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<h1>HELEN <br/><span class="small">IN THE</span> <br/>EDITOR’S CHAIR</h1>
<p class="tbcenter"><span class="small">BY</span>
<br/>RUTHE S. WHEELER</p>
<h1 title="">Helen in the Editor’s Chair</h1>
<h2 id="c1"><br/>CHAPTER I <br/><i>The Weekly Herald</i></h2>
<p>Thursday!</p>
<p>Press day!</p>
<p>Helen Blair anxiously watched the clock on the
wall of the assembly room. Five more minutes
and school would be dismissed for the day. How
those minutes dragged. She moved her books
impatiently.</p>
<p>Finally the dismissal bell sounded. Helen
straightened the books in her desk and, with the
162 others in the large assembly of the Rolfe
High School, rose and marched down to the cloak
room. She was glad that school was over for, to
her, Thursday was the big day of the week.</p>
<p>Press day!</p>
<p>What magic lay in those two words.</p>
<p>By supper time the <i>Rolfe Herald</i> would be in
every home in town and, when families sat down
to their evening meal, they would have the paper
beside them.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_14">[14]</div>
<p>Helen’s father, Hugh Blair, was the editor and
publisher of the <i>Herald</i>. Her brother, Tom, a
junior in high school, wrote part of the news and
operated the Linotype, while Helen helped in the
office every night after school and on Saturdays.</p>
<p>On Thursday her work comprised folding the
papers as they came off the clanking press. Her
arms ached long before her task was done, but she
prided herself on the neatness of the stacks of
papers that grew as she worked.</p>
<p>“Aren’t you going to stay for the final sophomore
debate tryouts?” asked Margaret Stevens.
Margaret, daughter of the only doctor in Rolfe,
lived across the street from the Blairs.</p>
<p>“Not this afternoon,” smiled Helen, “this is
press day.”</p>
<p>“I’d forgotten,” laughed Margaret. “All right,
hurry along and get your hands covered with ink.”</p>
<p>“Come over after supper and tell me about the
tryouts,” said Helen.</p>
<p>“I will,” promised Margaret as she turned to
the classroom where the tryouts were to be held.</p>
<p>The air was warm and Helen, with her spring
coat over her arm, hurried from the high school
building and started down the long hill that led
to the main street.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_15">[15]</div>
<p>Rolfe was a pretty midwestern village tucked
away among the hills bordering Lake Dubar, a
long, narrow body of water that attracted summer
visitors from hundreds of miles away.</p>
<p>The main street, built along a valley that opened
out on the lake shore, was a broad, graveled street,
flanked by a miscellaneous collection of stores and
shops. Some of them were of weather-beaten red
brick, others were of frame and a few of them,
harking back to pioneer days, had false fronts.
In the afternoon sun, it presented a quiet, friendly
scene.</p>
<p>Helen reached the foot of the school house hill
and turned on to the main street. On the right
of the street and just two blocks from the lake
shore stood the one-story frame structure housing
the postoffice and her father’s printing plant. The
postoffice occupied the front half of the building
and the <i>Herald</i> office was the rear.</p>
<p>Helen walked down the alleyway between the
postoffice and the Temple furniture store. She
heard the noise of the press before she reached the
office and knew that her father had started the
afternoon run.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_16">[16]</div>
<p>The <i>Herald</i>, an eight page paper, used four
pages of ready print and four pages of home print.
Each week’s supply of paper was shipped from
Cranston, where four pages filled with prepared
news and pictures, were printed. The other four,
carrying local advertisements and news of Rolfe
and vicinity were printed on the aged press in the
<i>Herald</i> office.</p>
<p>Helen hurried up the three steps leading to the
editorial office. Its one unwashed window shut
out the sunlight, and the office lay in a semi-shadow.
Unable to see clearly after the brightness
of the sunlight, she did not see her father
at his desk when she entered the office.</p>
<p>“Hello, Dad,” she called as she took off her tam
and sailed it along the counter where it finally
came to rest against a stack of freshly printed
<i>Heralds</i>.</p>
<p>Her father did not answer and Helen was on
the point of going on into the composing room
when she turned toward him. His head still
rested on his arms and he gave no sign of having
heard her.</p>
<p>Concerned over his silence, she hurried to his
desk.</p>
<p>“Dad, Dad!” she cried. “What’s the matter!
Answer me!”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_17">[17]</div>
<p>Her father’s head moved and he looked up at
her. His face was pale and there were dark
hollows under his eyes.</p>
<p>“I’m all right, Helen,” he said, but the usual
smile was missing. “Just felt a little faint and
came in here to take a few minutes rest. I’ll be
all right shortly. You go on and help Tom. I’ll
be with you in a while.”</p>
<p>“But if you don’t feel well, Dad, you’d better
go home and rest,” insisted Helen. “You know
Tom and I can finish getting out the paper. Now
you run along and don’t worry about things at the
office.”</p>
<p>She reached for his hat and coat hanging on a
hook at one side of the desk. He remonstrated
at the prospect of going home with the work only
half done, but Helen was adamant and her father
finally gave in.</p>
<p>“Perhaps it will be best,” he agreed as he walked
slowly toward the door.</p>
<p>Helen watched him descend the steps; then saw
him reach the street and turn toward home.</p>
<p>She was startled by the expression she had just
seen on her father’s face. He had never been
particularly robust and now he looked as though
something had come upon him which was crushing
his mind and body. Illness, worry and apprehension
had carved lines in his face that afternoon.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_18">[18]</div>
<p>Helen went into the composing room where the
Linotype, the rows of type cases, the makeup
tables, the job press and the newspaper press were
located. At the back end of the room was the
large press, moving steadily back and forth as
Tom, perched on a high stool, fed sheets of paper
into one end. From the other came the freshly
printed papers of that week’s edition of the
<i>Herald</i>.</p>
<p>“Shut off the press,” called Helen, shouting to
make herself heard above the noise of the working
machinery.</p>
<p>“What say?” cried Tom.</p>
<p>“Shut it off,” his sister replied.</p>
<p>Tom scowled as he reached for the clutch to
stop the press. He liked nothing better than running
the press and when he had it well under way,
usually printed the whole edition without a stop
unless the paper became clogged or he had to readjust
the ink rollers.</p>
<p>“What’s the idea?” he demanded. “I’m trying
to get through so I can play some baseball before
dark.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_19">[19]</div>
<p>“Dad’s sick,” explained Helen, “and I made
him go home. Do you know what’s the matter?”</p>
<p>“Gosh, no,” said Tom as he climbed down from
his stool. “He wasn’t feeling very well when I
came down from school and said he was going in
the office to rest, but I didn’t know he felt that
badly.”</p>
<p>“Well, he did,” replied Helen, “and I’m worried
about him.”</p>
<p>“We always take him more or less for granted.
He goes on year after year working in the office,
getting enough together to make us all comfortable
and hoping that he can send us to college
some day. We help him when we can, but he plugs
away day after day and I’ve noticed lately that
he hasn’t been very perky. Mother has been
worried, too. I can tell from the way she acts
when Dad comes home at night. She’s always
asking him how he feels and urging him to get
to bed early. I tell you, Tom, something’s wrong
with Dad and we’ve got to find out and help him.”</p>
<p>“Let’s go get Doctor Stevens right now,” said
the impetuous Tom, and he reached to shut off the
motor of the press.</p>
<p>“Not now,” said Helen. “If Dad thought we
weren’t getting the paper out on time he’d worry
all the more. We’ll finish the paper and then
have Doctor Stevens come over this evening. We
can fix it so he’ll just drop in for a social call.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_20">[20]</div>
<p>“Good idea,” said Tom as he climbed back on
his stool and threw in the clutch.</p>
<p>The press started its steady clanking and Helen
picked up a pile of papers and spread them out on
one of the makeup stones. Her father had
printed two of the pages of home news during the
morning and these sheets were stacked in a pile
in one corner. She arranged two piles of papers
on the makeup table, one pile which her father
had printed and one of papers which were coming
off the press as fast as Tom could keep it rolling.</p>
<p>Helen put on a heavy, blue-denim apron to protect
her school dress and went to work. With
nimble hands she put the sheets of paper together,
folded them with a quick motion and slid the completed
paper off the table and onto a box placed
close by for that purpose.</p>
<p>The press, of unknown vintage, moved slowly
and when Helen started at the same time as Tom
she could fold the papers as rapidly as they were
printed. But that day Tom, who had managed to
be excused half an hour early, had too much of
a start and when he finished the press run Helen
still had several hundred papers to fold.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_21">[21]</div>
<p>Tom stopped the press, shut off the motor,
raised the ink rollers and then pulled the forms off
the press and carried them to the other makeup
table. After washing the ink off the type with a
gasoline-soaked rag, he gathered an armful of
papers Helen had folded and carried them into the
editorial office. There he got out the long galleys
which held the names of the subscribers. He
inked each galley, placed it in the mailing machine,
and then fed the papers into the mailer. They
came out with the name of a subscriber printed at
the top of each paper.</p>
<p>The young Blairs worked silently, hastening
to complete their respective tasks so they could
hurry home. Tom had forgotten his plans to play
baseball and all thought of the outcome of the
debate tryouts had left Helen’s mind. There was
one thought uppermost in their minds. What was
the matter with their father?</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_22">[22]</div>
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