Mike
Flannery, the Westcote agent of the Interurban Express Company,
leaned over the counter of the express office and shook his fist.
Mr. Morehouse, angry and red, stood on the other side of the counter,
trembling with rage. The argument had been long and heated, and
at last Mr. Morehouse had talked himself speechless. The cause of
the trouble stood on the counter between the two men. It was a soap
box across the top of which were nailed a number of strips, forming
a rough but serviceable cage. In it two spotted guinea-pigs were
greedily eating lettuce leaves.
"Do
as you loike, then!" shouted Flannery, "pay for thim an'
take thim, or don't pay for thim and leave thim be. Rules is rules,
Misther Morehouse, an' Mike Flannery's not goin' to be called down
fer breakin' of thim."
"But,
you everlastingly stupid idiot!" shouted Mr. Morehouse, madly
shaking a flimsy printed book beneath the agent's nose, "can't
you read it here-in your own plain printed rates? 'Pets, domestic,
Franklin to Westcote, if properly boxed, twenty-five cents each.'"
He threw the book on the counter in disgust. "What more do
you want? Aren't they pets? Aren't they domestic? Aren't they properly
boxed? What?"
He
turned and walked back and forth rapidly; frowning ferociously.
Suddenly
he turned to Flannery, and forcing his voice to an artificial calmness
spoke slowly but with intense sarcasm.
"Pets,"
he said "P-e-t-s! Twenty-five cents each. There are two of
them. One! Two! Two times twenty-five are fifty! Can you understand
that? I offer you fifty cents."
Flannery
reached for the book. He ran his hand through the pages and stopped
at page sixty four.
"An'
I don't take fifty cints," he whispered in mockery. "Here's
the rule for ut. 'Whin the agint be in anny doubt regardin' which
of two rates applies to a shipment, he shall charge the larger.
The con-sign-ey may file a claim for the overcharge.' In this case,
Misther Morehouse, I be in doubt. Pets thim animals may be, an'
domestic they be, but pigs I'm blame sure they do be, an' me rules
says plain as the nose on yer face, 'Pigs Franklin to Westcote,
thirty cints each.' An' Mister Morehouse, by me arithmetical knowledge
two times thurty comes to sixty cints."
Mr.
Morehouse shook his head savagely. "Nonsense!" he shouted,
"confounded nonsense, I tell you! Why, you poor ignorant foreigner,
that rule means common pigs, domestic pigs, not guinea pigs!"
Flannery
was stubborn.
"Pigs
is pigs," he declared firmly. "Guinea-pigs, or dago pigs
or Irish pigs is all the same to the Interurban Express Company
an' to Mike Flannery. Th' nationality of the pig creates no differentiality
in the rate, Misther Morehouse! 'Twould be the same was they Dutch
pigs or Rooshun pigs. Mike Flannery," he added, "is here
to tind to the expriss business and not to hould conversation wid
dago pigs in sivinteen languages fer to discover be they Chinese
or Tipperary by birth an' nativity."
Mr.
Morehouse hesitated. He bit his lip and then flung out his arms
wildly.
"Very
well!" he shouted, "you shall hear of this! Your president
shall hear of this! It is an outrage! I have offered you fifty cents.
You refuse it! Keep the pigs until you are ready to take the fifty
cents, but, by George, sir, if one hair of those pigs' heads is
harmed I will have the law on you!"
He
turned and stalked out, slamming the door. Flannery carefully lifted
the soap box from the counter and placed it in a corner. He was
not worried. He felt the peace that comes to a faithful servant
who has done his duty and done it well.
_______________________________________________________________
Mr.
Morehouse went home raging. His boy, who had been awaiting the guinea-pigs,
knew better than to ask him for them. He was a normal boy and therefore
always had a guilty conscience when his father was angry. So the
boy slipped quietly around the house. There is nothing so soothing
to a guilty conscience as to be out of the path of the avenger.
Mr. Morehouse stormed into the house. "Where's the ink?"
he shouted at his wife as soon as his foot was across the doorsill.
Mrs.
Morehouse jumped, guiltily. She never used ink. She had not seen
the ink, nor moved the ink, nor thought of the ink, but her husband's
tone convicted her of the guilt of having borne and reared a boy,
and she knew that whenever her husband wanted anything in a loud
voice the boy had been at it.
"I'll
find Sammy," she said meekly.
When
the ink was found Mr. Morehouse wrote rapidly, and he read the completed
letter and smiled a triumphant smile.
"That
will settle that crazy Irishman!" he exclaimed. "When
they get that letter he will hunt another job, all right!"
A
week later Mr. Morehouse received a long official envelope with
the card of the Interurban Express Company in the upper left corner.
He tore it open eagerly and drew out a sheet of paper. At the top
it bore the number A6754. The letter was short. "Subject: Rate
on guinea-pigs," it said, "Dr. Sir - We are in receipt
of your letter regarding rate on guinea-pigs between Franklin and
Westcote addressed to the president of this company. All claims
for overcharge should be addressed to the Claims Department."
Mr.
Morehouse wrote to the Claims Department. He wrote six pages of
choice sarcasm, vituperation and argument, and sent them to the
Claims Department.
A
few weeks later he received a reply from the Claims Department.
Attached to it was his last letter.
"Dr.
Sir," said the reply. "Your letter of the 16th inst.,
addressed to this Department, subject rate on guinea- pigs from
Franklin to Westcote, ree'd. We have taken up the matter with our
agent at Westcote, and his reply is attached herewith. He informs
us that you refused to receive the consignment or to pay the charges.
You have therefore no claim against this company, and your letter
regarding the proper rate on the consignment should be addressed
to our Tariff Department."
Mr.
Morehouse wrote to the Tariff Department. He stated his case clearly,
and gave his arguments in full, quoting a page or two from the encyclopedia
to prove that guinea-pigs were not common pigs.
With
the care that characterizes corporations when they are systematically
conducted, Mr. Morehouse's letter was numbered, O.K'd, and started
through the regular channels. Duplicate copies of the bill of lading,
manifest, Flannery's receipt for the package and several other pertinent
papers were pinned to the letter, and they were passed to the head
of the Tariff Department.
The
head of the Tariff Department put his feet on his desk and yawned.
He looked through the papers carelessly.
"Miss
Kane," he said to his stenographer, "take this letter.
'Agent, Westcote, N. J. Please advise why consignment referred to
in attached papers was refused domestic pet rates."'
Miss
Kane made a series of curves and angles on her note book and waited
with pencil poised. The head of the department looked at the papers
again.
"Huh!
guinea-pigs!" he said. "Probably starved to death by this
time! Add this to that letter: 'Give condition of consignment at
present.'"
He
tossed the papers on to the stenographer's desk, took his feet from
his own desk and went out to lunch.
________________________________________
When
Mike Flannery received the letter he scratched his head.
"Give
prisint condition," he repeated thoughtfully. "Now what
do thim clerks be wantin' to know, I wonder! 'Prisint condition,
'is ut? Thim pigs, praise St. Patrick, do be in good health, so
far as I know, but I niver was no veternairy surgeon to dago pigs.
Mebby thim clerks wants me to call in the pig docther an' have their
pulses took. Wan thing I do know, howiver, which is they've glorious
appytites for pigs of their soize. Ate? They'd ate the brass padlocks
off of a barn door I If the paddy pig, by the same token, ate as
hearty as these dago pigs do, there'd be a famine in Ireland."
To
assure himself that his report would be up to date, Flannery went
to the rear of the office and looked into the cage. The pigs had
been transferred to a larger box - a dry goods box.
"Wan,
- two, - t'ree, - four, - five, - six, - sivin, - eight!" he
counted. "Sivin spotted an' wan all black. All well an' hearty
an' all eatin' loike ragin' hippypottymusses. He went back to his
desk and wrote.
"Mr.
Morgan, Head of Tariff Department," he wrote. "Why do
I say dago pigs is pigs because they is pigs and will be til you
say they ain't which is what the rule book says stop your jollying
me you know it as well as I do. As to health they are all well and
hoping you are the same. P. S. There are eight now the family increased
all good eaters. P. S. I paid out so far two dollars for cabbage
which they like shall I put in bill for same what?"
Morgan,
head of the Tariff Department, when he received this letter, laughed.
He read it again and became serious.
"By
George!" he said, "Flannery is right, 'pigs is pigs.'
I'll have to get authority on this thing. Meanwhile, Miss Kane,
take this letter: Agent, Westcote, N. J. Regarding shipment guinea-pigs,
File No. A6754. Rule 83, Gen. eral Instruction to Agents, clearly
states that agents shall collect from consignee all costs of provender,
etc., etc., required for live stock while in transit or storage.
You will proceed to collect same from consignee."
Flannery
received this letter next morning, and when he read it he grinned.
"Proceed
to collect," he said softly. "How thim clerks do loike
to be talkin'! Me proceed to col- lect two dollars and twinty-foive
cints off Misther Morehouse! I wonder do thim clerks know Misther
Morehouse? I'll git it! Oh, yes! 'Misther Morehouse, two an' a quarter,
plaze.' 'Cert'nly, me dear frind Flannery. Delighted!' Not!"
Flannery
drove the express wagon to Mr. Morehouse's door. Mr. Morehouse answered
the bell.
"Ah,
ha!" he cried as soon as he saw it was Flannery. "So you've
come to your senses at last, have you? I thought you would! Bring
the box in."
"I
hev no box," said Flannery coldly. "I hev a bill agin
Misther John C. Morehouse for two dollars and twinty-foive cints
for kebbages aten by his dago pigs. Wud you wish to pay ut?"
"Pay
- Cabbages - !" gasped Mr. Morehouse. "Do you mean to
say that two little guinea-pigs..."
"Eight!"
said Flannery. "Papa an' mamma an' the six childer. Eight!"
For
answer Mr. Morehouse slammed the door in Flannery's face. Flannery
looked at the door reproachfully.
"I
take ut the con-sign-y don't want to pay for thim kebbages,"
he said. "If I know signs of refusal, the con-sign-y refuses
to pay for wan dang kebbage leaf an' be hanged to me!"
Mr.
Morgan, the head of the Tariff Department, consulted the president
of the Interurban Express Company regarding guinea-pigs, as to whether
they were pigs or not pigs. The president was inclined to treat
the matter lightly.
"What
is the rate on pigs and on pets?" he asked.
"Pigs
thirty cents, pets twenty-five," said Morgan.
"Then
of course guinea-pigs are pigs," said the president.
"Yes,"
agreed Morgan, "I look at it that way, too. A thing that can
come under two rates is naturally due to be classed as the higher.
But are guinea-pigs, pigs? Aren't they rabbits?"
"Come
to think of it," said the president, "I believe they are
more like rabbits. Sort of half-way station between pig and rabbit.
I think the question is this - are guinea-pigs of the domestic pig
family? I'll ask professor Gordon. He is authority on such things.
Leave the papers with me."
The
president put the papers on his desk and wrote a letter to Professor
Gordon. Unfortunately the Professor was in South America collecting
zoological specimens, and the letter was forwarded to him by his
wife. As the Professor was in the highest Andes, where no white
man had ever penetrated, the letter was many months in reaching
him. The president forgot the guinea-pigs, Morgan forgot them, Mr.
Morehouse forgot them, but Flannery did not. One- half of his time
he gave to the duties of his agency; the other half was devoted
to the guinea-pigs. Long before Professor Gordon received the president's
letter Morgan received one from Flannery.
"About
them dago pigs," it said, "what shall I do they are great
in family life, no race suicide for them, there are thirty-two now
shall I sell them do you take this express office for a menagerie,
answer quick."
Morgan
reached for a telegraph blank and wrote:
"Agent,
Westcote. Don't sell pigs."
He
then wrote Flannery a letter calling his attention to the fact that
the pigs were not the property of the company but were merely being
held during a settlement of a dispute regarding rates. He advised
Flannery to take the best possible care of them.
Flannery,
letter in hand, looked at the pigs and sighed. The dry-goods box
cage had become too small. He boarded up twenty feet of the rear
of the express office to make a large and airy home for them, and
went about his business. He worked with feverish intensity when
out on his rounds, for the pigs required attention and took most
of his time. Some months later, in desperation, he seized a sheet
of paper and wrote "160" across it and mailed it to Morgan.
Morgan returned it asking for explanation. Flannery replied:
"There
be now one hundred sixty of them dago pigs, for heavens sake let
me sell off some, do you want me to go crazy, what."
"Sell
no pigs," Morgan wired.
Not
long after this the president of the express company received a
letter from Professor Gordon. It was a long and scholarly letter,
but the point was that the guinea-pig was the Cava aparoea while
the common pig was the genius Sus of the family Suidae. He remarked
that they were prolific and multiplied rapidly.
"They
are not pigs," said the president, decidedly, to Morgan. "The
twenty-five cent rate applies."
Morgan
made the proper notation on the papers that had accumulated in File
A6754, and turned them over to the Audit Department. The Audit Department
took some time to look the matter up, and after the usual delay
wrote Flannery that as he had on hand one hundred and sixty guinea-pigs,
the property of consignee, he should deliver them and collect charges
at the rate of twenty-five cents each.
Flannery
spent a day herding his charges through a narrow opening in their
cage so that he might count them.
"Audit
Dept." he wrote, when he had finished the count, "you
are way off there may be was one hundred and sixty dago pigs once,
but wake up don't be a back number. I've got even eight hundred,
now shall I collect for eight hundred or what, how about sixty-four
dollars I paid out for cabbages."
It
required a great many letters back and forth before the Audit Department
was able to understand why the error had been made of billing one
hundred and sixty instead of eight hundred, and still more time
for it to get the meaning of the "cabbages."
Flannery
was crowded into a few feet at the extreme front of the office.
The pigs had all the rest of the room and two boys were employed
constantly attending to them. The day after Flannery had counted
the guinea- pigs there were eight more added to his drove, and by
the time the Audit Department gave him authority to collect for
eight hundred Flannery had given up all attempts to attend to the
receipt or the delivery of goods. He was hastily building galleries
around the express office, tier above tier. He had four thousand
and sixty-four guinea-pigs to care for! More were arriving daily.
Immediately
following its authorization the Audit Department sent another letter,
but Flannery was too busy to open it. They wrote another and then
they telegraphed:
"Error
in guinea-pig bill. Collect for two guinea-pigs, fifty cents. Deliver
all to consignee."
Flannery
read the telegram and cheered up. He wrote out a bill as rapidly
as his pencil could travel over paper and ran all the way to the
Morehouse home. At the gate he stopped suddenly. The house stared
at him with vacant eyes. The windows were bare of curtains and he
could see into the empty rooms. A sign on the porch said, "To
Let." Mr. Morehouse had moved! Flannery ran all the way back
to the express office. Sixty-nine guinea-pigs had been born during
his absence. He ran out again and made feverish inquiries in the
village. Mr. Morehouse had not only moved, but he had left Westcote.
Flannery returned to the express office and found that two hundred
and six guinea-pigs had entered the world since he left it. He wrote
a telegram to the Audit Department.
"Can't
collect fifty cents for two dago pigs consignee has left town address
unknown what shall I do? Flannery."
The
telegram was handed to one of the clerks in the Audit Department,
and as he read it he laughed.
"Flannery
must be crazy. He ought to know that the thing to do is to return
the consignment here," said the clerk. He telegraphed Flannery
to send the pigs to the main office of the company at Franklin.
When
Flannery received the telegram he set to work. The six boys be had
engaged to help him also set to work. They worked with the haste
of desperate men, making cages out of soap boxes, cracker boxes,
and all kinds of boxes, and as fast as the cages were completed
they filled them with guinea-pigs and expressed them to Franklin.
Day after day the cages of guineapigs flowed in a steady stream
from Westcote to Franklin, and still Flannery and his six helpers
ripped and nailed and packed - relentlessly and feverishly. At the
end of the week they had shipped two hundred and eighty cases of
guinea-pigs, and there were in the express office seven hundred
and four more pigs than when they began packing them.
"Stop
sending pigs. Warehouse full," came a telegram to Flannery.
He stopped packing only long enough to wire back, "Can't stop,"
and kept on sending them. On the next train up from Franklin came
one of the company's inspectors. He had instructions to stop the
stream of guinea-pigs at all hazards. As his train drew up at Westcote
station he saw a cattle car standing on the express company's siding.
When he reached the express office he saw the express wagon backed
up to the door. Six boys were carrying bushel baskets full of guinea-
pigs from the office and dumping them into the wagon. Inside the
room Flannery, with' his coat and vest off, was shoveling guinea-pigs
into bushel baskets with a coal scoop. He was winding up the guinea-pig
episode.
He
looked up at the inspector with a snort of anger.
"Wan
wagonload more an, I'll be quit of thim, an' niver will ye catch
Flannery wid no more foreign pigs on his hands. No, sur! They near
was the death o' me. Nixt toime I'll know that pigs of whaiver nationality
is domistic pets - an' go at the lowest rate. "
He
began shoveling again rapidly, speaking quickly between breaths.
"Rules
may be rules, but you can't fool Mike Flannery twice wid the same
thrick - whin ut comes to live stock, dang the rules. So long as
Flannery runs this expriss office - pigs is pets - an' cows is pets
- an' horses is pets - an' lions an' tigers an' Rocky Mountain goats
is pets - an' the rate on thim is twinty-foive cints."
He
paused long enough to let one of the boys put an empty basket in
the place of the one he had just filled. There were only a few guinea-pigs
left. As he noted their limited number his natural habit of looking
on the bright side returned.
"Well,
annyhow," he said cheerfully, "'tis not so bad as ut might
be. What if thim dago pigs had been elephants!"
The
End
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