THE OMAlIA DAILY BEE: SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1901. 12 J i I Devlin's BY W. PORTER HAfULTON. (Copyright, 1904. by W. Porter Hamilton.! "Well. Weymouth." said the great finan cier, turning for moment from the stock ticker to address bla Junior partner, "things cera to be coming; our way thle morning." It wm the great Devlin who spoke, the man whose rery name wn a terror on the street, and he wu epeakln of the deal which be meant ahould be hie last. He waa an old man now, but he felt unwilling to leave what had been for him the iicene of o many ucceaees without one final and crowning effort. In the glory of which he might retire triumphant, to be forever re membered In the pit "Tea," he continued, epeaklng almost as much to himself as to the man beside him, "I think she'll close at 110 today. To morrow she'll go still higher." OH. HOW His partner nodded. He wag a man of I'll i 1 I ' few words. ,"At 110." the broker repeated. "But she U be 120 before I'm. through with her. Thirty points net gain for Devlin & Co.. eh?" Again his partner nodded. He was count- Ing up the' probable profits, figuring with bla finger In the air. It was a shrewd game that old Devlin bad been playing. Kenawha and Western presented; a good target, for It was- a security so large, a part of which lay In strong hands-hands which had no intention of releasing Itr-that any heavy buying of the floating stock was sure to be felt aooner or later In the market It was ft move, also, to olrculate -the rumor, shortly before the Kenawha's last quarterly divi dend had been declared, that the dlreotors ' would decide It best, owing to the heavy outlay required for contemplated Improve ments, to nduce It from 11 to 1 per cent, and would likewise request the stookhold . era to authorise a new bond Issue.. The report caused the security to go off five points, and It was then Devlin placed the majority of his orders, although he had been accumulating Kenawha quietly for weeks. N . Finally the dividend rumor was) em . phatlcally denied from a semi-official source, and Kenawha rallied In conse quence. Btlll , Devlin continued to buy. It had only been yesterday, however, that at S o'clock, Just after stock exchange . closing hour, the -dlreotors had met and declared not only the same dividend as In the past, but 14 per cent additional. The morning's quotations had Shown the In stantaneous effect. Influenced as weil by the fact of Pevlln'a corner. Weymouth was moving; about the private office restlesssly. The strain of the last few days was beginning to tall upon . him, . He lacked bla chiefs iron aerva . , .-.-. u . lengw, vim m nan nnauwni ex- cues, he opened the door and went out, passing into the adjoining room, reserved for customers. There waa an air of sup pressed excitement, whloh la never wholly looking even among veteran operators. .Weymouth joined a group of three or four vbo were discussing the financial situa tion, "I only hope the old man will bold 'on long enough," was what be kept saying to himself.' Meanwhile Devlin sat In bla offioe alone. . He was happy happier than he had been for months. Ha felt the old grip on things again knew himself perfect master of the situation. And yet his face wore the same hungry, lonely expression whloh his clerks had learned to recognise so well. At half past 11 precisely Weymouth looked In Just long enough to Illumine the atmos phere with a smile. 'It's at 108," ha cried, gleefully. "The shorts are on the run. The stock's career than cocktails at a prayer meeting. By tomorrow we caa make our own terms." For the first time n bis history, Devlin almost laughed. It would be a great week, and when It was over, and he had safely unloaded his Immense Kenawha holdings, he would be pointed out as the man who, single-handed, ha4 put through one of the moat success ful corners ever known la the Street Just then his offlos boy entered. "A woman to see you, sir," he said. Old Devlin glanced up. "Tell her I'm busy. Let her see Mr. Weymouth," he said, testUy. "I did. sir. but she wants to see you particular. If you please, sir." "Show ber la, then, and be quick. If he's got to come," growled the financier. The office boy beat a hasty retreat In a moment more a woman had entered un announced. , The banker, startled, rose from his chair. "Ah. good morning. Mrs. Merrtngton," he began, wits uiuuh ceremony. Last Deal There was a. pained look In the new oomer'e eyes. "Father I" - "Do me the boner of being seated." he remarked, with crushing courtesy. She seated herself on a large leather sofa, while Devlin, dropping into his re volving desk chair, wheeled around and faced her, steadily. WWIT" he asked. "Father," she said, "Is that all you have to say to met" "Alir he broke out. "All? In't It more than you deserve? Didn't I tell you that If you married Merrtngton I didn't want to see you again? But still you did It-you married him married one of my clerks I fm a man of my word. I don't forget," HAPPY YOU HAVE MADE MEI" SHE CRIED Devlin could hear vaguely the sounds from his cashier's office, and the cries of "Stock, stock. Devlin!" as the runners from the various banking houses delivered their Kenawha and Western. It was com ing In fast His humor grew a whit the pleasanter. ' "But In spite of Mr. Merrlngton's attrac tions, you had to come back at last" She assented, humbly. "I wonder why? Maybe you've tired of him." "Oh, no," aha said quickly. "No, tt wasn't that" "Not that? I had hoped tt was. Then aren't you going to tell me why?" She raised her white face to his, winking back the tears. "I don't suppose It would be any use, because I'm not going to ask you to forgive ma" He smiled In silent satisfaction. He liked her grit "Tell me all the same," he said. Shs hesitated for a moment "Go on," he commanded, looking at her fixedly. "This la my busy day." "I came" she began. "On behalf of Mr. Merrtngton," he Inter rupted, with Instant Intuition. "Ha Is oh, he's in dreadful trouble. And it's all. all my fault" She sobbed pitifully. "Your fault? Nonsense! It was his fault Hs ought never to have married you. the Idiot." "He doesn't think he was an Idiot to have married me, father," she said,' smil ing in spite of herself. "He doesn't ah? That's considerate of him. Don't think he was an Idiot to marry you, don't hT If he did, I'd I'd oh, d n him anyway!" he broke off lmpotentl.. His daughter waa up In arms In a flash. "You mustn't talk that way, you musn't I won't hear it" "Loyal, still loyal," he thought, half bit terly. "Well, and what Is It you want me to do for him?" hs asked aloud. The expression of her face changed. T I don't know," she faltered. "You don't know? You don't know? How the deuce am I to, then?" ,"I don't exactly understand It myself, but yesterday afternoon Jim told me and, oh, be looked so white aa he said It that there was no further hope, and he was as good as ruined 'broke,' was what he called it You see, some extra divi dends had been declared, or i something, and It was for my sake, you know, he did it for my sake he got caught on the wrong side of the market, or so hs said, and now, now-" She started to weep, silently. Devlin sat staring straight before him with unseeing eyea "What was the name of the stock he got caught In?" he asked, as a tnatetr of form. He knew well enough already. "Kenawha and Western. He said he had been selling short, though I don't know what he meant He's six feet two, you know." "Oot fooled on my canard the young ass," thought the banker, who didn't even smile. "By the way, did your husband say how heavily he was Involved?" "He did. But he made me promise not to tfll anyone. Still, I suppose it wouldn't be wrung to tell you, would It?" "Ob, no; tell me, by all meaaaf I don't count' She came ovsr and whispered In his ear. Hs Jumped as If he had been shot "Ood!" he cried, unable for the time be ing to say mora Then, as he began more fully to realise the situation: "The fool! The d unmitigated fool! How, by all that's holy, could hs stagger'under that?" And he sank back exhausted Into his seat He felt his daughter's hand on his arm. "Don't be hard on him," she Interceded. "Remember, he did It for my saka". "I'm trying to remember that" he man- agd to answer from between set teeth, There was a silence broken only by the babbling of the now unheeded stock ticker. The broker was the first to speak. "Would your husband take money from meT" Mrs. Merrlngton shook hsr bead violently, "He'd die first." "I thousht as much." He leaned back in his chair, closing his eyes and running his fingers through his a parse gray hair. The veteran market ma- nlDulator was doing as hard a bit of think Ing as be had ever dons In his His before. v tnr ail that, his first remark was hardly relevant to tha matter in band. "You've been a very undutlful daughter, Julia." Mrs. Merrlngton's Hps tightened. Thera was a hopeless look In ber eyes. "All the same you are my daughter, and " He stopped short and blew his nose viciously. Then he coughed and went on again. "All the same you are my daugh ter. and. confound it. If I'm not pretty fond of you." She gave a glad little cry and, charging JOYFULLY. down upon him, carried htm by storm where he sat and put her arms about him. VmiMi hAln Him. then?" "Julia, has he has he made you happy T" "linn father. And you're going ' to help him?" Devlin nodded silently. ,. She clasped her arms about him closer. Her trembling lips were pressed to bla for the first time In four years. When Mrs. Merrlngton had taken her departure the broker crossed the room to the humming stock ticker arid studied the tape carefully. To his mind there was but one thing to be dona He must smash the market And there was but one way to do that Taking the board room much by surprise as possible, he must throw overboard his enormous Kenawha holdings for whatever they would bring, Only In this way could be hammer down the prios sufficiently to enable his son-in law to cover his short sales. That he would stand to lose a million profit in the transaction he well knew. A million aa against his son-in-law's honor! After all, was It worth It? And yet he had promised to savs him. He thought next of his thwarted ambl tlori, of his desire to be remembered al ways for his consummate handling of the Kenawtha deal. The street would never understand his sudden change of front It would think he had lost his nerve. And yet he had promised to save him. Then, too, what would his own offioe say? How would Weymouth take it Weymouth, whom it was true he had admitted to the firm to serve merely as a figurehead and to save his chief by seeing troublesome call era .What would they all think of their leaders. In whom they were wont to be lieve so Implicitly? Hs had never realised before how muck his clerks' hero worship had meant to him. And yet he had prom ised to save him. He summoned his broker by private wire and gjave, in person, the orTler to sell. His Instructions ,were terse and to the point "Let the crowd know who's selling. Suggest, If you can, that the extra divi dend was only declared to facilitate the voting of the bond Issue. And give up my name direct on every lot" He stood, watching to catch the record of his first sola He had not long to wait Two hundred Kenawha St Western at VX. He smiled sa If It hurt htm. For the next two hours he scarcely left the ticker, save now and then to give a hurried order to one or another of his clerks. He saw his stock being gobbled up a thousand shares -at a tlms and the price dropping, dropping steadily, A hun dred and six, 106, 104. It was an avalanche. At I o'clock It was at par. At quarter past It was Mftfc; at half past it waa C64; at fifteen minutes to I It was W flat And Devlin's work waa done. "Let him cover now and be hangedl" he said to himself, as he went out to get a bite of lunch. Late that afternoon Devlin wsa sitting in. bis office writing. Outside he could hear, now and then, a ledger being slammed shut as a bookkeeper finished bis work for the day. "I've been a foot," be kept repeating to himself. "An awful fool." The office boy put his head In the door. "A lady to see you, sir Ue same lady that was here this morning." The broker's taoe lost its hard, look. rghow ber In," ha said. But his daughter was In the rotaa before he had finished speaking, and running up to biro embraced him gtrllshlj to the amasement of the office bey, who discreetly withdrew. V "Oh, how happy you have made tana!" ii envu juiuiijr, - now very, very r bapfiy. again And how I do love you for it alll "lis Ilk vU tuneg to ace yeu he said gravely. "To think that you have been away four yeara" "Four long years." she echoed. "Have you missed me very much?" "I might as well admit It. I suppose. I have missed you' very much. What does your husband have to say?" he Inquired abruptly. "Jim?" For the moment she looked con fused. "Oh, Jim says he knew the market was bound to drop all along." "And your "I didn't contradict him, but I-t am your daughter. I knew you did it." And she kissed him again upon his wrinkled cheek. 1 Next morning affairs of the day before were discussed with bated breath. In the offlee of Devlin A Co. "The old man must have been crasy yesterday," remarked the cashier to the oldest bookkeeper. "He's lost his grip," returned the oldest bookkeeper sententlously. "He's getting on .In life. It's- beginning to tell," asserted the head of the bond de partment "He played too high. It took his nerve," was the opinion of the transfer clerk. "He threw away a cool million," thought the Junior partner gloomily. "But anyway," concluded the office boy, who, after all, la the real factotum In any banking house, "the old gent seems happier now than I ever seen him before." THE WALL STREET OF TODAY A Dumping Ground for Watered Stock, Wind Flnsaee and Promoters. f The new Wall street Is a center where one may bet on what will be the fictitious value of certain alleged securities. It is the dumping ground of watered stocks and self- sustaining bonds. It is a bazar for the dis play and sale of certificates based on the Intrinsic value of various makes of gold bricks. Incidentally one may . deal In real securities, but the transactions in these are so small as to cut no appreciable figure In the total When an article or a representative of one has real value there are slight fluctua tions In Its quotations. It is difficult to hold' It above Its Intrinsic price, and slmost Im possible to depress It below Its honest mar ket quotation. But not so with rtocks of uncertain merit. They move violently and In defiance of all recognised laws governing values. But for this very reason a sus picious stock Is more popular in a specu lative way than one based on unquestioned assets. A glance at the stock sales for the last year will show that the overwhelming percentage of transactions were In shares which no conservative investor would hold In his vaults. Without going into compli cated details It may be sufficient to make the following comparison between the sales in the two classes of stocks: Lake Shore Is a gilt-edged stock quoted at $275 a share. The total transactions In It for the year 190S were 360 shares. There some question about the actual value of Brooklyn Rapid Transit stock; It never has paid a dividend, though onoe quoted aa high aa 139. It Is now selling at around 46. The transactions tn this lively security for the year 1908 reached the total of 1,646,331, which Is considerably In excess of tha sales In the more sedate Lake Shore. New York, New Haven and Hartford Is- worth about $200 a share and Its sales for the year were less than 26.000. Amalga mated Copper is quoted at about $50 a share and there are persons who claim that It Is a liability rather than an asset. The curi osity on this point was so great that more than 11,000,000 shares of It were bought and sold during the last year. The losses of the dear "public" on this Item were prob ably more than $200,000,000. Pullman Palace Car stock Is quoted at about $220 a share and may be considered a safe investment. The dealings In tt only reached 23,000 shares. When the presses ground out the certificates of the United States Steel Corporation the public was de lighted. They had a chance to buy a per Tuo "FOLLOW THE FLAG" Sn n n I UJ I U n!J Leave Omaha 9:30 p. m., Council Fair and St. Louis DULY Lv. Omaha - -Ar. World's Fair Ar. St. Louis - We have others. HARRY v. Come Early and Avoid the Rush. Sale Begins 8 a. m. Sharp iipirfesifl ENTIRE STOCK SHOES EVERY ARTICLE HARKED IN PAY THE SALESMAN ONE - Entire stock $7.60 Suits . Entire stock $10. OO suits Entire stock $12.80 Entire stock $18.00 suits Entire stock $20.00 suits... ........ Entire stock $28.00 suits . .. . cent dividend paying stock at less than $50. ' They also Invested in the 7 per cent, pre ferred stock at lees than par.' That brilliant financier, "620 per cent" Miller, never had so many customers nor Inspired greater confidence. The transactions for the year In steel reached the pleasing total of 14,000, 000. The 4 per cent dividend has besn dis continued and those who paid $60 a share for their stock are now unable to sell it for one-flftb of that sum. The losses of the public are beyond computation. At this writing no arrests have been made. Those who deal In these stocks and In a score of others which might be named realize more or less clearly that most of them are worth no more than the paper on which hey are printed, but they pro oeed on the theory that there are greater fools than themselves who will take certi ficates off their hands at an advancsd price. When a man offers for sale a 4 per cent dividend paying stock at the price of $E0 he Is either a fool or a knave. The one who purchaser tt at any price with the idea that It is an, investment deserves to be swindled, but i In all other confidence games the laws Interfere to protect such easy dupes. But Smith and Jones hava found that It is not safe to bet that a worthless stock will fall in price. They have made some expensive experiments alon gthls line. The men who float these worthless certificates are able to keep up the price If tt suits their ends. They control the money market and can squeeze the life out of any faction which dares "sell the market short," aa it is called in speculative terms. Of course, in (6 Special Trains July UOBIJ'S 7:45 7:30 7:50 a. P- m. m. m. Comparo Thio Timo With Othor Linos- Call at Wa.ba.sh E. MOORES, SIHXIXOttAiiA- PEOPLE'S FI HSITI RK AX U CARPET TODAY (SATURDAY) ONLY. OF UEfJ'S CLOTHING, HATS AT EXACTLY HALF MARKED FRIGE. THESE PRICES I suits.'. the long run a worthless stock will find its proper level, but In the process those who issue and manipulate It are In a position to rob both its friends and its enemies. By first raising and then lowering the market and it Is the easiest thing .in the world for certain Interests to do both Smith and then Jones find that their Judgment has been at fault. Brooklyn Eagle. DISPLACING . STEAM POWrR Oil and Gas Engines Steam Engines oi and Sea. Superseding Land I have been led lately to think the whole development of the steam engine, . to the exclusion of the gas engine, lias been a mistake and that we are now at the begin ning of a new 'era In the use of power. Engineers $ould today gain, better and more economical ' results by abandoning steam and using Internal combustion engines, even in large establishments. The gain In economy In 'fuel will advance with the size of the establishment.- With the Internal combustion engine a brake horse-power can be produced on a pound of coal. This could not be dona with steam under any conditions. So great a revolution has come about In methods of producing power that a 10,000 ton cruiser of twenty-one knots an hour could today ' proceed around the world at fourteen knots without taking on fuel and without sacrificing any of Its war efficiency. OH engines, using crude petroleum, will n oi Bluffs 9:45 p. m. Early Hoxt Horning. 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Tha dangers of steam at high pressure are avoided and the complexity of steam ma chinery done away with. Owing to the certain saving to be se cured in coal consumption and to the sim plicity and reliability of the gaa engine plant we shall witness a gradual forcing out of the steam plants In 'future power plants for lighting, pumping or factory use, and It will be a question of but a short time before many of the existing steam plants will be replaced. Lewis Nixon la World'a Work. 20.00 to Chicago. The Chicago Great Western railway will sell special round trip tickets to Chicago at $20.00 Tickets good for return until Oo tober SI. For further Information- apply to 8. D. Parkhurst, general agent, 1BJ Farnam street, Omaka, Neb. n Arrivo World's 6:30 7:00 7:15 P. a. a. m. m. m. V i X 0 o ( I