"Greg and Jim"

The Work of Gregory Clark and Jimmie Frise

Hard Stuff

Squatting down on the kitchen floor like the men of old must have done along the tidal shores, Jim and I proceeded to open oysters

By Gregory Clark, Illustrated by James Frise, December 9, 1933.

“How,” asked Jimmie Frise over the telephone the other evening, “do you like oysters?”

“Love them,” I replied.

“Come on over!” cried Jimmie. “Some- body has sent me a whole barrel of oysters from the maritimes.”

“In their shells?” I asked, excitedly.

“How else would they send them?” retorted Jimmie.

“Well,” I explained, “you see those jugs of naked oysters out in front of the grocery stores.”

“These are in the shells,” said Jimmie. “Come on over. I’ve selected about forty of the best ones and I’ve got them in the sink.”

“It’s only an hour since dinner,” I said, “but I’ll come over.”

There was Jim in his kitchen. His shirt sleeves were rolled up. And with a small brush he was scrubbing the shells of a sink full of the loveliest great big oysters you ever saw. Through the open back kitchen door I could see a huge barrel, foretelling feasts for nights, to come.

“Grab that other nail brush,” cried Jim, “take off your coat and lend a hand here. We’ve got to scrub them nice and clean under the tap first. And then we’ll open them up and we’ll each have a platter of twenty oysters in the ice box. How’s that?”

“Twenty is my lucky number in oysters,” I said, removing my coat.

With the cold tap running merrily and Jim and I scrubbing the coarse, rugged shells of the oysters, our appetites began to stir, even though it was only a little after eight o’clock.

“I wonder,” said Jim, “who the intrepid hero was who first ate an oyster?”

“It was likely one of our cave-men ancestors,” I said, “because eating oysters is as old as the hills. They find heaps of oyster shells in the ruins of ancient cities, and even in the caves in which primitive man dwelt.”

“Maybe,” said Jimmie, holding up and polishing a particularly huge oyster, “it was eating oysters that started man on the upward climb from the half gorilla to what we are to-day.”

“Perhaps we ought to feed oysters to those of us that are still gorillas,” I suggested.

Oysters Not Prepossessing

“Still,” said Jim, speculatively, “I’d like to know how the very first man came to eat an oyster, because, until you get to know an oyster, it isn’t a very prepossessing creature. You don’t feel drawn toward an oyster at first sight as you do toward a roast partridge.”

“I reckon,” I said, as I scrubbed a nice fat-shelled one, “that some poor starving cave man, or maybe it was a poor starved cave girl, was walking along the sea shore one day and she saw the sea birds digging the oysters out of the mud, when the tide was down, and dropping them from a height on to the rocks and then gobbling the cold, salty oysters when the shell broke. Probably, if it was a poor starved cave girl, she shuddered and closed her eyes as she gulped down the first one. Then, opening her eyes in astonishment and joy, she dashed down to the beach and grabbed huge armfuls of oysters, and rushed back to the rocky shore and cracked them open and guzzled them down. I bet one thing, and that is that the first person ever to eat an oyster probably holds the world’s record for the number eaten at one sitting.”

“I bet she was a nice girl,” mused Jimmie.

And when she returned to the cave,” I went on, “all swollen up with oysters, and beginning to look more beautiful already, everybody, caveman and cavewoman, began wondering at the marvellous improvement in her. Day by day, as she continued to eat her new-found food, she grew lovelier, her chin got bigger, the coarse hair all over her began to moult off, and inside of a year, she was walking upright all the time. Hardly ever walking on all fours.”

“The beginning,” said Jim, scrubbing away.

“And then the secret was out, and the whole cave colony started eating oysters, crying ‘oy, oy,’ hence the name oysters,” I recounted. “And this tribe became so strong and powerful that they conquered all the surrounding tribes. Of course, this is ages ago, Jimmie. Long before history began. But each tribe they conquered, they introduced to oysters, and so began the rise of man from a mere meat-eating beast to an oyster-eating epicure.”

“Let’s,” said Jimmie, “scrub up a few more. You could eat thirty, couldn’t you?”

“Make it the even three dozen,” I suggested.

So Jimmie went out to the barrel and dug out another heap of oysters for the sink.

“It’s a long cry,” said Jim, as we started in scrubbing the new lot, “from the cave-men sitting in the tidal mud guzzling oysters to shipping a barrel of oysters a thousand miles, in a refrigerator car, to the descendants of the cave-men standing beside fresh running water out of a tap, in a modern kitchen.”

“Lit with electricity,” I said.

“And with a mechanical ice box to chill them,” said Jim. “But isn’t it funny how few new things to eat we have discovered? I guess our ancestors were great explorers in the realm of food, even if they didn’t discover North America until just lately.”

“With my delicate stomach,” I said, “I shudder to think of some of the things my ancestors must have eaten.”

“Or tried to eat,” added Jim.

It was now nine o’clock.

“Well,” said Jim, gazing fondly at the huge pile of beautifully scoured oysters heaped on the drain board beside the sink, “let’s open them.”

“Where’s your oyster knife?” I asked.

“I’ve no oyster knife,” said Jim. “I got a couple of screw drivers. They’ll do.”

He produced two screw drivers, a short one and a long one, from the pantry drawer. And he laid out two large platters on the kitchen table.

“No cheating now,” said Jim. “Take them as they come, large and small. And we’ll each fill our own platter.”

I picked up a chubby one. I looked for a good place to insert the screw driver. But an oyster is a very deceitful creature. Instead of having one clear-cut crack down its side, it has itself concealed with a half a dozen or more cracks, each one of which looks like the right one.

I shoved. Scraped. Tried here. Tried there.

“H’m,” said Jimmie. I looked at him, and he was standing over under the kitchen. light, narrowly examining his oyster.

“They’re awfully tight, aren’t they?” he said.

“It’s a trick,” I explained. “Once you find the hinge, it’s nothing to open them. I’ve seen a good oyster bartender open a dozen in two minutes. Just like that.”

“Have you ever opened any yourself?” asked Jimmie.

“I seem to have,” I said, “but I can’t recall.”

“Your unconscious memory, from your cave men ancestors,” said Jim, laying his oyster down and coming over to watch me. I laid the oyster down on the drain board, pressed with all my weight on one hand, while I gouged with the screw driver.

“Try the other side,” suggested Jim.

I turned it over and tried the other side.

The screw driver slipped and I gave myself a nasty gouge on the hand I was pressing with.

“Ouch!”

Jim got the iodine and some gauze upstairs and bandaged my left hand.

“I’ll get the hang of it,” said Jimmie, taking my place at the drain board.

He took a fresh oyster. It had a more innocent look than the first one. Jim studied it. He placed the screw driver against the most vulnerable point. He shoved. He twisted. He wiggled and jabbed.

“Ouch,” said Jimmie. He had cut himself. So I bandaged him.

“What we need,” I said, “is an oyster knife.”

So Jim went to the hall and telephoned half a dozen neighbors, but none of them had an oyster knife.

Jim came back and with the screw driver, he chipped off the edge of a new oyster, a still more childish and smooth-faced one. And then he peered along the chipped edges. But there was no sign of any relaxation.

It was now nine-twenty o’clock.

“If we are going to have an oyster supper,” said Jimmie, “we ought to get busy and open some of these.”

“It was your suggestion,” I reminded him.

Bending down and jamming the oyster firmly against the corner of the wall and the drain board, Jim inserted the screw driver, and slowly, relentlessly, he shoved and twisted the blade of the tool at the place in the oyster shell where there is a kind of hollow.

“Nnnhhh!” he grunted.

The screw driver slipped. Jim’s hand slammed up against the corner, with the oyster and screw driver hopelessly mixed up in the collision. And there was another hunk of skin off his one good hand.

“Bandage me,” said Jim. “Now I’m out of action!”

So while Jim stood by with two bandaged hands, I, with my remaining hand, decided to approach the problem with intellect rather than with physical force.

I sorted through the pile of oysters, seventy-two of them, all scrubbed and ready for the feast, until I found one that seemed the silliest, goofiest, Oliver Hardy1 sort of an oyster in the whole heap.

Placing it in the corner of the drain board, with its back to the wall, I crept the screw driver into its hinge, and with a slow, prying pressure, I suddenly got a slight squirt of juice out of the edge.

“Hurray!” I shouted.

Another pry and twist.

And there, in its pearly glory, lay the, oyster, open and above board.

We beamed on it. We held it under the light. We smelled it. Boy, how cool and lovely it smelt!

“Let’s eat it right now,” said Jim, “to give us courage!”

“How could we both eat one oyster?” I exclaimed, scornfully.

“You take that round fat bit,” said Jim, “and I’ll take the ears, or whatever that crinkly part is.”

“Nothing doing,” I stated. “I eat an oyster whole. You won’t catch me dissecting any oyster. I’ve got the hang of it now, and in no time I’ll have the platters filled.”

But I was sanguine. I had to pass up three more before I got another one open. And after I got it laid bare, five more defied me before the accident happened.

It was very brief and simple. My hand slipped. And there was I with my right hand cut, too. And Jimmie was bandaging it, after a dash of iodine.

“Now,” said Jim, “where do we go? We’re both out of action.”

Because, really, you can’t open oysters with your hands wrapped up like a hobo’s feet in winter. “Let’s eat these two to start with, anyway.”

So Jim ate one and I the other, with careful and delicate applications of lemon juice, salt, pepper and ketchup.

“Mmmmm,” we said. Glurp. Plop. The oysters were ours.

We both tried to continue the opening, with our bandaged hands, but somehow we were too clumsy.

The Original Way

“I tell you,” cried Jimmie. “Let us resort to the ancient and original way of opening them. The way our cavemen ancestors, the discoverers of oysters, did!”

“How’s that?” “With a hammer!” said Jim. “They used rocks. But we’ve got hammers. Don’t tell me there isn’t some advance in civilization.”

So Jim got a hammer and a big heavy monkey wrench.

We laid the oysters on the drain board. But that only made big ugly nicks in the wood, and he was afraid his wife might complain.

“In the cave days,” explained Jim, “what a wife thought didn’t matter.”

He went outside and brought in two bricks, which we washed thoroughly, and then, squatting down on the kitchen floor, like the men of old must have done along the tidal shores, Jim and I proceeded to open oysters. It is not, I might say, the correct way. After hitting the oyster eight or ten times too lightly, you hit it one awful smash too hard, and there you have oyster squashed all over the brick, with broken shell imbedded in it.

After half an hour’s pounding, which caused neighbor’s dogs to howl and no doubt a lot of the neighbors to come and peer out their back windows, Jim had five oysters that were recognizable as such, and I had four. Of course, they weren’t on the half shell. We had to pick up the remains as best we could and carry them to the tap and wash off the brick dust and pick out the shell fragments. And then we put them in a tumbler. So to all intents. and purposes, we had those naked oysters such as you see in front of the grocery stores.

Anyway, such as it was, we held our oyster supper, after putting the rest of the seventy-two back in the barrel.

They went pretty good, too, although there was a mild flavor of iodine, and some slight trouble with shell splinters, and if there is any trick trickier than holding an oyster in your mouth while you feel around for a shell splinter with a bandaged hand, I don’t know it.

“This proves one thing,” said Jimmie, as we sat back from the feast. “And that is, we aren’t the men our ancestors were.”

“Oh, I don’t know,” I said. “Every man to his trade. All we’ve got to do is go and take a few lessons from some chef.”

“From what I’ve seen of the art of opening oysters,” said Jim, “I imagine it is a life’s work. Maybe they have high-paid officials in the restaurants. Oyster openers. With fancy costumes. Maybe oyster opening is one of those family secrets, handed down from father to son.”

“It’s quite an art,” I said, imagining I felt a sharp stab inside of me from a splinter I had not detected.

“The problem is,” said Jim, “what am I going to do with all that barrel full of oysters?”

“You’ve got a lot of friends,” I reminded him. “They would just love a couple of dozen oysters, fresh from the sea.”

“I guess that’s the solution2,” said Jimmie.

February 17, 1940

Editor’s Notes: This story was repeated on February 17, 1940 as “Sea Shells”.

  1. Of the famous Laurel and Hardy duo. ↩︎
  2. Or just buy an oyster knife… ↩︎

An Apprentice Degree in the Hunter’s Lodge

December 4, 1926

Jim illustrated this story by Frank Mann Harris (also known as “Six-bit” Harris), who was a regular contributor to the Star Weekly in the late 1920s and early 1930s. He wrote often of small town life and this story outlines his first time hunting.

All’s Well

December 4, 1937

Impractical Joke

Suddenly Jim leaped to his feet. “You crook,” he grated, pointing at Sacrahan. “Sit down,” said Sacrahan evilly.

By Gregory Clark, Illustrated by James Frise, November 26, 1938.

“My, you’re sulky,” observed Jimmie Frise.

“Jim,” I requested, “do you know any dirty tricks I could play on a certain party?”

“Do you mean on me?” inquired Jim, cautiously.

“No, it’s this bird McMuddle,” I confided. “I’ve come to the end. I’ve got to do something about him.”

“Aw,” said Jim. “He’s not such a bad scout. You’re just a little allergic to his type, that’s all.”

“He has really got on my nerves,” I declared, firmly. “I find myself brooding about him during the day, when I should be thinking of my work. I find myself spending my evenings sitting at home, sunk in an easy chair, just patiently hating that guy.”

“You shouldn’t let individuals get you down like that,” protested Jimmie. “After all, he has never done you any real damage. He’s just irritated you, that’s all.”

“Irritation,” I submitted, “can often be worse than a real injury.””

“What has he done,” inquired Jim, “that has finally got you so worked up?”

“As a matter of fact,” I admitted, “it was rather a childish incident. I was standing talking on the street corner with a couple of acquaintances when this McMuddle came along behind me. I didn’t see him. He clapped me heartily on the shoulder, in passing, and sang out in a loud voice: ‘Well, my little man, have you got them spellbound?'”

“That wasn’t very bad,” smiled Jim. “You admit you generally do make speeches whenever you get a couple of guys backed into a corner.”

“As a matter of fact,” I declared, “I did have them spellbound. I was explaining to them the situation in Europe, how the different nations are all lining up against Russia….”

“Then what was the matter with McMuddle remarking the fact,” demanded Jim, “if you had them standing there with their mouths open?”

“Oh, it’s just the climax of a hundred things this McMuddle has done to me,” I gritted. “And you know it. You know if he is in the party, either at anybody’s home or on a fishing or shooting trip, if that guy is in the party, it’s ruined for me.”

“He just kids you,” protested Jim.

“He haunts me,” I insisted. “He makes fun of every word I say. If I make a suggestion, he instantly offers a counter suggestion. If I do anything, like last summer, the time I brought in those six big bass, not one of them under three pounds, what does that bird do? Any natural pride I might have in the performance is simply made ridiculous by the way he rushed about, shouting to everybody to come and see, and overdoing the praise and being so excited that anybody could see he was just making a fool of me.”

“You and Mac,” explained Jim, “happen to be two types that just naturally get on each other’s nerves. You irritate him. He irritates you. Like cat and dog.”

“Or like cat and rat,” I muttered, “and I know who’s the rat.”

“Why Does He Pick on Me?”

“You’re right, to some extent,” admitted Jim. “Mac is a bit of a poor sport. He always sees he gets the best of anything that is going, like on that same trip last summer, he snaffled the best guide and the boat with the cushions in it, and all that.”

“He’s greedy, Jim,” I cried. “And selfish. And without a vestige of sporting character in his make-up. Even when we were out at Ed’s house last week, McMuddle acted like a paid entertainer, took the floor and held it all night, never stopped talking for a minute, ate all the olives, picked all the ripe olives out of the dish before even the sandwiches were passed.”

“I think,” said Jim, carefully “that he was just having a little fun with you because your well-known preference for ripe olives.”

“Why does he pick on me?” I shouted.

“To tell the truth,” said Jim, embarrassed, “I think he held the floor, over at Ed’s, because he thought unless he did, you’d get it and hold it.”

“Jim,” I said, “That’s very unfair. If I ever take the floor, it is because I have come with something interesting to say. McMuddle just talked birds, that night.”

“Everybody thought,” said Jim, “that he gave a pretty fair take-off of you. We all laughed enough.”

“Except me.” I pointed out.

“Yes, but,” considered Jim, “I agree with you, Mac is a bit of a pain in the neck. He is one of those practical jokers. One of those outspoken, frank fellows who imagines he is hitting straight from the shoulder, whereas all he is doing is hitting a man when he’s down.”

“You said it,” I agreed fervently.

“You’re not the only one he picks on,” went on Jim. “As a matter of fact, he is pretty free with his tongue to everybody.”

“I wonder you put up with it,” I said.

“Well, Mac’s type,” explained Jim, “is kind of hard to handle. He’s big and husky. He is good-looking and hearty. He says what he thinks. He has a quick wit. You get into an argument with him, and no holds are barred. He says anything he likes to you or about you. He just puts his head back, looks down his nose at you, and in a loud, sarcastic voice, he just rips you up, and you are so flustered with his style of attack, you can’t even think…”

“That’s him, that’s him,” I concurred. “I wish we could get rid of the guy, some way. Can’t we drop him from our gang?”

“That would be hard,” said Jim, “anyway, some of the gang would accuse us of not being able to take it.”

“I wish,” I stated deeply, “I could think of some way we could put him on the spot. I’ve gone over dozens of imaginary meetings with him. I’ve dramatized, in my own mind, dozens of conversations with him, in which I have flayed him to the bone. But when I meet him, the conversations never turn out that way.”

A Whale of a Stunt

“Did you ever hear the story about dear old Lou Marsh and the Detroit Yacht club?” asked Jimmie. “It’s one of the funniest tales I ever heard.”

“What was it?” I enquired hopefully.

“Lou was over at some sailing races in Detroit,” said Jim, “and, as you recollect, Lou was a pretty masterful type. During the races, Lou was very much on top of any situations that arose. He wasn’t taking anything from the Americans. And after the races were ended, the Detroit boys decided they’d have one on Lou.”

“That would not be easy to do,” I submitted.

“They staged a party in the clubhouse,” related Jimmie. “About 20 prominent sailors were invited. Among other diversions was a poker game, into which about nine of them sat, including Lou. The game went on for long time, with increasing tension, which was not lessened by the fact that one of the men at the table was a bad actor who, as the evening drew on, started making trouble in a quiet way.”

“There is always a McMuddle in every party,” I put in.

“Suddenly,” recounted Jimmie, “this trouble maker leaped to his feet. Pointing an accusing finger across the table at another member of the party, he shouted, ‘Cheat, cheat!'”

“Good gracious,” I exclaimed.

“Lou,” went on Jim, “and all the others, sat frozen with horror. In an exclusive club. Amongst a pleasant party. The accused man got angry and leaped to his feet. There were violent words shouted across the table. The accused man took a sudden swing at the trouble-maker. The trouble-maker reached back, pulled a gun and fired point-blank at the accused man.”

“What a scene,” I breathed.

“And at that instant,” said Jim, “the lights were switched off, pandemonium broke loose and three more shots were fired by the man with the gun.”

“Pandemonium is right,” I admitted.

“Of course, nobody,” explained Jim, “except three of them knew it was a joke, that the gun was the starter’s pistol for the sailing races and blank cartridges were being used.”

“What a whale of a stunt.” I cried.

“Well, there it is,” concluded Jim. “The gun spitting, the sudden darkness, everybody crashing and leaping in all directions, sheer panic. And then, suddenly, the lights go on. Some of them are under the tables and chairs. One man has even crawled under the edge of the carpet. Three of them raced for the stairway and one fell down the stairs, bruising himself badly. And Lou Marsh was on his hands and knees trying to get his 200-pound bulk in behind the iron radiator along the wall.”

“Grand, grand,” I crowed. “I can see it. It was magnificent. It was a good one on Lou and on everybody else, and nobody would have acted any differently.”

“Not even you or me,” admitted Jim.

“But how can we work this on McMuddle?” I demanded.

“Exactly the same,” said Jim. “Exactly, in every detail. At the next party we’re on, and there is to be one next week at Bill’s house; we’ll pull it. We’ll only have to let one other man in on it. The one we’ll accuse of cheating. You handle the pistol, I’ll handle the lights.”

“No, no, Jim,” I said. “Let me handle the lights. Let me be the guy that reveals McMuddle for what he really is.”

“You handle the pistol,” said Jim, “because you’re a hot-tempered little guy anyway, and just nutty enough to be carrying a pistol. Nobody would ever imagine I’d carry a gun.”

“Oh, wouldn’t they?” I retorted. “You good-natured fellows are the ones that really boil over when you get mad. Please, Jim, let me be the one that turns on the lights. That’ll give me more satisfaction than anything I can imagine.

Finding a Villain

“I don’t see how we can fool our gang,” insisted Jim. “Nobody, least of all McMuddle, would ever believe either you or I would carry a gun.”

“Could we ring in a stranger?” I asked.

“Look,” said Jim, suddenly. “I think I have it. I’ll agree to come to the party, and then have to beg off on account of a jam I’m in with a fellow. I have to entertain that night.”

“Yes?” I urged.

“Bill and the boys will insist on me coming and bring the guy,” explained Jim, “and I’ll try to beg off, because this fellow is a very bad actor, a fellow I’ve got mixed up with in a rather funny deal, and I think he’s a crook. See?”

“Swell.” I agreed

“And when Bill says bring him along anyway and let’s look him over, I’ll agree, on one condition that Bill explain to all the rest of the gang that this fellow is a louse, and probably has got me rooked for $2,000 but that I can’t be sure and I’ve got to be nice to him, and so on.”

“It builds up lovely,” I agreed.

“At the party,” concluded Jim. “I’ll act kind of moody and restrained. Not my old jolly self. see? And it will become more and more strained until, at the agreed signal, you get up and go and stand by the light switch, emptying your pipe or something, and then I’ll cut loose.”

What a glorious set-up,” I agreed, seeing McMuddle already trying to creep up the fireplace chimney.

Bill’s party was called for Thursday as usual. Six of us as a rule attend. Just a lot of cards, sandwiches and stuff, while the ladies are out to a movie.

Jim had no trouble finding a suitable villain from amongst his Russian pool-playing friends1, a lean and sinister fellow in the musical instrument business, wholly unknown to any of the rest of us. He was also an amateur theatricals enthusiast, and he fell for the plot with joy. To Bill, Jim told, with obvious reluctance, some of the facts of his being rooked by this gent, and how good it was of Bill and the boys to agree to Jim bringing him along. All through the evening, from the moment Jim arrived with the fictitious Mr. Sacrahan, which was a lovely name for a villain, Jim was ill at ease, anxious, jumpy. But all of us, realizing how embarrassed he was with this ringer in the party, were highly sympathetic and not a little jumpy ourselves. In fact, McMuddle, on whom I kept gloating and expectant eye, was almost decent throughout the night.

About 10 p.m., Jim began to get a little nasty with Mr. Sacrahan.

“Let’s have a look,” he would say, leaning over and examining Mr. Sacrahan’s cards whenever he tossed a winning hand down.

Sacrahan just gazed, with a malevolent expression, at Jim. In a few minutes, we all began to observe that Mr. Sacrahan was eyeing Jim steadily with increasing venom in his expression.

And Jim continued to make short, ugly remarks about each of Mr. Sacrahan’s bets, raises, calls.

Shots Crash Terribly

At a prearranged look from Jim, I rose and sauntered over to the dining-room light switch, and proceeded to fill my pipe.

Suddenly Jim leaped to his feet, crashing his chair over behind him.

“You crook!” grated Jim, pointing scarlet-faced at Sacrahan.

“Sit down,” said Mr. Sacrahan, evilly.

“You crook,” repeated Jim thickly. “I saw you take a card out of your sleeve.”

“That’s a lie,” said Sacrahan, as we all held our breaths in dazed horror.

“I’ve suspected for months,” began Jimmie, leaning forward across the table.

Mr. Sacrahan leaped to his feet and made a violent swing at Jim. I reached for the light switch, my eyes on McMuddle, who was observing the scene with tense fascination.

Out of Jim’s pocket came the bulldog starter’s pistol we had borrowed from Lou Marsh’s old sailing club.

All in one expert motion, the pistol swept up and crashed terribly in the strained and silent dining room.

Out went the lights.

And four more shots. scarlet, vicious, stabbed the pitch black.

Pandemonium is a poor word for it. Shouts, groans, yelps, crashes, scuffles, roars, and then, after 10 stupendous seconds in which I could hardly control the beating of my heart and the sobs of laughter fighting my diaphragm, I switched on the lights.

Bill was under his thick dining-room table. Others were rolled in corners, two were wedged in the narrow doorway, madly struggling to escape.

But on the floor lay Jimmie, flat on his back, and on top of him knelt McMuddle, one powerful hand holding Jim’s pistol hand at arm’s length pinned to the floor, the other hand clasped about Jim’s windpipe, slowly squeezing the life out of him.

“Here!” I shouted, “let go, let him up!”

McMuddle reached up and carefully took the gun from Jim’s now limp grasp.

“Has he gone nuts?” demanded McMuddle, in a cold, icy voice. “Has the poor guy gone completely nuts?”

“It was a joke,” I muttered.

“Does he want to hang?” continued McMuddle, slowly rising off the almost lifeless Jimmie, whose face had gone purple.

Then he saw Mr. Sacrahan grinning in the corner. And then we had to explain to everybody that it was just a little fun; and help Jim to his feet and take him into the kitchen for cold water.

“I should have known it was a joke,” said McMuddle, “but your acting was too good.”

“I guess,” said Jim, ruefully fingering his throat, “we should have let you in on the joke.”

And when the party broke up, all in the highest spirits, with Mr. Sacrahan suddenly blooming as one of the best story tellers we have ever had in our gang, Jim said to me aside: “It’s a funny thing, but often the most unpleasant people have the most guts.”


Editor’s Note:

  1. It has been mentioned before that Jim likes to play Russian Pool. There are different variations so I am not sure which he played. ↩︎

Relativity of Dollars

Gibbs was out to champion a cause, seeking election to the town’s school board.

By Gregory Clark, Illustrated by Duncan MacPherson, November 27, 1948.

“I’m running,” announced my neighbor Gibbs, “for school trustee.”

“Good man,” I congratulated. “I didn’t realize you were interested in education.”

“Actually,” said Gibbs, “I’m not. But I’m interested in business. I’m interested as a taxpayer. It’s time we put some hard-headed business men in as trustees, to keep control of those visionaries.”

The word visionaries suddenly brought me back to earth.

“Visionaries?” I laughed. “You’d hardly call our neighbor Peters a visionary.”

Peters, who lives across the road, has been a school trustee for fifteen years or more.

“It’s him I’m after,” confessed Gibbs, in a low voice.

I looked earnestly at Gibbs.

“You’re picking yourself,” I warned, “a pretty tough old customer to beat.”

“He’s a crook,” stated Gibbs flatly.

“Aw, not a crook,” I protested. “He’s shrewd. He’s sly. He’s cunning. But you can’t call him a crook.”

“He’s crooked,” insisted Gibbs.

“He may be a poor neighbor,” I admitted. “I grant you, he’s a crusty old crab…”

“He’s crooked,” asserted Gibbs. “Suppose you are in the stationery business, and you’re a school trustee. Suppose you quietly deflect all the plumbing contracts for the schools to one plumbing contractor. Wouldn’t you expect to get all that plumbing contractor’s stationery business?”

“Peters isn’t in the stationery business,” I reminded.

“No, but you see my point?” pursued Gibbs. “You call him shrewd. I say he’s a trustee for the business he gets out of it.”

“I imagine he’s a pretty good watchdog,” I submitted, “over any visionaries on the school board.”

“Imagine,” cried Gibbs, “the education of this great city in the hands of characters like Peters!”

“I’ve always voted for him…” I recollected.

“He’s small, he’s mean,” said Gibbs, “he’s petty. He’s hardly spoken to anybody in this neighborhood for twenty years. I’m told by collectors for charity, the community chest, Red Cross and so forth, that they never in their lives got a ten cent piece from Peters…”

“I admit he’s tight-fisted,” I regretted, “but in certain cases, that’s a virtue.”

“I’m running against him,” stated Gibbs.

“Have you announced it?”

“Yes,” said Gibbs. “At a meeting of the home and school club last night, over at the school, I announced I was running.”

“You’ll never beat him,” I confided. “You’ve only got about five weeks to campaign. You haven’t got any organization. He’s got fifteen years’ experience in electioneering.”

“With the help of a few characters like you,” smiled Gibbs, “I might give him the surprise of his life.”

“Not me,” I said hastily. “I wouldn’t touch politics – even school politics – with a ten-foot pole.”

“Our argument will be,” explained Gibbs, “that it is high time fresh blood was infused into the school board. Goodness knows what skulduggery is going on there, with the public funds. The same old gang in office year after year…”

“A whispering campaign, eh?” I reflected.

“That’s it!” cried Gibbs, eagerly. “Spread suspicion. Spread doubt. That’s the most powerful political weapon of all. Dynasties have fallen, as the result of whispering campaigns. Powerful ministries have tumbled in the dust, all from a few dirty rumors…”

“I’ll have nothing to do with it,” I informed Gibbs, firmly.

“Oh,” chuckled Gibbs, “I’m not going to spread unfounded rumors. Not me. I’m going to play a TRICK on Mr. Peters. I’m going to frame him.”

“How?” I queried.

“Childishly simple,” gloated Gibbs. “And I need your help. If I can prove to you that Peters is a cheap little crook, will you help me campaign against him?”

“If you could,” I doubted.

“Here’s all there is to it,” revealed Gibbs. “It’s a trick as old as the Caesars. You know how old Peters peaks behind the curtains in his front living room windows?”

“I’ve noticed him there,” I admitted, “smoking his pipe. It’s the way he relaxes. He sits there, thinking.”

“Relaxes my eye!” scoffed Gibbs. “He sits there to catch kids running across his lawn. He sits there hiding behind his curtains to peek and pry at his neighbors kids.”

“Aw,” I reasoned.

“Here’s what I’m going to do,” snickered Gibbs, excitedly. “I’m going to walk past Peters’ house tomorrow afternoon. It’s Sunday. And as I pass, I’ll drop my wallet accidentally, when I pull out my handkerchief…”

“Oho,” I admitted.

“First,” explained Gibbs, “I’ll make sure nobody else is coming along the street, and I’ll make sure the old skinflint is sitting at his parlor window, peeking. Now this is where you come in. You’ve got to be the witness that he picks the wallet up.”

“He’ll run to his front door,” I asserted, “and he’ll go after you…”

“I’ll bet you,” declared Gibbs, “five bucks that he comes to his door and watches me turn the corner, and then pops out and snitches my wallet.”

“Look here,” I took up the bet, “I’ll do more. If Peters does that, I’m your man! I’ll stump the district making speeches for you…!”

“Good egg!” exulted Gibbs, wringing my hand.

Right after Sunday noon dinner, Gibbs called at my side door and I let him in.

Gleefully, he produced the wallet.

“Look!” he hissed. “Six bucks1, a five and a one. Eight street car tickets, see? Then, look at these.”

Gibbs held up two snapshots of girls in skimpy bathing suits, very skimpy…

“I borrowed these,” gaggled Gibbs gleefully, “from a friend of mine who collects leg art. Isn’t that the finishing touch…?”

“Aren’t you putting in your driver’s license and stuff…?” I asked.

“Oh, no, that would almost compel him to return the wallet,” explained Gibbs. “Nothing in it but six bucks, eight street car tickets, some snappy snap shots and my name and address in two places, see? Here’s the usual wallet identification card; and here’s an empty envelope with my name and address on it, too.”

“Now, what?” I requested.

“I’ll go and sit in my front window,” said Gibbs, “and I see the old stinker take up his usual location behind his living room curtains, I’ll watch until I see nobody else on the street. Then I’ll telephone you, and proceed with the operation.”

“I’ll watch from my front window,” I agreed.

Gibbs went back into his house.

It was that after-dinner Sunday hour when the streets are quiet. The grown-ups are home from church; the youngsters aren’t yet starting for Sunday school.

The phone rang.

“He’s all set,” cried Gibbs’s voice.

“Okay,” I replied, and went to my front window. Gibbs came out of his front walk and stood gazing up and down the street for a moment, like a gentleman contemplating a nice Sunday afternoon stroll.

Then he crossed the street and started for the corner. As he passed Peters’ house, he reached back and drew his handkerchief from his hip pocket, from under his topcoat.

His wallet flipped out and dropped onto the pavement.

Gibbs, blowing his nose, proceeded on.

My eyes leaped to Peters’ parlor window, where I grieved to behold the shadow of Mr. Peters standing. He had sprung to his feet and was alert back of the curtains.

As soon as Gibbs disappeared around the corner, I saw Peters’ shadow disappear. An instant later, he opened his front door, took a quick look up and down the street and around at the houses about. Then in his slippers, he tippy-toed out, picked up Gibbs’s wallet and hastened back into his house.

Then in his slippers, he tip-toed outside and picked up Gibbs’ wallet

“Hm, hm, hm!” I groaned, dropping into a chair.

From the drug store, three blocks away, Gibbs telephoned a few minutes later.

“Well?” he enquired breathlessly.

“I owe you five bucks,” I muttered, and then gave him a play-by-play description of the whole affair.

In five minutes, Gibbs appeared.

He walked slowly down the street, looking this way and that on the ground, as though he had lost something. He took a particularly long time right in front of Peters’ house. And to make the tragedy complete. I could see the shadow of old Peters, as he sat, calmly smoking his pipe, behind the curtains of his parlor window.

Gibbs went into his house: and immediately popped out his side door into mine.

“We got him!” shouted Gibbs, tremendously elated. “We’ve got the so and so!”

“What do we do?” I begged.

“We wait,” propounded Gibbs, “forty-eight hours, at least, until tomorrow night. Then, with you for witness, and with half a dozen reputable citizens of this neighborhood I’ll get together, we will call upon Mr. Peters.”

“It’ll ruin him,” I muttered.

“We’ll inform him,” gloated Gibbs, “that we are going to spread the story all over town. I think he’ll resign. I think he’ll withdraw from the election. If he doesn’t…!”

“Isn’t that intimidation?” I protested. “Isn’t that’ threatening…?”

“It’s,” rejoiced Gibbs, “politics!”

We spent the evening drawing up campaign plans for Gibbs. Lists of names of leading business men in our ward who might join committees. Lists of meetings to be called, in the various schools in the ward…

Monday, we had trouble keeping our mind on our jobs. Gibbs telephoned me three times with new ideas for his campaign. We drove home together, after work.

As we pulled up in front of Gibbs’s, Mrs. Peters came to her front door and called across.

“Oh, Mr. Gibbs?” she yodelled. “My husband asked me to give you this wallet. He picked it up yesterday on the street…”

“Damn!” gritted Gibbs.

He walked slowly across and took the wallet from Mrs. Peters, thanked her, and she immediately shut the door.

Gibbs started back across the street, a look of chagrin on him, and opened the wallet.

He halted.

He lifted his eyes unbelieving from the wallet and stared wide-eyed at me.

Then he hurried.

“Come on in,” he commanded in a low voice.

I followed him into his house.

“Look at this!” he cried, when we got inside.

He held up four fifty-dollar bills2!

He also held up the five and the one dollar bill he had baited the wallet with. And the snazzy snapshots.

“What the…!” I croaked.

Gibbs fingered the four fifty-dollar bills feverishly.

“The old fool,” he cried. “I bet he’s put this wallet in his pocket. And then, absent-mindedly mistaking it for his own, stuffed this money into it…”

“Run right back with it!” I commanded.

“Probably ill-gotten gains,” ruminated Gibbs, lovingly rubbing the bills together. “He’ll probably never know what happened to them…!”

“Gibbs!” I exclaimed.

“You take a hundred,” said Gibbs, “I take a hundred. That’s fair…”

 “Gibbs!” I groaned, “the old devil was probably sitting at his window, watching, when his wife handed you that wallet…”

“Oh, my gosh!” yelled Gibbs, turning for the door.

We went together. Old Mr. Peters himself answered the bell.

“Thanks a million,” cried Gibbs, heartily, “for rescuing my wallet. But look here, Mr. Peters, there’s something wrong. I only had six dollars, and I find two hundred.”

“Okay, okay,” soothed Mr. Peters, reaching deftly and taking the four fifties in his hand and secreting them in his vest all in one smooth motion. “To tell the truth, Gibbs, I heard you were running against me for school trustee? Is that so?”

“I was thinking of it,” admitted Gibbs. “But…”

“I just wanted to assure myself,” said Peters, blandly, that you were an honest man. I stuck those four fifties in your wallet, just to… sort of…”

“Why, MR. PETERS!” gasped Gibbs, scandalized.

“Oh, well, in public life,” asserted Peters, morally, “you’ve got to be alert. You have to watch the kind of men who try to get elected. Now, for one thing, anybody can be honest about six bucks. But where $200 is concerned, that calls into play an entirely different brand of honesty. See?”

We thanked him again, heartily.

When we re-entered Gibbs’s vestibule, he turned to me.

“The old crook!” he quivered. “I wouldn’t demean myself, running against him!”


Editor’s Notes:

  1. $6 in 1948 would be $82 in 2025. ↩︎
  2. $200 in 1948 would be $2,725 in 2025. ↩︎

An American Writer Just Back from Northern Ontario, Says Some of Our Old Prospectors Carry a Bottle of Prussic Acid As a “Means of Escape” When Lost in the Wilds

November 27, 1926

Prussic acid is also known as hydrogen cyanide. The comic is making fun of this American who implies that being in Northern Canada is so deadly that use would be better off poisoning yourself than dying in the cold if you were lost. Of course, no one would carry it for this purpose, and whoever told him was pulling his leg.

Thar She Blows!

The whole engine seemed to explode, and out from the radiator core streams and jets of barn red were spurting with violent force.

By Gregory Clark, Illustrated by James Frise, November 23, 1946.

“Waste not,” proverbed Jimmie Frise, “want not.

“But, Jim,” I protested, “you say that anti-freeze is two years old?”

“It’s older than that,” admitted Jim. “It was two years ago I drained it out of my rad.”

“Well, then,” I figured, “why didn’t you use it last winter instead of now? Why have you left it all this time in your cellar?”

“Well, you remember last fall,” explained Jim. “Last fall, we figured the war was over. Everything was about to become plentiful again. Everything would soon be back to normal. New cars. New clothes. New furniture. New houses, New anti-freeze…”

“Anti-freeze was as hard to get last fall,” I pointed out, “as it is now1.”

“Yeah,” said Jim, “but I got busy early. I got a friend of mine in a garage to snaggle me three gallons of anti-freeze. Which he did. And I used it all last winter. And when spring came, last spring, why, I said to myself – we don’t have to save old anti-freeze now. The war’s over. Everything will soon be back to normal. New cars. New clothes. New furniture. New houses…”

“And new anti-freeze,” I rounded off bitterly. “So you just drained last year’s anti-freeze down the sewer.2

“Yes, sir,” said Jim. “Right down that drain, right there.”

And he pointed to the small drain-hole in his side drive. We were standing beside Jim’s car while it drained out the rusty water of the past summer’s driving. And in three large jars, one-gallon jars, stood the two-year- old anti-freeze which Jim had just brought up from his cellar.

The jars were brown glass. And the liquid within seemed clear and bright.

“It’s a very curious thing to me, Jim,” I said, crouching down to study the jars,” that there appears to be no sediment at all in this stuff. Wasn’t it rusty when you put it in here two years ago?”

“It was red,” agreed Jim, “and it thick with rust. But chemistry is a funny thing. Chemicals. undergo strange changes. That stuff has stood two whole years in the cellar. All the rust and sediment has settled to the bottom. It has, hardened there. It has congealed. It has, you might say, consumed itself by some mysterious chemical process.

I lifted one of the jars and examined the bottom.

“Careful there,” cried Jim. “Don’t shake it all up. I’ll decant it into the rad. And I don’t want it all stirred up.”

“There is,” I admitted grudgingly,” a small sort of sediment on the bottom…”

“That’ll be it,” said Jim. “That’ll be the rust. All that’s left of it. After two years of absolute stillness down in the dark cellar. Anyway, what is rust in anti-freeze? Just coloring. Nothing more. What seems to be an actual ingredient of the anti-freeze turns out to be nothing more than a fine coloring matter – rust – which, if left alone, settles to the bottom. And all you’ve got is just a little trace of sediment.”

I carefully lifted another jug and studied the traces of sediment on the bottom.

“It’s astonishing,” I confessed. “But Jim, won’t this anti-freeze be diluted?”

“How?” demanded Jim. “What would dilute it?”

“Well, water for one thing,” I suggested. “Didn’t you add a little water from time to time to this anti-freeze, since that winter two years ago?”

Jim reflected, as he listened to the gurgle of the little tap under his rad while the rusty water dribbled away.

“Yes,” he said, “I believe I do, as a matter of fact, add a little water from time to time, during the winter…”

“Very well then,” I cried, “isn’t this old stuff diluted? Maybe it’s all water?”

“Not at all,” replied Jim easily. “Anti-freeze doesn’t evaporate. So when I add a little water, it’s the water that evaporates, not the anti-freeze. See?”

Chemical Sense

“Then why did you have to add a little water in the first place,” I triumphed, “if the anti-freeze didn’t evaporate?”

“Well, I suppose,” said Jim, “some of it leaked away. After all, this is a pretty old customer of a car. There are bound to be little cracks and leaks in the radiator core.”

“May I smell this stuff, just to see?” I suggested, removing the top from the gallon jar nearest.

It smelled curious and pungent. It had a sharp, breath-taking odor. It certainly wasn’t diluted.

As I drew back smartly, Jim chuckled. “Not much dilution there,” he smiled. “No, Greg. I admit I’m very foolish in many respects. I leave this job of putting in the anti-freeze until the last minute…”

“The last minute!” I protested. My dear man, your rad has frozen three times this week!”

“I admit,” went on Jimmie, “that I’m a procrastinator. But I’ll say this for myself. I know chemicals. I know a few simple, common-sense facts about the things I’ve got to work with, such as cars. And I know anti-freeze will keep from year to year. And I think it was rather cute of me to put those three gallons away, two years ago.”

“I hope it works,” I muttered.

“You mean,” chuckled Jim, “you hope it doesn’t work. You’re stiff with jealousy because you can’t get any anti-freeze. Your car is laid up. And it burns you up to see me produce three gallons from my cellar that I have thriftily preserved all these years.”

“It isn’t like you, Jim,” I replied earnestly. “You’re NOT thrifty. You’ve never been thrifty all the years I’ve known you. It makes me sort of nervous and anxious to see you pop up with three gallons of anti-freeze out of your cellar. It doesn’t seem normal. It doesn’t seem right, somehow…”

“Heh, heh heh,” said Jim comfortably, as he bent down under and turned off the little radiator tap which had ceased dribbling.

“Might I suggest one thing, Jim.” I ventured, as he straightened up. “You said there: might have been little cracks and leaks in the rad. How about putting in some of those patent leak fixers they sell at the service stations? Before you risk putting all this good anti-freeze in?”

“I’ve already done that,” said Jim, setting a funnel in the radiator cap opening. “All last winter and all the past summer, I’ve dumped can after can of that radiator cement in. Five or six different kinds. Half a dozen different guaranteed brands. I bet there isn’t a leak in that whole core. And besides, any leaks that might try to break out are rusted up so tight, not even the patent leak fixers could get at it. Look under there.”

“That Stuff Eats”

And under the car I could see a pool of thick red rust where Jim had drained out the water. It was sludge. It was a regular pile of liquid rust.

“Okay,” cried Jim, “you hold the funnel. I’ll decant.”

By decanting, Jim meant tilting the gallon jug so gently that none of the little sediment in the bottom of the jar was stirred up.

As the first gurgle of anti-freeze hit the radiator pipe, there was a sharp hiss and a cloud of vapor billowed out that almost choked us.

“I should have waited,” coughed Jim “until it cooled off…”

The engine had been boiling when Jim decided to drain it.

“But,” he continued, decanting, “I’ll soon cool her out.”

Quite a lot of hissing went on and more choking fumes billowed out, which I dodged by crouching down so as to let the breeze waft them away.

As Jim poured, some of the anti-freeze gurgled and splashed a little on to my coat sleeve. And I noticed the cloth turned white immediately.

“Hey,” I said, “pour carefully! That stuff eats.”

When Jim had successfully decanted the first gallon jug. I examined my coat sleeve. Two or three small drops had fallen on the cloth and the cloth was marked almost pure white. I rubbed. The white became whiter. It was as if it were bleached.

“Now, be careful,” I said, as I held the funnel for the second gallon jug.

This jug poured much smoother than the first. We had lost our sense of smell by this time, of course, and it seemed to me the second jug did not exude such overpowering fumes as the first. Besides, it was a slightly less clear color. It was a sort of pale yellow.

“Jim,” I pointed out, “this jug is different. It seems thicker. And it’s not so gin clear.”

“Maybe it was the last one out,” explained Jim; sniffing. “It would be thicker…”

 So he poured and poured and the slick and slimy anti-freeze gurgled and guggled down into the radiator pipe. It seemed to soothe the weary gullet of the rad. All the hissing and sizzling stopped. It was like balm.

Jim poured the last of the jug and I let the funnel slowly empty. When I shifted it, I got a little of the liquid on my hand.

“It’s quite sticky,” I remarked.

“It would be,” agreed Jim authoritatively.

And he carefully hoisted the third and last jug.

It was another stinger. It poured like water. It emitted choking fumes. And I was glad when Jim carefully tipped, the last drop of it into the funnel.

“There,” sighed Jim. dusting his hands. “Now we’re set for another winter.”

And he carried the empty jugs back down cellar and stowed them in the special place he had left them two long-years before where, in the event that the world still refuses to get back on the rails, he intends to re-store his anti-freeze for another winter yet to come.

We washed our hands in the kitchen and came out and boarded the car. Jim started the engine, and it purred.

“Listen to that,” applauded Jim. “Now, why doesn’t everybody use a little common sense, a little forethought? Think of all the people, all over this country, who are fussing and fuming over a little anti-freeze for their cars…?”

“I never smelled anti-freeze, like that,” I submitted as we backed out to the street.

“Oho, yes, you have!” laughed Jim. “Every year. But you forget. Each year you have to get customed to the smell of your anti-freeze.”

But at the end of the first block, even Jim was a little anxious. The car seemed filled with those queer pungent choking fumes we had noticed while pouring the anti-freeze. I opened my window wide. Jim opened his.

As we came to a halt at the first stop light five blocks from home, at the shopping section, I could hear a curious familiar humming and hissing sound.

“Jim,” I cried, “she’s boiling again!”

“Nonsense,” laughed Jim.

He shifted gears and crossed with the green light. Whereupon something went fffzzzzz! and a squirt of what appeared to be barn red paint looped into the air in front of the car, curved back and splashed all over the windshield.

Jim jammed on the brakes and leaped out. He lifted the hood and as he did so, the whole engine seemed to explode, the radiator cap blew off and out from numerous points in the radiator core, streams and jets of barn red were spurting, with violent force.

The Home Touch!

I reached and turned off the ignition. And we stood there, while a crowd gathered the engine hissed, rumbled, spouted trembled as with an intense internal convulsion it reminded me of Mount Vesuvius in eruption.

By the time it had quieted down, Jim got a motorist to give us a push down to the next corner service station.

and

and

When we drew up and the lad at the pump lifted the hood again we were covered with barn red half-way back to the tonneau3.

“Boy,” breathed the garage lad admiringly, “you certainly got a beauty, eh?”

“I can’t understand it,” Jim declared. “I just finished putting my anti-freeze in. Not 10 minutes ago I drained it. I put in three gallons of anti-freeze, and look at her!”

The garage lad leaned in and smelled. He sniffed down the radiator pipe. He sniffed all around the front of the radiator core.

“What kind of anti-freeze do you use?” he asked, very puzzled.

“Why, the regular stuff,” said Jim, naming a well-known brand.

“And what else?” inquired, the lad, rubbing his finger around some of the larger holes in the rad.

He examined his finger curiously.

“Why,” he said, “it’s all granulated, sort of.” He cautiously tasted it.

“Why,” he said, “what are you doing with maple sugar in your rad?”

“Maple…” gasped Jimmie, “maple sugar!”

He strode into the service station. I strode after.

He dialled his home telephone number.

“Can you tell me,” he inquired coolly and distantly, “what was in those three jugs, gallon jugs of mine down under the cellar stairs?”

He got an answer.

He croaked good-by and hung up.

“What was it?” I asked.

“Two gallons of javel water4,” coughed Jim huskily, “and one gallon of maple syrup.”


Editor’s Notes:

  1. According to a October 26, 1946 news story in the Toronto Star, there was a shortage of anti-freeze in 1945 due to the availability of tins. The shortage in 1946 was due to anti-freeze produced in the United States. Some produced in the U.S. was from ethelyne glycol which had price controls from the war lifted which resulted in a higher price that could be received there. However the article indicated that anti-freeze made from alcohol should be expected to make up the difference. ↩︎
  2. This would be before there were laws against that. ↩︎
  3. I think this is just another old-timey saying by Greg, meaning the back of the car. A tonneau referred to the rounded back seat in an old open top car. ↩︎
  4. Javel water is liquid bleach. The first commercial bleach, was named Eau de Javel (“Javel water”) after the borough of Javel, near Paris, where it was produced. ↩︎

Pigskin Joins the Home Team

I wanted to see you Mr. Smythe,” Pigskin, doggedly, “about getting taken on by the Maple Leafs.”

Pigskin, cigar clamped in his teeth, had regained the puck and was rushing away, looking for a new place to shoot it.

By Gregory Clark, November 15, 1930.

“I have to shoot a bear,” I said to Merrill. And that was the end of Merrill and me.

“I will go apple picking with you,” said Merrill. I will go judging cattle and hogs. But never again will I go hunting or camping with you.”

“But, Merrill,” I protested, “journalism isn’t like that. Ours not to reason why. Ours but to do or die. We have been ordered to get a bear hunting story to relieve the tedium of eternal deer hunting and moose hunting stories.”

“I am engaged,” said Merrill, “in writing radio dramas for some of the largest corporations of this northern or wider half of the continent. And they have hinted that some of the enterprises I have been engaged in with you are hardly in keeping with the je ne sais quoi of a dramatist of the air. I think you had better get a new partner.1

“Partners are hard to get,” said I. “First Charles Vining and now you.”

“Get Jimmie Frise or Lou Marsh,” said Merrill. “Or Frederick Griffin or Bob Reade.”

“I tried them long ago,” said I, “and when we set forth on an adventure it always ended up at the coca cola fountain.”

“Well,” said Merrill, “coca cola for me, though I am not writing their scenarios.”

And it was at that moment that Pigskin Peters walked into the office.

“There you are,” said Merrill, and quietly slipped away.

Pigskin looked in the pink. He had a nice new whoopee overcoat2 on and his shoes were shined. His face glowed with ruddy health.

“Where’s Jimmie?” asked Pigskin.

“Are there any races on?” I asked.

“No.”

“Well, then, I guess he’s duck hunting,” said I. “How’s the old burg, Pigskin?”

“Same as ever. Say,” said Pigskin, “if I can’t find Jimmie will you do something for me?”

“What?”‘

“Take me up to the Arena and introduce me to Conny Smythe3,” said Pigskin, with a most embarrassed look.

“What’s up?” I asked.

“I’m going into pro hockey,” said Pigskin, clearing his throat. “I’m taking it up.”

“Why, I never knew you were a hockey player, Pigskin.”

“I ain’t,” said Pigskin. “But I’m going to be.”

“Well, er,” said l, “usually, you know, Pigskin, you put in a good deal of time as an amateur before you go into pro. As a matter of fact, it takes years to make a pro hockey player.”

“Will you introduce me to Conny Smythe?” said Pigskin, briefly.

“Sure I will! But I was just telling you.”

“I been in training,” said Pigskin. “Everybody down home says I would make a pro hockey player. Lots of pros are over thirty years old.

“Well, we’ll have to step along, Pigskin, if we are going to see Conny at noon.”

“l Practiced Skating All Summer”

So I took Pigskin up Yonge St. to the Arena4 and in the dim echoing emptiness we found Conny, standing as usual with his hat on the back of his head, hands in pockets, quietly watching his boys swooping about on the ice and banging pucks with hollow booms against the boards.

“Conny, I’d like to introduce Mr. Peters,” said l.

“Glad to know you.” said Conny.

“Pigskin Peters,” said I.

“You don’t say!” cried Conny, giving Pigskin another handshake. “l know a lot about you.”

“It can’t be proved,” said Pigskin.

We all laughed.

“I wanted to see you, Mr. Smythe,” said Pigskin, doggedly, “about getting taken on by the Maple Leafs.”

When Conny doesn’t know what to say, he just grins and looks interested.

“You play much hockey, Mr. Peters?” asked Conny.

“I been in training all summer,” said Pigskin, avoiding the question. “All the boys down home say I got the makings of a real pro hockey player. We had a fellow come through last winter. He was a scout for one of the big New York clubs, and he tried to sign me on then.”

“Well,” said Conny. “H’m.”

Pigskin unbuttoned his whoopee coat and let his chest stick out. It was about the size of a good big pickle barrel. His neck is about a twenty.

“Have you done much skating?” asked Conny.

“I practiced all summer,” said Pigskin. “From June on.”

“Have you got artificial ice down in Birdseye Centre?” Conny asked with interest.

“No,” said Pigskin. “It was roller skating I was doing. I used to get up as early as four or five o’clock all summer and go out to the main highway and practice on the pavement. None of the speed cops could catch me.”

Conny looked embarrassed. He didn’t want to offend either Pigskin or me.

“Well, there’s no harm, Mr. Peters,” said he. “in putting on pair of skates and letting as what you’ve got. Harry,” he called to one of the boys hanging around, “get Mr. Peters a pair of skates.”

So Pigskin went back to the dressing room.

“What the heck!” said Conny, looking at me out of his rather steely blue eyes.

“I couldn’t help it,” I apologized. “Jim Frise couldn’t found, so Pigskin put it up to me straight to introduce him.”

“Roller skates!” snorted Conny, turning to watch his boys again.

In a few minutes Pigskin wobbled out of the dressing room wearing his usual sweater and Christy hat5 and supporting himself on a hockey stick.

“They kind of pinch,” he said as he came to us and passed through the gate on to the ice. Pigskin took a short slide and slipped and fell flat on his back. As he scrambled up, Happy Day, the captain, skated over to us and looked inquiringly at Conny.

“All right,” said Conny. He winked at Happy. “Shoot him a couple.”

Happy skated back and passed the word amongst the boys.

Poor Pigskin, leaning heavily on his stick, made a couple of desperate efforts to get out into centre ice, but the skates seemed bedevilled. Down he went, two, three, four times, and each time he fell he became madder. The boys on the ice came and flashed around him with the puck, like swallows around a balloon, but Pigskin was too busy.

“What’s This – The Newest Rules?”

Finally standing up and propelling himself with the stick, he came to the ringside where Conny and I were standing.

“These boots pinch,” said Pigskin. “The skates is too slippery.”

“Some other time,” said Conny. “Call on me some day when I’m not so busy.”

“Just a minute,” said Pigskin, pushing past us and staggering heavily out the corridor to the dressing room.

“What’s the big idea,” said Conny to me.

“Gee, Conny, I’m sorry,” I said, “but I didn’t know he couldn’t even skate.”

Conny seemed not to want to discuss the matter at all and turned to watch his players.

I stood waiting for Pigskin to get the skates off and rejoin me.

There came a rumbling sound, out from the dressing room. Up the alley behind us came Pigskin – on roller skates.

“Hey!” said Conny, blocking the little gate in the boards that lets the players onto the ice.

“Just a minute,” cried Pigskin, pushing at the gate. “Lemme out for just a minute. I wanta show you…”

And out he burst on to the ice, while Conny slammed the gate.

Strange sights have been seen in that Arena, from wrestling bouts to ice carnivals. But the performance that Pigskin put on was the supreme best.

No tumbling or fumbling now. All we saw was a red and white streak circle the Ice topped with an old Christy hat. A blur of red and white, in front of which brandished a hockey stick.

Nothing was said. King Clancy6 who was just performing a nice job at clearing the puck from the net, stopped and stared. The rest of the boys desisted in their practice and stood watching that weird blur, a sort of flying cloud or spectre that went around the rink with a humming sound coming from it.

Pigskin did a couple of pirouettes, a la winter carnival. He jumped into the air and whirled into a figure eight. Happy Day7, who was standing staring, with the puck on the end of his stick, was suddenly pounced on and the puck was gone. Pigskin had it, and on his roller skates, had dissolved into another mist of speed, ahead of which the puck hissed on the ice.

“Get it!” roared Conny.

The Maple Leafs carne to life and all started after Pigskin. Cotton raced into a corner after him, but when Cotton hit the boards in that corner, Pigskin was already steaming around the opposite corner.

The Arena wan now filled with shouts, from the players, from Conny and I believe from me. For with nine or ten Maple Leafs all after him, Pigskin was doing a kind of roller skating that had never been seen on land or sea. From centre ice, he suddenly, crouching down, made a shot at the north end net, and the whole net collapsed. Whereupon the team rushed in to get the puck, but Pigskin, whose knowledge of hockey appears to be confused with rugby or prize fighting, slammed his weight right into the midst of them, and when the puck came back down the ice, it was on Pigskin’s stick. And again he began to fade from sight, so fast was he going.

Happy Day skated over to us and said to Conny:

“What is this? The newest rules or something?”

“Get it!” said Conny.

Up to the other net rushed Pigskin and made another terrific shot, and the puck went right through the net and smashed the board behind.

“Here, here!” shouted Conny. “Don’t wreck the place!”

Pigskin Melts the Ice

King Clancy hooked the puck out of the broken boards and shot it out to midice, where Pigskin grabbed it, colliding with two other players who skidded on their backs. Hard pressed by the seven remaining players, Pigskin shot the puck against the boards for a rebound and a whole section of the fence fell over.

“Hay, hay!” shouted Conny, opening the gate and rushing on to the ice. “Hay, hay!”

But Pigskin, cigar clamped in his teeth, had regained the puck and was rushing away, looking for a new place to shoot it.

“Get off the ice,” yelled Conny to his boys.

“Give him the ice and when he gets tired, we can go on practicing.”

The Maple Leafs skated over the boards and sat, breathing heavily on the fence.

“Get him out of here!” said Canny to me.

“Pigskin!” I hollered. “PIGSKIN!”

But I was too late. He lifted the puck in a terrific shot, it rose like a bullet, up, up and sailed in what seemed like a long black streak through the air to the rafters, where it struck one of the solid steel beams. And struck so hard that is melted and stuck there, a sort of black pudding dangling from the steel.

Pigskin slowed down in centre ice, patted the ice with his stick and said:

“Toss us out another one.”

The Arena was very still.

“Pigskin,” said I, softly.

“Huh?”

“Come here! Mr. Smythe wants to talk to you.”

As Pigskin slid over to us, we all noticed at the same time that the Arena ice was melting. A steam was rising off it and it was just beginning to run.

Conny held out his hand. Pigskin shook it in a proud but embarrassed way.

“What do you think of me?” he said.

“Wonderful,” said Conny. “But I’m filled up for this year.”

“Couldn’t you lay nobody off and give me a chance?” asked Pigskin, crestfallen.

“They are all on contracts,” said Conny. “Or I’d do it in a minute.”

“Come on, Pigskin,” I said, “let’s get going. I’ve got an appointment at the office.”

“I think I’ll stick around here for a while,” said Pigskin, “and watch the practice.”

“There won’t be any more practice to-day,” said Conny. “The ice is melted.”

And sure enough, the whole surface of the Arena was honeycombed, especially where Pigskin had been skating.

He shook hands with all the players and with his whoopee coat on again, I walked him down Yonge St.

“Too bad, Pigskin,” I said.

“Well, I only did it to please my friends,” said Pigskin. “I didn’t want to get taken on anyway.”

“No?”

“No. I want to play with the Birdseye Centre Rovers this winter, and it was them that said I was too good for them and told me to try to turn pro.”

“Oh.”

“Yeah. And they’ll be glad to hear I didn’t get on the Maple Leafs.”

“I’m sure they will,” I said.

“Well, so long,” said Pigskin.

“So long.”

And he headed briskly down Bay St. for the Union station.


Editor’s Notes: This is an odd one, as it is pre-Greg and Jim, but with a fictional character from Birdseye Center as if he is real? It is interesting that he does mention the other people he had “adventures” with (Charles Vining, Merrill Denison, Jimmie Frise, Lou Marsh, Frederick Griffin and Robert Reade). The regular Greg-Jim stories would debut in 1932.

  1. This is true. Merrill Denison’s playwriting career really started taking off after he left Canada for New York in 1929. He would still produce stories every now and then for the Star Weekly from New York (and illustrated by Jimmie). ↩︎
  2. A Whoopee coat was a style of coat popularized by Eddie Cantor in the 1928 Broadway play Whoopee! which was also made into a 1930 movie. It seems to be describing any brightly coloured coat with eye-catching patterns. ↩︎
  3. Conn Smythe was the principal owner of the Toronto Maple Leafs of the NHL from 1927 to 1961. ↩︎
  4. This would be the Mutual Street Arena. In 1962, it was converted into a curling club and roller skating rink known as The Terrace. It was demolished in 1989. Maple Leaf Gardens would be built in 1931. ↩︎
  5. This would be his regular bowler hat. Christy’s is a hatmaker. ↩︎
  6. King Clancy was a player for the Toronto Maple Leafs at the time. He retired in 1937, later being a referee, a coach, and a team executive until his death in 1986. ↩︎
  7. “Happy” Day was also a player at the time. ↩︎
Winnipeg Tribune ad from HBC for a Whoopee coat (May 3, 1929).

Ladies – PLE-EE-SE!

November 21, 1942

Turtle soup was very popular in the first half of the 20th century, so much so that they became endangered and it had to stop being produced. Even canned “mock turtle” soup was created until 1960 for people to still have something similar until it disappeared due to changing tastes.

It Always Pays to be Handy

Whittling is absorbing work. You can shave away and talk at the same time…

Women have their knitting. But what can men do to keep their minds and hands busy?

By Gregory Clark, Illustrated by James Frise, November 15, 1941.

“The shortage of labor,” declared Jimmie Frise, “is making a laborer out of me.”

“The same here,” I agreed. “I had to put up my storm windows last week myself, for the first time in 15 years. The man who usually does it is working in a munitions factory.”

“Making shells?” inquired Jim.

“No, putting up the munitions factory’s storm windows,” I replied indignantly. “And doing odd jobs around the plant.”

“Still,” said Jim, “that’s part of the war effort. Somebody has got to keep the munitions plants tidy and shipshape.”

“Okay, but how about me as a taxpayer?” I demanded. “Am I not part of the war effort? Doesn’t the money I pay in taxes pay the workers who make the munitions? Who’s going to pony up the wages of the men who make the shells if I am so busy putting up storm windows that I can’t earn any money to pay the government?”

“Pshaw,” said Jim, “it didn’t take you half an hour.”

“It took me two hours,” I responded hotly. “And when you figure up how much work we have all got to do ourselves that we used to pay other men to do…”

“Wait a minute,” laughed Jimmie. “The money you save by doing the work yourself makes available that much more cash for the government.”

“I see,” I muttered. “They want us coming and going.”

“They sure do,” said Jim. “They want all the taxes off you they can scrape without skinning you alive. They want all the money you can save to lend them. They want you to work harder than you have ever worked so you will make more money for them to tax and for you to lend them.”

“I’m on a salary,” I pointed out.

“All right, they want you to work harder than you have ever worked for your salary,” explained Jim, “in order that your employer will make more money for the government to tax and for your employer to invest in war bonds.”

“Money, money, money,” I said.

“Don’t be silly,” scoffed Jim. “It isn’t money the government wants. It’s shells. And bombs. And bombers. And ships. And soldiers ready for the battlefield. You can’t make a shell. You can’t make an airplane. You couldn’t even paint a ship. You’re too old to be a soldier. So you give what you’ve got. Work.”

“Aaaah,” I said.

“That’s all they want from you,” declared Jim. “Work. Work. Work. Work at anything you can do so long as it makes money that can be converted into shells, bombs, planes, ships. See?”

“Money is easily converted,” I confessed.

“Money is the only thing in the world,” explained Jim, “that can be converted into anything. It is the universal converter. For example: There is a tree standing in the woods. It is useless. But along comes a man who says I will give somebody 50 cents1 to cut that tree down. And down comes the tree. Money has converted the tree into a log. Then the man says I will pay somebody 50 cents to haul that log down to the skids. And from the skids it goes to the pulp mill.”

The Meaning of Giving Up

“What is this?” I inquired. “A lecture?”

“At the pulp mill, another guy,” said Jim, “says he will pay $20 for somebody to work a week in the pulp mill and turn the log into pulp. And then into paper.”

“It see it coming,” I confessed.

“Then another guy says,” went on Jim, “I’ll pay somebody $50 to write an article to print on this piece of paper. And you write the article, see?”

“I’m converted,” I agreed.

“Then about 550,000 people,” continued Jimmie, “say, I’ll give you a dime for that piece of paper with that article in it. So the tree standing in the distant bush has been converted, by money, money, money, into this thing in the hands of two million people, supposing four people read each paper.”

“And that’s the end?” I asked.

“Not on your life,” cried Jim. “Then the government says, we’ve got to have submarine chasers and we need planks, hardwood planks for making little ships. So they say to you, give us 15 bucks of that 50.”

“I’m told,” I said grimly, “that they get more than half of it, one way and another. The get 25 bucks.”

“Okay, says the government,” concluded Jim, “give me 25 of that 50. And it sends a man up into the bush to find a useless hardwood tree standing there. And that guy says I’ll give somebody 50 cents to cut down that tree. And away she goes again.”

“The part I had,” I submitted, “was very small in that transaction. That one measly article.”

“Yes, but you notice you got more for the article,” explained Jim, “than anybody else got for their share.”

“And I gave up more,” I reminded him, “than anybody else when they wanted that hardwood plank for a boat. I gave up 25 bucks, which is more than the man got for working a week in the pulp mill.”

“Oh, no you didn’t,” smiled Jim. “Because all you gave up was a couple of hours work, writing the article, and $25. Whereas the man who worked in the pulp mill gave up a whole hard week of his life, laboring like the devil.”

“I mean…” I protested.

“Oh, yeah, yeah,” laughed Jimmie. “You don’t mean the same thing by ‘giving up’ as I mean. Well, sir, there is a war on. So terrible a war that it’s end will decide whether men shall be free or slaves. And the side that is going to win, without any question, is the side that understands the meaning of giving up.”

“Jim,” I said gratefully, “that was a good lecture. I begin to see what it’s all about. It isn’t what we get, what we keep, what we own that matters. It’s what we convert into shells, planes, ships… all of us, everywhere, doing anything.”

“The other night,” related Jim, “I couldn’t get to sleep and I tried counting sheep. But the sheep would not come. Soldiers came instead. Endless ranks of them, marching. I closed my eyes tight and tried to picture sheep. But brighter and sharper came the endless ranks of soldiers, marching abreast. And I couldn’t go to sleep at all. For I began thinking that here in little, farflung Canada, with only eleven million people, there were 300,000 homes from which a soldier has gone to war. That is a lot of homes.”

“They’re not all at war,” I submitted.

“A hundred thousand are overseas,” enlightened Jim, “and 20,000 are in the navy and 60,000 are in the air force. It does not matter yet where they are. They are all gone to war; 300,000 homes are short a man.”

“And we’ve got to pay those men,” I offered.

“Huh, pay them?” laughed Jim bitterly. “They get $1.30 a day each. But they have to assign half their pay, or $20 a month to their dependants at home if they want the folks to get any allowances from the government. In other words, a married soldier gets about 60 cents a day, brother.”

“Phew,” said I.

“And so the government,” went on Jim, “gives the soldier’s wife $35 a month, and $12 for each child up to two children. Maximum, with the absent soldier’s $20, of $79 a month!”

“That’s not $3 a day,” I protested, “for rent, food, clothing…”

“But look,” interrupted Jim, “suppose the wife has no children? How much has she got? Or suppose she has four children?”

“I guess a soldier’s wife,” I humbled, “doesn’t even get 60 cents a day, come to think of it.”

To Revive Whittling

“Well, the reason I mentioned soldiers,” said Jimmie, “is that when we think of our taxes, and our war savings, we always think of shells, bombs, planes, ships. Big roaring factories; toiling, well-paid workers. What we forget are those 300,000 soldiers at a few cents a day. And those 300,000 homes, with a woman in each one, and children. Lonely, anxious and haunted. And less than $3 a day to live on, entire.”

“Maybe,” said, “we prefer to think of our taxes and war savings going on mighty bombers and ships and shells…”

“It makes us feel more romantic,” explained Jim, “about ourselves.”

So we sat for a little while not thinking very romantically about ourselves.

“Even our leisure,” said Jimmie, after awhile, “should be used. I envy women their knitting.”

“We could do odd jobs,” I suggested. “Like…”

“Like putting up storm windows?” inquired Jim sweetly.

“Okay,” I surrendered. “Like putting up storm windows. Or raking leaves. Or painting the back steps.”

“Or even whittling,” said Jim. “There are a dozen things a man could whittle. Such as…er…”

“See, Jim?” I cut in. “You can’t think of anything a man could whittle nowadays that would be any good. When I was a boy, there was a whittling man in every block. Out in front of the flour and feed store, there was always a man whittling. But now there aren’t even any more flour and feed stores.”

“He could whittle latches for the door,” said Jimmie, “and sticks to hold the window up. And pegs to wind string on. And knobs for drawers.”

“But now,” I countered, “there are no more latches, and windows stay up themselves. And if anything needs a new knob, you turn it in on the instalment plan for a fresh suite of furniture.”

“Say,” said Jim, rising, “that reminds me. I have a piece of hickory down cellar that I got about five years ago for an axe handle. I was down at the old farm, looking around, and I found this piece of hickory.”

“You can buy an axe handle, Jim,” I submitted, “for 35 cents.”

But Jim was heading for the cellar stairs and I followed him. He hunted around the cellar, looking on beams, under boxes and baskets, behind old dining-room buffets and things, and at last, in the fruit cellar, on top of the cupboards, located the very billet of hickory he had brought home years ago from a visit to his boyhood home.

It was hard and dry and weathered. And from the cupboard top he threw down several other odds and ends of wood, including a one-inch plank of cedar about six feet long.

“There you are,” he said. “A cedar plank for you.”

“And what can I make with that?” I demanded.

“What else,” retorted Jim, “but a paddle? That’s what I picked it up for, about seven winters back.”

“You must have been thinking of whittling sooner or later,” I supposed.

Creative Satisfaction

But Jimmie was gone back into the furnace cellar where he rooted around in a big box and found an old-fashioned axe head and an ancient whetstone. And on the stone, Jimmie proceeded to sharpen his pocket-knife. And when he had it honed to a glittering sharpness, he took my knife and worked it up to a beautiful edge that you could feel with your thumb like a razor.

And finding pleasant spots in which to sit and lean, we set to work, Jimmie at his axe handle, with small, keen curly shavings off the hickory and I, at the paddle, with long, stiff strokes of the cedar.

Whittling is absorbing work. You can shave away, and talk at the same time. And there is a queer feeling of accomplishment, of creative satisfaction, that invades you little by little as the thing you are working at begins to take form.

Jimmie got the head end of his axe handle the wrong way round, and I had to saw off about a foot of my plank due to having taken too deep a bite with my knife, causing a large chunk of the cedar to shear loose. But we whittled and viewed and chatted and whittled away dull care until an hour or more had gone, and Jimmie was starting to fit the head on the axe handle.

“You have to get the size of the eye just right,” he said, “or else the wedge will never really grip it.”

And in a few minutes, he fitted the head perfectly, though the handle itself was rather rough.

“There you are, my boy,” he said, handing me the axe. “Just feel the heft of that. No store axe handle has got the feel. You could really swing that axe. Feel how the curve of the handle slides through your hand, giving power.”

And from the kindling bin, he got a chunk of wood and set it up on the cellar floor.

“Now, watch,” he said.

He aimed the axe and then raised it. Back over his shoulder he swung it. Forward and down he struck.

And the axe head slipped off and hurtled through the doorway into the fruit cellar where it crashed on to the second shelf of preserves which included green tomato pickle, chow chow2, mustard pickles, summer catsup, mustard catsup; and these falling, took with them half the shelf of cherries, damson plums and 16 pints of wild raspberries which are Jim’s own favorite.

It was awful. Not only the sound, which continued for several seconds. But the way the juice ran, all red and yellow and ghastly over the concrete floor.

We used the shavings we had made to help staunch the flow. Jimmie used my paddle for a shovel to push the shavings on to the mess and to scrape up the broken glass and pickles and fruit.

Then he crept up the cellar stairs and finding nobody around he got the biggest ash can from the side entrance and we filled its huge space with the wreckage of shavings, glass, fruit and blood.

Then we carried the ash can out and placed it in the side drive of the house next door, where the people are away until Christmas.

And after we had swept and wiped and cleaned all as best we could and rearranged all the fruit and pickles from the upper shelves on to the lower shelves, until you could hardly notice how much damage had been done, I said:

“I am glad my whittling was of some use. It made a good shovel.”

“Finish it, why don’t you?” said Jim wearily.

“You finish your axe handle,” I suggested.

He looked around for it, but there was no sign.

“It must be swept up with the rest of the junk in the ash can,” said Jim.

So we went back upstairs in time to hear the late afternoon war news.


Editor’s Notes:

  1. The are a lot of prices mentioned in this article. For comparable numbers, $1 in 1941 would be like $19 in 2025. ↩︎
  2. Chow chow is a pickled relish made of chopped green tomatoes, onions, cabbage, and seasonal peppers (though carrots, cauliflower, beans, and peas are sometimes included). There are a variety of other pickled vegetables mentioned as well. ↩︎

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