登陆注册
26281800000070

第70章 Chapter XXI A Matter of Tunnels(3)

Outside of the bridge crush and the tunnels above mentioned, there was one other special condition which had been for some time past attracting Cowperwood's attention. This was the waning energy of the North Chicago City Railway Company--the lack of foresight on the part of its directors which prevented them from perceiving the proper solution of their difficulties. The road was in a rather unsatisfactory state financially--really open to a coup of some sort. In the beginning it had been considered unprofitable, so thinly populated was the territory they served, and so short the distance from the business heart. Later, however, as the territory filled up, they did better; only then the long waits at the bridges occurred. The management, feeling that the lines were likely to be poorly patronized, had put down poor, little, light-weight rails, and run slimpsy cars which were as cold as ice in winter and as hot as stove-ovens in summer. No attempt had been made to extend the down-town terminus of the several lines into the business center--they stopped just over the river which bordered it at the north. (On the South Side Mr. Schryhart had done much better for his patrons. He had already installed a loop for his cable about Merrill's store.) As on the West Side, straw was strewn in the bottom of all the cars in winter to keep the feet of the passengers warm, and but few open cars were used in summer. The directors were averse to introducing them because of the expense. So they had gone on and on, adding lines only where they were sure they would make a good profit from the start, putting down the same style of cheap rail that had been used in the beginning, and employing the same antique type of car which rattled and trembled as it ran, until the patrons were enraged to the point of anarchy.

Only recently, because of various suits and complaints inaugurated, the company had been greatly annoyed, but they scarcely knew what to do, how to meet the onslaught. Though there was here and there a man of sense--such as Terrence Mulgannon, the general superintendent;Edwin Kaffrath, a director; William Johnson, the constructing engineer of the company--yet such other men as Onias C. Skinner, the president, and Walter Parker, the vice-president, were reactionaries of an elderly character, conservative, meditative, stingy, and, worst of all, fearful or without courage for great adventure. It is a sad commentary that age almost invariably takes away the incentive to new achievement and makes "Let well enough alone" the most appealing motto.

Mindful of this, Cowperwood, with a now splendid scheme in his mind, one day invited John J. McKenty over to his house to dinner on a social pretext. When the latter, accompanied by his wife, had arrived, and Aileen had smiled on them both sweetly, and was doing her best to be nice to Mrs. McKenty, Cowperwood remarked:

"McKenty, do you know anything about these two tunnels that the city owns under the river at Washington and La Salle streets?"

"I know that the city took them over when it didn't need them, and that they're no good for anything. That was before my time, though," explained McKenty, cautiously. "I think the city paid a million for them. Why?"

"Oh, nothing much," replied Cowperwood, evading the matter for the present. "I was wondering whether they were in such condition that they couldn't be used for anything. I see occasional references in the papers to their uselessness."

"They're in pretty bad shape, I'm afraid," replied McKenty. "I haven't been through either of them in years and years. The idea was originally to let the wagons go through them and break up the crowding at the bridges. But it didn't work. They made the grade too steep and the tolls too high, and so the drivers preferred to wait for the bridges. They were pretty hard on horses. I can testify to that myself. I've driven a wagon-load through them more than once. The city should never have taken them over at all by rights. It was a deal. I don't know who all was in it. Carmody was mayor then, and Aldrich was in charge of public works."

He relapsed into silence, and Cowperwood allowed the matter of the tunnels to rest until after dinner when they had adjourned to the library. There he placed a friendly hand on McKenty's arm, an act of familiarity which the politician rather liked.

"You felt pretty well satisfied with the way that gas business came out last year, didn't you?" he inquired.

"I did," replied McKenty, warmly. "Never more so. I told you that at the time." The Irishman liked Cowperwood, and was grateful for the swift manner in which he had been made richer by the sum of several hundred thousand dollars.

"Well, now, McKenty," continued Cowperwood, abruptly, and with a seeming lack of connection, "has it ever occurred to you that things are shaping up for a big change in the street-railway situation here? I can see it coming. There's going to be a new motor power introduced on the South Side within a year or two.

You've heard of it?"

"I read something of it," replied McKenty, surprised and a little questioning. He took a cigar and prepared to listen. Cowperwood, never smoking, drew up a chair.

"Well, I'll tell you what that means," he explained. "It means that eventually every mile of street-railway track in this city--to say nothing of all the additional miles that will be built before this change takes place--will have to be done over on an entirely new basis. I mean this cable-conduit system. These old companies that are hobbling along now with an old equipment will have to make the change. They'll have to spend millions and millions before they can bring their equipment up to date. If you've paid any attention to the matter you must have seen what a condition these North and West Side lines are in."

"It's pretty bad; I know that," commented McKenty.

同类推荐
  • Gala-Days

    Gala-Days

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 张子正蒙注

    张子正蒙注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 南诏图传

    南诏图传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说苾刍五法经

    佛说苾刍五法经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 三藩纪事本末

    三藩纪事本末

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 多维世界的奇遇

    多维世界的奇遇

    内容简介:《多维世界的奇遇》(上半部?粤语版)反映了主人公陶卓然一家在加拿大的生活,及陶卓然在美国目睹的袭击事件。之后,陶卓然等人与中国警方分析,发现有‘极端分子’意图在美国发动性质为‘危害人类罪’的袭击。经中国警方与国际刑警配合,由美国警方最终破获此案,使人类社会避免了一次毁灭性的灾难。期间,作品还穿插叙述了其他人物对一些社会事件和历史事件的个人看法,以及他们在中国的一些际遇和他们的感情生活。
  • 重生之无心逆天下

    重生之无心逆天下

    她,叶无心。从小被人欺负长大,每夜全身如万虫蛇蚁撕咬之疼。一日日的拒加。给她一个小房子,家人从此不闻不问。只因,她身上大病小病都有过。因家人抹杀,重生的她变得独来独往,报着宁可我负天下人,也不让天下人负我。曾经人人嫌弃的她,如今美男如云,各个为她出生入死。情太多,福也?祸也?不惹你,你们就上捕,看姐不玩死你。
  • 微尘炼天

    微尘炼天

    懵懵懂懂的他能否适应这条道路?能否在残酷的竞争中走向巅峰?能否在重重迷雾中寻到真相?有都市,有仙侠,有宇宙,有位面......有扮猪吃虎,有热血激情,有插科打诨......
  • 落跑甜心:腹黑总裁请饶命

    落跑甜心:腹黑总裁请饶命

    床上一片凌乱,她傻傻的看着床上那个男人,半响后,二话不说穿好衣服狂奔出房间。她记得昨天男朋友才刚刚跟她分手,她便一个人跑去酒吧里喝酒……然后……然后好像糊里糊涂的将一个男人扛走开房去……该不会是她主动的把?妈呀!“你以为你能逃得掉吗?”他只要一动手指头,就能将整个世界倒转,他嘴角微微带着邪意,“你这么不听话,我该如何处罚你呢?”“我错了!”她弱弱的低下了头。男人满意的点头,“错在哪儿了”“哪里都错了。”他在她面前,哪敢不低头啊。
  • 佣兵王者在都市

    佣兵王者在都市

    四年前,他被迫人间蒸发,四年后,他风尘归来。至亲、恋人、故友,是他生命的全部,他渴望着像平凡人一样的生活,然而在这个尔虞我诈的世界,他没有别的选择。面对着至亲们的一一离世,故友们的肝胆相照,恋人遭受的百般凌辱,他决定开始他的复仇计划。然而,对手早已经设下重重困局,他是否能够突出重围呢?
  • 遇见你刚刚好

    遇见你刚刚好

    90后旗舰小说家,讲述最有诗意最浪漫唯美的爱情故事。一个中英混血儿和一个美籍小提琴家,由一次街头的偶然相遇并一见钟情,到互相克服各种阻碍,最终走在一起,成为恋人……整个故事有如童话一般,简单又纯真,充满诗意和张力。这世上真的有爱情吗?很多人对此持怀疑态度,但此书告诉我们,这世界不但有爱情,还有纯粹的爱情。你要相信,总有一个人,正在人海中焦急地寻觅着你的踪迹,兴许明天就会带上一颗赤诚的心与你相遇。你要做的,就是耐心等待……
  • 美人要逃宫:甘做花魁不为后

    美人要逃宫:甘做花魁不为后

    【本故事纯属虚构】惑世花魁顾怜薇,仅凭一手好琴便使男人为她散尽千金,钱途无限量。可在老鸨计划将她的价值推至顶峰时,她却偷偷落跑了。沈御轩,笙月国太子,他并非皇帝的长子,却深得皇帝的宠爱。当初的花魁无意间成了邪魅太子爷的贴身丫头,她杯具的人生才正式开始……
  • 灵界调查组

    灵界调查组

    在即将到来的未来里。这个世界,灵者也好,妖怪也好,他们离我们其实很近,也许就藏在人群之中。人们至今都没能弄清楚它们从何而来,而它们也生活在大街小巷之中,其中作恶多端者不在少数。而自从国际公认了他们的存在后,同时成立了国际灵界调查组联盟,专门针对这些散布在世界上大城小镇之中的妖怪。而故事,正是讲在国际调查组联盟成立十年后所发生的事。
  • 蛮古纪

    蛮古纪

    蛮古纪元,万族林立!这是一个多事之秋,亦是盛世将至,各族天骄辈出,争霸天下。一个少年自大荒走出,势要推翻一切,重塑神话!PS:新书发布,若有不足,恳请指出。故事属于慢热型,剧情会逐渐展开,布局很庞大,绝对精彩,拜求各种支持,谢谢!
  • 唐风盛舞

    唐风盛舞

    苏烈,字定方,马蹄踏处,即为大唐,马革裹尸还,热血洒家国......本书感谢墨星免费小说封面支持,百度搜索“墨星封面”第一个就是!