Jimmy HUNTS A job.
Once again Jimmy walked out onto Madison
Street, and, turning to his right, dropped into a
continuous vaudeville show in an attempt to coax his
spirits back to somewhere near their normal high-water
mark. Upon the next day he again haunted the
newspaper office without reward, and again upon the
third day with similar results. To say that Jimmy
was dumfounded would be but a futile description of
his mental state. It was simply beyond him to
conceive that in one of the largest cities in the
world, the center of a thriving district of fifty million
souls, there was no business man with sufficient acumen
to realize how badly he needed James Torrance, Jr.,
to conduct his business for him successfully.
With the close of the fourth day,
and no reply, Jimmy was thoroughly exasperated.
The kindly clerk, who by this time had taken a personal
interest in this steadiest of customers, suggested
that Jimmy try applying for positions advertised in
the Help Wanted column, and this he decided to do.
There were only two concerns advertising
for general managers in the issue which Jimmy scanned;
one ad called for an experienced executive to assume
the general management of an old established sash,
door and blind factory; the other insisted upon a
man with mail-order experience to take charge of the
mail-order department of a large department store.
Neither of these were precisely what
Jimmy had hoped for, his preference really being for
the general management of an automobile manufactory
or possibly something in the airplane line. Sash,
door and blind sounded extremely prosaic and uninteresting
to Mr. Torrance. The mail-order proposition,
while possibly more interesting, struck him as being
too trifling and unimportant.
“However,” he thought,
“it will do no harm to have a talk with these
people, and possibly I might even consider giving one
of them a trial.”
And so, calling a taxi, he drove out
onto the west side where, in a dingy and squalid neighborhood,
the taxi stopped in front of a grimy unpainted three-story
brick building, from which a great deal of noise and
dust were issuing. Jimmy found the office on the
second floor, after ascending a narrow, dark, and
dirty stairway. Jimmy’s experience of manufacturing
plants was extremely limited, but he needed no experience
as he entered the room to see that he was in a busy
office of a busy plant. Everything about the
office was plain and rather dingy, but there were
a great many file clerks and typists and considerable
bustling about.
After stating his business to a young
lady who sat behind a switchboard, upon the front
of which was the word “Information,” and
waiting while she communicated with an inner office
over the telephone, he was directed in the direction
of a glass partition at the opposite end of the room—a
partition in which there were doors at intervals, and
upon each door a name.
He had been told that Mr. Brown would
see him, and rapping upon the door bearing that name
he was bid to enter, and a moment later found himself
in the presence of a middle-aged man whose every gesture
and movement was charged with suppressed nerve energy.
As Jimmy entered the man was reading
a letter. He finished it quickly, slapped it
into a tray, and wheeled in his chair toward his caller.
“Well?” he snapped, as Jimmy approached
him.
“I came in reply to your advertisement
for a general manager,” announced Jimmy confidently.
The man sized him up quickly from
head to foot. His eyes narrowed and his brows
contracted.
“What experience you had?
Who you been with, and how many years?” He
snapped the questions at Jimmy with the rapidity of
machine-gun fire.
“I have the necessary ability,”
replied Jimmy, “to manage your business.”
“How many years have you had
in the sash, door and blind business?” snapped
Mr. Brown.
“I have never had any experience
in the sash, door and blind business,” replied
Jimmy. “I didn’t come here to make
sash, doors and blinds. I came here to manage
your business.”
Mr. Brown half rose from his chair.
His eyes opened a little wider than normal.
“What the—” he started; and
then, “Well, of all the—” Once
again he found it impossible to go on. “You
came here to manage a sash, door and blind factory,
and don’t know anything about the business!
Well, of all—”
“I assumed,” said Jimmy,
“that what you wanted in a general manager was
executive ability, and that’s what I have.”
“What you have,” replied
Mr. Brown, “is a hell of a crust. Now,
run along, young fellow. I am a very busy man—and
don’t forget to close the door after you as
you go out.”
Jimmy did not forget to close the
door. As he walked the length of the interminable
room between rows of desks, before which were seated
young men and young women, all of whom Jimmy thought
were staring at him, he could feel the deep crimson
burning upward from his collar to the roots of his
hair.
Never before in his life had Jimmy’s
self-esteem received such a tremendous jolt.
He was still blushing when he reached his cab, and
as he drove back toward the Loop he could feel successive
hot waves suffuse his countenance at each recollection
of the humiliating scene through which he had just
passed.
It was not until the next day that
Jimmy had sufficiently reestablished his self-confidence
to permit him to seek out the party who wished a mail-order
manager, and while in this instance he met with very
pleasant and gentlemanly treatment, his application
was no less definitely turned down.
For a month Jimmy trailed one job
after another. At the end of the first week
he decided that the street-cars and sole leather were
less expensive than taxicabs, as his funds were running
perilously low; and he also lowered his aspirations
successively from general managerships through departmental
heads, assistants thereto, office managers, assistant
office managers, and various other vocations, all with
the same result; discovering meanwhile that experience,
while possibly not essential as some of the ads stated,
was usually the rock upon which his hopes were dashed.
He also learned something else which
surprised him greatly: that rather than being
an aid to his securing employment, his college education
was a drawback, several men telling him bluntly that
they had no vacancies for rah-rah boys.
At the end of the second week Jimmy
had moved from his hotel to a still less expensive
one, and a week later to a cheap boarding-house on
the north side. At first he had written his father
and his mother regularly, but now he found it difficult
to write them at all. Toward the middle of the
fourth week Jimmy had reached a point where he applied
for a position as office-boy.
“I’ll be damned if I’m
going to quit,” he said to himself, “if
I have to turn street-sweeper. There must be
some job here in the city that I am capable of filling,
and I’m pretty sure that I can at least get a
job as office-boy.”
And so he presented himself to the
office manager of a life-insurance company that had
advertised such a vacancy. A very kindly gentleman
interviewed him.
“What experience have you had?” he asked.
Jimmy looked at him aghast.
“Do I have to have experience to be an office-boy?”
he asked.
“Well, of course,” replied
the gentleman, “it is not essential, but it
is preferable. I already have applications from
a dozen or more fellows, half of whom have had experience,
and one in particular, whom I have about decided to
employ, held a similar position with another life-insurance
company.”
Jimmy rose. “Good day,” he said,
and walked out.
That day he ate no lunch, but he had
discovered a place where an abundance might be had
for twenty-five cents if one knew how to order and
ordered judiciously. And so to this place he repaired
for his dinner. Perched upon a high stool, he
filled at least a corner of the aching void within.
Sitting in his room that night he
took account of his assets and his liabilities.
His room rent was paid until Saturday and this was
Thursday, and in his pocket were one dollar and sixty
cents. Opening his trunk, he drew forth a sheet
of paper and an envelope, and, clearing the top of
the rickety little table which stood at the head of
his bed, he sat down on the soiled counterpane and
wrote a letter.
Dear dad:
I guess I’m through,
I have tried and
failed. It is hard to admit it, but I
guess I’ll
have to. If you will send me the price
I’ll
come home.
With love,
Jim
Slowly he folded the letter and inserted
it in the envelope, his face mirroring an utter dejection
such as Jimmy Torrance had never before experienced
in his life.
“Failure,” he muttered, “unutterable
failure.”
Taking his hat, he walked down the
creaking stairway, with its threadbare carpet, and
out onto the street to post his letter.