eae Pa Gamtduiee th t91o. Rex Beach Adventure Stories “Bitter Root” Billings, Arbiter By REX BEACH Copyright by McClure, Phillips & Co. ILLINGS rode in from the Junc- B tion about dusk and ate his supper in silence. He'd been east for sixty days, and, al- though there lurked about him the bint of unwonied ventures, etiquette forbade its mention, You see, in our country that which a man gives vol- untarily is ofttimes later dissected ir smoky bunk houses or roughly handled round tickering campfires, but the privacies he guards are in- violate. Curiosity isn't exactly a lost art, but its practice isn't popular nor hygienie, Later 1 found him whittling out on the porch, and as the moment seemed propitious 1 in- quired adroitly, “Did you have a good time in Chicago, Bitter Root?" “Bully,” sald he. relapsing weighty absorption, “What'd you do?’ 1 inquired, with almost the certainty of appearing in- sistent, “Don't you never read the papers?’ he inquired, with such evident com- passion that “Kink” Martin and the other boys snickered This from “Biiter Root,” outside of the “Arkansas Printing.” as he terms the illustrations! “Guess I'l have to show you my press notices,” and from a hip pocket he produced a fat bundle of clippings in a rubber band, These he displayed jealously, and 1 stared agape, for they were front pages of great metro- politan dailies, marred with red and black seare heads, in which 1 glimpsed the words, “Billings, of Montana,” * ‘Bitter Root’ on Arbitration,” “A Lochinvar Out of the West” and other things as puzzling. “Press notices!” echoed “Kink” scornfully. “Wouldn't that rope you? He talks like Big lke that went with the Wild West show. When a punch: er gets so lazy he can’t earn a living by the sweat of his pony he grows his hair, goes on the stage busting glass balls with shot ca'tridges and talks about ‘press notices.” Let's see ‘em, Billings. You pinch ‘em as close to your stummick as though you held cards in a strange poker game.” “Well, 1 have set in a strange game, amongst aliens,” Billings, disre- garding the request, “and | ve held the high cards; also I've drawed out with meditatively into said honors. I've sailed the medium high seas with mutiny in the stokehole. I've changed the lnws of labor, politics and municipal econc: I went out of God's country right into the heart of the decaying east, and by the ap- plication of a running noose in a bemip rope 1 strangled oppression and put 8,000 men to work.” He paused es, ponderously. ‘I'm an arbitrator!” “The deuce you are!” indiguantly cried “Reddy,” the cook. “Whe says id “Reddy” isn't up in syntax, aud his unreasoning joyalty to Billings is au established fact of such standing that his remarks allord no conjecture. “Yes; I've cut into the ‘nation’s peril’ and t ‘erring evil’ good and strong, walking ont from the stinks of the Union stockyards of Chicago into the Mmelight of publicity vin the ‘drunk | and disorderly’ route, “You sce 1 got those ten carloads of steers into the city all right, but 1 wis =o blame busy splattering through the tracked up wastes of the cow pens and inhaling the sewer gas of the woot side that I never got to see a newspaper. If I'd ‘a’ read one, here's what I'd ‘a’ found--naipely, the greatest, stubbornest, riotingest strike ever known, which weans a heap for Chicago, she being the wet nurse of labor trouble, “The whole river front was tied up. Nary a steamer had whistled inside the six mile erib for two weeks, and 8,000 men was out. There was hold- ups and blood shedding and picketing, which last is an alias for assault with intents, and altogether it was a prime | place for a cowmat on a quiet vaca- | tion--just homelike and natural. “It was at this peint that | enters. busting out of the smoke of the stock- ards, all sweet and beautiful, like the gentle heeroine in the play as she walks through the curtains at the back of the stage. “Now, you know there's a heap of difference between the stockyards and Chicago—it's just like coming from Arkansas over into the United | In the sbuffle Murdock shifts my bal- langwidge through a wire net at the States, “Well, soon as 1 sold the stock I kit for the lake front and began to ground sluice the coal dust off of my palate, “l was busy working my booze hy- draulic when I see an arid appearing pilgrim 'longside looking thirsty as ap alkali flat, “‘Get in,’ says I, and the way he obeyed orders ‘cooked like he'd had military training. 1 felt sort of drawed to him from the way he handled his licker’ took it straight and sunning over, then sopped his hands | mislald. I got her out at last and try it anyhow,’ ind he smites the work | they'd who scorns literature | wouldn't get a cent for feeding the | fives ueither, a on the bar and smelled of his fingers. He seemed to just soak it up both ways—reg'lar human blotter, “You lap it up like a man,’ says I— { ike a cowman full growed. Ever been | west? | “‘Nope, says he; ‘born here.’ | ow ‘Well, I'm a stranger,” says I, ‘out absorbing su~h beauties of architecture and free lunch as offers along the line. If 1 ain’t keeping you up I'd be glad of your company.’ “‘I'm your assistant lunch buster,’ says he, and in the course of things he further explained that he was & tughoat fireman out on a strike, giv- ing me the follering information about the tieup: ‘It all come up over a dose of dyspepsia’ "— | “Back up” interrupted | squirming. “Are you plumb bug? Get | together! You're certainly the Raving Kid. Ye must have stone bruised your | heel and got concession of the brain.” “Yes, sir—indigestion,” Billings con- | tinued. “Old man Badrich of the Bad- i rich Transportation company has it ! terrible. It lands on his solar every morning about § o'clock, getting worse | steady, and reaches perihelion along about 11. He can tell the time of day by taste. One morning when his mouth felt like about 10:45 in comes a com- mittee from Firemen and Engineers’ local No. 21 with a demand for more witzes, prodding him with the intima- | lent, but 1 was so weakminded in “Kink,” | , blazed away just a second after they | dodged around the corner; then I | hit the trail after ’em, letting go a | few sky shots and getting a ghost | dance holler off my stummick that had been troubling me. The wallop on the head made me dizzy, though, and | 1 zigzagged awful, tacking out of the Jatiey right into a policeman. “ ‘Whee! says I iu joy, for he had | Murdock safe by the bits, bucking | consid'rable. | ‘Stan’ aside and le’'mme 'lectrocute { Im,’ says I. I throwed the gun on | him, and the crowd dodged it into all | the doorways and windows conven- the knees I stumbled over the curb and fell down. “Next thing 1 knew we was all bouncing over the cobblestones in a patrol wagon, “Well, in the morning I told my story to the judge, plain and un- varnished; then Murdock takes the stand and busts into song, claiming that Le was coming through the alley toward Clark street when I staggered out back of a saloon and commenced to shoot at him. He saw [| was drunk and fanned out, me shooting at him with every jump. He had proof, he suid, and he called for the president of his union, Mr. Heegan. At the name all the loafers and stew bums in the courtroom: stomped and said, tion that if he didn't ante they'd tie up all his boats. “lI s'pose a teaspoonful of baking | soda, assimilated internally around | the environments of his appendix, | would have spared the strike and cheated me out of being a hero. As the poet might have said, ‘Upon such slender pegs is this our greatness bhuug.'” “Oh, Gawd!" exclaimed Mullins piously. “Anyhow, the bitteruess in the old wan's inner tubes showed in the bile | of his answer, and he told 'em if they wanted more money he'd give ‘ems a chance to earn it—they could nights as well as days. He inthinated further that they'd ought to be satisfied with their wages, as undoubtedly foller the same line of business in the next world and “Next worning the strike was called, and the guy that breathed treachery and walkouts was one ‘Oily’ Heeguan, further submerged under the titles of president of the Federation of Fresh Water Firemen; also chairman of the United Water Front Workmen, which last takes in everything doing business along the river except the wharf rats and typhoid germs, and it's with the disreputableness of this party that 1 infected myself to the detriment of labor aud the triumph of the law. “D. O'Hara Heegan is an able man, and inside of a week he'd spread the strike till it was the cleanest, dirtiest tieup ever known, The hospitals and morgues was full of nonunion men, but the river wns empty all right. Yes; he had a persuading method of arbitration quite convincing to the most calloused. involving the laying on of the lead pipe. “Things got to be pretty fierce by and by, for they had the police buf- faloed, and disturbances got plentyer than the casualities at a butchers’ plenie. The strikers got hungry, too, finally, because the principles of unionism is ike a rash on your me- chanfe, skin deep-—-inside, his gastries works three shifts a day even if his outsides is idle and steaming with socialism, “Olly fed ‘em dray loads of elo- quence, but it didn't seem to be real filling. They'd leave the lectures and rob a bakery. “He was a wonder, though; just sat inn his office and kept the shipowners waiting in line, swearing bitter and refined cuss words about ‘ignorant flend' and ‘cussed pedagogue,’ which last, for ‘Kink's’ enlightenment, means a kind of Hebrew mecting house, “These here details my new friend give me, ending with a eulogy on ‘Olly’ Heegan, the ‘idol of the idle. “If he says starve we starve,” says he, ‘and if he says work we work. See! Oh, he's the goods, he is! Let's go down by the river. Mebbe we'll see Lim." So me and Murdock hiked down Water street, where they keep mos- quito netting over the bar fixtures and | spit at the stove. “We found him, a big mouthed, shifty kind of man, ‘bout as cynical looking in the face as a black bass and full of wind as a toad fish. 1 ex- changed drinks for principles of so- | ! cialism and doing so happened to dis- | , play my roll. Murdock slipped away | and made talk with a friend: then when Heegan had left he steers me out the back way into an alley. ‘Short | cut,’ says he, ‘to another and a better place.’ “I follers through a back room; then as [ steps out the door I'm grabbed by this new friend, while Murdock | bathes my head with a gas pipe billy, | one of the regulation, strike promoting kind, fe they use for decoying mem- bers into the glorious ranks of labor. | “1saw a ‘burning of Rome’ that was ia dream and whole cloudbursts of ! shooting stars, but 1 yanked Mr. En- | thusiastic Stranger away from my sur- | | eingle and throwed him agin the wall. — | last, though, and steams up the alley | with my greenbaeks, convoyed by his | friend. | “‘Wow-ow,' says |, giving the dis- | tress signal so that the windows rattled and reaching for my holster. I'd 'a’ got them both, only the gun caught in my suspender. You see, not anticipating any live bird shoot, I'a put it inside my pants band, under my vest. for appearances, 21 45 is like fresn air to a drownding man—generally has to be drawed in baste—and neither one shouldn't be | Clerk, $10 and costs. ‘Hear. hear!" while up steps this Napo- leon of the hoboes. “Sure, he knew Mr. Murdock, had kzown bim for years, and he was per- fect!ly reliable and houest. As to his desk. ‘Collins, what d'ye say if we tow the Detroit out? Her crew has | stayed with us so far, and they'll stick now if we'll say the word. The | uulous are bungry aud scrapping among themselves, and the men want to go back to work, It's just that devil of a Heegan that holds ‘em. If | they see we've got a tug crew that'll | i gu they'll arbitrate, and we'll kill the | strike.’ | “Yes. sir’ says Collins. ‘But ! | where's the tug crew, Mr. Badrich? *“*Rizht here! We three and Maur- | phy. the beokkeeper. Blast this idle- | ness! 1 want fight? | “I'll take the same, says I, ‘when | I get the price.’ ! “*That’s all right. You've put the ! spirit into me, and I'll see you through. Can you run an engine? Good! I'll! take the wheel, and the others 'll fire. N's geing to be risky work, though. | You won't back out, eh? “Reddy” iuterrupted Billings here loudly with a snort of disgust, while | “Bitter Root” ran his fingers through | his hair before continuing. Martin ' was listening intently. “The old man arranged to have a squad of cops on all the bridges, and I begin anticipating bilarities for next | day. “The news got out, of course, through the secrecies of police bead- | quarters, and when we ran up the river for our tow it looked like every striker west of Pittsburg had his family on ! the docks to see the barbecue, accom- panied by enough cobblestones and 1 i | i i robbing me, it was preposterous, be- cause he himself was at the other end | of the alley and saw the whole thing, | just as Mr. Murdock related it. I jumps up. ‘You're a line, Heegan, | I was buying booze for the two of you,” but a policeman nailed me, chok- ing off my rhetorics. Mr. Heezan leans over and whispers to the judge, while 1 got chilblains along my spine. *“*look here, kind judze. says I, real winning and genteel, ‘this mau is 80 good at explaining things away, ask him to talk off this bump over my ear. I surely didn't get a buggy spoke and laminate myself on the nur.’ “That'll do,’ says the judge. ‘Mr. Charge, drunk and disorderly. Next! “*Hold on there. says 1, ignorant of the involutions of justice, ‘1 guess I've got the bulge on you this time. They beat vou te me, judge. 1 ain't got a cent. You ean go through me and be welcome to half you tind. I'l mali you ten when I get home though, hon- est.’ “At that the audience giggled, and the judge says: **Your humor deesn't appeal to me, Mr. Billings. Of course you have the privilege of working it out,’ OL, glory, the ‘privilege! “Heegan nodded nt this, and 1 real- ized what I wns against, | * ‘Your honor.” says 1. with sarcastic | refiuements. ‘science tells ns that a | perfect vacuum ain't possible, but after | watching you I know better, and for | you, Mr. Workingman's Frieud, us to the floor, and I run at Heegan. “Pshaw! [1 never got started. nor I didn’t rightfully come to till 1 rested in the workhouse, which last figger of speech is a pure and beautiful para- dox. “1 ain't dwelling with glee on the next twenty-six days—$10 and costs, at four bits ‘a day—but 1 left there saturated with such hatred for Hee- i i { { “} got her out at last and blazed away.” gan that my breath smelled of 'em. “1 wanders down the river front, hoping the fortunes of war would deliver him to me dead or alive, when the thought. hit me that I'd need money. It was bound to take an- other ten and costs shortly after we met, and probably more, if 1 paid for what 1 got, for 1 figgered on dis- tending myself with satisfaction and his features with uppercuts, Then 1 see a . ‘Nonunion Men Wanted— Big Wages.” In | goes and strains “‘I want them big wages’ says Il. “ ‘What can you do? “‘Anything to get the monev,’ says {. ‘What does it take to liquidate an “There was a white baired man in the cage who began to sit up and take notice. “ ‘What's your trouble? says he, and | 1 told him. “‘If we had z few more like you we'd bust the strike’ says he, kind of sizing me up. ‘I've got a notion to aud I turied we got going up was repartee, but I tiggoered we'd need armor getting back. “We passed a hawser to the Detroit, | the was into the tug, | blowing for the Wells street bridge. | Then war begin. 1 leans out the door | just in thme to see the mob charge the | bridge. The cops clubbed ‘em back, | while a roar went up from the docks | i serap fron to ballast a battleship. All 1 | cand roof tops that was like a bad [Continued on page 7. Col. 1.} Aid the Kidneys DO NOT ENDANGER LIFE WHEN A BELLE. FONTE CIT'ZEN SHOWS YOU THE WAY TO AVOID IT Why will people continue to suffer the agonies of kidney compliint, back-ache, i urinary disorders, lameness, headaches, i languor, why allow themsalves ta become chronic invalids, « Fer re. edy is offered them? Doan’s Kidney Pills have been veeé in kidney trouble over 50 years, have been tested in thousands of cases If you have any. even one. of the symp. 1 toms of kidney diseases, act now. Drop: { sv or Bright's disease may se: in and | make neglect dangerous. Read this Bellefonte testimony. Mrs. John Fisher. 51 S, Water St. Belle: | fonte, Pa.. says: “I rec mmend Doan's Kidney Pills just as highly today as | did some years ago when I gave a public statement in their favor. 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