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FACING PAGE

"He staggered to his feet, stumbled blindly through the doorway" 142

"'Go in for Minturn.... Use your brains,' he added" 232

"Tubby went over backward in his chair" 258

FORWARD PASS

OFF TO SCHOOL

There was a warning clang from the engine bell and a sudden return to darkness as the fireman slammed the furnace door and tossed the slicer-bar back onto the tender. The express messenger in the car behind pulled close the sliding door and hasped it, pausing afterwards to glance questioningly at the cloudy night sky. At the far end of the train, which curved serpent-wise along the track, the conductor's lantern rose and fell, the porter seized his footstool and Dan Vinton, after a final hurried kiss, broke from his mother's arms and ran nimbly up the steps of the already moving sleeper.

"Good-bye, mother," he called down into the half-darkness. "Good-bye, father! Good-bye, Mae!"

They all answered at once, his father in a hoarse growl, his mother softly and tearfully and his sister in a shrill, excited voice as she tripped along beside the car steps, waving frantically. The eastbound express carried ten cars to-night, and for a moment the big engine puffed and grunted complainingly, and the train moved slowly, the wheel flanges screaming against the curving rails. From across the platform Dan heard his father's voice lifted irritably:

"Ma, if you're coming I wish you'd come! Can't expect me to keep these horses standing here all night!"

Dan smiled and choked as he heard. Dear old dad! All the way to the station he had been as cross as a wet hen, holding his face aside as they passed a light for fear that the others would see the tears in his eyes, and trying with his gruffness to disguise the quiver in his voice. Dan gave a gulp as he felt the tears coming into his own eyes. The dimly-lighted station hurried by, there was a flash of green and red and white lanterns as the trucks rattled over the switches and then they had left the town behind and were rushing eastward through the September night, gaining speed with every click of the wheels. There was a sudden long and dismal shriek from the engine, and with that the monster settled down into the stride which, ere morning came, was to eat up three hundred Ohio miles and bring them well into Pennsylvania. The porter, with a muttered apology, closed the vestibule door, and Dan, blinking the persistent tears from his eyes, left the platform and entered the sleeping-car.

"I put your suit-case under the berth, sir," said the porter as he followed the passenger down the aisle. The lights were turned low, and Dan was glad of it, for he didn't want even the colored porter to think him a baby. The green curtains were pulled close at every section and from behind some of them came sounds plainly indicating occupancy.


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