THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE- MORNING, APRIL 1894. RESTING ON THEIR LAURELS. Heroes oi the War Now Residents of New York City. A LONG LIST AND A BRILLIANT ONE. Potue o! Mie Slost ftunoni HoMUers of tllf Wl'.r JtOW Reside III SothMU Uenerab Howard, stoeuin, Meet, .irtt'r, Pryor, uuiley .-.mi evtton liming Tlii-iu. Although a generation has poind sinoe '.he clone of the great civil war.lt Isestima- ed that more than ball the men who partici pated In it Iron tho North ond Boutb an stPi living, and a majority far from being ok) men. Tho youiigMt living soldier of the Mar, Captain Klem ot tho regular army, is sliout forty-tour, and tho oldest is thought to bo General Soul Don of Maine, who inn jusi oomplsted his ninetieth year. Snuo oue has said that all good Americana go to Paris whan they die, but be that as it (hoy, thoso who son afford it prater to live in N..v York City, and bora some of our must fatuous toldiora diet ami other famous sol dloi - are still residing, 0 rant, und Sherman and Hancock, lived in New York, and all tbxog. died there, thougb a tow days before his dftXh Qra&t was hur ried to Mount MoOrogor, near Boratoga, in the hope ot helping him. Although the moat oonspiouooi Dgurei on both sides have noosed away, a large percentage ol tbo prom incut survivor live In Ot near New York City, and manyol them are still active tig uros in tho business, professional and literary world. It would crowd our spaoe to give any thing like u complete list ol these, or to more than bint at names that have bosoms his t tic. and the owners ol which can bo seen every day In the Street! Ol the great mi'tiop oiis, still as eagerly lighting the battle ol lif as ii they were only beginning the prelimi nary skirmish. Not only by reason of his position as WO ond In rank ui the army ol tho United States, but for his spleudid record as a soldier and hti starling ipiallUes as a man and a oltteen to be proud of General Oliver Otis Howard, now in command ol the Dapartmsnt ol the Atlantic, with bis headquarters on Govern or's bhtnd, IS the most prominent of our military heroes, He was born In Maine in 1880, and next November will have reached the age for retirement. A graduate ol West Point, Howard was assistant Instructor of mathematics at the school when the war broks out. At the tlrst sound of Sumter's Kims young ii. .ward was appointed by the governor ol his state colonel ol the Third Maine Volunteers. Within -i months he was iii epmmand of a brigade, and he led a division in tho Peninsular campaign under IfoCtetlaU, where he lost his right urui. I'p I to Gettysburg, where he commanded the Eleventh Corps, he was with the Army Ol ihe Potomac. In October, i!3. ho was sent I West, and under Sherman he foughtgaltanrJy j in the campaign to Atlanta, eommandlng the right wing in tho marah t. the sea. After the war be served South, and then in Arizona nnd the Northwest against ihe Indians. General Howard, thanks to a line constitu tion nnd excellent habits. Is tlll ill the prime ol life, and so great n social favorite Is he in Hew York that it U the hope Ol our citizens that he may make his home here after he is retired. The mention of Howard's name suggests that of General Henry Warner Blocum, with which It Is Immortally connected. General Hooum was born In New York Slate Se,t. -Jl, 1887, and was a roommate ol Phil sh.-ri.iau at West Point; indeed, it i-i said that Sheri dan could not have passed but (or the help of Ins more intellectual comrade. Soon after graduating BkMUffl resigned, studied law, and was admitted to the bar in li". At the breaking out of the war he was commissioned colonel of the Twenty-seventh X. Y. Volun teers, and from tluit time on his star never waned, but rose brighter and higher, till it wai grouiod with thoso of the foremost mili tary leaders of the day, Ht commanded the left wing of Sherman's army from Atlanta to Savannah and north to BentonvHIs, He was offered high rank In the regular army, but he resigned and wont back to the law. He has served with success in Congress as a Demo crat, and but for the trickery of Hmoklyn ring politicians he might have been governor of the state, if, indeed, he did not rise higher ; for there la no pubiio offlos for which hsSs not qualified. Hois Interested in the s! ret roads of Brooklyn and Is rich, for he Is oi.t; Of those men who succeed In all their under takings. He Is a great favorite socially, nnd although his hair is white, his figure Is SS trim und Ills step as light as when he held the Union right at Gettysburg. Xo attempt is being made to present the names of our local military heroes In the order of their standing as citizen or sol diers, for that would be I most difficult un dertaking, (ieuural Franz Slgel, born In Ger many in 1W14, perhaps curries his uiro a well as any of these men. Be was educated as a soldier It Carlsriiho. and ns a revolutionist in his natlvo laud in 14S be saw much we.r and eommandel buye armies ij.-i.iro the fail ure of tho effort! of himself und compatriots forced him to seek an asylum In America. At the broaklngoutof tho civil war hobffhrad his services to the Qovernneot, and raised a regiment in Missouri. He served with dis tinction in the West and subsequently had command of the DsDartmsnt Of Wsst Vir ginia. Bll record Is honest tUid distin guished, nu.l Iho Union cause owes Mm much, After the war ie was eio,:t".i register of New York City, und wis subsequently ap pointed pension ag'nt here by President Cleveland during his first term- Rls hair Is fair, his beard thin, and he is light and active, weighing not more than one hundred and twenty-fhre pounds. General t'Az John Volar Is a New Yorker by birth, a West Pointer by education, and will be It year -if ago the Ui!h or next June. Ho comas of military family, mid he distinguished himself and was wounded during thu attack on the Helen gate, taking the City of Mexico, (a May. '61, he was appointed colonel of tho Fifteenth rogU lais, an 1 from tho first ikOWOd the highest military talents. He commanded the Sixth Corp In tho Seven Days' light, und gallantly N(Hllaed Hie enemy at Malvern Hill. Pope brought charges against blffl tOT dlsotxdtsnee of orders. He was tried and dismissed the Service by a prejudiced court and on false ill ' V GEXEHAL PORTER IS WAS TIME, j i evidence. One of the noblest acts of General Grant's lift was his righting tho wrongs that had been dune Porter and lifting Ihe cloud from his illustrious name, Hs is a polios Mmnitaunar In New York, and Is popular and beloved by a largo eiivio ol friends, Ho stows bqt few signs ol ago, and could take the field to-morrow. One of the most plclui'Osipin men in ap pearance, as well ns in inc siiggosuvenoss 01 his life, to be found In New York City, Is (ien. moor Atkinson PryoTi He will be 88 years Of In on tin 19th of ncx'. July, and was Ik rn near Petersburg;, V. Educated at the uni versity ol his native state fur tho bur, for which hW talents qualified him, he soon took an active part In polities, and mads s reputation as an ardent SlosSlloajSt With the faith of bis convictions, he fought brave ly, if nt brilliantly In the southern tinny, was oaptured near the elo W Ol the WM and Imprisoned In Port Lafayette. When the end came he accepted the situation and came to New York. Ho soon won position, and to- OKNKl'U si.ofTM. day (s one ot our most honored judges. His hair Is long, his figure tall and spare, am! his face is usually us clean shaven as a monk's. Ho Is a delightful man socially, mid his wannest friends are amongst his old oppO" nente. During and lllloe the war few names have been more popular than that Of lien,. ml David Slonue Stanley. He WSJ born In Ohio, June 1, 18:K, and educated nt West Point. He refused a nigh OrHoe In the Cohfederats arm) at the breaking out of the war. He was appointed brigadier-general of volunteers and distinguished himself at Island Number Ten, and subsequently at Corinth, .v. man was more beloved by his men. This was shown ui the Nashville campaign, when they followed him and he led in persoq -in one oi the grandest charges of the war. When the army was reorganized, he was made col onel of the Twenty-second infantry, and served in the seat,-Janob of the time In Tens. Ha was made brigadier-general In 'A and was retired two years ago. He Is a frank, heurty man. and looks every inch the soldier that he is. General John Newton i a Virginian bj birth and is in his seventy-first year. Hale, strong, alert, and us elear-bralned as forty years ago, He gmduateJ second In his class at West Point, with Van Dorn, Longstreet and other men fulweipu-utly fiinio;:-. For a I time he was instructor of engineering at the I academy He served with distinction in Alliert Sydney Johnston a I tali campaign, While never popular with his men. he was with his superiors by reason ol hi marked I ability. He succeeded to the command of the Sixth Corps after the death of General Reynolds, the first 'lay nt Gettysburg, Sub sequently he served with distinction hi Geor gia, commanding a division in Howard's -ps. After the war, as an engineer officer, he was engaged in moving tho obstructions in Xew York harbor and the entrance to the Sound. He was retired as a brigadier-gen eral, and 1 now commissioner of public works for Xew York City. He is a man of pure life, but is said to be reserved and some what hnrsh In his manner-. One of the greatest Social favorites In Xew York and Brooklyn M Rear Admiral Daniel Lawrence llraine. H" was born in New York In 1838, and appointed a midshipmen from Texas. Hi name is brilliantly associated With the grandest exploits ol the navy during the civil war. and he won every step of his promotion. For years he was in c .mound j f the Brooklyn Xnvy Yard, Where his name became a synonym for hospitality. Although retired two years ago. Admiral Brains is as fit for duty to-day as he was when he com manded the Montieello, in UI. Among the men wtowona reputation lor dash and daring during the war was General William Woods Averiii. now In his sixty ond year, n native of New York and a gradu ate of West Point. Before the war he had had some experienc in Indian lighting. As cr.NF.IIA!. ISIfSXl. cavalry, he soon made a nnme. The hills uvsl of the !hi iiamlouh Were tin' llclds of his e.pl..;.s. Here In the spring of '64. to ipiote himself, he "marched, climbed, slid und swam Hid miles" g live days, in the midwin ter, and with the enemy In hoi pursuit. He was several times wofcndod, and was with Sheridan In the- closing Imttles of the war. Hs was tor a tlma our consul ut Montreal, but for yeafl bus been engaged In the manu facture ot steel. He is very popular loeUkUyi and still look the cavalryman In every move ment. Many southern soldiers have won position and wealtii In Xew York since the war, und among these Isljenerid Thomas Jordan, who veil tnirii Id V'lruii.lu I,, iwl.l ...,.l ...U.S....I...I Willi honor at Went Point. He distinguished himself In the Seminole and Mexican WOH, but had retired to civil iifewl.cn secossfon eumo. He served ,vith credit on the stuffs ol BeOO regard and Bragg. After (he war ho be came noted for his forts to tree1 China from the yoke of Spain, in which attempts Be cam., new losing his own head. He Is at present the editor of th "Mining Record." lie bos written a life of General Forrest, and con tributes brilliant articles to i ur lending periodical-.. Naturally, he Is a great favorite of the local Confederate camp and of the South ITU society, but all who know htm like him, GeU On! Daniel Kdg.ir Sickles Is a Xew Yorker of the Xew Yorkers. He d':es not look to be 71 and though the loss of a leg at at Gettysburg, Where lie commanded the Third corps, compels him to go on crutch 's, he ts still a remsrkably VigoroUS-lookIng man. He Is vary wealthy and has many ad niitvrs, and a good many w ho do not admire him so much, lie begin life in u printer's I devil, and has won by she o force of will and 1 despite iiwvleipiate training. He is a retired major-general In the United States army, Mill j Is also Ot this time a member of cdngreSI iii i opposition to ihe regulations, - ime claim. j The American sailor has alwuv-been Justly if a U -A CM colonel of the gallant Third Pennsylvania i popular, but not since ParrOgUts death ha there been any man who so won his way into tic. hearts ui ihe people ol Now York, a Ad miral Ghsmrdi, now in command of tho Brooklyn Navy Yard. Ho was born in Louis iana in ISM, and entered the navy ns a mlil enipman from Massachusetts. During Ihe wnr he distinguished hlinsolf In tho Gull nquadnn, arid Inpnrtloular in tho ,m. sh Hay light. It Is iiald he receives on nu aver age twenty inflations a day, during the win ter, to private and public dinners, General Joseph B, Oifr, born In Albany in IMS, is one or the mosl distinguished of our surviving volunteer officers. He went Into the war as Colonel of the Second N. Y. Yohni- tesn, fought through uii tho battles of the Army of the PotOUUM, and came out u luajoi -general. In polities he is a Kep'.ibllean, Slid was twice eWeted lepretary ot atate tine ol the oldest West Point men DoW living in New York Olty is General Thomas A, balnea who was born in 1809, He has been u merchant and an engineer. During tLo wur lis won u brilliant name in the West, He Is a writer mi religious and sslentlho subjects, and is a charming man socially, Then there isGeQoral Bohuyler Hamilton, of illustrious family. boTfJ on the Hudson In ii. and educated at West Point. He honored tils name in the Mexloon war, tn the midst of n brilliant carer in the West lie was forced on account of Ill-health ts resign In 'HU. He Is Interested in hydrograpblo engineering, and to Mm more than any other man, New York City is Indebted for her wad r works. General Granville Melleh Dodge, althougrf not a West Pointer, was one of the foremost soldiers of the voir. He not only rose us u soldier, but he achieved feme an it statesman and an engineer, Born tn New York 68 years ago, much of his lifu h:u been spent in the West, where thu Unlou Paclftc Ballroad, ol which ho was chief engineer, must ever stand a monument of his ability. He Is still interested In railroads, and CStl do more work than a dozen ordinary i i, and then huve time to see his friends. We have gallant General "Tom" Swing, ol Ohio, n vigorous youth of 85, and one of thu i leading members of our bur. General Daniel I Butterfield would take n go to hl:n justice. ; He was one of our ablest Soldiers and QOSl j ftiithoii public ofUclals. He, too, looks like a young man, despite Ids (U years Gnneral Webb, tho soldier and teacher, do ; serves more notice. Hut tho space is ex . Imusted, l Bud, at the beginning of the sub I jtct. Stanton Edwabds. A man ihoWS his breeding the way he eais his dinner; a woman shows her breeding by Ihe way she receives people. The Spaniards have more proverbs than any other nutlon. and despite the fact Hint they ie a very ivligiou-. If not u pious People, many of their proverbs hold the priests Up to ridicule. Queen Victoria has had so far, llxty-flve children, grand children und great-grand children, of whom Hfty-stx are living, she is t'ie most proline monarch of modern times, and sh? is not troubled With the fear that any of her descendants will bring up In the poor house DOME GGOUPATiONS. wwwi ihwi The best thing that a mother whose means are ample can do for her daughter, after Se? ing that she takes out of door exercise suffi cient for her health and physical develop ment, and that her diet Is wholesome. Is to put her In the way of learning t.. occupy lier self pleasantly Indoors, I lay this to wealthy mothers, or to fathers who feel that they can assure their .laughters comfortable Incomes for life. Those who ee before their girls a struggle with poverty, are likely to give them a trade or a profes sion, nnd need of bread or bonnet will gener ally serve us an impulse to a clever girl, and force her into the Held of usefulness, Poor women, whether they are obliged to work for bread, or are the helpmates of struggling wage winners, ure seldom op pressed bv l.ll- moments. It Is the Woman wno has plenty ol money who sometimes Do Is life a burthen in her middle age many ol these ladies live In rural dis tricts, or in suburban homes remote from all placel of Amusement. The women ol the cllv can nt least go shop ping, or nnd some lecture, or concert, or I exhibition of pictures to entertain her. She hoi probably friends within a short walk, but i there In tbo obi family mansion the widow j or .-plnstes. who lias passed the time of life , w hen day-dreams are delightful and one can Idle and smile away one's hours, live halt j her life "behind gloss." She looks out I through her Window panes upon the rainy landscape, or upon the high-piled scow. I The mud is deep between her home and the station. Nobody win call, she is tired of reading. Only Ihe student by nature can live perpetually on book. Sewing the long, white seam' i an occu pation that needs little thought, and permits all those regrets of the pist. and i'ars for the future, to flock thick nnd fast through her brain. Besides, the seamstress sews better what Is the m of it all 1 So she wanders about, wishing she had lomethtng to do that Interested her, and Iii the worst casus, go's out of her mind, or lut'igt hcidf in '.he garret. But all (hat hOI nothing to do with your Kitty or fanny. You say, they are the gay est of the gay. rhle their byolclss, play at lawn-tennis, run about, rain or shine, never have a Weit'y moment. That is very true, but time will ss. ru le's your girl die early, they must grow older, and be less nbl.; to s, .);d hours out of doors. They may not marry 1 if they d , the blessing of children may be denied Without being Invalids, they may bs far trom strong, and thus a little shut In. To such Women, the kftOWledgOof some pleasant art or industry Is Invaluable. If she can caive on wood, or hummer brass, decorate Let own fines, paint ohlni or satin, or velvet, and has learned to do it Wei, so that she does not merely raprodUOS, bill creates designs, she IS armed against such Udium. If she learns to do that sort of embroidery which Is called art-work, she will find much the same ft tor est In It. 11 she can sketch from nature, paint llOWers well or manage a portrait Of the kitten, even though the Academy of Design might not hang her pictures, she boi actually entered into art-life and will taste Its Strang ' happiness, Ho If she has genius for music, and culti- vales the art for Its own sake, not merely that listeners, ma v admire at evening pa files j if h cat! 00ds1 In clny, or curve her thoughts in marble, in fact do anything that uplesthe hands and Ihe brain nt the same time, sin. will never be as forlorn and lonely a -ho would otherwise. Let your girls pl.ty their 0Ut-0f door gotni I, rli'c and run. Walk and row u much as they like, nothing is better lor tlietn, bttt give them al io, 1 besscch YOU, a thorough, train ing In some artistic, home occupation to Which they nmy turn, w hen ,thSM thlSgl be cine, for any lemon, impossible. The so-called a"eoinpli.slii,.eiits of the pOSt gen. ration Were dropped In disgust by Omen of sense, and Were vahlless as ocupu- tjons, because they did not inter the region ol a.'. U hat Ileal! by parents may have their girls taught to-day, will grow mors Interesting lth every year, and III! the life when the uopis of early youth ore over. PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORS. How Some Corporations Secure Their Uirectinp; Hoards. A fiOVEL AND LUCRATIVE INDUSTRY. 'Not i Important si j re nt In Kmrlnml, but Mtlll .Uany an Honest Penny U Turned l) It - -Financier Whose Mniucs tire Enircrly Honcht by xlncMit Hrimioters, It Is nn old saying in ilnanf. ial ClrotSS that when one is rlsh, It Is easy to besoms richer. Tbj Hoh man has sXCSlloDt opportunities tor Inereusilig his wealth, and be has the means to avail himself of the opportunity presented. Hen of Influence, us well as men of vast means ei'hieii.ler this category alto. The Influential banker, railroad man or lawyer', is always sought alter. Ills name Is requested on the prospectus of a company, In u circular soliciting money for church und charita ble objects und on the application forposltlon oroffloe. There are hundreds or rlohmen throughout the country who ore dally besieged to take part in some enterprise, subscribe to some projeot or join In some philanthropic cgAtnroH m. pinsw, or monetary movement. But this sort of solicitation Is not always made without any consideration being In volved. There is a premium attached to these requests, provide! Ihe man In question consents. The man Of prominence is very busy. He cannot nfford to servo on a board of directors or lend his signature and intlu ence to an enterprise for nothing, iflsivn object, In nearly every instance, to get the party Interested, and therefore, It it made an object for him to become Interested. This statement, Of oourss, does not refer to benev olent or religious schemes. In such cases it is expected both money und Influence will be contributed to the cause. Eut In the scram ble to nuke money and float enterprises, the value of nu Influential endorsement is recog nized and nop roc luted and the Influence ami endorsement ars paid t"r. To get the right man as an underwriter for an industrial concern, n Subscriber to bonds or stocks of n new company, or a director in a reorganization, is the aim of the promoters and backers of all such projects. Then Isn't a prominent man in Xew York, be ho finan cier, lawyer, merchant or railroad magnate, who is not constantly offered the biggest kinds ol inducements if he will lend his name to something new, become president of n company that is about to introduce a va'.ua- bio patent, or tuke his iiiae- on the board of directors ot u freshly incorporated Imnk, in surance company or manufacturing estab lishment. Big blocks of stock arc offend in i consideration, He can h... a figure-head as president und draw a large -alai v. 1: he will only servo and recommend the matter to his friends. Ii' he will allow the use of his name j us a director Of a land company, he can have Ff.vjAsrtN r. Tract. lol 9 enough to found a village on. Nobody knows the frequency of these re quests nor the persistency w ith which they ore presiod. Erastus Wlman us.sl to say lie was offered tho presidency of a now company on an average of onco a wocif. Jay Gould WOS bored constantly In this line, until ho ab solutely shut down on It. '. Plerpont .Mor gan is flooded with earnest appeals to act in an official capacity, with 11 big bonus of bonds or 'docks or lands for libs services. Leading lawyers, like Joseph H. Choate, Ellhu Boot, John H. Parados and Robert g. Ingersolt, COUld sit bn 0 hundred board" or directors apiece, If they heeded these applications. They usually sit on the applicants, There Is -cai eoly n banker of note on Wall Street who is not startled nnd surprised now and then j upon the receipt of n handsomely prepared usoepectus, m wii.cn ne is mentioned as one ol the directors of u new corporation. With tho prospectus eomw a letter, stating that the projectors have taken great pleasure In electing him nnd hoping. In view of the mer its Of the enterprise mid the fact that thous ands of copies of the piospoiius huve been printed, that lie will accept. Most of tllOM Battering missives corns from distant points and the ibrewd author takes care to girl tho circulars wide publicity beforo tho usually indignant declination IS received. The cler gy of the metropolis uru not exemt t from I this sort of business. The more prominent I 1 the preacher, the greater he Is In demand. ! T, He Witt Talmoge, Charles U. Pnrkhunt, John Hull. David Greer, Robert Armttogo and Robert Cdlyer are understood to be fav- I ! orites with aspiring promoters. Dr. John 11. ; I'. xloii was frequently sought after during his pastorate, und while he was chaplain of the seventh Beglmtnt. Neurit nil these sollcllatloiis are promptly turned down. But there is a feature, which Is almost u tlmineinl fad, that does attract and rapture a great many prominent man. Companies ut good standing often get big men on their boards of intnagepken,t, in many eases three or four leading men net together ina sprtot advisory capacity. They are paid well for their Work nnd lime. The recompense comes In the shape of a fixed sum given them at every ne etlng they at tend. It Is considered only right thai they should be well rewarded. Thcyhnvet.. meet In the busy time of day and usually hate a number of reports to hoar read and a number of accounts to examine and audit, ti, I prices vary with the hnportahci of the work, I thefrequohcy Of the nnetlngi and the slr.e of j the company. Out instance will suffice us In example of nil, There Is a young, but ,;l vigorous and successful insurance company that possesses uu advisory eoinniittoo con sisting of Cliauncey M. Dopew, Benjamin P. Xney and Chariei s. Palrohlld. In the por- PHAI1XS K. FAlnCHII.b. sons of ihese three gentlemen are represent ed oho of the largest railroads, one of the leading law llrms and one of the most prom inent trust companies of tho country, The committee Is supposed to meet ohoea month. If nil three ..f the members are present, each gets one hundred dollars. If only two arc on hand, they each receive one hundred and fifty dollars, und It only one attends, he walks off with three hundred dollars, This may seem a largo sum. but It Is not, when the influence and standing of the men ure considered. It Is good business for the com pany ami yet perfectly legitimate for ail con cerned. This Is really nothing more than an Imita tion of tho methods In vogue for year? In England. It has been tho fashion to invite men of prominence to act as the directors ol coin panics and pay them stated annua! sal aries. There arc lords and dukes und shs and members ol parliament who reap hand some lnoomee from the salaries received by them as directors of corporations. There are well known figures in English llnances who practically advertise themselves as Open to poSltloniof this sort. If their names r.dd to the strength of the company and attract cap ita! to Its coffers, they are in eager demand. Half a dozen knighted gentlemen could be named who are kept constantly busy attend ing meetings. It was stated not long ago tliut several of these parties draw salaries in J this manner that aggregate 175,000 10 J100, I 000 a year. Ordinarily It Is no reflection ! upon a prominent man to Indulge In this kind ol profitable pastime. Certain It is that 1 ! I. .. fan O , I.. . . ,! ...O.K.. la n.f to suoearioe tor ine snares oi any company iu whose boards of manajpment these gentle men appear. They are recognized ns csrstul and eniilious, and when they join a board, It means they are (satisfied of the soundness und prospects of the enterprise, Hero In America, it Is different. Up to date, no influential citizen has pOMd as an applicant for directorships. Tho men of value to companies have to be coaxed to be come officials. They insls,1 upon thoroughly Investigating concent they are Invited to associate themselves with. The money con sideration is not tempting enough of Itself to bring them Into line. If they Join the board thev do so beeaose they are absolutely sr.tij- lied of Its merit and future, or because friends of theirs, upon whose opinions they urn rely, aro Interested, and assure them that everything is right. How soon the cus tom will beooms more general, is a matter of conjecture. Of lata years, prominent men have mora and mora iJentiiied themselves With various enterprises anil corporations. One has but to glance over the list of direct ors of the leading bankj. Insurance and trust AftmMtitM rtf ftlA bMi AttlM t1 Mia MMflt I , ,i., t.. i ,, ... i iv mvwif HUH. i.icii u; ee.oi 1.1 an w in. concerns gets a fixed sum for his attendance at every mooting. In banks the amount is understood to range from ten to twentv-llvo dollars. In insurance companies and In trust companies the amount usually varies from tWSntv-flve to one hundred dollars. There Is no orltloism to offer to this habit. The directors of prominent companies that handle. In trust or otherwise, n great deal of money for other people, an I have prominent and perplexing) negotiations to conduct con stantly, ought to be composed or men of the greatest experience, the highest standing and the widest influence. Liwnixci 3. MOTT. onciie VeriCl, The night WM drear, you scarce could hoar, The solemn eodllsh bawl; The owl, somehow, forgot to howl. The calf had lost his . aul. "Tie growing cold, the stove is coaled," The ice man shrieked in glee. "I'll get some ice. 'twill boil my pot, Some m. e," said the Chinee. The MW-tofM saw the saw Ash saw The lee and said, "That's gueis-i! ' The ice man sought to euro nil eyes, He laid : "My niece Is nice, I'll tttko iter to a town that's Nice, ."illno Ice Is wasting her.'. I'll get my eyesight back again, While here, I only hear. ' He soos the soas. and lelOM hold The rope, and down the hold Be bowled, and knocked tin Captain down, Who cried: "You're over-howled !" "This is the 1". rulOOX." he cried, "It knocks us equally, Hi noxious both to man and beast, , Such seas those seasons see," "Let mo alone the Ice tunti groahoa, I've grown afraid to pun ; "Let you alone? " the Captain erted, " "1'ls done, bttt I laall done," "This bounding billow's bound to boar, J he passengers to land ; I Abounding hv the wealth they n I, This bill owe ill- for "sand.' "Tiic francs v 1 frankly need in France : Stranded we reach iter strand, Her bunks COn't check our COSh advance; They will not Uin our latd. With health and eye-light both restored. The nice.) nnd loo-mau two. Will hie them back from Nice to Ico 'T.s due they thus should do. Xcmr Lane Uc More Kxnel. Hailstone! weighing eighteen ounces are reported from Texts. This is something definite and shows an etie niragdig leaning toward veracity on the part of reporters in the cyclone belt. The old comparison of hailstones with hens' engs got to be frightfully monotonous. It would improve the accuracy of the description still more to Indicate whether troy, ivoldupoli, or fluid ounce ore meant. But then, we recall that In the t ill tory of the turbulent tornado und the cir cuitous and convoluted cyclone they do not measure fluids by the ounce. Worth, tho man milliner of Par's and the present source ot feminine fashion, ts op posed to woiusn ii rights. Ho intimates that the more he oees women the Utter he likes men. It looks very much as if the woman of the c imittg generation will know less about tor luring a piano und more about books, and studies that develop the intellect. ThowoiM I- coming to believe Hint uitlosl on" bus a talent for niusle. It is a eftmlhol wns'.e of time to try to learn It, besides the torture iu (llotod on those compelled to listen to a girl practicing. LUCK OF THE BOLD-SEEKER. Chance Plays a Large Part Western TUningr. Life. m HANK MMM AND HIS RICH FIHD, xtart a Uraiui ot Veteran Miner to Story Tolling The Alder Oiilcti. Uit Clmnee, Meli f Time nnd Other Fammi JI(ne-Early Dgys ot the Conxtnck Lode. I Ttovm. Colo., Mare). 23, WM.-Mr. K. C. 'reode. who US lUit been visiting his partner -., ... i- Ji li inkwr .uollat, In uus city, I cue ol otu UmoUS fMn, He ii lomuththg over fifty and ipiite a s modest as In the day when he was willing to prospect on a grab itake, an I had not yet given his name to it town nor sud- denly leaped into the possession of miUUons. Greede's appearance here always starts sto ries of the days when he was hard hit, and how, after twenty years of persistent effort, he seemed further from SuceMI than when he started. Greede's success was Mr-gdl-ussed in a club-room where I was present on St. Pat rick's evening, and one of the number, a mun who had made and lost a hall dozen for tunes, and who, though now down on his luck, expects to make another and hang on to It, said: "In most businesses energy, pluck and brains count for everything, but in milling it is nil dumb luck.'' "Dumb ' was not (AO word he used, but it sounded like it. The others hastened to agree with this, and eases Innumerable Were cited of men who, W 1 tli no more bruins than th- law Olio. Jla .1 actually blundered into wealth. 'There was Hunk Morgan : why. ten years ago he was dead broke over In LesdViUc, He had Juit come from California, most of the way on foot and the rest of the distance in freight ears, and he knew no mowabOUl the new country In which he found himself than u hog does about the topograph)' of the other rirnxa or: j side of tho moon. Hut Hank hud check nnd ' an oily tongue, that's how he got Tim Foley ti grub stake him. Hank told me afterwards that he expected to go into the hills and stay as long ns the provender held out. Well. J gentlemen, Bank Morgan Wondered into the I mountains, not knowing where be wa solng, I and not caving a blank ei'.hcr. When over in ! the Gunnison foothills, he stumbled on n j n0jo where someone had been at work before, As that was e.s good n placj to stop ns any. he cleaned OUt the hole, went down a little deeper, not mon'n a foot, and by the jumping jingo I hs struck It I He came back, located his claim, and sold out within a month for 1800,009, Will any man have the braten au dacity to tell me that was the result of lore thought or brain'? Xo. gentlemen, it was pure, unadulterated luek, ami Hank Morgan himself, when he got to wearing n gold enMe for a watch chain and driving a pair of the ; fnitest horses in the mountains, WOl man enough to iteknowiedgc It." Having had no experience in prospecting. 1 I asked what the modus nperaii'li was. and j this Information was volunteered : 1 Every spring hundreds ol prospectors along the Bookies and Sierras nlunge into i tho WllderneM to searxh for gold or silver. The well-to-do. thai is the men who can pur chase '.boir own outfit, lay in supplies for few months, and have a mule or a horse to carry their camping r.tid prospering outfit, consisting of a bag of flour, some bacon, coffee and sugar. A pick, suade and pan arc fastened to tho peek, and the prospector usually carries a hatchet a his belt and a rifle on Ills ihouldsr. A majority ot the inspectors nr. "grub-Stoked," tltr.t is. some merchant or man with means furnishes then: with mppllOS, the conditions being that in 1 the event of lUCCSSS the "ongOl," to use a thntrical term, divides with them. These men keep clear of the beaten trails, and they know more in the aggregate about the geog raphy of the North American continent than all ihe engineer outfits combined. All suffer : many of them die : more of them, and often the best and the brightest, persistently fail: and the few. through dumb luck, strike It rich. But it is much like n blind man shoot ing nt n target after ho has bjen told the Ure-tlor.. Tho ehancea are he will miss, but II ho mak a bull's eye only a fool would attribute n .0 his marksmanship. ?: :$?Ji m 1 1! "They say." said another, "thai about men, WU the way in which was discovered every ten years there is .1 business panic In u'hnt Adams, who was dead broke, called the iaist, but I've been out here a leetle over . ' Xbe Nick of Time' mine." thirty year, and I know for a fact that every ' "That wmindk ms of the 'Christmas Gttf ten years th Is a mining crane-some new! m!,, ' California, ' said the llrst speaker. outcrop or diggings hive been dlsooverei1, s""' ut Jeer hunting in the and there Is a ruih and a boom. In ' the Sierras wllha party trom Frisco, and 011 their World WM running tfl California. In '50 the i Wl,.v to oomp on Christmas Eve the the country was orosy over Hike's Peax. In 1 others missed Snow. They found that he '00 the silver discoveries of Virginia City Bd his horse had tumbled into a canyon, wore making miUionslres by the score, iii Whflo they Were getting the man nnd horse '70 there came the Lesdvllls rush, and it was ' 8n. w'" hod been a prospector, filled a dandy, In '89 the Cosurde Alne country bit pockets with some of tho detached was opened up. and so It g .'es. But while WonoS. They proved to be rich In gold, and thodleoovoryot mines U largely o matter of t,,e tortnnoi the hunter and hit friends chance, and the management oi them is too ; wore n'r'i? by a mishap which they deplored often a swindle and a gamble, Whew It Is fob 'at the time. " lowed honestly und persistently ns n bus!-: Many other eases eouolly Interesting were lies.; en'erpiiso. it is sure to pay in the end. I e;,e'1 io bW that the element of luek was Why, right here in Denver there are more the principal factor In the discovery of rich men worth WWQOOthan KZtX country except New Vm nnd Philadelphia; chief value. XtlLSOX Ashlsv. antt bine-tenthi of them made their money , out of mining. And, let me say, the wealth; Leopold. King ot Belgium, is nddieted to 18 by no means ail discovered yet ; we have i .Hods ol frightful debauch. His sprees only skimmed the SttrtoM." come on about onoi in three months and he Others nt ones became reminiscent, and keeps them up til! his brain and nerves are without MtfliptiOB r.'.l were disciples Of the exhausted. He has Just closed a carouse, doctrine of luck. which DSgOU In Brussels nnd ended In a "Why," continued another, ".here was old brothel In Geneva. Cruse. Ho went to Montana whon it was a , iMWlingwildcrn.'fs !.: '. with - "Ian,; x y jj thaf Theodore Thomas is about Sioux on every hand. For twenty years he to give concert- alternately in Chicago and plodded and starved, nnd lived the life Ota New York. It will now ho in order for the hermit tn ft shadowy gulch near Whan Butte Windy City to olslm that Thomas will give City now 'stands. Why, he got so poor that drees rsheorsals In Kew York and the genuine ho couldn't get credit for O AftCk of flour, thing With all his best licks and grand but he had a dumb faith that there was gold flourishes 6ut thsi I, in the earth near by, and he hun on. Hoj believed there was money In his claim, and I The short skirt innovation for women om after a time begot others to boilers the I pioyos in the telegraph and telephone servioe nine; and so there came a day when he 'old u on no.-ounl of the dust, so Injurious to tho owaportoi ms tiuoresr 10 an iMicnsn syn dlCOte lor about 89,000,030, He is :t wifeless, ahtldlssiold man. who dot) not knew what to do with his money." "Yes,1 joined In n third pnrty, "when old Captain Butter bufll his sawmill in the Bterra foothills, hi lisd HO dream of ,?!d till one iiay it was found in tho mill-race, and Call ii'ornia within a year became tin SI dorarfo.'! The CherosOtl, living in the Indian Terrl A year after th Custor inossiere In the Blg'torv. nnn-bir 8.MW0, and am a far advanced Horn country, during a noon halt a cavalry ofltoer sat down to rest on u knoll of soft e'.av; near by was hil Utterly, holding the bridles of both horses. They were smoking and admiring the grand mountain peaks about them. After a bit the orderly's eyes came down to earth; they were glued on the knoll on which the captain sat. Suddenly ho leaped to his feet nnd shouted out, -My God, Captain, you are sitting on a gold minul' find such proved to be the ease, and these two men, who were out hunting In dians, stumbled into wealth." This reminded another that " In the sum mer of '01 a prospector with tho euphonious nam of Chris Keyce, who bad been prospect ing In jlontaim till everything tut his faith in his own luck was gone, came one dav to Fort Benton with n hag full of quartt, in jW f T W ,lk pluffi he found in the Hear WW .tloutiUiiK. A psr.y was made ut to go with him to what I- de-.-"iil od as a gulch full of gold, but they we.-e massscrsd by the Indians, and Keyesand bis secret were lost to the world. Tens of thousands of dollars and years of time hare been snant uamh. lug the Bear Paw ktoun tains tor Eeyss' lost mine, and some day it will be found, atum bled on, oi it was by its original first dis co raven" "You've ell heard of Alder Gulch Mine," sold a man who had been quietly smoking up to this time. "Well, you know It is the richest Dlld that Urn ns yet been made m Western Montana, and Its discovery was an accident, as much us the find of the hero of Bow's Flat that Bret Harte tells about. Early In tho sixties Bill Falrwcather and some friends started out to prospect tbo life' Horn Bongs, but were driven out of their course by the Crow Indians. Disheart ened and hungry, they were working thelt i way book to Bannock Olty; the nearest set tlement, when they went Into camp on Alder Creak, While the other were cooking about the last of their grub, Fu'rweuther, from for.-e of habit, began panning out the dirt In the creek. The very first dishful showed about three dollnrj. That was the simple beginning of it. a camp wr.s started: a town sprang up; and, as we all know, about flfl8,000,00fNo gold has been taken from the j mines of Alder Creek. I "Talk about brains ond foresight: they in all very well, and I believe in giving them credit, but as a rule they don't deserve it. sTukc Helena; it's u second case of Alder Gulch. The Lost Chance Gulch was discovered by eharteo, and the capital of Montana was j founded. Let me See yes, that was in '04. Four miners. Cowan. Crab, Miller und Stan , ley, stampeded from Alder Gu!ch and pushed i north. They met Tim Coleman c imlng from ! the Kootenai country with tad news. The j four prospectors itruok off In another dlrao I tion, without any destination in view, ano ; after a week's wandering they decided to 'try their fortunes on a strewn which they called 'Last Chocc) Creek.' They found gold in encouraging quantiUes; the country was full Of game: they stuck to itTand the I result wu one of the richest finds in tho I World, Old the founding of the capital of n i great state. Lu:k? Well, I should say it j was luck." "BO you know.' said yet another, "that the famous Coffiltock Lode that made so many men in .Nevada and out oi it Immensely wealthy, was originally a gold mine? " S inu knew this and Others did not. "Well." ha continued. ' It is a fact. There wasgjld on the surface, but ns they went down the gold petered out, an.! Oomstock and his partner-, Peter OT.iley and Tat Mclaughlin, wero nbout to abandon It, whoa It struck them to have an analysis made ot the strange deposit they had come on. This was done, and tho silver was discovered by chones, but all tho same. $868,000,000 was taken from that mine." "Talking about luck." said a man from Las Vegas. " reminds me of the case of Adams. I believe h was related to the great Xew England family; nt my rate, Ills front n.an'.e was John Quiney. One day while prospecting, his magnifying gl.193 was so hung that it focused the sun's ray on his haversack and set it on fire. As the haver sack held about a doxen pounds of powder. Adams dropped it mighty spry, nnd lit out in a hurry. Ir fell into n crevice that was down in the Saudia Mountain and after the explosion he went luck from curiosity to see the effect, nnd he found largo masses of rock scattered in every direction. Be found, to his delight, a vein of white quart with flecks of gold in it. He sold a tenth interest within a month for SlO.OUd, but it worth a hundred timet that. That, gentle. ry .1 I AncBtKo res 1101.11. - jnrumeuts, which levr-sweeping skirts r-sweoping disturb. There are two kinds of girls the pretty foot and nnkle. and the ugly foot and ankle. The latter is kicking against the de cree. The Indian population of the United States Is 01 nearly as can bo estimated, 39,279, In education and ogrloutture as their white neighbors, Indeed, their per capita wealth is greater than that of the whites.