National Avenue Booth Tarkington (best e reader for academics .txt) đ
- Author: Booth Tarkington
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Dan repeated the last four words a little ruefully as he went down in the elevator with Sam, who was his escort. âââDonât give it up.â Well, not very likely!â He laughed at the idea of giving it up; then sighed reflectively. âWell, anyhow, heâs the first one Iâve talked to that said it. Most of the others just had a grand time laughinâ at me and told me to give it up! I appreciate your fatherâs friendliness, Sam.â
Sam shook his head. âIt ainât that exactly,â he said, with a cautious glance at the young man who operated the elevator. âWait a minute and Iâll tell you.â And when they had emerged upon the ground floor, he followed his friend through the busy aisles and out to the sidewalk. âItâs this way, Dan,â he said. âYou ainât got any bigger ideas of how weâre goinâ to have a great city here than what papa has; he donât talk so much in public, as it were, the way you been doinâ, but home I wonder how many thousand times we got to listen to him! Thatâs why you had him so interested he sat still like that. But he ainât goinâ to put money in it now. I know papa awful well; it ainât his way. I wouldnât say it to anybody but you, Dan, but I expect right now heâll own a good many shares stock in that Ornaby farm some day.â
âWhat?â Dan cried, surprised. âWhy, you just saidâ ââ
âI said he wonât put money in now,â Sam explained, with a look of some compassion. âPapa wonât ever take a gamble, Dan; he ainât the kind. Heâll wait till you go broke on this Ornaby farm; then, if it looks good by that time, heâll get a couple his business friends in with him, maybe, and theyâll send some feller after dark to buy it for thirty-five cents. He wouldnât never mean you no ill will by it, though, Dan.â
âOh, I know that,â Dan said, and laughed. âBut youâre mistaken about one thing, Sam, and soâs he, if he counts on it.â
âWhatâs that?â
âIâm not goinâ broke on it. Why, Sam, ten years from nowâ ââ
âYou told papa all about that,â Sam interrupted hurriedly. âYou talked fine about it, and I wish I could run off an argument half as good. Itâs a shame when a manâs got a line oâ talk like that he ainât got a good proposition behind it.â
âBut it is good. Why, even two years from nowâ ââ
âYes; by then it might be,â Sam said. âBut now you got an awful hard gang to get any backinâ out of in the business men of our city, Dan. They didnât make their money so easy theyâre willinâ to take a chance once in a while, you see.â
âI expect so,â Dan sighed; and then, consulting his memorandum book, shook hands with this sympathetic friend and hurried away to see if he could obtain another interview with John W. Johns, the president of the Chamber of Commerce. He was successful to just that extent; he was readily granted the hearing, but failed to arouse a more serious interest in Ornaby Addition than had hitherto been shown by this too-humorous official.
Mr. Johns was cordial, told Dan that he did âjust actually love to listen about Ornaby Additionâ; that he was always delighted to listen when he had the time, and went on to mention that he had said openly to the whole Chamber at the Chamberâs Friday lunch, âWhy, to hear young Dan Oliphant take on about Ornaby Addition, itâs as good as a variety show any day!â Mr. Johns was by no means unfriendly; on the contrary, he ended by becoming complimentary on the subject of Danâs good nature. âOf course, you arenât goinâ to get any business man to sink a dollar in that old farm, my boy; but I do like the way you stand up to the roastinâ you get about it. âTisnât every young fellow your age could take everybodyâs whoopinâ and hollerinâ about him without gettinâ pretty hot under the collar.â
âOh, no,â Dan said. âIf I can get some of you to put in a little money, I donât care how you laugh.â
âBut you canât,â Mr. Johns pointed out. âThatâs why I kind oâ like the way you take it. We donât put in a cent, and we get hunderds of dollarsâ worth oâ fun out of it!â
âI guess thatâs so,â Dan admitted, and he went away somewhat crestfallen in spite of Mr. Johnsâs compliment.
As Sam Kohn said, these men of business had not made their money easily; they had made it by persistent caution and shrewdness, by patient saving, and by self-denial in the days of their youth; they were not the men to âtake a chance once in a while.â Orations delighted them but would never convince them; and as the weeks and months went by, Dan began to understand that if Ornaby Addition was to be saved, he alone would have to save it.
He worked himself thin at the task; for he was far from losing heart and never admitted even to himself that he was attempting an impossibility. His letters to Lena were filled with Ornaby Addition, of which her own ideas appeared to be so indefinite that sometimes he wondered if she didnât âskipâ in her perusal of his missives. She wrote him:
It seems to me you must
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