Golden Days for Boys and Girls, Vol. XII, Jan. 3, 1891 by Various
page 31 of 247 (12%)
page 31 of 247 (12%)
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feel hopeful, but fearing the worst.
CHAPTER II. Scarcely had the youth left the railroad company's headquarters, when a tall, spare man, with faultless dress and cleanly-shaven face, entered the apartment, going straight to the superintendent's desk, smiling and nodding to the clerks as he passed them. He was Donald Minturn, the assistant superintendent, who had a smile for every one, but as treacherous as the charm of the serpent. "Hilloa Minturn!" greeted his chief; "you are back sooner than I expected. By-the-way, you must have met a boy as you came in. He was after a situation, and I was careless enough not to ask him his name. Call him back if it is not too late. I think we might do worse than--" "What!" exclaimed Mr. Minturn, "has that fellow had the audacity to come here for another job? He has been discharged from his section this very week." "Then you know him, Minturn? Come to think of it, he told me so. How stupid I am to-day! What is his name?" "That he couldn't have told you himself, if you had asked him, general. He is a sort of waif of the switch-yard. Jack Ingleside--you knew Jack--he was engineer on the old Greyhound, afterwards took to drink and went to the bad--well, as I started to say, Jack found this boy in the caboose one morning as he was starting from Wood's Hollow. He wasn't |
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