The Federal CTC certificate was
dated yesterday so Andy Ledger was standing on the railroad platform in
Washington D.C. waiting for the 11:02 train to Harrisburg Pennsylvania.
The CTC Citizens Training
Certificate allowed Andy to go home and take up a new life-style that his
father refused to accept.
Andy had been lucky enough to
get competent government teachers and even a scholarship that included living
quarters, food and even clothing.
Andy had enlisted in the
government CTC high school programs and went to training camps every summer and
enjoyed that natural outcome promised.
He learned to play better baseball, play a pretty good game of tennis
and he was really good at boxing which was his ticket to a free higher
education at the federal CTC Citizens Training Center in Washington D.C. and he
was primed to make his contribution.
He had been trained in all the federal
governments peaceful arts and because of his moral excellence endorsement he
was granted a government job located inside the Capitol City of Harrisburg
Pennsylvania.
Andy was going home again and
thanks to his obedience and good grades he would enter his government career and
help build better institutions and maintain a well-ordered society as a junior
manager inside the Department of Natural Coal - DNC at the Harrisburg
Improvement Center.
He stood on the platform
waiting on the 11:02 train and he thought back to his father's words of
guidance before he left for the CTC Citizens Training Center and hoped his
father had changed his mind. His father
was a horse breeder and the Ledger Farms and Stables rendered some of the best
horses on the East Coast so when the federal government wanted a noiseless,
emit no fumes, radiate less heat and fit the natural order of transportation
the horse was perfect for the workload.
The Ledger Farms and Stables
Corporations was granted a quartermaster certificate by the federal government that
allowed Andy's father to start one of the largest horse-breeding projects in
the United States. Andy was eager to see
the 285 stallions and strange as it seemed standing on the railroad platform,
he wanted to see his father.
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