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CHAPTER XIV
THIS autumn a Mr. W. G. Harding, of Marion, Ohio, was appointed President of the United
States, but Zenith was less interested in the national campaign than in the local
election.
Seneca Doane, though he was a lawyer and a graduate of the State University, was
candidate for mayor of Zenith on an alarming labor ticket.
To oppose him the Democrats and Republicans united on Lucas Prout, a mattress-
manufacturer with a perfect record for sanity.
Mr. Prout was supported by the banks, the Chamber of Commerce, all the decent
newspapers, and George F. Babbitt.
Babbitt was precinct-leader on Floral Heights, but his district was safe and he
longed for stouter battling.
His convention paper had given him the beginning of a reputation for oratory, so
the Republican-Democratic Central Committee sent him to the Seventh Ward and South
Zenith, to address small audiences of
workmen and clerks, and wives uneasy with their new votes.
He acquired a fame enduring for weeks.
Now and then a reporter was present at one of his meetings, and the headlines (though
they were not very large) indicated that George F. Babbitt had addressed Cheering
Throng, and Distinguished Man of Affairs had pointed out the Fallacies of Doane.
Once, in the rotogravure section of the Sunday Advocate-Times, there was a
photograph of Babbitt and a dozen other business men, with the caption "Leaders of
Zenith Finance and Commerce Who Back Prout."
He deserved his glory. He was an excellent campaigner.
He had faith; he was certain that if Lincoln were alive, he would be
electioneering for Mr. W. G. Harding-- unless he came to Zenith and electioneered
for Lucas Prout.
He did not confuse audiences by silly subtleties; Prout represented honest
industry, Seneca Doane represented whining laziness, and you could take your choice.
With his broad shoulders and vigorous voice, he was obviously a Good Fellow; and,
rarest of all, he really liked people. He almost liked common workmen.
He wanted them to be well paid, and able to afford high rents--though, naturally, they
must not interfere with the reasonable profits of stockholders.
Thus nobly endowed, and keyed high by the discovery that he was a natural orator, he
was popular with audiences, and he raged through the campaign, renowned not only in
the Seventh and Eighth Wards but even in parts of the Sixteenth.
II Crowded in his car, they came driving up to
Turnverein Hall, South Zenith--Babbitt, his wife, Verona, Ted, and Paul and Zilla
Riesling.
The hall was over a delicatessen shop, in a street banging with trolleys and smelling
of onions and gasoline and fried fish. A new appreciation of Babbitt filled all of
them, including Babbitt.
"Don't know how you keep it up, talking to three bunches in one evening.
Wish I had your strength," said Paul; and Ted exclaimed to Verona, "The old man
certainly does know how to kid these roughnecks along!"
Men in black sateen shirts, their faces new-washed but with a hint of grime under
their eyes, were loitering on the broad stairs up to the hall.
Babbitt's party politely edged through them and into the whitewashed room, at the front
of which was a dais with a red-plush throne and a pine altar painted watery blue, as
used nightly by the Grand Masters and Supreme Potentates of innumerable lodges.
The hall was full.
As Babbitt pushed through the fringe standing at the back, he heard the precious
tribute, "That's him!" The chairman bustled down the center aisle
with an impressive, "The speaker?
All ready, sir! Uh--let's see--what was the name, sir?"
Then Babbitt slid into a sea of eloquence:
"Ladies and gentlemen of the Sixteenth Ward, there is one who cannot be with us
here to-night, a man than whom there is no more stalwart Trojan in all the political
arena--I refer to our leader, the Honorable
Lucas Prout, standard-bearer of the city and county of Zenith.
Since he is not here, I trust that you will bear with me if, as a friend and neighbor,
as one who is proud to share with you the common blessing of being a resident of the
great city of Zenith, I tell you in all
candor, honesty, and sincerity how the issues of this critical campaign appear to
one plain man of business--to one who, brought up to the blessings of poverty and
of manual labor, has, even when Fate
condemned him to sit at a desk, yet never forgotten how it feels, by heck, to be up
at five-thirty and at the factory with the ole dinner-pail in his hardened mitt when
the whistle blew at seven, unless the owner
sneaked in ten minutes on us and blew it early!
(Laughter.)
To come down to the basic and fundamental issues of this campaign, the great error,
insincerely promulgated by Seneca Doane--"
There were workmen who jeered--young cynical workmen, for the most part
foreigners, Jews, Swedes, Irishmen, Italians--but the older men, the patient,
bleached, stooped carpenters and mechanics,
cheered him; and when he worked up to his anecdote of Lincoln their eyes were wet.
Modestly, busily, he hurried out of the hall on delicious applause, and sped off to
his third audience of the evening.
"Ted, you better drive," he said. "Kind of all in after that spiel.
Well, Paul, how'd it go? Did I get 'em?"
"Bully!
Corking! You had a lot of pep."
Mrs. Babbitt worshiped, "Oh, it was fine! So clear and interesting, and such nice
ideas.
When I hear you orating I realize I don't appreciate how profoundly you think and
what a splendid brain and vocabulary you have.
Just--splendid."
But Verona was irritating. "Dad," she worried, "how do you know that
public ownership of utilities and so on and so forth will always be a failure?"
Mrs. Babbitt reproved, "Rone, I should think you could see and realize that when
your father's all worn out with orating, it's no time to expect him to explain these
complicated subjects.
I'm sure when he's rested he'll be glad to explain it to you.
Now let's all be quiet and give Papa a chance to get ready for his next speech.
Just think!
Right now they're gathering in Maccabee Temple, and WAITING for us!"
III Mr. Lucas Prout and Sound Business defeated
Mr. Seneca Doane and Class Rule, and Zenith was again saved.
Babbitt was offered several minor appointments to distribute among poor
relations, but he preferred advance information about the extension of paved
highways, and this a grateful administration gave to him.
Also, he was one of only nineteen speakers at the dinner with which the Chamber of
Commerce celebrated the victory of righteousness.
His reputation for oratory established, at the dinner of the Zenith Real Estate Board
he made the Annual Address. The Advocate-Times reported this speech
with unusual fullness:
"One of the livest banquets that has recently been pulled off occurred last
night in the annual Get-Together Fest of the Zenith Real Estate Board, held in the
Venetian Ball Room of the O'Hearn House.
Mine host Gil O'Hearn had as usual done himself proud and those assembled feasted
on such an assemblage of plates as could be rivaled nowhere west of New York, if there,
and washed down the plenteous feed with the
cup which inspired but did not inebriate in the shape of cider from the farm of
Chandler Mott, president of the board and who acted as witty and efficient chairman.
"As Mr. Mott was suffering from slight infection and sore throat, G. F. Babbitt
made the principal talk.
Besides outlining the progress of Torrensing real estate titles, Mr. Babbitt
spoke in part as follows:
"'In rising to address you, with my impromptu speech carefully tucked into my
vest pocket, I am reminded of the story of the two Irishmen, Mike and Pat, who were
riding on the Pullman.
Both of them, I forgot to say, were sailors in the Navy.
It seems Mike had the lower berth and by and by he heard a terrible racket from the
upper, and when he yelled up to find out what the trouble was, Pat answered, "Shure
an' bedad an' how can I ever get a night's sleep at all, at all?
I been trying to get into this darned little hammock ever since eight bells!"
"'Now, gentlemen, standing up here before you, I feel a good deal like Pat, and maybe
after I've spieled along for a while, I may feel so darn small that I'll be able to
crawl into a Pullman hammock with no trouble at all, at all!
"'Gentlemen, it strikes me that each year at this annual occasion when friend and foe
get together and lay down the battle-ax and let the waves of good-fellowship waft them
up the flowery slopes of amity, it behooves
us, standing together eye to eye and shoulder to shoulder as fellow-citizens of
the best city in the world, to consider where we are both as regards ourselves and
the common weal.
"'It is true that even with our 361,000, or practically 362,000, population, there are,
by the last census, almost a score of larger cities in the United States.
But, gentlemen, if by the next census we do not stand at least tenth, then I'll be the
first to request any knocker to remove my shirt and to eat the same, with the
compliments of G. F. Babbitt, Esquire!
It may be true that New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia will continue to keep ahead of
us in size.
But aside from these three cities, which are notoriously so overgrown that no decent
white man, nobody who loves his wife and kiddies and God's good out-o'doors and
likes to shake the hand of his neighbor in
greeting, would want to live in them--and let me tell you right here and now, I
wouldn't trade a high-class Zenith acreage development for the whole length and
breadth of Broadway or State Street!--aside
from these three, it's evident to any one with a head for facts that Zenith is the
finest example of American life and prosperity to be found anywhere.
"'I don't mean to say we're perfect.
We've got a lot to do in the way of extending the paving of motor boulevards,
for, believe me, it's the fellow with four to ten thousand a year, say, and an
automobile and a nice little family in a
bungalow on the edge of town, that makes the wheels of progress go round!
"'That's the type of fellow that's ruling America to-day; in fact, it's the ideal
type to which the entire world must tend, if there's to be a decent, well-balanced,
Christian, go-ahead future for this little old planet!
Once in a while I just naturally sit back and size up this Solid American Citizen,
with a whale of a lot of satisfaction.
"'Our Ideal Citizen--I picture him first and foremost as being busier than a bird-
dog, not wasting a lot of good time in day- dreaming or going to sassiety teas or
kicking about things that are none of his
business, but putting the zip into some store or profession or art.
At night he lights up a good cigar, and climbs into the little old 'bus, and maybe
cusses the carburetor, and shoots out home.
He mows the lawn, or sneaks in some practice putting, and then he's ready for
dinner.
After dinner he tells the kiddies a story, or takes the family to the movies, or plays
a few fists of bridge, or reads the evening paper, and a chapter or two of some good
lively Western novel if he has a taste for
literature, and maybe the folks next-door drop in and they sit and visit about their
friends and the topics of the day.
Then he goes happily to bed, his conscience clear, having contributed his mite to the
prosperity of the city and to his own bank- account.
"'In politics and religion this Sane Citizen is the canniest man on earth; and
in the arts he invariably has a natural taste which makes him pick out the best,
every time.
In no country in the world will you find so many reproductions of the Old Masters and
of well-known paintings on parlor walls as in these United States.
No country has anything like our number of phonographs, with not only dance records
and comic but also the best operas, such as Verdi, rendered by the world's highest-paid
singers.
"'In other countries, art and literature are left to a lot of shabby bums living in
attics and feeding on *** and spaghetti, but in America the successful writer or
picture-painter is indistinguishable from
any other decent business man; and I, for one, am only too glad that the man who has
the rare skill to season his message with interesting reading matter and who shows
both purpose and pep in handling his
literary wares has a chance to drag down his fifty thousand bucks a year, to mingle
with the biggest executives on terms of perfect equality, and to show as big a
house and as swell a car as any Captain of Industry!
But, mind you, it's the appreciation of the Regular Guy who I have been depicting which
has made this possible, and you got to hand as much credit to him as to the authors
themselves.
"'Finally, but most important, our Standardized Citizen, even if he is a
bachelor, is a lover of the Little Ones, a supporter of the hearthstone which is the
basic foundation of our civilization,
first, last, and all the time, and the thing that most distinguishes us from the
decayed nations of Europe.
"'I have never yet toured Europe--and as a matter of fact, I don't know that I care to
such an awful lot, as long as there's our own mighty cities and mountains to be seen-
-but, the way I figure it out, there must
be a good many of our own sort of folks abroad.
Indeed, one of the most enthusiastic Rotarians I ever met boosted the tenets of
one-hundred-per-cent pep in a burr that smacked o' bonny Scutlond and all ye bonny
braes o' Bobby Burns.
But same time, one thing that distinguishes us from our good brothers, the hustlers
over there, is that they're willing to take a lot off the snobs and journalists and
politicians, while the modern American
business man knows how to talk right up for himself, knows how to make it good and
plenty clear that he intends to run the works.
He doesn't have to call in some highbrow hired-man when it's necessary for him to
answer the crooked critics of the sane and efficient life.
He's not dumb, like the old-fashioned merchant.
He's got a vocabulary and a punch.
"'With all modesty, I want to stand up here as a representative business man and gently
whisper, "Here's our kind of folks! Here's the specifications of the
Standardized American Citizen!
Here's the new generation of Americans: fellows with hair on their chests and
smiles in their eyes and adding-machines in their offices.
We're not doing any boasting, but we like ourselves first-rate, and if you don't like
us, look out--better get under cover before the cyclone hits town!"
"'So! In my clumsy way I have tried to sketch the Real He-man, the fellow with Zip
and ***.
And it's because Zenith has so large a proportion of such men that it's the most
stable, the greatest of our cities.
New York also has its thousands of Real Folks, but New York is cursed with
unnumbered foreigners. So are Chicago and San Francisco.
Oh, we have a golden roster of cities-- Detroit and Cleveland with their renowned
factories, Cincinnati with its great machine-tool and soap products, Pittsburg
and Birmingham with their steel, Kansas
City and Minneapolis and Omaha that open their bountiful gates on the *** of the
ocean-like wheatlands, and countless other magnificent sister-cities, for, by the last
census, there were no less than sixty-eight
glorious American burgs with a population of over one hundred thousand!
And all these cities stand together for power and purity, and against foreign ideas
and communism--Atlanta with Hartford, Rochester with Denver, Milwaukee with
Indianapolis, Los Angeles with Scranton, Portland, Maine, with Portland, Oregon.
A good live wire from Baltimore or Seattle or Duluth is the twin-brother of every like
fellow booster from Buffalo or Akron, Fort Worth or Oskaloosa!
"'But it's here in Zenith, the home for manly men and womanly women and bright
kids, that you find the largest proportion of these Regular Guys, and that's what sets
it in a class by itself; that's why Zenith
will be remembered in history as having set the pace for a civilization that shall
endure when the old time-killing ways are gone forever and the day of earnest
efficient endeavor shall have dawned all round the world!
"'Some time I hope folks will quit handing all the credit to a lot of moth-eaten,
mildewed, out-of-date, old, European dumps, and give proper credit to the famous Zenith
spirit, that clean fighting determination
to win Success that has made the little old Zip City celebrated in every land and
clime, wherever condensed milk and pasteboard cartons are known!
Believe me, the world has fallen too long for these worn-out countries that aren't
producing anything but bootblacks and scenery and ***, that haven't got one
bathroom per hundred people, and that don't
know a loose-leaf ledger from a slip-cover; and it's just about time for some Zenithite
to get his back up and holler for a show- down!
"'I tell you, Zenith and her sister-cities are producing a new type of civilization.
There are many resemblances between Zenith and these other burgs, and I'm darn glad of
it!
The extraordinary, growing, and sane standardization of stores, offices,
streets, hotels, clothes, and newspapers throughout the United States shows how
strong and enduring a type is ours.
"'I always like to remember a piece that Chum Frink wrote for the newspapers about
his lecture-tours.
It is doubtless familiar to many of you, but if you will permit me, I'll take a
chance and read it.
It's one of the classic poems, like "If" by Kipling, or Ella Wheeler Wilcox's "The Man
Worth While"; and I always carry this clipping of it in my note-book:
"When I am out upon the road, a poet with a pedler's load I mostly sing a hearty song,
and take a chew and hike along, a-handing out my samples fine of Cheero Brand of
sweet sunshine, and peddling optimistic
pokes and stable lines of japes and jokes to Lyceums and other folks, to Rotarys,
Kiwanis' Clubs, and feel I ain't like other dubs.
And then old Major Silas Satan, a brainy cuss who's always waitin', he gives his
tail a lively quirk, and gets in quick his dirty work.
He fills me up with mullygrubs; my hair the backward way he rubs; he makes me lonelier
than a hound, on Sunday when the folks ain't round.
And then b' gosh, I would prefer to never be a lecturer, a-ridin' round in classy
cars and smoking fifty-cent cigars, and never more I want to roam; I simply want to
be back home, a-eatin' flap jacks, hash, and ham, with folks who savvy whom I am!
"But when I get that lonely spell, I simply seek the best hotel, no matter in what town
I be--St. Paul, Toledo, or K.C., in Washington, Schenectady, in Louisville or
Albany.
And at that inn it hits my dome that I again am right at home.
If I should stand a lengthy spell in front of that first-class hotel, that to the
drummers loves to cater, across from some big film theayter; if I should look around
and buzz, and wonder in what town I was, I swear that I could never tell!
For all the crowd would be so swell, in just the same fine sort of jeans they wear
at home, and all the queens with spiffy bonnets on their beans, and all the fellows
standing round a-talkin' always, I'll be
bound, the same good jolly kind of guff, 'bout autos, politics and stuff and
baseball players of renown that Nice Guys talk in my home town!
"Then when I entered that hotel, I'd look around and say, "Well, well!"
For there would be the same news-stand, same magazines and candies grand, same
smokes of famous standard brand, I'd find at home, I'll tell!
And when I saw the jolly bunch come waltzing in for eats at lunch, and squaring
up in natty duds to platters large of French Fried spuds, why then I'd stand
right up and bawl, "I've never left my home at all!"
And all replete I'd sit me down beside some guy in derby brown upon a lobby chair of
plush, and murmur to him in a rush, "Hello, Bill, tell me, good old scout, how is your
stock a-holdin' out?"
Then we'd be off, two solid pals, a- chatterin' like giddy gals of flivvers,
weather, home, and wives, lodge-brothers then for all our lives!
So when Sam Satan makes you blue, good friend, that's what I'd up and do, for in
these States where'er you roam, you never leave your home sweet home."
"'Yes, sir, these other burgs are our true partners in the great game of vital living.
But let's not have any mistake about this.
I claim that Zenith is the best partner and the fastest-growing partner of the whole
caboodle. I trust I may be pardoned if I give a few
statistics to back up my claims.
If they are old stuff to any of you, yet the tidings of prosperity, like the good
news of the Bible, never become tedious to the ears of a real hustler, no matter how
oft the sweet story is told!
Every intelligent person knows that Zenith manufactures more condensed milk and
evaporated cream, more paper boxes, and more lighting-fixtures, than any other city
in the United States, if not in the world.
But it is not so universally known that we also stand second in the manufacture of
package-butter, sixth in the giant realm of motors and automobiles, and somewhere about
third in cheese, leather findings, tar roofing, breakfast food, and overalls!
"'Our greatness, however, lies not alone in punchful prosperity but equally in that
public spirit, that forward-looking idealism and brotherhood, which has marked
Zenith ever since its foundation by the Fathers.
We have a right, indeed we have a duty toward our fair city, to announce broadcast
the facts about our high schools, characterized by their complete plants and
the finest school-ventilating systems in
the country, bar none; our magnificent new hotels and banks and the paintings and
carved marble in their lobbies; and the Second National Tower, the second highest
business building in any inland city in the entire country.
When I add that we have an unparalleled number of miles of paved streets, bathrooms
vacuum cleaners, and all the other signs of civilization; that our library and art
museum are well supported and housed in
convenient and roomy buildings; that our park-system is more than up to par, with
its handsome driveways adorned with grass, shrubs, and statuary, then I give but a
hint of the all round unlimited greatness of Zenith!
"'I believe, however, in keeping the best to the last.
When I remind you that we have one motor car for every five and seven-eighths
persons in the city, then I give a rock- ribbed practical indication of the kind of
progress and braininess which is synonymous with the name Zenith!
"'But the way of the righteous is not all roses.
Before I close I must call your attention to a problem we have to face, this coming
The worst menace to sound government is not the avowed socialists but a lot of cowards
who work under cover--the long-haired gentry who call themselves "liberals" and
"radicals" and "non-partisan" and
"intelligentsia" and God only knows how many other trick names!
Irresponsible teachers and professors constitute the worst of this whole gang,
and I am ashamed to say that several of them are on the faculty of our great State
University!
The U. is my own Alma Mater, and I am proud to be known as an alumni, but there are
certain instructors there who seem to think we ought to turn the conduct of the nation
over to hoboes and roustabouts.
"'Those profs are the snakes to be scotched--they and all their milk-and-water
ilk! The American business man is generous to a
fault.
But one thing he does demand of all teachers and lecturers and journalists: if
we're going to pay them our good money, they've got to help us by selling
efficiency and whooping it up for rational prosperity!
And when it comes to these blab-mouth, fault-finding, pessimistic, cynical
University teachers, let me tell you that during this golden coming year it's just as
much our duty to bring influence to have
those cusses fired as it is to sell all the real estate and gather in all the good
shekels we can.
"'Not till that is done will our sons and daughters see that the ideal of American
manhood and culture isn't a lot of cranks sitting around chewing the rag about their
Rights and their Wrongs, but a God-fearing,
hustling, successful, two-*** Regular Guy, who belongs to some church with pep
and piety to it, who belongs to the Boosters or the Rotarians or the Kiwanis,
to the Elks or Moose or Red Men or Knights
of Columbus or any one of a score of organizations of good, jolly, kidding,
laughing, sweating, upstanding, lend-a- handing Royal Good Fellows, who plays hard
and works hard, and whose answer to his
critics is a square-toed boot that'll teach the grouches and smart alecks to respect
the He-man and get out and root for Uncle Samuel, U.S.A.!'"
IV Babbitt promised to become a recognized
orator.
He entertained a Smoker of the Men's Club of the Chatham Road presbyterian Church
with Irish, Jewish, and Chinese dialect stories.
But in nothing was he more clearly revealed as the Prominent Citizen than in his
lecture on "Brass Tacks Facts on Real Estate," as delivered before the class in
Sales Methods at the Zenith Y.M.C.A.
The Advocate-Times reported the lecture so fully that Vergil Gunch said to Babbitt,
"You're getting to be one of the classiest spellbinders in town.
Seems 's if I couldn't pick up a paper without reading about your well-known
eloquence. All this guff ought to bring a lot of
business into your office.
Good work! Keep it up!"
"Go on, quit your kidding," said Babbitt feebly, but at this tribute from Gunch,
himself a man of no mean oratorical fame, he expanded with delight and wondered how,
before his vacation, he could have
questioned the joys of being a solid citizen.