        
Read
'em and Weep fiction by Rube Goldberg
When
I was delivering copy I used to hear Fred Knowles tell the reporters,
Forget all that stuff about suspense, style, light and shade,
and the rest of it. Just make sure youve got a story thats
worth telling, and, if you know anything about the English language,
it will be interesting. The only way to write is to write
Now,
get out of here.
Thats what gave me a secret desire to put a lot of words down
on paper some day and see how they came out. Maybe it will be all
cockeyed, with the middle in the front and the back in the middle.
But I at least know something about the subject I have selected.
So here goes:
I worked on the Mail-Telegraph and sat in a chair outside the door
where it said Editorial Rooms. To get past me you had to have plenty
of reasons or be Rudyard Kipling. The few bucks I earned seemed
like a lot in those days and the fact that I could throw guys out
made me feel important. The only fellows who knew my last name were
Ernie Kerr and Gus Salinger. Everybody else just called me Buzz.
Ernie wrote small stories about cops chasing burglars over tenement
house roof-tops, and Gus drew those diagrams with dotted lines showing
where half a dozen cops fell after shooting each other in the excitement.
Ernie said some day he would knock out a column that would make
all the big guys in the game look sick. Gus sat around mumbling
about going over to Paris to study art.
They did most of their bragging to Jennie Kraus, who wrote sob stuff
under the name of Viola Merivale. Everybody was willing to forget
the name Jennie Kraus because Viola Merivale
seemed to belong to her. She was a beaut. Long eyelashes, a pale
complexion with just enough rouge on her lips to make you look twice.
And she was very neat about everything, which was a novelty around
a newspaper office. It was hard to tell which one she liked the
best, Gus or Ernie. I had a secret admiration for Viola myself,
but she didnt seem to know I was alive. When she walked past
my desk I could hear birds sing, like a fighter who was just clipped
on the chin.
Its a funny thing about a newspaper. Theres a continual
flow of human lives going through those clattering old typewriters
all the time, but nobody gives a rap for all the joys and troubles
of the people in the office. Thats what made me so strong
for Ernie and Gus. One payday they saw my chin dropping down to
my knees, and asked me what was the matter. I told them my kid brother
had to be sent to Arizona for his health and I didnt know
what to use for money. Without too much talk they gave me enough
dough to make up the amount I needed, and left me standing there
like a fool before I could swallow the lump in my throat and say
something. I was their friend for life. I paid them back little
by little. Every little while theyd ask me how my sister or
my mother was, and I had to remind them it was my brothers
life theyd saved. I didnt care. There was nothing I
wouldnt do for them after that.
Everything around the Mail-Telegraph seemed so permanent. You just
took it for granted that everybody and every desk was there forever.
So you can imagine what a terrible jolt we all got when a notice
was posted near the city desk saying the Mail-Telegraph had been
sold to P.C. Singleton and would be consolidated with the Blade.
This meant that we would all be thrown out on our ear, because Old
Man Singleton only wanted the name and, incidentally, Viola Merivale.
We were glad for Violas sake, because she could handle King
Kong if she had to. She was used to owners who liked to have nice-looking
dames around.
Gus and Ernie were pretty sad when they were cleaning out their
desks, which were mostly full of old papers, stray neckties, and
orange peels. They kept whispering and looking over at me. So I
went over to console them, although I felt pretty sad, myself.
Buzz Snagle, said Ernie, with a quiver in his
voice, youre a great little guy. This is a tough blow
to all of us.
Gus put his arm around my shoulder and said, Ernie and I have
been thinking. We dont want to give up the place we got, and
we thought it would be nice if you came to live with us and sort
of helped out while we were all looking around. It would be good
for you, too.
Gee, that would be wonderful, I answered, feeling pretty
good to think two guys like that would want me. I still had a little
dough in the bank and could pay my way until I found something.
The first night we were in the apartment we swore to split our combined
bank roll three ways, no matter what happened. Ernie said drop around
to the magazines in a day or two and get a job, and Gus thought
hed knock out a few murals until something better turned up.
They introduced me to Viola. She said, Havent I seen
you some place before? which was enough for me. If she had
just recited her ABCs it would have been okay. Her voice was like
that.
I found out Ernie and Gus had no money at all, and I had to kick
in pretty strong to keep things going. I knew people would think
I was somewhat of a sap for doing it. But it didnt matter
to me what people would think, because the memory of what Ernie
and Gus did for my brother was still pretty fresh in my mind.
Time went on, and my roll was getting thinner.
I know what my trouble is, said Ernie, after going through
my pants, which were hanging on the back of a chair. My head
is too big for my body. My brain generates ideas so fast my poor
little physique hasnt enough strength to execute them.
I was lucky that way. I didnt have to worry about my brain
at all. All I had to worry about was getting those two guys out
of bed in the morning so they would look for work
The three of us were standing in front of one of those employment
agencies on Sixth Avenue where they paste up little slips asking
for valets, chauffeurs, and other high-class help. Ernie and Gus
didnt seem to be reading the notices very carefully, and I
had the courage to say, Listen, boys. If youre trying
to pick out a job for me, its no dice. We all get jobs, or
else I lay down right alongside of you two and we all starve together.
They both grabbed me and gave me a reproachful look.
Listen, Buzz, said Gus. Were all going to
get jobs, and whatever we make goes in the pot for the three musketeers,
just like we said before.
I asked, with some degree of doubt, Suppose one of us is out
of work and cant kick in?
Nothing to it, smiled Gus, sort of tickled with himself
for no reason. The other two of us will take care of him until
he gets a job. Its all in one pot, even if only one is working.
That last crack had a peculiar sound to it, but I agreed. To confirm
my suspicions, I was the first one to land a job. I was to get fifteen
bucks a week in a cannery over near the East River working on a
silly machine that blew skins off of tomatoes. I thought it was
a rib at first, but after the first couple of weeks the laughs were
gone. It was just another job, and very monotonous.
I nearly fainted when Gus and Ernie came home and said they had
jobs, too. It was around the holidays, and Gus was helping out in
a stationery store selling Christmas cards. He said the art work
was lousy but, after all, all great artists had to suffer before
they got anywhere.
Ernie was also imbibing the Christmas spirit. He was getting fourteen
smackers a week in the toy department of a big store, demonstrating
a little tin duck that walked around in a circle and quacked. He
always kept a false beard handy in case Viola or any of the old
gang from the paper happened to be roaming through the store. It
was all right with me. As long as they were both doing honest work
I didnt care how much they suffered.
Outside of being ashamed of all our jobs we
werent doing so bad. We were eating regular, and Ernie and
Gus were still able to alternate with Viola, what with the free
tickets she got for the theater and poultry shows.
One day I ran into a man named Tanner, who was the manager of a
syndicate that sold newspaper features. He greeted me like an old
friend: Hello, Buzz. What have you been doing since the boss
ran out on the old staff?
Who, me? I stalled. Why, Im doing fine.
Im in the canned goods business.
Canned goods business, he laughed. Dont
kid me.
Well, I said, I got to eat, dont I? Im
working in a cannery blowing skins off tomatoes at fifteen dollars
a week.
He exploded with a laugh, and I hastened to add, No, Mr. Tanner.
This is on the level. Ask anybody in the business about the machine.
It saves the time and expense of peeling the tomatoes.
You know, Buzz, he said, when he got control of himself,
I dont forget, like some people do. I owe something
to you. You always gave me a break when I tried to get in to see
the big boss to sell him some of my stuff. Howd you like to
try selling features?
I couldnt get the answer out of my mouth fast enough: Listen,
Mr. Tanner. Ill go out selling lighthouses just to get away
from those tomatoes.
All right. Well give you your expenses to visit papers
in small towns at first, and youll get a commission on every
feature you sell. Come around to the office and well fix up
a deal.
The next day Tanner showed me a large map of the eastern part of
the United States, with a lot of little red pins sticking in it,
and said, Buzz, this is your territory.
He gave me a bunch of samples of the stuff I was to sell. There
was a daily cartoon about a kid detective who was mixed up with
gangsters. I was to tell editors that this feature would especially
appeal to mothers, on account of the lesson it taught that crime
dont pay. I didnt quite get the drift, because I looked
at one weeks installment, and it was all about riveting the
kid up inside a boiler and throwing the boiler into a big vat of
burning oil. Cute entertainment for the kiddies. Then there was
another feature about how to keep yourself beautiful. The dame who
was writing the stuff happened to be in the office when I was there,
and she looked pretty terrible. There was a lot of other stuff,
too.
Gus and Ernie were very happy to hear about my good luck and said
theyd keep in touch with me when I was out on the road. When
I said good-by I told them, Just hang on to your jobs and
I know everything will come out all right in the end. That
three-way agreement bothered me a little, because I knew the boys
werent any too industrious
The first editor I met gave me a setback. He was on the telephone
most of the time I was showing him my samples, and from snatches
of his conversation I judged he had his mind more on himself than
on his paper. He was making arrangements for some kind of banquet
to be given in his own honor. I must have talked extra loud about
one of my cartoon features called Andy and Sandy, because he turned
around and asked, How much do you want for Andy and Sandy?
I looked up the price for his town and told him. He said hed
try it for three months and see how it went. Then he told me to
step into the business managers office downstairs and make
out a contract. I went down and saw the business manager, and he
told me that Andy and Sandy had been running in their paper for
two years.
The next editor I tackled was a darb. He boasted, I got the
best paper in town and I dont know one feature from another.
Outside of Annie The Waif, theyre all the same.
I laid out my junk and said, Heres a cartoon with a
little thought in it. It has humor and
He cut in with, Boy, youre wasting your time. I told
you I never look at that tripe. All I know is that the president
of the Lions Club has a little daughter who reads Annie The Waif
in the opposition paper. Id buy a cartoon like that if I could
get it.
I tried to sell him Steno Sadie and some other stuff, but he got
sore. So I ducked and caught a bus to the next town. Here I broke
the ice by selling my beauty series to an editor who had no sales
resistance because he had just come back from a big lunch. I picked
up a sale here and there, and felt kind of good when I arrived in
Pittsburgh. When I registered at the hotel that clerk handed me
this letter:
Dear Buzz:
We were glad to get your letter from Bridgeport saying you thought
editors were pretty low, but hope by this time you have found out
different. Gus and I are both fine, only Gus quite his job because
he felt the work was not helping his art much. He is now looking
for something that will give him real inspiration. I had a little
trouble at the store. A woman tripped on one of my ducks and she
is now suing the store for $10,000. They made such a fuss about
it I thought Id better quit. I hate working for cheap people.
I hate reminding you of this but Gus and I are pretty flat, and
you know about out agreement. Please send us two thirds of what
you make outside your expenses for a little while, until we get
set. Well do the same for you when you get fired. Viola is
fine, too. Her new boss tried to kiss her the other day and she
bit his thumb. They had a nice quiet talk afterwards and he gave
here a five- dollar raise.
Dont forget, old pal, the three of us have agreed to stick
together. Well never run out on you. Please send money order
by return mail.
As ever your pal,
Ernie
I admit I burned up when I went to the post office and sent the
money order for hard dough I earned with so much work. But an agreement
is an agreement. I enclosed the money order in the following letter:
Dear Gus: Sorry to hear you and Ernie got such bad breaks. I am
enclosing money order for two thirds of what I made after all expenses
were paid. It aint so much, because this is a hard game. Hurry
up and get jobs, because if I flop I expect you and Ernie to come
through for me the way Im doing now.
The only comic strip they want is Annie The Waif, and I aint
selling that. I am looking for an editor who reads his own paper.
Tell Viola to bite the other thumb for me. Regards to you and Ernie.
Your pal,
Buzz
The boys wrote swell letters back but didnt say anything about
landing jobs. And I kept thinking of Viola all the time and the
injustice of it, with the fellows Im supporting so close to
her.
It didnt make me feel any better when I met a guy named Froos
on a bus going to Richmond, Virginia. We got a gassing about things
in general, when he said he just came from New York, where he had
a cousin by the name of Viola Merivale. At the mention of her name
I gave a lurch.
Froos said, Thats funny. I didnt feel any bump.
I gulped, That was my own priv ate
bump. I used to work on a newspaper with Viola.
Great girl, Jennie I mean, Viola. I knew shed make a
name for herself, even if it wasnt her own.
Did you see much of here when you were in New York?
I asked.
Did I! I still got a headache from the last party we had at
the Ubangi Club up in Harlem. What a week, what a week!
That dont sound much like Viola.
Dont get me wrong. Viola was only acting as a kind of
a chaperon to a couple of friends of hers who didnt seem to
have much else to do but breeze around town entertaining visiting
firemen.
A couple of friends, did you say?
Sure. Two guys, Ernie and Gus.
I lurched again.
Say, whats the matter with you? he asked. Is
something biting you?
Dont pay any attention to me. Its just a habit.
Then I added, I know Ernie and Gus, too. It was certainly
nice of you and Viola to drag them around to such expensive places.
Oh, I didnt drag them around. They paid all the bills.
And did Viola have a good time?
Swell. When she got tired wed trot her off home, and
then Gus and Ernie would insist on carting me around some more.
I dont know how they stand the life.
Neither do I.
Maybe they can stand it because they sleep all day.
When we parted at Richmond, Frooss last pleasant remark was,
After this, they can say all they want about Southern hospitality.
Those New York fellows are as big-hearted as anybody in the world.
They wouldnt let me spend a nickel.
At the hotel they handed me this letter:
Dear Buzz:
Thanks a lot for coming through so regular. We are expecting another
money order today. Ernie has a short story almost finished, and
will let one of the big magazines have it next week. Ive decided
to go in for portrait painting. It is the only legitimate form of
art. We are both up bright and early every morning making every
minute count, so we can lay our hands on some dough and pay you
back as soon as possible.
Havent seen much of Viola lately, as she has been busy showing
a cousin of hers the night life of this town. We are tucked in bed
before those things start. Dont hurry home, as everything
here is just the same. Send money orders to the same address, and
good luck, old pal.
Your pal,
Gus.
I was falling away to nothing, what with being rattled around in
galloping buses and tossing off cheap beef stews. I kept sending
the boys their money, although I was not so particular about the
two thirds. And I had to keep myself pepped up with fake enthusiasm,
telling editors funny stories, talking about their golf, and taking
their secretaries out to lunch. I had a contract-bridge item called
Count Your Tricks, and a Jacksonville editor bought it for his childrens
page because he thought it was something about a magician. Hes
still using it. . . .
When I finally got back to New York I was pretty discouraged, and
told Mr. Tanner I was sick of shoving our stuff down editors
throats, when the only thing they really wanted was Annie The Waif.
Well, he said, we cant all have hits. We
just have to go along until something on our list clicks in a big
way.
I was too tired to give any answer to that, and thought Id
go home and get a good sleep. It was three in the afternoon.
Our apartment consisted of a sitting-room, two bedrooms, a bath,
and a kitchenette. When I opened the front door with my key I heard
a noise that sounded like a gang of CCC workers sawing up the Oregon
woods. The telephone was ringing like mad. I looked in the bedroom
and saw Ernie and Gus sleeping like two dead men, if you want to
overlook the snoring. I then answered the telephone. It was Viola.
Who is this? she asked.
Its me, Buzz Snagle. I just got in from a trip.
Yes? she replied in a tone that indicated she didnt
care when I came back.
Than I said, I met a cousin of yours by the name of Froos
on a bus going to Richmond.
Oh, you did. The boys and I had a lot of fun with him when
he was in New York.
On my dough, I muttered so she couldnt hear me.
Then into the phone, The boys are both asleep now. I dont
want to wake them, they look so cute.
She laughed in that musical voice of hers and said, Tell them
to call me up later. Ill be at the paper.
I lost my head for a minute. Say, which one of those two sleeping
beauties are you going to marry, anyway? I asked her.
I could hear her gasp into the mouthpiece: What business is
it of yours?
Plenty, I said. Im through supporting them.
How dare you! she yelled.
Youre the swellest girl in the world, I answered
then we both hung up.
By the time I shook the boys out of their dreams I forgot I was
tired, myself. I called them every name I could think of and told
them the agreement was off. They sat there and took it like a couple
of naughty children. They looked so sad I began to feel sorry for
them. Then I noticed they were both wearing swell silk dressing
gowns. This was too much. I ran out of the house and took a walk
in the park.
I saw down on a bench and started to brood. Of course, my first
thought was to quit cold and force Ernie and Gus to give me money
when they got jobs. And if they didnt get jobs it didnt
make much difference if I died. Who cared, anyway? Then it suddenly
struck me that if I died and nobody cared Id have a pretty
small funeral. Im not exactly vain, but Ive got a little
pride.
My thoughts were all balled up. I could hear Violas voice
saying, Tell them to call me up later. I went over to
the office of the Blade-Mail-Telegraph.
To my great surprise, Viola greeted me with, Hello, Buzz.
My groggy mental state left me just careless enough to speak my
mind.
Listen, Viola, I guess youre sick of hearing everybody
say they love you.
Calm yourself, young man, she replied, without batting
an eye. No girl is ever sick of hearing men say they love
her.
Well, Id like to join the mob. I love you, too.
Thanks.
Now Ill tell you what I came for. Ive got a terrible
problem on my mind. Its about.
Ernie and Gus, she interrupted. Youre tired
of waiting till they find employment suitable to their talents.
So theyve been talking it over with you, have they?
I said. You and the boys and your cousin must have had plenty
of laughs over me at the Ubangi Club.
Youre really a sweet boy, she laughed, only,
only.
Only, Im dumb. I know, Viola, only a sap would let those
two mugs put it over on him.
Well, youre at least honest enough to stick to your
agreement.
Itll land me in the poorhouse if I cant put those
goofs to work.
Well, one can draw and the other can write, cant they?
But how?
Ive got to get to work now, Buzz. Youre a dear.
On the way down in the elevator I thought it over . . . Gus, Ernie;
draw, write . . . Why didnt I think of it before? Of course.
Id get the boys
to collaborate on a tear-jerking strip like Annie The Waif.
I walked around the reservoir in the park four times trying to think
of a name for the new character. It had to suggest hard luck. Lets
see Hardluck Hattie, Little Miss Rags, Notwanted Nona. Somehow these
didnt sound right.
I roamed over towards Madison Avenue, and bumped into a sandwich
man with a sign on his back which read, Stay away from the
poorhouse by taking out an annuity on the Dorflinger Life Plan.
The word poorhouse came back to me again. The rest was
easy. Poorhouse, Poorhouse Patsy, Poorhouse Penelope, Poorhouse
Peggy. There it was, just like that. Poorhouse Peggy.
When I burst into the apartment I found the boys dressed and ready
to argue. I came right to the point. Boys, I said, The
country wants to cry.
Okay with us, moaned Ernie. We feel the same as
the country.
You two are going to collaborate on a comic strip called Poorhouse
Peggy.
Comic strip! they shouted in unison.
Yes, comic strip. They love to cry over sad comic strips.
Work is bad enough, groaned Ernie. But to draw a sad
comic strip! Oh! If Viola ever finds out.
She knows already, I answered, smiling for the first
time in days.
I was afraid to look at the first weeks strips the boys knocked
out. I might weaken. I had Gus draw a few poses of Poorhouse Peggy
so I could run over to Washington and have the character registered
in my name: Poorhouse Peggy, by Buzz Snagle. I had no prestige to
lose and I wanted to be sure of my third of the take, no matter
how small. To kill two birds with one stone, I sold the strip to
the Washington Inquirer without showing any samples. The managing
editor cried when he heard the name.
My fears were realized when I got my first look at the stuff. If
you can sell that, said Ernie, You can peddle safety
razors to babies.
Ill sell it, I answered grimly.
In the first few weeks installments, Poorhouse Peggy got the
measles, was run over by a truck, was bitten by a mad dog, and beaten
to a pulp by a crooked lawyer named Cyrus Baxter, who knew that
Peggy was the rightful heir to the Vanderblatt millions and wanted
to grab the fortune for himself. I was surprised that Mr. Tanner,
the head of the syndicate, did not stab me when I brought it in.
I was so anxious to keep those two boys working I didnt even
say good-by to Viola. I flew around the country like a frightened
gazelle, and used up thousands of throat lozenges keeping my voice
tuned up to the praises of Peggy. Editors bought the stuff just
to quiet me down.
After four weeks of intensive roadwork I dragged myself back to
Mr. Tanners office, more dead than alive. I flopped into a
chair and said, Mr. Tanner, Ive ruined my health and
ruined your syndicate. Ive sacrificed you and myself just
to put a couple of mooching bums to work and show a certain girl.
I heard a chirping sound like somebody practicing a flute accompaniment
to one of those gargling sopranos. It was a burst of soft, tinkling
laughter from Viola.
Oh, hello, Viola, I said, with a choke of surprise.
What are you doing here?
Hello, Buzz, she said, coming towards me. Im
just here on business. But Im leaving now. Wont you
take me home?
Ill take you to Patagonia if you want, I replied,
glad to get away from Mr. Tanner.
On the way uptown I said, Well, Im not quite as dumb
as you thought, am I?
Buzz, she agreed, that was a swell idea of yours
about the new comic strip.
You betcha, I replied. Funny I didnt think
of it before.
Then, trying to be casual, I said, By the way, what business
took you to Tanners office?
I wanted to see how a certain salesman was getting along.
When I left her she said, Ernie and Gus are so busy now they
havent much time to devote to poor little me. Give me a ring.
Well, it took me just two weeks to get Viola in my arms and tell
her how guilty I felt in putting Ernie and Gus out of the way. After
the first kiss she said, Youre not taking me away from
anybody. Im in full charge of my own destiny.
So am I now, I whispered against her cheek. . . .
I am a firm believer in miracles. The good people of the United
States took Peggy to their hearts. Gus and Ernie became reconciled
to their fate when we sold the movie rights for thirty grand. I
was warming a bottle for the baby, when I yelled in from the kitchen,
Viola, I still think that opening continuity for Peggy was
about the rottenest story that was ever written.
I wrote it, she called back, as she toyed with the wave
in the three hairs on Buzz Juniors head. Who do you
think got Gus and Ernie started?
Thank heaven I took you out of literature and planted you
in the home.
        
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