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About The Gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1910-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 17, 1925)
THE GATE CITY JOURNAL J King Tommy -------------------------------------------------------- » CHAPTER X— Continued * — 12 ■■ Janet Church was watching about the central hall looking out tor some one In whose business she could in terfere, helpfully of course. Janet always wants to be helpful. When she saw Tommy at the desk of the reception office she walked over and Joined him. She agreed with the head clerk that an Auswels was nec essary, and showed the one which the Berlin police bad granted to her. Then she offered to take a look at Tommy's passport Just to see that It was In order. It was. Tommy’s mouth, hose, eyes and hair were de scribed In the usual official style. His photograph, not In the least like him, was s tu d In the proper place and duly stamped by the Foreign of fice. All the visas were there, as Illegible as usual. But Janet raised her eyebrows In surprise. Taking Tommy by the arm she led him sway from the desk. “You’d better be careful with that passport,“ she said. "The German police know more than you’d think.” “But It’s all right, Isn’t It?’’ “Oh, It's all right, of course, for the Rev. T. A. Norreys, an Irish clergyman.” "And that's who I am.” “I don’t see what good you expect to do by keeping up that pretense with me,” said Janet. " I assure you—” "And I assure you,” said Janet, "that no ordinary Irish clergyman— that's what you profess to be. Isn't tt T—" "Quite ordinary,” said Tommy, “not even an archdeacon.” “No ordinary clergyman. English, Scotch or Irish, would have Count Caslmlr calling on him the moment he arrived In Berlin. Everybody knows that Caslmlr Is up to his neck In International plots. What would he want with an ordinary clergy man? And If you’re nothing but a curate, how do you account for the way you were received at the Mas- cotte last night? I wus there when you arrived. The whole staff simply bowed down to you and you were given the best table In the room. Ev erybody turned round and stared at you when you came In. The head waltor, who was drunk later on, served you himself. And that's a thing head waiters don’t do In the case of ordinary curates.” “I know It looks odd,” said Tom my, “but, all the same, I really am—" “I hope for your sake,” said Janet, “that the police will believe you. I don’t know who you really are, and It Isn’t my business to find o ut; but If the police believe that curate story I shall be surprised. Don't you be under any mistake about the Berlin police. They'll know exactly what happened last night at the Mascotte, and In all probability they know, what I don’t, exactly who you are and what you're doing In Berlin.” This made Tommy a little uneasy, but he was not seriously anxious. His passport was In perfect order. He had papers In his pocket, a check book and some letters, which ought to be enough to establish his Identity. He took a cab to the police office. He found his way after some trou ble, Into a small, grimy, hndly over heated room. It was filled with shab by looking people, men and women of various nationalities who stood In an Irregular Ill-formed queue. Tom my took his place behind a smelly Polish Jew and waited. After about half an hour he found himself stand ing opposite a desk nt which a young man In plain clothes was writing. This man was smoking a bedraggled cigarette, which looked as If he had licked it all over before lighting It. He was very badly shaved and near ly as grimy as Ids office. Ills tem per, like the atmosphere of his room, was overheated. He asked Tommy a number of questions rapidly. Tommy did not understand a word that was said to him and shook his head amiably. The young ‘ man asked his questions •over again more loudly. Tom my did not understand any better than before, but he tried the experi ment of saying "Ja ” In an agreeable tone to each question. This merely irritated the young man, so Tommy, who wns beginning to learn a little German, said, “Ja , bltte seboen.” Even this appeared to be unsatisfac tory, and the young man wns getting seriously annoyed. Tommy tried “neln." and then, aiming at polite ness, “nein. danke." The young man repeated his questions In a very loud and threatening tone. Tommy, still confident that every thing must go well In the end, got out his passport and handed It across the table. It contained all the Infor mation which even the most Inquisi tive policeman could desire, his name, his profession, the date and place of his birth were all there. His height was stated, and the color of his eyes and the shape of his mouth and a large number of other things. It cer tainly seemed as If every possible question was answered. The police officer opened the pass port with a Jsrk o t his hand and al lowed the ash of his cigarette to fall on the paper In order to show his dis dain of everything English. There was really very little of It he could read or understand, for ha knew no English; but he pretended to study It with a sort of contemptuous atten tlon. Suddenly he became really alert His eye had I# on Tommy's « -----------------------------------------------------— By George A. Birmingham my did .not know It till afterward, Copyright by BobbeMarriUCo.—W. N. U. Servie» but be was In tho presence of ths Prince von Stelnveldt, head of the German ministry for the control of name, which happened to be written aliens. “You speak not German good,” said very legibly. He stared at it, looked at Tommy, and then began searching Von Stelnveldt stiffly. “I don’t speak It at all,” said Tom through a pile of documents at the side of his desk. He came on the one my, “except ‘Ja,’ ‘neln,’ ’heisz wasaer’ he wanted, opened It out beside Tom and ‘bltte schoen,’ I don’t believe I my’s passport and compared the two. know a single word. It’s a great re He took the cigarette out of his lief to me to hear you talk English. mouth and looked at Tommy with a You can't Imagine how I’ve been wor smile of malicious triumph. He made ried all the morning by people ask a remark In a tone which was evi ing me questions which I couldn't un dently meant to be Insulting. Then derstand. If there's anything you he gave an order to a couple of men really want to know. I’ll be delighted In uniform who stood at the door of to tell you provided you ask In Eng the room. The men stepped forward, lish." “Your name?” touched Tommy on the arm and mo “Norreys,” said Tommy, “Rev. tioned him to follow. Tommy, puzzled and rather suspi Thomas A. Norreys, M. A. T. 0 . D." “Ach, so?” , cious, followed the constable Into an “Yes,” said Tommy pleasantly, Inner office. There he found him self In the presence of another police “Just so. I see you've got my pass officer, evidently a man of superior port there. If you look at It you’ll rank, for he was smoking a cigar. see my photograph. My nose la of The constable made a short report normal size, my face oval, my eyes and handed over Tommy's passport. of a bluish color—" “So?” The superior officer stared curiously, "Exactly so," said Tommy, and then he, too, began to ask questions, n large number of questions. Tom then waited. The German referred to some pa- my could neither understand nor answer. All he could do was to point pers which lay before him and then to his passport. But It was evident took another look at Tommy’s pass ly In some way unsatisfactory. The oft- port. “Your name,” he said, “Is Norreys ener the police officer looked a y It the more Insistently he repeated nls but It Is here In the passport not al questions. At last, thoroughly dis together rightly spelled.” “N-o-r-r-e-y-s,” said Tommy. satisfied both with Tommy and the "Here,” said the German, tapping passport, he rang the office bell one of his own papers, “I your name sharply. Two minutes later Tommy found N-o-r-h-e-y-s spelled find. Not true?” “Not In the least true,” said Tom himself under arrest. He was not actually handcuffed, but It was made my. “Herr Marquis,” said the German, quite clear to him that he was un der the charge of two policemen who “we are of your coming to this coun- try and of your plan for the resto- stood one on each side of him. The police officer laid his cigar ration of the monarchy of Lystrla and of the so-deep-grlpping plots of down carefully and took up a tele your minister of Balkan affairs good phone receiver which stood on his desk. Then followed a long conver Informed. The police Auswels per sation, or rather a series of conver mitting you longer to remain in Ber sations. Tommy, listening and watch- lin will not ge-granted be.” “I suppose you know,” sa+A Tom- my, "that all that rigmarole about plots and monarchies and marquises has nothing whatever to do with me, and my name Is spelled exactly as It Is sn my passport.” “The In English so-called bluff do I most perfectly understand,” said the German. "Within the borders of the German state may you no longer remain.” "That,” said Tommy, “is a bit rough ou me. I came over here sim ply to get rid of a lot of your money which I happened to have. I don’t want to say anything Insulting to Germany or to hurt your feelings In any way, but you must know that your money Isn’t very highly thought of anywhere else In the world. I don't suppose the most unsophisticat ed South Sea islander would give you a coconut for a whole sackful of marks. If you turn me out of Ger- many I don't see how I am to get rid of that money nt all.” “In Germany.” said Von Stelnveldt. “for you to remain Is strongly forbid den.” Tommy had begun to feel Irritated with the ridiculously pompous old man who sat before him. He had tried to annoy him by speaking of the worthlessness of German marks. The Superior Officer Stared Curiously. But the attempt had not been a suc Then He, Too, Began to Ask Ques cess. He tried again. This time a tions, a Large Number of Questions. different taunt. “Very well,” he said, "If you expel lng carefully, realized that the officer was repeating his story several times me’ from Germany, I shall go to over, with long pauses between each Strashurg and make a tour of Al- telling, during which It seemed to sace and Lorraine. They're not In Tommy that he was being switched Germany any longer, you know.” "To cross the frontier,” said Von off from one listener to another. Tom my did not understand a word he Stelnveldt, "is without the police said, but he caught his name occa Ausweis entirely Impossible.” Tommy thought this over carefully sionally, very badly pronounced. Aft er a while he began to recognize the for a minute and then realized the words “junger Englander.” Tommy, absurdity of the position. “You say I can't stay In Berlin?” who was still In quite a friendly mood, turned to one of the policemen he said. beside him. “Anywhere In Germany," said Von "It's a pity," he said, "that he Stelnveldt, “Is for you strongly for doesn't try broadcasting. That must bidden.” be the fifth time he’s told Ills story." “And at the same time you say 1 After the police officer had talked can’t go." Into his telephone for half an hour, “To cross the frontier without the he gave an order to his two tnen and police Auswels Impossible Is.” Tommy was led off. They shut him “So far as I can see," said Torn- up In a small inner room and left my. “the only thing left for me to do him there. Tommy began to feel Is to fade away gradually like the slightly annoyed, but wus not In the Cheshire cat In “Alice in Wonder least frightened. It was evident that land," and 1 can’t do that. The only the hotel clerk had been wrong In kind of man I ever heard of who saying that the police proceedings could do that Is a Mahatma, with an are merely formal, and Janet Church astral body, and I’m not one. But I right when she warned him that he dare say you’re simply making what was likely to have a great deal of you believe to be a Joke. I always trpuble before he got permission to heard that German Jokes are a bit stay in Berlin. difficult to set.” When Tommy had been Incarcerat (T O H E C O N T IN U E D .) ed for about an hour he was taken out and put in a taxi. His two M ade L onely Journey guards went with him. They were A woman farmer In a lonely part of perfectly civil, but they never took South Africa, Mrs. Ida Francis, has their eyes off him for an instant. Just shown that In luck and endur The cab stopped opposite an im ance British women settlers are not mense, floridly decorated doorway. behind the men. Tommy was led through it, into what About two months ago a cyclone seemed to be a public Tifflce. He was devastated her farm, which Ilea be conducted along a corridor, taken up yond the western fringe of the desolate an elevator, led along two other cor Kalahail desert; and then came flood« ridors and finally with Immense cer which destroyed the food and «heller emony, ushered Into a very hand for her cattle. The only way to save somely furnished office. her animals waa to drive them 400 A tall, fierce-looking man. elderly, miles across the desert to her son's grizzled and most Imperfectly shaved, farm, and this she did, unaided. sat at a large table covered with pa She found that many of the water pers. He was evidently a person of boles In the desert had dried up. and great Importance and Tommy took sometimes she had to ward off attacks a good look at him. His short gray by Ilona wltfc her rifle; but she kept hair stood upright on his head like steadily od. and In the end brought the bristles of a brash. There were nearly all h«t chargee through safely large rolls of fat on bis neck. Tom —Family HUaM Writ« or call for an appointment to have your photograph made WILCOX STUDIO I22yi So. Main St. Salt Lake City SAVE, Start Now! Special catalogue on U n iv e r sa l M ilk in g M a c h in e s D a ir y M ilk C o o le rs will tell you how. H . A . Shellenberger. Dairy Supply 779 South Main. 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