apologetically behind her hand.</p>
<p>“I'm not very littery, Mrs. Smith,” she said kindly, “but mebby Mrs. Stein
knows of him. Mrs. Stein reads a lot.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Stein, whose sole reading was the Bible and such advertising booklets
as came by mail, or as she could pick up on the counter of the drugstore,
when she went to Kilo, moved uneasily. For years she had had the
reputation of being a great reader, and brought face to face with the
sister of an author she feared her reputation was about to fall.</p>
<p>“What say his name was?” she asked.</p>
<p>“Tarbro,” said Mrs. Smith, as one would mention Shakespeare or Napoleon.
“Tarbro. Marriott Nolan Tarbro.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Mrs. Stein slowly, turning her head on one side and looking
at the spot on the ceiling from which the plaster had fallen, “I won't say
I haven't. And I won't say I have. When a person reads as much as what I
do, she reads so many names they slip out of memory. Just this minute I
don't quite call him to mind. Mighty near, though; I mind a feller once
that peddled notions through here name of Tarbox. Might you know him?”</p>
<p>“No,” said Mrs. Smith, “I haven't the honor.”</p>
<p>“I thought mebby you might know him,” said Mrs. Stein. “His business took
him 'round considerable, and I thought mebby it might have took him to New
York, and that mebby you might have met him.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Bell sighed audibly.</p>
<p>“It's goin' to be an awful trial to Susan if she can't go,” she said; “but
I dunno WHAT to say. Seems like I oughtn't to say 'go,' an' yet I can't
abear to say 'stay.'”</p>
<p>“I MUST have Susan,” said Mrs. Smith, putting her arm about the girl. “I
know you can trust her with me.”</p>
<p>“Clementina,” said Mr. Bell suddenly, “why don't you leave it to the
minister? He'd settle it for the best. Why don't you leave it to him?
Hey?”</p>
<p>“Well, bless my stars,” said Mrs. Bell, brightening with relief, “I'd
ought to have thought of that long ago. He WOULD know what was for the
best. I'll ask him to-morrow.”</p>
<p>To-morrow was the picnic day.</p>
<p>As Mrs. Smith led the way for Eliph' Hewlitt, the minister left the group
of women who had clustered about him, and walked toward her.</p>
<p>“Sister Smith,” he said, in his grave, kind way, “Sister Bell tells me you
want to carry off our little Susan. You know we must be wise as serpents
and gentle as doves I deciding, and”—he laid his hand on her arm—“though
I doubt not all will be well, I must think over the matter a while.
Welcome, brother,” he added, offering his hand to Eliph' Hewlitt.</p>
<p>The little book agent shook it warmly.</p>
<p>“'I was a stranger and ye took me in,'” he said glibly. “Fine weather for
a picnic.”</p>
<p>His eyes glowed. To meet the minister first of all! This was good, indeed.
Years of experience had taught him to seek the minister first. To start
the round of a small community with the prestige of having sold the
minister himself a copy of Jarby's Encyclopedia made success a certainty.</p>
<p>He took the oilcloth-covered parcel from beneath his arm, and handed it to
the minister gently, lovingly.</p>
<p>“Keep it until the picnic is over,” he said. “I'm a book agent. I sell
books. THIS is the book I sell. Take it away and hide it, so I can forget
it and be happy. Don't let me have it until the picnic is over. PLEASE
don't!”</p>
<p>He stretched out his arms in freedom, and the minister smiled and led the
way toward the place where a buggy cushion had been laid on the grass as
his seat of honor.</p>
<p>“I will retain the book,” said the minister, with a smile, “although I
don't think you can sell the book here. My brethren in Clarence are not
readers. I read little myself. We are poor; we have no time to read.
Except the Bible, I know of but one book in this entire community. Sister
Dawson has a copy of Bunyan's sublime work, 'Pilgrim's Progress.' It was
an heirloom. Be seated,” he said, and Eliph' Hewlitt seated himself
Turk-fashion, on the sod.</p>
<p>The minister took the book carefully on his knees. Even to feel a new book
was a pleasure he did not often have, and his fingers itched upon it.</p>
<p>In three minutes Eliph' Hewlitt knew the entire story of Mrs. Smith and
Susan, so far as it was known to the minister, and he leaned over and
tapped with his forefinger the book on the minister's knee.</p>
<p>“Open it,” he said.</p>
<p>The minister removed the wrapper.</p>
<p>“Page 6, Index,” said Eliph' Hewlitt, turning the pages. He ran his finger
down the page, and up and down page 7, stopped at a line on page 8, and
hastily turned over the pages of the book. At page 974 he laid the book
open, and the minister adjusted his spectacles and read where the book
agent pointed. Then he pushed his spectacles up on his forehead and looked
carefully at the picnickers. He singled out Mrs. Tarbro-Smith, and waved
her toward him with his hand. She came and stood before him.</p>
<p>The minister wiped his spectacles on his handkerchief, readjusted them on
his nose, and bent over the book.</p>
<p>“What is your brother's name?” he asked kindly, but with solemnity.</p>
<p>“Marriott Nolan Tarbro,” she answered.</p>
<p>He traced the lines carefully with his finger.</p>
<p>“Born?” he asked.</p>
<p>“June 4, 1864, at Tarrytown-on-the-Hudson.”</p>
<p>“And he is married?”</p>
<p>“Married Amanda Rogers Long, at Newport, Rhode Island, June 14, 1895.”</p>
<p>“Where is he living now?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Last year he was living in New York—I am a widow, as you know—but
last fall he went to Algiers.”</p>
<p>“The book says Algiers. What-er-clubs is he a member of?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes,” said Mrs. Smith; “The Authors and The Century.”</p>
<p>“I have no doubt,” said the minister, “from what the book says, and what
you say, that you are indeed the sister of this—ah—celebrated”—he
looked at the book—“celebrated novelist, who is a man of such
standing that he received—ah—several more lines in this work
than the average, more, in fact, than Talmage, more than Beecher, and more
than the present governor of the State of Iowa. I think I may safely
advise Mrs. Bell to let Susan go with you.”</p>
<p>“One!” said Eliph' Hewlitt quickly. “That's just ONE question that came up
flaring, and was mashed flat by Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and
Compendium of Literature, Science and Art, a book in which are ten
thousand and one subjects, fully treated by the best minds of the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries. One subject for every day in the year
for twenty-seven years, and some left over. Religion, politics,
literature, every subject under the sun, gathered in one grand colossal
encyclopedia with an index so simple that a child can understand it. See
page 768, 'Texts, Biblical; Hints for Sermons; The Art of Pulpit
Eloquence.' No minister should be without it. See page 1046, 'Pulpit
Orators—Golden Words of the Greatest, comprising selections from
Spurgeon, Robertson, Talmage, Beecher, Parkhurst,' et cetery. A book that
should be in every home. Look at 'P': Poets, Great. Poison, Antidotes for.
Poker, Rules of. Poland, History and Geography of, with Map. Pomeroy,
Brick. Pomatum, How to Make. Ponce de Leon, Voyages and Life of. Pop,
Ginger,' et cetery, et cetery. The whole for the small sum of five
dollars, bound in cloth, one dollar down and one dollar a month until
paid.”</p>
<p>The minister turned the pages slowly.</p>
<p>“It seems a worthy book,” he said hesitatingly.</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt looked at Mrs. Smith, with a question in his eyes.</p>
<p>She nodded.</p>
<p>“Ah!” he said. “Mrs. Smith, sister of the well-known novelist, Marriott
Nolan Tarbro, takes two copies of Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and
Compendium of Literature, Science and Art, bound in full morocco, one of
which she begs to present to the worthy pastor of this happy flock, with
her compliments and good wishes.”</p>
<p>“I can't thank you,” stammered the minister; “it is so kind. I have so few
books, and so few opportunities of securing them.”</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt held out his hand for the sample volume.</p>
<p>“When you have this book,” he declared, “you NEED no others. It makes a
Carnegie library of the humblest home.”</p>
<p>The entire picnic had gradually gathered around him.</p>
<p>“Ladies and gents,” he said, “I have come to bring knowledge and power
where ignorance and darkness have lurked. This volume——”</p>
<p>He stopped and handed his sample to the minister.</p>
<p>“Introduce me to the lady in the blue dress,” he said to Mrs. Smith, and
she stepped forward and made them acquainted.</p>
<p>“Miss Briggs, this is Mr——”</p>
<p>“Hewlitt,” he said quickly, “Eliph' Hewlitt.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Hewlitt,” said Mrs. Smith. “Miss Sally Briggs of Kilo.”</p>
<p>“I'm glad to know you, Miss Briggs,” said Eliph' Hewlitt. “I hope we may
become well acquainted. As I was sayin' to Mrs. Smith, I'm a book agent.”</p>
<p>For the chapter on Jarby's Encyclopedia that dealt with “Courtship—How
to Win the Affections,” said that the first step necessary was to become
well acquainted with the one whose affections it was desired to win. It
was not Eliph' Hewlitt way to waste time when making a sale of Jarby's,
and he felt that no more delay was necessary in disposing of his heart.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER III. “How to Win the Affections” </h2>
<p>Miss Sally glanced hurriedly around, seeking some retreat to which she
could fly. Mrs. Smith, having introduced Eliph' Hewlitt, had turned away,
and the other picnickers were gathered around the minister, looking over
his shoulders at the copy of Jarby's Encyclopedia. Although she could have
no idea, as yet, that Eliph' Hewlitt had decided to marry her, Miss Sally
was afraid of him. She was a dainty little woman, with just a few gray
hairs tucked out of sight under the brown ones, but although she was
ordinarily able to hold her own, each year that was added to her life made
her more afraid of book agents.</p>
<p>Time after time she had succumbed to the wiles of book agents. It made no
difference how she received them, nor how she steeled her heart against
their plausible words, she always ended buying whatever they had to sell,
and after that it was a fight to get the money from her father with which
to pay the installments. Pap Briggs objected to paying out money for
anything, but he considered that about the most useless thing he could
spend money for was a book. Whenever he heard there was a book agent in
Kilo he acted like a hen when she sees a hawk in the sky, ready to pounce
down upon her brood, and he pottered around and scolded and complained and
warned Miss Sally to beware, and then in the end the book agent always
made the sale, and Miss Sally felt as if she had committed seven or eight
deadly sins, and it made her life miserable. Only a few months before she
had fallen prey to a man who had sold her a set of Sir Walter Scott's
Complete Works, two dollars down, and one dollar a month, and she felt
that the work of urging the monthly dollar out of her father's pocket was
all she could stand.</p>
<p>Why and how she bought books always remained a mystery to her; it is a
mystery to many book buyers how they happen to buy books. Book agents
seemed to have a mesmerizing effect on Miss Sally, as serpents daze birds
before they devour them. The process applied between the time when she
stated with the utmost positiveness that she did not want, and would not
buy, a book, and the time, a few minutes later, when she signed her name
to the agent's list of subscribers, was something she could not fathom.</p>
<p>And now she had been left face to face with a book agent, actually
introduced to him, and her father still under monthly miseries on account
of Sir Walter Scott's Complete Works.</p>
<p>“I don't want any books to-day,” said Miss Sally nervously, when she saw
that she could not run away.</p>
<p>“And I'm not going to sell you any,” said Eliph' Hewlitt cheerfully. He
had studied Miss Sally thoroughly, with the quick eye of the experienced
book agent who has learned to read character at sight, and he had decided
that no more suitable Mrs. Hewlitt was he apt to find. “And I'm not going
to SELL you any,” he repeated. “This is picnic day, and I'm not selling
books, although I may say there is no day in the whole year when Jarby's
Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art is
not needed. It is a book that contains a noble thought or useful hint for
every hour of every day from the cradle to the grave, comprising ten
thousand and one subjects, neatly bound.”</p>
<p>“I don't want one,” said Miss Sally, backing away. “I don't live here, and
you might do better selling it to someone who does.”</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt's eyes beamed kindly through his spectacles.</p>
<p>“It is just as useful to them that is traveling as to them that is home,”
he said, “if not more so. If you ever took a copy along with you on your
travels you would never travel again without it. Take the chapter on
'Traveling,' for instance, page 46.” He looked around, as if he would have
liked to get his sample copy, but it was in such a number of eager hands
that he turned back to Miss Sally. “Take the directions on Sleeping Cars,”
he said. “For that one thing alone the book is worth its price to anyone
going to travel by rail. It gives full instructions how much to give the
porter, how to choose a berth, how to undress in an upper berth without
damage to the traveler or the car, et cetery. And, when you consider that
that is but one of the ten thousand and one things mentioned in this
volume, you can see that it is really giving it away when I sell it,
neatly bound in cloth, for five dollars.”</p>
<p>“I don't think I want one,” said Miss Sally doubtfully, for she was
beginning to fall under the spell.</p>
<p>“No!” said Eliph' firmly. “No! You don't. And I don't want to SELL you
one. Nothing ain't farther from my mind than wanting to sell you a copy of
that book. Just rest perfectly easy about THAT, Miss Briggs. We'll put
'Literature, Science, and Art' to one side and enjoy the delights of the
open air, and, if I happen to say anything that sounds like book, just you
excuse me, for I don't mean it. Mebby I DO get to talking about that book
when I don't mean to, for it is a book that a man that knows it as well as
I do just can't HELP talking about. It's a wonderful book. It is a book
that has all the wisdom and knowledge of the world condensed into one
volume, including five hundred ennobling thoughts form the world's great
authors, inclusive of the prose and poetical gems of all ages, beginning
on page 201, sixty-two solid pages of them, with vingetty portraits of the
authors, this being but one of the many features that make the book
helpful to all people of refinement and mind. Now, when you take a book
like that and bind it in a neat cloth cover, making it an ornament to any
center table in the country, and sell it for the small price of five
dollars, it is not selling it; it is giving it away. Five dollars, neatly
bound in cloth, one dollar down, and one dollar a month until paid.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally looked hopelessly toward the sample copy, which the minister
was still exhibiting to the picnickers with real pleasure. She was
enthralled, but she was puzzled. Never had she bought a book that she had
not first looked through. Invariably the agent had begun his dissertation
on the book's merits by an explanation of the illuminated frontispiece—if
it had one—and ended by turning the last page to show the sheet
where she must sign her name, underneath those of “the other leading
citizens of this town.” There was something wrong, but she was not quite
sure what it was. She glanced back at the eager face of Eliph' Hewlitt,
and mistook the glow of “Affection, How to Hold it When Won,” for the
intense glance of the predatory book seller.</p>
<p>“I'll take a copy,” she said recklessly.</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt's face clouded, and he put out his hand as if to ward off a
blow.</p>
<p>“No, you won't!” he said, with distress. “You don't want one, and I won't
sell you one.”</p>
<p>He cast his mind quickly over the chapter on “Courtship—How to Win
the Affections,” and recalled its directions. He wished he had the book in
his hands, so that he could turn to the chapter and freshen his memory,
but the first direction was, certainly, to become well acquainted.</p>
<p>“I don't want to sell you one,” he said more gently. “I want to sit down
on this nice grass and get acquainted. You and me are both strangers here,
and I guess we ought to talk to each other.”</p>
<p>He seated himself as he said the word, and crossed his legs, Turk-fashion,
and looked up at Miss Sally, with an invitation in his eyes. For a minute
she stood looking down at him doubtfully. She was unable to understand the
actions of this new variety of book agent that refused to sell books after
talking up to the selling point, and she suddenly remembered that she was
away from home, and that the book was sold on installments. She flushed.
Did his refusal to sell imply that she might not be able to pay the
installments?</p>
<p>“I'll take a copy of that book, IF you please,” she said haughtily. “I
guess there ain't no question but that I'm able to PAY for it. I've bought
books before, and paid for them; and I guess I'm just as able to pay as
most folks you sell to. If you've any doubt about it, there's references I
can give right here in Clarence that will satisfy you.”</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt coughed gently behind his hand, and stroked his whiskers,
as he looked up at the indignant Miss Briggs. He did not want to sell her
a book' it would place him in her mind once, and, probably, for all, as
one of the tribe of book agents, and nothing more. Yet he could not offend
her. He might compromise by giving her a copy, but the chapter on
“Courtship—How to Win the Affections,” distinctly advised this as a
later act. First it was necessary to become well acquainted; then it was
advisable to proceed to give small presents, books or flowers or sweets
being particularly mentioned, and Eliph' Hewlitt would never have thought
of doing first the thing Jarby's Encyclopedia advised doing second. He had
been selling Jarby's for many years. He had seen the “talking feature” of
the colored plates of the Civil War pass, and had seen them succeeded by
colored plates of the Franco-Prussian War, and had seen these make way for
colored plates of one war after another until the present plates of the
Spanish War appeared, and through all these changes in the last chapter he
had studied the book until he knew its contents as well as he knew his
“two—times—two.” He could recite the book forward or backward,
read it upside down—as a book agent has to read a book when it is in
a customer's lap—or sideways, and could turn promptly to nearly any
word in it without hesitation. The more he studied it the more he loved it
and admired it and believed in it. It was his whole literature, and he
found it to be sufficient. If he saw a thing in Jarby's he knew it was so,
and if it was not in Jarby's it was not worth knowing. Under such
circumstances he could not make Miss Sally a present of the book until he
and she had first become well acquainted. Jarby's said so. He scrambled
hurriedly to his feet.</p>
<p>“Miss Briggs,” he said earnestly, “You ain't near guessing the reason why
I don't want to sell you a copy of the world-famous volume. You ain't
nowhere near it at all. If I was to tell you what the reason was I guess
you'd be surprised. But I ain't going to tell you. It ain't because you
can't pay for it, for if it was a library of one thousand volumes at ten
dollars a volume, ten dollars down and ten dollars a month, I'd be glad to
take your order. And it ain't because I ain't going to sell any more
copies here, because I am, and I'm going to sell all I can, right here at
this picnic, just to show you what I can do when I try. But I ain't going
to sell you one. I've got a good reason.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally was not fully pacified by this, for now she was sure she had
guessed the reason Eliph' Hewlitt did not want to sell her a copy. She
imagined now that some book agent had told him of her father's aversion to
books—when they had to be paid for—and that Eliph' Hewlitt was
willing to forego a sale rather than lead her into new trouble with her
father. Possibly he had met the Walter Scott man. She turned away.</p>
<p>“I guess I'll go and help Mrs. Smith lay out the lunch,” she said, as the
easiest way to be rid of the annoyance.</p>
<p>“I guess I'll go, too,” said Eliph' Hewlitt promptly and cheerfully. “I'm
a good hand at that. It tells all about it in Jarby's Encyclopedia. Look
under 'P': 'Picnic Lunches. Picnic, How to Organize and Conduct. Picnic,
Origin of,' et cetery, et cetery. A book that contains all the knowledge
in the world condensed into one volume, with lives of all the world's
great men, from Adam to Roosevelt, and the dying words of them that is
dead.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally turned on him sharply.</p>
<p>“Goodness sakes!” she exclaimed, “I wish you would either sell me a copy
of that book or keep still about it. Ain't I going to have no peace at
all?”</p>
<p>“I didn't mention it, did I?” asked Eliph' Hewlitt innocently, and he did
not know that he had. “I was speaking of this happy gathering. Ain't it
pretty to see all kinds of folks gathered together this way to make each
other happier? It's like a living Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and
Compendium of Literature, Science and Art, a little of everything in one
volume, and all of it good. All the good things from parson to pickles. I
suppose you put up your own pickles, don't you?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I do,” said Miss Sally, who was now walking toward where the ladies
were unpacking the lunch. “Why do you ask it?”</p>
<p>“It called to my mind the recipe for making pickles that is in Jarby's
Encyclopedia,” said Eliph', unmindful of the look of anger that flushed
Miss Sally's face at the mention of that book. “Them that has tried it
says it is the best they have ever used. That and seven hundred and
ninety-nine other tested recipes, all contained in the chapter called 'The
Complete Kitchen Guide,' see page 100, including roasts, fries, pastry,
cakes, bread, puddings, entrées, soups, how to make candy, how to clean
brass, copper, silver, tin, et cetery, et cetery. Them that uses Jarby's
tested recipes as given in this volume, uses no other.”</p>
<p>There was a stiffening of Miss Sally's back as she walked ahead of him,
and even Eliph' Hewlitt could not fail to observe it. It told plainly that
if he could have seen her lips he would have seen them close firmly, and
he made haste to reassure her.</p>
<p>“I ain't trying to sell you a book,” he said, taking a quicker step to
reach her side, but she hurried the more as he did so, and crowded in
among the other women so that he could not follow. He stood a moment
watching her, but she began talking rapidly to one of the women, ignoring
him conspicuously, and he coughed gently behind his hand, as if to
apologize for her affront, and then walked away.</p>
<p>He could not account for his poor success in getting well acquainted with
Miss Sally, and he began to fear that he had not fully understood the
directions given by Jarby's Encyclopedia in the chapter on “Courtship—How
to Win the Affections.” He realized that he had used that chapter less
often in talking up a sale than he had used any other, and that for that
reason he had studied it less closely, and he saw now, more than ever,
that there was no chapter in the whole book that a possessor could afford
to neglect. He walked over to where the minister was still holding the
book, but now holding it closed in his lap, and he asked politely if he
might have it for a few minutes. The minister handed it to him, and
Eliph', walking to where one of the smaller trees of the grove made a spot
of shade, seated himself, and fixed his eyes on the chapter on “Courtship—How
to Win the Affections.”</p>
<p>For the first time in his life he was unable to fix his attention firmly
on the pages of Jarby's Encyclopedia. His eyes insisted on turning to
where Miss Sally moved about the cloth spread on the grass; the tablecloth
on which green bugs and black bugs and brown bugs were already parading,
as bugs always do at a picnic. Occasionally he stroked his sandy-gray
whiskers, and whenever she turned her face in his direction he cast his
eyes upon his book, but he could not read.</p>
<p>He hoped he would have the good fortune to be seated next to Miss Sally
when the lunch time came, and he had little doubt that he would be near
her, for it was likely that he and she, being strangers, would be put near
the minister. He closed the book, seeing at length that it was impossible
for him to read it, and, as the men began to bring the cushions from the
buggies and place them around the cloth, he arose and went to bring his
own to add to the supply. As he reached the fence, a barefoot boy, mounted
on a horse with no other saddle than a blanket, came galloping down the
road, and stopped before him.</p>
<p>“Say,” said the boy, wide-eyed with importance, “is Sally Briggs in
there?”</p>
<p>Eliph' said she was.</p>
<p>“Well, say,” said the boy, “she's got to go home to Kilo, right away. Her
dad telephoned up, and he don't know whether he's dying or not, and she's
got to go right home.”</p>
<p>Eliph' turned and hurried to where Miss Sally was standing.</p>
<p>“I hope it ain't nothing serious, Miss Briggs,” he said, “but that boy has
come to give you a message that come by telephone. I think your father
ain't well.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally dropped the cake she was holding, and ran to the fence.</p>
<p>“What is it?” she gasped.</p>
<p>“Well,” said the boy, “my dad was in the post office just now, and the
telephone bell rang, and he looked around to see where Julius was, and
Julius he had gone outside to see what Mr. Fogarty, from up to the
Corners, wanted. I don't know what he wanted. Pa didn't tell me. I don't
know as pa knew, anyway, but I guess he wanted something, or else he
wouldn't have motioned Julius to go out, unless he just wanted to talk to
Julium. Mebby he just wanted to ask Julius if there was any mail for him.
So pa answered the telephone.”</p>
<p>“Well, what did it say?” asked Miss Sally impatiently.</p>
<p>“You've got a pa, haven't you?” asked the boy.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Miss Sally.</p>
<p>“Well, has he got false teeth?” asked the boy.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Miss Sally more impatiently.</p>
<p>“Well, that's all right, then,” said the boy. “Pa couldn't tell exactly
whether it was false teeth or not, the telephone at the post office works
so poor, and pa ain't no hand at it, anyhow. He said it sounded like false
teeth. So you pa wants you to come right home to Kilo. Mebby he's dying.”</p>
<p>“Dying!” cried Miss Sally, as white as a sheet.</p>
<p>“Yes, mebby he is,” continued the boy. “He ain't right sure, but he says
you'd better come right home, so if he IS dying you'll be on hand. And, if
he ain't, you can help him hunt for them. He says he went to bed last
night, same as always, but he don't recall whether he took out his false
set of teeth or left them in, and he ain't sure whether he swallowed them
last night, or put them down somewheres and lost them. He says he's got a
pain like he swallowed them, but he ain't sure but what it's some of the
cooking he's been doing that give him that, and anyway he wants you to
come right home.”</p>
<p>“Goodness sakes!” exclaimed Miss Sally, “why don't he go see Doc Weaver?”</p>
<p>The boy shook his head.</p>
<p>“I don't know,” he said. “I guess pa didn't think to ask him that. I'll
have to ask him when I git back.”</p>
<p>The departure of Miss Sally made a break in the orderly progress of the
picnic, for it not only terminated her part of the day's pleasures, but
also cut short her visit in Clarence, and she had to say farewell to all
the picnickers before she could go.</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt offered to drive her to Clarence, but she refused him, and
arranged to have one of the young boys, who had a faster horse, drive her
to Kilo. The whole picnic leaned over the rail fence and watched until she
was out of sight, and then went on with the lunch, which was just ready
when her summons came.</p>
<p>It was a severe blow to Eliph' Hewlitt. He had hoped to have carried his
courtship so far during the day that it would have been at least to the
third paragraph of the first page of “Courtship—How to Win the
Affections,” and now Miss Sally had left, and he had not progressed at
all. It reminded him of the quotation in the Alphabet of Quotations, in
Jarby's Encyclopedia, “The Course of True Love Never Did Run Smooth.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally's departure, however, and the strange circumstance of it,
allowed him to ask questions about her and about Kilo that he could not
otherwise have asked. He learned how far she would have to travel to reach
Kilo, who her father was, and all that he wished to know. He decided that
the only course for him to follow was to omit his canvass of the
interlying farms and of the town of Clarence for the present, and follow
Miss Sally to Kilo.</p>
<p>When the picnic ended, Irontail had released the rein, and Eliph' Hewlitt
drove off, well pleased with his day's work. He had not only secured a
wife—for he had no doubt that it only needed an application of the
rules set forth in Jarby's Encyclopedia in order to “Win the Affections”
of Miss Sally, and “Hold Them When Won,” but he took with him
subscriptions for sixteen volumes of Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and
Compendium of Literature, Science and Art, bound in cloth, five dollars,
and two bound in morocco, at seven fifty.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER IV. Kilo </h2>
<p>The next evening Jim Wilkins, landlord of the Kilo House and proprietor of
the Kilo Livery, Feed and Sale Stable, was sitting in front of his hotel,
with his chair tipped back against the wall, trading bits of indolent
gossip with Pap Briggs, when Eliph' Hewlitt drove his horse Irontail down
Main Street, and pulled up before the hotel. Pap Briggs had not swallowed
his store teeth; he had not even worn them to bed, and Miss Sally found
them on top of the pump in the back yard, where Pap had doubtless put them
when he went to pump himself a drink. He often lost them, as he wore them
more for ornament than for use, and commonly removed them when he wished
to talk, eat, or laugh. It was Sally who made him buy them, and he wore
them more for her sake than for any other reason, and he was always
uncomfortable with them, for they were a plain, unmistakable misfit, and
felt, as he said, “like I got my mouth full o' tenpenny nails.” When out
of Sally's sight he avoided this feeling by carrying them in his hand,
hidden in his red bandana handkerchief. About town he used to show them
with a great deal of pride, and openly boasted of their cost and beauty.
On Sunday he wore them all day.</p>
<p>Whenever Eliph' Hewlitt drove into a town he looked about with a seeing
eye, for he had learned to judge the capacity of a place for Jarby's
Encyclopedia by the appearance of the town, but as he drove into Kilo he
was more than usually interested. If this was the home of Miss Sally
Briggs, it followed that when he had completed his courtship, and had won
her affections and held them, it would be his home, also, and he was
curious to see whether it was a town he would like or not like. He liked
it. It was a real American town, and it looked like a good business town,
because there could be no possible reason for people building a town on
that particular situation unless it was for business.</p>
<p>The town was built on a flat space, and the country was flat on all sides
of it. It was on no river, brook, or creek. It was as unbeautiful in
location as it was in architecture. It was just a homely, common, busy
little Iowa village, and even so late in the evening it was as hot as
Sahara; but Eliph' Hewlitt knew it at once for a good town, for the street
was knee deep in dust, which meant much trade, and the four buildings at
the corners of Main and Cross Streets were of brick, which meant
profitable business. There were a couple of other brick buildings on Main
Street, and one or two with “tin” fronts, and of the other business places
only one or two were so ramshackle that they looked as if their firmer
neighbors were holding them up, letting the weaker structures lean against
them as a strong man might support an invalid.</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt liked the town; it was just his idea of what a town should
be, not much as to style, but business-like. There were two full blocks of
Main Street devoted to business, and nearly half a block of Cross Street
was given over to the same purpose, and the dwellings were well scattered
over the surrounding level tract. Three or four of the dwellings “out Main
Street” had conspicuous lawns that had felt the blades of a lawn mower,
but most of the yards were merely grass, with flower beds filled with the
more hardy kinds of flowers, such as would grow tall and show over the top
of the surrounding grass. The plank walks, which on Main and Cross Streets
were made of boards laid crossways, tapered down into narrow walks with
the boards—two of them—laid lengthways very soon after the
stores were passed, and a little farther out became dirt paths along the
fences, and beyond that pedestrians were supposed to walk on the road. But
most of the houses were painted, either freshly, or at least not
anciently.</p>
<p>The corner of Main and Cross Streets, the business center of Kilo, was
like the business centers of other small country towns. A long hitching
rail extended at the side of the street before the buildings on each
corner, and the dirt beneath was worn away by the scraping of the feet of
the many horses that had been tied to the rails. Just below the corner, on
Cross Street, were other holes worn by tossing horseshoes at pegs, which,
if America was composed of small towns only, would be our national game.</p>
<p>It was a good little town, and Eliph' Hewlitt was pleased.</p>
<p>On one of the corners of Main Street stood the Kilo Hotel, and before it
Eliph' checked the slow gait of Irontail.</p>
<p>Jim Wilkins, the landlord, tipped his chair forward, and got out of it
with a grunt of laziness.</p>
<p>“Hotel running?” asked Eliph' Hewlitt briskly.</p>
<p>“You might call it runnin' if you wasn't dictionary—particular what
you called it,” said the landlord. “If you had to keep it you'd more
likely say it was tryin' to learn to walk. But it's open for business.
Want your rig put up?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” admitted Eliph'. “I've had my supper.”</p>
<p>“That's all right,” said the landlord cheerfully. “I'm sort of glad of it;
save the old lady gittin' up a meal. I was just tellin' Pap Briggs here
that I figgered Kilo had the hottest mean summer temperature, and the
meanest hot summer temperature on earth, and it's hotter over a kitchen
stove than anywheres else. We generally have cold suppers in this here
hotel, unless some guest happens in. Hey, S. Potts! Come here and git this
feller's horse!”</p>
<p>The livery stable was convenient, just around the corner on Cross Street,
and S. Potts came lankly and lazily around the corner. He stood and looked
at Irontail a minute critically, and then felt the horse's hocks and shook
his head at the result of his investigation. Then he opened Irontail's
mouth and looked at his teeth.</p>
<p>“Well, I'll be hanged!” he said, and he called around the corner, “Hey,
Daniel!” and from the livery stable came a very old man.</p>
<p>“Look at this,” said S. Potts, opening Irontail's mouth again, and Daniel
looked and shook his head, as S. Potts had done.</p>
<p>“And feel this,” said S. Potts, putting his hand on Irontail's hock again.
Daniel felt as he was told, and again shook his head.</p>
<p>“Now, what do you make of that?” asked S. Potts triumphantly.</p>
<p>“I dunno what to make of it, S. Potts,” said the old man, shaking his
head. “What do you make of it?”</p>
<p>The landlord broke in upon the conversation with sudden energy.</p>
<p>“Look here,” he said, “you git that horse around to the stable, and shut
up,” and S. Potts and Daniel hastily clambered into the buggy and drove
around the corner.</p>
<p>“I wonder if anything's the matter with my horse?” said Eliph'.</p>
<p>“Matter?” laughed Jim Wilkins. “That's just S. Potts tryin' to show off
before strangers, like he always does. He don't mean no harm, but he can't
be satisfied to just come around and git a horse and lead it to the
stable. He's got to draw attention to hisself or he ain't happy. He's
harmless, but he's just naturally one of the know-it-all-kind, and he's
got to show off.”</p>
<p>There is no man in a small town who can give such a satisfying and
official welcome to a stranger as that given by the liveryman, and when
the landlord of the hotel and the owner of the livery stable are combined
in one man he is better than a reception committee composed of the mayor
and the leading citizens. He is glad to see the stranger, and he lets him
know it. He has a gruff, hearty, and not too servile manner, and a way of
speaking of the men of the town and the farmers of the surrounding country
as if he owned them. Having bought horses of many of them, he knows their
bad traits, and he has an air of knowing much more than he would willingly
tell regarding them. He is not inquisitive about the stranger's business,
and is willing to give him information. Probably it is his trade of buying
and selling and renting horses that gives him such a flavor of his own,
for he knows that the horses he lets out on livery are often as
intelligent as the men who hire them. He comes as near the chivalric model
of the old Southern planter as a Northern business man can, but his slaves
are horses, and his overseer the hostler. He is a man in authority, even
though is authority is over horses.</p>
<p>Modern civilization has few finer sights and sounds than the liveryman
when he is asked if he has a horse he can let out for a ten-mile drive
into the country. He looks at the supplicant doubtfully; “Well, I dunno,”
he says, “where was it you wanted to drive to?” He receives the answer
with a non-committal air. “That's nearer fourteen mile than ten,” he says
and then turns to the hostler. “Say, Potts, Billy's out, ain't he?” Potts
growls out the answer, “Doc Weaver's got him out. Won't be back till
seven.” The liveryman pulls slowly at his cigar, and runs his hand over
his hair. “How's the bay mare's hoof today?” he asks. Potts shakes his
head. “That's right,” says the liveryman, “it don't do to take no chances
with a hoof like that. And we haven't got a thing else in the barn except
that black horse, have we, Potts?” “Everything else out,” says Potts. The
liveryman walks away a few steps, and then turns suddenly. “Hitch up the
black, Potts,” he says, with an air of sudden recklessness. “Put him in
that light, side-bar buggy of Doc Weaver's. Want a hitching strap? Put in
a hitching strap, Potts. AND that new whip.”</p>
<p>The result is that you get the horse and buggy the liveryman intended you
to have from the minute he saw you coming toward him down the street, but
you get it with a fine touch of style that is worth much in this dollar
and cent world. Potts drives the rig around to where you are standing, and
the liveryman sends Potts back to get a clean laprobe instead of the one
that is in the buggy. He pats the horse on the neck as you climb in, and
as you pick up the reins he says, as if conferring a parting favor that
money could not repay, “Keep a fair tight rein on him; it's the first time
he has been out of the stable to-day.”</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt, in his travels, had learned the value of the liveryman. He
used him as friend and directory. None else could tell him so well where
the prosperous farmers lived, nor who was most likely to fall a victim to
Jarby's Encyclopedia in the town itself. From the liveryman he could learn
which minister, if there were more than one, would be the best to have
head his list of subscribers, which lady was head of the Society, and what
society she was head of. He took one of the chairs that were ranged along
the side of the hotel, and laid his sample across his knees. He chose the
chair that was next to Pap Briggs, for he was ready to become acquainted
with the man he intended soon to have for a father-in-law.</p>
<p>“Nice town you got here,” he said.</p>
<p>“She's purty good,” agreed Pap, “except for taxes. Taxes is eternal high,
and it's all us propputy owners can do to keep 'em from goin' clean out o'
sight. City council don't seem to care a dumb how high they git. I wish't
I'd stayed on my farm.”</p>
<p>“Taxes ain't so high here as what they are in Jefferson, Pap,” suggested
the landlord. “If you lived down there they'd make you holler, all right.”</p>
<p>“Well, Jim,” said Pap, “they ain't much choice. If these here young
fellers git their way taxes will go right up. What do they want to
decorate this here town all up for, anyhow? What you think young Toole was
sayin' to me to-day? He was sayin' it was a disgrace to Kilo to have the
public square rented out an' a crop o' buckwheat growin' in it. He says we
ought to plant it in grass an' stick a fountain in the middle. But that's
the way she goes; anything to raise up the taxes. All I says to him was,
'All right, who'll pump water to make the fountain squirt? Suppose the
taxpayers 'll take turns, hey?'”</p>
<p>“Well,” said the landlord, “I ain't in favor of a fountain, myself. I
reckon a nice piece of statuary would look better, so long as we ain't got
water works to make the fountain fount out water. But it don't look right
to have a public square rented out to grow buckwheat in. It ain't
city-like.”</p>
<p>“It brings in seven dollars a year to the town,” said Pap, “an' that's
better than payin' out good money for statuary. I'm agin high taxes every
time. It costs too much to live, anyhow, especially when you've got a
daughter to support, and no money comin' in, to speak of. And just when
some does come in, along comes a pesky book agent or somethin' and fools
the women out of the money. They ought to be a law agin book agent. City
council ought to put a license on 'em, and keep 'em out of town.”</p>
<p>“Some towns,” he said softly, “do have licenses against book agents. One
of the relics of the dark ages, but abolished wherever the light o'
culture is loved and esteemed. What so helpful as the book? What so
comforting? What so uplifting? And who but the book agent carries help and
comfort and uplift, and leaves it scattered around, one dollar down and
one dollar a month until paid; who but the humble but useful book agent?
To mention but one book, Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium
of Literature, Science and Art has carried wisdom into a million homes,
making each better and brighter. It is a book that makes the toil of the
day easy, by giving one thousand and one hints and helps, and that
sweetens rest after toil, by quotations from all the world's great
authors. In this one book——”</p>
<p>Pap Briggs had put his hands on the arm of his chair, preparing to run
away, but the landlord leaned forward and looked in Eliph' Hewlitt's face.</p>
<p>“Say,” he said, “is your name Mills?”</p>
<p>“Hewlitt,” said the book agent, “Eliph' Hewlitt.”</p>
<p>He turned to the landlord and looked him fairly in the face, and as he
looked the air of suspicion that had suddenly shone in his eyes vanished.</p>
<p>“Jim Wilkins!” he exclaimed. “Isn't it Jim Wilkins?”</p>
<p>“Ain't it!” cried the landlord. “Well, I should say it is! And to think,
you little, sawed-off propagator of human knowledge didn't recognize your
old side pardner in the field of sellin' improvin' and intellectooal works
of genius! Don't say you don't remember the 'Wage of Sin,' Sammy! Don't
say you don't remember Kitty!”</p>
<p>“Kitty?” asked Eliph' doubtfully.</p>
<p>“Well, if the little red-head ain't forgot Kitty!” exclaimed Wilkins.
“Why, I MARRIED Kitty, Sammy. For an actual, truthful fact I did. And to
think I should run across Sammy Mills after all these years.”</p>
<p>“Hewlitt,” said Eliph'. “Eliph' Hewlitt is that name I'm known by.”</p>
<p>“And to think you stuck by that name all these years!” said Wilkins. “And
still sellin' works of literatoor, are you? Pap, this is my old boyhood's
chum come meanderin' backwards out of the past. And still sellin' books!
Well, I don't want to discourage your ambitiousness, but I guess you've
struck Kilo about the worst time in the century. Ever hear of a literary
writer called Sir Walter Scott? Well, sir, Kilo is chuck full of Sir
Walter; full as a goat. She ain't begun to near git through with Sir
Walter yet, and I don't figger she'll take in no more libraries just now.
Sir Walter hit her pretty hard.”</p>
<p>“Ten volumes, fifteen dollars cloth, twenty dollars half morocco?”
inquired Eliph' Hewlitt.</p>
<p>“The identical same,” said the landlord. “I purchased a group of Sir
Walters in red leather myself. So did everybody in Kilo; at least I ain't
found anybody that's been missed yet. Paper here got some.”</p>
<p>“My daughter Sally——” began the old man.</p>
<p>“Same thing,” said Wilkins; “you pay just the same if you bought the
books. Why, Sammy, there's enough Sir Walter right here in Kilo now to
start up a book business. Kilo's light on literatoor generally, but when
she goes in, she goes in heavy. There ain't many towns where you'll find
every livin' soul ready to swaller down fifteen dollars worth of Sir
Walter Scott, two dollars down and one dollar a month until paid; but I
calculate them ten volumes will last Kilo quite a spell, and if worst
comes to worst she won't buy no more literatoor till she gits paid up on
Sir Walter. I figger from my own sense of feelin's that about the worst
time to sell a feller books is when he is still payin' once a month on the
old lot. About the second time the collector drops in to collect on a set
of works of literatoor, a man feels like he had been foolish, but he grins
cheerful, and pays up, but if another man drops in about then to sell
another set of the world's great masterpieces it is pretty near an insult
to human intelligence.”</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt drew his hand across his whiskers and coughed gently.</p>
<p>“They told me in Jefferson,” he said softly, “that Kilo was the most
intellectual town in central Iowa.”</p>
<p>“Everybody says the same,” said Wilkins with a touch of pride. “The Sir
Walter Scott man said it, and I guess it's so. But there's other things
besides books. Kilo may be strong and willin' on books, but she's strong
other ways, too, and just now she is lookin' at another kind of horse, and
that's why I say you've miscalculated your comin'. If I was you I'd go
elsewhere and come back later. Kilo has got more books now than she can
handle without straining something, and just now her mind's off on another
tack. We struck a big missionary revival here last week, and you can bet a
wager that every dollar that goes out of Kilo these days, except what goes
for dues on Sir Walter, is goin' for the brethren. The women folks is
havin' a sale this very evenin' to raise cash to help the heathen.”</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt arose from his chair and tucked the oilcloth-covered parcel
that had been lying on his knees under his left arm. He was a small man,
and his movements were apt to be short and jerky.</p>
<p>“Missionary sale?” he said briskly. “I guess I'll go around and look in on
it. Strangers welcome, I suppose? I'm rather fond of missionary sales, and
I think the world and all of the heathen. Think the ladies would like to
see a stranger?”</p>
<p>Wilkins grinned.</p>
<p>“Pap,” he said, “what you think? Think they'll fall on his neck if he has
any money? From what I have experienced of them sales I figger to
calculate that anybody that is anxious to buy gingham aprons an' sofa
pillows is sure to be took by the hand and given a front seat. I'd go
around with you, but I've got my taxes to pay, like Pap here, and I don't
actually need any pink tidies. It ain't far; just up to Doc Weaver's; two
blocks up, and you can't miss the house. It's the yeller mansion, this
side the road, an' the gate's off the hinges and laid up alongside the
fence. But I guess if them's your samples in that there package, you might
as well leave them here.”</p>
<p>But Eliph' Hewlitt did not leave them there; he tucked them under his arm,
and hurried away with brisk little steps.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER V. Sammy Mills </h2>
<p>“There ought to be a license agin book agents,” said Pap Briggs
spitefully, when Eliph' Hewlitt had hurried away.</p>
<p>“It wouldn't harm that feller,” said Wilkins. “He's a red hot one at
book-agenting, he is, an' he'd find out some way to git round it. I hear
lot of book agents that come round this way tell of him. He's got a record
of sellin' more copies of that encyclopedia book of his than any one man
ever sold of any one book, an' he's a sort of hero of the book-agenting
business. It makes me proud to call to remembrance that him an' me was
kids together down at Franklin, years ago. Him an' me took to the
book-agentin' biz the same day, we did. I needed cash, like I always do,
and he had literatoor in the family. So we went an' did it. We did it to
Gallops Junction first, and after that Eliph' sowed literatoor pretty
general all over Iowa, an' next I heard of him all over the United States.
Iowa is now a grand State, an as full of culture as a Swiss cheese is full
of holes, an' I don't take all the credit for it; I give Eliph' his share.
Hotels help to scatter the seed, but literatoor scatters more.</p>
<p>“One day, down there at Franklin, Eliph' says to me, 'Jim, you know that
book pa wrote?' That's what Eliph' remarked to me on the aforesaid day,
but I wish to state his name wasn't Eliph' on that date, an' it wasn't
Hewlitt, neither. It was plain Sammy; Sammy Mills. Eliph' Hewlitt was a
sort of fancy name my pa had give to a horse he had that he thought was a
racer, but wasn't. It was a good enough horse to enter in a race, but not
good enough to win. It was the kind of race horse that kept pa poor, but
hopeful.</p>
<p>“'Why, yes, Sammy,' I says, 'I've heard tell of that grand literary effort
of your dad.'</p>
<p>“'Well,' he says—we was sittin' on the porch of his pa's house—'Pa
he had a thousand of them printed.'</p>
<p>“'Dickens he did!' I remarked, supposin' it was us to me to do some
remarkin'.</p>
<p>“'And,' says Sammy, 'he's got eight hundred an' sixty-four of them highly
improvin' an' intellectooal volumes stored in the barn right now.'</p>
<p>“'Quite a lib'ry,' I says, off-hand like.</p>
<p>“'Numerous, but monotonous,' says Sam. 'As a lib'ry them books don't give
the variety of topics they oughter. They all cling to the same subject too
faithful. Eight hundred an' sixty-four volumes of the “Wage of Sin,” all
bound alike, don't make what I call a rightly differentiated lib'ry. When
you've read one you've read all.'</p>
<p>“'Alas!' I says, or somthin' like that, sympathetic an' attentive.</p>
<p>“'Likewise,' says Sam, 'they clutter up the barn. They ought to be got out
to make room for more hay.'</p>
<p>“'This was indeed true. I saw it was all good sense. Horses don't take to
literatoor like they does to hay.</p>
<p>“'Well,' says Sammy, 'what's the matter with chuckin' them eight hundred
an' sixty-four “Wages of Sin” into the rustic communities of this
commonwealth of Iowa, U.S.A.? Here we've got a barnful of high-class,
intellectooal poem, an' yon we have a State full of yearnin' minds,
clamorous for mental improvement at one fifty per volume. It's our duty to
chuck them poems into them minds, an' to intellectooally subside them
clamors.'</p>
<p>“I shook my head quite strenuous.</p>
<p>“'Nix for me!' I remarked; 'no book-agenting for me.'</p>
<p>“'Who said book-agenting?” asked Sammy, deeply offended. 'Do you calculate
that the son of a high-class author of a famous an' helpful book would
turn book agent? Never!'</p>
<p>“'What then?' I asks him.</p>
<p>“'Just a little salubrious an' entertainin' canvassin' for a work of
genius,' he says. 'A few heart-to-heart talks with the educated ladies of
Gallops Junction an' Tomville on the beauties of the “Wage of Sin.” That
ain't no book-agenting,' says he, 'that's pickin' money off the trees.
It's pie ready cut an' handed to us on a plate with a gilt edge. All we've
got to do is to bite it.'</p>
<p>“No, let me tell you right here, Pap, that the 'Wage of Sin' was a
thoroughbred treat to read. It was a moral book. Next to the Bible it was
the morallest book I ever tackled, an' when W. P. Mills wrote that book he
gave the literatoor of the U.S.A. a boost in the right direction that it
hasn't recovered from yet. It was the champion long distance poem of the
nineteenth century. That book showed what a chunky an' nervous mind old W.
P Mills had. There was ten thousand verses to that book of poem,
partitioned off into various an' sundry parts so the read thereof could
sit up an' draw breath about every thousand verses, an' get his full wind
ready for the run through the next slice.</p>
<p>“That 'Wage of Sin' book was surely for to admire, any way you looked at
it. Take the subject; it wasn't any of your little, sawed-off, one-year
sprints. No siree! W. P. Mills started away back in the front vestibule of
time. He said, right in the preface—an' that was all poetry, too—</p>
<p>Now, reader, go along with me Away back to eternity, A hundred thousand
years, and still Keep backing backwards if you will.</p>
<p>“An' when he got away back there he sort of expectorated on his hands an'
started in at Genesis, Chapter One, Verse One, an' went right along down
through the Bible like a cross-cut saw through a cottonwood log. He never
missed a single event that was important, if true. He got all them old
fellers rhymed right into that book—Jereboam, Rehoboam, Meschach,
Schadrach, an' Abednego, an' all the whole caboodle, from Adam with an A
to Zaccheus with a Z.</p>
<p>“That certain was a moral tome, an' no prevarication. It was plumb
drippin' with moral from start to finish. You see Eve she set the ball
a-rollin' when she swiped them apples. That was where she done dead wrong,
and that was the 'Sin' as mentioned in the name of the book, an' old W. P.
Mills he showed in that literary volume how everybody has had to pay the
'Wages' ever since. It was great. I never read anything else moral that I
could say I really hankered for, but I sure did enjoy that book. Old W. P.
Mills was a wonder at poetry.</p>
<p>“It beat all how vivid he made all them Old Testament people, an' the
things they did. Why, I never cared two cents for Shadrach, Meshach, an'
Abednego before I read that book, but after I read it I never could git
them lines of W. P.'s out of my head—</p>
<p>'The King perhaps that moment saw A thing that filled his soul with
awe-Shadrach and Meshach, to and fro, Walked and talked with Abednego.'</p>
<p>“I tell you, you can't obliterate them three men out of your mind when you
read that verse once. You see them walkin' in that fiery furnace, even
when you're in your little bed; walkin' an' carryin' on a conversation,
which, when you come to think of it, was the most natural thing for them
to be doin'. You wouldn't look to see them sit down on a hot log, or to
stand still sayin' nothin'. Walk an' talk, that's what they did, an' it's
what anybody would do in similar circumstances. I guess fiery furnaces has
that effect all the world over, but it took W. P. Mills to see it with his
mind's eye, an' put it into verses.</p>
<p>“So, when Sammy gently intimated to me that it was his pa's book we was to
canvass, the job looked different. I might shy at an encyclopedia, or at a
life of Stephen A. Douglas, but to handle a moral volume like the 'Wage of
Sin' sort of appealed to the financial morality of my conscience. So I
asked Sammy what the gentlemanly canvassers would get out of it.</p>
<p>“'Pa had a lot of faith in that lyric poem,' says Sammy to me, 'an' no one
had a better right to, for he wrote it himself, but the publishing game
was dull an' depressed about the time he got ready to issue it forth, an'
he was necessitated to compensate the cost of printing it himself. And,'
he says, 'the rush an' hurry of the public to buy that book is such it
reminds me of the eagerness of a kid to get spanked. So I figger we can
get several wagon-loads of “Wage of Sin” at fifty cents per volume.'</p>
<p>“'That's a cheap price,' I says, 'That's two hundred verses for one cent,
an' the cover free.'</p>
<p>“Sammy was one of the confidential kind that gets close up to your ear and
whispers, even if he is only tellin' you that it looks like rain, so he
looks all around and whispers to me:</p>
<p>“'We'll make our initiative beginnin' first off at Gallops Junction,' he
says, 'where we ain't known, an' where pa ain't known, an' where the book
ain't known. I've a premonition,' he says, 'that 'twould be better so. If
we was to start in here we would get discouraged, for the folks ain't used
to buyin' “Wage of Sin.” They've been given it so bountiful an' free that
pa can't give away another copy to the poorest man in town. They've got so
that they run when they see pa comin'.'</p>
<p>“'You've got sense in that red head of your'n,' I says.</p>
<p>“'For me,' he says, 'it will be merely a voluptuous excursion. It will be
pie to sell that book, because I am the son of its author. Filial
relationship to genius,' he says, 'will make them overawed, an' grateful
to be allowed to buy of me, but you will have it harder. You can't claim
nearer kin to genius than that you helped the son of it chop wood at
various and sundry times.'</p>
<p>“'And gave him a handsome black eye one time,' I says reminiscently. 'I'll
make the most of that. The public likes anecdotes.'</p>
<p>“'No,' says Sammy, 'you can omit to mention that black-eye business. That
kind of an anecdote would be harrowing to the minds of literary inclined
gentlefolks. You can reminisce about how you helped me carry wood while I
recited passages of poem out of that book at you.'</p>
<p>“What I would have spoke next don't matter, because I omitted to speak it.
I was gettin' a glimmer of an idea into my head, and I wanted to get it
clear in and settled down to stay before I lost it. It got in, an' I had a
realization that it was an O.K. idea, an' that it beat Sammy's
son-of-his-father idea quite scandalous.</p>
<p>“When me an' Sammy got down to Gallops Junction we found that as a
municipality of art an' beauty it was a red-hot fizzle, but as a red-hot,
sizzling sandheap it was the leader of the world. As near as we could
judge from a premature look at the depot platform the principal
occupations of the grizzly inhabitants was pickin' sand burrs from the
inside rim of their pants-leg. It was a dreary village, but Sammy
restrained my unconscious impulse to get right aboard the train again. He
had that joyful light of combat in them blue eyes of his, an' he looked at
that bunch of paintless houses that was dumped around the Gallops Junction
Hotel like Columbus must have looked at Plymouth Rock when he landed
there.</p>
<p>“I had an immediate notion that the thing for me to do was to go over to
the hotel, an' sit in the shade there, an' study the inhabitants a while,
an' get the gauge of 'em, an' learn their manners an' customs, before
harshly thrustin' myself into their bosoms, so I went an' did it; but
Sammy proceeded immediate to visit their homes with the 'Wage of Sin' in
one hand an' the torch of culture in the other.</p>
<p>“The more I set under the board awning of that hotel the less I felt like
goin' for the to uplift the populace, so I went calmly an' respectfully to
sleep, like everybody else in sight, an' the gentle hours sizzled past
like rows of hot griddles.</p>
<p>“It was contiguous to five o'clock when I woke up, an' I had put three
hours of blissful ignorance into the past, an' I seen it was too late to
begin my labors of helpfulness that day. I crossed my legs the other way
from what they had been crossed, an' I was about to extend my ruminations
to other thoughts, when I noticed a young female exit out of a grocery
store across the road. She had a basket of et ceterys on her arm, an' a
face that was as beautiful as a ham sandwich looks to a man after a forty
days' fast. I recognized her right away as the prettiest girl of my life's
experience, an' as she stepped out I slid out of my chair an' made up my
mind to make a disposal of one copy of that book as soon as she struck
home.</p>
<p>“She went into her house at the back door, as most folks do, an' before
she slid the basket off her plump but modest arm, she looked up in
surprise to see what gentlemanly visitor was knockin' the paint off the
screen door with his knuckles. The glad object that her eyes beheld was
me, smilin' an' amiable, with one hand shyly feeling if my necktie was
loose, while the other concealed behind my back the interesting volume
entitled the 'Wage of Sin.'</p>
<p>“I won't circumlocute about how I got in and got set down on a chair
alongside of the kitchen stove. Approaching the female species promptly
and slick was my hard card always. So there I set, face to face with that
beautiful specimen of female bric-a-brac, and about two inches from a
ten-horse-power cook stove in full blossom. It was a warm day, and extry
warm on the side of me next that stove. The night side of me felt like
sudden fever aggravated by applications of breaths from the orthodox bit
of brimstone, and even my off side was perspirating some.</p>
<p>“Thus situated before that young female lady, I was baked but joyous, and
I set right in to sell her a 'Wage of Sin.'</p>
<p>“'Ma genully buys books when we buy any, but we never do,' she says.</p>
<p>“'Your ma in now?' I asks, respectful, but in a way to show that her eyes
and hair wasn't being wasted on no desert hermit.</p>
<p>“'Yes, she's in,' she says. 'Looks like it's guna rain.'</p>
<p>“'Its some few warm,' I says, shifting my most cooked side a little. 'Can
I converse with your ma?'</p>
<p>“'Only in spirit,' she says. 'Otherwise she's engaged.'</p>
<p>“'Dead?' I asks, her words seeming to imply her ma's having departed
hence.</p>
<p>“'Oh, no,' she says, smiling. 'She's in the front room, talking. She has a
very previous engagement with a gent, and can't break away.'</p>
<p>“'You'll do just as well,' I says, 'if not better. You have that
intellectual look that I always spot on the genooine lover of reading
matter.'</p>
<p>“'If you are gun to talk book, you better git right down to business and
talk book' she says, 'because when I whoop up that stove to git supper, as
I'm gun to soon, it's liable to git warm in this kitchen.'</p>
<p>“I took a look at the cooking apparatus, and decided that she knew what
she was conversing about. I liked the way she jumped right into the fact
that I had a few things to say about books, too. She was an up-and-coming
sort, and that's my sort. It's up-and-comingness that has made the Kilo
Hotel what it is.</p>
<p>“'All right, sister,' I says, 'this book is the famous “Wage of Sin.”'</p>
<p>“'No?” she exlamates. 'Not the “Wage of Sin”? The celebrated volume by our
fellow Iowan, Mr. What's-his-name?'</p>
<p>“'The same book!' I says, glad to know its knowledge had passed far down
the State. 'Price one-dollar-fifty per each. A gem of purest razorene. A
rhymed compendium of wit, information, and highly moral so-forths. Ten
thousand verses, printed on a new style rotating duplex press, and bound
up in pale-gray calico. Let me quote you that sweet couplet about the
flood:</p>
<p>“I hear the mother in her grief Imploring heaven for relief As up the
mountain-side she drags Herself by mountain peaks and crags.”</p>
<p>“'When I wrote that—'</p>
<p>“'When you wrote that!' she cries joyous, stopping to gaze at me. 'What!
Do I see before me a real, genooine author? Do I see in our humble but not
chilly kitchen a reely trooly author?'</p>
<p>“'Yes'm,' I says, modest, like G. W. when is papa caught him executing the
cherry tree. 'I wrote it. I am the author. Here, as you see me now, in
tropical but dripping diffidence, I am the author of that tome. It's a
warm day.'</p>
<p>“She stood in my proximity and explored me with her eyes.</p>
<p>“'An author!' she says, stunned but pleased. 'A real live author! My! But
it is hard for me to grasp a realization of that fact. So you wrote it?'</p>
<p>“'Yes'm,' I says again. 'I done it.'</p>
<p>“'So young, too,' she says. 'Genius is cert'nly a wonderful phenomenus.'</p>
<p>“'It's easy when you know how,' I says off-hand like. 'Book-writing is
born in us. When we get warmed up to it it's no trick at all. An author
can't no more help authorizing than a stray pup can help scratching.'</p>
<p>“'But,' she says, 'it must be true what I've heard about authorizing being
a poor paying job.'</p>
<p>“'Why?' I asks, being suspicious.</p>
<p>“'Because,' she says, 'if it wasn't you wouldn't be touring around to sell
your own books after you've wrote them. That is hard work. Now, I have to
stay in this kitchen and perspire because I have to, but if you was rich
off your books you wouldn't sit on that chair and get all stewed up. I can
see that.'</p>
<p>“'What you can't see,' I says, 'is that I came here just because I was the
writer of this here composition. Money I don't desire to wish for. Being a
rich man and a philanthropist, I give all I make off of this book to the
poor. But it ain't everybody can experience the satisfiedness of seeing a
reely genooine author. So I travel around exhibiting myself for the good
of the public. And as a special and extraordinary thing—a sort of
guarantee to one and all that they have seen a genooine living author—I
write my autograph in each and every volume of this book that I sell at
the small sum of one-fifty per. Think of it! Ten thousand verses; moral,
intellectooal, and witty; cloth cover, and the author's own autograph
written by himself, all for one-fifty. The autograph of the famous boy
author.'</p>
<p>“'That's a big bargain,' she says, thoughtful.</p>
<p>“'Jigantic,' I says</p>
<p>“'Genius is cert'nly a wonderful phenomenus,' she repeats again, dreamy.</p>
<p>“'Ain't it!' I responds, sniffing to see if it was my pants that was
scorching. 'Will you have one volume?'</p>
<p>“She hesitated, and then she says, 'No. No, I don't dast to. Not yet. Not
till I see how ma comes out. Mebby she'll purchase one before she gits
through being talked to.'</p>
<p>“I set straight upward on my hotly warmed chair. 'Being talked to!' I
says, astonished.</p>
<p>“'Yes,' says the sweet sample of girl. 'Your son, you know, Mister Samuel
Mills; he's in the front room interviewing ma.'</p>
<p>“'My son!' I ejaculates weakly, the thermometer in my spinal backbone
going up ten thousand degrees hotter.</p>
<p>“'Such an oldish son, too,' she says, sinfully joyous, 'for such a
youngish father. He must have been two years old the day you were born.
Genius is cert'nly a wonderful phenomenus!'</p>
<p>“I set there a minute, wilted, but nervous. Then I got hot, and arose in
anger.</p>
<p>“'My son!' I says, scornful. 'So that's what he says, it is? Disgracing
his father in that way! All right for him! I disown him out of my family.
And I furthermore remark that he ain't my son, nor never was.'</p>
<p>“'Well,' she says, 'you needn't get so hot about it. He's a hard worker.
He's been here all day.'</p>
<p>“'I ain't hot,' I says, forgetting that my temperature was torrid plus
glowing, 'but I'm mad to think that that boy which I hired to sell my book
should pass himself off as my son, and then stay talking all day in one
place, instead of selling books throughout the promiscuous neighborhood.'</p>
<p>“'Then,' she says, as if for the first time seeing light, 'that young man
in their ain't no son of the author of this “Sin” book?'</p>
<p>“'Never; subsequent nor previous, nor wasn't, nor will be,' I solemnly
made prevarication.</p>
<p>“'Well,' she says, 'he said he was when he come in; and me and ma didn't
think it likely an author person would have his son out book-peddling, so
we asservated back that he wasn't; and him and ma has been having a
high-grade talking match all day in the front parlor to convince each
other otherwise than what they are convinced of.'</p>
<p>“'Him,' continued the lovely girl, 'says he'll sell ma a book BECAUSE he's
the son of the author thereof, and ma says she'll buy a book if he owns up
truthful that he ain't the son of the author thereof. She says that if she
buys a book off of him when he's making false witness of having a talented
dad she'll be encouraging lying, which she can't do, being a full-blood
Baptist. So they've got a deadlock, and the jury is hung, and the
plurality is equal and unbiased on both sides, and up to date nobody
wins.'</p>
<p>“'Then,' I says, 'I don't sell no “Wage of Sin” do I?'</p>
<p>“'Not as no author if it,' she says. 'If you want to tackle us as a common
book agent, you'll find us right in the market.'</p>
<p>“'Katie,' I says, 'call your ma out here a minute. If I can sell a copy of
this volume I am willing to sell my birthmark for a mess of potash any day
of the week.'</p>
<p>“'That,' she says, cheerful, 'is spoke like a financier and a gentleman.'</p>
<p>“With that she started for the front room, but just then the door swung
open, and out came her ma and Sammy, tired with fatigue, but satisfied.</p>
<p>“'What!' says the young daughter, 'is the tie untied? Is the jawfest
concluded?'</p>
<p>“'It is,' says the maternal ancestor of that girl, weak but happy. 'We
talked seven miles and six furloughs, but I won. He has renounced his sin.
He ain't no son of no author. I've boughten his book.'</p>
<p>“I gazed at Sammy with a moist, reproachful eye.</p>
<p>“'Sammy! Sammy!' I says, shaking my head, 'to think——'</p>
<p>“'Hush!' he says, 'don't say it. I ain't no Sammy. I ain't no Mills. Them
is not my name.'</p>
<p>“'Alas!' I says, mournful, 'am I then deceived since childhood's happy
hours?'</p>
<p>“I see the respectable old lady pricking up her ears and getting ready for
another season of conversation. Sammy likewise made the same observation,
and he fended off the deadly blow.</p>
<p>“'Yes,' he says, 'I have deceived you. My name is——'</p>
<p>“He stopped and looked doubtful and perplexed, and scratched his ear with
his forepaw.</p>
<p>“'My name is——' he says, and stops, and then he turns to the
elderly female, and asks desperate: 'What in tunket did I say my name
was?'</p>
<p>“'Hewlitt,' she says, 'Eliph' Hewlitt.'</p>
<p>“'Oh, yes!' says Sammy, 'that's it. I guess I'll just write that down, so
as to have it handy. You know,' he says, looking at me, 'my memory's awful
bad since I had the scarlet fever. It's terrible. Why, when I come in here
I knowed I had SOMETHING to say about this book, and I tried to remember,
and I seemed to remember that I was the son of the author who authored it.
I never come so near lying in my life. I'm all in a tremble over it to
think how near to lying I was! An' I got the notion Eliph' Hewlitt was the
name of a horse.'</p>
<p>“'Ma,' says Katie, giving me a wicked smile, 'this here other young man
has got a bad scarlet fever memory, too. HE'S come near to lying,
likewise. You'd ought to speak a few words of helpfulness with him, too!'</p>
<p>“'Now, here,' I says, 'you pass that by, Katie. All that that I said was a
novel I was thinking of writing out when I got my full growth, which I
told you to pass the time away whiles this What's-his-name was busy. I
never wrote nothing!'</p>
<p>“'Well,' she says, 'you don't look as if you had the sense to, so I guess
you ain't lying now.'</p>
<p>“But ma lit into me, and spent two hours, steady talk, convincing me I
wasn't W. P. Mills, although every time she said I wasn't I said so, too.
The more I agreed that I wasn't the more she would fire up and take a
fresh hold, and try to bear it home to me that I wasn't. There was never
in the world such a long fight, with both sides saying the same thing.
Ordinary persons couldn't have done it, but hat lady mother could, an'
did, an' every now an' then she would dig into Sammy again. An' all of it
was right near to that enthusiastical stove. So at last she laid a couple
of extra hard words against us an' we keeled over, as you might say, an'
toppled out of the kitchen. We was dazed with language that was all words,
an' when we come to the gate we was so stupefied that we climbed right
over it, an' so weak that we fell down off the other side of it, an' Sammy
all the time repeatin' 'Eliph' Hewlitt,' like a man in a dream. By next
day he was able to leave the hotel, an' he took the train, an' I ain't
seen him until this day, so I guess he stuck right to that name, for fear
he might meet the talkin' lady again. I don't see how he could get the
name out of his system when once Katie's ma had talked it in, anyway, for
she was a great talker. I ought to know, for I went back an' chinned with
Katie as soon as I got the daze out of my head, an' the long-come
short-come of it was I married Katie.</p>
<p>“When Sammy comes back I want to ask him if he sold out all them 'Wage of
Sin' books. I never sold but one, an' I didn't sell that—I gave it
to Katie for a wedding present.”</p>
<p>“You done right when you gave up the book agent business, Jim,” said Pap
Briggs. “There ought to be a license agin all of 'em.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER VI. The Castaway </h2>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt, when he reached the large, yellow house, found the door
open. The sale was well over. The gingham aprons and the cat-stitched
dusting cloths were all sold, and only a few crocheted slipper-bags and
similar luxuries remained, and these were being offered at greatly reduced
prices, much to the chagrin of the ladies who had contributed them. The
cashiers were counting the results of the evening's business, and the
other ladies were grouped about the minister, who stood in the middle of
the parlor, laughingly explaining the merits of a plush-covered
rolling-pin he had purchased in a moment of folly.</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt tapped on the door to call attention to his presence, and
walked into the parlor. Mrs. Doctor Weaver came forward, a shade of
anxiety on her face.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Doctor Weaver, I suppose,” said Eliph' Hewlitt. “Well, my name is
Hewlitt, Eliph' Hewlitt, and I heard of this sale at the hotel. The
landlord said strangers were welcome——”</p>
<p>“Of course they are!” exclaimed Mrs. Doctor Weaver. “I'm afraid all the
best things are gone, they went off so quickly to-night; but you're just
as welcome, I'm sure, an' mebby you'll find something you'd like, though I
suppose you're a travelin' man, an' I don't see what you'd do with a knit
tidy, or a rickrack pin cushion, unless you've got a sister or a wife to
send it to. But mebby you ain't a drummer after all?”</p>
<p>“Well, yes, I'm a sort of a drummer,” said Eliph', tapping his parcel.
“Book agent, you know. That the minister?”</p>
<p>Mrs. Weaver drew back when Eliph' mentioned his occupation. She did not
consider a book agent any less worthy than another man, but she had been
obliged to miss the last payment on Sir Walter Scott, and she had an
ill-defined feeling of guilt. To miss a payment was almost as hideous in
her eyes as to neglect to put a dime in the contribution plate each Sunday
would have been. Her first thought was that Eliph' had come to rudely bear
away the ten volumes of Sir Walter before the eyes of all the women of
Kilo, and she gladly grasped at his last words.</p>
<p>“Yes,” she said quickly, “that's him. Let me introduce you. He—he
likes books.”</p>
<p>“I'm not selling books to-night,” explained Eliph' Hewlitt, for her words
seemed one form of the usual reception of a book agent, and to indicate a
desire to be rid of him as quickly as possible; “but I don't mind meeting
him.”</p>
<p>As Mrs. Weaver led the way to the center of the group, Eliph' Hewlitt
followed her, but his eyes quickly made a circle of the room, and rested a
moment on Sally Briggs, who was one of the cashiers.</p>
<p>She saw him and caught her breath, as if the sight had frightened her, but
when he nodded she could not refuse to return the salutation. She nodded
as coldly as she knew how, and hurried to the most distant corner of the
room. Eliph' was well enough pleased with this reception, for he would
hardly have known what to do with a warmer one; in many years he had
received only the book agent's usual greeting, which is far from cordial.
She had nodded to him, at any rate, and he felt a glow of satisfaction.</p>
<p>When Mrs. Weaver introduced him to the minister she added that he was a
book agent. She may have done this as an explanation, for Kilo, and even
Kilo's minister, craved details, or she may have done it to give fair
warning to all concerned. The effect was instantaneous, and the smiles of
welcome faded. The minister shook hands gravely, and the ladies who had
run forward with shoe bags and tidies turned and walked coldly away.</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt smiled.</p>
<p>“Funny how that name makes a man unpopular, ain't it?” he said, addressing
the minister. “But I ain't going to talk books in Kilo. The landlord down
at the hotel told me it was a bad time, so I'm going to pass it by. Well,
I guess we deserve all the blame we get. Some of us do pester the life out
of people—don't know when to stop. Now, when I see a man don't want
my book, or when I see a town ain't ready for it, I drop books and go off,
and leave them alone. I could have stayed down there at the hotel and
bothered the landlord into taking my book. He'd have too it, because
everybody that sees this book, and understands it, does take it; but I
said, 'Why bullyrag the life out of the poor man when there's a missionary
sale going on in town, and he don't want a book, and I do want to see the
sale? I am interested in missions.”</p>
<p>“It's a great field,” said the minister, with a sigh of relief; for, as
the literary head of Kilo, he was always the first and most strongly
contested goal of the book agents. The subscription list that did not bear
his name at the head bore few others, and he appreciated the self denial
of Eliph' Hewlitt in passing such a good opportunity to talk business.</p>
<p>“Are you deeply interested in the field?” he inquired graciously.</p>
<p>“Well, you se,” said Eliph' Hewlitt, “I was cast away on one of those
desert islands myself once, and I know what those poor heathen must suffer
for lack of churches and civilization, and good books to read. I can feel
for them.”</p>
<p>Someone pushed a chair gently against Eliph's legs, in gentle invitation
for him to be seated, and he took the chair, and laid his package across
his knees. Those who had drawn away from him now gathered closer, and all
gazed at him with interest. Miss Sally alone remained at the other end of
the room.</p>
<p>“Well, I never expected to live to see a man that had been shipwrecked,”
said Mrs. Weaver, “let alone shipwrecked on a desert island—an' a
book agent at that!”</p>
<p>Eliph' smiled indulgently.</p>
<p>“I wasn't a book agent in them days,” he said; “it was that made me a book
agent. If I hadn't been shipwrecked on that island I wouldn't be here now
with this book on my knees.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Weaver's face flushed.</p>
<p>“I'm sure I ask you to excuse me,” she exclaimed. “I don't know what I was
thinkin' of not to ask to take your package. Let me put it aside for you.
They ain't no use for you to be bothered with it.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, ma'm,” said Eliph', “but I'll just keep it. No offense, but I
never let it go out of my hands, day or night. It saved my life, not once,
but many times, this book did, and I keep it handy. But for this book that
shipwreck would have been my last day.”</p>
<p>“Land sakes, now!” cried Mrs. Weaver, “won't you tell us about it?”</p>
<p>“Well, as I said, but for this book I'd be bones at the bottom of the sea.
Yes, ladies and gents, bones, of which there is one hundred and
ninety-eight in the full grown human skeleton, composed of four-fifths
inorganic and one-fifth organic matter.”</p>
<p>“How dreadful!” exclaimed Mrs. Weaver, who, being a doctor's wife, had a
particular dislike for bones, as for useless things that cluttered up the
house, and were not ornamental. “But how come you to get wrecked?”</p>
<p>“Five years ago,” said Eliph' Hewlitt, “I was a confidence man in New
York. New York is the largest city in the Western Hemisphere; population
estimated over three million; located on the island of Manhattan, at the
mouth of the Hudson River. And, if I do say it myself, I was a good
confidence man. I was a success; I got rich. And what then? The police got
after me, and I had to run away. Yes, ladies and gents, I had to fly from
my native land. I took passage on a ship for Ceylon. Ceylon,” he added,
“is an island southeast of India; population three millions; principal
town, Colombo; English rule; products, tea, coffee, spices, and gems.</p>
<p>“We had a good trip until we almost got there, and then a big storm come
up, and blew our ship about like it was a peanut shell, tossing it up and
down on the mighty waves, and round and back; and the third day we bumped
on a rock, and the ship began to sink. In the hurry I was left behind when
the crew and passengers went off in the boats. Think of it, ladies and
gents, not even a life preserver to save me, and the ship sinking a foot a
minute.”</p>
<p>“Goodness me!” said Mrs. Weaver, “you wasn't drowned, was you?”</p>
<p>“No,” said Eliph' Hewlitt, “or I wouldn't be here to tell it. I rushed to
the captain's cabin. I thought maybe I would find a life preserver there.
Alas, no! But there, ladies and gents, I found something better. When I
didn't find a life preserver I was stunned—yes, clean knocked out. I
dropped into a chair and laid my head on the captain's table. I sat there
several minutes, the ship sinking one foot per minute, and when I come to
my senses, and raised my head, my hand was lying on this.”</p>
<p>Reverently he raised the volume from his knees and unwrapped it, and the
Ladies' Foreign Mission Society leaned forward with one accord to catch a
glimpse of the title. Eliph' Hewlitt opened the book and flipped over the
pages rapidly with the moistened tip of his third finger.</p>
<p>“It was this book, ladies and gents, and it was open here, page 742.
Without thinking, I read the first thing that hit my eye. 'How to Make a
Life Preserver,' it said. 'Take the corks from a hundred champagne
bottles; tie them tightly in a common shirt; then fasten the arms of the
shirt about the body, with the corks resting on the chest. With this
easily improvised life preserver drowning is impossible.' I done it. The
captain of that ship was a high liver, and his room was chuck full of
champagne bottles. I put in two extry corks for good measure, and when the
ship went down, I floated off on the top of the ocean as easy as a duck
takes to a pond.”</p>
<p>“My sakes!” exclaimed Mrs. Weaver, “that captain must have been an awful
hard drinker!”</p>
<p>“He was,” said Eliph' Hewlitt—“fearful. I was really shocked. But,
there I was in the water, and not much better off for it, neither, for I
couldn't swim a stroke, and as soon as I got through bobbing up and down
like your cork when you've got a sunfish on your line, I stayed right
still, just as if I'd been some bait-can a boy had thrown into an eddy,
and I figgered like as not I'd stay there forever. Then I noticed I had
this book in my hand, and I thought, 'While I'm staying here forever, I'll
just take another peek at this book,' and I opened her. Page 781,” said
Eliph', turning quickly to that page, “was where she opened. 'Swimming;
How to Float, Swim, Dive, and Tread Water—Plain and Fancy Swimming,
Shadow Swimming, High Diving,' et cetery. There she was, all as plain as
pie, and when I read it I could swim as easy as an old hand. The direction
all through this book is plain, practical, and easily followed.</p>
<p>“I at once swum off to the south, for there was no telling how long I'd
have to swim, and as the water was sort of cool, I thought best to go
south, because the further south you go the warmer the water gets. When I
swum two days, and was plumb tuckered out, I come to an island. The waves
was dashing on it fearful, and I knew if I tried to land I'd be dashed to
flinders. It knocked all the hope out of me, and I made up my mind to take
off my life preserver and dive to the bottom of the sea to knock my brains
out on the rocks. But, ladies and gents, before I dived I had another look
at my book, hoping to find something to comfort a dying man. I turned to
page 201.”</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt found the page, and pointed to the heading with his finger.</p>
<p>“'Five Hundred Ennobling Thoughts from the World's Greatest Authors,
including the Prose and Poetical Gems of All ages,'” he read. “There they
were-sixty-two solid pages of them, with vingetty portraits of the
authors. I read No. 285:</p>
<p>“As Thou has made Thy world without, Make Thou more fair my world within,'
et cetery.”</p>
<p>“Whittier, J. G., commonly called the poet of liberty, born 1807, died
1892'—with a complete sketch of his life, a list of his most popular
pieces, and a history of his work on behalf of the slave.</p>
<p>“I was much comforted by this,” said Eliph' Hewlitt, “and I run over the
pages this way, thinking of what I had read, when I hit on page 927:
'Geography of Land and Sea.' I skipped ten pages telling in an interesting
manner of the five great continents, their political division, mountains,
lakes, and plains, their vegetable inhabitants and animals, their ancient
and modern history, et cetery, and I come to 'Islands, Common, Volcanic,
and Coral'; and on page 940 I read that coral islands are often surrounded
by a reef on which the waves dash, but that there is usually a quiet
lagoon between the reef and the island, with somewhere an opening from the
sea into the lagoon.</p>
<p>“When I read that,” said Eliph', closing the book, “I shut up my book and
swum round until I come to the opening, which was there, just like the
book said it would be, and I swum across the lagoon, and fell exhausted on
the beach. I was played out, and I had swallered too much water. I would
have died right there, but I thought of my book, and I turned to the
index, where every subject known to the vast realm of knowledge is set
down alphabetically, from 'A' to 'Z', twenty thousand references in all,
dealing with every subject from the time of Adam to the present day,
including, in the new and revised edition just from the press, a history
of the war with Spain, with full page portraits of Dewey, Sampson,
Cervera, and the boy king, and colored plates of the battles of Manila Bay
and Santiago. I run my eye down the page till I came to 'Drowned, How to
Revive the,' page 96; and what I read there saved my life.”</p>
<p>The ladies sighed with relief.</p>
<p>“What shall I say about my four long years on that island?” said Eliph'.
“I was the only man on it. Oh, the pangs of solitude! Oh, the terrors of
being alone! But, ladies and gents, I suffered none of them. I was not
alone. He is never alone who has a copy of Jarby's 'Encyclopedia of
Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art,' published by
Jarby & Goss, New York, and sold for the trifling sum of five dollars
a volume, one dollar down and one dollar a month until paid, the book
delivered when the first payment is made. And that, my friends, was the
book I had, and the book you see before you.”</p>
<p>The minister put out his hand.</p>
<p>“May I look at the volume?” he asked, and Eliph' passed it to him with a
nod.</p>
<p>“From the first the book was my friend, philosopher, and guide. I had no
matches. Page 416, 'Fire, Its Traditions—How to Make a Fire Without
Matches—Fire-fighting, Fire-extinguishers,' et cetery, taught me to
make a fire by rubbing two sticks, as the savages do. I had no weapons to
kill the fowls of the air. Page 425, 'Weapons, Ancient and Modern—Their
History—How to Make and Use Them,' et cetery, told me how to twist
the cocoanut bark into a cord, and to shape the limb of the gum-gum tree
into a bow and arrow. Page 396, 'Birds, Tropical, Temperate, and Arctic—Song
Birds, Edible Birds, and Birds of Plumage,' et cetery, with their Latin
and common names, and over one thousand illustrations, told me which to
kill, and which to eat. Page 100, 'The Complete Kitchen Guide,' being
eight hundred tested recipes—roasts, fries, pastry, cakes, bread,
puddings, entrées, soups, how to make candy, how to clean brass, copper,
silver, tin, et cetery—told me how to prepare and cook them.</p>
<p>“Yes, my friends, I went to that island an ignorant, unbelieving man, and
I came away educated and reformed. For my idle hours there was the
'Complete Mathematician,' showing how to figger the most difficult
problems easily, how to measure corn in the drib, water in the well,
figger interest, et cetery, by which I become posted on all kinds of
arithmetic. There was the 'Complete Letter Writer, or a Guide to Polite
and Correct Correspondence,' the 'Dictionary of Legal Terms, or Every Man
His Own Lawyer,' the 'Modern Penman,' the 'Eureka Shorthand System'—in
fact, all the knowledge in the world, condensed into one thousand and four
pages, for the small sum of five dollars. Who can afford to be without
this book, which will pay for itself twice over every week of the year?</p>
<p>“I was picked up, ladies and gents,” continued Eliph' Hewlitt, “by a
passing ship, and I decided to devote my life to a great work—to
circulating this wonderful book in my native land. I wept when I thought
of the millions that had not seen it—millions that were living poor,
starved lives because they didn't have a copy of Jarby's Encyclopedia of
Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art, and I gave myself
to the cause.”</p>
<p>The minister handed the book back to Eliph' Hewlitt, and cleared his
throat.</p>
<p>“It seems to be all you claim for it,” he said; “but I fear the landlord
of the Kilo House was right. We are not, many of us, ready for more books
at present. If you return in a year or eight months——”</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt smiled, and put his hand gently no the glossy black knee of
the minister's best trousers.</p>
<p>“True,” he said, “true! Kilo has books. Kilo knows the civilizing and
Christianizing influence of books. But,” he exclaimed, “think of the poor
heathen! Think of the poor missionaries fighting to bring civilization to
those dark-hued brothers! Shall it be said that every home in Kilo has a
set of Sir Walter Scott, ten volumes with gilt edges, while the minds of
the heathen dry up and rot for want of the vast treasures contained in
Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science
and Art? Here in this book is the wisdom of the whole world, and will you
selfishly withhold it form those who need it so badly? If I know Kilo, I
think not. If what is said in Jefferson regarding the unselfishness and
liberality of Kilo is true, I think not. I know what you will say. You
will say, 'Here, take this money we have collected this evening and give
to the thirsting heathen as many volumes of Jarby's Encyclopedia of
Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art, as it will buy at
five dollars a volume.'”</p>
<p>He glanced around the circle of faces.</p>
<p>“That is what you will say,” he said; “But Eliph' Hewlitt will beg a
chance to do his little for the noble work. He will, seeing the good
cause, make the price four seventy-five per volume, and throw in one
volume from for the Kilo Sunday School library, where one and all can have
reference to its helpful and civilizing pages.”</p>
<p>In Eliph' Hewlitt's eyes glowed the fire of conquest that always shone in
them when he was “talking book,” a glitter such as shines in the eyes of
the enthusiast, and they fell upon Miss Sally Briggs, who had been drawn
by his eloquence to the edge of the ring of ladies. As he paused, she
recognized the moment as that when the victim is supposed to utter the
words, “Well, I guess I'll take a copy,” but she missed the direct appeal,
and its absence confused her, and she was still wondering whether it was
now time to say she would take a copy, or whether she had better wait for
the formal appeal, when Mrs. Doc Weaver spoke for the Ladies' Mission
Circle.</p>
<p>When Eliph' Hewlitt left the house, half an hour later with his order
signed, Miss Sally had disappeared, and, although he peeked eagerly into
both the side rooms as he passed through the hall, he could see nothing of
her. He was disappointed.</p>
<p>When he returned to the hotel the landlord was asleep in the chair before
the door. He arose with a yawn, rubbed his eyes, and led the way into the
office where a dingy kerosene lamp was burning dimly. He stretched his
arms as he looked at the clock that stood above the dusty pigeon holes
back of the desk.</p>
<p>“'Leven o'clock!” he yawned. “I must have been asleep two hours. Guess
you'll want to get right up to bed, won't you? I reckon you found out Kilo
don't want no books this trip, Sammy; an' if you want to git an early
start from town you'll need all the sleep you can get.”</p>
<p>Eliph' tossed his package on the desk carelessly.</p>
<p>“Why, yes, Jim, I wish you WOULD call me early,” he said. “I'll be ready
for bed in half an hour or so. I done a little business up yonder, and I
want to mail my report to New York. But you needn't hitch up my horse in
the morning.”</p>
<p>“No?” asked the landlord sleepily.</p>
<p>“No,” said Eliph', “and if any feller comes this way selling books in the
next month or so, just tell him there ain't no use for a raw hand to waste
time in this town. Tell him Eliph' Hewlitt has settled down to live here.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER VII. The Colonel </h2>
<p>When Eliph' Hewlitt stepped out of the hotel the next morning, after he
had eaten his breakfast, and stood, with a wooden toothpick between his
lips, looking up and down the street, he felt a sense of exultation. If he
had been a victorious general, and Kilo a captured city of great
importance, he would have had a similar feeling. Already he felt that, if
he was not the captor of the town, he was one of its important citizens,
and practically the husband of an attractive woman whose father owned
sufficient property to be one of those who grumble about taxes.</p>
<p>To a man who had been a wanderer all his life it was pleasant to feel that
he was soon to be kin to all the things he saw on Main Street, brother to
the town-pump and cousin to the flag pole, and to consider that even the
well-gnawed hitching rails were to be part of his future years. He nodded
across the street to Billings, the grocer and general store man, as if he
was an old acquaintance, and he watched Skinner, the butcher, sweeping the
walk, with a pleasant smile, for he saw in him a future friend. He loved
Kilo, and he was ready to like everything, from the post office to the
creamery. His whole future seemed destined to be simple and pleasant, for
he was resolved to do his best to make the town like him, and there seemed
little opportunity for complications in a town that could all be seen at
one glance.</p>
<p>Strangers think all small towns simple. The few stores are all plainly
labeled, the streets run at right angles, and the houses are set well
apart, like big letters in a primer. A small town looks like a story
without a plot, like: “See the cat. Does the cat see me? The cat sees the
dog;” beside which a city is as unfathomable as a Henry James paragraph.
To the stranger each man and woman he meets is a complete individual, each
standing alone, like letters on an alphabet block, and not easily to be
confused, one with the other. But these letters of the small town's
alphabet are often tangled into as long and complex words as those of the
greatest city; it takes but twenty-six letters to spell all the passions.
The letter A, that looked so distinctly separate, is soon found to be
connected with C and T in Cat, and with W and R in War, as well as
cross-connected with the C and W in Caw, and with T and R in Tar; while
the houses that stood so seemingly alone are all connected and
criss-crossed by lines of love and hate, of petty policy and revenge and
pride, quite as are nations or people who live in labyrinths, or in a
metropolis.</p>
<p>It was still too early in the morning for Eliph' Hewlitt to call on Miss
Sally, and there was no haste; the day was long. He even doubted whether
it would be good policy to call on her in the morning; he might find her
busy with household cares. Probably it would be best to wait for the
afternoon, when she would be at leisure. This, he decided would be best.
He would arrive in her presence at two o'clock, and four hours of
conversation would carry them to the point of being well acquainted, as
advised by Jarby's Encyclopedia. The next day he could enter the second
stage of the directions, and call with a book, present it; call after
dinner with a box of candy, present it; call after supper, and propose a
walk, visit the ice cream parlor, and on the way home offer his hand, and
be accepted. The chapter on “Courtship—How to Win the Affections”
advised against haste, and Eliph' did not wish to be hasty. To a man of
his spirit two days seemed rather long to devote to so simple a matter—a
real waste of time—but he was willing to take longer than necessary,
in order to follow the directions in spirit, as well as in letter.</p>
<p>Eliph' settled himself into one of the chairs before the hotel and opened
his copy of Jarby's Encyclopedia at the chapter on “Courtship—How to
Win the Affections.” He was deep in it when the landlord strolled around
from the livery stable and sank into a chair by his side.</p>
<p>“So you made up your mind to stay here, Sammy?” he asked. “I guess the
town'll be glad enough to have you. All this town needs to be a big place
is inhabitants. What you ought to do now it to settle down for good, an'
get married. There's some purty fine women in this town that ain't picked
up yet, but they won't last long, they way they're goin'. Somebody gets
married every couple of months.”</p>
<p>Eliph' looked up with a smile. Jim Wilkins did not know he had advised the
very thing he meant to do.</p>
<p>“I've thought some about it,” said Eliph', “'most everybody's getting
married now-a-days.”</p>
<p>“It's the popular thing 'round here,” said Jim. “Look across the street,
yonder. See that feller just goin' up to the lawyer's office? He's one
that's in the marry class, just now. That's Colonel Guthrie. He lives out
on the first farm beyond Main Street, and he's goin' to marry Sally
Briggs, daughter of old Pap Briggs, that we was talkin' to last night,
here.”</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt stared at the Colonel, but he said nothing. He blamed
himself; he had wasted his opportunity. This was what came of being slow!
He should have completed his courtship at the picnic, or last night at the
sale. Jim Wilkins interrupted the thought.</p>
<p>“Leastways,” he said, “HE'LL get her if Skinner don't. It's a close run
between him an' Skinner. Skinner ain't so good lookin' as the Colonel, but
he's better fixed. It's Skinner owns our butcher-shop, an' it's Skinner is
buildin' our Opery House Block. Some say Skinner'll get Pap Briggs' money,
an' some says the Colonel will.”</p>
<p>“Are there any others?” asked Eliph', looking down the street to where the
raw brick of the opera house glowed in the sun.</p>
<p>“After Sally?” asked Jim Wilkins. “Well, there's sev'ral would like to get
her, I dare say. Sally Briggs is a pretty fine sort of woman, an' Pap
Briggs has quite considerable money, but the Colonel an' Skinner has the
inside track. No one else has a chance.”</p>
<p>Eliph' stroked his whiskers softly and coughed gently behind his hand.</p>
<p>“Briggs, did you say the name was?” he asked. “Seems to me I met a lady at
a picnic up Clarence way that had that name. You said the name was Sally
Briggs?”</p>
<p>“That's her,” said Wilkins. “Sally Ann Briggs. She's been visitin' up
there in Clarence.”</p>
<p>Eliph' nodded his head slowly.</p>
<p>“I seem to recollect her, since you mention it,” he said indifferently,
and then he added, “She spoke as if she might buy a copy of Jarby's
Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art
when I saw her at that picnic. I guess I'll drop 'round and see if she's
ready to buy. If she' goin' to be married she ought to have a copy.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER VIII. The Medium-Sized Box </h2>
<p>As Eliph' walked briskly toward Miss Sally's house the Colonel was having
an interesting conversation with Attorney Toole, in the attorney's office
over the Kilo Savings Bank.</p>
<p>Attorney Toole had been a lawyer at Franklin, and he had come down to Kilo
because he preferred a being a big toad in a small puddle, rather than a
little toad in a middle-sized one. This was one of his reasons, but
another was that he had complete and full faith in Richard Toole, and
intended to be a political power in the land. He could not be much of
anything in Franklin, for that town was hard and fast Democratic, and
Toole was a Republican. The first step to political preferment is to be
elected to something or other, it does not make much difference what, and
to rise from that to greater things, but a Republican had no chance in
Franklin; couldn't even get an appointment as dog police or wharfmaster;
couldn't get elected to any office at all.</p>
<p>So Toole packed up his law books and moved to Kilo, where he was in a
Republican town, a Republican county, and a Republican congressional
district, in a Republican State that formed part of a Republican nation.
He selected Kilo, after considering other good little Republican towns,
because the Republicans of Kilo needed aid and assistance; they were out
of office; kicked out.</p>
<p>Every so often the small town of the West turns the regular party out of
office and puts in a Citizens' ticket, just to show that the people still
rule, and to let the greedy officeholders, some of whom get as much as one
hundred dollars a year in salary, know that their offices are not life
positions. When Attorney Toole descended on Kilo, the Citizens' Party was
“in,” and the Republicans were “out,” and the attorney saw an opportunity
of making himself valuable to his party by working to put the party “in”
again.</p>
<p>Never before had the Colonel climbed his stairs, and Toole smiled like an
Irish sphinx when the Colonel entered his office. He smiled most of the
time, not because he thought a smile becoming to his freckled face, but
because he found things so eternally amusing. In law a man is considered
innocent until he has been proved guilty; in Kilo Attorney Toole
considered everything amusing until it had been proved serious, and he
considered the Colonel and Skinner, and the whole Citizens' Party they had
been instrumental in organizing, as parts of the same joke. They would
stand until he was ready to lazily push out his hand and topple them over.
It was almost time to topple them, now, and he was glad to see the
Colonel; he motioned him to a seat, and smiled.</p>
<p>The Colonel took his hat from his mat of coarse iron-gray hair, and laid
it carefully on the floor. Out of his small sharp eyes ignorance and
cunning peered, and the mass of beard that hid the greater part of his
face could not hide the hard line of his mouth.</p>
<p>“I jest dropped up,” he explained, after he had acknowledged the
attorney's cheerful greeting with a gruff “mornin',” “I jest dropped up,
sort of friendly-like, thinkin' you might have nothin' to do, an' might
like to sit an' chin a while. You don't charge nothin' for sittin' an'
chinnin' do ye?”</p>
<p>Toole said he did not.</p>
<p>“I didn't figger you did,” said the Colonel. “If I'd thought you did I
wouldn't have dropped up, for I ain't got no money to spend on lawyers.
I'd sooner throw money away than spend it at law. But I figgered you was
young at the law yet, and didn't have much to do at it, and I sort of run
across a case I thought might amuse you, like, when you ain't got nothin'
to do. Folks don't seem to have much faith in young lawyers, and you can't
blame 'em; old ones don't know much. All any of 'em care for is to get
people into trouble so they can charge 'em fees to get 'em out of it. So I
thought mebby you'd like to hear of this case so you could kind of mull it
over in your mind whilst you're loafin' up here.”</p>
<p>“That was kind of you,” said Toole.</p>
<p>“I always like to do a good turn when I can,” said the Colonel, “when it
don't cost nothin'. An' this case I was tellin' you about is a mighty good
one for a young lawyer to study over. Soon as I heard of it I says to
myself 'I'll tell this case to Attorney Toole, an' he'll be grateful to
hear of it.'”</p>
<p>The country client usually begins in some such way as this, anxious to get
all the advice he can without having to pay for it, and Toole merely
smiled.</p>
<p>“Mebby you know,” said the Colonel, “that there was a feller took board of
Sally Briggs a while back; feller by the name of William Rossiter, that
come through here peddlin' lightnin' rods and pain killer and land knows
what all. Well, he was a rascal. He took board off of Sally Briggs four
weeks, and then he cleared out, and she nor no one else has seen hide nor
hair of him since, and he never paid her one cent. All he ever let on was
to leave this letter stickin' on the pin cushion in his bedroom.”</p>
<p>The Colonel dug the letter out of his vest pocket, and Toole read it. It
was short:</p>
<p>Dear Miss Briggs: I'm off. Good-by. Business in Kilo is no good. Sorry I
can't square up, but I leave you the box in my room in part payment. W. R.</p>
<p>“Prosecution's exhibit No. 1,” said the attorney.</p>
<p>“Jest what I was tellin' Miss Sally,” said the Colonel. “I says to her to
keep that paper, and it might come handy. Mebby you heard that me and Miss
Sally was what you might call keepin' company?”</p>
<p>“That's interesting,” said Toole. “Been keeping it long?”</p>
<p>“Quite some consid'able time,” said the Colonel. “Long enough, land knows,
and we'd a-been done with it by this time and married, if that Skinner
hadn't come crowdin' in where he wasn't wanted. What right has a man like
him to come pushin' in like that? His wife ain't been dead twelve months
yet. It ain't decent of him, is it?”</p>
<p>“Do you want a legal opinion?” asked Toole, reaching for a large law book
that lay on the table.</p>
<p>“No, I don't!” cried the Colonel in alarm; “I don't want to run up no
charges. I don't care whether it's legal or not, it ain't friendly, after
him and me has worked together buildin' up this Citizens' Party, and all.
What does he mean, sendin' Miss Sally porterhouses, when she only orders
flank steak, like he was wrappin' up love and affection into every steak?
He's got mighty proud since he set out to build that there Kilo Opery
House of his. He's a fool to spend money on an opery house in this town.
He's a beefy, puffy old money bag, he is. He needn't tell ME he expects to
get even on what he spent on that Opery House Block out of what he'll make
on it; he just built it to make a show, so some dumb idiot like Sally
Briggs would think he amounted to more than others, and marry him.”</p>
<p>The Colonel brought down his hand with a bang on the attorney's table.</p>
<p>“What kind of an idiot did you call Miss Briggs?” asked Toole pleasantly.</p>
<p>“I didn't call her no kind!” declared the Colonel. “All I say is, I've
been married once already, and I know how women are. And I know Skinner.
He's lookin' for to pay for that opery house with Pap Brigg's money that
he'll git if he marries Sally. But he won't git it! I'm a-goin' to——”
He was going to say he was going to get it, but he caught himself in time,
and substituted “I'm a-goin' to see to that.”</p>
<p>“I see,” said Toole, “and you want to retain me as your attorney in case
you have to sue for breach of promise?”</p>
<p>The Colonel scowled.</p>
<p>“I don't want to retain, and I don't want to sue, and I don't want no fees
to pay. You get that clear in your mind. If I did, I'd go to a lawyer that
had some experience. I jest dropped up——”</p>
<p>“Well, any time you wish, you can just drop down again, Colonel,” said
Toole, but not ill-naturedly.</p>
<p>“Now, don't git that way,” said the Colonel. “I jest dropped up to do you
a favor, and you git mad about it! I don't call that friendly. If you was
to do me a favor I wouldn't git mad.”</p>
<p>“Go ahead with the favor, then,” said Toole, leaning back in his chair and
putting his feet on his table.</p>
<p>“Miss Sally,” said the Colonel, “she told me all about this feller
Rossiter, an' what he said, an' what she said, an' how he come to go to
her house for board, an' how he skipped off, an' she showed me the note he
left on the pin cushion, an' then she come down to business. 'Colonel,'
she says, 'have I a right to take an' keep that box? Have I a right to
open it? Is it mine by law? If I open it can he come back an' sue me, or
anything?'</p>
<p>“'Can he?' says I. 'That's the question. Can he?'</p>
<p>“'It's a large box,' says Miss Sally.</p>
<p>“'A large box, hey?' says I. 'Of course if it was a small box, Miss Sally—but
it is a large box! How large?'</p>
<p>“'Quite large,' she says. 'About medium large. Not too large. Besides
anything very large it would be small, but beside anything very small it
would be large.'</p>
<p>“I nodded my head to her, to let her see I knew what she was tryin' to
say. 'Medium large,' I says, 'yes, I know just about how big you mean, but
what I'd like to know is, is it heavy?'</p>
<p>“'Medium,' she says, 'just medium heavy.'</p>
<p>“Well, there she was! A medium heavy, medium-sized box. If it had been a
little bit of a light-weight box I'd 'a' told her to open it and keep it,
for there couldn't have been much in it; and if it had been a big heavy
box I'd have told her she'd better leave it alone; for there wouldn't be
any tellin' whether she had any right to open a box like that one might
have turned out to be. I didn't know how the law stood on that kind of a
box. But it was medium-sized, and I didn't know WHAT to say.</p>
<p>“'Miss Sally,' I says, 'I'd like to help you out on this. Any time I can
give you any advice on anything, I'm glad to, but I don't know what to say
about a box that is medium size and medium heavy. You'd ought to get the
law on that subject before you touch that box. Don't you touch that box.
Don't you open it unless there's a law officer standin' by to see you do
it.'</p>
<p>“She seen that was good advice,” continued the Colonel, “and I sat there
right in her parlor and thought it over. 'Miss Sally,' I says, after I had
thought all I could about it, 'I believe Attorney Toole would tell you
what to do about that box. There ain't nothin' a lawyer needs more than to
be popular, and there ain't no way to git popular quicker than by doin'
little favors, an' he ought to be glad to do a favor for you, for you're
almost an orphan. Your ma's dead, an' Pap Briggs ain't overly strong, an'
you're liable to be an orphan almost any minute. I can tell by the looks
of Attorney Toole,' I says, 'that he's got a good heart, and if you say
the word I'll ask him what he says to do about that box.' She seemed sort
of put out at what I'd said about orphans, but I seen she was willing to
have me ask you about that box, and I seen it would be doin' you a favor,
too, to tell you about it, so you could sort of exercise your mind on it,
so I jest dropped up——”</p>
<p>“Colonel,” said Toole, “this is a very serious case.” He put his hand over
his mouth to hide the smile he could not prevent from coming to his lips.</p>
<p>“You don't mean to tell me!” exclaimed the Colonel. “I was afraid there
might be somethin' wrong about it somewheres. But I ain't goin' to go to
no expense about it. It ain't my box——”</p>
<p>“I would not take a case like this for money,” said the attorney, turning
suddenly and facing the Colonel with a seriousness that frightened that
cautious soul. “I would not take a case involving a medium-sized,
medium-heavy box; a box left for board by a man from parts unknown, now
departed to parts unknown; a box that may contain stolen property; I would
not take such a case for money, Colonel. But I'll undertake it for
friendship. For friendship only. You ARE my friend, aren't you, Colonel?”</p>
<p>“Surely! Surely!” exclaimed the Colonel eagerly.</p>
<p>“A medium-sized box,” said Toole, turning his head to hide his smile,
“should be opened only in the presence of an attorney-at-law. That is
legal advice and worth five dollars, but I charge you nothing for it, you
being my friend. Consider it a gift from me to you.”</p>
<p>“I'm much obliged,” said the Colonel gruffly.</p>
<p>“And now,” said the attorney briskly, “for the MODUS OPERANDI, as we
lawyers say. Has the client, the lady in the case, a hatchet?”</p>
<p>The Colonel thought.</p>
<p>“I ain't right sure,” he said at length, after he had searched his brain;
“seems like she ought to have, but I've got one, an' I'll loan it to her.”</p>
<p>“Good!” exclaimed Toole briskly. “That is better yet. A medium-sized box
left by a transient in payment of default of a board bill should always be
opened, if possible, with a hatchet not the property of the plaintiff.
Chitty says that. It was so ruled in the case of MUGGINS vs. MUGGINS.”</p>
<p>He took from his desk a bulky volume, and ran over the pages rapidly.</p>
<p>“Box,” he said, “small box-medium box. Here it is. Humph!”</p>
<p>The Colonel leaned over the book, but the attorney closed it quickly.</p>
<p>“Bring an ax,” he said. “A hatchet would do, but an ax is more legal.
Hatchets for small boxes, axes for medium boxes. There is a later case
than MUGGINS vs. MUGGINS.”</p>
<p>“I'll fetch the ax,” agreed the Colonel.</p>
<p>“Can you be at the house in half an hour?” asked the attorney.</p>
<p>The Colonel could.</p>
<p>“You're right sure there ain't goin' to be no charges to this?” he asked
anxiously, and when the attorney had once more assured him there would be
none, he picked his hat from the floor and shuffled into the hall and down
the stairs.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER IX. The Witness </h2>
<p>When Eliph' Hewlitt reached the Briggs house, he did not hesitate, but
walked right up to the front door and rang the bell. A minute later he saw
the red silk that obstructed the pane of beveled glass in the upper part
of the door drawn ever so slightly to one side and then quickly replaced.
He caught the glisten of an eye, as the red silk was held aside, but the
door did not open. Miss Sally, after the brief glance, tiptoed back
through the hall. She did not want to meet the book agent.</p>
<p>Eliph' waited a respectable minute and then rang the bell again, although
he had little belief that this would bring Miss Sally to the door. It is
good form to ring the bell of the front door several times, before going
to the back door, for it may be that the lady of the house is dressing, or
is hastily taking the folded paper “curlers” out of her front hair, or
slipping on her “other skirt” before admitting the visitor. Few indeed are
the front doors in Iowa that open promptly to a knock or a ring. Primping
time must be allowed, and if this, followed by a second ring or knock, does
not open the door, nothing but business permits the visitor to go to the
back door. Having waited, Eliph' went to the back door. It closed almost
as he reached it, and it would not open to his most vigorous knocking.</p>
<p>To know a person is in a house, and not to be able to reach that person,
is annoying, and Eliph' had often had this happen to him. The usual course
was to go away and return again; returning a third or fourth time, or
until the door at last opened; but Eliph' was not merely trying to sell a
copy of Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature,
Science and Art this time. He had no time to waste in the usual manner. If
he could not get into one house to sell a book, he could enter another
house and sell a book, but when a man is after a certain heart he does not
care to go to another house and take another heart. Some men do it, but
they are usually sorry afterwards. Eliph' walked to the front of the house
again, and looked at the front door.</p>
<p>He felt there should be some way to get into the house and have five
minutes' conversation with Miss Sally. If this Colonel and this Skinner
had already had months or years of opportunity for pressing their suits,
there was not time to be lost, and the sooner he began the sooner he would
win. But none of his ordinary methods of entering unwilling houses would
serve his purpose this time. It would not do to begin by making Miss Sally
unfriendly. So Eliph' tucked his book more snugly under his left arm and
looked at the house. He walked to the gate and looked up at the roof;
walked across the street and viewed the house in perspective; but nothing
useful came of it, so he crossed the street again and tried ringing the
doorbell once more. He rang it sharply and waited. Then he knocked and
waited. He was willing to wait until the door opened, and he leaned
against the porch railing and waited, ringing the doorbell insinuatingly,
or commandingly, or coaxingly, from time to time.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the attorney waited until the half hour he had assigned was up,
and then walked toward Miss Briggs' house with briskly business-like
steps.</p>
<p>“Now, some folks,” he said to himself, as he walked, “wouldn't get any fun
at all out of a case like this, but I do. That's the way to keep young.
It's why I don't grow stale in this town. It is a small puddle for a toad
of my size, but I hop around and keep things stirred up.”</p>
<p>As he neared the house, he saw the Colonel approaching from the opposite
direction, and he waved his hand to him, and the Colonel hurried to meet
him. They turned into the yard together, and saw Eliph' Hewlitt resting
easily against the porch railing.</p>
<p>“Nobody's at home?” asked the attorney.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Eliph'. “Somebody's home, but they don't answer the bell.</p>
<p>“Book agent?” said the attorney. “Well, you can't blame them, much. Gems
of literature aren't always wanted.”</p>
<p>The Colonel scowled. He felt a personal interest in Pap Briggs' money, and
he resented any attempt to part the old man from any of it. He suffered
almost as deeply at tax time as Pap himself did, and he considered the
money Sally had to pay in installments on Sir Walter Scott as practically
thrown away, and that she might as well have taken it out of his own
pocket. He knocked on the lower step of the porch, with the side of his
ax, angrily.</p>
<p>“You git out of this here yard!” he ordered. “I don't want no book agents
a-hangin' around here, an' I won't have it. You clean out of here!”</p>
<p>Eliph' coughed lightly behind his hand, but the words of reproof that he
intended to launch softly at the Colonel were never spoken.</p>
<p>“Well, this IS lucky!” cried the attorney, holding out his hand to Eliph'.
“Colonel, this is the best luck we could have had. Here we need a witness,
and here we have him right on the spot! I was going to stop and get
Skinner on the way down, and then I thought maybe, from what you said, you
and Skinner were not very friendly, so I didn't, and now I'm glad I
didn't. We find a witness right here on the porch, just as if he had been
ordered to be here. I call that a good omen.”</p>
<p>The Colonel was not pleased, and he showed it, but he really had nothing
that he could urge against this book agent, so he said nothing. The
attorney rang the bell, and Miss Sally, having peeped out to see the
meaning of so many men on her porch, recognized the Colonel and the
attorney, and opened the door. The attorney stood back to let Eliph'
enter, and then followed him in. The three men stood in the little
hallway, hats in hand, while Toole explained why they had come, and Miss
Sally led the way to the second-floor room where the box stood.</p>
<p>It was an impressive scene as the four gathered around the box.</p>
<p>“Knock off the lid!” said the attorney firmly. The Colonel raised his ax
and struck. The board splintered but remained firm. “Legally,” said the
attorney, “you may strike three blows.”</p>
<p>At the third blow a portion of the lid fell clattering to the floor, and
the three men and Miss Sally peered anxiously into the box. From it the
Colonel tenderly lifted a nickel-plated cylinder, as tall as a man's knee
and as large around as a leg of mutton. It had a convex top, and on one
side a dial. From near the base a long rubber tube extended.</p>
<p>The Colonel handled the thing gently. He held it in his hands as an old
bachelor might handle his newborn nephew, and Miss Sally looked anxiously
into his face, appealing for enlightenment. The Colonel studied the thing
carefully, and then looked into the box again, and back at the glittering
object in his hands. There were three more exactly like it in the box.</p>
<p>“What is it?” asked Miss Sally nervously. It looked explosive.</p>
<p>The gingerly manner in which the Colonel handled the dangerous-looking
thing aroused her suspicions. She backed away from it. Eliph' Hewlitt
opened his lips to speak, but the attorney motioned him to be still.</p>
<p>“Don't you know what it is?” Miss Sally asked, appealing to the Colonel.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said the Colonel, but he still looked at the glistening affair with
doubt. “Oh, yes! But I can't see what that there young feller was doin'
with four of 'em. I can't see what he was doin' with 'em anyhow. Mebby,”
he said, “he was agent for 'em.”</p>
<p>“He was agent for 'most everything I ever heard tell of a man bein' agent
for,” said Miss Sally, “but I wish you'd tell me what they are.”</p>
<p>“Well, ma'm,” said the Colonel, “this is fire-extinguishers; patent
chemical fire-extinguishers. I know because I recall seein' some once when
I was down to Jefferson. They had 'em in a theater there. They put out
fires with 'em.”</p>
<p>“Well!” exclaimed Miss Sally. “How do you ever suppose anybody would put
out a fire with a thing like that?”</p>
<p>The Colonel turned the affair over and over.</p>
<p>“I didn't study that up,” he admitted, “but I guess if I take time I can
find out how the thing works. They squirt out of this here tube somehow.”</p>
<p>He turned up the end of the tube and squinted into it. Again Eliph'
Hewlitt was about to speak, but the attorney caught his eye and winked,
and the little book agent held his tongue.</p>
<p>“Well, land's sakes!” exclaimed Miss Sally, “What am I goin' to do with
four fire-extinguishers, I'd like to know?” She asked the question as if
the Colonel had got her into this thing of the ownership of the
fire-extinguishers, and she looked to him to take the responsibility. He
was quite willing to accept it.</p>
<p>“I've got to think that over,” he said. “A feller can't decide right off
hand what to do with four fire-extinguishers. It looks to me as if they
was worth a lot more than the young feller owed you, Miss Sally. They
ain't no doubt about Miss Sally havin' a right to 'em, is there, Mister
Toole?”</p>
<p>“Not a bit of doubt!” exclaimed Toole cheerfully. “She has every right in
the world. You've got a witness that they came out of that box, and she
can sell, give, donate, assign, or bequeath them, for better or for
worse.”</p>
<p>“Then that's all right,” said the Colonel, “an' I guess that's all we need
you for.”</p>
<p>“Except to settle the witness fees with this gentleman,” said Toole,
turning to Eliph', who was still eager to say a word or two. “But mebby,
if I have a word or two with him, I can fix it up without making any
expense for you.”</p>
<p>He drew Eliph' to one side.</p>
<p>“What's the cost of that book you're selling?” he asked. “Well, I'll take
one. I don't take one for a bribe, but because I can see you're not the
sort of man that would sell a book that wasn't worth the money. I want
that book. And just you keep still about those fire-extinguishers. Between
you and me, those are first-class nickel-plated lung-testers, and not
fire-extinguishers. But that doesn't matter. There's just about as heavy a
call for fire-extinguishers in Kilo as there is for lung-testers. Can you
keep still about it?”</p>
<p>“I can,” said Eliph' Hewlitt, “and you'll never regret having bought a
copy of Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature,
Science and Art. It is a book that should be in every man's hand, and in
every home. If you owned a copy now, you would know is value to man,
woman, or child. I was going to try to sell one to Miss Briggs when you
came, and if you could help me to——”</p>
<p>The attorney smiled. This was the sort of game he enjoyed. “Don't tell
about the lung-testers,” he whispered, and turned to Miss Sally. “Miss
Briggs,” he said, “will you let this gentleman have a few minutes of your
time? I want him to show you a book he has. It is a book that should be in
every home. If you will give him a few minutes.”</p>
<p>He did not wait for Miss Sally to answer, but turned to the scowling
Colonel.</p>
<p>“Colonel,” he said, “I want you to walk down to the office with me. I
shouldn't wonder if you could sell those fire-extinguishers right here in
Kilo.”</p>
<p>The four descended the stairs together, and the Colonel would willingly
have lingered, but the attorney took him by the arm and jovially steered
him out of the door. Miss Sally, too, would gladly have had the Colonel
remain, to protect her from the book agent, and to say “no” when the
appeal to buy was reached, but Eliph' retreated into the darkness of the
parlor, and took a seat in the corner of the room, and Miss Sally, unable
now to escape him, seated herself as far from him as she could.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER X. The Boss Grafter </h2>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt was resolved that into this interview no words regarding
Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science
and Art should enter. With two such favored rivals in the field, and with
such difficulty in getting into the house as he had experienced, he meant
to get well acquainted in a hurry. Miss Sally sat stiffly in her chair,
steeling herself to refuse the request to buy a copy of the book. Her
usually attractive face was stern, as she looked at Eliph' Hewlitt, and
she watched him suspiciously as he slowly combed his whiskers with his
fingers, as if she feared this was some part of the operation by which he
was charming her into a hypnotic state in which she would sign for a book
without knowing why. She nerved herself to ward off whatever insinuating
words he should first say, and Eliph', as he studied her face, sought
words that would advance him at one bound deep into the state of being
well acquainted. It was a trying moment for both.</p>
<p>Then, so suddenly that Miss Sally almost jumped from her chair, Eliph'
coughed behind his hand, and spoke.</p>
<p>“It seems like it would be as hot to-day as it was yesterday, if it don't
shower before night,” he said, and smiled pleasantly as he said it.</p>
<p>Miss Sally was taken off her guard, and before she was aware she had
answered, quite as politely as she would have answered the minister
himself.</p>
<p>“It's awful hot,” she said. “I guess Kilo's the hottest place on earth in
summer.”</p>
<p>“Not the hottest,” answered Eliph', leaning forward eagerly. “You wouldn't
say that if you had a copy of Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and
Compendium of Literature, Science and Art, and studied it up the way I do.
Page 442 gives all the hottest places on earth, with the record highest
temperature of each, together with all the coldest places, where there is
the greatest rainfall, and a chronological table of all the great famines,
floods, storms, hot and cold spells the earth has ever known, from the
time of Adam to the present day, with pictures of the Johnstown flood, and
diagrams of Noah's Ark. This, with the chapter on the Physical Geography
of Land and Sea, telling of tides, typhoons, trade winds, tornadoes, et
cetery, explains why and how weather happens. All this and ten thousand
other subjects, all indexed from A to Z in one book——”</p>
<p>He paused suddenly, appalled to think that he was already far from his
resolve not to mention Jarby's Encyclopedia, and, as his voice still hung
on the last word he had spoken, the doorbell rang, and Miss Sally jumped
up, happy for any interruption. She merely turned her head to say:</p>
<p>“I guess I don't want one to-day,” and then Eliph' heard her open the
door, and greet the newcomers as she welcomed them into the hall. They
were Mrs. Tarbro-Smith and Susan, and, as Miss Sally hurried them up the
stairs to remove their dusty hats, she leaned back and called to Eliph':</p>
<p>“You can get right out the door,” she said, “it ain't shut. I guess I
won't have no more time to spend listenin' to you to-day.”</p>
<p>For half an hour Eliph' waited, listening to the chatter of voices, and
then he quietly stole from the house and stepped gently out of the yard.
There was no sense in waiting longer, and he knew it.</p>
<p>Mrs. Tarbro-Smith, receiving a letter from the editor of MURRAY'S
MAGAZINE, had learned at length that Clarence was not typical Iowa, and
she had transferred her field of study to Kilo on his recommendation. She
meant to spend the rest of the season there, and hoped Miss Sally would
take her to board. She found that Miss Sally would be glad, indeed, to
have her company, and Mrs. Smith did not think it necessary to mention
that she was looking for local color and types. She was pleased when she
heard that Eliph' Hewlitt, who had so interested her, was “working” Kilo.</p>
<p>As Eliph' Hewlitt walked toward the hotel he felt that another opportunity
had been lost—thrown away—by his inability to avoid Jarby's
Encyclopedia as a topic, and for one moment he came as near giving up Miss
Sally as he ever came to giving up anything. In that moment he saw the
simplicity of his courtship, as he had imagined it would be, resolve
itself into a tangled affair, as all these new individualities entered
into it. Instead of being a mere matter between himself and Miss Sally, it
was involving men and women, one after the other. It seemed to become a
fight between himself, a singer stranger in Kilo, and an endless chain of
interested citizens. Already there was Pap Briggs, who hated book agents;
the Colonel and Skinner, who hoped to win Miss Sally; Mrs. Smith, who
would serve as a defense against Eliph's attacks; and, as he walked down
the street, he seemed to see in every man, woman, and child, a possible
ally of either the Colonel or Skinner. But he tucked his sample copy of
Jarby's under his arm more securely, and braced up his courage. He even
whistled as he approached the hotel, but, when he glanced up at the
attorney's office and saw Toole and the Colonel with their head together,
he stopped whistling. If Toole was going to take either side, Eliph' would
have liked to claim him. Toole was a smart man.</p>
<p>Toole and the Colonel left Miss Sally's with the attorney well pleased,
and his enigmatic smile rested on his face as he led the Colonel to his
office. He handed him a chair, and made him take a cigar, and then turned
and faced him.</p>
<p>“Now,” he said, “what are you going to do with those
what-do-you-call-'ems?”</p>
<p>“Them fire-extinguishers?” said the Colonel, licking the cigar around and
around before lighting it. “Well, I ain't had much time to think that over
yet. A feller can't decide on a thing like that all at once. It ain't
likely no one in Kilo would buy a fire-extinguisher like them, all
nickel-plated, if they had their senses about 'em. 'Twouldn't be natural.
I might raffle 'em off, only nobody'd be likely to buy chances on a
fire-extinguisher. I might take 'em down to Jefferson, but I don't see as
that would do much good, nobody'd be likely to buy fire-extinguishers off
of me down there.”</p>
<p>“No,” said the attorney, turning to his table and looking over some
papers, with an appearance of interest, “No, I guess not. I don't see that
you can do much of anything with them, unless you use them for ornaments.
It seems a pity that Miss Briggs didn't go to Skinner for advice about
that box, instead of you, doesn't it?”</p>
<p>The Colonel stopped with a lighted match half way to his cigar.</p>
<p>“What do you mean?” he asked, red in the face. “Do you mean that puffy old
beef-cutter's got more sense than what I have, young man?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no,” said the attorney, carelessly. “Not at all. I was just thinking
that if Skinner HAD opened that box, and HAD found fire-extinguishers in
it, it would have been a fine chance for him to say to Miss Briggs,
'Madam, I am building in this town an opera house, known as Skinner's
Opera House. The safety of the people of Kilo demands fire-extinguishers
in Skinner's Opera House. I will take those four nickel-plated appliances
and install them in my opera house, and allow you ten dollars apiece for
them, cash or meat.' But, of course,” continued the attorney innocently,
“you can't do that; you haven't built an opera house.”</p>
<p>The Colonel's little eyes peered at the attorney, and they were filled
with cunning. Across his hard mouth a smile crept and broadened until he
had to lay his hand across it, it was so indecently wide and exultant.</p>
<p>“Skinner is no fool,” continued the attorney. “As soon as he hears that
Miss Briggs has those four things he will probably rush right up to her
house and offer to buy them. It would be a great feather in his cap with
her, if he could get the credit of having thought of it. I shouldn't
wonder if he had heard of what was in that box by this time. It seems a
pity, doesn't it, that he should get all the credit after you have done
all the work?”</p>
<p>The Colonel looked at the noncommittal face of the attorney, and smiled
again. This was a sort of cunning he could appreciate, and he leaned over
and gave Toole a sly poke in the ribs, to show him that he understood.
Toole looked at him with a blank face, and at this the Colonel slapped his
knee, and uttered a mirthful noise that was like the sound of a man
choking. He clapped his greasy hat on his mat of hair and went out,
pausing at the door to look back and grin at the attorney once more.</p>
<p>Mr. Skinner was trimming a roast. He had just cut off a piece of suet,
which he held in his plump red hand as he listened to the Colonel's
proposition to sell him four nickel-plated fire-extinguishers at ten
dollars each. Perhaps the Colonel spoke too impetuously; too commandingly.
Skinner held the lump of suet offensively near the Colonel's nose as he
answered.</p>
<p>“Fire-extinguishers!” he laughed. “Me buy fire-extinguishers? I wouldn't
give THAT for them.”</p>
<p>He shook the suet before the Colonel's eyes.</p>
<p>“No, sir!” he sneered. “I wouldn't give THAT for them. And I throw that
away!”</p>
<p>“Skinner,” said the Colonel, growing dangerously red in the face, “don't
you shake no meat in MY face like that! Don't you dare do it! I won't have
no butcher shake meat in MY face. You low-down beef-killer. That's all you
are, a beef-killer.”</p>
<p>“Mebby,” admitted the butcher indifferently. “Mebby I am, but I don't buy
no fire-extinguishers. And I don't take much stock in agents for them,
neither. No. Nor in gold bricks. Nor green good. No.”</p>
<p>The Colonel raised his fist and brought it down on the butcher's counter
so hard that the meat scales danced, and the indicator jerked nervously
across the face of the dial, weighing a half pound of anger. The butcher
leaned back against the shopping block, and gently caressed the handle of
his cleaver. He pointed to the door with his other hand.</p>
<p>“Git out!” he said, and the Colonel scowled but went.</p>
<p>On his way home the Colonel bethought himself of a good excuse to stop at
Miss Sally's. He had left his ax there, and he went to the back door, this
not being a formal call. Miss Sally came to the door when he knocked, and
brought him the ax, and he took the opportunity to say a bad word for
Skinner, and he was astounded to find that she sympathized with Skinner on
his refusal to buy the fire-extinguishers.</p>
<p>“I don't wonder at it,” she said, “seeing he has put so much money on that
opery house already. He's done a lot for this town that nobody else would
ever have thought of doin'. Mr Skinner's a very public-spirited citizen,
and to think he made it all out of sellin' meat! It must be a good
business. I guess you'll have to excuse me now, Colonel Guthrie, I've got
visitors down from Clarence.”</p>
<p>The Colonel's steps dragged as he walked home. Never had Miss Sally said
so many good words for his rival. She had almost rebuffed his good offices
in the attempt to sell the fire-extinguishers, and had praised Skinner to
his face.</p>
<p>Early the next morning he “dropped up” into the office of Attorney Toole,
and as that young man lay back in his chair, with his feet on his desk, he
told him the whole story. The attorney smiled. This was the kind of split
in the ranks of the Citizens' Party that he had hoped to promote.</p>
<p>“After that, Colonel,” he said, when the Colonel had told him that Skinner
had ordered him out of the shop, “you ought to MAKE him buy them.”</p>
<p>“I wisht I could, dog take him!” cried the Colonel. “I'd like to make him
eat 'em.”</p>
<p>“Colonel,” said Toole, “I see you are, as always, guided by a spirit of
conservative kindness. You hesitate to force that butcher to do what he
does not want to do. The feeling does you honor, but is it business? You
hesitate even when you see how easily you could force him to do what he
is in duty bound to do to protect the lives of our trustful citizens. I
admire your gentleness, but I deplore your unbusinesslike moderation. You
lack public spirit.”</p>
<p>The Colonel grinned savagely. He felt that the attorney was teasing him,
but he could not quite tell how.</p>
<p>“You,” said Toole easily, “knowing that our town council can, and should,
pass an ordinance compelling all owners of opera houses to install
nickel-plated fire-extinguishers—to install four of them in each
opera house in Kilo—for the protection of our people, hesitate to
ask them to pass such an ordinance. You hesitate because you do not wish
to appear malevolent toward a rival. Now, don't you?”</p>
<p>“Me be kind to that fat, pig-stealing, sausage-grinding——”
snorted the Colonel, but the attorney stopped him with a lifted hand.</p>
<p>“Just what I said,” exclaimed the attorney. “You are too kind; too
considerate; too regardful of his feelings. But would he be so kind and
considerate and regardful of your feelings, if he was in your place?”</p>
<p>He lowered his feet and his voice, and placed his hand on the Colonel's
knee.</p>
<p>“No!” he whispered hoarsely. “No!” he cried loudly and defiantly. “No! He
would not! He would use the influence you have with the city council and
the mayor to have an ordinance passed making YOU put fire-extinguishers in
YOUR opera house, and compel YOU to buy them of HIM. But you will not use
your huge influence with Mayor Stitz and the city council. You hesitate.”</p>
<p>Toole shook his head sadly; he almost wept out the last word, he seemed so
heartbroken to see the Colonel hesitate.</p>
<p>“Why hesitate?” he asked. “If I were not a stranger in town, as I may say,
I should beg you not to hesitate. I should beg you to act. I should beg
you to think of the lives of poor, helpless women and children. I should
beg you, for humanity's sake, to go to the honorable mayor and city
council, and appeal to them to pass an ordinance compelling this Skinner
to buy nickel-plated fire-extinguishers. To compel him, Colonel! But I
have nothing to say.”</p>
<p>He shuffled the legal-looking papers that littered his desk. The Colonel's
eyes had narrowed to fine points of hate-instilled cunning as the attorney
proceeded.</p>
<p>“What have we come to,” asked the attorney sadly, “when the leading
citizens of a town like Kilo neglect their duty? Are there no true
citizens left to show the mayor and city council their plain duty?”</p>
<p>When the Colonel had the thing put to him in this light he did not
hesitate. He knew Stitz, the mayor, and he knew that Stitz had full
control of the city council. What Stitz told it to do the city council
did, and the Colonel believed he had a right to dictate what Stitz should
tell it, for he had suggested the name of Stitz as candidate for mayor,
and, with Skinner, had helped elect him. He went at once to the mayor, and
laid the case before him.</p>
<p>Mayor Johann Stitz was an honest, upright shoemaker, and owned his own
building. It had once been a street car in Franklin, and when the horse
cars were superseded by electric cars, Stitz had bought this car at
auction, and had paid ten dollars to have it hauled to Kilo. It had not
been a very good car when it left the shops before it made its first trip,
and the ten years of running off the track and being boosted on again had
not improved it much. It was in pretty bad shape when Stitz picked it up
for eighteen dollars, and it had deteriorated greatly since it had been
doing duty as a cobbler's shop, but Stitz liked it. The tiny car stove
that stood midway of one of the seats was all he needed in cold weather,
and the seats along the sides were a continuous spread of cobblers' seats.
He could cobble all the way up one side of the car and all the way back
the other, and when he had customers waiting he always had a seat to give
them. He and the whole city council could hold a caucus in the car, and
all have seats, and in the evenings he could take a stool out on his front
or back porch and smoke a pipe in peace. His car stood side by side with
the round topped wagon of the traveling photographer, who had not traveled
since his felloes gave out on that very lot six years before.</p>
<p>The city officers of the Citizens' Party, being of an independent part,
were so independent that they were worried and chafed by their
independence. No one but a man in office knows the real blessedness of
having the set beliefs and an traditions of a regular party to fall back
upon. The independence of the independents made their work more difficult;
it compelled them to decide things for themselves, and then everybody
complained of what they did. No independent is ever satisfied with what
another independent does, and they lost even the satisfaction of knowing
that they were pleasing their own part, which a properly service Democrat
or Republican is rather apt to be sure of. In this state of things the six
councilmen had thrown their burdens of decision to Stitz. They cast the
whole burden on him, saying, “Ask Stitz. He's mayor. What he says, we'll
do.” And Stitz never would say.</p>
<p>As the Colonel entered the mayor's shoe shop Stitz was reading a magazine,
which he laid beside him on the car seat while he listened to the Colonel.
A pile of similar magazines lay beside him on the seat. They were the
missionary offerings of Doc Weaver, who was interested in whatever was
latest in religion, government or popular science. They were magazines
telling of the municipal corruption of “New York, The Vile,”
“Philadelphia, Defiled but Happy,” “Chicago, the Base,” and “St. Louis,
the Decayed.” Doc Weaver had given them to Mayor Stitz to show him the
evil of graft, and to keep his administration clean and pure.</p>
<p>When the Colonel had laid before the mayor his request for an ordinance
compelling all opera house owners in Kilo to install and maintain four
nickel-plated fire-extinguishers in each opera house, the mayor beamed on
him through his iron-rimmed spectacles.</p>
<p>“Ho! Ho-o!” he exclaimed, “it is to make Mister Skinner buy some
fire-extinguishers, yes? So shall my city council pass an ordinance, yes?
Um!”</p>
<p>He smiled broadly at the Colonel, and then nodded.</p>
<p>“For how much you graft me?” he asked blandly.</p>
<p>“What?” asked the Colonel.</p>
<p>“Graft me,” repeated Mayor Stitz. “I say for how much you will graft me
when I shall pass one such ordinance my council through?”</p>
<p>“What's that?” asked the Colonel, puzzled.</p>
<p>“For how much you will make me one graft?” Mayor Stitz repeated slowly.
“Graft! Graft! Understand him not?”</p>
<p>The Colonel shook his head.</p>
<p>“What is it?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Graft! Graft! Graft!” exclaimed the mayor with annoyance. “Don't you know
him? When I make you one ordinance to pass, so, then you make me one
graft, so! Like I read me in this book. Me to you, one ordinance; you to
me one graft. So!”</p>
<p>A look of dismay came over the face of the Colonel, as he frowned at the
smooth, honest face of the mayor, from which beamed eyes of childish
honesty and frankness.</p>
<p>“Here in this book,” said the mayor slowly and distinctly, like one
explaining some simple thing to a child, “I read me of this graft
business. It is to me this graft comes. So it is by all big cities. Man
would have one ordinance. Goot! In every town is such one boss grafter. To
the boss grafter gives the ordinance-wanting man a graft. So! Then for the
ordinance-wanting man does the boss grafter get one ordinance made like is
wanted. Yes! So, it is; no graft, no ordinance! Some graft, some
ordinance! I read him in this book Doc Weaver gives me as a lesson to go
by. It is a goot way. I like me that graft business.”</p>
<p>A glimmer of the meaning entered the Colonel's mind, but he could hardly
connect the idea of graft with the honest Johann Stitz. As a fact, to
Mayor Stitz the idea of unlawful gain did not come. Graft was a way out of
the difficulty of having to decide things. It was a system authorized by
the lawmakers of great cities, and a system that could operate in Kilo.
Whenever Stitz and his council passed an ordinance someone complained, and
upbraided him; he saw now why this was; they had not used the approved
system. But the Colonel still frowned.</p>
<p>“Well, what—how much do you want?” he asked.</p>
<p>Mayor Stitz turned up his innocent face and smiled blandly again.</p>
<p>“That makes not!” he exclaimed. “In the books it says much money, but is
not yet Kilo so gross as New York. We go easy yet a while. It is what you
want to graft me. One bushel apples—one bushel potatoes—that
YOU must say.”</p>
<p>The Colonel moved closer to the mayor. He thought of Miss Sally, and of
Skinner.</p>
<p>“I will make you a present of a bushel of apples,” he said.</p>
<p>The mayor laid down his magazine and arose. As the Colonel watched him
with surprise, he removed his leathern apron. The Colonel folded his hand
into a fist, but on the pleasant face of Mayor Stitz there was no sign of
anger; no sign of righteous indignation; only a bland look of
satisfaction.</p>
<p>“Well,” inquired the Colonel impatiently, “will ye put the ordinance
through, or won't ye?”</p>
<p>The mayor looked at him with surprise in every feature. Clearly this
Colonel did not understand the first rudiments of graft.</p>
<p>“First I must go by Mr. Skinner,” said Stitz simply. “Mebby he grafts me
more NOT to pass such an ordinance.”</p>
<p>“Look here, Stitz,” said the Colonel in alarm. “You ain't goin' to do
that, are ye?”</p>
<p>“Vell,” said the mayor, “still must I do it! So always does the boss
grafter. Which side grafts him the most, so he does. It is always so,
never different. To the most grafter, so goes he. I read it in this books.
When the boss grafter does not so, what use is the grafts? How then does
he know which he shall do for, the ordinance-wanting man, or the
ordinance-not-wanting man?”</p>
<p>The Colonel tried to argue with him, but the mayor was obdurate. He would
not budge from the highest principles of graft, and, as the Colonel had
gone too far now to recede with honor, he secured the best terms he could.
The most he could obtain was a promise that the mayor would not mention
any names, nor so much as hint that graft had been promised. He uneasily
awaited the mayor's return.</p>
<p>Stitz returned radiant. He was rubbing his hands and beaming.</p>
<p>“Fine!” he exclaimed. “Fine! I make me one boss grafter yet! Mister
Skinner grafts me one roast beef and six pigs' feet. He ain't much liking
those fire-extinguishers to have. How much more will you graft me now?”</p>
<p>The Colonel looked the mayor squarely in the eye.</p>
<p>“Stitz,” he said, “I ain't goin' to run no auction with that there
Skinner. I come to you first, an' I was the first to say I'd make you a
present, an' you ought to pass that ordinance anyhow. But to shut up this
thing right here an' now, I'll do this: if you'll say you'll pass that
ordinance like I want, so Skinner'll have to buy them four nickel-plated
fire-extinguishers that Miss Briggs owns, at twenty-five dollars each,
I'll give you four bushels of Benoni apples, two bushels of Early Rose
potatoes, four bunches of celery, a peck of peas, and one spring chicken.
And if you won't” he added, raising his hand threateningly, “I'll go to
them six councilmen, an' I'll graft 'em one at a time, an' THEN where 'll
your boss grafter be? You can't help yourself.”</p>
<p>“Say!” he exclaimed, “ain't I a boss grafter? Apples, potatoes, celery,
peas, and chickens! Five grafts for one ordinance! I do it!”</p>
<p>“An' don't you say nothing about it,” warned the Colonel.</p>
<p>The Colonel thought there would be no harm in making a little commission
for himself on the deal. It was not as if he had done nothing to earn it.
He would have to furnish the produce for the mayor's “graft,” and he had
secured the services of Toole free of fees, and he was doing Miss Sally a
good turn into the bargain. If Skinner was compelled to buy the four
fire-extinguishers at twenty-five dollars each Miss Sally could afford a
commission of ten dollars each, and forty dollars were always forty
dollars to the Colonel.</p>
<p>The mayor kept his promise. At the next meeting of the council the
ordinance was proposed, and hurried to a third reading by suspension of
the by-laws, and the next day Stitz signed it. There was some opposition
at the council meeting, for Skinner was present, and wanted to talk, but
the marshal was present, too, and at a word from Stitz, he helped Skinner
down the stairs, but gently, as a marshal owing a considerable butcher's
bill should.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XI. The False Gods of Doc Weaver </h2>
<p>When Eliph' Hewlitt reached the hotel after his unfortunate visit of
courtship, he stood a minute irresolute, and then the sign of the KILO
TIMES, across the street, caught his eye. Here was a power he must not
neglect; the power of the press. He knew well enough that the next issue
of the KILO TIMES would chronicle his arrival in town; something like “E.
Hewlitt is registered at the Kilo Hotel,” or “E. Hewlitt, representing a
New York publishing house, is sojourning in our midst,” but he felt that
his heart interest in Kilo demanded something more than this. He was
willing to have all the friends he could muster for the fight he would
have to make for Miss Sally's affection, and he knew that the press was
powerful in creating first impressions. He crossed the street and climbed
the stair to the office of the KILO TIMES.</p>
<p>Every Thursday, except once a year, when Thomas Jefferson Jones went to
the State Fair at Des Moines, the KILO TIMES appeared, printed on an old
Washington hand-power press in the TIMES office four small pages, backed
by four other pages that came already printed from a Chicago supply house,
with the usual assortment of serial story, “Hints to Farmers,” column of
jokes, sermon, and patent medicine advertisements. T. J.'s own side was
made up of local advertisements, a column of editorial, a few bits of
local news that he could scrape together, and several columns of “country
correspondence.” T. J. himself was the entire force of the TIMES, except
for a boy who came in every Thursday morning to work the hand-power of the
press, who then washed up and delivered the papers about town. T. J. had
built up the paper from a state of decay until it was one of the most
prosperous country weeklies in Iowa, and he had done this against a
handicap that would have discouraged most men—he was not married.</p>
<p>In Kilo subscriptions are frequently paid in turnips or cordwood, and the
advertisers expect at least half of their bills to be taken out in trade,
and the unmarried publisher is at a disadvantage. An unmarried publisher
has little use for the trade half of the payment he received from the
advertising milliner. No editor can appear in public wearing a gorgeously
flowered hat of the type known as “buzzard,” and retain the respect of his
subscribers. Neither can he receive as currency, in a year when the turnip
crop is unusually plentiful, more than sixty or seventy bushels of turnips
in one day without having to get rid of them at a severe discount. But, in
spite of all this, T. J., by his energy and good humor, had made a success
of the TIME, and his editorials advising the people not to patronize the
Chicago mail-order houses, but to patronize their home merchants, were
copied by his contemporaries all over the State. One of his editorials on
the prospects of the year's hog crop was quoted by the hog editor of a big
Chicago daily, word for word. These are the real triumphs of country
journalism, and all over the State his paper was referred to by his
brother editors as “Our enterprising contemporary, the KILO TIMES,” and T.
J. as “The brilliant young editor of the same.”</p>
<p>When Eliph' Hewlitt entered the printing office T. J. was standing by his
case setting up an item of news. He never wrote anything but editorials on
paper; other matter he composed in type as he went along. It saved time.
Now he laid his “stick” on the case and turned to Eliph'.</p>
<p>“My name is Hewlitt, Eliph' Hewlitt,” said the book agent, “agent for
Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science
and Art,' published by Jarby & Goss, New York; price five dollars,
neatly bound in cloth, one dollar down, and one dollar a month until
paid.”</p>
<p>As the editor was about to speak, Eliph' raised his hand.</p>
<p>“I don't want to sell you one!” he exclaimed. “We are members of the same
craft, and I never canvass publishers, except to offer them a chance to
buy this book at a very liberal discount offered by our firm to the fellow
members of the great craft, a discount of forty percent, bringing the cost
of the book, complete in every respect and exactly like those sold
regularly for five dollars, down to the phenomenally low cost of three
dollars. At this price no publisher can afford to be without a copy,
containing, as it does, all the matter usually found in the most complete
and expensive encyclopedias, and much more, all condensed into one volume
for ready reference. It saves times and money.”</p>
<p>T. J. shook his head, not unkindly, but positively, and was about to turn
to his case again, but Eliph' held out his hand.</p>
<p>“I merely mentioned it,” he said, with a smile. “I don't want to sell you
one. I supposed you would have learned from the landlord that I was in
town and I only wanted to be sure that you got the item right for the next
paper.”</p>
<p>T. J. turned to his galleys and read from the type:</p>
<p>“'One of the visitors to our little burg this week is E. Hewlitt, of New
York, who is stopping at the Kilo House.'”</p>
<p>Eliph' stroked his whiskers and smiled.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he said. “Quite correct. H-e-w-l-i-t-t, I presume? A very good
item, and well worded, but it might be more—more extensive.”</p>
<p>“We are rather crowded for space this week,” said T. J. “Two of our
country correspondents missed the mails last week, and we have a double
dose of it this week.”</p>
<p>“Certainly,” said Eliph'. “But I was thinking that this book ought to be
mentioned. The advent of a book like Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and
Compendium of Literature, Science and Art, containing, as it does,
selections from the world's best literature, hints and helps for each and
every day in the year, recipes for the kitchen, the dying words of all the
world's great men, with their lives, et cetery, ought to be noticed. I was
wondering if you would have space to run in a little card about that
book.”</p>
<p>T. J. came forward and brushed a heap of exchanges from the only chair in
the office, and motioned to it with his hand. Eliph' laid his book on the
editor's desk, and picked up a copy of last week's TIMES. He ran his eye
over the columns, and stopped at the advertisement of Skinner, the
butcher.</p>
<p>“I was thinking of something about twice the size of this,” he suggested.</p>
<p>T. J. smiled and mentioned his rate for the space. It was not much, and
Eliph' nodded.</p>
<p>“Every week, until forbid,” he said, “and I guess I'd better subscribe. I
am going to live right here in Kilo right along now, and the man that don't
take his home paper never knows what is going on.”</p>
<p>T. J. was pleased. He was more pleased when Eliph' pulled a long purse
from his pocket, and paid for one insertion of the advertisement and for
the subscription. The editor pulled a pad of paper toward himself, and
wrote hastily, while Eliph' briefly mentioned facts. When the next number
of the TIMES appeared there was a well-displayed advertisement of Jarby's
Encyclopedia, with Eliph' Hewlitt mentioned as agent, but more important
to Eliph' was the “local item” that stood at the very top of the local
column.</p>
<p>“We are glad to announce that Kilo has secured as a citizen Eliph'
Hewlitt, a man whose work in behalf of good literature entitles him to the
highest praise. Mr. Hewlitt, who intends to make his home with us
permanently, is representative of the celebrated work, Jarby's
Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art,
published by Jarby & Goss, Greater New York, and his travels in behalf
of that work have taken him to all parts of the nation. To have a man of
such extensive travel decide to make Kilo his home is an honor. Mr.
Hewlitt says that in all his travels he never found a town more up-to-date
and progressive for its size than our own little burg. We heartily welcome
him to our midst.</p>
<p>“We have it on good authority that Mr. Hewlitt is a man of considerable
means, amassed in carrying on his work as a disseminator of literature,
and that he intends, in the near future, to purchase a home here. He will
probably buy a lot, and erect a dwelling that will be a credit to him and
to our little burg. At present he is stopping with Doctor Weaver, the
leading physician of our little burg.</p>
<p>“We learn that our new citizen has followed a habit universally adopted by
many authors, theatrical artists, and others gifted in various ways, and
early adopted a NOM DE PLUME, choosing the name of Eliph' Hewlitt because
of its unassuming simplicity. His real name is Samuel Mills, and he is the
son of the late W. P. Mills, of Franklin, gifted author of the deservedly
famous poetical work, 'The wages of Sin.' Early in his career our new
citizen found himself overshadowed by the fame of his father, and
unwilling to succeed by and because of his own efforts, he chose a NOM
DE PLUME, which he has ever since used. This truly American independence
does him the greatest credit.</p>
<p>“Mr. Mills, or Eliph' Hewlitt, as he prefers to be known, is an old
schoolmate of James Wilkins, the prominent livery and hotel man of our
little burg. Again we welcome him to our midst.”</p>
<p>This was headed, “Eliph' Hewlitt Now a Citizen of Kilo!” and it was all
the introduction the little book agent needed—except to Miss Sally.
When she read it she turned pale. A book agent living in the very town was
more than she could bear.</p>
<p>But there was another item of news that Eliph' left with T. J. that went
into the same issue of the TIMES. This stated that Mrs. Smith, of New
York, and Miss Susan Bell were visiting Miss Sally Briggs, and T. J. had
completed the slight information given him by Eliph' by a call at Miss
Sally's. It was after Eliph' had told T. J. that he meant to make his home
in Kilo that the enterprising editor suggested Doc Weaver's as a good
boarding place, and the little book agent was glad enough to settle
himself in a real home, for the Kilo Hotel was hardly more than an annex
to the liver, feed and sale stable part of Jim Wilkins' business, and any
man with half an eye could see that it was not, as a home for men, to be
compared to the comfort with the stable, as a home for horses. Jim would
have been the last man in Kilo to expect a visitor to remain in the Kilo
Hotel more than two days. Before the end of the day Eliph' had arranged
with Mrs. Doc Weaver for board and lodging, and had moved his big valise
to the little back room on the second floor, from the low six-paned
windows of which he could look out over the cornfield that environed Kilo
on that side.</p>
<p>At supper he met Doc Weaver himself, and found him, as Kilo pronounced
him, “a ready talker.” Eliph' and Doc Weaver were sitting at the supper
table, earnestly engaged in conversation, while the doctor's wife cleared
away the dishes, and Eliph' was pouring out the knowledge he had absorbed
from Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature,
Science and Art. The doctor was having a mental feast. Behind his
spectacles his eyes glowed, and in exact ratio, as the doctor's spirits
rose, the frown on his wife's forehead deepened.</p>
<p>The doctor had few opportunities for discussing any subjects but the most
ordinary. Neighborhood gossip, the weather, the price of corn, were the
usual sources of conversation in Kilo, except when an election gave a
political tinge to discussions, or when a revival turned all attention to
religious matters; but the doctor's mind scorned these limitations, and he
found few persons from year's end to year's end to whom he could speak
openly on his favorite themes.</p>
<p>To Kilo in general the doctor was something of a mystery. Ordinarily he
was the most silent of men, but on occasion, as for instance when he could
buttonhole an intelligent stranger, he dissolved into a torrent of words.</p>
<p>Doc Weaver held views. He believed there were other things besides the
Republican party and the Methodist Church, and being liberal-minded, he
believed all these other things in turn, and he had believed them
enthusiastically. He could not help thinking that he was of a little finer
clay than Skinner, or Wilkins, or Colonel Guthrie. Kilo considered the
doctor one of her peculiar institutions; as Kilo took the ever-joking
Toole seriously, so she took the ever serious doctor good-naturedly, but
not too seriously. He was “jist Doc Weaver,” and Kilo reserved the right
to laugh at him in private, and to brag about him to strangers, and they
were apt to “joke” him about his beliefs. As he was sensitive and dreaded
the rough raillery of his neighbors, he kept his enthusiasms to himself.
He was like an overcharged bottle of soda water.</p>
<p>Eliph' and the doctor were discussing Christian Science and faith cures
generally, and when the doctor's wife passed to and fro, catching a phrase
now and then, a look of deep anxiety spread over her face, until, as she
brushed the crumbs from the red tablecloth, her shoulders seemed to droop
in dejection.</p>
<p>When she smoothed the cloth and set the lamp on the mat in the center the
doctor glanced at his watch and arose. He buttoned his frock coat over his
breast (it was the only frock coat in Kilo), and drew on his driving
gloves, holding his hands on a level with his chin. It was a habit, an
aristocratic touch, which, like his side-whiskers, detached him from the
rest of Kilo. He had once worn a silk hat, but he soon abandoned it for
gray felt; for even he saw that a silk hat emphasized his individuality
too strongly for comfort. It was a tempting mark for snowballs in winter.</p>
<p>When the doctor had closed the door and stepped from the front porch, his
wife sank into a chair.</p>
<p>“I do hope you won't git mad at what I'm goin' to say, Mister Hewlitt,”
she said, “'cause I ain't goin' to say it for no such thing; but I
couldn't help hearin' what you was sayin' to Doc while I was reddin' off
the table. I wisht you wouldn't let him git to talkin' about new-fangled
religions and sich. It ain't for his good nor mine.”</p>
<p>Eliph' nodded good-naturedly.</p>
<p>“Why, ma'm,” he exclaimed, “we were only discussing faith cures, and
neither of us believes in them—wholly, that is. Of course everyone
who has read the chapter on “India, It's Religions and Its History,' in
Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science
and Art, must to some extend admit the power of mind over matter. But if
you'd rather not have me, I'll not discuss it again. There are one
thousand and one other interesting subjects treated of in this great book,
any one of which will please the studious mind.”</p>
<p>“I'd rather you wouldn't, if you don't mind,” said the doctor's wife
simply.</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt pushed back his chair, and arose as he saw the lines of
worry leave the face of his hostess. He turned to the side table and
looked among the books that lay on it.</p>
<p>Mrs. Weaver sprang to her feet.</p>
<p>“Land's sakes!” she cried. “I know what you're lookin' for. You're lookin'
for that book of yourn, ain't you? It's right there behind them wax
flowers on that what-not. I seen it layin' around and I jist shoved it
back there so Doc wouldn't git at it.”</p>
<p>“Well, you sit down, ma'm,” said the book agent. “I can get it. But there
was no need to be so particular. The doctor knows how to hand a book as
well as the next man.”</p>
<p>The doctor's wife drew her darning basket from the side table and turned
its contents into her lap.</p>
<p>“'Twasn't that,” she said; “I'd never have thought of that, I guess. I hit
it because I didn't know if 'twas a proper book for Doc. It's got a kind
of a queer name.”</p>
<p>Eliph' turned the book over in his hand. It was the first time anyone had
suggested that the volume might be dangerous. He looked up and smiled.</p>
<p>“It would not harm the youngest child, ma'm,” he said, “unless it fell on
it. I wouldn't harm a baby.”</p>
<p>“Well, I guess you'll think I'm awful foolish about Doc,” said Mrs.
Weaver, “but I wasn't goin' to take no chances, and the name kind of
riled. Me. And them pictures of ladies bending.”</p>
<p>“Physical Culture,” said Eliph', “How to Develop the Body, How to Maintain
Perfect Health, How to Keep Young and Beautiful. Page 542. Why, ma'm,
that's just a system of training for the body. It makes one more graceful,
just like running and jumping makes a boy strong.”</p>
<p>The doctor's wife heaved a sigh of relief.</p>
<p>“Well, I guess that won't hurt Doc any if he does read it,” she laughed.
“I thought it was some new-fangled religion or other, and I allus keep
sich things out of Doc's reach. Mebby you'll think I'm crazy, but when you
know Doc as well as I do, you'll find out mortal quick he is to take up
with new notions, and it would be jist like him to give up his sittin' in
church and go and be a Physical Culture, if there was any sich belief. I
don't mind much his bein' a Socialist, or any of them politercal things,
if he wants to,—and goodness knows he does,—'cause they keep
his mind busy; but since I got him to jine church I'm goin' to keep him
jined, Physical Culture or no Physical Culture. I seen them pictures, and
they riled me right up, to think of Doc's goin' round wrapped up in them
sheets, or whatever it is on them folks in the pictures. Mebby it's all
right for Physical Culturers, but I don't ever hope to see Doc so.”</p>
<p>Eliph' Hewlitt laughed a thin little laugh, and Mrs. Weaver smiled.</p>
<p>“Now, you do think I'm foolish, don't you?” she inquired. “But I had sich
a time with Doc 'fore I married him that I'm scared half to death every
time I hear a long word I ain't right sure of. I was 'most worried out of
my wits last Summer when Miss Crawford was lecturin' on Christian Science.
It was jist about even whether Doc 'ud git in line or not. He had an awful
struggle, poor feller, 'cause he can't bear to have nothin' new to believe
in com round and him not believe in it. Religions is to Doc jist like
teethin' is to babies; they got to teethe, and seem like Doc's got to
catch new religions. He ain't never real happy when he ain't got no queer
fandango to poke his nose into. But he didn't git Christian Scientisted.</p>
<p>“I says to him, 'Doc, ain't you an allopathy?' And he says, 'Yes,
certainly.' 'Well,' I says, 'if you go and be a Christian Science you
can't be no allopathy, Doc. Christian Science and allopathy don't mix,' I
says, 'and you'd starve, that's what you'd do. I leave it to you, Doc, if
you quit big pills, how'd you ever git a livin'? There ain't no big pills
set down in the Christian Science book.'</p>
<p>“Well, he poked his eyes up at the ceiling, and says, 'I might write,
Loreny.' 'Yes,' I says, 'so you might. And what 'd you write, Doc Weaver?'
I says. 'Shakespeare?' And Doc shet right up, and never said another word.
It was a mean thing for me to say, but I was awful worried.”</p>
<p>“Shakespeare?” inquired Eliph'.</p>
<p>“Yes, that's the word—Shakespeare,” said Mrs. Weaver. “It come purty
nigh keeping me from marrying Doc. You see, Doc ain't like common folks.
Don's got sich broad ideas of things. Lib'ral, he calls it, but I name it
jist common foolish. He's got to give every new-fangled scheme a show. I
guess, off and on, Doc's believed most every queer name in the dictionary,
and some that ain't been put in yet. I used to tell him they didn't git
them up fast enough to keep up with him. He's got a wonderful mind, Doc
has.</p>
<p>“I hain't no notion how ever Doc got started believin' things, but mebby
he got in with a bad lot at the doctor school he went to. Doc told me
hisself they cut up dead folks. Anyhow, he come back from Chicago a
regular atheist; but that was before I knowed him. He lived up at
Clarence, and he didn't come to Kilo 'til about ten years after that, and
he'd got pretty well along by then, and had got right handy at believin'
things.</p>
<p>“Well, when Doc come to Kilo pa had jist died an' ma an' me had to take in
boarders to git along; so Doc come to our house to board. That's how Doc
an' me got to know each other. I was about as old as Doc, and we wasn't
either of us very chickenish, but I thought Doc was the finest man I'd
ever saw, an' exceptin' what I'm tellin' you, I ain't ever had cause to
change my mind.</p>
<p>“I'd never sa so many books as Doc brought—more'n we've got now. I
burned a lot when we got married—Tom Paine and Bob Ingersoll, and
all I wasn't sure was orthodoxy. Why, we had more books than we've got in
the Kilo Sunday School Lib'ry. 'Specially Shakespeare books, some
Shakespeare writ hisself, an' some that was writ about him. Doc was real
took up with Shakespeare them days.</p>
<p>“'Most all his spare time Doc put in readin' them Shakespeare books, and
sometime he'd git a new one. One day he come home mad. I ain't seen Doc
real mad but twice, but he was mad that day and no mistake. He'd got a new
book, an' he set down to read it as soon as he got in the house; but every
couple of pages he'd slap it shut and walk up an' down, growlin' to
hisself. Oh, but he was riled! That night I heard him stampin' up an' down
his room, mad as a wet hen, and by and by I heard that book go rattlin'
out of the window and plunk down in the radish bed. So next morning I went
out and got it, 'cause I liked Doc purty well by then, and it made me
sorry to see sich a nice, quiet man carry on so.</p>
<p>“I couldn't make head nor tail of the book, nor see why it riled Doc up
so. It was jist another Shakespeare book, only this one said that it
wasn't Shakespeare, but some one else, that wrote the Shakespeare books. I
thought Doc was real foolish to git so mad about it, but I had no idea how
much Doc had took it to heart.</p>
<p>“Well, I do run on terribul when I git started, don't I? An' them supper
dishes waitin' to be washed! But I guess it won't hurt them to stand a
bit. You see, when Doc begun to take a likin' for me, the poor feller
started in to talk about what he believed in. Most fellers does. First he
begun about greenbacks. He was the only Greenbacker in Kilo; but that was
jist politercal stuff, and while I'm a good Republican, like pa was, I
didn't see that it would hurt if my husband did think other than what I
did on that, so long as he wasn't a saloon Democrat. That was when they
was havin' the prohibition fight in Ioway, you know. But when Doc begun
lettin' out hints that he didn't think much of goin' to church, I was real
sorry.</p>
<p>“I was sorry because I couldn't see my way clear to marry an outsider,
bein' a good Methodist myself; but I didn't dream but that he was jist one
of these lazy Christians that don't attend church lest they're dragged.
There is plenty sich. I thought mebby I could bring him round all right
once he was married; so I jist asked him right out if he would jine
church.</p>
<p>“Well, you'd have thought I'd asked him to take poison! He didn't flare up
like some would, but jist sat down and explained how he couldn't. I guess
he must have explained, off an' on, for three weeks before I got a good
hang of his idea. Seems like he was believing some Hindoo stuff jist then.
I don't know as you ever heart tell of it. It's about souls. When a person
dies his soul goes into another person, and so on, until kingdom come.
R'inca'nation's what they call it.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Eliph' Hewlitt, “it is all given in 'India, Its Religions and
Its History,' in Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of
Literature, Science and Art.”</p>
<p>“Jist so!” said Mrs. Weaver. “Well, I guess by the time Doc got done
explainin' I knew more about r'inca'nation than what your Encyclopedia of
Compendium does, because night after night Doc would sit up and explain
till I'd drop off asleep.</p>
<p>“But it wasn't no use. So far as I could see, r'inca'nation was jist plain
error and follerin' after false gods, and I told Doc so. Anyhow, I knowed
there wan't nothin' like it in the Methodist Church, an' I jist up and let
Doc know I wouldn't marry anybody that believed such stuff. Doc reckoned
to change my mind, but my argument was jist plain 'I won't!' and that
settled it. I believe a man and wife ought to belong to the same church,—'thy
God shall be my God'—and I wasn't goin' to give up what I'd been
taught for any crazy notions Doc had got into his head. I told him so,
plain.</p>
<p>“Then Doc took a poetry-writing spell, but he wasn't no great hand at it.
I told him in plain words he would be better off rollin' allopathy pills.
I used to git right put out with Doc sometimes, foolin' away good time
that way, sittin' round by the hour spoilin' good paper. I reckon he
started close onto a thousand poems, but he didn't git along very good.
'Bout the their line he'd stop and tear up what he'd wrote. When I wasn't
mad I used to feel real sorry for Doc, he tried so hard; but feelin' sorry
for him didn't help him none, and it was kind of ridiculous to see him.</p>
<p>“One day I asked Doc why he didn't tell ma and the rest of Kilo what he
believed in, and he said that Kilo folks couldn't understand sich things,
bein' mostly born and bred in the Methodist Church, and not lib'ral like
he was. I seen he was payin' me a compliment, because he had told me, but
I couldn't swaller r'inca'nation, for all that. And so we didn't seem to
git no further.</p>
<p>“But one day Doc says, 'Well, Loreny, WHY can't you marry me? They ain't
no one can love you like I do, and you know I'll make you a good husband,
and I'll go to church with you reg'lar if you say so.'</p>
<p>“'Goin' to church ain't all, Doc Weaver,' I says. 'I jist won't marry a
man that believes sich trash as you do.'</p>
<p>“'Well, tell me why not,' he says.</p>
<p>“'I'll tell you, Doc Weaver,' I says, 'since you drive me to it. I'm
willing enough to marry YOU, but I ain't willing to marry some old heathen
Chinee or goodness knows what!'</p>
<p>“'Doc was took all aback. 'Why, Loreny!' he says, 'Why, Loreny!'</p>
<p>“'I mean it,' I says, 'jist what I say. How can I tell who you are when
you say yourself you ain't nothing but some old spirit in a new body? Like
as not you're Herod, or an Indian, or a cannibal savage, and I'd like to
see myself marryin' sich,' I says, 'I'd look purty, wouldn't I, settin' in
church alongside of a made-over Chinee?'</p>
<p>“Doc ain't very pale, ever, but he got as red as a beet, and I see I'd hit
him purty hard. Then he kind of stiffened up.</p>
<p>“'Loreny,' he says, 'I'd have thought you'd have believed my spirit to be
a little better than a heathen Chinee's,' he says, 'though there's much
worse folks than what they are.'</p>
<p>“I seen he was put out, an' I hadn't meant to hurt his feelings, so I
says, more gentle, 'Well, Doc, if you ain't that, what are you?'</p>
<p>“I s'pose, Mr. Hewlitt, you've noticed how sometimes something you find
out will make clear to you a lot of things you couldn't make head nor tail
of before. That's the way what Doc said did for me. There was that poetry
writin' of his, an' the way that Shakespeare book made him mad, an' how he
read those Shakespeare books instead of his Mateery Medicky volumes.</p>
<p>“Well, I asked Doc, 'If you ain't a heathen Chinee or some sich, what are
you?' an' when he answered you could have knocked me down with a wisp of
hay. You'd never guess, no more than I did.</p>
<p>“'Loreny,' he says, solemn as a deacon, 'I didn't reckon never to tell
nobody, an' you mustn't judge what I tell you too quick. I ain't made up
my mind sudden-like,' he says, 'but have studied myself and what I like
and don't like, for years, and I've jist been forced to it,' he says.
'There ain't no doubt in my mind, Loreny,' he says, an' he let his voice
go way down low, like he was 'most afraid to say it hisself. 'Loreny, I
believe that Shakespeare's spirit has transmigrated into me.'</p>
<p>“Well, sir, I was too taken aback to say a word. I thought Doc had gone
crazy. But he hadn't.</p>
<p>“When I kind of got my senses back I riled up right away. 'Well,' I says
snappy, 'I think when you was pickin' out someone to be you might have
picked out someone better. From all I've heard, Shakespeare wasn't no
better than he'd ought to have been. He don't suit me no better than a
Chinee would, and I hain't no fancy to marry Mister Shakespeare. Maybe you
think it's fine doin's to be Shakespeare, Doc Weaver, but I don't, and I
ain't going to marry a man that's like a two-headed cow, half one thing
and half another, and not all of any. When you git your senses,' I says,
'you can talk about marryin' me' and off I went, perky as a peacock. But I
cried 'most all night.</p>
<p>“Him an' me kind of stood off from each other after that, and I made up my
mind I'd die before I'd marry Doc so long as he was Shakespeare, and Doc
had got the notion that he was Shakespeare so set in his mind it seemed
likely he would.</p>
<p>“I hadn't never took much stock in poetry readin' since I got out of
'Mother Goose,' but I begun to read Shakespeare a little jist to see what
kind of poetry Doc thought he had writ when he was Shakespeare. Well, I
wouldn't want to see sich books in the Sunday School Lib'ry, that's all
I've got to say. Some I couldn't make sense out of, but there was one long
poem about Venus and some young feller—well, I shouldn't thing the
gov'ment would allow sich things printed! I jist knowed Doc couldn't ever
have writ such stuff. There ain't so much meanness in him. But I couldn't
see clear how to make Doc see it that way.</p>
<p>“I'd about given up hopes of ever curing Doc, when one day a feller come
to town and give a lecture in the dance room over the grocery. He was one
of these spiritualism fellers, and as soon as it was noised around that he
was comin', I knowed Doc would be the first man to go and the last to come
away, and he was. Thinks I, 'Let him go. If Doc jines in with
spiritualists, it will be better'n what he believes in now, and if he
begins changin' religions, mebby I can keep him changin', and change him
into a churchgoer.” And so, jist to see what Doc was like to be, I coaxed
ma to go, an' I went, too. It wasn't near so sinful as I expected.</p>
<p>“The feller's name was Gilson, an' he was as pale as a picked chicken, but
real common lookin', otherwise. He was a right-down good talker and seemed
real earnest. He wasn't the ghost-raisin' kind of spiritualist, and them
that went to see a show, come away dissap'inted, for all he did was to
talk and take up a collection. He said he was a new beginner and used to
be a Presbyterian minister. Doc stayed after it was over and had a talk
with Gilson, and of course he got converted, like he always did. He told
ma so.</p>
<p>“I hadn't been havin' much talk with Doc one way or another, but when ma
told me he had jined the spiritualists I eased up a litt, and one day I
made bold to say, 'Well, Doc, I s'pose now you have give up that
Shakespeare foolishness, ain't you?'</p>
<p>“'No, Loreny,' he says, 'I ain't.'</p>
<p>“'Land's sakes!' I says, 'do you mean to say you can be two things at once
in religion, as well as bein' Shakespeare and Doc Weaver?'</p>
<p>“'Yes, Loreny,' he says. 'The spirit has got to be somewheres between the
times it has got a body,' he says, 'That stands to reason. It's always
puzzled me where I was between the time I died two or three hundred years
ago and the time I entered this body,' he says, 'and spiritualism makes it
all clear. I was floatin' in space.'</p>
<p>“That's jist how fool-crazy Doc was them days. There he was believin' with
all his might that r'inca'nation business and that spirit business at the
same time.</p>
<p>“I says, 'Well, Doc, some day you'll see how deep in error you are,' and I
didn't say no more.</p>
<p>“Of course Doc wouldn't let well-enough alone. There was a big
spiritualist over to Peory, Illinoy, a reg'lar ghost-raisin' feller, and
what did Doc do but write over and git him to come to Kilo and give a
séance. That is a meetin' where they raise up ghosts. Doc wanted the
feller to stop at our house, but I wouldn't have it, so he had to put up
at the hotel. Doc said it was a shame, but as soon as I seen the man I
said it served him right, and that he was a fraud, but Doc swallered him
right down, hide an' hoof.</p>
<p>“They had the séance in the hotel parlor, and no charge, so me and ma
went, thought we wasn't jist sure it was right; but I says it wasn't as if
it was real—we knowed it was all foolishness; so ma and me trotted
along. I found out afterward that Doc paid to have the feller come to
Kilo. His name was Moller, an' he was one of them long-haired
greasy-lookin' men.</p>
<p>“I must say it was real scary when they turned the lights down an' Moller
made tables jump around and fiddles play without anybody playin' on them.
There wasn't many folks there, but ma held my hand, an' I held ma's, and
Doc was right in front of us.</p>
<p>“Moller did a lot of tricks sich as I hear they always do, an' then he
said he'd bring up any spirits anyone would like to have come up. That was
what Doc was waitin' for, and he popped right up.</p>
<p>“'I should like to talk to Bacon,' he says.</p>
<p>“'Bacon?' says Moller. 'There's a good many Bacons in spirit-land. Which
one do you want to speak to, brother?”</p>
<p>“'The one that lived when Shakespeare did,' says Doc. 'The one that wrote
the essays and sich. Sir Francis Bacon.'</p>
<p>“'Ah, yes!' says Moller. 'I'll see if he's willin' to say anyting
to-night.' And down he set into a chair. Well, you'd have died! In a bit
his head and legs begun to jerk like he had St. Vitus dance, and then he
straightened out, stiff as a broomstick. It was the silliest thing ever I
seen. I felt real sorry for Doc, he was so dead earnest about it.</p>
<p>“In a minute Moller opened his jaw and begun to talk. It was all sort of
jerky-like.</p>
<p>“'I'm sailin' through starry fields,' he says, 'explorin' the wonders of
the universe. Why am I called back to earth this way? Doth somebody want
to question me about something?'</p>
<p>“Doc was all worked up. He held onto a chairback, an' he was so shakin' I
could hear the loose chair rungs rattle.</p>
<p>“'Is this Bacon?' he says.</p>
<p>“'It is,' says Moller, his voice jerkin' like a kitten taken with the
fits.</p>
<p>“'Well,' says Doc, like his life was hangin' on what Moller would say,
'did you, or did you not, write Shakespeare's plays?'</p>
<p>“'I did not,' Moller jerked out; 'Shakespeare did.'</p>
<p>“You could hear Doc sigh all over the room, it was sich a relief to his
mind. Doc was awful pleased. He was smilin' all over his face, he was so
pleased to have Bacon own up, an' he turned to ma and me and says, 'Ain't
it wonderful!'</p>
<p>“Then Moller come out of his fit an' set still a while, like he had jist
woke up from a long nap. Then he says he's goin' into another trance, an'
if any in the room wants to hold talk with any of their lost friends or
kin, they should ask for them, an' he jerked again, and jerked out stiff.</p>
<p>“That old back-slider, Pap Briggs, popped up, but Doc was ahead of him,
'cause Pap always has to regulate his store teeth before he can git his
tongue goin', and Doc says, 'I desire to speak with Richard Burbage.'</p>
<p>“I guess Moller didn't now any sich feller. Anyways he jist lay still an'
so Doc says, 'Mebby there's several Richard Burbages. I mean the one that
owned a theater with Shakespeare.' But Richard Burbage didn't feed like
talkin' that evenin'. I reckon Moller didn't know nothin' about Richard
Burbage, and was frightened that Doc would ask him something that he
couldn't answer. There ain't nobody slicker than them fake fellers. It's
their business.</p>
<p>“But Doc was so worked up he would have swallered anything, and I guess
Moller thought he had to make up to Doc for payin' his expenses, so he
says, smilin', 'I see, doctor, you are interested in literature, and I'll
try to get somebody in that line that's willing to talk.' So he jerked
into another trance.</p>
<p>“Purty soon Moller says: 'From the seventh circle I have come, drawn by
the will of somebody that knows and loves me. It's a long way. Billions of
miles off is ny new home, where I spend eternity writin' things that make
what I writ on earth look like nothin','—or some sich nonsense. Doc
looked back at me once, proud as sin, an' then he swelled out his lungs,
an' run his hand over his whiskers, like you've seen him do. He was
gittin' wound up for a good talk.</p>
<p>“If I do say it myself, Doc's a good talker, an' I figgered he'd make
Moller hustle. I see Doc was goin' to spread hisself to do credit to
Shakespeare. He hadn't no doubt that one spirit would recognize another,
so he says, like he was makin' a speech, 'You know who I am?'</p>
<p>“'I do,' says Moller.</p>
<p>“'Then,' says Doc, 'since my spirit eyes are blinded by this mortal body,
may I ask who you are?' He didn't hardly breathe. Then Moller jerked. 'I
am Shakespeare,' he says, sudden-like.</p>
<p>“'What's that?' says Doc, short and quick.</p>
<p>“'Shakespeare,' says Moller—'William Shakespeare.'</p>
<p>“Poor Doc jist dropped into his chair, and run his hand over his forehead
and his eyes, like he had bumped into the edge of a door in the dark. I
ain't never seen Doc real pale but once, and that was then. Then he turned
round to ma an' me, weak as a sick baby, an' says, 'Come, Loreny; this
lyin' place ain't nowhere for you and me to be,' and we went out.</p>
<p>“'Well, Doc,' I says, when we was outside, 'seems to me like there is two
of you,' and that was all I says to him about it, then; but I guess he see
what a fool he'd been, 'cause the next night he says, 'Loreny, I wisht
you'd git me a set of the articles of belief of our church. I'd like to
look them over.'</p>
<p>“'Well,' I says, 'who'll I say wants them, Shakespeare or Doc Weaver?'</p>
<p>“'You can say an old fool wants them,' says Doc, 'and you'll hit it about
right.'</p>
<p>“So Doc jined church, an' he's leadin' the singin' now; but you can see
why I keep sich a lookout lest he gits started off on some new religion.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Weaver glanced at the clock.</p>
<p>“Mercy me!” she exclaimed. “Doc'll be home before I git them supper dishes
washed up. Now, you won't feel hurt because I don't want you to talk new
religions to Doc, will you? You can see jist how I feel, and you wouldn't
want no husband yourself that was a philopeny, as you might say. I don't
believe I could git on real well with Doc if he had kept on bein'
Shakespeare. I'd always have felt like he was 'bout three hundred years
older than me. But there's jist one thing I dread more than anything else.
If Doc should take up with the Mormon religion and start a harem, I
believe I'd coax him to be Shakespeare again. It's bad enough to have a
double husband, but, land's sakes, I'd rather that than be part of a
wife.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XII. Getting Acquainted </h2>
<p>Althought Eliph' Hewlitt was not making much progress in his courtship he
was far from idle in the succeeding weeks. He had taken many orders for
Jarby's great book in the county, before he arrived in Kilo, and as a
shipment of the books arrived from New York he spent much of his time
behind old Irontail making his deliveries and collecting the first
payments, and some time in the immediate neighborhood making new sales.
One of the copies he had to deliver was the one purchased by Mrs.
Tarbro-Smith, but although he delivered it to her at Miss Sally's, he did
not have an opportunity to speak to Miss Sally, for she hid herself when
he approached the door, and did not come down stairs again until he had
left the house.</p>
<p>Mrs. Tarbro-Smith received the book with a lady-like enthusiasm, and
immediately placed it upon Miss Sally's center table, where its bright red
cover added a touch of cheerfulness to the room, suggestive of the
knowledge, literature, science and art the book was guaranteed to
irradiate in any family. But Miss Sally never so much as looked inside its
covers. She avoided it as if the thought the book itself might seize her
and sell to her, against her will, one of its fellows. Mrs. Smith said
openly that she wished she might see more of Eliph' Hewlitt, and that she
thought him a most remarkable book agent, particularly after she had heard
of his selling the Missionary Society a wholesale lot of Jarby's
Encyclopedia, and after glancing through the book she admitted that it was
really an excellent thing of its kind, but Miss Sally merely remarked that
she didn't like book agents, and that she hated this one more than most,
he was so slick.</p>
<p>The energetic spirit of Mrs. Smith was sure to carry her into anything
that partook of a social nature, and she had arrived in Kilo in the midst
of the festival season, when out-door festivals of all varieties were
following one after another almost weekly for the benefit of the church,
which had a properly clinging and insatiable debt. In these festivals she
took a prominent part, for the brought her in contact with the people of
Kilo as nothing else could, and if she enjoyed the affairs, so did Susan.
Susan bloomed wonderfully. She sprang at once from childhood to young
womanhood, and Mrs. Smith was pleased to have her protégée appear so well
and receive so much attention, for she felt that she had had the revision
of her. She already saw in her the heroine of the novel she meant to
write, with the plot beginning in Kilo and Clarence, and carried to New
York and, perhaps, Europe.</p>
<p>The attorney and the editor were particularly nice to Susan, and attentive
to Mrs. Smith at all the festivals, and it amused the New Yorker to find
herself and her maid on and equal social plane. It is quite different in
New York. But lady's maids in New York are not all like Susan. Maids in
New York do not spend their spare time studying Jarby's Encyclopedia of
Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art, and Susan did.
Even Eliph' Hewlitt could not have read the book more faithfully than
Susan did, nor have believed in it more trustfully. Often when the editor
or the attorney sought her at one of the festivals they would find her
talking with Eliph' Hewlitt, exchanging facts out of Jarby's Encyclopedia.</p>
<p>For Eliph' never missed a festival. He haunted them, standing in one spot
until his eyes fell upon Miss Sally, when he would make straight for her
with his dainty little steps, and she, catching sight of him—for she
was always on the lookout—would move away, weaving around and
between people until he lost sight of her, when he would stand still until
he caught sight of her again. It was like a game. Sometimes he caught her,
but before he could have a word with her she would make an excuse and
hurry away, or turn him over to another. Usually she shielded herself by
keeping either the Colonel or Skinner beside her, if they were present,
and they usually were.</p>
<p>“Land's sake!” she exclaimed to Mrs. Smith, one evening, as they were
walking home after an ice-cream festival at Doc Weaver's, “I wish somebody
would tell that Mr. Hewlitt that I don't want to buy no books. He pesters
the life out of me. I can't show myself nowhere but he comes up, all
loaded to begin, and if I'd give him half a chance he'd have me buyin' a
book in no time. It don't seem to make no difference where I am. I believe
he'd try to sell books at a funeral.” Mrs. Smith laughed.</p>
<p>“I know he would!” she said. “He is delightful! Why don't you do as I did,
and buy a book, and then he will be satisfied, and leave you alone.”</p>
<p>“Well, I won't!” declared Miss Sally. “I ain't done nothin' all my life
but buy books an' then fight pa to get money to pay installments on 'em,
an' I won't buy no more! I declared to goodness when I bought them Sir
Walter Scott books that I wouldn't buy no more, an' I won't. If I buy this
one off of this man, there'll be another, an' another, an' so on 'til
kingdom come, an' one everlasting fight with pa for money.”</p>
<p>“Couldn't you pay for it with the money you got for those
fire-extinguishers?” asked Mrs. Smith.</p>
<p>“Pa borryed that to pay taxes with, long ago, an' that's the last I'll
ever see of the money,” said Miss Sally. “Pa ain't the kind that pays
back. He's a good getter, an' a good keeper, but he's about the poorest
giver I ever did see, if he is my own father. There ain't nothin' in the
world else that would drive me to get married but just the trouble I have
to get money out of pa for anything. I ain't even got a black silk dress
to my name, and there ain't another lady in Kilo but's got one. I guessed
when we moved to town I would have the egg money same as on the farm, but
since pa had his teeth out an' got new ones he won't eat nothin' but eggs,
an' I don't get any egg money. Pa eats so many eggs I'm ashamed to tell
it. I wonder he don't sprout feathers. I don't believe so many eggs is
good for a man. It don't seem natural. That encyclopedia book don't say
anywhere that eatin' too many eggs makes a man close fisted, does it?”</p>
<p>Mrs. Smith said she could remember nothing to that effect in the book, and
for a minute they walked in silence. Suddenly she looked up and spoke.</p>
<p>“Miss Sally,” she exclaimed, “I know what to do! I will make you a present
of my encyclopedia. I will give it to you, and the next time you see Mr.
Hewlitt you can tell him you have a copy, and then he will leave you
alone!”</p>
<p>That was how it happened that at the next festival Miss Sally did not run
when she saw Eliph' Hewlitt approaching, but stood waiting for him. He
stepped up to her with a smile that was half pleasure and half excuse.</p>
<p>“I don't want to buy a book,” she said quickly. “I've got one. Mrs. Smith
gave me the one she had. So you needn't pester me any more.”</p>
<p>“I didn't want to sell you a book,” said Eliph' gently, “although I am
glad to learn you have one. No person, whether man, woman or child, should
be without a copy of this work, including, as it does, all the knowledge
of the ages and all the world's wisdom, from A to Z, condensed into one
volume, for ready reference. It is a book that should be on every parlor
table and——”</p>
<p>“Well, I've got one,” said Miss Sally, “so it's no use wasting talk on it.
One's all I want. Another one wouldn't be no good but to clutter up the
house.”</p>
<p>“Just so,” said Eliph'. “I don't want to sell you another. To sell this
book is the smallest part of my trouble. It is a book that sells itself. I
only need to show it, to sell it. Wherever it falls open it attracts the
attention with a gem of thought or a flower of knowledge, perhaps the
language of gems, or the language of flowers, how to cure boils, how to
preserve fruit, each page offers something of value to the mind. A copy of
this book in the house is a friend in sickness or in health, a help in
business and a companion in pleasure; to the agent it is a source of
steady and continuous income. One copy sells another.”</p>
<p>“I said before that I don't want another,” said Miss Sally shortly.</p>
<p>“Let us talk about something else,” said Eliph' Hewlitt, coughing politely
behind his hand. “I'll be glad to, but I do not blame you for bringing up
the subject of the work I am selling. I make it a rule never to talk book
out of business hours, but I am not sensitive, as some book agents are.
When Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature,
Science and Art is mentioned I am not offended; I am not ashamed of my
business—I enjoy it. I could talk of the merits of this unequaled
work day and night without stopping and yet not do it full justice, but I
don't. When my work is done I stop talking book. I might, to enliven
conversation, quote from the 'Five Hundred Ennobling Thoughts from the
World's Greatest Authors, Including the Prose and Poetical Gems of All
Ages,' containing, as it does, the best thoughts of the greatest minds,
suitable for polite and refined conversation, sixty-two solid pages of
the, with vingetty portraits of the authors, and a short biographical
sketch of each, including date and place of birth, date and place of
death, if dead, et cetery. Or I might, to brighten a passing moment,
propound one or more of the 'Six Hundred Perplexing Puzzles,' page 987,
including charades, conundrums, quaint mathematical catches, et cetery,
compiled to brighten the mind and puzzle the wits, suitable for young or
old, for grave or gay. It is a book that meets every want of every day, is
neatly and durably bound, and the price is only five dollars.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally turned as if to run away, but Eliph' put out his hand and
touched her arm lightly.</p>
<p>“But I don't,” he said. “I don't quote, and I don't propound. I put the
book aside and I forget. When my work is done I relax my mind. I enter
into the pleasures I find most congenial, such as festivals, sociables,
fairs, kermesses, picnics, parties, receptions, et cetery, rules and
suggestions for conducting all of which are to be found in this book,
which is recommended and esteemed by the leaders of society, both in the
Four Hundred and out. Or I read a good book, a list of five hundred of
which may be found on page 336, 'The Reader's Guide,' giving advice in
selecting fiction, history, philosophy, religious works, poetry, et
cetery, the whole selected by eight of the most eminent professors of
literature in our colleges and universities, both at home and abroad. Or I
indulge in conversation, in which what better guide than is to be found on
page 662, 'The Polite Conversationalist,' including gems of wit, apt
quotations, how to gain and hold the attention, how to amuse, instruct and
argue, et cetery? When it is remember that all this, and much more, can be
had for only five dollars, neatly bound in cloth, one dollar down and one
dollar a month until paid, what wonder is it that—that——”</p>
<p>Suddenly one of the paper lanterns that hung from the wire above them
burst into flame, and Eliph' saw on Miss Sally's face the look of fear
with which she was regarding him, fear and fascination mingled. The smile
faded from his lips, and his gentle blue eyes became troubled. He dropped
the hand that had been lightly resting on her arm, and his dapper air of
self-confidence wilted in abashment.</p>
<p>“Was I—was I talking book?” he asked weakly. “I was! Pardon me, Miss
Briggs, pardon me, I didn't know it. I'm sorry, I didn't mean to.”</p>
<p>For a moment Miss Sally studied his face, and she saw only a genuine
contrition there, and a regret so deep that she was sorry for him. There
could be no doubt of his sincerity.</p>
<p>“Well!” she exclaimed, with a breath of relief; “I do believe you didn't
know you was! I believe that book's got so ground into you that you can't
help but talk it, like Benny Tenneker, who got so used to climbin' trees
an' fallin' out of 'em that he used to climb the bedposts an' fall of of
'em in his sleep without wakin' up. Mrs. Doc Weaver's his aunt, an' when
he visited her he nearly got killed fallin' out of bed when he was tryin'
to climb a bed post when there wasn't not on the bed. He'd got so he could
fall out of any high place an' light safe, but he wasn't used to fallin'
off of low ones. He was such a nice boy. All Martha Willing's children
were nice. Mebby you've met her. She lives out Clarence way.”</p>
<p>“Willin?” said Eliph'. “Yes, I sold her a—I mean to say, I met her.”</p>
<p>“Well, her husband's dead, and her and her boys is runnin' the farm,” said
Miss Sally, “an' doin' right well, so I guess she ain't afraid of book
agents. She can afford to buy. I don't know as I'm afraid of 'em either,
or hate 'em as such, but I can't afford. Pa don't approve of books much,
an' he can't see why he should pay out money for what he don't approve of.
Books an' taxes he don't care much for. That's why I was so scared of
you.”</p>
<p>“I didn't want to sell you a—to sell you anything,” said Eliph'
meekly. “All I wanted was to get acquainted, to get well acquainted.”</p>
<p>“I guess that's all right then,” said Miss Sally. “There ain't anything
more natural than that you should wish that, bein' intendin' to make your
home here. I hope you like the place an' make lot of acquaintances, but if
I was you I'd try not to talk book any more than you have to. I don't
think it'll help to make you popular, as I may say. That Sir Walter man
sort of gave everybody an overdose of book, an' folks feel kind of mad at
book agents ever since. Like father Emmons, when he had one of his sick
spells, an' nothin' would do but he was goin' to die, so he got up before
sun-up an' drove to town to see Doc Weaver. He let Doc know he felt he was
dyin' an' told him the symptoms, an' all Doc says was, 'All you want is
salts. You stop at the drug store an' get a pound of salts, an' I'll
warrant you'll be as well as ever.' So when his daughter—she's Mary
Ann Klepper—went into the house after carryin' lunch to the men in
the field, there was her poor old father settin' at the table with the big
yeller bake-bowl in front of him, an' him eatin' away at what was in it
with a big spoon. 'Eatin' bread an' milk, father?' she asks, an' her pa
looks up with tears in his eyes, an' swallers down another spoonful. 'No,'
he says, as cross as a bear, 'I'm eatin' a pound o' salts Doc Weaver told
me to git, but hang if I can eat another spoonful, an' I ain't above half
done.' So I guess Kilo folks kind of gag when they think of books.”</p>
<p>“If I so much as mention books,” said Eliph' pleadingly, “I wish you'd
stop me. Don't let me. Mebby I do sort of get in the habit of it, thinking
it and talking it so much. But I never meant to sell you one. I only
wanted to get acquainted.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally laughed.</p>
<p>“Well,” she said cheerfully, “there's different ways to do it, but I guess
you an' me have got well acquainted different from what most folks does.
Ain't you been over to the ice-cream table yet? Or was you waitin' to be
primed; that's what us ladies is here for, to start folks spendin' money,
like Mrs. Foster's little nephew that come up from the city to visit her
last summer. He wanted to know what everything was for that was on the
farm or in the house, that he wasn't used to, an' when they told him they
always had to leave a dipper of water in the pail to prime the pump with
so it would give water, he wanted to know if the reason they had the pans
of milk in the spring-house was so they could prime the cows so they would
give milk.”</p>
<p>Eliph' laughed heartily, for his heart was light. He was making progress;
Miss Sally admitted that they were well acquainted, and now he could
proceed to the second step advised in “Courtship; How to Win the
Affections; How to Hold Them When Won.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XIII. “Second: A Small Present” </h2>
<p>The next morning Eliph' Hewlitt purchased the two-pound box of candy in
the pictured box that had long been considered by the druggist a foolish
investment. For months it had reposed in the end of the toilet soap case
awaiting a purchaser, and had acquired a sweet odor of scented soap
mingled with the plainer odor of cut castile, and no one had been so
extravagant as to buy it. Once the druggist had tried to persuade the
candy salesman to take it back in exchange for more salable goods, but
after taking it from the show-case and smelling it the drummer refused. At
the opposite end of the case the druggist kept his plush manicure and
brush-and-comb sets, with a few lumps of camphor scattered among them to
discourage moths, but the odor of camphor did not hurt the candy. The
scented soap protected it from the camphor. When Kilo buys scented soap
she likes to have it really scented.</p>
<p>Miss Sally, when the small boy Eliph' secured as a messenger had delivered
the box of candy, knew well enough what it meant. The neatly written card,
“From Yours very truly, E. Hewlitt,” did not suggest much, perhaps, but in
Kilo friends do not scatter two-pound boxes of candy recklessly about. To
receive a two-pound box on Christmas would have been a suspicious
circumstance, for a smaller box would have done quite as well between
friends, but to send a two-pound box on a day that was no holiday at all,
but just a plain day of the week, could stand for but one of two things—the
giver was insane, or he had “intentions,” and Miss Sally knew very well
that Eliph' Hewlitt was not insane. Unless on the subject of Jarby's
Encyclopedia.</p>
<p>She carried the box of candy to Mrs. Smith, and showed her the card.</p>
<p>“How lovely!” cried Mrs. Smith, an exclamation which might have meant
either the box of candy or the sentiment that inspired the sender, and
then added, “How odd! It smells like soap!”</p>
<p>“That's a sign it's good candy,” said Miss Sally. “The candy Rudge sells
always smells of soap, an' he handles only the best, so when you see candy
that smells that way you know it's good. This is Rudge's candy, sure
enough, for I know this box by heart. Rudge has had it in his show case
ever since the firm was Crimmins & Rudge. It must be some stale by
this time, but the box is pretty.”</p>
<p>“I don't suppose Mr. Hewlitt knew it was stale,” said Mrs. Smith, “He
evidently tried to get the best he could.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” admitted Miss Sally. “He wouldn't know this box of candy so well as
we town folks do, him bein' a newcomer here. I suppose Rudge gave him a
discount off the price on account of the box bein' soiled a little. I hope
to goodness that man wasn't so foolish as to go an' pay straight sixty
cents a pound for it. He got cheated if he did, an' I'll tell him so when
I see him next.” She slowly untied the red ribbon that bound the box, and
rolled it neatly around the fingers of her left hand, to lay away for
future use. “Now, what do you suppose that man sent it to me for?” she
asked.</p>
<p>Mrs. Smith smiled, for she knew Miss Sally was asking the question merely
that she might have her own belief made sure by the words of another.</p>
<p>“Because he's in love, of course,” said Mrs. Smith. “Because he is
desperately in love. It is a romance, my dear.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally looked doubtfully toward Susan, who was curled up on the old
sofa in the corner of the room. She was not sure that such matters should
be discussed before one so young, but Susan would have refused to leave
the room, even if asked, and she resented the questioning glance that Miss
Sally had thrown at Mrs. Smith.</p>
<p>“'Courtship—How to Make Love—How to Win the Affections—How
To Hold Them When Won,'” she said gaily. “'First, get acquainted; second,
make small presents, such as flowers, books or candy; third, ask for the
lady's hand.' You needn't look at me that way, Miss Sally; I know all
about it. I read it in Jarby's Encyclopedia.”</p>
<p>“Lands sakes!” exclaimed Miss Sally. “And me and him only got well
acquainted last night at the festival. I never heard of such a thing!”</p>
<p>“It's love at first sight,” teased Mrs. Smith. “He will probably be around
this afternoon to propose, and we can have the wedding this evening.”</p>
<p>“Well, he needn't come this afternoon, if he's got it in his mind to
come,” said Miss Sally shortly, “for I won't be at home. I ain't goin' to
be rushed that way, not by no man. I don't say but Mr. Hewlitt is a clever
spoken man, Mrs. Smith, when he ain't talkin' books, but I ain't in the
habit of bein' courted like I was a Seidlitz powder, and had to be drunk
down before I stopped fizzin'. That may be some folks way of doin' it, but
it ain't mine.”</p>
<p>“Nor Colonel Guthrie's,” suggested Mrs. Smith.</p>
<p>“If the Colonel's slow it ain't his fault,” said Miss Sally. “He'd be
quick enough if I'd let him, but I can't see no hurry, one way or another.
I don't say but that a husband is a good thing to have, mind you! I guess
I'm like all other women and want to have one some time, but so long as
I've got pa I'm in no hurry. He's as much trouble as a husband would be,
and as grumpy when things don't go to suit him. Sometimes I feel like in
the end I'd choose to marry the Colonel, since it wouldn't be so much of a
change, the Colonel bein' like pa in some ways, such as bein' economical;
and then again I feel like I'd prefer Skinner, just because he'd BE a
change. I'd be always sure of gettin' good meat, for one thing, and I'd
insist upon it. I can't a-bare tough meat.”</p>
<p>“Shoemakers' children go without shoes,” suggested Mrs. Smith.</p>
<p>“They wouldn't if I was their mother, an' I'll tell Skinner so, if I
choose to marry him an' he tries to send home any but the best meat he's
got in the shop,” said Miss Sally firmly. “That's one man, if I marry him,
I won't take no foolishness from. When a man is castin' his eyes my way,
an' then has to have a city ordinance made to compel him to do me the
favor of buyin' four fire-extinguishers off of me, that ain't no earthly
use to me, I'll let him know I'm going to have my way about some things
when we're married. I know well enough I ain't such a beauty that Skinner
an' the Colonel is what you might call infatuated with me, and I don't
expect 'em to be. Pa's got money, and if he didn't have I guess the
Colonel an' Skinner wouldn't bother their heads about me much; but if they
like me for pa's money now I guess they'll like me for it just as well
after they marry me, for I'll have it well known that money don't go out
of my name. And I'll let this book agent man know it too. If it's pa's
money he's in such a hurry to get, he'll find out his mistake.”</p>
<p>“I rather like the book agent,” said Mrs. Smith. “He doesn't seem to me at
all the adventurer type.”</p>
<p>“His whiskers do make him look like a preacher,” said Miss Sally, “if
that's what you mean; but if he means business he ought to know I ain't
the kind of bird to be caught with boxes of candy. Neither Skinner nor the
Colonel is so silly as to think that.”</p>
<p>She smoothed her apron across her knees, and looked at its checked
pattern.</p>
<p>“Seems to me,” she said, with a touch of regret, “this ain't no time or
age for such foolishness. It ain't as if I was a girl like Susan there.
Boxes of candy an' Susan would match up like pale blue an' white. I guess
the safe thing is to make choice of one that ain't a stranger. I've done
business with Skinner years an' years, sellin' him calves an' buyin' meat
off of him; an' as for the Colonel, I guess I know all his bad points as
well as his good ones. The Colonel has been a friend of pa's a long time.”</p>
<p>So it happened that when Eliph' Hewlitt called at Miss Sally's that
afternoon he did not find her at home. Mrs. Smith received him and tried
to make up by her kindness for the disappointment Eliph' evidently felt.
She thanked him in Miss Sally's name for the beautiful box of candy—although
Miss Sally had left no such word—and drew him on to talk of Jarby
& Goss, the publishers of the Encyclopedia, and of his own adventures.
The longer she talked with the little man the better her opinion of him
became, and she saw that he was gentle, shrewd, capable and sincere—sincere
even in his wildest enthusiasm for Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and
Compendium of Literature, Science and Art. When he arose to go he stood a
moment hesitatingly with his hat in his hand. He coughed apologetically.</p>
<p>“I hope Miss Sally like the little token of esteem; the box of candy;” he
said, looking up into Mrs. Smith's face anxiously, “it isn't as if I was
used to such matters. My preference would have been a book; a good book; a
book that I could recommend to man, woman or child, containing in a
condensed form all the world's knowledge, from the time of Adam to the
present day, with an index for ready reference, and useful information for
every day of the year. It was my intention to have given her such a book,
which would have been a proper vehicle to convey to her my—my
regard, but I learned only last night that she already had a copy of that
work, without which no home is complete, and which is published by Jarby
& Goss, New York, five dollars, bound in cloth; seven fifty, morocco.
I learned that she already had one.”</p>
<p>“She told you I had given her my copy?” asked Mrs. Smith.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Eliph' simply. “So I could not present her with a copy of that
work. My preference was to give a work of literature; I am a worker in the
field of literature, and it would have been more appropriate. But I could
give her nothing but the best of its kinds, and where find another such
book as Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature,
Science and Art? Nowhere! There is no other. This book combining in one
volume selections from the world's best literature, recipes for the home,
advice for every period of existence, together with one thousand and one
other subjects, forms in itself a volume unequaled in the history of
literature. No person should be without it.”</p>
<p>“I know, Mr. Hewlitt,” pleaded Mrs. Smith, smiling, “but I have already
bought two copies. Don't you thing you ought to let me off with that?”</p>
<p>“I was not trying to sell you one,” said Eliph' with embarrassment. “I
hoped——” He paused and coughed behind his hand again. “You
know my intention in sending a present to Miss Briggs,” he said bravely.
“I admire her greatly. I—to me she is, in fact, a Jarby's
Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art
among women.”</p>
<p>“Dear Mr. Hewlitt,” said Mrs. Smith, taking his hand, “I understand. And I
wish you all the good fortune in the world. I shall do all I can to help
you.”</p>
<p>“Thank you,” said Eliph', shaking her hand as if she was an old
acquaintance he had met after long years of separation. “So you understand
that I can feel the same to no other woman. Not even to—to anyone.”
He wiped his forehead with his disengaged hand. “So I feel that you will
not misunderstand me if I ask you to accept a copy of Jarby's Encyclopedia
of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art, bound in
morocoo, seven fifty. I mean gratis. No home should be without one.”</p>
<p>“Why, it is very kind of you to suggest such a thing,” said Mrs. Smith,
“and I'm sure I'll be glad to own a copy.”</p>
<p>“I'm glad to have you,” said Eliph'. “I wanted to give you one, but I
didn't want you to think I meant it in the way I meant what I sent to Miss
Sally. I was afraid you might, or that Miss Sally might. But I don't mean
it that way.”</p>
<p>“I know you don't,” said Mrs. Smith heartily. “And if Miss Sally is
jealous I will tell her she is quite mistaken. But if you will let a woman
that has had a little experience advise you, do not be too hasty. Do not
try to hurry matters too much. It would spoil everything if you pressed
for an answer too soon and received an unfavorable one. And I'm afraid it
would be an unfavorable one if you put it to the test now.”</p>
<p>Eliph's countenance fell. It said plainly enough that he understood her to
mean that the Colonel and Skinner were more apt to be favorably received.</p>
<p>“I'm afraid so,” said Mrs. Smith regretfully. “You know they are older
acquaintances, and Miss Sally is not one of those who think new friends
are best.”</p>
<p>“I was coming again to-night,” said Eliph'. “Perhaps I'd better not say
anything to-night. Perhaps I had better wait until to-morrow.”</p>
<p>“Wait until next month, or next year,” advised Mrs. Smith. “There is no
hurry. Something may turn up.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XIV. Something Turns Up </h2>
<p>Something turned up the very next day. It turned all Kilo upside down as
nothing had for years, and created such a demand for the TIMES that J. T.
Jones had to print an extra edition of sixty copies, and he would have
printed ten more if his press had not broken down.</p>
<p>Across two columns—the TIMES never used over one column headlines
except for the elections—blazed the work “GRAFT,” and beneath, in
but a size or two smaller, stared the “sub-head” “OFFICIAL OF KILO
CORRUPTED. CITIZENS' PARTY ROTTEN TO THE CORE. PROMINENT CITIZEN
IMPLICATED.” Beneath this followed the moral of it, “The City, as
Predicted in These Columns, Suffers for Departing from The Beneficent Rule
of the Republican Party.”</p>
<p>Attorney Toole was sitting in his office when the boy from the TIMES
delivered the paper to him. He smiled as he opened the damp sheet, for he
extracted more amusement than news from the little paper, but as he turned
it the headlines caught his eye, and instantly he was deep in the columns.
Someone had sprung his mine before he had intended—it had exploded
prematurely and with, what seemed to him, as he read on, a futile
insipidity.</p>
<p>There were full two columns of it. There were hints and innuendoes, too
well veiled, but no names mentioned. The specific act of graft was not
brought to the surface. It was as if the writer had a “spread” of some
vaguely uncertain rumor, and yet there was not doubt that Colonel Guthrie
and Mayor Stitz and the fire-extinguishers were meant. The attorney could
see that, and he had an idea that the writer had meant to tell more than
he really did tell. The veiled allusions were so thoroughly veiled in
words that they were buried as if under mountains of veils. Each slight
hint was swamped in morasses of quotations and fine flourishes, overgrown
and hidden by tropical verbiage, and covered up by philosophical and
political phrases until nothing of the hint could be seen. As he read on
the attorney could see Doc Weaver talking, as plainly as if he stood
before him; he could see him at his desk in a frenzy of composition, and
he recognized the apt quotations from Shakespeare that were Doc's
specialty. Doc Weaver had written it.</p>
<p>The attorney laid the paper down and studied the matter. How could Doc
have learned of the affair? Skinner, angry as he had been at having to buy
the four fire-extinguishers, would never have dared to wreck the party he
had helped to create. The Colonel would have been no such fool. Stitz? He
would hardly accuse himself. Who then?</p>
<p>One passage set the attorney thinking again as he re-read the article.
“'Thinks are seldom what they seem,' as the poet says, which is as true as
that 'Honesty is the best policy.' And as Shakespeare says, 'To what base
ends,' for all this disreputable graft centers around certain brilliant
objects that are not what the guilty bribers and bribees suppose them to
be. While we shudder with horror at the temerity of the sinners we shake
with laughter as we think of their faces as they will be when they realize
that they are mortals to whom the immortal bard refers when he enunciates
the truth, 'What fools these mortals be!'”</p>
<p>“Certain brilliant objects” could mean nothing but the lung-testers.
Eliph' Hewlitt had that secret, and Eliph' Hewlitt boarded with Doc
Weaver. The attorney felt a sudden rush of anger. It was to this
intermeddling book agent, then, that he owed the premature explosion of
the mine that was to have blown the Citizens' Party to fragments, and to
have landed the fragments in the basket held ready by Attorney Toole?</p>
<p>The distribution of that week's TIMES acted like a tonic on the town
streets. New life followed in the wake of the boy as he carried the paper
from door to door. It began at the corner of Main and Cross Streets, and
as the boy proceeded, the merchants, the loafers, and the customers came
from the stores and gathered in knots that formed quickly and dissolved
again as the parts passed from one group to another, questioning, arguing,
and guessing. The attorney looked out of his window. Across the street he
could see the office of the TIMES, and T. J. already besieged by
questioners, to whom he was evidently giving a kind but decided refusal of
further information. The editor was waving them away with his hands. Some
of the editor's visitors handed T. J. money, and carried away copies of
the TIMES, but all went, gently urged by the editor, and joined one or
another of the groups below. The attorney drew on his coat. He would
postpone his interview with Eliph' Hewlitt; Thomas Jefferson Jones was the
man he wanted to see at that moment.</p>
<p>It was difficult for the attorney to retain his enigmatical smiles as he
climbed the stairs to the TIMES office. He was angry, but he knew the
value of that irritating smile that hinted superiority and a knowledge of
hidden details. He needed it in his talk with the editor.</p>
<p>It is odd how common interests will bring men together. And sometimes how
common interests will not. The attorney and the editor had been as one man
in polite attentions to Susan Bell, Mrs. Smith's protégée, at first, but
as their acquaintance with her grew they seemed to like each other less.
They no longer consulted each other on the best methods of bringing
Republican rule back to Kilo. They did not consult together at all. The
attorney coldly ignored the editor, and his irritation, beginning in this
rivalry, was increased by the growing suspicion that the editor dared look
toward the leadership of the Republican party in Kilo.</p>
<p>It all angered the attorney. What right had a country editor to compete
with a man of talent, with a member of the bar, with Attorney Toole? Was
this the thanks a rising lawyer should receive for leaving the superior
culture of Franklin and bringing his talents to add luster to the bleak
unimportance of Kilo? The very impertinence of it angered him. Toole, a
man whose name would one day ring in the hall of Congress and perhaps
stand at the head of the nation's officers as chief executive, to be
bothered by the interference of a Jones! By the interference of a man who
spent his time collecting news of measles and hog cholera! It was about
time T. J. Jones was told a few things.</p>
<p>As Toole entered the printing office T. J. was handing a copy of the TIMES
to a customer, and the editor turned, and, seeing who his visitor was,
held up his hand playfully.</p>
<p>“No use!” he exclaimed. “I can't say anything about it, except what's in
the paper. Contributed article, and the editor sworn to silence, you
know.”</p>
<p>The attorney seated himself on the editor's desk, pushing a pile of papers
out of his way.</p>
<p>“That's all right, Jones,” he said. “That's for the”—he waved his
hand toward the window—“for the fellow citizens; for the populace.
This is between ourselves.”</p>
<p>“I'd like to,” said Jones, “but really, I can't say anything about it. I
promised faithfully I would not betray my contributor's confidence.”</p>
<p>“Now, do I look so green as that?” asked Toole. “Nonsense! Doc Weaver
wrote that rot.” He smiled. “He spread himself, didn't he?”</p>
<p>The editor remained motionless.</p>
<p>“I have nothing whatever to say,” he remarked, noncommittally.</p>
<p>“Well, I have!” cried the attorney. “I'll tell you that it is poor work
for you to steal my thunder and attempt to use it without consulting me!
It is poor work, and mean work. You want to be boss of this party in Kilo
county, that's what you want. And you haven't the capacity. You have
proved it right here, right here in this silly sheet of yours. You hit on
a big thing, and you spoil it. You are so anxious that Toole shall get no
credit that you rush it into print and make a fizzle of it. I know who the
traitors to the party are—you are one. Doc Weaver with his elegant
style and his Shakespeare is another. And that miserable intermeddling
little book agent is another. You make me sick.”</p>
<p>The editor stood like a statue, and his face was as white. The attorney
dropped his words slowly from lips that still wore the tantalizing smile.</p>
<p>“The childishness amuses me,” said the attorney. “It makes me smile. Why
didn't you give names, since you had them? Why didn't you tell it all, and
do the party some good, as well as doing me some harm, if that was what
you were after—and I don't know what you were after if it wasn't
that? Why don't you get a schoolboy to edit your paper for you?”</p>
<p>T. J. ground his nails into the palms of his hands. He meant to retain
possession of his temper, but it was boiling within. He said nothing as
the attorney indolently arose from his seat on the desk; he was resolved
to do nothing, but when the attorney brushed against him in passing,
turning his superior smile full in his face, he raised his arm. The next
moment the two men were lying beside the press, struggling and gasping,
locked fast and fighting for advantage, legs intertwined and each grasping
the other by a wrist. The editor was on top, but the heavier attorney was
working with the energy of hate, and as they panted and struggled the door
opened and Eliph' Hewlitt entered.</p>
<p>There was strength in his wiry arms, and he threw himself upon the upper
man and dragged him backward. The attorney loosened his hold and the two
men stood up, panting and gulping, and soon began to brush their clothes
and look at the floor for dropped articles, as men do who have fought
inconclusively and are not sorry to have been parted. The only real damage
seemed to have been done to Eliph's spectacles, which he had shaken off in
his efforts, and which had been crushed beneath a heel. The attorney
presently smiled, but it was a silly smile, and then he went out of the
door and down the street.</p>
<p>Eliph' coughed gently behind his hand, as if to excuse his intrusion.</p>
<p>“Quarreling?” he suggested. “I used to wrestle some when I was a boy. But
not much. I hadn't then the rules, given on page 554 of Jarby's
Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art,
including “How to Wrestle, How to Defend Oneself Against Sudden Attack,
Jui Jitsu,” et cetery, with wood cuts showing the best holds and how to
get them. All this being but one of one thousand and one subjects treated
of in this work, the price of which is but five dollars, neatly bound in
cloth.”</p>
<p>The editor had turned his back and was staring angrily out of the window—sulkily
tremulous would be a better description, perhaps—when he suddenly
cried out. Eliph' searched hurriedly in his pockets for another pair of
spectacles, found them and put them on, and looked where the editor
pointed. Across the street the attorney, backed up against the wall of the
bank, was defending his face with one arm, and with his right hand seeking
to grasp a whip that was raining blows upon his face and head. Someone
grasped the whip from behind and wrenched it from the hand of the
attorney's assailant, and as the man turned angrily, the two in the window
saw that it was Colonel Guthrie.</p>
<p>They heard him cursing those who had taken the whip from him, ending by
loudly justifying himself for what he had done to the attorney, and saw
the attorney step forward to quell the Colonel's hot words. The Colonel
put up both his hands and shouted, and some from the crowd, grasping the
attorney about the waist and arms, as if the feared he was about to attack
the older man, hurried him away, speaking soothing words to him.</p>
<p>The Colonel rioted on. Nothing could have stopped him. He pulled a copy of
the TIMES from his pocket and slapped it with his hand as he abused the
attorney for having given T. J. Jones the facts of the article.</p>
<p>He lit it be plainly known, in his anger, that the article called him a
giver of graft. The crowd stood silent, as crowds stand about some drunken
man, for the Colonel was drunk with wrath, and wordy with it, talking to
himself as drunken men do. He finished, and the crowd opened a passage
through itself to let him pass, and Skinner, who, in apron and bare arms,
had viewed his rival's wrath from a safe place on the edge of the group,
backed away. The Colonel, mumbling, caught sight of him, and with one
swift motion of the arm grasped him by the shirt band.</p>
<p>“You!” he shouted, pulling the shirt band until Skinner grew purple in the
face. “You! You done it! Why couldn't you buy them fire-extinguishers like
a man? You made me buy up that Dutchman. I wouldn't 'a' had to do it but
for you.”</p>
<p>He gave the choking butcher an extra shake, and raised his hand to strike
him, but again the crowd interfered, and seized the Colonel, and hurried
him away.</p>
<p>The butcher stood stupidly and rubbed his neck, waiting for the wits that
had been choked out of him to return, and far down the street Mayor Stitz,
hearing a noise, came out on his front platform and looked up the street.
It appeared to him that something was going on, and sticking his awl in
the door of his car, he walked blandly up the street to where the remnant
of the crowd formed a half circle around the butcher. He crowded through,
saying, “Look out, the mayor is coming. Stand one side yet for the mayor!”</p>
<p>The butcher looked and saw before him the round, innocent face of the
mayor, topped by the mayor's round bald head. He raised his large, fat
hand, and in vent for all his injured feelings brought it down, smack! On
the smooth bald spot.</p>
<p>“Ouw-etch!” said the mayor.</p>
<p>He was surprised. He backed away and rubbed the top of his head, and what
he said next was a rapid string of real, genuine German; exclamations,
compound tenses, and irregular verbs and all that makes German a useful,
forceful language. As long as he rubbed his head—with a rotary
motion—he spoke German; then he stopped rubbing and spoke English.</p>
<p>“So is it you treat your mayor!” he exclaimed indignantly. “Such a town is
Kilo, to give mayors a klop on the head! Donnerblitzenvetter! Not so is it
in Germany.” He turned to the crowd. “A klop on the head! It is not for
klops on the head that I am mayor. No. I resign out of this mayor
business. Go get another mayor, such as likes klops on the head. I am no
mayor. I am resigned.”</p>
<p>He turned and walked slowly back to his car, pulled the awl out of the
door, and went inside.</p>
<p>The editor moved away from the window. He seated himself at his desk and
leaned his head on his arms and thought.</p>
<p>“Headache?” asked Eliph'.</p>
<p>“No,” said the editor, lifting his head. “I'm trying to think this thing
out. Guthrie is in it, and Skinner must be in it, and Stitz. And that
fellow across the way said you knew something about it, and he said Doc
Weaver wrote the article. No,” he added hastily, as Eliph' offered to
speak, “let me think it out myself.”</p>
<p>He leaned his head on his hand, and gazed at the attorney's office. He
drew the week's copy of the TIMES toward him and read over the article
that had caused all the trouble.</p>
<p>“It might be that fire-extinguishers ordinance,” he said slowly. “Stitz
pushed that through. And Skinner had to buy them. And—they were
owned by Miss Briggs and the Colonel negotiated the sale.” He jumped up
and turned over the file of back numbers of the TIMES. He found the
announcement he had made of the arrival of Eliph', and the report of the
meeting of the city council that had passed the fire-extinguishers
ordinance. Eliph' had been in town before the ordinance had passed. Eliph'
boarded now with Doc Weaver. Again he read the article in the TIMES,
seeking for the meanings that Doc knew so well how to hide. He paused at
the “Things are seldom what they seem” lines, and considered it. Suddenly
he arose and put on his hat.</p>
<p>“Wait here,” he said, “I'll be back.”</p>
<p>When he returned he was smiling. He had visited Skinner's Opera House and
had examined the fire-extinguishers where they sat, each on its bracket.</p>
<p>“Hewlitt,” he said, “when you told Doc about the fire-extinguishers did
you tell him they were lung-testers?”</p>
<p>The little book agent stared at the editor.</p>
<p>“I never told,” he exclaimed. “I have never said a word to Doc Weaver, nor
to anyone about them. Not a word. I have kept it as sacred as the secret
of the Man in the Iron Mask, a full account of whom, together with a wood
cut, is given on page 231, together with 'All the World's Famous
Mysteries,' this being but one feature of Jarby's——”</p>
<p>“All right,” said the editor. “And you never told him about the graft?”</p>
<p>The blank amazement on the book agent's face was sufficient answer.</p>
<p>“I've got to go out,” said the editor. “I've got some reporting to do.
You'll excuse me. I want to see Stitz. And Skinner. And Guthrie. I wish
Doc hadn't gone to his State Medical Society meeting to-day.”</p>
<p>Eliph' went out with the editor, who locked the door behind him.</p>
<p>“Don't say anything,” said the editor, “but I think there will be an extra
edition of the TIMES out to-morrow.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XV. Difficulties </h2>
<p>Eliph' had said nothing to Doc Weaver about the affair of the
fire-extinguishers, he had known nothing of the graft matter, and yet it
could not be supposed that Doc Weaver could be a confidant of the
attorney's. The editor was puzzled, but he was sure he was right in the
main, and he was nearer learning the truth than he supposed, as he hurried
down the street to the mayor's car-cobbler shop.</p>
<p>He opened the door and stepped inside, but the mayor did not look up with
his usual smile; he was sulking, and from time to time he rubbed his head
where the butcher had struck him.</p>
<p>“How do, Stitz,” said the editor. “How's the mayor?”</p>
<p>The cobbler pulled his waxed threads angrily through a tough bit of
leather, and did not look up.</p>
<p>“I am no more a mayor,” he said crossly. “I am out of that mayor job. I
give him up. I haf been insulted.”</p>
<p>“I saw it,” the editor assured him. “He gave you a good whack. Sounded
like a wet plank falling on a marble slab. Mad about the
fire-extinguishers business, wasn't he?”</p>
<p>“And why?” asked the mayor, looking up for the first time, “he has a right
to obey those ordinances and not get mad.”</p>
<p>“Oh, but he don't like the way folks will laugh at him when they learn the
joke you have played on him. That was a good one.”</p>
<p>“Joke?” queried the mayor, growing brighter. “Did I play him one joke?”</p>
<p>“You know,” said T. J. “Making him buy those lung-testers of Miss Briggs'
when he thought they were fire-extinguishers. I should say it WAS a joke!”</p>
<p>“Sit down,” said the mayor; “don't hang on those straps when seats is
enough and plenty. Sit down. So I joked him, yes?”</p>
<p>“Rather,” said the editor, “and Guthrie, too, making him pay that graft.”</p>
<p>“Sure!” grinned the cobbler. “I got goot grafts. Apples, and potatoes, and
celery, and peas, and chickens! Five grafts for one such little
ordinances. Grafts is a good business, but now is all over. I quit me that
boss-grafter job. I like me not such kloppings on the head. Next comes
such riots, and revolutionings. I quit first.” He sewed steadily for a
while then prepared another thread, waxing it, and twisting the bristle on
either end.</p>
<p>“That fire-extinguishers joke,” he said, as he ran the ball of wax up and
down the thread; “that was a good one, yes? On Skinner. That makes me a
revenge on Skinner for such a klop on the head, yes?”</p>
<p>He adjusted the shoe on his knee, and began to sew again.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he said, “I am glad I make that joke on Skinner. What was it?”</p>
<p>“Come now!” said T. J. “Don't pretend such innocence, Stitz. Don't try to
fool ME. You knew all the time that those fire-extinguishers were nothing
but lung-testers.” The mayor looked puzzled, and properly, for he had
never heard of lung-testers. “To test lungs,” explained the editor. “To
show how many pounds a man can blow; how much wind his lungs will hold; a
sort of game, like pitching horseshoes. They are not worth anything to
Skinner. He paid his money for them for nothing. He will have to buy four
genuine fire-extinguishers now. That was what made him mad at you.”</p>
<p>When the editor left Stitz's car he had learned all the mayor could tell
him, including the undoubted fact that the mayor considered graft a quite
legitimate operation, and this particular case a good joke on Skinner and
Colonel Guthrie, and that the mayor himself, thinking the joke too good to
keep, had told Doc Weaver. The editor easily guessed that Doc had
investigated the rest of the affair, and had seen the fire-extinguishers
and known them to be not what they seemed. He hurried back to his office
to set in type what he had learned.</p>
<p>But others were abroad, too. Attorney Toole, watching the editor, had seen
him enter the cobbler-car and leave it again, and he easily guessed the
object of the editor's visit. He, too, went to see Stitz, and had a long
and confidential talk with him, first frightening him until he was in a
collapse, and then offering him immunity and safety, and at length leaving
him in a perspiration of gratitude. He held up to him a vision of the
penitentiary as the reward of grafting, and when the mayor was
sufficiently wilted, rebraced him by promising to defend him, whatever
happened, and finally restored him to complacency by showing him that the
transaction was not graft at all. When he parted from the mayor, that
official was, as opposition papers put it, “a creature of the attorney's.”</p>
<p>The attorney found Skinner in his butcher-shop surrounded by a group of
friends, to whom he was relating a story of how he had been attacked by
the Colonel, and what would have happened to the Colonel if intervention
had not come just when it did. Toole entered briskly and pushed his way
through the group to where the butcher stood.</p>
<p>“Skinner,” he said, “I want half a dozen words with you, at once,” and his
manner was enough to silence the butcher. Skinner led the way to the back
room where the sausage machine made its home, and Toole carefully closed
the door.</p>
<p>“Now,” he said, taking the butcher by the shirtsleeve,” you have had a
taste of what comes of taking the political lead away from the party to
which it rightly belongs. You have had an experience of what happens when
people who know nothing about politics meddle with thing that the natural
political leaders should be left to handle. You have been choked, and you
have been cheated, and you deserve to be kicked. You pay money to this
editor here in town, for an advertisement that you know does you no good,
and in return he prints an article to make you laughed at. You form a
combination with Guthrie to put in outsiders instead of good party men,
and Guthrie uses his pull to have an ordinance passed to make you spend
money for fire-extinguishers. You elect a mayor, by your influence as a
leading citizen, and he takes a bribe from Guthrie, and passes an
ordinance to rob you. And you, like a fool, let him do it. And you let
Guthrie, that he may stand in solidly with the very woman you have your
eye on, sell you—what? Fire-extinguishers? Not much! Not
fire-extinguishers at all, but useless, no-account lung-testers!
Lung-testers, that he makes you pay one hundred dollars for, and that you
will have to throw away. That is what they are, lung-testers, and you can
pocket a loss of one hundred dollars, and buy four real fire-extinguishers
now, as the ordinance tells you, and makes you!”</p>
<p>The butcher's mouth opened and his eyes stared. He felt weakly behind him
for the edge of the table, pawing uncertainly in the air.</p>
<p>“That's all I have to say to YOU,” said the attorney. “If you like that
kind of thing, you are welcome. If you are willing to be cheated it is
nothing to me. I don't say T. J. Jones set them up to doing all this, just
to throw down your Citizen's Party, but you can see in the TIMES who
printed the whole thing. If you like to have that kind of man run your
only public journal it is no business of mine, but look out for the next
TIMES!”</p>
<p>The butcher had found the edge of the table and was leaning back against
it. The attorney paused with his hand on the door.</p>
<p>“You ought to be able to make the Colonel pay you back that hundred
dollars,” he said. “It looks as if he had obtained money under false
pretenses and given a bribe. But if you don't care, I don't,” and he went
out.</p>
<p>Outside of the butcher shop the attorney stopped and looked up and down
the street, smiling. He felt that he had done well, so far, setting both
the mayor and Skinner against the editor, making a tool of the mayor, and
inflaming the butcher against the Colonel. He would have liked to go to
the Colonel and set him against the editor and Skinner, but he neither
dared nor felt it really necessary. If Skinner attempted to make the
Colonel take back the lung-testers the ill feeling between the two would
be sufficiently emphasized, and no doubt the Colonel had sufficient
reason, in the publication of the article, to hate the editor.</p>
<p>Horsewhipped! His face reddened as he thought of it, but he was too polite
to consider a revenge of fists, which would not lessen the insult of the
whipping he had received, but would only add the stigma of attacking an
older man. That he had led the Colonel into the affair, putting him up to
it, did not strike him as being any excuse for the Colonel. He felt that
he had done only what he was entitled to do in the pursuit of political
leadership. He would revenge himself on the Colonel later. A suit for
damages for assault, timed to precede the next election, would be both
revenge and politics. He could, at the moment, think of nothing else to do
to undermine his opponents, and he had turned toward his office when a
fresh idea occurred to him. Should Miss Sally take back the lung-testers,
where then would his case stand? Guthrie would return the hundred dollars
to Skinner. Skinner was fool enough to be satisfied with that, and Kilo,
like many other towns, not wishing to besmirch herself, would hush up the
whole affair. Miss Sally must not take back the lung-testers.</p>
<p>The attorney swung around and walked briskly toward Miss Sally's home,
tossing tumultuously in his mind the events of the day, his plans and what
he would say to Miss Sally. As he turned in at the gate he saw Mrs. Smith
and Susan sitting on the porch, and he took off his hat, and walked
smilingly up to them.</p>
<p>“Miss Sally in?” he asked, after the customary greetings. “I would like to
speak to her if she is.”</p>
<p>“She's in” said Mrs. Smith, “but she is engaged at present. Won't you have
a seat and wait?”</p>
<p>Toole passed rapidly through his mind all those who might have business
with Miss Sally this morning—the Colonel, Skinner, the editor. It
could not be Skinner, for he had just left him, nor the editor, for he
knew he was still in his office where he had seen him last. Probably it
was the Colonel. He took the proffered seat.</p>
<p>“I suppose you saw the TIMES,” he said, “and that tremendous article. It
amused me considerably. Splendid specimen of local journalism. Our friend
T. J. is to be congratulated, isn't he? He has made quite a stir.”</p>
<p>“The Colonel was here with a paper,” said Mrs. Smith. “He was furiously
angry. I couldn't understand what it was all about, except that it was
connected with those fire-extinguishers Miss Sally had.”</p>
<p>“It was about the meanest piece of business I have ever run across,” said
the attorney, speaking more to Susan than to Mrs. Smith. “It was the most
vindictive thing I ever heard of. Do you know any reason why that editor
should want to annoy Miss Briggs?”</p>
<p>“Mr. Jones annoy Miss Sally?” said Susan, with surprise. “I can't imagine
why he should.”</p>
<p>“That's what puzzles me,” said Toole. “There doesn't seem to be any reason
whatever, except that he is showing his ill-will. It looks like a
conspiracy to throw those fire-extinguishers back on Miss Sally's hands.
Probably he has taken an agency for fire-extinguishers, or had made a deal
to take some in payment for advertising space in his paper, and wants to
sell them to Skinner. I understand there is some cock-and-bull story he
has got up about these fire-extinguishers being out-of-date, or useless,
or something of that kind, and that he means to make a big stir about the
council having been bribed to force them on Skinner. I suppose Jones will
get something out of it, someway. I understand he means to keep the thing
alive in his paper, and throw ridicule on all concerned, until he forces
things his way. Probably he has some political object, too. But I think it
is bad that he should drag Miss Sally into it. I don't mind his trying to
throw mud on me. I can see his reason for that.”</p>
<p>He looked at Susan and smiled.</p>
<p>“I don't understand,” said Mrs. Smith, “I couldn't see that he said
anything about you this morning.”</p>
<p>“Not this morning,” said the attorney. “There will be more to follow. Wait
until you see the next issue of the representative of a free and
untrammeled press. He will serve up all his friends there. I saw him
darting around like a hawk-eyed reporter this morning. I went up to plead
with him to drop the whole thing, this morning, but he as much as told me
to mind my own business. The poor old Colonel was so angry he came at me
with a whip—I don't know why—but I did not take the advantage
my strength gave me. I can forgive a man who is anger blinded. All I want
to do now is to prevent that editor fellow making any more trouble for my
friends, if I can. I don't want Miss Sally to TAKE back those
fire-extinguishers, and I don't want her to be blackmailed into BUYING
them back. I want to put her on her guard against T. J. Jones.”</p>
<p>“This is very kind of you,” said Mrs. Smith.</p>
<p>“She is a friend of yours, and of Miss Susan's,” said the attorney. “That
would be reason enough for my doing it.”</p>
<p>The door opened and Eliph' Hewlitt came out of the house, and Toole, who
had jumped up, in order to be on the defensive had it been the Colonel,
assumed an air of indifference. The book agent hesitated uncertainly,
glanced toward Mrs. Smith, felt under his left arm where his sample copy
usually reposed, and, not finding it, put on his hat and walked toward the
gate. Mrs. Smith sprang from her chair and ran after him. She caught him
at the gate and laid her hand on his arm. He turned to face her, and she
saw that there were tears in his usually clear eyes. He had put the
question to Miss Sally, and the answer had been unfavorable.</p>
<p>The interview had been short and conducted with the utmost propriety, as
advised by “Courtship—How to Win the Affections,” and Miss Sally had
been kind but firm. The article in the TIMES had, far from turning her
against the Colonel, shown her what the Colonel has risked for her sake,
and she had decided in his favor, although he had not yet appeared to
claim an answer to the question he had never asked, but had been hinting
for years.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XVI. Two Lovers, and a Third </h2>
<p>The attorney, when Eliph' walked down the path to the gate, entered the
house, and found Miss Sally still sitting in the dark parlor where she had
had the painful interview with Eliph' Hewlitt. She still held her
handkerchief to her eyes, for she had been weeping, and the attorney was
not sorry to see this evidence of the stress of her interview with the
book agent. Certain that Eliph' had told Doc Weaver of the lung-testers,
he was no less certain that the book agent had been telling Miss Sally
that the nickel-plated affairs would be thrown back on her hands, and he
hastened to urge resistance.</p>
<p>“Miss Briggs,” he said, “I came right in, because I knew what that book
agent was here to say to you, and I wanted to warn you against him. I know
what he asked, and I hope you refuse him.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally gasped.</p>
<p>“I believe,” continued the attorney, taking a seat, “that you refused,
because you know which side your bread is buttered on. I believe that
before the day is over Colonel Guthrie will come with the same question,
and I want you to give him the same answer. And if Skinner should come on
his knees, I want you to send him away with the same answer, too. They
will all have arguments enough, but don't be fooled. They money is all
they want.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally gasped again. She was astounded.</p>
<p>“I could see,” said the attorney, confidentially, “that you have the book
agent a pretty sharp answer, and that was right. He had no business to put
himself forward at all, and I don't suppose you can guess why he did.”</p>
<p>“He said he liked me,” said Miss Sally weakly, ashamed to mention the word
openly. The attorney laughed.</p>
<p>“My opinion is that it is an conspiracy,” he said. “That is just the word,
a conspiracy, and T. J. Jones is at the head of it. The book agent has
come first; now the Colonel will come; and then Skinner, all asking the
same thing, but my idea is that they are all in partnership, and that
Jones is engineering the whole thing. They want your money, and that is
all they want, and once they get it they will be happy and you will be
left with four lung-testers on your hands.”</p>
<p>Even in Kilo slang comes and goes as in the rest of the world and Miss
Sally was not sure about the word “lung-tester.” It had a slangy sound,
and it must be a term of reproach applied to the future value of the four
men Toole had mentioned. She accepted it as such.</p>
<p>“All I have to say,” continued the attorney, “is to refuse the Colonel,
and to refuse Skinner if he comes, just as you have refused this book
agent. Stick up for your rights. If they want to sue you, let them sue.
You have the money now, and it is better to have that than a lot of
good-for-nothing lung-testers. Once you get them on your hands you'll
never get rid of them.”</p>
<p>He arose and took up his hat.</p>
<p>“That is all I have to say,” he said, “but I wanted to let you know what
you ought to do. Don't mind if there is a lot of stuff published in the
TIMES. You have to expect that, and Jones will probably drag your name
into it, in connection with the Colonel and Skinner, but you are perfectly
innocent and they can do nothing to you.”</p>
<p>He went out, and Miss Sally remained in a daze, looking at the door by
which he had gone. She was still looking at it helplessly when Mrs.
Tarbro-Smith came in with a swish of skirts and put her arm gently about
her.</p>
<p>“DO you think you did what your heart told you to do, dear?” asked the
lady from New York, kissing Miss Sally on the brow. “He was SO downcast. I
really pitied him, poor man.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally threw her arms around Mrs. Smith's waist and hit her face in
the lacy softness of her gown, and wept. The authoress smoothed the brown
hair and waited patiently for the tears to cease.</p>
<p>“Did you see Mr. Toole?” she asked brightly, to ease Miss Sally's weeping
and to turn her thought to other things. “He wanted to see you about those
fire-extinguishers. But I don't trust him. I think he has some plan or
other that is selfish. I think he had been drinking.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally's tears ceased, and she sat up, straight and severe.</p>
<p>“Fire-extinguishers?” she asked quickly.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Mrs. Smith; “he seemed to think Skinner or the Colonel or
someone would want you to take them back. And return the money, I
suppose.”</p>
<p>“The money?” echoed Miss Sally slowly. She blushed as she saw that she had
misunderstood the attorney, thinking he had dared to advise in her love
matters, and then she frowned. “The money?” she repeated. “But I gave that
money to pa. Pa won't ever give that money back, never! I don't know where
on earth I'd ever get sixty dollars.”</p>
<p>As she spoke she heard someone on the walk, and then the heavy feet of the
Colonel climbing the porch steps. She heard him ask Susan if Miss Sally
was inside, and heard the girl answer that she was, and she held Mrs.
Smith's hand tighter.</p>
<p>“Come in,” she called, to the knock on the door, and the Colonel stumped
into the room. He was hot and angry, so angry that he did not stop to
offer his usual curt greetings.</p>
<p>“Look here,” he said, by way of introduction, “you an' your
fire-extinguishers has got me into a purty fix, Sally Briggs—a blame
purty fix-an' I want to know do you intend to git me out or not? I don't
want no foolishness. Skinner is after me an' I've got to pay him back them
sixty dollars, or somebody'll go to jail for it. You ought to have knowed
them wasn't nothin' but lung-testers, afore you set me up to sellin' 'em
to Skinner, an' not let me go an' make a 'tarnal fool out of myself. But
that ain't the thing now; the thing is, will you pay back them sixty
dollars? I guess you'd better do it, an' do it quick. Skinner'll have the
law on ye if ye don't.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally drew back toward Mrs. Smith as he scowled at her.</p>
<p>“Now, you git them sixty dollars an' hand 'em over to me, that's what
you'd better do,” said the Colonel. “I want to git shut of this business.
I was a fool fer meddlin' in a woman's affairs in the fust place. I don't
want to have no more hand in it. You git me that money, an' let me fix it
up with Skinner. He's mad, an' he won't stand no foolin'. It was all I
could do to keep him from comin' in an' makin' a row right here in the
house. He's waitin' at the gate till he sees if I git the money, an' if I
don't——”</p>
<p>“But I haven't got sixty dollars,” Miss Sally gasped. “I gave that money
to pa. I don't know whether I can GET sixty dollars out of pa.”</p>
<p>She was so helpless that Mrs. Smith's blood boiled at the rude brutality
of the Colonel, and she stepped forward and faced him.</p>
<p>“What is all this about?” she asked. “What is the matter with those
fire-extinguishers? Why do you come bothering Miss Sally this way? Why
don't you settle it with Mr. Skinner yourself?”</p>
<p>“The matter is, them ain't fire-extinguishers at all,” said the Colonel
rudely, “an' wasn't, an' never was. Them things is lung-testers, an' Sally
was cheatin' Skinner when she sold 'em to him. An' the reason I'm
botherin' her is that she got the money fer 'em, an' she's got to find it
somehow an' pay it back. An' as for me settlin' with Skinner, I ain't got
nothin' to do with it. I wasn't nothin' but Sally's agent. I done her a
favor, an' that's all, an' I'm sorry I ever meddled in it.”</p>
<p>“But there certainly can't be such haste needed,” said Mrs. Smith. “Miss
Sally is not going to run away. Mr. Skinner is not going to fail for want
of sixty dollars, is he? You can wait until to-morrow, or to-night, when
Miss Sally can see her father.”</p>
<p>“No, I can't,” said the Colonel doggedly. “I can't wait at all. By
to-morrow mornin' that newspaper feller will have another paper printed
up, an' I hear tell he's goin' to give us all plain names, an' I ain't
goin' to wait. I want to git this thing fixed up right now. If Sally ain't
got sixty dollars, let her go borry it. I got to pay Skinner right now,
an' I want Sally to pay me. I want to git shut of this.”</p>
<p>“I don't believe Mr. Skinner is in any such hurry as you pretend!”
exclaimed Mrs. Smith. “I don't believe he is so ungenerous. I believe he
is more chivalrous, I believe HE will have some manliness, if you have
not.”</p>
<p>She started for the door, but the Colonel grasped her by the arm.</p>
<p>“Hold on, here!” he said, but Mrs. Tarbro-Smith merely raised her eyebrows
and looked, first at his hand on her arm, and then at his face, and his
hand fell. He stood irresolute and uncomfortable as she went to the door
and called to Mr. Skinner. The butcher walked up to the door, clearing his
throat as he came. Mrs. Smith held the screen door wide for him to enter,
and he walked into the parlor, holding his hat in his hands, and stood
uneasily.</p>
<p>“The Colonel,” said Mrs. Smith pleasantly, “has told us you wish Miss
Sally to return the money you paid for what she supposed were
fire-extinguishers.”</p>
<p>“They was nothin' but lung-testers,” said the butcher.</p>
<p>“So it seems,” said Mrs. Smith, “and it is odd that a man of business like
yourself should not know it in the first place. But of course Miss Sally
did not know what they were. Who told you they were fire-extinguishers,
Sally?”</p>
<p>“The Colonel,” said Miss Sally, and the Colonel moved his feet uneasily.</p>
<p>“Indeed!” exclaimed Mrs. Smith, giving the Colonel another of her
paralyzing glances. “But Miss Sally will do whatever is right. She hasn't
the money at this moment. You can wait until to-morrow for the sixty
dollars, can you not, until she can see her father?”</p>
<p>The butcher grew red in the face, redder than his naturally high coloring,
but he shook his head.</p>
<p>“I want it now,” he said. “Business is business.” And after a moment he
added, “It wasn't sixty, it was one hundred. Four at twenty-five, that's
one hundred. One hundred dollars, that was what I handed Guthrie. I paid
one hundred and I want one hundred back.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally and Mrs. Smith looked at the Colonel.</p>
<p>“I had a right to make a commission,” he blustered. “I ain't no sich fool
as to do business fer other folks an' lose time by it. I took out a
commission, an' I had a right to, an' I don't want to hear no more about
it. A commission's fair.”</p>
<p>“You didn't say anything about it,” said poor Miss Sally. “Mrs. Smith was
just surprised to learn of it.”</p>
<p>“Surprised, my dear?” said Mrs. Smith, “No, indeed. Nothing that man would
do could quite surprise me. But forty percent commission! Miss Sally
hasn't sixty dollars in the house,” she added, turning to the butcher.
“You know very well people here don't have so much in the house at one
time. If I had it I would gladly lend it to her, but I don't happen to
have so much with me to-day. You can wait until Mr. Briggs gets back from
Clarence, or you can do what you please.”</p>
<p>“I want the money,” said Skinner doggedly.</p>
<p>“Very well,” said Mrs. Smith. “Collect forty from the Colonel. That will
keep you from starving until to-morrow. And now will you both kindly leave
the house?”</p>
<p>“Now, look here, Mrs. Smith, ma'm,” said the butcher. “You ain't got any
right to talk that way to me. Money matters is money matters, and a man
has a right to look after his own the best way he can. I was cheated out
of one hundred dollars by this man and Miss Sally, as easy as you please,
and there's bribery in it, and land knows what. But I ain't mean. All I
want is my money back, and I want it now. I hear T. J. Jones is going to
get out an extry to-morrow morning all about this, and all I want is to do
what is right. Hand me back my hundred dollars, and I'll go to T. J. and
explain that Miss Sally did what was right, and tell him to leave her out
of what he writes, but if I don't get the money I won't say a word to him.
He can guess all he wants about Miss Sally and the Colonel being in
cahoots with this bribe business. All I want is my money.”</p>
<p>“But I say you shall have it in the morning.”</p>
<p>“Well, I don't count much on what you'll get out of Pap Briggs. You might
get ten cents, if he was feeling liberal, but he don't usually feel that
way. What I want is one hundred dollars right now. I don't need no
lung-testers, and I've been cheated, and I won't wait. If Miss Sally ain't
going to pay me, I'll see what the law says about it.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Skinner,” said Mrs. Smith, “in consideration that Miss Sally is a
lady and that you are a gentleman, will you not wait till to-morrow?”</p>
<p>“Business is business,” he said flatly. “When I'm sellin' meat I ain't a
gentleman, I'm a butcher; and when Miss Briggs was sellin' lung-testers
she wasn't a lady, she was in business. Business is one thing an' bein'
pleasant is another. I've got to look after my money or I soon won't have
any.”</p>
<p>When the two men went out Mrs. Smith could hear them begin to wrangle even
before they quitted the yard, but she was more interested in what might
happen to Miss Sally through the vindictiveness of the butcher. She was
surprised to hear that T. J. Jones had even thought of such a thing as
bringing Miss Sally's name into the matter as a conspirator, and she did
not know enough about Iowa laws to know whether the butcher could take any
summary action or not. The most satisfactory way to straighten things out
would be to pay the butcher, but it must be done at once. She pleaded with
Miss Sally to remember someone of whom she could borrow sixty dollars, but
Miss Sally confessed that she knew no one who would be apt to lend so
much. She even expressed her doubt that her father would ever release the
money she had given him. The two women sat in the darkened parlor, Miss
Sally weeping softly and Mrs. Smith thinking hard. The authoress was
ashamed that she could devise no way to aid her friend, and there they
sat, exchanging a brief word from time to time, and the gloom deepening
every minute. Presently, when the atmosphere was so charged with sadness
that it was almost too thick to breathe, Mrs. Smith called to Susan, and
the girl came in.</p>
<p>“Sue,” said Mrs. Smith, “will you run down to the TIMES office and see Mr.
Jones? And—let me see—and tell him I very much want to see him
before he begins to print his extra. You won't mind, will you?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no,” said Susan cheerfully, and she went, a fairy in filmy white,
while the two women relapsed into gloom again.</p>
<p>So softly did the next comer mount the porch stairs that the two women did
not hear him until a gentle tap on the door frame, followed by an
apologetic cough, announced the return of Eliph' Hewlitt.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XVII. According to Jarby's </h2>
<p>When Eliph' Hewlitt, sad at heart, departed from his disastrous interview
with Miss Sally, he felt, for the first time in his life, a doubt as to
the infallibility of Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of
Literature, Science and Art. Here was a book he had praised, sold and
believed, and it had failed him. Here was a book that was proclaimed, in
the “Advice to Agents,” to be so simply written and so easy of
understanding that a child could follow its directions as well as a man,
and it had only led him to defeat. He had courted according to
“Courtship”; he had tried to win the affections according to “How to Win”
them, and instead of the “Yes” that Jarby's book led him to believe he
would receive, he had been given a “No.” This, then, was the book whose
success he had made his life work! Caesar, when he saw Brutus draw his
dagger, was wounded no more in spirit than Eliph' Hewlitt was now.</p>
<p>The world seemed to slip from beneath his feet; his firmest foundation
seemed to have crumbled away; his best friend seemed to have turned false.
As he walked toward Doc Weaver's house he decided what he would do: he
would go to his room and tear his sample copy of Jarby's Encyclopedia of
Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art to scraps and
throw them out upon the wind; he would write to Jarby & Goss and
resign his commission; he would have Irontail hitched to his buggy and
leave Kilo at once and forever, and from some other town he would write to
G. P. Hicks & Co., and solicit the agency for Hicks' Facts for the
Million, a book he had heretofore hated and despised. All this he resolved
to do, and yet here he was again at Miss Sally's door, and the sample copy
of Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science
and Art was under his arm!</p>
<p>Mrs. Tarbro-Smith, when she saw Eliph' Hewlitt at the door, uttered a
little cry of joy and darted toward him. She put her finger to her lips
and slipped out of the door and drew him to the seat that had once been a
church pew, but was now doing duty as a garden-seat under an apple tree in
the side yard. On Eliph's face was no longer the care-worn expression of
the rejected lover, but the full glow of confidence, radiating from
between his side-whiskers.</p>
<p>Mrs. Smith bent confidentially toward him, and laid one hand on the copy
of Jarby's, which he had placed across his knees. In quick, crowding words
she bade him hope—which wasn't necessary—and told him of the
coming of Guthrie and Skinner, and of their demands. She laid before him
all she knew of the affair of the fire-extinguishers, of the horror of the
threatened legal attack on Miss Sally, and the disgrace that would
overwhelm her should T. J. Jones publish an article mentioning her name.
Eliph' Hewlitt must prevent the publication of the article; he must save
Miss Sally.</p>
<p>The book agent was willing. As the appeal was spoken his eyes brightened
and the book agent instinct—the instinct that knows no defeat, but
will talk a book into any man's library, or die in the attempt—flowed
full and free through his soul. Mrs. Smith saw him take fire, and she
ventured the question she had been leading up to.</p>
<p>“Now, Mr. Hewlitt,” she said, “I have sent for Mr. Jones, and I will do
what I can to persuade him not to publish the article. I depend on you to
do what you can in that, too, but I am going to trespass on your good
nature in another thing also. It is something I know Miss Sally would
never allow me to ask, and I myself would not ask it but that I happen to
be waiting for a check from my publisher, and am quite out of funds at the
moment. I am going to ask you to lend me sixty dollars! Not for myself,
but to me. I believe Miss Sally would be willing to borrow it of me, and I
know, dear Mr. Hewlitt, you will be willing to lend it to me.”</p>
<p>Eliph' coughed softly behind his hand.</p>
<p>“Gladly!” he said. “Gladly any amount. I have quite a little money laid
away, quite a little; some thousands, in fact; I might be called a wealthy
man—in Kilo. And it would be a pleasure, a real pleasure, to spend
all for Miss Sally. She is a fine woman, Mrs. Smith. I admire her.”</p>
<p>“I knew I could depend on YOU,” said Mrs. Smith, putting her white hand on
his scarcely less white one.</p>
<p>“But I can appreciate Miss Sally's-ah-maidenly dislike, in fact, her quite
proper dislike of a loan from-ah-one who aspires—— In fact,”
he said, boldly breaking away from all attempt to speak bookishly, “from
me. She don't want to borrow from me, and it would be the same thing if
you borrowed for her from me. The same thing. I am courting Miss Sally,
and such a loan would be irregular. There is nothing, Mrs. Smith, in the
chapter on 'Courtship—How to Win the Affections,' et cetery, about
loaning money to the lady. It would derange the directions given in this
book, which is——”</p>
<p>“I don't want to hear about the book,” said Mrs. Smith with annoyance. “I
know all about the book. So you refuse to lend me sixty dollars? You, like
these other men, are willing to desert Miss Sally at a time like this?”</p>
<p>“No,” said the book agent. “Not desert. Rescue. Rescue her from the hands
of these—these men. Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium
of Literature, Science and Art should be in every home, in every store, in
every office. To be without it is to be like a rudderless air ship tossed
by the waves of the relentless ocean. It contains a fact for every day in
the year, for every moment of life, any one of which is worth the price of
the book many times over. This book,” he said—and then his eyes,
which had been gazing far into the sky over Miss Sally's house, returned
to the eyes of Mrs. Smith—“I am going to sell Mr. Skinner a copy of
this book.”</p>
<p>In spite of her disappointment in him, Mrs. Smith, the authoress, felt a
thrill of pleasure in the discovery of such an admirable type—a book
agent who could see in the midst of love, courtship, conspiracy and
trouble only his book and a chance to sell it. But she was deeply
disappointed.</p>
<p>“Then you desert Miss Sally,” she repeated sadly.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Smith.” Said Eliph', reaching into his pocket and laying a handful
of thick greasy manila envelopes in her lap, “these are my bank books.
Six, containing the sum of seventeen thousand four hundred and eighty-two
dollars and forty-six cents, and all this I lay at Miss Sally's feet if I
do not succeed in selling a copy of Jarby's Encyclopedia this afternoon.
If sold, the matter is settled.”</p>
<p>When Eliph' reached the business part of Main Street he turned into
Skinner's butcher shop and halted at the counter. The butcher was at work
in the back room, and he put his head out and, seeing who had called,
shook it.</p>
<p>“No books,” he said shortly. “I never buy books. I didn't buy them Sir
Walter Scotts even. No books.”</p>
<p>Eliph' coughed his deprecatory little cough and walked behind the counter
and to the door of the back room.</p>
<p>“So I understood,” he said. “I heard at Franklin that you didn't buy
books; it was mentioned to me that I would be wasting my time in calling
on you. They said you was known all over the State as not buying books,
and many admired your self-restraint in not buying. They said it was
wonderful. That's why I never called on you to buy. But I didn't come to
sell you a book. I wanted to ask if you knew William Rossiter?”</p>
<p>“William Rossiter?” asked Skinner, perplexed, coming out of the back room.
“Who's William Rossiter?”</p>
<p>Eliph' laid his book on the chopping block.</p>
<p>“William Rossiter, agent,” he said. “He was here once. He was the man that
stopped with Miss Sally Briggs a while. I thought maybe you knew him. He's
dead. I thought maybe you'd be interested to know it.”</p>
<p>A light dawned on the butcher. William Rossiter must have been the man
that left the lung-testers at Miss Sally's.</p>
<p>“I'm glad he's dead,” he said. “I don't know anybody I'd sooner have it
happen to.”</p>
<p>“Don't say that!” exclaimed Eliph'. “If you only knew how he died, poor
young man, you wouldn't say it. He burned to death.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said the butcher, “I don't know as I care how he died. I can't say
I'm sorry. I guess he cost me a hundred dollars. I've got to go to law for
it if I ever want to see it again. I guess he deserved to die, for the
trouble he has made in this town.”</p>
<p>Eliph' placed his hand on the sample copy of Jarby's.</p>
<p>“I will tell you how he died,” he said briskly.</p>
<p>“No, you won't,” said Skinner angrily, waving his hand toward the door;
“you won't tell me nothin'. I've heard of these stories of yours, I have.
You want to sell me one of them books, and you'll talk away at me about
this Rossiter feller, and the first thing I know you'll have me down for a
book. But you won't, for if you don't get right out of that door I'm goin'
to put you out.”</p>
<p>“All right,” said Eliph' cheerfully, picking up his book, “if that's the
way you feel about it I won't take up your time telling you about it I
won't take up your time telling you about Bill Rossiter. Only I thought
you'd like to know how it happened he was burned up in a theater when
there was two dozen as good fire-extinguishers, right at hand, as there is
in the world. But I won't intrude. I know myself too well, and I know I
might happen to get to talking books before I thought. You see,” he said,
as if apologizing for himself, “I can't forget how this book saved my
life, and might have saved the life of Bill Rossiter, too, if he had had a
copy, the price being only five dollars, bound in cloth, one dollar down
and one dollar a month until paid.”</p>
<p>“There,” said Skinner, as if Eliph' had offended him, “you are talkin'
books right now, like I said you would.”</p>
<p>“Was I?” asked Eliph'. “And all I started out to say was that I met Bill
Rossiter in St. Louis just after he had run away from here. He told me all
about it, and wept on my shoulder as he told me how it pained him to have
to skip that way. He said it wasn't as if he could have left Miss Briggs
anything that she could use, but-lung-testers! He asked me what a town
like Kilo could do with lung-testers, and he felt awful about it. Said he
couldn't bear to look at a lung-tester any more, they made him feel so
ashamed, and what made it all the worse was that he had to look at them
all day.”</p>
<p>“I should think they would,” said the butcher heartily. “It makes me sick
to see them. But why did he do it if he didn't like it?”</p>
<p>“I was just going to tell you that,” said Eliph', putting down his book
again. “You see, when he left here he went right to St. Louis, that being
where his home was, and that was how he happened to have lung-testers with
him when he was here. His father made them. That was his father's
business. He was in the lung-tester manufacturing business. So when Bill
Rossiter left here he went right home to his father, which was the wise
thing to do.”</p>
<p>“Went home to sponge on the old man, I suppose,” said Skinner.</p>
<p>“Just so,” agreed Eliph', “and that was how I happened to meet him. There
was a man there in St. Louis by the name of Hopper-Darius Hopper-and he
owned the Imperial Theater and Museum. He was an old friend of mine, and I
had sold him a copy of Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of
Literature, Science and Art away back in 1874, and as soon as he heard I
was stopping in St. Louis he sent around to the hotel and begged me to
come around to the museum and give readings out of Jarby's to the people
that come into the museum. He said that it would draw bigger crowds in a
cultured city like St. Louis than would come to see a two-headed calf or a
fat women's race, being a course of readings that would instruct,
entertain and please, and he asked me to name my own price.”</p>
<p>“I should call him a fool,” said Skinner scornfully.</p>
<p>“He wasn't,” said Eliph'. “It took splendid. But I wouldn't let him pay me
a cent. I said I considered it my sacred duty to make as many people as I
could love and know Jarby's, and that I was doing my best to better the
world that way, and was glad to do it free gratis, because in a big place
like St. Louis there were many that could not afford even the small price
of one dollar down and one dollar a month, which is all that is asked for
this splendid volume, containing all the wisdom of the world, from the
earliest days to the present time, neatly bound in cloth, and I felt I was
helping the cause of progress by reading them a few chapters. I began at
page one,” continued Eliph', opening the book in his hands, “skipping the
allegorical frontispiece in three colors, and the index in which ten
thousand——-”</p>
<p>“I thought you was goin' to tell me about William Rossiter,” said the
butcher suspiciously.</p>
<p>“So I am,” said Eliph'. “William Rossiter was on the third floor of the
Theater and Museum building, for that was the job his father hunted up for
him. William was in charge of the penny-in-the-slot machines of all kinds,
a full description of which will be found in this book under the head of
'Machines, Automatic,' including a description of how made, how to use and
how to repair. In fact, there is nothing in the way of information, from
how to tell the weight of a baby by measuring its waist, to the age, size
and history of the immortal pyramids of Egypt, one of the seven wonders of
the world, that this book does not contain. It interests alike the student
and the business man. And,” he continued quickly as Skinner was about to
interrupt him, “among the slot machines of which William Rossiter had
charge were twenty-four lung-testers.”</p>
<p>“Twenty-four!” exclaimed Skinner. “Them St. Louis folks must like to test
their lungs!”</p>
<p>“No,” said Eliph', “they don't, and that is what makes me feel so bad
about William Rossiter. The St Louis people didn't care for lung-testers
at all. They crowded pennies into all the other machines, but they would
just go up to the lung-testers and sort of sniff at them, and walk away
without trying them. So there those twenty-four lung-testers stood,
useless to man and beast, all in a row, doing nobody any good, and there I
was on the floor below reading out of a book that would have told Bill
Rossiter how to make those lung-testers worth their weight in gold, and
would have saved his life. And to think he could have bought this book for
the small nominal sum of——”</p>
<p>“You said that once,” said Skinner. “Five dollars; one dollar down, and
one dollar a month until paid.”</p>
<p>“Bound in cloth,” said Eliph'. “Seven fifty if in morocco leather. So at
the very minute that the fire broke out——”</p>
<p>“Fire!” said Skinner; “what fire? You didn't say anything about a fire.”</p>
<p>“The fire in the theater and museum,” said Eliph'. “It started right on
the stairs between the second and third floors, and the old building
flared up like dry paper. Two or three men that was trying the slot
machines saw the smoke and run for the lung-testers, thinking by the look
they were fire-extinguishers, which was the most natural mistake in the
world. The looks of them would fool anybody, but they were lung-testers,
and there that old building was, with twenty-four lung-testers in it, and
not one fire-extinguisher. After that fire they passed an ordinance
compelling every theater to have four fire-extinguishers.”</p>
<p>“And do they have them?” asked Skinner.</p>
<p>“Every first-class theater and opera house does, all over the United
States,” said Eliph'. “But the odd thing was that at the very moment the
fire broke out I had this book open at page 416, 'Fire—Its
Traditions—How to Make a Fire Without Matches—Fire Fighting—Fire
Extinguishers, How Made.' I was reading to those people how to make
fire-extinguishers at home out of common chemicals and any suitable
nickel-plated can, that would be as good as the best sold in any store,
and right as I read it I thought how easy it would be for any man or child
to turn those twenty-four useless lung-testers on the third floor into
first-class fire-extinguishers, by following the simple directions set
down on page 418, at a cost of only about twenty-six cents each——”</p>
<p>Skinner held out his hand for the book.</p>
<p>“Let me have a look at that book,” he said.</p>
<p>Eliph' picked up the book and tucked it under his arm.</p>
<p>“And at that minute came the cry of 'Fire!'” he said. “And I thought of
poor Bill Rossiter up there on the third floor, shut off from all hope of
rescue——-”</p>
<p>Skinner reached down to his cash drawer and pulled it open. He took out a
dollar bill and held it toward Eliph'. The book agent ignored it.</p>
<p>“Think of it,” he said. “Bill Rossiter on the third floor, burning up, and
me on the floor below with this book in my hand reading off of page 418
the names of the simple ingredients that would——”</p>
<p>“Mebby I might as well pay the whole five right now,” said Skinner, taking
four more dollars out of his drawer. “Could you leave that book with me?”</p>
<p>“I will, as a special favor,” said Eliph'.</p>
<p>“Well, say,” said Skinner, “I'll be mortally obliged to you if you will.
It will take a mighty load off of my mind.”</p>
<p>And when Eliph' left the butcher shop he had, for the first time in his
life, sold his sample copy.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XVIII. Another Trial </h2>
<p>When Eliph' stepped out of the butcher shop he saw T. J. Jones across the
street, returning from his interview with Mrs. Smith, and the book agent
hailed him and crossed the street. The editor wore a harassed look as
Eliph' stepped up to him, and it deepened when Eliph' asked him if he had
acceded to Mrs. Smith's request.</p>
<p>“Hewlitt,” he said, “I couldn't do it. I wanted to, but I couldn't. The
man was willing but the editor had to refuse. The press cannot sink the
public welfare to favor individuals; once the freedom of the press is lost
the nation relapses into sodden corruption. I told Mrs. Smith so. And
besides, I have the whole article in type, too. I like Mrs. Smith, and I
like Miss Sally, but the hissing cobra of corruption must be crunched
beneath the heel of a free and independent press. The TIMES must do its
duty, let the chips fall where they may.”</p>
<p>“'The pen is mightier than the sword,' page 233, Apt Quotations for All
Occasions,” said Eliph', “this being one of three thousand quotations,
arranged alphabetically according to subject, as 'Bird—in the hand,
Bird—of a feather, Bird—killing two with one stone,' et
cetery, including 'Leap—look before you,' and 'Sure—be sure
you're right, then go ahead.' What do you mean to print?”</p>
<p>The editor told him all he had been able to gather regarding the matter of
the fire-extinguishers, and as he talked Eliph' saw the butcher leave his
shop and enter the drug store—he was after chemicals. He turned to
the editor with fresh assurance.</p>
<p>“See page 88, 'Every Man his Own Lawyer,'” he said, “giving all that it is
necessary for any man to know regarding the laws of his native land,
including laws of business, how to draw up legal papers, what constitutes
libel, et cetery. This one division alone being worth the whole cost of
the book, showing among other things what a paper should print and what it
should not. Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of
Literature, Science and Art is a marvelous work, including as it does the
chapter on 'Fire—Its Traditions—How to Make a Fire Without
Matches—Fire Fighting—Fire Extinguishers, How Made,' et
cetery, containing directions by which man, woman or butcher can convert
lung-testers into approved fire-extinguishers at a cost of only twenty-six
cents. It is a good book. I just sold Mr. Skinner one.”</p>
<p>He watched the editor's face as the meaning of his words dawned on it, and
added:</p>
<p>“Miss Briggs has a copy, morocco binding, including among ten thousand and
one subjects 'What Constitutes Libel.'”</p>
<p>“Then those fire-extinguishers will be all right, after all?” said the
editor. “You want to look out how you trifle with the press. The press
never forgives nor forgets.”</p>
<p>“Those lung-testers, prepared according to Jarby's Encyclopedia of
Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art, would put out the
flames of the fiery furnace prepared for Shadrach, Meschach and Abednego,
mentioned in 'Bible Tales,' Condensed and Put into Words of One Syllable
for Children,' page 569, Jarby's Encyclopedia,” said Eliph' airily. “They
would satisfy an investigation committee of imps, or other experts.”</p>
<p>The editor thought for a minute and Eliph' looked at him and smiled,
gently combing his whiskers with his fingers.</p>
<p>“That's all right,” said the editor. “That lets Miss Sally out, and it may
satisfy Skinner, but it don't do away with the bribery. Mayor Stitz was
bribed and he admits it. He says he was, and he brags about it. Guthrie
bribed him, and I've got enough left to give Stitz and Guthrie a good
shot. I'll leave Skinner and Miss Briggs out, but I'll go for Stitz and
Guthrie. I'll show them that in Kilo the press is alert, wide awake, and
not to be trifled with. I'll teach them a lesson.”</p>
<p>“So do!” said Eliph'. “And make Miss Sally mad. And make Mrs. Smith mad.
And make Miss Susan mad. And me. So do, and have Tolle tell them that he
did not want you to print it, and that he went up and fought you to get
you not to print it. So do, and instead of having Miss Sally and Mrs.
Smith and me your friends, have us run you down to Susan. Instead of
having hit Toole by printing the thing sooner than he wanted, as you did,
print more, and do him a favor. Make him a favorite of Miss Sally's. So
do, if you want to. Or—have me go to Miss Susan and say you will not
relent but that there is one chance—that she shall plead with you
herself.”</p>
<p>He stepped back and looked at the hesitating Jones.</p>
<p>“Jones,” he said, “the way you are acting, the way you hesitate, would
tell anybody that you have not a copy of Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge
and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art, in your office. No man who
has read that book would lack wisdom, that work containing under one cover
all the wisdom I the world, price five dollars, two dollars off to the
press. Buy a copy and be sensible.”</p>
<p>Jones looked far down the street toward his office as if the matter he had
there standing in the galley was begging him not to desert it.</p>
<p>“Courtship—How to Make Love—How to Win the Affections—How
to Hold them When Won,” said Eliph'. “See Jarby's giving advice to those
in love, those wishing to win the affections, et cetery. 'If the object of
the affections can be placed in a position where she will be compelled to
ask a favor, the granting of it, however slight, will advance the cause of
the eager suitor.”</p>
<p>“I don't care!” said T. J. Jones suddenly. “I'd lose Skinner's ad if I
printed that article, and he pays cash.”</p>
<p>“Mine too,” said Eliph', “and I was just thinking of doubling it. Jarby's
deserves——”</p>
<p>“That's all right,” said the editor, with a sigh of relief. “You needn't
have Miss Susan come begging me. Just tell her I gave up printing the
article because you said she wouldn't like it.”</p>
<p>“Don't throw away a chance,” urged Eliph' putting a hand on the young
man's arm. “Be wise. Do as Jarby's says. Be urged. I followed Jarby's
advice.”</p>
<p>“Why are you—are you, too?” asked T. J., beaming upon him.</p>
<p>Eliph' coughed behind his hand.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he said, “Miss Briggs. I followed Jarby's advice—and won.”</p>
<p>“Congratulations!” said the editor. “Have it your own way then. I'll be at
Miss Sally's after supper, if Sue wants to coax.”</p>
<p>They parted, and as Eliph' walked happily toward his boarding house he did
not realize that he had not won, nor that his appeal had been rejected by
Miss Sally, for he had regained his faith in Jarby's and if he had not yet
won, he felt that he would, and that was the same thing.</p>
<p>After his supper Eliph' felt that the time had come to arrange things with
Miss Sally. There was no longer any cause for delay. He had arranged the
matter of the fire-extinguishers; he had settled the matter of the TIMES,
and he felt that Skinner and the Colonel must have hurt by their actions
their causes with Miss Sally. They had, indeed, far more than Eliph'
guessed. He repaired to his room and brushed his whiskers carefully. Never
had he appeared smarter than when he went out of the gateless opening in
Doc Weaver's fence, and turned his face toward Miss Sally's home.</p>
<p>His way led him past the mayor's little car, where Stitz was on his
platform smoking and evening pipe. The mayor halted him with a motion of
his pipe stem.</p>
<p>“Mister Hewlitt,” he said, “you know too that joke, yes? About those
lung-testers was not fire-extinguishers?”</p>
<p>“That's all right,” said Eliph', seeking to pass on, “It is all fixed up
now. They ARE fire-extinguishers.”</p>
<p>“Such a fool business on Skinner,” said the mayor with enjoyment. “And on
Stitz, too. I thinks me I am the boss grafter, and I ain't!”</p>
<p>He chuckled.</p>
<p>“No-o!” he said cheerfully. “But next times I makes no more such fool
mistakes; I make me a real boss grafter. I am now only a boss-fool, but
boss grafter. So says Attorney Toole. Money is grafts, and houses and lots
is grafts, and horses is grafts, and buggies, but,” and he paused
impressively, “apples isn't, and potatoes isn't, and peas isn't, and
chickens isn't. Nothing to eat is grafts. If it is to eat it is not
grafts. So says Attorney Toole. Things to eat is no more grafts as
lung-tester is fire-extingables. So says Toole. So nobody won't prosecute
me. I stick me to the mayor business yet a while. Klops on the head is
nothings much; all big men gets them. So says Attorney Toole.”</p>
<p>Skinner was locking his shop when Eliph' passed, and the stopped Eliph'
too.</p>
<p>“Works fine,” he said. “I tried a tomato canful on a bonfire in the back
yard, and it put it out like a wink. That's a great book; I'm glad you
spoke about it. I wish you'd told me about it sooner.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally was not on the porch when Eliph' arrived, for she was still in
the kitchen at the supper dishes, but Mrs. Smith and Susan were there, and
they greeted him eagerly. The little man smiled as he walked up to them,
and waved his hand in the air.</p>
<p>“You fixed it?” cried Mrs. Smith. “It is all right now?”</p>
<p>“Fixed from A to Z,” said Eliph', as he took a seat on the porch step.
“All right from the allegorical frontispiece in three colors to the back
page. Jarby's wins, and error don't. Miss Sally in?”</p>
<p>He heard the click of the dishes as Miss Sally laid them one by one on the
kitchen table, so he knew well she was in.</p>
<p>“It might relieve her mind if I told her,” he suggested, and Mrs. Smith
smiled and said it might.</p>
<p>“Go right in,” she said, and Eliph' did.</p>
<p>He went into the hall and coughed gently behind his hand, and Miss Sally
looked up. She wiped her hands hastily on her blue gingham apron, and came
into the hall.</p>
<p>“Jarby's fixed it,” he said, and rapidly related what he had done, with
illustrations in the way of quotations from the titles and sub-titles of
Jarby's. “When you have a moment to spare,” he added, “I would like to
speak to you. I want to tell you something about Jarby's Encyclopedia of
Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art, a copy of which I
see lying on your parlor table, forming an adornment to the home both
useful and helpful.”</p>
<p>“Well, I don't want no books,” said Miss Sally, “I've got one copy, and
that ought to be enough to adorn any home. And I've got to get these
dishes washed sometime. I've let the fire go out, and the water will be
cold. If there's anything important you want to say about that book, you
can go out and wait till I get the dishes done.”</p>
<p>“It's about how to get the best use out of it,” said Eliph'. “I'll go out
and wait. It's something everybody that has a copy ought to know.”</p>
<p>He went out as she said, and found Susan alone on the porch. Mrs. Smith
was at the gate, and he could see her white dress in the evening darkness.
Susan sat with a knitted shawl about her shoulders, for the evening were
already growing chill, so long had Eliph's courtship lengthened out. He
could not have had a better opportunity to speak to Susan alone, and he
warned her of the “piece” T. J. had threatened to publish in the morning,
and of the disgrace and sorrow it would bring to Miss Sally. The girl
listened eagerly and her indignation grew as he went on, so that he had to
veer, and expatiate on the virtues of T. J. and the right of the modern
press to meddle in private affairs when it wants to.</p>
<p>“And can't anything be done?” asked Susan. “Why don't somebody do
something? I didn't think Thomas was like that.”</p>
<p>“He isn't,” admitted Eliph' heartily. “But he needs coaxing. If you were
to coax him he might see how wrong he is. I shouldn't wonder if he would
come up here to-night, looking for me, being interested in Jarby's
Encyclopedia and anxious to get a copy at the reduced price of two dollars
off, offered to the press only. If he does, try to move him.”</p>
<p>“I will,” said Susan. “And if he publishes that piece, I'll never speak to
him again.”</p>
<p>Eliph' was still sitting there when T. J. came, and when Susan proposed a
walk down to the corner he knew that it would be all right with T. J.
Jones. A light coming suddenly over his shoulder from the parlor behind
him told him that Miss Sally was ready to receive him, and he took his hat
and went into the house.</p>
<p>Miss Sally was sitting in the rocker with the cross-stitch cover, and
Eliph' took a seat at the opposite side of the center-table and lifted the
morocco bound copy of Jarby's from its place beside the shell box. The
kerosene lamp glowed between them, and he drew closer to the table and
laid the book gently on his knees. Miss Sally sat straight upright in her
chair and looked at the little book agent.</p>
<p>“This book,” he said, looking up at her with eyes in which kindness and
business mingled, “although sold, in this handsome binding, for seven
fifty, is worth, to one who understands it, its weight in gold. It holds a
help for every hour and a hint for every minute of the day. It furnishes
wisdom for a lifetime. I read it and study it; for every difficulty of my
life it furnishes a solution. Corns? It tells how to cure them. Food? It
tells how to cook it. Love? It tells how to make it. But,” he said, laying
his hand affectionately on the morocco cover, “to be understood it must be
read. To read it well is to admire and cherish it, and yet, only this
morning I was about to tear my copy of this priceless volume to pieces and
scatter it to the four winds of heaven.”</p>
<p>He paused to let this awful fact sink into Miss Sally's mind.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he continued, “I was about to turn away from the best friend I have
in the world and declare to one and all that Jarby's Encyclopedia of
Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art was a fraud! When
I left your home yesterday, I was full of anger. I was mad at Jarby's
Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science and Art. I
had trusted to its words and directions, as set forth in, Courtship—How
to Make Love—How to Win the Affections—How to Hold Them When
Won, and you sent me away. I went away a different man than I had come,
and resolved to go away from Kilo, and never to sell another copy of this
book. I resolved to take the sale of 'Hicks' Facts for the Million,' a
book, although greater in cost, containing by actual count sixteen
thousand less words than this.</p>
<p>“I went to my room at Doc Weaver's,” he continued, “and seized my copy of
this work from where it lay on my bureau. I called it names. I told it it
was a cheat and a liar. Yes, Miss Sally, I let my angry passions rise
against this poor, innocent book. I believed it had advised me falsely. I
had trusted to its words and had done as it said to do, and you had sent
me away, not in anger, but in sorrow, but just as much away. I picked up
the book and opened it, grasping it in two hands to tear it asunder.”</p>
<p>He opened the book and showed her how he had grasped it.</p>
<p>“I pulled it to tear it in two,” he said, raising the book and pulling it
in the direction of asunder, “but it would not rip. It was bound too well,
the copies bound in cloth at five dollars, one dollar down and one dollar
a month until paid, being bound as firmly as the more expensive copies at
seven fifty. I pulled harder and the book came level with my nose. I saw
it had opened at 'Courtship—How to Make Love,' and I said, 'While I
am getting my breath to give this book another pull, why not read the lie
that is written here once more? It will give me strength to rend it
asunder.' So I read it.”</p>
<p>He looked at Miss Sally and saw that she was showing no signs of being
bored.</p>
<p>“I held the book like this,” he said, showing how he held it, “and read.
All that it said to do I had done and my anger grew stronger. But I turned
the page! I saw the words I had not seen before; words that told me I had
tried to tear my best friend to pieces. I sand into a chair trembling like
a leaf. I felt like a man jerked back from the edges of Niagara Falls, a
full description and picture of that wonder of nature being given in this
book among other natural masterpieces. I weakly lifted the book back again
and read those golden words.”</p>
<p>“What was it?” asked Miss Sally, leaning forward.</p>
<p>“'Courtship—How to Make Love—How to Win the Affections—How
to Hold Them When Won.'” said Eliph', turning to the proper page. “And the
words I read were these: 'The lover should not be utterly cast down if he
be refused upon first appealing for the dear one's hand. A first refusal
often means little or nothing. A lady frequently uses this means to test
the reality of the passion the lover has professed, and in such a case a
refusal is often a most hopeful sign. Unless the refusal has been
accompanied by very evident signs of dislike, the lover should try again.
If at the third trial the fair one still denies his suit, he had better
seek elsewhere for happiness, but until the third test he should not be
discouraged. The first refusal may be but the proof of a finer mind than
common in the lady.'”</p>
<p>Eliph' removed his spectacles and laid them carefully in the pages of the
book which he closed and placed gently on the center-table.</p>
<p>“Having read that,” he said, “I saw that I had done this work a wrong. I
had read it hastily and had missed the most important words. I felt the
joy of life returning to me. I remembered that you were a lady of finer
mind than common, and I understood why you had refused me. I resolved to
stay in Kilo and justify Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium
of Literature, Science and Art by giving it another trial. And now,” he
said, placing his hand on the book where it lay on the table and leaning
forward to gaze more closely into Miss Sally's face, while she faced him
with a quickened pulse, and a blush, “now, I want to ask you again, WILL
you put your name down for a copy of this work——” He stopped
appalled at what he had said, and stared at Miss Sally for one moment
foolishly, while over her face spread not a frown of anger or contempt,
but a pleasant smile of friendly amusement.</p>
<p>“Not the book,” he said, “but me.”</p>
<p>Miss Sally looked at the eager eyes that were not only serious, but
sincere and kind.</p>
<p>“Well, Mister Hewlitt,” she said, “I guess I'll have to marry someone some
time so I might as well marry you as anybody. But I don't think pa will
ever give consent to havin' a book agent in the family. He hates book
agents worse than I used to.”</p>
<p>“You don't any more,” said Eliph', putting his hand very far across the
table.</p>
<p>“Well, no, I don't,” said Miss Sally graciously, “not all of 'em.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XIX. Pap Briggs' Hen Food </h2>
<p>The doubt that Miss Sally had expressed regarding Pap Briggs' acceptance
of Eliph' Hewlitt as a son-in-law was mild compared with the fact. When
the old man returned the next day from his farm at Clarence and learned
from Miss Sally that she had promised to marry the book agent he was
furiously angry. For two whole days he refused to wear his store teeth at
all, and when he recovered from his first height of anger it was to settle
down into a hard and fast negative. He went about town telling anyone that
would listen to him that there ought to be licenses against book agents,
and once having made up his mind that Miss Sally should not marry Eliph'
as long as he remained alive to prevent it, not even the friendly
approaches of the book agent could move him from his stubborn resolution.
Miss Sally would not think of marrying while her father was in such a
state of opposition, and indeed, Eliph' did not urge it. He had no desire
to defy his father-in-law, and he unwillingly but kindly agreed to wait.</p>
<p>In this way the autumn faded into winter. Mrs. Tarbro-Smith returned to
New York with a note-book full of dialect and a head full of local color
and types, and if she took Susan with her it was only because she agreed
to bring her back in June, when T. J. Jones was to marry her. Miss Sally
lived on with her father, attending to his wants, which were few and
simple. An egg for breakfast, and enough tobacco to burn all day were his
chief earthly desires, eggs because he could eat them in comfort, and
tobacco because he liked it.</p>
<p>When Miss Sally had moved to town there was one thing she had said her
father SHOULDN'T do, after living all his life on a farm, and that was,
have store eggs for his breakfast.</p>
<p>“Hens is trouble enough, Lord knows,” said Miss Sally, “an' dirty, if they
can't be kep' in their place; but there's some comfort in their cluckin'
round, and I guess I'll have plenty of time, and to spare to tend to 'em;
so, Pap, you won't have to eat no stale eggs for breakfast, if I kin help
it. They ain't nothing' I hate to think on like boughten eggs. Nobody
knows how old they are, nor who's been a-handlin' them; and eat boughten
eggs you shan't do, sure's my name's Briggs!”</p>
<p>So Sally brought half a dozen hens and a gallant rooster to town with her,
and supervised the erection of a cozy coop and hen-yard, and Pap had the
comfort of knowing his eggs were fresh. But fresh or not, it made no
difference to him so long as he had one each morning, and it was fairly
edible.</p>
<p>“These teeth o' mine,” he told Billings, the grocer, “cost twelve dollars
down to Franklin, by the best dentist there; but, law sakes! A feller
can't eat hard stuff with any comfort with 'em for fear of breakin' 'em
every minute. They ain' nothin' but chiney, an' you know how chiney's the
breakiest thing man ever made. That's why I say, 'Give me eggs for
breakfast, Sally,'—and eggs I will have.”</p>
<p>The six hens did their duty nobly during the summer and autumn and a part
of the winter, and Pap had his egg unfailingly; but in December the long
cold spell came, and the six hens struck. It was the longest and coldest
spell ever known in Kilo, and it hung on and hung on until the entire hen
population of Eastern Iowa became disgusted and went on a strike. Eggs
went up in price until even packed eggs of the previous summer sold for
twenty-seven and thirty cents a dozen, and angel-cake became an impossible
dainty.</p>
<p>The second morning that Pap Briggs ate this eggless breakfast he suggested
that perhaps Sally might buy a few eggs at the grocery.</p>
<p>“Pap Briggs,” she exclaimed reproachfully, “the idee of you sayin' sich a
thin! As if I would cook packed eggs! No; we'll wait, and mebby the hens
will begin layin' again in a day or two.”</p>
<p>But they did not, and the days became a week, and two weeks, and still no
eggs rewarded her daily search. Pap knew better than to repeat his
suggestion of buying eggs, for Sally Briggs said a thing only when she
meant it, and to mention it again would only exasperate her.</p>
<p>“Our hens don't lay a blame egg,” Pap told Billings complainingly, “and
Sally won't buy eggs, and I can't eat nothin' but eggs for breakfast, so I
reckon I'll jist have to naturally starve to death.”</p>
<p>“Why don't you try some of our hen-food?” asked Billings, taking up a
package and reading from the label. “'Guaranteed to make hens lay in all
kinds of weather, the coldest as well as the warmest' That's just what you
want, Pap.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Pap, “I been keepin' hens off and on for nigh forty year, and
I ain't ever seen any o' that stuff that was ary good; but I got to have
eggs or bust, so I'll take a can o' that stuff. But I ain't no hopes of
it, Billings, I ain't no hopes.”</p>
<p>His pessimism was well founded. The cold spell was too much even for the
best hen-food to conquer. No eggs rewarded him.</p>
<p>One evening he was sitting in Billings', smoking his pipe and thinking. He
had been thinking for some time, and at length a sparkle came into his
eyes, and he knocked the ashes from his pipe and arose.</p>
<p>“Billings,” he said, “mix me up about a nickel's wuth o' corn-meal, and a
nickel's wuth o' flour, and”—he hesitated a moment and then chuckled—“and
a nickel's wuth o' wash-blue.”</p>
<p>“For heaven's sake, Pap,” said Billings, “have ye gone plumb crazy?”</p>
<p>“No, I ain't,” said Pap. “I ain't lost all my brains yit, nor I ain't gone
plumb crazy yit, neither. That's a hen food I invented.”</p>
<p>“Hen-food!” exclaimed Billings. “You don't 'low that will make hens lay,
do you, Pap?”</p>
<p>“I ain't advisin' no one to use it that don't want to,” said Pap, “but I
bet you I'm a-goin' to feed that to my hens”; and he chuckled again.</p>
<p>“Pap,” said Billings, “you're up to some be-devilment, sure! What is it?”</p>
<p>“You jist keep your hand on your watch till you find out,” answered Pap,
and he took his package and went home.</p>
<p>“Sally,” he said when he entered the house, “I got some hen-food now
that's bound to make them hens lay, sure.”</p>
<p>She took the package and opened it.</p>
<p>“For law's sake, Pap,” she said, “what kind o' hen-food is that? It's
blue!”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Pap, looking at it closely, “it IS blue, ain't it? It's a
mixture of my own. I ain't been raisin' hens off an' on fer forty year for
nothin'. You got to study the hen, Sally, and think about her. Why don't a
hen lay in cold weather? 'Cause the weather makes the hen cold. This will
make her warm. You jist try it. Give 'em a spoonful apiece an' I reckon
they'll lay. It don't look like much, but I bet you anything it'll make
them hens lay.”</p>
<p>“I don't believe it,” she snapped, “and I'll hold you to that bet, sure's
my names Briggs.” But the next day she gave them the allotted portion.</p>
<p>That evening when Pap Briggs knocked the ashes from his pipe and rose from
his seat in Billings' store, he said, “Billings, have you got some mainly
fresh eggs—eggs you kin recommend?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I have,” said Billings, with a grin. “So your hen-food don't work,
Pap?”</p>
<p>Pap chuckled.</p>
<p>“It's a-workin,” he said, “and you can give me a dozen o' them eggs. And,
say, you need't tell Sally.”</p>
<p>Billings laughed. “I'm on,” he said.</p>
<p>Pap put the bag of eggs back of the cracker-box, and put three of them in
his pocket.</p>
<p>When he reached home he quietly slipped around the house and deposited the
three eggs in three nests, and went it.</p>
<p>The next morning Sally greeted him with a smile. “Eggs this mornin', Pap,”
she said. “That hen-food did work like a charm. I got three eggs.”</p>
<p>Pap ate without comment until he had finished the second egg. He felt that
he could eat a dozen, after his long fast.</p>
<p>“It do seem good to have eggs agin,” he said.</p>
<p>That evening, and the next evening he deposited three eggs as before. On
the third morning Sally said: “It's queer about them hens, Pap; they lay,
but they don't cluck like a hen generally does when she lays an egg.”</p>
<p>Pap hesitated for a moment.</p>
<p>“It's sich cold weather,” he said, “I reckon that's why.”</p>
<p>About a week later Sally said: “I do declare to gracious, Pap, them hens
do puzzle me.”</p>
<p>Pap moved uneasily in his seat.</p>
<p>“The do puzzle me!” repeated Sally. “Here the are layin' right along as
reg'lar as summer-time, and never cluckin' or lettin' on a bit, and the
queerest thing is they jist lay three eggs every day. It don't seem
natural!”</p>
<p>That night Pap put four eggs in the nests. The next night he put in five,
and the next night three, and the danger into which his wiles had fallen
was averted.</p>
<p>One morning Sally startled him by saying: “Pap, I can't make them hens
out. Here they are a-layin' right along, and all at once they quit layin'
decent sized eggs like they ought, and begin layin' little mean things no
better than banty eggs.”</p>
<p>Pap scratched his head.</p>
<p>“You must allow, Sally,” he said, “that it's quite a strain on a hen to
keep a-layin' right along through such weather as this, and I'm only
thankful they lay any. Mebby if you give them a leetle more o' that
hen-food they'll do better.”</p>
<p>“I believe it,” said Sally. “Why, it's wonderful, Pap. I shouldn't be a
bit surprised to find 'em layin' duck eggs if I jist give 'em enough o'
that stuff.”</p>
<p>Pap looked closely at her face, but it was innocent of guile. She
suspected nothing.</p>
<p>The next day the eggs were of the proper size.</p>
<p>“It's a real blessin' to have hens a-layin',” she said one day. “I took
half a dozen over to the minister's wife this mornin', and she was so
pleased! She said it was sich a blessin' to have fresh eggs again. She was
gittin' sick o' them she's been buyin' at Billings'. She was downright
thankful.”</p>
<p>About a week later she said:</p>
<p>“Them hens of ourn do beat all creation. I run out o' that hen-food a week
ago, and I hain't give them a mite since, and they keep a-layin' jist the
same. I can't make head nor tail of them, Pap.”</p>
<p>Pap squirmed in his chair.</p>
<p>“Pshaw, now, Sally,” he said, “you'd ought to have let me know you was
out. You oughtn't to do that. Feed 'em plenty of it. They deserve it. If
you stop feedin' them they'll stop layin' pretty soon. The effect of that
hen-food don't last more'n two weeks. No,” he said thoughtfully, “ten days
is the longest I ever knowed it to last 'em.”</p>
<p>If Pap Briggs enjoyed his eggs for breakfast he enjoyed as fully the many
laughs he had with Billings over the scheme, and Billing found it hard to
keep his promised secrecy. It would be such a good story to tell. But Pap
exhorted him daily, and he did not let the secret out.</p>
<p>One Sunday morning Pap came down to his breakfast and took his seat. Sally
brought his coffee and bacon. Then she brought him a plate of moistened
toast.</p>
<p>“You've forgot the eggs, Sally,” said Pap admonishingly.</p>
<p>“They ain't none this morning,” said Sally briefly.</p>
<p>Pap looked up and saw that her mouth was set very firmly.</p>
<p>“No eggs?” he asked tremulously.</p>
<p>“No,” she said decidedly, “no eggs! I kin believe that hens lay eggs and
don't cluck, and I kin believe that hens lay eggs all winter, and I kin
believe that Plymouth Rock hens lay Leghorn eggs and Shanghai eggs and
Banty eggs, Pap, but when hens begin layin' spoiled eggs I ain't no more
faith in hens.”</p>
<p>Pap laid down his knife and fork.</p>
<p>“Spoiled eggs!” he ejaculated.</p>
<p>“Yes, spoiled eggs,” she declared. “You and Billings ought to be more
careful.”</p>
<p>Pap turned his bacon over and eyed it critically. Then he frowned at it.
Then he chuckled.</p>
<p>“You needn't laugh,” said Miss Sally severely. “You don't get no more eggs
until the hens begin laying regular. You can eat moistened toast. You
ain't fair to me, pa. You set up to say who I shall marry, when I'm old
enough to know for myself, and then you go and cheat me about eggs. Mebby
I ain't old enough to know who to marry, but I'm old enough to run this
house for you, and you don't get no more eggs. No more eggs until spring,
or until I can marry who I want to.”</p>
<p>Pap looked at the mushy piece of toast and grinned sheepishly.</p>
<p>“You'd be worse of 'n ever, Sally,” he said meekly, “if so be you married
a man that felt he had to hev eggs every morning. They'd be two of us
then.”</p>
<p>“Well, I'd just have to buy eggs then,” she said, “if that come to pass. I
couldn't expect these few hens to lay enough eggs in winter for two men.
If I had to buy eggs for a husband, I'd buy them.”</p>
<p>The old man ate his toast slowly and without relish.</p>
<p>“Sally,” he said that afternoon, “I guess mebby you'd better git married.
I'm gittin' old. You'd better marry that book agent whilst you got a
chance.”</p>
<p>It was Pap Briggs who urged an early date, after that, and who was most
joyous at the wedding.</p>
<p>“Pap,” asked Sally one morning soon after she and Eliph' were married,
while the three were sitting at breakfast, “what ever made you swing round
so sudden and want me to marry Eliph', after objectin' so long?”</p>
<p>Her father looked at Eliph' slyly and chuckled.</p>
<p>“Eggs,” he said. “I fooled you that time, Sally. I knowed when I said to
go ahead that Eliph' has to have eggs for breakfast. Doc Weaver told me
so.”</p>
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