AN UNEXPECTED PROPOSAL.
During his temporary editorship, Harry
did not feel at liberty to make any decided changes
in the character or arrangement of the paper; but
he was ambitious to improve it, as far as he was able,
in its different departments. Mr. Anderson had
become rather indolent in the collection of local
news, merely publishing such items as were voluntarily
contributed. Harry, after his day’s work
was over, made a little tour of the village, gathering
any news that he thought would be of interest to the
public. Moreover he made arrangements to obtain
news of a similar nature from neighboring villages,
and the result was, that in the course of a month
he made the “Gazette” much more readable.
“Really, the ‘Gazette’
gives a good deal more news than it used to,”
was a common remark.
It was probably in consequence of
this improvement that new subscriptions began to come
in, not from Centreville alone, but from towns in
the neighborhood. This gratified and encouraged
Harry, who now felt that he was on the right tack.
There was another department to which
he devoted considerable attention. This was
a condensed summary of news from all parts of the
world, giving the preference and the largest space,
of course, to American news. He aimed to supply
those who did not take a daily paper with a brief
record of events, such as they would not be likely,
otherwise, to hear of. Of course all this work
added to his labors as compositor; and his occasional
sketches for Boston papers absorbed a large share
of his time. Indeed, he had very little left
at his disposal for rest and recreation.
“I am afraid you are working
too hard, Harry,” said Ferguson. “You
are doing Mr. Anderson’s work better than he
ever did it, and your own too.”
“I enjoy it,” said Harry.
“I work hard I know, but I feel paid by the
satisfaction of finding that my labors are appreciated.”
“When Mr. Anderson gets back,
he will find it necessary to employ you as assistant
editor, for it won’t do to let the paper get
back to its former dulness.”
“I will accept,” said
Harry, “if he makes the offer. I feel more
and more that I must be an editor.”
“You are certainly showing yourself
competent for the position.”
“I have only made a beginning,”
said our hero, modestly. “In time I think
I could make a satisfactory paper.”
One day, about two months after Mr.
Anderson’s departure, Ferguson and Harry were
surprised, and not altogether agreeably, by the entrance
of John Clapp and Luke Harrison. They looked
far from prosperous. In fact, both of them were
decidedly seedy. Going West had not effected
an improvement in their fortunes.
“Is that you, Clapp?”
asked Ferguson. “Where did you come from?”
“From St. Louis.”
“Then you didn’t feel inclined to stay
there?”
“Not I. It’s a beastly place. I
came near starving.”
Clapp would have found any place beastly
where a fair day’s work was required for fair
wages, and my young readers in St. Louis, therefore,
need not heed his disparaging remarks.
“How was it with you, Luke?”
asked Harry. “Do you like the West no
better than Clapp?”
“You don’t catch me out
there again,” said Luke. “It isn’t
what it’s cracked up to be. We had the
hardest work in getting money enough to get us back.”
As Luke did not mention the kind of
hard work by which the money was obtained, I may state
here that an evening’s luck at the faro table
had supplied them with money enough to pay the fare
to Boston by railway; otherwise another year might
have found them still in St. Louis.
“Hard work doesn’t suit
your constitution, does it?” said Ferguson,
slyly.
“I can work as well as anybody,”
said Luke; “but I haven’t had the luck
of some people.”
“You were lucky enough to have
your fare paid to the West for you.”
“Yes, and when we got there,
the rascal left us to shift for ourselves. That
aint much luck.”
“I’ve always had to shift
for myself, and always expect to,” was the reply.
“Oh, you’re a model!”
sneered Clapp. “You always were as sober
and steady as a deacon. I wonder they didn’t
make you one.”
“And Walton there is one of
the same sort,” said Luke. “I say,
Harry, it was real mean in you not to send me the money
I wrote for. You hadn’t it, had you?”
“Yes,” said Harry, firmly;
“but I worked hard for it, and I didn’t
feel like giving it away.”
“Who asked you to give it away?
I only wanted to borrow it.”
“That’s the same thing—with
you. You were not likely to repay it again.”
“Do you mean to insult me?” blustered
Luke.
“No, I never insult anybody.
I only tell the truth. You know, Luke Harrison,
whether I have reason for what I say.”
“I wouldn’t leave a friend
to suffer when I had plenty of money in my pocket,”
said Luke, with an injured air. “If you
had been a different sort of fellow I would have asked
you for five dollars to keep me along till I can get
work. I’ve come back with empty pockets.”
“I’ll lend you five dollars
if you need it,” said Harry, who judged from
Luke’s appearance that he told the truth.
“Will you?” said Luke,
brightening up. “That’s a good fellow.
I’ll pay you just as soon as I can.”
Harry did not place much reliance
on this assurance; but he felt that he could afford
the loss of five dollars, if loss it should prove,
and it might prevent Luke’s obtaining the money
in a more questionable way.
“Where’s Mr. Anderson?”
asked Clapp, looking round the office.
“He’s been in Michigan for a couple of
months.”
“You don’t say so! Why, who runs
the paper?”
“Ferguson and I,” said Harry.
“I mean who edits it?”
“Harry does that,” said his fellow-workman.
“Whew!” ejaculated Clapp,
in surprise. “Why, but two years ago you
was only a printer’s devil!”
“He’s risen from the ranks,”
said Ferguson, “and I can say with truth that
the ‘Gazette’ has never been better than
since it has been under his charge.”
“How much does old Anderson
pay you for taking his place?” asked Luke, who
was quite as much surprised as Clapp.
“I don’t ask anything
extra. He pays me fifteen dollars a week as
compositor.”
“You’re doing well,”
said Luke, enviously. “Got a big pile of
money laid up, haven’t you?”
“I have something in the bank.”
“Harry writes stories for the
Boston papers, also,” said Ferguson. “He
makes a hundred or two that way.”
“Some folks are born to luck,”
said Clapp, discontentedly. “Here am I,
six or eight years older, out of a place, and without
a cent to fall back upon. I wish I was one of
your lucky ones.”
“You might have had a few hundred
dollars, at any rate,” said Ferguson, “if
you hadn’t chosen to spend all your money when
you were earning good wages.”
“A man must have a little enjoyment.
We can’t drudge all the time.”
“It’s better to do that than to be where
you are now.”
But Clapp was not to be convinced
that he was himself to blame for his present disagreeable
position. He laid the blame on fortune, like
thousands of others. He could not see that Harry’s
good luck was the legitimate consequence of industry
and frugality.
After a while the two left the office.
They decided to seek their old boarding-house, and
remain there for a week, waiting for something to
turn up.
The next day Harry received the following
letter from Mr. Anderson:—
“DEAR WALTON: My brother
urges me to settle permanently at the West. I
am offered a partnership in a paper in this vicinity,
and my health has much improved here. The West
seems the place for me. My only embarrassment
is the paper. If I could dispose of the ‘Gazette’
for two thousand dollars cash, I could see my way
clear to remove. Why can’t you and Ferguson
buy it? The numbers which you have sent me show
that you are quite capable of filling the post of editor;
and you and Ferguson can do the mechanical part.
I think it will be a good chance for you. Write
me at once whether there us any likelihood of your
purchasing.
“Your friend,
“JOTHAM ANDERSON.”
Harry’s face flushed eagerly
as he read this letter, Nothing would suit him better
than to make this arrangement, if only he could provide
the purchase money. But this was likely to present
a difficulty.