THE SCR ANTON TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24,18 94. The Celebrated Brooklyn Divine Dis cusses the Causes of Poverty. Neither the Silver Bill, the Tariff Amendment, or any Politioal Party Responsible-No " Healthy, Moral, Industrious Man Evor Suf fers From Want-The Bible the Best Work u Political Economy. . Bsooaun, N. Y., Feb. 21. Tho Beverend Doctor T. Do Witt Tabnage, of t!io great Brooklyn Tabernacle, it at nil times a most interesting personality. Ho preaches to the largest congregation to tho largest ohurch building in the Doited states, ami his ser morxs aro so judldously syndicated thai they are read from Florida to Oregon, ami from Maine to Texas a lew days alcer their deliv ery. He is the bright, partiooJar, and beat, paying star of tho lecture bureaus, and the editor of one of the most popular and widely read religious publications in the world. Un like many of his brethren of the sloth, Dr. falmage is foreslghted and forehanded, and SB. T. DIW1TZ TALMAdC. hi deems it not Inconsistent with his olertc&l work, to guard against the unproductive days of old nge. and to take care that thewolf of want does no loud howling within hearing of his own private domlo At this time, Interest In Dr. Talmoge is In tensified by two (acts: first, he is about to sever his eonueetion with the Brooklyn Tali srnacle, altera faithful and brilliant Borvioe of twenty-live years: and. second, ho Is going to lecture to tho antipodeans of Australia, hiking in Ceylon, with its spicy brce s, and India, with us rare assortment ot creeds uud languages, on his way In me. As ho has recently helped to feed many thousands of the subjects of that Impov erished monarch, " the Great White czar," I reasoned that Dr. Talmage should know n great deal about the poverty in our own land and Its onuses, an i hoping for light on this important subject, and incidentally to learn of his own future mi ivements, I called on him by appointment, a tew nights ago. In re sponse to my question, the doctor replied in that prompt, vigorous way. that distinguishes him alike in the parior and the pulpit: " Yes, my decision to leave tho Tabernacle is dual, and I am not so vain as to think that a man cannot bo found to fill my place. No one man, or no hundred men, or thousand men, or ten thousand men,"' tho doctor paused, and I feared he was going to say: ' or no men at all," when he finished the sen tence by adding " are essential to ths world's advance, and that means theeause of religion. I start for Australia on tho llrst day of June, taking my wife with me, and shall deliver forty led uros , iVCT there. I expect to be gono five months to tho minute, and, on tho way baek, I shall spend tour Weeks in Ceylon ami Indiu. Trom Calcutta to Luoknow, Delhi, Benares, and Bombay; thence by steamer to Aden, up the Red Boo, within sight of Sinaii, and over the waters that artod at the command of Moses, then home, via Brindisi, I'aris, London and Liverpool." "To what do you attribute tin present busi ness depression and consequent poverty, doctor? " "The Bible says: 'Yo have the poor al ways with you.' I mado that the text of my sermon a few Sundays ago. It la as true now, liko all the Master's sayings, as it was wnen onareu. rovemr is not ot to-inv or yesterday. It is as old as the race, and, I fear it will continue U lor,03 the raeo lasts, Through all tin years of hssftsry, SSCXed and profane, bread has l.ren the CJporbihg que m. From tho days when tll "llIM, world Washington, expecting Congress to do some thing to relievo tho distress, or at least to end this harassing discussion. But It will never end. Llko Bunimo's ghost it will not down. It was hero at our births, and it will survive our deaths. My onrliest recollection is tho discussion of this question by my father and his neighbors. It has continued with increasing vehemonee, from that day to this, and It was us near settlement, then as it is now, or over can he, while men have tho power to discuss. Perpetual motion, annex aton, spiring the circle, Hawaii, tiuMiniversal Solvent, and every other question may be sot tied in time, but this taiiffle question will grow more lusty and absorbing with the prog ress of the ages. Thi country is like a sick man in the can' ot a lot of doctors of differing or opposing schools uf medicine. The c mstituti n of the patient prevents the dissolution which the practice of the physicians tends to hasten. Then' is too much being s lid ami too little being done. A very inferior doctor, provided be had an antipathy to drugs, would do more fur the patient than all the learned medical men of the rival school-.. Let us do some thing to restore confidence, and the anvil will ring, ami the wheels whirr and the shuttles Hash again, and want will lly the presence of rewarded industry. ' Hut wo oannot legislate prosperity, we need something besides tariff laws to banish Idleness, and to nil hungry mouths with bread. Silver hills and tarltV bills may shake confldonoe or frighten capital for a while, hut it is the whiskey bill that brings hunger and broad famine. Ovor 91,000,000,000 were spent in tho Dotted States last year Tor whiskey, wines and beors, The Hour mills dose, but the gin mills are always open, and doing a rushing business. The fouuderiesshul down, but the bars never shut up. Banksstop pay ment, hut the I ire w cry continues. Dry goods ami hardware merchants and grocers fail, tor want ot trade, but the saloons tlourish. The greater the poverty, tho better tin- busi ness for the dealers In li Uld damnation. Husband loafs about the bar, wife take.-, in washing. Tho children, ragged, gaunt, and thin-blooded, huddle together tor heat in the foul air of a wretch I tonem nt, or learn profanity and pitch pennies on the street. The poor spend a hundred times more tor rum than the rich or the counties best )W on them in the way ot charity. Banish the liquor tralb foot and branch and you ban ish hunger and inaugurate prosperity, -Think of it, millions of bushels ol corn distilled into s"iir masii. Instead ot being mode Into bread. Bar ley and rye transformed into poison, in stead of being converted into wbjblcsome food. Banish this curse ol tho ages; then hail the day .a' lasting prosperity! Close the bars, and empty the poor houses and by men, and who do tho snmo work for loss wages? " "Well, It is my SXJtriahaa that in a ma jority of eases when women have been forced t., do such work, that they are driven to it by the dru ukcuncbS of the father or the hus band, who should be the protector and bread winner. There are some cases where the women are the solo reliance of invalid parents, and who, under such circumstance, are ready to take up the first work that of fers. But, apart from that) 1 can see qo 1 1 ' ''''' if,.f I . r,i ., v.'ii nil r i i ' ' !' if w wa Hi X 1f - . - . o " ? i f( A mm h liil M ij ;; ' :' i':.';'iif!' ). 1 1 .Vr: II ' iHiiii It I - ""THE OJOnmnt IS I.IKE A RICK MAN tloekod to tliestorohousos of Joseph In Egypt, up to tin present time, men havo been dying of hunger. Think of tho millions of men who havo never actually had a full meal. Wo cannot guard against such famines as that which recently devastated parts of tho Russian Emplre.though broader sympathies anil bsttcr transportation facilities tmnblo ns to relievo distress, whero formerly it was Impossible. There have boon 351 great famines in Eng land. Kvcry other land lias asiinllar history, and this Is ono oftbe things In which history promlnes to go on repeating itself." "But, Doetor, wo have not. had deficient crops, no disaster by Hood or Held, why then should Industrious men bt idle and 'their children pinched for bread?" " Want of eonfldanM lias much to do with it In the sermon referred to, I used tho word ' tarlfflc It. Is not in tin dictionaries, but It expresses ray meaning. A majority of our people stand with their eves turned to ' "POVEKTY IS AS OLD AS THE r..UT" jail1:.'1 Cease the manufadturo and sale of In toxicants, ond'we shall n l fewer hospitals and insane asylums. Wo stand on tiptoe, bending towards Washington for news of legislation that will restore confidence; if it were known that to-morrow the liquor traffic was at an end. confidence would come to stay, and the only legislation, that could frighten her away, would I1 that that threat ened bi restore the old order of things." ' But, Doctor," It was urged, '-there arc tens of thousands of good, sober men Idle, and their families are suffering; how do you account for that?" "The innocent suffer with tho guilty, and while that. Is to bo deplored, I cannot see how it can bo helped. But oven under the most prosperous conditions, the labor supply Beams to exceed the labor demand. Ami this condition increases from year to year. We boost a good deal about cheapening the ooal of production by tho invention of lalK.r sav ing devices. But for myself. I never hear of a now invention, that promises to do tho work of fifty or a hundred men, without n sigh of regret. Say what we will, tin edi tion of tho sewing woman has not been im proved by tho invention of tin Sewing ma ohino. I grant you, it has ma le great for tunes for a few, and it has cheapened pro duction, but it seems to me this has been done at lie- expenSO of lalior. Tho invention of typo-settiug machines is dispensing every week witii the services of hundreds of Intelli gent compositors, who, outside their trade, ere as helpless ns children. Home one in vents a horse shoo that can be turned out by machinery, and at once scores of blacksmith shops close in every county. And tile sturdy mechanics take off their leather aprons and grope helplessly nlxmt for some other calling. A few years ago I was out in Dakota. It. is a glorious land, vast, verdant plains, ready to yield grand harvests to effort, but to my surprise, the old system of applying that ef fort, was gone. There I saw steam plows, great 'rooting monsters, that swept over the groerj prairies, leaving six black furrows of turned up loam in their wake. To keep pace With Such plowing, they must dispense with tho old method ami get an invention for sow ing tho i d.'and liny have it. When the grain is ripe, mighty machines enter the sea of golden grain, and Mi if, and thrash it, and put it into bags, Over the Iron road it is rushed to mammoth mills, that have SUDOT- eded the old water wheel contrivances of my boyhood, and therq it is made into while cata racts of Hoar, and crammed Into machine. rnade barrels, and whirled to nil parts (.t tho world by labor UVfho Htenm. All n 1'V ffii ml and very great, no doubt, hut the leniency of It seems lo be, to have ai few men and as much labor saving machinery ns possible. Thousands of the Idle men to be found in our cities to-day, arc poor fellows whose occupa tion has been invented away." "What do you think of the Increasing numbers of women who are entering those Holds of labor formerly exclusively occupied S Us I "T!IK INNOl'LNT BUITOI WITH THE aTOTT" good reason why women should not do any work for which they are phj iloolly and men tally qualinod. 'Veil Bay women do tho rime work for smaller wages than men. Well, thoy would willing t i take high; r w. g is, if thoy could get it. But, as a matter of fact, women can live much better and dri ss much better than nu n, on the same amount of money, They ,(, not squander their oarnlngs in bars. They do nut smoke. Thoy do net bet or gamble, and. a- a rule, they lea 1 more hculthful lives. i " Another great ecus ol poverty, Is tho Ira prudenc ot people. 1,1 the jay of their pros perity thoy pay no heed to the morrow. They spend as fast as they make. It malt in . ol win .ii t it Is one thousand or ten thousand a year, thoy are always b. hind hand, or they live up to the lost penny. Buch people orq sinfully selfish and self-indulgent, for tin habit and the 8 'If-d0ni.1i. essentia,) to save, are in them selves an excellent education. This largo, Improvident class, drinks its wine or beer, and smokes its pipe or cigars, but if has never a penny for the savings lank or for lifi' insurance. No matter the man, be has some one dependent on him, and if he is not laying by his money in a savings bank, be should carry a life insurance policy commen surate with his means. This should fco Im perative with the man who has a family. It is criminal, in the event of his death, to leave his wife and children penniless paupers. If men could be taught to make such a provision for their families, there would be less poverty and its attendant vices in our midst to-day. "Then this growing gambling spirit is re sponsible for much of the poverty and suffer ing. The speculative impulse is in the air. Men want to et something for nothing. They yearn to leap into wealth at a hound; and, to accomplish their purpose, they me not over particular as to tin- means employed. Cards, horse-racing, dice, policy ami kindred deviltries count their victims by the thous ands. Onco let a man get It into his head that money is to bo made by betting on cards, horses, or the rise and fall of Stocks, ami he is forever unfitted for honorable productive work. To secure money far Ids purpoa , the grocery clerk robs his omployqVs till, the tPllcr robs his bank, and the book-keeper falsities his accounts. " Again, there is a class of peoplo who I 1 mi destined to failure and poverty. Often those are bright, Intelligent men, full of plans, that must inevitably lead to fame ami fortune, but tiny never do. Meanwhile, some slow, careful, trustworthy fellow, without a gloom of Imagination, or a spark of genius, and aided only by his own fixed purpos 1, ami It may be a second hand plan of the most primitive con struction, achieves a solid BU 90681, Theso people are always in tin wrong place at the wrong time, if one of them buys goods far a rise, It is a signal tor the latter to fall far under prices at onoe, If hi' s ills iii d tapatr, tile article in which he is 00 longer inti rested ris"s out. of sight in volunn. TheSO mon are wanting in judgment, and the courts should appoint guardians to watch over them, as it docs in the case of orpliaicil minors. Tlcy are always investing on BI Dorados, on the representation of some one keen' r and nior onscrupulous than thomselves, and they are invariably disappoint d. "If liny are not in tho rosy clouds of ex pectancy with a mide, they are in the seventh heaven of hope with an invention thai is go ing to revolutionise the world nnd Incident ally to make the RothOhUda pnnpers In coi.i imrison with themselves. A blind ami more than ohild-llke, credulity Is one of the most pot tit characteristics ot these ever-Increasing failures. They are honest themselves, and so Imagine that rogues are only:., . found In Rotlon, They live In a world that is entirely imaginary, and when thoy din, (heir families go to swell the great army of the DOlpleM and impoverished. " To the classes I have enumerated, may be added the many who are hampered by environ ment, or chained down by sickness, or Inca pacitated for the 1 if . battle by physical affihV tion. Poverty has beam the problem of tin ages and It was never mora SO than now. Hut it is my firm belief, that in the past, now', and In the future, no healthy, sober man, who is willing to work, need sum r or havo his family sulTer for the DeOeSSltlOl of life. I do not speak professionally when I say religion pays' simply as a material investment, and tho Bible Is worth all (In other books 00 political economy." AtfBBD II. CAt.nof.-t. WIIV WHITTIEP. NEVER MARRIED. A letter Whittier wmte In 17, mil of nd mlraUon for a young Woman named Bray, who cime to Haverhill, to have her portrait painted, shows that In rcidly fell in love with the painted linage, and afterward made her ocqualntanos with tin- result ofdoopanlng the feeling. But he never nllowod himself to fo. low this or othat temptations of the sort. He Is said once to have seriously observed to a relation, a young woman, (hat. no Whittier ought to marry, for the I: n.hUry tampef was such that no wife could Ik- happy in con tinual contact with it. If this was his Judg ment of his own nature it c.'.plnlns his siinle Part They Plav in the Financial Oper ations of the Day. Twenty-fivo Yoars Ago a Trust Company Was a Hirity, but Now There aro Over Two Hun dred of Them in tho Unitod States -Law-' recco 8. Mott Writes About Them, and also Gives an Inside Glimpse of Wall Street. NewYouk, Feb., 34. The trust companies of the United Stales contribute an Interesting page In tho history of national llnauee. Their growth has I n truly plmiiomujial. They came up llko mushrooms, but their growth was permanent. They long ago came to stay. Them is no stopping their mi ss. Kvcn iii panics like the present, they keep arriving on the semi', r.lko all permanent QnnUOlalin Btltutlon, they canio booaUSC they wero needed, Tin y mi long felt wants. They oc cupy a niche in tin business of banking that had long waited fur an occupant. While like everything else that is good, thoy have their inter! eits and consequently their failures, they are to-day tin most Hiablo and sale;- btotory of our financial conoorn Twenty-five years ago a trust company was a rarity. To-day there are over two hundred of them between Midi!" and California ami their resources amount to over a. billion of dollars. On tho continent of Europe and in England, the trust company made Its appear 01 C 1 tors it did ill America. Some of the strongest banking cstabttsbmants abroad are conducted on tin trust, plan. Tin Society Oonorale, of Paris, is famous in nil the finan cial circles of tin world. BrUBS Is and Am- sjprdam each beasts of a vigorous organiza tion of this sort. There aro scores of thorn ii England, and nearly nil tin Industrial establishments in this country that wore purchased by tin English had the negotia tions carried on by tcuil concerns In London, Liverpool, tfanohoster, Edinburgh ami Glas gow. Thou: standing a 'en reach id the top in tiie way of popularity mil orodtt, The Trustee:;. Kx ciitois and Boourltios (Limited), of Lon b n, attainod a record br aking popu larity. Its original bores wore 10, equal to fifty dollars in our money. Bafura the Boring failure, thl Sa shares sold OS high in ifi.OO'l. In other Words, a share for which the c,ir;y Stockholder paid fifty dollars, was sold far 880,000, No bank in tin world ever equaled that record. We have ic parallel con hear, One ol the earliest of tho trust companies wa i tie.- Farmers' Loan and Trust Co., of New York. Us origin was humble, but no sturdy lad ever grew tost r nor with mors vigor, It is typical of all the original Institutions of the kind. It had a liberal charier. ThC banks at once perceived the dangerous cha racter ot iis rival, but there was no oheoklng it progress, it was permitted to pay inter est on dep. sits subjected to check. All t rm; companies now have similar privileges. They can act as trustees, buy and soil securities, Issue bonds and shares of stock of corpora tions ami make money in a SCOTO of ways fr.en which tho average Slato or National bank is di borrc I. Look nl the Farmers' L inn and Trust com pany of to-day. It owns a magnlfloent bull ling at the cornor of William and Beaver Streets, Its oftlees arc all t hat could be wished in tin way of comfort, They OOUld easily be elegant, bat (or tin plainer tastes of the of ficials, prosperity has followed tho corpora tion rlghtalong. Itneapltni stock is?i,ooo,ooo. Its surplus is St.lOJ.OiW, and yet all the stockholders get regular dividends that arc decidedly sotlstaotory, it. reported to tho Secretary of Slate, . opj; January 1st, that its resources were 134,010,000, It would take a bunch of banks t.. snow equal assets. lt.O. Ralston is the presld int. Ho ia a short, rather stout man, with a plain face and the keenest of eyes. Ho Is (12 years old, but as lively as a cricket and always ready f ir busi ness. There are several thousand corpora tions throughout the country, and in nearly evrry State, win have mortgaged their prop, erties to this company us trust ICS, The total vain" of (he properties whoso welfare is entrusted to this one concern is said to bo over sio,(Kio.oo;i,noo. There are twenty-five trust companies of merit and high Standing ill New York, it isn t necessary to enumerate llmm all. Their i iblned capitalisation is about $o(i noti,oo(). they have a surplus of double that amount. Banking in the lead with the Farmer's Loan that of any In the country. It has boon In uslnoss less than two years, nil hough Its charter, bearing the SUM name, is old and was offered around the streets for many months before Samuel D. Babcock cornered It. Its capital is 82,000,000. Nobody knows what its earnings have been, but they must bo enormous. Its resources, uccording lo the recent affidavit of its officials, are 118,- 806,891, Ithasannll Smbradve charter ami does an all embraolve sort Of 'business. Be fore it had been in operation fifteen months, it had successfully issued to the public Buch enterprises as the Michigan Peninsular Car Co., and American Type rounders Co., ami had I u behind half a dozen smaller Indus trial offerings. It has bought and disposed of millions of bonds, including total issues of tho syndicates that manipulate the street car lines ot New York and Brooklyn. Kdwin Packard is tin president. He ran a trust com pany in Brooklyn, before In took charge of the new cone,. rn. He Is considered a very shrewd trader and lands his company safely on toji in bis negotiations. There aro eight trust companies In Brook lyn. They have a total capital of 15,000,000, Tho two largest of tin s noems uro the Brooklyn and Franklin. Kaeh bus a capital of $1,000,000. Tim surplus of the former is 11,300,000, while that of the latter is $000, iiiio. While these companies have, die,,, ted themselves principally to local Investments, thoy occasionally go aernss the East llivcr ami take a slice of the financial bargains on the market of die metropolis, Philadelphia is a great trust company centre. C nise native as the (Junker City is generally supposed lo be, jt took eagerly after tiie financial fad. Several of its institu tions In this line were among tho llrst oBta'i llehbd ill tin United Stales, but they st o, alone far some years, Then all of a sudden half u dozon concerns iprang up in ono year. Now tin third city of tin Union in popula tion brags of twontytrusl companies. Nearly all or strong and viry prosperous! Tin big sir. t ear syndicate that has bought up the loading lines often large cities, such as New Y'ork, Philadelphia and Chicago and has a m t work of trolley roods iii New Jem y, owes iis sm- -ss to the Philadelphia trust companies, Tho'great project original 'd in tho city of Brotherly Love ami It got the sinews of war from its local Institutions, The three largest trust corporations In Philadelphia are tho Fidelity, Qliard Annuity and Trust, and tic? Tv mi. The Fidelity and Pohu each have capi talisations ol (3,000,000 and a surplus each of tin sa amount. John 1!. Oert is president of tin former and Bindley Smyth oftiie latt"r. Tin Qirard is capitalized at 11,000,000 and bus a surplus of $2,000,00.1. Nearly on u par with the throe mentioned, is the Provident Life end Trust, whose capital is 11,000,000 and its surplus $1,500,000, BaSVUel li. Ship ley is tiie prc-ide;:t. I i 11 IS GARLAP. A New and Virile Force in American Literature. I Stand for the Frocdom of the Individual in Art as in Life," lays Garland-The Beauty Diseasc, He Believes, Has Bcki the Buin of Much Good Literature -A Strojj and Attract ive Personality. There Is u now movement In American no tion which, while arniiated in its largest as pect to tho new Hooiul faith beginning to per meate Kuropeim literatures, i a ,o. ... tiy American movement, and with Mie incr, aslttg material prosperity nod settlement ol the country, this broadonlng of the aims of lie tion promises to rc eelve its fullest encourage, nmnt and development, and most decided flavor ami bias, In tin . it, Ono ol tin mosl characteristic figures in fx W9k .-rr-5 ! MsJ Cv m i - ft. ii 'I f 'K ill F Wm '' i , Mm i h. 'j rn ;. r ' i r 5 V v v. "T N orncn or THE itSBOAXTTJUB inusT co, y,y- l!Hj0&& l-'-. -r '.-' ?'. I I I OmOa OF TBI N, Y. OUAllANTY CO. and Trust, arc the Central Trust and tho United St lUs Trust companies. Kaeh is a power in tin financial world, it is hard to OOnOetVe of a panic that, could imperil their integrity or shake their Standing. Tin Cen tral Trust has a surplus of S5,000,000, or live times the amount of its capital stock. The (Wed States Trust has just sworn that its r isouroes are till ,814,108, This Is truly aston ishing and ahliOSt appalling, These two Companies are within a stone's throw of each other on opposite .sides of Wall street. One of i he nnst papular of the smaller oonosrna is the State Trust. It owes much of its success to its president) Andrew Mills, He is a young man, ami looks young. Ten years or so ago, ho was clerk In a linking house. Brains ami energy put him where lie is and he takes pride In slating that this infant financial prodigy has a line of deposits amounting to over $7,000,0110. Tin-big InsuratUM companies have diseov- ered the value and profit of trust companies. I'lny all own or control a trust corporal ion. Tho Equitable controls the Mercantile Trust Co. It lias its offices hi the huge Bqultablo building at ISO Broadway. Qen, Louis fiu- g Tal l is the president. It bus a capital of 13,000,000 and a comfortable surplus of$l, 000,000. The New York Life is interested in tiie NOW York Life insurance and Trust 4,, at fit Wail street . Henry Pariah is the presi dent lis capital s 11,000,000 and II -hows up a surplus ol i-J.OOO.OOi). The Mutual Life IslheiargcBtownerof the New York Guaranty ami Indemnity 0o which occupies spacious apartmefits in tho large Mutual Life Build ing at Nassau am I Cedar streets, The growth of this triad company Is more phenomenal ClAn Boston has ten trust oompanies, which Is exceedingly good for its size and speaks well for the financial stability ol the city. They are nearly nil managed by members of old and famous New England families. Th New England Is probably the largest. It has a capital of $1,000,000 and Its surplus amounts to the saute comfortable figures, William EndloOtt is the president. The other per manent companies are the American Loan and Trust Co., of which S. E. Peabody Is the president, capital $1,000,000, surplus. $:V"fl.- 000; Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Co., V. It, Stone, prasldont and a capital of $1,000,000 and surplus of $700,000; International, John M. Orahnm, president, with capital or $:,00,. 000, and surplus of 1700,000; the Old Colony, over which T. T. Ooolidgo presides, capital ized at $1,000,01, surplus $500,000. Many of th big gas and railroad oonstruotions for which Massachusetts is noted owe their origin and future nourishing condition to the trust companies of the Hub. Chicago can count up twelve trust companies two of them rank with the b'st in the country. The' Merchants' Loan ami Trust is oxtromoly strong . John V. Online is its president. George M. Pullman Is heavily Interested in this institution. It may be considered the llnnn- eiai iigein oi up. roiim.vi utTUO. It uas a capnai siock oi hi,uuuuuu and a surplus of 11.000,000, Tin Illinois Trust Co., of which John .1. Mitchell is the preaidont, has the reputattonof matching the Pullman oonoorn In strength and Influence, It also has eaap- ital of two million dollars ami a surplus of half that amount. The trust companies of the western metropolis had munll to do w ith floating thai millions of dollars' worth f bonds, from (he sale of which it vol - pa to erect the buildings ot the Columbian Expo sition, There aro four trust companies In SI. Louis ami twooi- three each in nearly all the other larger western cities. Denver and Ban Fran- else I nre not without them and lie re is , yen one in Salt Lake city. Tin lacgesl of them nil is the I mo:, Trust Co., ,.f St. Louis. i hasii capital OtlJM)0,000 and W. ! Hughes is the president. The growth of those con cerns in (lie smaller cities bus been ins, as rapid as in the larger centres of noDnlatlati. It is remarkable how soon they obudn a permanent and prosperous footing, They achieve almost instant popularity. Before they have been going six months, they i soome the repositories ot millions of dollars, are made trustees fur vast enterprises mid execu tors for huge estates, A great many of them, in edditioii lo their regular trust' features, guarantee titles. Several of the companies iimi the latter plan nmre profitable than any other. The Title Ouaran to i ami Trust Co,,ol New lork, for Instance, has made a fortune out of its system of real estat searches. Its guarantees are taken am) its searches are r, qulred in nearly every r a) estate transa itlon of Importance in this city. Bo large has ths business grown that tin parent Oomnaiiy sonic months ago started a Bond and Mort gage Co., which loans money and takes liens upon properties whose titles nave been passed upon by the original concern. The Guaranty ned Indemnity ac 1 Itog I mother, the Mutual Life Insurance Coi, are responsible for ihe i'n, ted sintes Mortgage Oo, Tills corporation has onl been In exutenoo aboul a year, in fact hardly thai long, and yet. it does almnsl ns big a business as any of thorn and is rolling up a princely surplus. Tin Fidelity Title and Deposit Co., of Newark N. .1.. is typical of companies of this sort in smaller cues, u has grown like a wood add retained n growth, Companies of equally marvoloua development and) ped Bttccoas can be found scattered up mid down through the various Btal Tin mere mention of the surplus accumukv- ted and tin business done is SUfflclOnt to show Hn powerful Influehoe of ths trust company of to-day, PerhaM nothing batter Illustrates it ail, nowevor, than simply a ra f. rands to the tact that through tin activity and agency of tin presidents of two trusi companies in this city a lew days ago, the $." 1.000,1)00 of bonds, offered by Secretary Ciirllslc, were nearly all bid lor ill forty eighj hours and nil tin bidden wero within four blocks of one duothor. this encouraging phase -. contemporary fic tion, is Hamlin Qarland. As I see our eon temporary lit rary stage thr.iig'n my sj e. tacles, Hamlin Qarland could much morn truly tlmu Budvard Elollnir. sail hlmanti "Tin Man From Nowhere'' that is, of course, in a literary sens.. India, tin land of romance, of tradition, ot strange, cast aand weird horrors, of intense absorptidn in ab stract ideas, of poetry and philosophy, can not be called a literary t-rra incognita, and any man touching the life so colored and in fill 'need, even though ho may not have thor OUghly studied its hisbry and religion an I literature, cannot rightly In called a man from nowhere, for ho Las be, n surely iu IIip need by them in some degree. But Hamlin Qarland is tin first to give anything liko an adequate expression of the typical farm and village life t the West, and to reveal something of its spiritual Influence and disasters. He oceuplos quite a unique plae.-i in American literature, not only because his work bus struck an i mtiaUy new note in literature, but because he is tin forerunner of a great movem lit that, Whatever the ex cellence or defect, of his individual literary work, lends to nil In does nn added dignity and Importance oven for tlnao who nre en tirely opposed to his point of view, and to the methods of the humanistic school gener ally. I hud a conversation in Hamlin Qarland's new quarters in New York, the other day. He lives in one of tho quieter street! of tie noisy metropolis, and his study is a plainly furnished room, with a few portraits of some favorite contemporaries on the wall among others Ibsen, Tolstoi, Walt Whitman, W. 1). Howollsnml Bnneking, tin Boston painter. "And so you are going to spend your winters in Xew York, instead of in Beaton, as in previous years?" "Well, I am going to spend this winter her, but in tin j-prlng I am going out West again. New York is the literary centre of th untry to-day, but in literature, as in material concerns, with new criteria, there will bo more equilibrium and less dominance in American Uteraturo, and that will be more healthy far all creative arrir-ts." "I do not believe very much In literary centres myself." I returned, - for tin y are apt to try to impress the ideas of paltry formal cliques upon all imaginative literature, If Chicago will break the power of the petty conventionalism which so largely obtains in our eastern centres to-day, I hope her liter ary advent may be soon.' " It Is only a question of time when Chicago will bo a great literary centre, affording channels of utterance for a multitude of writers who are rising in the West and South. " "It was your candor about (his conflict of East and West which brought down Suoh an avalanche of orltiouun upon your head." " Ob, yon nn an that Pbrum article," laugh- i m. "1 don I know -.lid 1 ,vt it very hot and strong? 1 have been traveling so much and I have be, n so busy that 1 have not seen a newspapor, The title of that paper oould better have been 'The Literary Emancipation of Youth,' instead of "The Literary Emanci pation of the West.1 It is really the state ment of n need of greater freedom for the yOUhg Creative artist from the overawing iu- of any man living or dead. I beliovo in re lating u hlan's work to life, and to tho simple principles of style, like simplicity, clearness, genuineness and tho like. "That is the only truo basis of art. That is tho oharm of tho great ElirjlAithan out burst; it was quite spontaiuous, it was nb S irately heedless of nuv traditionary literary Lokground, That makes Bhaksspears as . uch the incarnation o ihei ternnlin human .;aturo as the tiica-anl ion of feudalism 'as Walt Whitman put it. With a tree Intellectual atmosphere, genius will always transcend the sooiaraod political oonditioas of Its time." "Y'r.s," said Qarland, gjod-humoredly 'and grave, " You are holding out for tho recon ciliations ot comparative criticism. But tlc re is u now word in literature, mid that word is significance. The modern artist d oling with the moder.i man and modern conditions that is, tho modern, serious, thinking, human artist, is not trying to ban die iii., beautiful all the time, to givoa false, iet irpretatlon of lire which shall compel pco ple to say how beautiful it is. But ho lals with Significant things, and reveals without didacticism, their sijsail! " I believe the beauty disease has been tho ruin of much good literature, It leads to paint ami putty artificiality. If a thing la beautiful, well and good ; but I do not bollSVS In an a: u ing literary var.ilsh in writing of sordid things, lie can discover the beauty in sordid lives not by varnishing them, but by sympathetic interpretation of them." " If I can claim tho lienor of belonging to any literary generation at ail, it is to your gem ration, Qarland, but I am really so lazy and li Isuroly that I ought to have lived in the eighteenth century instead of in this. When i s i the amount of work young men of our day ore doing, i amappalledat my owngw s habit of mind nnd body. Now just look at the long lino ol ycur books standing stoul shoulder to shoulder, and you a mac ol oj thirty-three I What a prodigious wort must bo!" "Well, you sec all my fore, sin:' I teaching,' goes into my creative vi . mver write under pressure. I work p: a- son paintcrs-do, I have ii !::' tares lying around my work hop, i reaktast each morning I go into room, and whichever picture chimes my mood, after a glance around, c'. n for that morning. I work on it as 1 :: - ,. find great pleasure in it, audi stop tit i ment I am conscious of it becoming a ;.- .. . . If 1 have any power kft, I turn to somt thin , els -. It not, I quit work and turn to recreation reading, study, or go out for a walk. " I do all my writing on blocks ot mnnu p eve pa; r, and I havo stacks of these lying around, as many as forty or fifty, in various stages of completion. I nwer write on any ' D tiling day after day just with the purposo Of M tting it dene. I believe thoroughly in ne o Is, although I do not. wait for any partic ular mood, fbr I am in the mood every morn ing for something. I take tho mood as it serves. All my work interests me Supremely, or I should not do it. " In writing my st rio I conceive a thin;: in its wholeness, and dotuils como by what may almost be term 'd unconscious cerebra tion. When 1 have tho llrst rough draft writ ten, I rend to an expert typewriter and (ill In tin ibdails as I read. Tho sound of my own voice keeps me Very olose to absolute col;, -qulailSIBS, fori refer everything to my en-, and so avoid all stereotyped conversation!! Ill my conception I am seldom at fan . rarely alter that, but I go on adding and all.: mostly the subtli 1 1 niches an I sligg as until I am satisfied." fo: I fljj JlrJV Imr I U, (MBUUrO tx nis STL'nv. fiuenco ot the past. I simply stand for the freedom of the individual in art, its in life. Tin relation of art and life In my conception of the olllccs of art is so dos that 1 can do nothing less. " The great masters of the past are exalted Into demi-gods by cbrtServaltVC critics and colleges, und they are used to (errore-e the young writer, ot these the BbftospearC Worship is tin principal idolatry. As taught our schools ami colleges, Shakespeare In aosoiutoiy Denuabs the young dramatist, while, as a matter of fact, the dramas of Bhakespcare have no oonm qttbri with our nge nt all." I domurred, personniiy I would perfar to have Shakespeare benumb the young dramat ist than have (in infinite mulUpUcattan of tiie youug dramatist benumb the study of and .1 -light In Shakespeare. But this is not. tho place for my demurrer. ' It is the aristocratic ideal of Shakespeare and bis fellows, and not. (heir perennial truth to human nature you object to?" " Precisely. I do not believe in any stand ard that relates itself to the literary standard MU. OAKLAND AS A nOT. "I have noticed that you deal more Wie the happenings of every day, the struggle for existence, the intimate life of husband and wife and mother ami children, than with the love-making period of life, with which most novelists begin and end." " That is a fashion in literature which must largely pass away. Courting is not a man's whole life, by any means, mid the love mak ing age is not usually the age of the deepest reflection and feeling. Tiie drama of life docs not usually begin in real down-right earnest until after marriage, and for men whose whole lives is a long Struggle for exist ence, tin courtship period is a very brief one, and soon, perhaps, a very insignificant memory. 1 try to give in my stories a picture for the larger Hsu and phases of life under Certain condition-' as I have known them. My aim is to truthfully represent, the com mon working farmer -the renter and tho hired man as well ; to take tin three men out. of live rather than the one men out of ten. I aim to pnl in the proper proportion of dusty days, rainy days and c c.d days, the proper proportion Of terrible tot) and pleasuring. I think 1 have iii my own werk largely solved the problem of giving my character's occupa tion the same prominence and influence Which it has in real life. 1 have heaixl that many writers find this the most difficult part of their work -and if they write o( farm life without experience, I can quite understand it. "I see life from the working side of the fem e, and not from the buggy of the visiting city novelist. I was one,.', the men binding the grain under the scorching sun. and 1 was not noticing the glint and shimmer of tho light on the golden grain. Tin b. amy of the aeons is there truly enough, but beneath it mi is iin and squalor, l aim to put ail them is in the scene, on the surface and beneath, Into my pictures. Tiie golden butter and sun Shine do not make up the whole of farm life." "And what are you Working on now?" " Well, 1 am getting a volume of essays into shape, dealing with lev 'dens on 'Impression- Lstic Art.' 1 may publish It somo time this Winter, In these essays, some of which have already appeared in tin ArsMnndthe brum, 1 have amplified my literary creed, and I hope Justified It but the critics will judge of that according to their sympathies. " If the oasays are In lo y with the essay in tin Arum there will bo the most, delightful rumpus we have Seen in th" literary press f n- a long while. Oh dear, how 1 do love to be in n good old literary l'onnybrook fair It oli an the atmosphere ; " "There have been a good many sharp ei'itl- dams made upon the position i have taken, and so long as a man deals with the princi ples 1 advocate, criticism und disapproval do int. disturb m ', But t e nfes to feeling some dis -list and bitterness when I see so called criticism resorting to slurring person alities, It almost makes me dtspatr, und I never despnir for I am nn optimist." "Ah. DO, 1 believe in a sort of moral Qnoonsberry code for criticism and then, n Sarah Battle said of whist then lot us havo tho rigor of the game 1" Walteu BliontnUI Hahts- "I .