EVEN a baseball writer must sometimes work. Regretfully I yielded
my seat in the P. G., walked past the section where Art Graham,
Bill Cole, Lefty Paiks and young Waldron were giving expert
tonsorial treatment to "Sweet Adeline," and flopped down beside
Ryan, the manager.
"Well, Cap," I said, "we're due in Springfield in a little over
an hour and I haven't written a line."
"I want you to start me," I said. "Lord!" said Ryan. "You
oughtn't to have any trouble rinding out stuff these days, with
the club in first place and young Waldron gone crazy. He's worth
a story any day."
"That's the trouble," said I. "He's been worked so much that
there's nothing more to say about him. Everybody in the country
knows that he's hitting .420, that he's made nine home runs,
twelve triples and twenty-some doubles, that he's stolen
twenty-five bases, and that he can play the piano and sing like
Carus'. They've run his picture oftener than Billy Sunday and
Mary Pickford put together. Of course, you might come through
with how you got him."
"So I've heard you say," I retorted. "But it wouldn't be a
mystery if you'd let me print it."
"Well," said Ryan, "if you're really hard up I suppose I might as
well come through. Only there's really no mystery at all about
it; it's just what I consider the most remarkable piece of
scouting ever done. I've been making a mystery of it just to have
a little fun with Dick Hodges. You know he's got the Jackson club
and he's still so sore about my stealing Waldron he'll hardly
speak to me.
"I'll give you the dope if you want it, though it's a boost for
Art Graham, not me . There's lots of people think the reason I've
kept the thing a secret is because I'm modest.
"They give me credit for having found Waldron myself. But Graham
is the bird that deserves the credit and I'll admit that he
almost had to get down on his knees to make me take his tip. Yes,
sir, Art Graham was the scout, and now he's sitting on the bench
and the boy he recommended has got his place."
"That sounds pretty good," I said. "And how did Graham get wise?"
"I'm going to tell you. You're in a hurry; so I'll make it
snappy.
"You weren't with us last fall, were you? Well, we had a day off
in Detroit, along late in the season. Graham's got relatives in
Jackson; so he asked me if he could spend the day there. I told
him he could and asked him to keep his eyes peeled for good young
pitchers, if he happened to go to the ball game. So he went to
Jackson and the next morning he came back all excited. I asked
him if he'd found me a pitcher and he said he hadn't, but he'd
seen the best natural hitter he'd ever looked at--a kid named
Waldron.
"'Well,' I said, 'you're the last one that ought to be
recommending outfielders. If there's one good enough to hold a
regular job, it might be your job he'd get.'
"But Art said that didn't make any difference to him--he was
looking out for the good of the club. Well, I didn't see my way
clear to asking the old man to dig up good money for an
outfielder nobody'd ever heard of, when we were pretty well
stocked with them, so I tried to stall Art; but he kept after me
and kept after me till I agreed to stick in a draft for the kid
just to keep Art quiet. So the draft went in and we got him.
Then, as you know, Hodges tried to get him back, and that made me
suspicious enough to hold on to him. Hodges finally came over to
see me and wanted to know who'd tipped me to Waldron. That's
where the mystery stuff started, because I saw that Hodges was
all heated up and wanted to kid him along. So I told him we had
some mighty good scouts working for us, and he said he knew our
regular scouts and they couldn't tell a ball-player from a torn
ligament. Then he offered me fifty bucks if I'd tell him the
truth and I just laughed at him. I said: 'A fella happened to be
in Jackson one day and saw him work. But I won't tell you who the
fella was, because you're too anxious to know.' Then he insisted
on knowing what day the scout had been in Jackson. I said I'd
tell him that if he'd tell me why he was so blame curious. So he
gave me his end of it.
"It seems his brother, up in Ludington, had seen this kid play
ball on the lots and had signed him right up for Hodges and taken
him to Jackson, and of course, Hodges knew he had a world beater
the minute he saw him. But he also knew he wasn't going to be
able to keep him in Jackson, and, naturally he began to figure
how he could get the most money for him. It was already August
when the boy landed in Jackson; so there wasn't much chance of
getting a big price last season. He decided to teach the kid what
he didn't know about baseball and to keep him under cover till
this year. Then everybody would be touting him and there'd be
plenty of competition. Hodges could sell to the highest bidder.
"He had Waidron out practising every day, but wouldn't let him
play in a game, and every player on the Jackson club had promised
to keep the secret till this year. So Hodges wanted to find out
from me which one of his players had broken the promise.
"Then I asked him if he was perfectly sure that Waldron hadn't
played in a game, and he said he had gone in to hit for somebody
just once. I asked him what date that was and he told me. It was
the day Art had been in Jackson. So I said:
"'There's your mystery solved. That's the day my scout saw him,
and you'll have to give the scout a little credit for picking a
star after seeing him make one base hit.'
"'That makes it all the more a mystery. Because, in the first
place, he batted under a fake name. And, in the second place, he
didn't make a base hit. He popped out.'
"That's about all there is to it. You can ask Art how he picked
the kid out for a star from seeing him pop out once. I've asked
him myself, and he's told me that he liked the way Waldron swung.
Personally, I believe one of those Jackson boys got too gabby.
But Art swears not."
"That is a story," I said gratefully. "An old outfielder who must
know he's slipping recommends a busher after seeing him pop out
once. And the busher jumps right in and gets his job."
I looked down the aisle toward the song birds. Art Graham, now a
bench warmer, and young Waldron, whom he had touted and who was
the cause of his being sent to the bench, were harmonizing at the
tops of their strong and not too pleasant voices.
"And probably the strangest part of the story," I added, "is that
Art doesn't seem to regret it. He and the kid appear to be the
best of friends."
"Anybody who can sing is Art's friend," said Ryan.
I left him and went back to my seat to tear off my seven hundred
words before we reached Springfield. I considered for a moment
the advisability of asking Graham for an explanation of his
wonderful bit of scouting, but decided to save that part of it
for another day. I was in a hurry and, besides, Waldron was just
teaching them a new "wallop," and it would have been folly for me
to interrupt.
"It's on the word 'you,'" Waldron was saying. "I come down a
tone; Lefty goes up a half tone, and Bill comes up two tones, Art
just sings it like always. Now try her again," I heard him direct
the song birds. They tried her again, making a worse noise than
ever:
"I only know I love you;
Love me, and the world (the world) is mine (the world
is mine)."
"No," said Waldron. "Lefty missed it. If you fellas knew music, I
could teach it to you with the piano when we get to Boston. On
the word 'love,' in the next to the last line, we hit a regular F
chord. Bill's singing the low F in the bass and Lefty's hitting
middle C in the baritone, and Art's on high F and I'm up to A.
Then, on the word 'you,' I come down to G, and Art hits E and
Lefty goes up half a tone to C sharp, and Cole comes up from F to
A in the bass. That makes a good wallop. It's a change from the F
chord to the A chord. Now let's try her again," Waldron urged.
"No, no! " said young Waldron. "Art and I were all right; but
Bill came up too far, and Lefty never moved off that C. Half a
tone up, Lefty. Now try her again."
We were an hour late into Springfield, and it was past six
o'clock when we pulled out. I had filed my stuff, and when I came
back in the car the concert was over for the time, and Art Graham
was sitting alone.
"If you ever get through playing ball," I went on, "you oughtn't
to have any trouble landing a job. Good scouts don't grow on
trees."
"It looks like I'm pretty near through now," said Art, still
smiling. "But you won't never catch me scoutin' for nobody. It's
too lonesome a job."
I had passed up lunch to retain my seat in the card game; so I
was hungry. Moreover, it was evident that Graham was not going to
wax garrulous on the subject of his scouting ability. I left him
and sought the diner. I found a vacant chair opposite Bill Cole.
"Try the minced ham," he advised, "but lay off'n the
sparrow-grass. It's tougher'n a double-header in St. Louis."
"Well, what did you tell 'em?" he inquired. "Did you tell 'em we
had a pleasant trip, and Lenke lost his shirt in the poker game,
and I'm goin' to pitch to-morrow, and the Boston club's heard
about it and hope it'll rain?"
"No," I said. " I gave them a regular story to-night--about how
Graham picked Waldron."
"Then you didn't get the real story," said Cole, "Ryan himself
don't know the best part of it, and he ain't goin' to know it for
a w'ile. He'll maybe find it out after Art's got the can, but not
before. And I hope nothin' like that'll happen for twenty years.
When it does happen, I want to be sent along with Art, 'cause I
and him's been roomies now since 1911, and I. wouldn't hardly
know how to act with him off'n the club. He's a nut all right on
the singin' stuff, and if he was gone I might get a chanct to
give my voice a rest. But he's a pretty good guy, even if he is
crazy."
"Sure you would," he answered, "and I'd like to tell it to you. I
will tell it to you if you'll give me your promise not to spill
it till Art's gone. Art told it to I and Lefty in the club-house
at Cleveland pretty near a nionth ago, and the three of us and
Waldron is the only ones that knows it. I figure I've did pretty
well to keep it to myself this long, but it seems like I got to
tell somebody."
"You can depend on me," I assured him, "not to say a word about
it till Art's in Minneapolis, or wherever they're going to send
him."
"I guess I can trust you," said Cole. "But if von cross me, I'll
shoot my fast one up there in the press coop some day and knock
your teeth loose."
"The fac's." said Bill Cole. "Art not only didn't see him pop
out, but he didn't even see him with a ball suit on. He wasn't
never inside the Jackson ball park in his life."
"No, sir. Nobody tipped him off, neither. He went to Jackson and
spent the ev'nin' at his uncle's house, and Waldron was there.
Him and Art was together the whole ev'nin'. But Art didn't even
ask him if he could slide feet first. And then he come back to
Detroit and got Ryan to draft him. But to give you the whole
story, I'll have to go back a ways. We ain't nowheres near
Worcester yet, so they's no hurry, except that Art'll prob'ly be
sendin' for me pretty quick to come in and learn Waldron's lost
chord.
"You wasn't with this club when we had Mike McCann. But you must
of heard of him; outside his pitchin', I mean. He was on the
stage a couple o' winters, and he had the swellest tenor voice I
ever heard. I never seen no grand opera, but I'll bet this here
C'ruso or McCormack or Gadski or none o' them had nothin' on him
for a pure tenor. Every note as clear as a bell. You couldn't
hardly keep your eyes dry when he'd tear off 'Silver Threads' or
'The River Shannon.'
"Well, when Art was still with the Washin'ton club yet, I and
Lefty and Mike used to pal round together and onct or twict we'd
hit up some harmony. I couldn't support a fam'ly o' Mormons with
my voice, but it was better in them days than it is now. I used
to carry the lead, and Lefty'd hit the baritone and Mike the
tenor. We didn't have no bass. But most o' the time we let Mike
do the singin' alone, 'cause he had us outclassed, and the other
boys kept tellin' us to shut up and give 'em a treat. First it'd
be ' Silver Threads' and then 'Jerusalem' and then 'My Wild Irish
Rose' and this and that, whatever the boys ast him for. Jake
Martin used to say he couldn't help a short pair if Mike wasn't
singin'.
"Finally Ryan pulled off the trade with Griffith, and Graham come
on our club. Then they wasn't no more solo work. They made a bass
out o' me, and Art sung the lead, and Mike and Lefty took care o'
the tenor and baritone. Art didn't care what the other boys
wanted to hear. They could holler their heads off for Mike to
sing a solo, but no sooner'd Mike start singin' than Art'd chime
in with him and pretty soon we'd all four be goin' it. Art's a
nut on singin', but he don't care nothin' about list'nin', not
even to a canary. He'd rather harmonize than hit one past the
outfielders with two on.
"At first we done all our serenadin' on the train. Art'd get us
out o' bed early so's we could be through breakfast and back in
the ear in time to tear off a few before we got to wherever we
was goin'.
"It got so's Art wouldn't leave us alone in the different towns
'we played at. We couldn't go to no show or nothin'. We had to
stick in the hotel and sing, up in our room or Mike's. And then
he went so nuts over it that he got Mike to come and room in the
same house with him at home, and I and Lefty was supposed to help
keep the neighbors awake every night. O' course we had mornin'
practice w'ile we was home, and Art used to have us come to the
park early and get in a little harmony before we went on the
field. But Ryan finally nailed that. He says that when he ordered
mornin' practice he meant baseball and not no minstrel show.
"Then Lefty, who wasn't married, goes and gets himself a girl. I
met her a couple o' times, and she looked all right. Lefty might
of married her if Art'd of left him alone. But nothin' doin'. We
was home all through June onct, and instead o' comin' round
nights to sing with us, Lefty'd take this here doll to one o' the
parks or somewheres. Well, sir, Art was pretty near wild. He
scouted round till he'd found out why Lefty'd quit us and then he
tried pretty near everybody else on the club to see if they
wasn't some one who could hit the baritone. They wasn't nobody.
So the next time we went on the road, Art give Lefty a earful
about what a sucker a man was to get married, and looks wasn't
everything and the girl was prob'ly after Lefty's money and he
wasn't hem' a good fella to break up the quartette and spoil our
good times, and so on, and kept pesterin' and teasin' Lefty till
he give the girl up. I'd of saw Art in the Texas League before
I'd of shook a girl to please him, but you know these
left-handers.
"Art had it all framed that we was goin' on the stage, the four
of us, and he seen a vaudeville man in New York and got us booked
for eight hundred a week--I don't know if it was one week or two.
But he sprung it on me in September and says we could get solid
bookin' from October to March; so I ast him what he thought my
Missus would say when I told her I couldn't get enough o' hem'
away from home from March to October, so I was figurin' on
travelin' the vaudeville circuit the other four or five months
and makin' it unanimous? Art says I was tied to a woman's apron
and all that stuff, but I give him the cold stare and he had to
pass up that dandy little scheme.
"At that, I guess we could of got by on the stage all right. Mike
was better than this here Waldron and I hadn't wore my voice out
yet on the coachin' line, tellin' the boys to touch all the
bases.
"They was about five or six songs that we could kill. 'Adeline'
was our star piece. Remember where it comes in, 'Your fair face
beams'? Mike used to go away up on 'fair.' Then they was 'The Old
Millstream' and 'Put on Your Old Gray Bonnet.' I done some fancy
work in that one. Then they was 'Down in Jungle Town' that we had
pretty good. And then they was one that maybe you never heard. I
don't know the name of it. It run somethin' like this."
Bill sottoed his voice so that I alone could hear the beautiful
refrain:
"'Years, years, I've waited years
Only to see you, just to call you 'dear.'
Come, come, I love but thee,
Come to your sweetheart's arms; come back to me.'
"That one had a lot o' wallops in it, and we didn't overlook none
o' them. The boys used to make us sing it six or seven times a
night. But 'Down in the Cornfield' was Art's favor-ight. They was
a part in that where I sung the lead down low and the other three
done a banjo stunt. Then they was 'Castle on the Nile' and 'Come
Back to Erin' and a whole lot more.
"Well, the four of us wasn't hardly ever separated for three
years. We was practisin' all the w'ile like as if we was goin' to
play the big time, and we never made a nickel off'n it. The only
audience we had was the ball players or the people travelin' on
the same trains or stoppin' at the same hotels, and they got it
all for nothin'. But we had a good time, 'specially Art.
"You know what a pitcher Mike was. He could go in there stone
cold and stick ten out o' twelve over that old plate with
somethin' on 'em. And he was the willin'est guy in the world. He
pitched his own game every third or fourth day, and between them
games he was warmin' up all the time to go in for somebody else.
In 1911, when we was up in the race for aw'ile, he pitched eight
games out o' twenty, along in September, and win seven o' them,
and besides that, he finished up five o' the twelve he didn't
start. We didn't win the pennant, and I've always figured that
them three weeks killed Mike.
"Anyway, he wasn't worth nothin' to the club the next year; but
they carried him along, hopin' he'd come back and show somethin'.
But he was pretty near through, and he knowed it. I knowed it,
too, and so did everybody else on the club, only Graham. Art
never got wise till the trainin' trip two years ago this last
spring. Then he come to me one day.
"'Bill,' he says, 'I don't believe Mike's comin' back.'
"'Well,' I says, 'you're gettin's so's they can't nobody hide
nothin' from you. Next thing you'll be findin' out that Sam
Crawford can hit.'
"'Never mind the comical stuff,' he says. 'They ain't no joke
about this!'
"'No,' I says, 'and I never said they was. They'll look a long
w'ile before they find another pitcher like Mike.'
"'Pitcher my foot!' says Art. 'I don't care if they have to pitch
the bat boy. But when Mike goes, where'll our quartette be?'
"'Well,' I says, 'do you get paid every first and fifteenth for
singin' or for crownin' that old pill?'
"'If you couldn't talk about money, you'd be deaf and dumb,' says
Art.
"'But you ain't playin' ball because it's fun, are you?'
"'No,' he says, 'they ain't no fun for me in playin' ball. They's
no fun doin' nothin' but harmonizin', and if Mike goes, I won't
even have that.'
"'It'd be swell stuff harmonizin' without no tenor,' says Art.
'It'd be like swingin' without no bat.'
"Well, he ast me did I think the club'd carry Mike through
another season, and I told him they'd already carried him a year
without him hem' no good to them, and I figured if he didn't show
somethin' his first time out, they'd ask for waivers. Art kept
broodin' and broodin' about it till they wasn't hardly no livin'
with him. If he ast me onet he ast me a thousand tmmes if I
didn't think they might maybe hold onto Mike another season on
account of all he'd did for 'em. I kept tellin' him I didn't
think so; but that didn't satisfy him and he finally went to Ryan
and ast him point blank.
"Then Art'd watch him warm up, to see if he had anything on the
ball.
"'He's comin' fine,' he'd tell me. 'His curve broke to-day just
as good as I ever seen it.'
"But that didn't fool me, or it didn't fool Mike neither. He
could throw about four hooks and then he was through. And he
could of hit you in the head with his fast one and you'd of
thought you had a rash.
"One night, just before the season opened up, we was singin' on
the train, and when we got through, Mike says:
"'Well, boys, you better be lookin' for another C'ruso.'
"'I'm talkin' about myself,' says Mike. 'I'll be up there in
Minneapolis this summer, pitchin' onct a week and swappin'
stories about the Civil War with Joe Cantillon.'
"'You're crazy,' says Art. 'Your arm's as good as I ever seen
it.'
"'Then,' says Mike, 'you must of been playin' blindfolded all
these years. This is just between us, 'cause Ryan'll find it out
for himself; my arm's rotten, and I can't do nothin' to help it.'
"'You're a yellow, quittin' dog,' he says. 'Just because you
conic round a little slow, you talk about Minneapolis. Why don't
you resign off'n. the club?'
"You'd of thought that Art would of gave up then, 'cause when a
ball player admits he's slippin', you can bet your last nickel
that he's through. Most o' them stalls along and tries to kid
themself and everybody else long after they know they're gone.
But Art kept talkin' like they was still some hope o' Mike comin'
round, and when Ryan told us one night in St. Louis that he was
goin' to give Mike his chanct, the next day, Art was as nervous
as a bride goin' to get married. I wasn't nervous. I just felt
sorry, 'cause I knowed the old boy was hopeless.
"Ryan had told him he was goin' to work if the weather suited
him. Well, the day was perfect. So Mike went out to the park
along about noon and took Jake with him to warm up. Jake told me
afterwards that Mike was throwin', just easy like, from half-past
twelve till the rest of us got there. He was tryin' to heat up
the old souper and he couldn't of ast for a better break in the
weather, but they wasn't enough sunshine in the world to make
that old whip crack.
"Well, sir, you'd of thought to see Art that Mike was his son or
his brother or somebody and just breakin' into the league. Art
wasn't in the outfield practisin' more than two minutes. He come
in and stood behind Mike w'ile he was warmin' up and kept tellin'
how good he looked, hut the only guy he was kiddin' was himself.
"Then the game starts and our club goes in and gets three runs.
"'Pretty soft for you now, Mike,' says Art, on the bench. 'They
can't score three off'n you in three years.'
"Say, it's lucky he ever got the side out in the first innin'.
Everybody that come up hit one on the pick, but our infield
pulled two o' the greatest plays I ever seen and they didn't
score. In the second, we got three more, and I thought maybe the
old bird was goin' to be lucky enough to scrape through.
"For four or five innin's, he got the grandest support that was
ever gave a pitcher; but I'll swear that what he throwed up there
didn't have no more on it than September Morning. Every time Art
come to the bench, he says to Mike, 'Keep it up, old boy. You got
more than you ever had.'
"Well, in the seventh, Mike still had 'em shut out, and we was
six runs to the good. Then a couple o' the St. Louis boys hit 'em
where they couldn't nobody reach 'em and they was two on and two
out. Then somebody got a hold o' one and sent it on a line to the
left o' second base. I forgot who it was now; but whoever it was,
he was supposed to be a right field hitter, and Art was layin'
over the other way for him. Art started with the crack o' the
bat, and I never seen a man make a better try for a ball. He had
it judged perfect; but Cobb or Speaker or none o' them couldn't
of catched it. Art just managed to touch it by stretchin' to the
limit. It went on to the fence and everybody come in. They didn't
score no more in that innin'.
"Then Art come in from the field and what do you think he tried
to pull?
"'I don't know what was the matter with me on that fly ball,' he
says. 'I ought to caught it in my pants pocket. But I didn't get
started till it was right on top o' me.'
"'Well,' says Ryan, 'I wisht you'd misjudge all o' them that way.
I never seen a better play on a ball.'
"So then Art knowed they wasn't no more use trying to alibi the
old boy.
"Mike had a turn at bat and when he come back, Ryan ast him how
he felt.
"'I guess I can get six more o' them out,' he says.
"Well, they didn't score in the eighth, and when the ninth come
Ryan sent I and Lefty out to warm up. We throwed a few w'ile our
club was battin'; but when it come St. Louis' last chanct, we was
too much interested in the ball game to know if we was throwin'
or bakin' biscuits.
"The first guy hits a line drive, and somebody jumps a mile in
the air and stabs it. The next fella fouled out, and they was
only one more to get. And then what do you think come off?
Whoever it was hittin' lifted a fly ball to centre field. Art
didn't have to move out of his tracks. I've saw him catch a
hundred just like it behind his back. But you know what he was
thinkin'. He was sayin' to himself, 'If I nail this one, we're
li'ble to keep our tenor singer a w'ile longer.' And he dropped
it.
"Then they was five base hits that sounded like the fourth o'
July, and they come so fast that Ryan didn't have time to send
for I or Lefty. Anyway, I guess he thought he might as well leave
Mike in there and take it.
"They wasn't no singin' in the clubhouse after that game. I and
Lefty always let the others start it. Mike, o' course, didn't
feel like no jubilee, and Art was so busy tryin' not to let
nobody see him cry that he kept his head clear down in his socks.
Finally he beat it for town all alone, and we didn't see nothin'
of him till after supper. Then he got us together and we all went
up to Mike's room.
"'I want to try this here " Old Girl o' Mine,"' he says.
"'Better sing our old stuff,' says Mike. 'This looks like the
last time.'
"Then Art choked up and it was ten minutes before he could get
goin'. We sung everything we knowed, and it was two o'clock in
the mornin' before Art had enough. Ryan come in after midnight
and set a w'ile listenin', but he didn't chase us to bed. He
knowed better'n any of us that it was a farewell. When I and Art
was startin' for our room, Art turned to Mike and says:
"'Old boy, I'd of gave every nickel I ever owned to of caught
that fly ball.'
"'I know you would,' Mike says, 'and I know what made you drop
it. But don't worry about it, 'cause it was just a question o'
time, and if I'd of got away with that game, they'd of murdered
some o' the infielders next time I started.'
"Mike was sent home the next day, and we didn't see him again. He
was shipped to Minneapolis before we got back. And the rest o'
the season I might as well of lived in a cemetery w'ile we was on
the road. Art was so bad that I thought onct or twict I'd have to
change roommies. Onct in a w'ile he'd start hummin' and then he'd
break off short and growl at me. He tried out two or three o' the
other boys on the club to see if he couldn't find a new tenor
singer, but nothin' doin'. One night he made Lefty try the tenor.
Well, Lefty's voice is bad enough down low. When he gets up about
so high, you think you're in the stockyards.
"And Art had a rotten year in baseball, too. The old boy's still
pretty near as good on a fly ball as anybody in the league; but
you ought to saw him before his legs begin to give out. He could
cover as much ground as Speaker and he was just as sure. But the
year Mike left us, he missed pretty near half as many as he got.
He told me one night, he says:
"'Do you know, Bill, I stand out there and pray that nobody'll
hit one to me. Every time I see one comin' I think o' that one I
dropped for Mike in St. Louis, and then I'm just as li'ble to
have it come down on my bean as in my glove.'
"'You're crazy,' I says, 'to let a thing like that make a bum out
o' you.'
"But he kept on droppin' fly balls till Ryan was talkin' about
settin' him on the bench where it wouldn't hurt nothin' if his
nerve give out. But Ryan didn't have nobody else to play out
there, so Art held on.
"He come back the next spring---that's a year ago--feelin' more
cheerful and like himself than I'd saw him for a long w'ile. And
they was a kid named Burton tryin' out for second base that could
sing pretty near as good as Mike. It didn't take Art more'n a day
to find this out, and every mornin' and night for a few days the
four of us would be together, hittin' her up. But the kid didn't
have no more idea o' how to play the bag than Charley Chaplin.
Art seen in a minute that he couldn't never beat Cragin out of
his job, so what does he do but take him out and try and learn
him to play the outfield. He wasn't no worse there than at second
base; he couldn't of been. But before he'd practised out there
three days they was bruises all over his head and shoulders where
fly balls had hit him. Well, the kid wasn't with us long enough
to see the first exhibition game, and after he'd went, Art was
Old Man Grump again.
"'What's the matter with you?' I says to him. 'You was all smiles
the day we reported and now you could easy pass for a
undertaker.'
"'Well,' he says, 'I had a great winter, singin' all the w'ile.
We got a good quartette down home and I never enjoyed myself as
much in my life. And I kind o' had a hunch that I was goin' to be
lucky and find somebody amongst the bushers that could hit up the
old tenor.'
"'Your hunch was right,' I says. 'That Burton kid was as good a
tenor as you'd want.'
"'Yes,' he says, 'and my hunch could of played ball just as good
as him.'
"Well, sir, if you didn't never room with a corpse, you don't
know what a whale of a time I had all last season. About the
middle of August he was at his worst.
"'Bill,' he says, 'I'm goin' to leave this old baseball flat on
its back if somethin' don't happen. I can't stand these here
lonesome nights. I ain't like the rest o' the boys that can go
and set all ev'nin' at a pitcher show or hang round them Dutch
gardens. I got to be singin' or I am mis'rable.'
"'Go ahead and sing,' says I. 'I'll try and keep the cops back.'
"'No,' he says, 'I don't want to sing alone. I want to harmonize
and we can't do that 'cause we ain't got no tenor.'
"I don't know if you'll believe me or not, but sure as we're
settin' here he went to Ryan one day in Philly and tried to get
him to make a trade for Harper.
"'I ain't runnin' no ball players' benefit association,' says
Ryan, and Art had to give it up. But he didn't want Harper on the
club for no other reason than because he's a tenor singer!
"And then come that Dee-troit trip, and Art got permission to go
to Jackson. He says he intended to drop in at the ball park, but
his uncle wanted to borry some money off'n him on a farm, so Art
had to drive out and see the farm. Then, that night, this here
Waldron was up to call on Art's cousin--a swell doll, Art tells
me. And Waldron set down to the py-ana and begin to sing and
play. Then it was all off; they wasn't no spoonin' in the parlor
that night. Art wouldn't leave the kid get off'n the py-ana stool
long enough to even find out if the girl was a blonde or a
brunette.
"O' course Art knowed the boy was with the Jackson club as soon
as they was interduced, 'cause Art's uncle says somethin' about
the both o' them hem' ball players, and so on. But Art swears he
never thought o' recommendin' him till the kid got up to go home.
Then he ast him what position did he play and found out all about
him, only o' course Waldron didn't tell him how good he was
'cause he didn't know himself.
"So Art ast him would he like a trial in the big show, and the
kid says he would. Then Art says maybe the kid would hear from
him, and then Waldron left and Art went to bed, and he says he
stayed awake all night plannin' the thing out and wonderin' would
he have the nerve to pull it off. You see he thought that if Ryan
fell for it, Waldron'd join us as soon as his season was over and
then Ryan'd see he wasn't no good; but he'd prob'ly keep him till
we was through for the year, and Art could alibi himself some
way, say he'd got the wrong name or somethin'. All he wanted, he
says was to have the kid along the last month or six weeks, so's
we could harmonize. A nut? I guess not.
"Well, as you know, Waldron got sick and didn't report, and when
Art seen him on the train this spring he couldn't hardly believe
his eyes. He thought surely the kid would of been canned durin'
the winter without no trial.
"Here's another hot one. When we went out the first day for
practice, Art takes the kid off in a corner and tries to learn
him enough baseball so's he won't show himself up and get sent
away somewheres before we had a little benefit from his singin'.
Can you imagine that? Tryin' to learn this kid baseball, when he
was born with a slidin' pad on.
"You know the rest of it. They wasn't never no question about
Waldron makin' good. It's just like everybody says--he's the best
natural ball player that's broke in since Cobb. They ain't
nothin' he can't do. But it is a funny thing that Art's job
should be the one he'd get . I spoke about that to Art when he
give me the story.
"'Well,' he says, 'I can't expect everything to break right. I
figure I'm lucky to of picked a guy that's good enough to hang
on. I'm in stronger with Ryan right now, and with the old man,
too, than when I was out there playin' every day. Besides, the
bench is a pretty good place to watch the game from. And this
club won't be shy a tenor singer for nine years.'
"'No,' I says, 'but they'll be shy a lead and a baritone and a
bass before I and you and Lefty is much older.'
"'What of it?' he says. 'We'll look up old Mike and all go
somewheres and live together.'"
We were nearing Worcester. Bill Cole and I arose from our table
and started back toward our car. In the first vestibule we
encountered Buck, the trainer.
"Mr. Graham's been lookin' all over for you, Mr. Cole," he said.
We found Art Graham, Lefty, and young Waldron in Art's seat. The
kid was talking.
"Lefty missed it again. If you fellas knew music, I could teach
it to you on the piano when we get to Boston. Lefty, on the word
'love,' in the next to the last line, you're on middle C. Then,
on the word 'you,' you slide up half a tone. That'd ought to be a
snap, but you don't get it. I'm on high A and come down to G and
Bill's on low F and comes up to A. Art just sings the regular two
notes, F and B. It's a change from the F chord to the A chord. It
makes a dandy wallop and it ought to be a ----"
"Here's Bill now," interrupted Lefty, as he caught sight of Cole.
"Set down here and learn this," growled Art. "We won't never get
it if we don't work."
"Yes, let's tackle her again," said Waldron. "Bill comes up two
full tones, from F to A. Lefty goes up half a tone, Art sings
just like always, and I come down a tone. Now try her again."
Two years ago it was that Bill Cole told me that story. Two weeks
ago Art Graham boarded the evening train on one of the many roads
that lead to Minneapolis.
The day Art was let out, I cornered Ryan in the club-house after
the others had dressed and gone home.
"Did you ever know," I asked, "that Art recommended Waldron
without having seen him in a ball suit?"
"I told you long ago how Art picked Waldron," he said.
"Yes," said I, "but you didn't have the right story." So I gave
it to him.
"You newspaper fellas," he said when I had done, "are the biggest
suckers in the world. Now I've never given you a bad steer in my
life. But you don't believe what I tell you and you go and fall
for one of Bill Cole's hop dreams. Don't you know that he was the
biggest liar in baseball? He'd tell you that Walter Johnson was
Jack's father if he thought he could get away with it. And that
bunk he gave you about Waldron. Does it sound reasonable?
"Just as reasonable," I replied, "as the stuff about Art's
grabbing him after seeing him pop out."
"I don't claim he did," said Ryan. "That's what Art told me. One
of those Jackson ball players could give you the real truth, only
of course he wouldn't, because if Hodges ever found it out he'd
shoot him full of holes. Art Graham's no fool. He isn't touting
ball players because they can sing tenor or alto or anything
else."
Nevertheless, I believe Bill Cole; else I wouldn't print the
story. And Ryan would believe, too, if he weren't in such a mood
these days that he disagrees with everybody. For in spite of
Waldron's wonderful work, and he is at his best right now, the
club hasn't done nearly as well as when Art and Bill and Lefty
were still with us.