<p><span class="pagenum">[Pg 189]</span><SPAN name="XIV" id="XIV"></SPAN></p>
<div class="centerbox1 bbox">
<br/>
<div class="centerbox bbox"><span class="chapter">No. 14</span></div>
<br/>
<div class="centerbox2 bbox"><span class="dropcap">F</span>ROM John Graham, at
the Union Stock Yards in Chicago, to his son, Pierrepont, at The Travelers’
Rest, New Albany, Indiana. Mr. Pierrepont has taken a little flyer in short
ribs on ’Change, and has accidentally come into the line of his father’s
vision.</div>
<br/></div>
<p> </p>
<h2>XIV</h2>
<p class="date"><span class="smcap">Chicago</span>, July 15, 189—</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[Pg 191]</span><em>Dear Pierrepont:</em> I met young Horshey, of Horshey & Horter, the grain
and provision brokers, at luncheon yesterday, and while we were talking
over the light run of hogs your name came up somehow, and he congratulated
me on having such a smart son. Like an old fool, I allowed that you were
bright enough to come in out of the rain if somebody called you, though I
ought to have known better, for it seems as if I never start in to brag
about your being sound and sweet that I don’t have to wind up by allowing
a rebate for skippers.</p>
<p>Horshey was so blamed anxious to show that you were over-weight—he
wants to handle some of my business on ’Change—that he managed to prove
you a light-weight. Told me you had ordered him to sell a hundred
thousand ribs short last week, and that he had just bought them in on a
wire from<span class="pagenum">[Pg 192]</span> you at a profit of four hundred and sixty-odd dollars. I was
mighty hot, you bet, to know that you had been speculating, but I had to
swallow and allow that you were a pretty sharp boy. I told Horshey to
close out the account and send me a check for your profits and I would
forward it, as I wanted to give you a tip on the market before you did
any more trading.</p>
<p>I inclose the check herewith. Please indorse it over to the treasurer of
The Home for Half Orphans and return at once. I will see that he gets it
with your compliments.</p>
<p>Now, I want to give you that tip on the market. There are several
reasons why it isn’t safe for you to trade on ’Change just now, but the
particular one is that Graham & Co. will fire you if you do. Trading on
margin is a good deal like paddling around the edge of the old swimming
hole—it seems safe and easy at first, but before a fellow knows it he
has stepped off the edge into deep water. The wheat pit is only thirty<span class="pagenum">[Pg 193]</span>
feet across, but it reaches clear down to Hell. And trading on margin
means trading on the ragged edge of nothing. When a man buys, he’s
buying something that the other fellow hasn’t got. When a man sells,
he’s selling something that he hasn’t got. And it’s been my experience
that the net profit on nothing is nit. When a speculator wins he don’t
stop till he loses, and when he loses he can’t stop till he wins.</p>
<p>You have been in the packing business long enough now to know that it
takes a bull only thirty seconds to lose his hide; and if you’ll believe
me when I tell you that they can skin a bear just as quick on ’Change,
you won’t have a Board of Trade Indian using your pelt for a rug during
the long winter months.</p>
<p>Because you are the son of a pork packer you may think that you know a
little more than the next fellow about paper pork. There’s nothing in
it. The poorest men on earth are the relations of millionaires.<span class="pagenum">[Pg 194]</span> When I
sell futures on ’Change, they’re against hogs that are traveling into
dry salt at the rate of one a second, and if the market goes up on me
I’ve got the solid meat to deliver. But, if you lose, the only part of
the hog which you can deliver is the squeal.</p>
<p>I wouldn’t bear down so hard on this matter if money was the only thing
that a fellow could lose on ’Change. But if a clerk sells pork, and the
market goes down, he’s mighty apt to get a lot of ideas with holes in
them and bad habits as the small change of his profits. And if the
market goes up, he’s likely to go short his self-respect to win back his
money.</p>
<p>Most men think that they can figure up all their assets in dollars and
cents, but a merchant may owe a hundred thousand dollars and be solvent.
A man’s got to lose more than money to be broke. When a fellow’s got a
straight backbone and a clear eye his creditors don’t have to lie awake
nights worrying over his liabilities. You<span class="pagenum">[Pg 195]</span> can hide your meanness from
your brain and your tongue, but the eye and the backbone won’t keep
secrets. When the tongue lies, the eyes tell the truth.</p>
<p>I know you’ll think that the old man is bucking and kicking up a lot of
dust over a harmless little flyer. But I’ve kept a heap smarter boys
than you out of Joliet when they found it easy to feed the Board of
Trade hog out of my cash drawer, after it had sucked up their savings in
a couple of laps.</p>
<p>You must learn not to overwork a dollar any more than you would a horse.
Three per cent. is a small load for it to draw; six, a safe one; when it
pulls in ten for you it’s likely working out West and you’ve got to
watch to see that it doesn’t buck; when it makes twenty you own a blame
good critter or a mighty foolish one, and you want to make dead sure
which; but if it draws a hundred it’s playing the races or something
just as hard on horses and dollars, and the<span class="pagenum">[Pg 196]</span> first thing you know you
won’t have even a carcass to haul to the glue factory.</p>
<p>I dwell a little on this matter of speculation because you’ve got to
live next door to the Board of Trade all your life, and it’s a safe
thing to know something about a neighbor’s dogs before you try to pat
them. Sure Things, Straight Tips and Dead Cinches will come running out
to meet you, wagging their tails and looking as innocent as if they
hadn’t just killed a lamb, but they’ll bite. The only safe road to
follow in speculation leads straight away from the Board of Trade on
the dead run.</p>
<p>Speaking of sure things naturally calls to mind the case of my old
friend Deacon Wiggleford, whom I used to know back in Missouri years
ago. The Deacon was a powerful pious man, and he was good according to
his lights, but he didn’t use a very superior article of kerosene to
keep them burning.</p>
<p>Used to take up half the time in <span class="pagenum">[Pg 197]</span>prayer-meeting talking about how we
were all weak vessels and stewards. But he was so blamed busy exhorting
others to give out of the fullness with which the Lord had blessed them
that he sort of forgot that the Lord had blessed him about fifty
thousand dollars’ worth, and put it all in mighty safe property, too,
you bet.</p>
<p>The Deacon had a brother in Chicago whom he used to call a sore trial.
Brother Bill was a broker on the Board of Trade, and, according to the
Deacon, he was not only engaged in a mighty sinful occupation, but he
was a mighty poor steward of his sinful gains. Smoked two-bit cigars
and wore a plug hat. Drank a little and cussed a little and went to the
Episcopal Church, though he had been raised a Methodist. Altogether it
looked as if Bill was a pretty hard nut.</p>
<p>Well, one fall the Deacon decided to go to Chicago himself to buy his
winter goods, and naturally he hiked out to Brother Bill’s to<span class="pagenum">[Pg 198]</span> stay,
which was considerable cheaper for him than the Palmer House, though,
as he told us when he got back, it made him sick to see the waste.</p>
<p>The Deacon had his mouth all fixed to tell Brother Bill that, in his
opinion, he wasn’t much better than a faro dealer, for he used to brag
that he never let anything turn him from his duty, which meant his
meddling in other people’s business. I want to say right here that with
most men duty means something unpleasant which the other fellow ought to
do. As a matter of fact, a man’s first duty is to mind his own business.
It’s been my experience that it takes about all the thought and work
which one man can give to run one man right, and if a fellow’s putting
in five or six hours a day on his neighbor’s character, he’s mighty apt
to scamp the building of his own.</p>
<p>Well, when Brother Bill got home from business that first night, the
Deacon explained that every time he lit a two-bit cigar<span class="pagenum">[Pg 199]</span> he was
depriving a Zulu of twenty-five helpful little tracts which might have
made a better man of him; that fast horses were a snare and plug hats a
wile of the Enemy; that the Board of Trade was the Temple of Belial and
the brokers on it his sons and servants.</p>
<p>Brother Bill listened mighty patiently to him, and when the Deacon had
pumped out all the Scripture that was in him, and was beginning to suck
air, he sort of slunk into the conversation like a setter pup that’s
been caught with the feathers on its chops.</p>
<p>“Brother Zeke,” says he, “I shall certainly let your words soak in. I
want to be a number two red, hard, sound and clean sort of a man, and
grade contract on delivery day. Perhaps, as you say, the rust has got
into me and the Inspector won’t pass me, and if I can see it that way
I’ll settle my trades and get out of the market for good.”</p>
<p>The Deacon knew that Brother Bill had<span class="pagenum">[Pg 200]</span> scraped together considerable
property, and, as he was a bachelor, it would come to him in case the
broker was removed by any sudden dispensation. What he really feared was
that this money might be fooled away in high living and speculation. And
so he had banged away into the middle of the flock, hoping to bring down
those two birds. Now that it began to look as if he might kill off the
whole bunch he started in to hedge.</p>
<p>“Is it safe, William?” says he.</p>
<p>“As Sunday-school,” says Bill, “if you do a strictly brokerage business
and don’t speculate.”</p>
<p>“I trust, William, that you recognize the responsibilities of your
stewardship?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="illus014" id="illus014"></SPAN>illus014]</span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus14.png" width-obs="276" height-obs="600" alt="I started in to curl up that young fellow to a crisp." title="" /> <span class="caption">“<em>I started in to curl up that young fellow to a crisp.</em>”</span></div>
<p>Bill fetched a groan. “Zeke,” says he, “you cornered me there, and I
’spose I might as well walk up to the Captain’s office and settle. I
hadn’t bought or sold a bushel on my own account in a year till last
week, when I got your letter saying that you were coming. Then I saw
what looked like a<span class="pagenum">[Pg 201]</span> safe chance to scalp the market for a couple of cents
a bushel, and I bought 10,000 September, intending to turn over the profits
to you as a little present, so that you could see the town and have a good
time without it’s costing you anything.”</p>
<p>The Deacon judged from Bill’s expression that he had got nipped and was
going to try to unload the loss on him, so he changed his face to the
one which he used when attending the funeral of any one who hadn’t been
a professor, and came back quick and hard:</p>
<p>“I’m surprised, William, that you should think I would accept money made
in gambling. Let this be a lesson to you. How much did you lose?”</p>
<p>“That’s the worst of it—I didn’t lose; I made two hundred dollars,” and
Bill hove another sigh.</p>
<p>“Made two hundred dollars!” echoed the Deacon, and he changed his face
again for the one which he used when he found a lead<span class="pagenum">[Pg 202]</span> quarter in his
till and couldn’t remember who had passed it on him.</p>
<p>“Yes,” Bill went on, “and I’m ashamed of it, for you’ve made me see
things in a new light. Of course, after what you’ve said, I know it
would be an insult to offer you the money. And I feel now that it
wouldn’t be right to keep it myself. I must sleep on it and try to find
the straight thing to do.”</p>
<p>I guess it really didn’t interfere with Bill’s sleep, but the Deacon sat
up with the corpse of that two hundred dollars, you bet. In the morning
at breakfast he asked Brother Bill to explain all about this speculating
business, what made the market go up and down, and whether real corn or
wheat or pork figured in any stage of a deal. Bill looked sort of sad
and dreamy-eyed, as if his conscience hadn’t digested that two hundred
yet, but he was mighty obliging about explaining everything to Zeke. He<span class="pagenum">[Pg 203]</span>
had changed his face for the one which he wore when he sold an easy
customer ground peas and chicory for O. G. Java, and every now and then
he gulped as if he was going to start a hymn. When Bill told him how
good and bad weather sent the market up and down, he nodded and said
that that part of it was all right, because the weather was of the Lord.</p>
<p>“Not on the Board of Trade it isn’t,” Bill answered back; “at least, not
to any marked extent; it’s from the weather man or some liar in the corn
belt, and, as the weather man usually guesses wrong, I reckon there
isn’t any special inspiration about it. The game is to guess what’s
going to happen, not what has happened, and by the time the real weather
comes along everybody has guessed wrong and knocked the market off a
cent or two.”</p>
<p>That made the Deacon’s chin whiskers droop a little, but he began to ask
questions<span class="pagenum">[Pg 204]</span> again, and by and by he discovered that away behind—about a
hundred miles behind, but that was close enough for the Deacon—a deal
in futures there were real wheat and pork. Said then that he’d been
misinformed and misled; that speculation was a legitimate business,
involving skill and sagacity; that his last scruple was removed, and
that he would accept the two hundred.</p>
<p>Bill brightened right up at that and thanked him for putting it so clear
and removing the doubts that had been worrying him. Said that he could
speculate with a clear conscience after listening to the Deacon’s able
exposition of the subject. Was only sorry he hadn’t seen him to talk it
over before breakfast, as the two hundred had been lying so heavy on his
mind all night that he’d got up early and mailed a check for it to the
Deacon’s pastor and told him to spend it on his poor.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[Pg 205]</span>Zeke took the evening train home in order to pry that check out of the
elder, but old Doc. Hoover was a pretty quick stepper himself and he’d
blown the whole two hundred as soon as he got it, buying winter coal for
poor people.</p>
<p>I simply mention the Deacon in passing as an example of the fact that
it’s easy for a man who thinks he’s all right to go all wrong when he
sees a couple of hundred dollars lying around loose a little to one side
of the straight and narrow path; and that when he reaches down to pick
up the money there’s usually a string tied to it and a small boy in the
bushes to give it a yank. Easy-come money never draws interest;
easy-borrowed dollars pay usury.</p>
<p>Of course, the Board of Trade and every other commercial exchange have
their legitimate uses, but all you need to know just now is that
speculation by a fellow who never owns more pork at a time than he sees<span class="pagenum">[Pg 206]</span>
on his breakfast plate isn’t one of them. When you become a packer you
may go on ’Change as a trader; until then you can go there only as a
sucker.</p>
<p><span style="margin-left: 22em;">Your affectionate father,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 27em;"><span class="smcap">John Graham</span>.</span></p>
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