THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN NEW YORK AND CANANDAIGUA
We were touring in our auto from New
Hampshire out to Buffalo. For several days everything
had gone well. And then, within ninety miles of
Buffalo, everything went wrong at once. I had
had two blow-outs the previous day, and had bought
two casings. Then, just as we were coming into
Canandaigua my whole transmission went. This was
ten or twelve years ago, and the nearest thing Canandaigua
had to a garage was a tin shop. I got the car
pulled in under a wagon shed and put in eighteen hours
building a new transmission out of an old copper pump
and a rainspout.
Buying the two casings had “broke”
me, and now I had a two-days’ hotel bill for
four people, and nothing to pay it with. Fine!
But with my most winning way I went up to the desk
and said to the old landlord,
“Mr. Landlord, I am in rather
an embarrassing fix. I owe you a bill and I have
no money.”
The landlord was a quaint, silent
old fellow, with thick glasses and a very disconcerting
stare. He now used this stare hard and said nothing.
So I hastened to add
“Of course I have got money,
but I haven’t got it with me; and I shall have
to give you a check.”
He just gave a little sniff and turned
his head and glanced up at a framed card above the
desk which read
NO CHECKS CASHED.
“But,” I hastened to add,
“I’ll tell you what I would like to have
you do. You telegraph, at my expense of course,
to Mr. Murphy, of the Genesee Hotel, or Mr. Shea,
at Shea’s Theater, and I think they will assure
you that Will Cressy’s check is good.”
He sniffed again and looked at me
through those big glasses, and I began to get rattled
in earnest. There must be some way; I must have
something that will convince this man I am not a crook.
I have it! My Identification Card from my insurance
company. Hastily getting out my pocketbook I
showed him this card.
“I can show you all right that
I am Will Cressy. See? Here is my picture;
and how heavy I am; and how tall; and the color of
my eyes; and hair; and my signature.”
Anxiously I looked up at him again.
And I hadn’t touched him. I began to get
desperate. Frantically I searched through my pocketbook
for something that would show my identity.
I dragged out my different Club Cards.
“See!” I said, “I
belong to the Lambs’ Club, in New York; and the
Friars; and the Green Room Club; and the Touring Club
of America; and the Vaudeville Comedy Club.”
I stopped; almost tearfully I looked
at him. I could do no more. He sniffed again,
shifted his weight from one foot to the other and said,
“You’re a hell of a feller when you’re
home, ain’t ye?”
As I was going to the theater in Indianapolis
I passed two ladies who were busily discussing a third.
“You know she can’t hear very well,”
said one.
“No, I see she can’t,” said the
other.
“Bobbie” Richardson was
not feeling very well, and for the past four nights
had been taking a couple of pills each night.
The fifth night Mrs. Bobbie happened to glance over
toward him just as he was about to take his two pills.
“Bobbie,” she said with a gasp, “what
are you doing?”
“I am taking a couple of my pills,” replied
Bobbie.
“My Goodness,” said Mrs.
Bobbie, “those are not pills; that is a bottle
I gave Alice to keep her beads in.”
Julius Tannen and his wife were er talking
it over. That is, she was; Julius was
playing he was the audience. Finally Julius got
an opening and said,
“Say, what would you think if
you and I ever thought the same about something?”
Quick as a flash Mrs. Julius answered,
“I should know I was wrong.”