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Another Of Those Cub Reporter Stories
by
“I’ll take the same,” he said to the man behind the bar, and then to me with a kind of explosive snap: “By George, I’m in a good mind to resign this rotten job!” That didn’t startle me. I had been in the business long enough to know that the average newspaper man is forever threatening to resign. Most of them–to hear them talk–are always just on the point of throwing up their jobs and buying a good-paying country weekly somewhere and taking things easy for the rest of their lives, or else they’re going into magazine work. Only they hardly ever do it. So Devore’s threat didn’t jar me much. I’d heard it too often.
“What’s the trouble?” I asked. “Heat getting on your nerves?”
“No, it’s not the heat,” he said peevishly; “it’s worse than the heat. Do you know what’s happened? The chief has saddled Old Signal Corps on me. Yes, sir, I’ve got to take his old pet, the major, on the city staff. It seems he’s succeeded in losing what little property he had–the chief told me some rigmarole about sudden financial reverses–and now he’s down and out. So I’m elected. I’ve got to take him on as a reporter–a cub reporter sixty-odd years old, mind you, who hasn’t heard of anything worth while since Robert E. Lee surrendered!”
The pathos of the situation–if you could call it that–hit me with a jolt; but it hadn’t hit Devore, that was plain. He saw only the annoying part of it.
“What’s he going to do?” I asked–“assignments, or cover a route like the district men?”
“Lord knows,” said Devore. “Because the old bore knows a lot of big people in this town and is friendly with all the old-timers in the state, the chief has a wild delusion that he can pick up a lot of stuff that an ordinary reporter wouldn’t get. Rats!
“Come on, let’s take another beer,” he said, and then he added: “Well, I’ll just make you two predictions. He’ll be a total loss as a reporter–that’s one prediction; and the other is that he’ll have a hard time buying his provender and his toddies over at the Shawnee Club on the salary he’ll draw down from the Evening Press.”
Devore was not such a very great city editor, as I know now in the light of fuller experience, but I must say that as a prophet he was fairly accurate. The major did have a hard time living on his salary–it was twelve a week, I learned–and as a reporter he certainly was not what you would call a dazzling success. He came on for duty at eight the next morning, the same as the rest of us, and sorry as I felt for him I had to laugh. He had bought himself a leather-backed notebook as big as a young ledger, just as a green kid just out of high school would have done, and he had a long, new, shiny, freshly sharpened lead pencil sticking out of the breast pocket of his coat. He tried to come in smartly with a businesslike air, but it wouldn’t have fooled a blind man, because he was as nervous as a debutante. It struck me as one of the funniest things–and one of the most pathetic–I had ever seen.
I’ll say this for Devore–he tried out the major on nearly every kind of job; and surely it wasn’t Devore’s fault that the major failed on every single one of them. His first attempt was as typical a failure as any of them. That first morning Devore assigned him to cover a wedding at high noon, high noon being the phrase we always used for a wedding that took place round twelve o’clock in the day. The daughter of one of the wealthiest merchants in the town, and also one of our largest advertisers, was going to be married to the first deputy cotillion leader of the German Club, or something of that nature. Anyhow the groom was what is known as prominent in society, and the chief wanted a spread made of it. Devore sent the major out to cover the wedding, and when he came back told him to write about half a column.