Aftermath
AFTERMATH Part Second of _A Kentucky Cardinal_ by JAMES LAKE ALLEN Author of _The Blue-Grass Region of Kentucky_, _Flute and Violin_, etc. 1899 Dedication This to her from one who in childhood used to stand at the windows
As for those whose property was required and taken under the Act, it was
all very well for owners and for those who had leases: they could not be
molested without fair and proper payment. Shopkeepers and others,
however, who were only annual tenants, had, I fear in many cases, to go
empty away. Some of these had good, old-established businesses that had
for years become identified with certain premises. It was nothing short
of ruin to them to move, but they had to take up their goods and walk.
This is the way that authorities often have to deal with the more or
less helpless in view of what they consider to be the greatest good of
the greatest number.
It will, of course, be said that some of these traders were extremely
short-sighted not to have had leases of premises that were so
all-important to them. In many cases, however, they were unable to
obtain such agreements, the landlords being unwilling or unable to grant
them. The result was that many a prosperous tradesman had his successful
career cut short and passed into a retirement he did not desire,
probably with a few warm curses upon the Town Council, the Improvement
Scheme, and the schemers.
It is not very easy to understand the just laws that should govern
compensation. When there is talk of disestablishing public-houses,
certain statesmen approve of compensation. The argument is that as
public-houses are licensed by law, their owners have been given a sort
of status and sanction, which should be properly and considerately dealt
AFTERMATH Part Second of _A Kentucky Cardinal_ by JAMES LAKE ALLEN Author of _The Blue-Grass Region of Kentucky_, _Flute and Violin_, etc. 1899 Dedication This to her from one who in childhood used to stand at the windows