Sunday, 9th November 1913: A Dead Hero Is The Poorest Sort Of A Husband; Boots Rogers, Hero Extraordinary, Learns Lesson, The Atlanta Constitution
The Atlanta Constitution,
Sunday, 9th November 1913,
PAGE 9, COLUMN 1.
Photos by Francis E. Price.
Upper picture: Boots Rogers, at extreme right, standing beside
automobile with detectives with whom he worked on the Phagan murder mystery.
Lower illustrations: Rogers at time of the Frank trial, his daughter, Louise,
and his wife, who formerly was Miss Louise Petty.
By Britt Craig.
The little
clock ticked impatiently between the statue of the market girl and the boy with
the finishing rod on the mantelpiece. The folding doors were closed, and the
shades came plumb down to the sill.
W. W. (Boots) Rogers got down on one knee in
appropriate attitude of humbleness on the flower-bordered carpet of a
north-side parlor not so awfully long ago and said to the maiden, who blushed
and fidgeted on the sofa:
Howd you
like to get married?
It wasnt so
eloquent as the proposal in the third act of Lovers. You and I, but it amply
conveyed its fullest meaning. It was with some difficulty that the blushing
maiden stammered this reply:
Sure,
Boots, just as soon as you quit being a policeman.
She could
have told the humble swain at her feet that she must deign his proposal because
of an earlier offer which she had accepted from the Earl of Denmark, and Boots
would have been no more surprised. He jumped to his feet, flicked the dust from
his knees.
Then this:
But why quit
the police force?
Oh, just
because.
But thats
purely a womans reason and its ridiculous.
The maidens
nose tilted skyward and she pouted, which isnt unnatural in maidens even in
those who are receiving proposals of marriage. Considering the fact that but a
moment previously a very worthy young mad had entreated her to become his
bride, she was legally, probably, unquestionably entitled to pout, or most
anything else.
WOMANS REASON
IS GOOD ENOUGH.
Well, I
guess if a woman decides mans wife, she has a perfect right to give any kind
of reason she wants, womans reason or not. And besides, I guess a womans
reason is as good as anybodys, I do.
Very well.
Resignedly. Have it your way. But dont think for a minute that when I turn in
my resignation purely on the grounds of Because, that the chief will accept
it without investigation. We have some kind of system even in the county police
department, you know.
But the
chief doesnt have to know anything about it. You just quit and be done with
it.
Great! You
ought to be in politics. You could just do things and be done with them.
All right,
thenhave if your own way. Remember, young man, I dont have to marry until I
get good and ready.
Now, listen,
Louise, you dont understand. Being a policemans honorable
I
know that
And
upright
I
know that, also.
It
pays well
And
I know that.
Theres
nothing disgraceful about it.
But,
its not that; its none of those. Youre just a great big fool when youre in
uniform, and youd do most anything on earth and try to get away with it. I
dont want them to bring in my husband a corpse the first week were married.
Hes got to be aliveabsolutely aliveand I positively refuse to have any other
kind.
LIVE COWARDS
V. DEAD HEROES.
See, Boots;
Id rather have a live coward than a dead hero. Live cowards can make some kind
of a husband, at least an excuse for one, but dead heroes dont make anything
but widowsandorphans.
Oh! Now, youre snowing right. (This with
elation.) Im beginning to catch your drift.
I knew you
would. You see. I didnt want to tell you until you made me. I was afraid youd
get the swellhead. Its so easy.
But Im no
heroI dont get in danger. Im just a plain, ordinary policemana county
policeman, at that. You women ought to stop readin novels.
But, Boots,
what about that time the negro shot at you at the oil mill?
Oh, I forgot
that.
And the time
you drove that automobile at that crowd of burglars?
That, too. My
memorys bad here lately.
Also the time
you jumped off your motorcycle into that crazy automobile?
You dont
expect me to remember everything?
And that time
your automobile ran off the bridge?
Oh, I
remember that occasionally.
Now, listen!
I wouldnt mind you being a policeman, dear, if a policeman didnt have to
police like they do. To tell the truth, I think you look good in
uniformespecially the one you wore last summer. But, as I said just now, my
husbands got to be perfectly alive with good prospects of staying so for a
good, long time.
I get you!
Then, are you
going to quit?
Are you going
to marry me?
Curtain.
A WOMANS BECAUSE,
THATS ALL
Twenty-four
hours later, Chief Zack Rowan, in his office at county police headquarters,
receives a resignation from one of his motorcycle staff, for which he cannot
account. There are no grounds to it, no reasons, nothing.
Except
Because.
Thats all.
Next Sunday the society columns announce the
engagement of Miss Louise Petty to Mr. W. W. Rogers.
Which brings
on more talk.
During his
several years service as motorcycle patrolman with the county police
department. Rogers gained the wide distinction of the nerviest and most daring
man on Chief Rowans staff. Many have been the times the chief has gone out of
his way to bestow praise upon the dauntless youth who grazed death so
frequently that he was on speaking terms with it.
The career of Boots has been
entertainingly varied. He served as a sharpshooter in the Philippines, as
sailor on a man-o-warsman and as a private detective. Finally, as county
policeman. The God of Fate, who seems to be partial, more or less, to the courageous
has been good to him. He is still this side of thirty without a gray hair in
his dome.
It was during
the famous Buckeye oil mill barricade that Rogers won his first laurels of
heroism.
A negro
desperado, wild and drug-crazed, who had slain four of his race in the Backeye
plant, had sought refuge in the loft of a vacant dwelling out near Pittsburgh,
the scene of the famous riots of several years ago.
With pockets
overloaded with ammunition, a repeating Winchester and revolver at his service,
he pumped lead on defiance in the faces of the two mounted policemen who just
reached the spot. An emergency call for reserves was sent to headquarters of
both county and city police departments.
Rogers and
three other motorcycle men were sent from the county force. Arriving at the
negros stronghold, they were met by an auto filled with reserves sent from
police headquarters on Decatur street. In the machine was Detective George
Bullard, who since has been promoted to sergeancy.
EVERY BULLET SANG
A FUNERAL NOTE.
George evinced
no hesitation in attempting to rush the negros fort alone. He barely realized
his mistake in time. As his foot reached the front doorsteps of the barricaded
dwelling house, a bullet sang through his hat, while other played a funeral
roll about his feet.
The detective
jumped for shelter with an exclamation that had something to do with the
futility of such generous warning, when one shotprobably the one that went
through his hatwould have been a Lords sufficiency. George prudently turned
his footsteps toward a considerate oak tree and the job over to whichever
applicant who might be braveor foo
lishenough to tackle the black brute and his
bullets.
Its up to
some unmarried guy, he said. My endowment policy wont permit it.
Rogers was
standing behind the automobile that had brought the men from the city
headquarters, blazing away at the shattered plane from which protruded the
outlaws gun, verbally and pistolly trying to consign the hapless negro to
every kind of eternity from fire and brimstone to a hereafter of nakedness in
the frozen arctic.
After the
unfortunate gentleman behind the barricade had been doomed to Hell, Hull,
Halifax and all intermediate points, Boots emerged from behind the machine, his
ammunition and profanity at low ebb.
Ill get
you, you blasted blister on a snakes skin. Getcha head back in at hole.
This from behind
several trees as Rogers skirted the yard and reached the building in a
precipitation of bullets.
Thank God,
the poor fool isnt married.
BOOTS EMERGES WITH
THE SHIVERING SMOKE.
When boots
emerged, he dragged a shivering negro by the collar. All the outlaw desperation
and bravado were gone. His Winchester and revolver upstairs with his
ammunition. All he now had were a set of chattering teeth and a prayer for
mercy. Rogers had caught him unawares through the trapdoor that enters in the
loft. And, even a desperado, as desperate as they may sometimes get, isnt
going to start something when the drops staring him in the face.
Its like
turning your four perfectly good sevens over to a royal flush when the jokerbless
his heart, even though he is untrue at timesis completely out of the deck and
over in the discarded strips.
That placed
the first feather in the Rogers cap for police duty.
Then, there
was the time he drove four policemen and a helpless police reporter into
perfect hail of burglars bullets out on the north side at an hour of night
when all respectable folks are supposed to be in bed. He had charge of Chief
Rowans car, at the time, and was loafing with the big machine down at police
headquarters.
It was about
3 a. m. when a message came over the telephone that burglars were robbing a
store out near Pryor street and Georgia avenue. Rogers offered to carry the
reserve men out in the chiefs car, which stood outside at the curb. Three
motorcycle men, a captain and police reporter for a morning newspaper jumped
in.
As the car
neared the scene of burglarization, Rogers cut out his engine and lights and
coasted down the slope. Barely had he reached sight of the building than two
menlookouts stationed on the corneropened fire, Policeman Anderson, who sat
on the front seat, was first to return the shots.
NEVER SIT ON
A RED LAMP.
Captain Mayo
and Policeman Watson, sitting in the tonneau, also opened up. The reporterunarmed,
his revolver having fallen prey to the sign of the three ballsdid the only
logical thing he could expected to do under the circumstances. Which was
climbing over the back of the tonneau and sitting upon the red lamp. There are
scars, yet. What more could you expect of an enterprising red lamp?
The two
lookouts were augmented by three others who came from the building. Fire from
five burglars is generally supposed to be enough to repulse three ordinary men,
and, undoubtedly would have repulsed three perfectly good policemen on this
particular occasion, had it not been for Rogers, who threw in his engine and
drove the car directly into the fusillade.
The burglars
probably took fright more at the onrushing automobile than they did at the
pistoles. They scattered in all directions, ducking into a big touring car that
stood, engine running on the shadowy side of the street. The car was off before
Rogers could swerve into the center of the road. A few shots were exchanged,
but the burglars had escaped before pursuit was possible.
Also, there
was the time Rogers, unassisted, unaided, unabetted, leaped from his motorcycle
into the driving seat of a runaway automobile, saving the life of a wild and
hysterical gentleman and $1,500 worth of 1910 model automobile.
Boots was
patrolling his beat along Paces Ferry road, a favorite route for speed-fiends
who have money enough to pay for the gasoline and sufficient lightness of the
head to take the risk. Jerry M. Fields, a resident of north Georgia, who owned
a car that went quite cranky at times, was bowling along at a goodly pace on
his way home.
ROGERS SPRING OUT
AN AUTO HERO.
Something
went wrong with his engine. Either that or Mr. Fields lost his head and
absolute control of said engine. Evidently the latter, as Rogers afterwards
said he found no difficulty in shoving in the clutch and using the emergency
brake. Anyway, the car dashed down the river hill like an anti out of an
equal rights convention.
The machine
shot by Rogers on his motorcycle. He speeded up, overtaking the runaway near
the river bridge. While both machines were running at a dizzy rate the
policeman left his motorcycle, clung to the tonneau of the swaying automobile
and crawled to the steering wheel. In a moment the car was at a standstill.
Returning to
town, Rogers could find but few who would believe the story of this late heroism.
However, he had a badly bent and battered motorcycle for substantiation and the
business card of Jerry M. Fields, Jackson County, with a cordial invitation to
call around whenever in the vicinity.
And, there
have been many other times, including the incident when he toppled over a
bridge at Peachtree creek trying to outrun a speeding automobile that outdid
the law by at least twenty excess miles an hour. They had to fish him out and
parts of his motor are still in the creek.
Then he fell
in love. And what love cant do, it behooveth no man to undertake. In the words
of Boots:
A guysome
guyscan do most anything and get away with it, but when it comes to trying to
outdo love and a woman, there isnt a chancea bit of a chance.
By the way, Rogers is now doing
office worktame, but safe and compensating.