1910. "Luck": Short Story of a Young Man's Success LORD MACAULAY Kitfitand'n (ire a tent HNtorlnn, Said In The i:llnliirt Itevtow: "When J uYvour the pt-tnant pnges of Alnswurth 1 am lost In amazement Hint his wonderful historical novel have not an sbMing place In every home. A dabblor in history myself, I ran fully appreciate the charm which his romantic stylo lmvarts to an ofhen dry subject. Ills close adherence to established facts woven together In such attrac tive form lenOers his series of romances Indispensable In the family circle. Ho tlwuys charms, but never misleads." THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JUNE y oakley state, an k VAELEY DIME D&KBL TjOTLDING- AI Q&ELET, IDAHO r UY I.KONAIU) KOWLEn. Special CommlsHluuer of The Hee. His bunk li a ImsincHS of more than 11,000.000 pr .xt-.ir. He situ behind a bis mahoRany roll-top 'lth "t.'aHhler" In shiny brass letters tacked to the end. Ho carries a . tb,W0 balasi e with the Fli-at National at Omaha. ( His new bank building font $15,000 and fjl 1A(tl fur He cm sell his sheep on the Omaha market for more than 30,000. He got the bid for them while I waa talking with him. His real extute, his quarry of purest granite, his farm and city property total to 115,000 ur fO.000. His home Is the neatest, most comfort Able In town; it cost to.OOO. Hlawlfe Is one of the leaders In the younger Bet of an old. old town. His boy "Jack," not yet 2 yeara old, is worth his weight In diamonds. . But he Is only 27 years of age! The west Is the place for the young fellow. And Idaho Is the wonder state of U th golden west. Here is J. B. Randall, cashier of the Oakley State bank; secre tary of Chapman & Handull, fluckniastei's, and stockholder in the Burley State bank and In the Bank of Utah; the latter at Hiram, Utah. Thus are his activities scat tered over two states. And he is only a boy. But a boy In whom every one has .Xaitn, -confidence, and , to whom the best . ..a biggest men in the town are so loyal that there Is not a member of his board -cf directors who Isn't years and years older tha'.i hlmstlf.' He Is a typical out growth of the west, the west that he culls home, the west that he hives. . "Homebody gave him his start," I can almost hear you say. It Is the Invariable excuse of the weakling when he contem plates the success of another. Alwaya I can hear that whine: "Home one left It to him," or "his father was rich," or "he was lucky." This time I .want you to listen to what luck really is. This time I want to chow you what "luck," real luck, will do for a fellow. , Ho liooii of Work. jThis Randall person was born on a farm near OgUen, Utah, Jut. I twenty-seven years ago. He went to the district echuul until he was Id, working In the summer, on a threshing machine, to help out at home, suv lug meantime for the business college course upon which he had set his hope. Kvery summer he left home to go to the Di-eat wheat fields of Washington and Oiegon, where work was plenty and help scarce. No "free board at home for him. iut a Job in the open, where he had to hustle and compete with strong men for his dally wage. A clean cut battle with . iH'Stlny was the sort of a scrap that Ran dall put? up. The last ycur that he went , to svliool, when he hud Just turned 1H, the vlone of the threshing siusoti found him furtlund, Ore. And opportunity was there in the shape of a sir.ke of the Sea- linens' union. The wage offered were tempting high, and Kundull shipped before Uie mast l'ul u three mouths' cruise on the I'oluiubiu, the ill-titled ship that later weni to pieces of Mendocino. This was a fine experience, but the strike settled, the win ter was almost over and early spring found him a common laborer in the in Iters at til eat Falls, Mont. More of the threshing season In the great wheat fields of the Treasure State, and the coveted sum he had been saving for all this time waa his; in a bank, ' rtiady to serve its. purpose, giving to Itandali, thresher hand, roustabout, smelter laborer, au education In modern business science. "1 knew this," he said, "that to excel the other fellows I'd have to know as jfcuiuch about their game as they did. There's a practical way iu uo iiuugs aim a tnco letlcal way, and the fellow ho only knows ons way, . whichever one it is, U Ucund to be Worse off than the fellow who know both. 1 wanted to know boih.". That was the way he reasoned it cut. A nil Alien 1 asked him to have a cigar, he repM.vd, with a' smile,' "1 don't kiutf tin. ti it, of cither liquor or tobacco." I.ut'k of Hard Ksilpir. ' Luck! Sure it was luck that made him a V4uler of a big bank at 21. Nothing In Ins world but luck. The kind of luck mat bustle for sixteen hours a day; the kind of luck that dues wlut its migtU what Us hanus find to do; the sort of luck that slip's clear of evil associations, of petty exiravuguucies; that saves Us money; tna. Iius a definite ami; thai knows what It ijunis and camps on the trail until It gets . Wt lly thut; ' nothing less. lutuinlng to Ogden Uandull went to business college. Not once, but twice, each lime to a different school. "1 wanted to get It all," tie said to me. "I found that there was more to it than I had planned and that It took a little longer to learn It.'' And so to two of Hum he wenu And thla was the only place he got a "lift." While he was going to school his father Kave him a home free of charge; a home sixteen miles from the city, and the trip lo make twice a day. School finished h looked .around Jur something to do. He bad his mind thai the banking busii Yi.y offered a pla.'e and an opportunity to Iff-' young fellow ready to lake life as o found it, and to make the beat of every lkiuj li eiUiubkU wm . Out morning found him at the cashier's desk of the 1 Oden State bank at Ogden, asking for "something to do." , It was the president who sat at that desk that morning; the cashier was Out, and Handall frankly and plainly ' asked for "something to do." The president was ac customed to being asked for almost any and every place In the bank, but "some thing to do" waa a new one on him. Not necessary to detail what Itandali answered to the qeustions fired at him. He got his Job, which paid (25 per month. And for four months Randall worked for that princely stipend, riding every single day sixteen miles to work and riding sixteen miles back when the bank was closed. He stayed with it; was the first at the bank atid the last to leae it. He was "on the' Jvb" all day long and all the time. When he took his first month's pay homo his family looked at It with the laconic re mark, "Better come back to the farm, it pays better." "You watch me," replied Randall, "I'll make that old tnan pay me JlfiO a month before I leave that bank." " And he did. Of course it was Luck; Just pure luck. It was the sort of Luck 'that Is waiting outtlde the barn door at 5 o'clock in the morning; the Lupk that waits, Just, ..outside the door to greet the first fellow down to business, the Luck that helps a. man. de termined to get across anyway, over the hard plucea of life. Oh, it was Luck, all right, nothing but Luck. ' ( All the Way Is, . After about four months lie quit carrying the little red bag of the bank collector around the down town streets, and by degrees he worked In every single de partment of the bank up and including the paying teller's cage, which, . you must know, Is next to assistant cashier. Then the Ogden banks wanted a secretary for the clearing house. And Randall was se lected for that Job. It was never an easy one, "but when the panic came ' ho was there, at the desk, night and day, ready for any and every emergency. Did they take Randall out and put in an older man? Not on your life; they dirt not. Randall was there, as wise as any of the oldor ones; with youth and strength to stand the strain. He had been everything In a bank; knew the whole routine, and he stuck to the Job; nailed to the mast, lib was on deck. And, well, you know how Ogden, Utah, came through the panic. Girl and the Hunk. All this time Randall had a sweetheart. A serious little woman who is his sweet heart yet. Her folks lived at Hiram, Utah, and ono day, when the panicky times had quieted down, Randall had a leave of ab sence. He went to see his "girl." She lived at Hiram with her relatives, and Randall the night he wanted to come away found that he couldn't cash a check. "How many people In this town?" he asked. They answered, "About S.000." "Why don't you havo a bank?" "Have been trying to get one, bdt there's no one lo organize It." Randall didn't go back to Uyileii that night, nor the next, nor the next. And when he did go back Hiram had a bank et least it was organized und Randall had the papers and applications In his pocket. Promptly these were filed and his resig nation went to the clearing house of the associated banks at Ogden. Soiur I tah a ill t allsts. In the First National bank at Ogden is a man named i'avid Kccles. That man Is worth fiu.ouu.ooo In his oun name and right. Also there Is M. S. .Browning, whose In come Is in excess of $500,000 per year. Browning Is the inventor of the automatic principle In all the Colt's fire-arms. He makes lots of money. It's like' the Selden patent to automobiles. This man Brown ing is many trmes a millionaire. David Eccies Is the head of the sugar beet In terests of the Intel -mountain countty) he Is the head of the lumber interests of east ern Oregon, ifiownlng Is associated with til m. neii thut resignation of Randall's came to these men there wu a consulta tion. Randall's Aoit of man Is hard lo I get hold of; that threshing machine-dock luborer-smelterman-baiik-collector-clearing- house-sreretary experience that Randall mid was worth money and ccles and hi owning could afford to puy. - The resig nation was not acted upon. lUndall.it flutied again. And one morning Browning came Into his office and usked Itandali Jo go "up the country" for a few days, itan dali thought It was a hunting trip; fishing, or something like that. And so Browning, niulti-millionalie, ' and Itandali, the bank cleik, left for Oakley, a Mormon settleincnt in Idaho. 10 years old, with one bank In Hl.lch Eccles and Browning had a' large Interest. Handall Hmiem m Bank. In plain words, the affairs of the bank at Oakley were "In bad shape." A former cashier had over-loaned on one acount un til there wa A.0GO "out" to an Implement house at Tnln Kails, forty miles aaay; a sum almost twice as great as one bank la permitted to make to any one customer, in Ibe slate of Idaho, where the capital Is no greater thaa was the case In the Instance of the Oakley state bank. Ran dall's own story of how he ran the bank until 4 o'clock In the afternoon; mounted his hor.'e and rode to Twin Falls; ran the implement - house all nfxtdy and ouiuuled, that same pinto yo&y u gel back to Oakley, ro as to run the bank next day, has that Sheridan thing left at the post. All the same, those moon-lit rides over the eweet-smelling sage brush plains of south ern Idaho must have been good for him. He wound up the affalrs'of the Implement house, got all the bank's money and col lected every cent of the interest, all save (250, and ran the bank at the same time so that Its deposits Increased from $70,000 to $120,000. He straightened the whole thing out; balanced his books to a cent and went back to Ogden. That girl of his preys on his mind even yet; more so then, and Ran dall showed up at Ogden, Browning's big desk in the First National, with his third resignation. s Hack to II 1 Bank That morning Browning was deaf. Ran dall, obdurate, Browning Insistent, and fin ally Randall told of the girl, tfhe Hiram bank, and all the rest of his ambitions. Picking up a check for $60,000 that laid on his desk. Browning said, very slowly and very impressively: "Here Is a check that has Just come from the Colts. It's good. Now, don't you want to go back; stick wlbh that bank, get everytholng In shape, and be one of us. I'll stay behind that Oakley bank for every cent I've got Mr. Kccles will stay with me. Ton want to co back? Don't you?- Go on up to Hiram, get the girl and go. back to Oak ley. "We need men like you. We are wil ling to pay. Now, don't-you think that Oakley is the place tor you?". .So spake Browning.- ' Into HU j,lle,Work. Well. Randall Is here at-Oakley; the bank has .deposits in excess of $200,000;- It has Just finished Its building, a handsome one of lava rock and pressed brick, modern throughout, with a steam heating plant; complete, thorough, with enough rooms rented In It to clear 16 per cent net on the Investment and give the bank its corner quarters, on the main street of the town free of cost. In the man while he has gone into the sheep business with E. Chapman a widely known flockmaster of this section. The winter has been kind to these sheep, and the increase, the wool and the lambs In value, today "Just about tot up $32,000,' to use Randall's expression. In the mean time, too, he finished the organization of the bank at Hiram; he and Browning and Eccles have taken over the, Burley State bank; a home has been built. and "Baby Jack" Is here on the scene, wailing night for "daddy" to come home,' and a little woman makes a fairy land of a brick cottage which is Just big enough for three. The Kuhns, multi-millionaires, of Pitts burg, the men who have conquered the deserts of more than,, half of Idaho, are operating here; Randall has had some ln s de tips, and has, a bunch of real estate on the old town site, within a block of where the Kuhns are to erect a $70,000 hotel; ho gets all the loose money he wants from the First National bank at Ogden, or from the Flint National at Omaha, and, well. Just reread that first paragraph, If you want to know what Randall has go; and who he Is. . Just "Luck." Luck! Why, of course, it was luck. The sort of luck that will "hand you the name package," If you get down early 'enough In the morning, before luck is tred tramp ing around looking for some one to take lis burden; the same Identical luck that will Invest your cigar money In sheep; the luck that attracts the "right kind of a girl" and keeps her waiting for five years while you "get the start." That was Rundall's sort of luck. And, believe me, it's the only luck you'll ever1 get. FROM ARMY LINE TO PULFNT Boy Hero of IV k I it geeks Trrr from Lieutenant to (bigi l-ln. Lieutenant Calvin P. Vitus. - Fourtrentn United states infantry, the soldier to wnom a medal of honor was voted by congress ior being the first American to scale the Malls of Pricing In the campaign for the '"ef uf the legations during tha Boxer out- menu, aim u no anerwara received an ap pointment to West Point as a further lecognltiou of that achievement, wants 14 be an army chaplain. For more than a ear the young officer has been trying to get transferred to the religious branch of the service, and several times It has looked as If his ambition would be realised, but something always happened to frustrate his plans. . Lkuienant Titus" lecord is one of the best In the army, and he is among the very ftw who may wear the congressional medal of honor, the highest distinction that can come to an officer of the Un.ied ritatet army. At the time cf the lioxer outbreaks Titus was an enlisted man of the Fourteenth In fantry, nd was In the detachment sent to Cnlna under command of Lieutenant Gen eial Adna R. Chaffee to represent, the Vnlted states in the international demon stration against the Chinese capital. The Fourteenth led the American advance In the attack on Peking, and Titus was the llrst American to. scale the wall and stand Id the forbidden city. His feat was brought to the attention of congress and President McKlnley. and the latuy; looked up hi record, gad, fitidUij that at that time he was omy 19 years old elded to send him to West Point. Titus entered the academy In July,' 1401, and Immediately he was a - marked man. The cadets had heard all about him, and as a "plebe" one of the things required of him was to show up In unexpected places at unexpected times and thenvto solemnly announce to whoever happened to be around: "I am the hero of Peking; I am the fellow who first scaled the walls of the forbidden city." Titus was game, however. He took his medicine and soon became one of the most popular men in the academy. While a cadet Titus was one of the most active workers In the Young Men's Christian as sociation, and was the ' president of the organization when he graduated In 1905. When he received his commission he was ordered back to the Fourteenth, the regi ment In which he made his record as an enlisted man. When he Joined'' the Fourteenth as an officer Titus became Intensely Interested in the religious welfare of the men and was thef leader In much of the evangelical work that was done In the command. The year following his commission in 1906 the Fourteenth was ordered to Manila, and on Its arrival there Titus became Interested In the work of the Salvation Army and Identified himself with Its work among the soldiers. - He was married about that time, and his wife became and Is still his associate In his efforts for the spiritual and moral uplift of the American soldier. Last year Titus announced his intention You tag CVl"lb'"-itrwT"lJ ' ' 1 "-ito-i-Jt,IB"MM'' " " 1 ' - a-a. iL-a ,. , nit " mi W I I. LWJ There isnt any slavery but ignorance. You are kept with your nose to the grind-stone because you do not know of the opportunity that would burst the 'shackles of your unproductive routine. You never saw a clerk who was proud of his Job. You never saw a human brain reduced to the mechanics' all-ordered tasks for each day of life, that was proud of the job. Oet out of the rut man! Do something! Join the army of men who are developing the great, wide, waste spaces of the west. You can do it, and if you do not know how. we can show, you. We will point the way to success, and that bucking Jackass of a Job jou are riding will turn to the easy glide of life's automobile way. Get busy! Do something! Write to us for information about Albion; about the Raft River Extension; the great Kubn project, backed by the multlmllllons of those Pittsburg operators. We will send you letters of information absolutely free. We will send you booklets. We will point the road to success, If you will only let us. of resigning his commission to enter the ministry, but General Luke E. Wright, who had known him In the Philippines and who was then the secretary of war, knew of his record and decided he was too good a man to be allowed to leave the service. When Tart became president. Secretary of War Dickinson agreed with General Wright, and so It was that Lieutenant Titus was asked to remain In the army, with the promise that he would be made a chaplain as soon as he could qualify for the position. Under the law no man can be a chap lain In the army unless he Is ordained minister of some religious denomination in good standing, with recommendation from some eccleslastlcul body of five accredited ministers from some denomination. Lieu tenant Titus thereupon decided . to be or dained. A few months ago he was made a minister of the United Brethren, a relig ious body Incorporated under the laws of Colorado. Last week Titus took his examination and the report of the examining board is now in the hands of Secretary Dickinson. The board is certain he will make a fine chaplain, but reported that, owing to the fact that the young officer has as yet had no personal experience, he could not qualify. In the meantime Titus -remains an offi cer in the line, and while attending to his military duties will find a way to get the pastoral experience that will make him eligible for the black-' broadcloth uniform of an army chaplain. New York Times. ire Needled obi Idaho!! biooi Rxealtiy Albion, (Cassia inzz Aliisworth has done for Kngltsh histovy what Dumas per did for the French: Roth wrote romances, Interwoven with history. In such a way that they occupy the foremost place as historical romanres in the literary nnnols of these countries. Ainsworth spun his web of fiction about tne'tourtA of Windsor. St. James, the Louvre, and the Uswrlai, and he is iiever so happy as when picturing Charles II and his madcap cotrt at Whitehall, his witty KayiiiRs and his galaxy of beauties, the piquant Louise de Que rotmlle, the dazzling duchesses, poor bewitching Nelly, and, laige ns life. Sir 1'eter lely n-palnting of them. The Ray court at Tarls if shown at Its most Interesting period; Crlchton, the Admirable, waR a brilliant Scotsman, whoso handsome person, accom plishments, tnd courage, earnod for him that title. The scene la laid during the tiwo of Catherine do' Medici, and Is full of the Intrigues of Henry. HI, the Incognito adventures of Immi Henri of Navarre. I'roluibly no more graphic accounts have ever been written of thA. Plague of London and of the Great Fire Ihun those in "Old Saint Paul's," and few historical works contain the equal of the descriptive writing in "Cardinal Pole," "The Constable of the Tower." or "The Star Chamber.", In "John Law" Is glveu an extraordinary Interesting account of the Mississippi bubble and of the varied career of the great promoter. To Ainsworth's skill and energy we are Indebted for brKilaat pic tures of the Tower of London. Theobald's. Tower Hill. Newgate, Ran leigh Gardens, etc., which he peopled with realistic portraits of the most interesting characters in Kngllsh history of Henry. VIII. Ms wives, daughters, cardinals, and headsmen; of Queen Anne, of the Duchess Sarah, and her Duke of Marlborough; of the Lord Mayor of London and his in ntlce-town. etc.. etc. Ainsworth, born in 1805, carried on the work In historical romance ended by the death of Scott. With Ainsworth's death. In 1882, there was sundeted the last of the chain of a brilliant coterie of English novelists of the nineteenth century: Thackeray, Dickens, Ainsworth. As an. example of the fascinating and Intensely Interesting quality of these writings, there will be sent, upon receipt of request, absolutely without charge, a booklet apropos of Henry VIII, entitled A, King and His Wive. ; "The immortal Ainsworth." THACKERAY. "A noticeable revival of Interest In these exciting historical nov els. " -ItoMon Kveninu Transcript. "Gives a vivid picture of the times and places with which ha dealt." New York Herald. "Historical romances of Ainsworth superior to the models of thp. present day." TJe Haltimore Sun. ' "There would be a clear gain in the discipline of English style, If these works .should supersede, with the mob of readers, our currant historical romances." The Nation. "Makes the Tower of London the sympathetic background of all the mysteries of court intrigue that compass the unfortunate Lady Jane Grey; at Windsor fastle he unfolds the romance of Bluff King Hal and his many wives." Philadelphia Times. George Darrie & Sons, Publishers 1313 WALNUT STREET PJIIL.VDELPIIIA, PA. Medals: 1876, Philadelphia. 1878. Paris. 1880-1, Melbourne. 1883, Vienna. 1889, ParlH. 1893, Chicago. Awarded Grand Prix and Gold Medal by the International Jury at Paris Exposition, 1900. Under auspices of the. United States Government, exhibited Hora Crmcours at the Louisi ana Purchase Exposition, 11104. He Who Advertises : Keeps Cassia county, Idaho, is the richest of all Idaho counties, and Idaho Is the richest of all western Btates. You have got to know about Idaho. You can double your money in Idaho. You tan more than double your money la Cassia county, Idaho. The great Minidolra dam of the United States Reclamation Service, reclaiming thousands of acres of the richest soli on earth; the great Mllner dam of the North Side Twin Falls Project; these are all located In Cassia county. . Double Your E7.oney We will absolutely guarantee to double any amoupt of money you give us to handle for you, large or small, If you leave it in Idaho long enough. Booklets Free Write to us today. ' A roatal card will do. It costs you nothing. It obligates you nothing. All we wsnt to do is to tell you about Albion, about Catsla county, about Idaho. a County) Idaho. in The Bee His Automobile Busy JJ nsaMimsij