KARLSBAD,
October 6, 189-
Dear Pierrepont: If you happen
to run across Doc Titherington you’d better
tell him to go into training, because I expect to be
strong enough to lick him by the time I get back.
Between that ten-day boat which he recommended and
these Dutch doctors, I’m almost well and about
broke. You don’t really have to take the
baths here to get rid of your rheumatism their
bills scare it out of a fellow.
They tell me we had a pretty quiet
trip across, and I’m not saying that we didn’t,
because for the first three days I was so busy holding
myself in my berth that I couldn’t get a chance
to look out the porthole to see for myself. I
reckon there isn’t anything alive that can beat
me at being seasick, unless it’s a camel, and
he’s got three stomachs.
When I did get around I was a good
deal of a maverick for all the old fellows
were playing poker in the smoking-room and all the
young ones were lallygagging under the boats until
I found that we were carrying a couple of hundred
steers between decks. They looked mighty homesick,
you bet, and I reckon they sort of sized me up as
being a long ways from Chicago, for we cottoned to
each other right from the start. Take ’em
as they ran, they were a mighty likely bunch of steers,
and I got a heap of solid comfort out of them.
There must have been good money in them, too, for
they reached England in prime condition.
I wish you would tell our people at
the Beef House to look into this export cattle business,
and have all the facts and figures ready for me when
I get back. There seems to be a good margin in
it, and with our English house we are fixed up to
handle it all right at this end. It makes me
mighty sick to think that we’ve been sitting
back on our hindlegs and letting the other fellow
run away with this trade. We are packers, I know,
but that’s no reason why we can’t be shippers,
too. I want to milk the critter coming and going,
twice a day, and milk her dry. Unless you do
the whole thing you can’t do anything in business
as it runs to-day. There’s still plenty
of room at the top, but there isn’t much anywheres
else.
There may be reasons why we haven’t
been able to tackle this exporting of live cattle,
but you can tell our people there that they have got
to be mighty good reasons to wipe out the profit I
see in it. Of course, I may have missed them,
for I’ve only looked into the business a little
by way of recreation, but it won’t do to say
that it’s not in our line, because anything
which carries a profit on four legs is in our line.
I dwell a little on the matter because,
while this special case is out of your department,
the general principle is in it. The way to think
of a thing in business is to think of it first, and
the way to get a share of the trade is to go for all
of it. Half the battle’s in being on the
hilltop first; and the other half’s in staying
there. In speaking of these matters, and in writing
you about your new job, I’ve run a little ahead
of your present position, because I’m counting
on you to catch up with me. But you want to get
it clearly in mind that I’m writing to you not
as the head of the house, but as the head of the family,
and that I don’t propose to mix the two things.
Even as assistant manager of the lard
department, you don’t occupy a very important
position with us yet. But the great trouble with
some fellows is that a little success goes to their
heads. Instead of hiding their authority behind
their backs and trying to get close to their men,
they use it as a club to keep them off. And a
boss with a case of big-head will fill an office full
of sore heads.
I don’t know any one who has
better opportunities for making himself unpopular
than an assistant, for the clerks are apt to cuss him
for all the manager’s meanness, and the manager
is likely to find fault with him for all the clerks’
cussedness. But if he explains his orders to the
clerks he loses his authority, and if he excuses himself
to the manager he loses his usefulness. A manager
needs an assistant to take trouble from him, not to
bring it to him.
The one important thing for you to
remember all the time is not to forget. It’s
easier for a boss to do a thing himself than to tell
some one twice to do it. Petty details take up
just as much room in a manager’s head as big
ideas; and the more of the first you store for him,
the more warehouse room you leave him for the second.
When a boss has to spend his days swearing at his
assistant and the clerks have to sit up nights hating
him, they haven’t much time left to swear by
the house. Satisfaction is the oil of the business
machine.
Some fellows can only see those above
them, and others can only see those under them, but
a good man is cross-eyed and can see both ends at
once. An assistant who becomes his manager’s
right hand is going to find the left hand helping
him; and it’s not hard for a clerk to find good
points in a boss who finds good ones in him. Pulling
from above and boosting from below make climbing easy.
In handling men, your own feelings
are the only ones that are of no importance.
I don’t mean by this that you want to sacrifice
your self-respect, but you must keep in mind that
the bigger the position the broader the man must be
to fill it. And a diet of courtesy and consideration
gives girth to a boss.
Of course, all this is going to take
so much time and thought that you won’t have
a very wide margin left for golf especially
in the afternoons. I simply mention this in passing,
because I see in the Chicago papers which have been
sent me that you were among the players on the links
one afternoon a fortnight ago. Golf’s a
nice, foolish game, and there ain’t any harm
in it so far as I know except for the balls the
stiff balls at the beginning, the lost balls in the
middle, and the highballs at the end of the game.
But a young fellow who wants to be a boss butcher
hasn’t much daylight to waste on any kind of
links except sausage links.
Of course, a man should have a certain
amount of play, just as a boy is entitled to a piece
of pie at the end of his dinner, but he don’t
want to make a meal of it. Any one who lets sinkers
take the place of bread and meat gets bilious pretty
young; and these fellows who haven’t any job,
except to blow the old man’s dollars, are a good
deal like the little niggers in the pie-eating contest
at the County Fair they’ve a-plenty
of pastry and they’re attracting a heap of attention,
but they’ve got a stomach-ache coming to them
by and by.
I want to caution you right here against
getting the society bug in your head. I’d
sooner you’d smoke these Turkish cigarettes which
smell like a fire in the fertilizer factory.
You’re going to meet a good many stray fools
in the course of business every day without going out
to hunt up the main herd after dark.
Everybody over here in Europe thinks
that we haven’t any society in America, and
a power of people in New York think that we haven’t
any society in Chicago. But so far as I can see
there are just as many ninety-nine-cent men spending
million-dollar incomes in one place as another; and
the rules that govern the game seem to be the same
in all three places you’ve got to
be a descendant to belong, and the farther you descend
the harder you belong. The only difference is
that, in Europe, the ancestor who made money enough
so that his family could descend, has been dead so
long that they have forgotten his shop; in New York
he’s so recent that they can only pretend to
have forgotten it; but in Chicago they can’t
lose it because the ancestor is hustling on the Board
of Trade or out at the Stock Yards. I want to
say right here that I don’t propose to be an
ancestor until after I’m dead. Then, if
you want to have some fellow whose grandfather sold
bad whiskey to the Indians sniff and smell pork when
you come into the room, you can suit yourself.
Of course, I may be off in sizing
this thing up, because it’s a little out of
my line. But it’s been my experience that
these people who think that they are all the choice
cuts off the critter, and that the rest of us are
only fit for sausage, are usually chuck steak when
you get them under the knife. I’ve tried
two or three of them, who had gone broke, in the office,
but when you separate them from their money there’s
nothing left, not even their friends.
I never see a fellow trying to crawl
or to buy his way into society that I don’t
think of my old friend Hank Smith and his wife Kate Kate
Botts she was before he married her and
how they tried to butt their way through the upper
crust.
Hank and I were boys together in Missouri,
and he stayed along in the old town after I left.
I heard of him on and off as tending store a little,
and farming a little, and loafing a good deal.
Then I forgot all about him, until one day a few years
ago when he turned up in the papers as Captain Henry
Smith, the Klondike Gold King, just back from Circle
City, with a million in dust and anything you please
in claims. There’s never any limit to what
a miner may be worth in those, except his imagination.
I was a little puzzled when, a week
later, my office boy brought me a card reading Colonel
Henry Augustus Bottes-Smythe, but I supposed it was
some distinguished foreigner who had come to size me
up so that he could round out his roast on Chicago
in his new book, and I told the boy to show the General
in.
I’ve got a pretty good memory
for faces, and I’d bought too much store plug
of Hank in my time not to know him, even with a clean
shave and a plug hat. Some men dry up with success,
but it was just spouting out of Hank. Told me
he’d made his pile and that he was tired of living
on the slag heap; that he’d spent his whole
life where money hardly whispered, let alone talked,
and he was going now where it would shout. Wanted
to know what was the use of being a nob if a fellow
wasn’t the nobbiest sort of a nob. Said
he’d bought a house on Beacon Hill, in Boston,
and that if I’d prick up my ears occasionally
I’d hear something drop into the Back Bay.
Handed me his new card four times and explained that
it was the rawest sort of dog to carry a brace of
names in your card holster; that it gave you the drop
on the swells every time, and that they just had to
throw up both hands and pass you the pot when you
showed down. Said that Bottes was old English
for Botts, and that Smythe was new American for Smith;
the Augustus was just a fancy touch, a sort of high-card
kicker.
I didn’t explain to Hank, because
it was congratulations and not explanations that he
wanted, and I make it a point to show a customer the
line of goods that he’s looking for. And
I never heard the full particulars of his experiences
in the East, though, from what I learned afterward,
Hank struck Boston with a bang, all right.
He located his claim on Beacon Hill,
between a Mayflower descendant and a Declaration Signer’s
great-grandson, breeds which believe that when the
Lord made them He was through, and that the rest of
us just happened. And he hadn’t been in
town two hours before he started in to make improvements.
There was a high wrought-iron railing in front of his
house, and he had that gilded first thing, because,
as he said, he wasn’t running a receiving vault
and he didn’t want any mistakes. Then he
bought a nice, open barouche, had the wheels painted
red, hired a nigger coachman and started out in style
to be sociable and get acquainted. Left his card
all the way down one side of Beacon Street, and then
drove back leaving it on the other. Everywhere
he stopped he found that the whole family was out.
Kept it up a week, on and off, but didn’t seem
to have any luck. Thought that the men must be
hot sports and the women great gadders to keep on
the jump so much. Allowed that they were the
liveliest little lot of fleas that he had ever chased.
Decided to quit trying to nail ’em one at a time,
and planned out something that he reckoned would round
up the whole bunch.
Hank sent out a thousand invitations
to his grand opening, as he called it; left one at
every house within a mile. Had a brass band on
the front steps and fireworks on the roof. Ordered
forty kegs from the brewery and hired a fancy mixer
to sling together mild snorts, as he called them,
for the ladies. They tell me that, when the band
got to going good on the steps and the fireworks on
the roof, even Beacon Street looked out the windows
to see what was doing. There must have been ten
thousand people in the street and not a soul but Hank
and his wife and the mixer in the house. Some
one yelled speech, and then the whole crowd took it
up, till Hank came out on the steps. He shut off
the band with one hand and stopped the fireworks with
the other. Said that speechmaking wasn’t
his strangle-hold; that he’d been living on snowballs
in the Klondike for so long that his gas-pipe was
frozen; but that this welcome started the ice and
he thought about three fingers of the plumber’s
favorite prescription would cut out the frost.
Would the crowd join him? He had invited a few
friends in for the evening, but there seemed to be
some misunderstanding about the date, and he hated
to have good stuff curdle on his hands.
While this was going on, the Mayflower
descendant was telephoning for the police from one
side and the Signer’s great-grandson from the
other, and just as the crowd yelled and broke for
the house two patrol wagons full of policemen got
there. But they had to turn in a riot call and
bring out the reserves before they could break up Hank’s
little Boston tea-party.
After all, Hank did what he started
out to do with his party rounded up all
his neighbors in a bunch, though not exactly according
to schedule. For next morning there were so many
descendants and great-grandsons in the police court
to prefer charges that it looked like a reunion of
the Pilgrim Fathers. The Judge fined Hank on
sixteen counts and bound him over to keep the peace
for a hundred years. That afternoon he left for
the West on a special, because the Limited didn’t
get there quick enough. But before going he tacked
on the front door of his house a sign which read:
“Neighbors paying their
party calls will please not heave rocks
through windows to attract attention. Not
in and not going to be.
Gone back to Circle City for a little quiet.
“Yours
truly,
“HANK
SMITH.
“N.B. Too
swift for your uncle.”
Hank dropped by my office for a minute
on his way to ’Frisco. Said he liked things
lively, but there was altogether too much rough-house
on Beacon Hill for him. Judged that as the crowd
which wasn’t invited was so blamed sociable,
the one which was invited would have stayed a week
if it hadn’t slipped up on the date. That
might be the Boston idea, but he wanted a little more
refinement in his. Said he was a pretty free
spender, and would hold his end up, but he hated a
hog. Of course I told Hank that Boston wasn’t
all that it was cracked up to be in the school histories,
and that Circle City wasn’t so tough as it read
in the newspapers, for there was no way of making
him understand that he might have lived in Boston
for a hundred years without being invited to a strawberry
sociable. Because a fellow cuts ice on the Arctic
Circle, it doesn’t follow that he’s going
to be worth beans on the Back Bay.
I simply mention Hank in a general
way. His case may be a little different, but
it isn’t any more extreme than lots of others
all around you over there and me over here. Of
course, I want you to enjoy good society, but any
society is good society where congenial men and women
meet together for wholesome amusement. But I want
you to keep away from people who choose play for a
profession. A man’s as good as he makes
himself, but no man’s any good because his grandfather
was.
Your
affectionate father,
JOHN
GRAHAM.