Story of Carnegie's Rise From Penury to Riches arrested for riot and bound over for Widow and trial. Consequently, some of these dis¬ Mr. Carnegie9s Daughter Rose From Penniless to appeared, among them Iho Burgess of Homestead. Some time afterward my Carnegie Professor Van Dyke, of Rutgers Boy friend, College, was ordered to California for of his health. Upon his return he told me One Richest Men in the World that he had met the ex-Burgess work¬ ing ns n laborer in a Mexican mine at Sonora. I asked him to offer McLuckie a-iy help ho might need, and upon his Life Story of Scotch Boy return to the West he did so. Who Amassed One of "It was D.d White in Andy." Estates in the "Meanwhile McLuckie had got a posi¬ His Largest Benefaction* Largest tion with the Sonora Railway driving His theory of Like Fiction wells, and was succeeding ndmirably. .r World Reads The professor said: 'You don't know whose money I was told to help you with.' He said that he had no ¿dea. 'Well, it. was Mr. Carnegie's.' Then ~ ¦. Gave Away Many Millions ceme the slow, earnest response. 'That was damned white in Andy.'" Samson Mr. Carnegie said this proudly and "f :.i.". -. his smile started a general laugh. Final Years Spent in Spread¬ "When I talked to the Homestead Took reliera upon my return I told them Two Education terms ing Through my partners had offered liberal and I could not have offered more. Libraries; Heroism Was One roller said: 'Oh, Mr. Carnegie, it Columns wasn't a question of dollars! The boys Rewarded would have let you kick them and they 'r . It is suggested that Sam¬ wouldn't let another man 3troke their ; Carne% " .;16,01 son had a keen idea of ad¬ hair.' , the outstanding in 1901 the Carnegie Company vertising. Samson took two figure of nineteenth century In¬ was merged into the United States solid columns, with the re¬ dustrialism, will go down throug'i tho Steel Corporation, and in this year Mr. from a as the o Carnegie retired business, with sult that he brought down ages very personification fortune of about $250,000,000.» "Triumphant Democracy." '¦ lonai b'llm . rvn the house. The bonds of the United States Steel opyright by 11 term ' this column Overcoming almost Insuperable ob Corporation which he held yielded a Mrs. Andrew Carnegie and Mrs. Roswell Miller- By taking in stades his unusual en> an ¡;igantic income, of which he always by ;y the that, he the New York Tribune we sheer tenacity of purpose, Andrew ¿.ave, liberally, and fact aid "The man who dies rich "lies dis- his as it? s'hools. in¬ endeavor to attain rose from a humble .free and his to administer during property public and, publicity Carnegie mes showed that money was not dies v.rt to these. When I was to graced" lifetime, disgraced." deed, adjunct and build up the house. senger boy wealth bevond ";¦ the goal of his ambition. "That is the Mr. attention was called a boy in , Colonel dreams of avarice. Un to Carnegie's rose from irospel 1 preach," he said, referring to a paragraph in a London paper which of Allegheny, a man 1 can neve obscurity to a unique position in th these words, "that is the gospel 1 prac¬ famous tion without of d Cross referred to his declaration feelings '¦ Envelope Bag world. tise, and that is the gospel I intend "that to die rich is to die disgraced." gra' itt.de, opei ed Im little Yet despite the tremendous effort to practice during what remains of and he was asked what he was going to four hundred books to bo put into he life." , Andrew everything uncjertool my ido with the fortune he had amassed. Saturday afterno h .vas in at Carnegie's meteoric rise wv. Despite his busy life, Mr. Carnegie "Tell that editor," replied Mr. Car- anee him due entirely to the offer ! "to watch and see. 1 I shell books. No on« he « to opportunity found time for literary work. His first negie, hope bul all in a land of freedom and of not the definition, sometimes can know the inl "Round the was justify free speech. This fact he emphasize book, World,'' pub¬ of a as a mar. which was awa all this he an deserved, philanthropist Saturday in his writyigs, and i:i all hi lished in 1879. In gave with a great, deal of money but very new book had. ¡va of across Pacific might be speeches. Moreover it had a prcfoun account his trip the little sense." in -uro-; | effect the Ocean to China and and revelling these trei upon course he adopted foi Japan, India, "My first act upon retiring from busi- solved, if ever wealth ci me 1 the administration of his vast fortur' hack home by way of the Suez Canal said Mr. in the testi- I for .tid Several books fot- ncss," Carnegie, it should be us« d to IV.' the development of mankind, am' Europe. similar rnon;, in February, 1915, that other -'' the of but bis best known work is already quoted, libraries, poor boys furtherance science. iowed, "was to give $5,000,000 to the workmen recei te opporl unit ie Triumphant Democracy; or, Fifty of the Steel as a Fathered World Peace Plan i'eary' March »of the This Carnegie Company for which we were indebted From Republic." parting gift, $4,000,000 for pensions to noble ma ." the very first he looked upo' look was widely rend in America and men maintain the seal in the and $1,000,000 to Third in his list came Of genuine pin leather, black his fortune as a trust urope, and excited much comment and For or great bestowed libraries and halls 1 had built for them. or extension of medica Intei colon, silver plated mountings. him riticism. He treated of the progrey.-; I when later the upon for the betterment of man was greatly pleased pits -i and other euro: pri One extension, 3 tight pockets, J kind. With this f the American Republic largely as an United States Steel saw tit point in view he so' dvance in which Corporation to do with the all« ia1 of human framed silk-lined coin compartment. [himself the task of it fot material'prosperity, to duplicate my gift, adding $4,000,000 and which re more es administering e as (.he surest test of the for I have. suffering, ~r\ Fitted 1:1th leather and the of art and regarded more to the fund pensions. . purse mir¬ development education, of claims of pecially concerned with t! prev .. ror. Handle at science. validity the popular gov¬ just reaj the report of this joint fund top. Size 7\$ x (>Yi ernment to Of this book rather than the cure of hun I One of his most recent in the superiority. with great satisfaction. was inches. $21.26 gifts "The York Nation" "There His fourth idea to « « latter realm was the establishment of A ¡¡drew e New said: I "The Hero Fund which I was privi lie but he did Silver plated block letters, each Carnegi is, perhaps, hardly a word which passes' to interested parks, Mount Wilson Observatory, built for leged found has always little this Iin« ime the never fos »¡ways fr,r letter. 63c the ihe truth. It is only when it is placed me most * along p^ special purpose of studying tho deeply. op« rig of public halls a to sun. This had a before us in this vivid way that we "1 not rest until 1 had founded remarkable observatory is become moulder in pottery, and In attempting to release them one wire could ¡dying of them with organs. Thi just about to work of a realize the stupendous development." hero funds with a total of begin adding to frequently visited club where checker suddenly fie v up and cul a frightful capital $11,- Cross Bottle Set the store of human knowledge. players gathered. Young Andrew at gush in hi.; face. "Triumphant Democracy" passed 790.000. The report of the annual j Andrew was born in times on one through eight editions in England, and held at Pittsburgh on Jan¬ Carnegie Dun- accompanied him, and oc¬ Oil." has been translated into French. Ital¬ meeting, fermline, the parliamentary burgh of casion met there a Mr. Brooks, who was "Striking uary 20, shows awards given to forty 'body, P'ifeshire, on of a If!.-', next successful venture ian, Spanish, Dutch and Japanese. heroes or their wives and families. Scotland, November 25, manager telegraph office. The business In Carnegie Began Life 1837. His was a elder told Brooks was the with sever, 1891 Mr. Carnegie contributed an with a total of awards since the birthplace one-story Carnegie he didn't purchase capital-i article to 1,027 structure in Moodie Street, back know what to do with his ists of the Storey 'arm in Oil City, The Tribune entitled "How fund began Every case is At War just boy. to the mam operation. $1.20 Weekly Wage o| of some gas works. At the time he "Send him 1o my office," said the latter, Penn., where oil had been found tho Get Rich," thesis of which most carefully investigated. We re came into the world the town of Dun- "and 1 will make a messenger of him." year previous. This venture is re¬ was that native ability and industry absolute and are sufficient to insure quire certainty proof fcrmline was rioted for its extensive Mr. Carnegie once described this new ferred t.> in Mr, Carnegie's "Trium¬ quite prosperity given by witnesses. NDREW CARNEGIE was born at weaving industry. job ¿is "a transference from darkness phant Democracy" as follows: "When without the akl of a college education. statement up to the It was "The complete Dumfermline, Scotland, N .,.¦ The boy's father, William Carnegie, to light." "My only dread,'' he contin¬ firsl visited this famous well the oil largely copied and quoted, with close of last year shows that the total ft to was was the result that of col¬ 25, 1835. 1 one of the leading weavers of Dun- ued, "was that should some day he running into the creek, where a large numbers of our foundations and gifts amounts fermline and was considered well to do, dismissed because 1 didn't know the few flat bottomed scow-; lay filled with lege graduates attacked and criticised to At the age of eleven he came *^ as he 1 it but without its main $324,657,399." 1 he V\ ar of the .'>. j owned four damask looms and city. knew that a messenger boy it, ready to be floated down the Alle¬ freely, refuting Best Gift this country with his paren*- on $50 several eufrht to know all the River thesis. Mr. Carnegie's fourth book, Thought Library a employed apprentices. Eeon- firms and ad¬ gheny upon an agreed-upoo/'day i borrowed from an Gei trr'-: omy was the watchword of the house- dresses of men who were in the habit «ach week, when the creek was flooded "Wealth," was reprinted in England lie oace told why he considered a uncle, rge Fitteti with hold, and in to of I means of a under the title "The Cospel of Wealth." library the best for a community. Lander. four class bottles in however, order insure receiving telegrams. However, by temporary dam. This It? gift nickel ases. Complete with black the family against future reverses the made up my mind that I would learn to was tho beginning of the natural oil principal contention is that "sur¬ He said: "The result of my own study The family se'tied at Alleg! eny the la mother at repeat each plus is a sacred which its of the 'What is the best patent leather case, lin- worked the looms from early successively business house business. We purchased the farm for weayn trust, question, gift City, Penn., in 1848, where Andrew waterproof morning until late at night. in the principal streets, and was soon $40,000. Its value rose to possessor is bound to administer in his that can be given to a community'." is "I do i ing. Size: S x S x 2 inches... $5,000,000; that went to work as bobbin at $9.25 Father Meets Reverses. able to shut my eyes and begin at one is, the shares of tho company sold in the lifetime for the good of the commu¬ that a free library occupies the lirst boy $1 but I hope Tan pig goatskin case.$9.75 side of Wood Street and call firm market nity from which it is derived," and the will ac¬ a week. When Andrew was eleven old every upon this basis, and one year place, provided community Same design, tuith three bot¬ years in succession to the top. and then it in that "the man who dies possessed of cept and maintain it as a in¬ revolt fitted a dire destroyer of the family pros¬ pas's paid cash dividends $1,000,000 public His next job was telegraph oper¬ huma Itur« tles- case measures 6x5x2 inches. to the other side and4 caV: every firm to rather a good return upon an invest- millions of available wealth, which was stitution, as mucii a part of the city perity came in the shape of the dis¬ the bottom." ment ator at $25 a mont h. Black patent covery of the uses of steam. The hand of $40.000." leather.$7.75 From messenger boy be soon rose to In the Civil War he worked in the reali Tan pig goatskin.$8.25 weavers of saw large fac¬ the of The Iron Master. a^ras post operator. When a messen¬ telegraph branch of the sen, and ". I» tories spring up in which this new- ger he ''seiî tó to Not get the office earlier satisfied with these enterprises, ^ devised a power was installed, and found that than in order to the Mr. Carnegie was the alert cipher system for the Ui ion Cross they must abandon the occupation necessary study always'on 4s "The Laird forces. tion of m I to Fruit Basket instrument for new which their fathers and their fathers' and alphabet. As operatoi ventures, and soon came to of'Skiho, he received what to him then was the the conclusion that railroad Soon after the war fathers had followed. none of bridges he aided T. T. I Upon enormous salary of $25 a month. II«. could be improved upon as well as them did the blow fall more heavily also Woodruff in the development of the did extra work in the way of fur¬ railroad cars: He believed the day of Was True Scot M r. than William lie was first car ¦. Carnegi« >Hcmi upon Carnegie, nishing the news to th" wooden had come and Carnegie sleeping and realized 1,1 telegraphic bridges gone A n forced to'dispose of his looms at a low and. that cast iron when the Pullman Pittsburgh newspapers. This increaso( would be the ma- Company bought il« *6l figure. His savings rapidly vanished his income about each month. terial in the future. He and the spectre of poverty was installed $5 employed the rights. in the home. His First Investment. gathered about him a number of rail¬ Mad- first in PI road men and organized the Surrounded Hiniseif With in Ancient his $1,000,000 oil Andrew Carnegie in later life paid With the completion of the Penn Keystone Highlanders lands which he with H Bridge Company, and in order to give bought borrowed ' '.hr il glowing tribute to the worth of his sylvania Railroad to Pittsburgh, Thorn it full attention he retired from the Dress.Converted Ancient Castle Into a Mod- capita!. mother. It was she return- as A. Scott was sent there as divisioi come '^oi °* who, upon railroad service. This was in 1867,and In 1SG7 ing tired and worn from her toil at tho superintendent. His coming made had at ern formed the Keystone Bridge ta cal decided in Mr. Carnegie last attained his Mansion With Elevators and tax, looms, yet found time to instruct change the boy's opportuni ambition he was working for himself, Electricity Company, which built the first iron young Andrew. To her he owed what ties, for Mr. Scott, attracted th. had a .' lad's by reached point beyond the salary bridge in the country over the state, 'i little education he received in ?hose energy, offered him the place o sphere. The first great bridge over River. Of colored enamel and never operator in his a to w wicker, hand- days, he forgot his debt. In office, at month! the Ohio, at Steu lenville, with a 300- By Ishbel M. Ross his Scotch characteristics, although he painted decorated wood bottom; this connection he once said: "I have salary of Ç35. Mr., Scott's fo foot span, was built this never that it was Brought the Bessemer steel procès 9 ..vor tu top liking bj company in no forgot to America '¦"-* 14-inch base never known my mother to be wrong in young Andrew finally ied him to suy After a visit to '.'.here We saw Possibly phase of his existence he owed his fortune. On the to this country, and became owner of .; int diameter, 9%-incA dia¬ that if he had Europe, was more of the human side of Andrew Fourth meter, SY4 inches Unfitted anything. So long as she lived I nevi gest $500 it might b that iron rails were being discarded of July each year it was his custom to the Homestead Mills in high. hesitated to obtain her on well for him to invest it in Adams K;i and steel rails Carnegie revealed than during the a Pittsburgh. His Books \\ Kcad. $6.50 opinion any ¡ substituted, he started months he give fete, and the Stars and Stripes In 1S8S he and his associates idel> question and to follow it absolutely." press Company stock. the in his milla al spent each year at Skibo flew side side with the owned It is 1 t on« must extra. The Castle. Fifth Avenue knew him as one invariably by seven Artificial fruits, father, meanwhile, had died, an Later he became the ownei Union Jack. the great steel mills in and , . At this crisis in the family fortunes the Pittsburgh. of its greatest Ko in the <ék the mother exhibited cour¬ ready money ill the family at th of th" Homestead Steel at millionaire's, but in around Pitts , ewi H'i wonderful time tliis Works, Scotland he was the "ittle He Wore Tartan Clothes burgh. 0p age and She summoned a proposal tame amounted t Pittsburgh, and in 18SS be owned, witT simply lair In 1901 the Cross foresight. of Skibo," son of the who He wore tartan on Carnegie Steel Com¬ "Overnight" Bag family council and to her considerably less than $500. Andrev his associates, the seven great stee plain soil, always clothes ibhshed brought hope as er had the courage and the to the other side of pany was into the husband émi¬ however, was his invariable custon works iii near Pittsburgh. Thes< grit achieve the Atlantic. In fact, merged United it despairing by proposing told his m.-'ner seven phenomenal success. he had a special tartan woven for States Steel n«»f- gration to America. insuffi¬ what Mr. Scot; ha mills, known throughout tht him, Corporation and Mr. Car ., deaj Having said, and world a1' the He was born in Lowland to which he his own name. cient funds to make the she she decided to mortgag Carnegie Steel Compan: Scotland, gave It negie retired from business with with sei journey, tiieir little home. included the but when he returned became one of the industries of a appealed to her who was a She took a riv« plant, Homestead, tin years afterward brother, steamer to Ohio and secured 1he Edgar the Stee to choose a home from the many beau¬ "neighboring village. $250,000,000. familiar character in that part of Scot- nece: Works Thompson, Duquesne tiful estates of He ('¦.i- land. He was sary cash from a brother. When tl and Furnaces, the Lucy Fur his native country, he had magnificent shooting and called "Candy Rock and first naces, the travelled to the on ! Whitenin' Gtsordie Lauder" because he dividend came, in the shape of Keystone Bridge Works, th extreme Northern fishing his estate, but. while he was check for $10, the mother and son wei Upper Union Rolling Mills and tb. Highlands and settled on a castle pict¬ fond of tiie rod and would spend a few peddled rock candy through the streets Lo.ver situated in for the and also sold stove. overwhelmed with joy, Mr. Carnegie Union Rolling Mills and th uresquely Sutherlandshire. days pursuing salmon and trout, noth¬ children, career as a Frick Coke An Almost the first he did was ing would induce him to I whitening to the housewives. The t>ed- capitalist was launched. Company. approximat have thing to handle a gun. 1er A short time after this first ven tu estimate of this plant put the outpu two marble marbles made'.one, His guests might bag all the willingly gave his sister £10. a Mr. at tons of steel of the of pheasants In 1848 Woodruff strolled into the rai 190,000 rails an tiny house hi? birth; the they wanted, but he shuddered at the the Carnegie family, cons ist- road office one day and drew from h 140,000 tons of pig iron a month. other, of his newly acquired castle. thought of killing warm-blooded ani- ing of the father and mother, Andrew before the rest pocket a model for a. sleeping car. Tl Testifying Federal Com To-day they side by side in the mais. This was in keeping with his and his brother William, sot sail. value of the mission on Industrial i hall of Skibo. and it was whole-hearted to Seven weeks after invention was immediate Relations, the laird's aversion slaughter of they embarked the recognized by the young operator, wl February, 1915, Mr. Carnegie gave i pride to point to them as the story of any kind. He would s#y to his visitors, Fvr vwTium., '"Mudis-ov. Carnegies sailed into New York Har¬ got together all the funds his own words nn interesting accoun his life, the marble evidence of the "If you must kill kill ¿IssigiL. bor, and a or so after possible ai of the conduct of them, them; but Black seal day their arrival joined Woodruff as a that vast business: long road he had travelled. don't let me know Leather, elastic porkrts left here for partner in d "We ban one anything about it." Allegheny City, where the new idea rule: Come what ma; He reviewed fur fittings- Sisuea 14-jnch. relatives had settled. veloping and putting we would never think of Modernized Skibo Castle many quaint old Cus¬ mrcfjJeJ already on the market. cars running ou toms at for The were test works with new men. Skibo lias been one of the show Skibo, largely the benefit $49.20 Bobbin by the and Able, sober,we of his American visitors. It Initials si A on Hoy. pronounced behaved workmen such as places of Scotland since Mr. was hi: amps bag isitJkvitl success. to Mr. ours wer Carnegie habit to have a march The first money Andrew Carnegie According Carneg are not. to be picked up on the street took it ¡ver several years ago and con¬ piper up am charge. earned was to the sleeping car investment verted down the hall playing the be Yudrt and him the greatest prize broug and we wished no others. We wer it into an up-to-date residence bagpipes mamacre set, as shvwm, of his life. Not all the millions of him his tirst considerable return. T in that contrasts with fore dinner started. Kilts were sect extra. IVIdle company later very particular regard to drinking oddly fine olc more around Skibo erLlstloid and aiass. ! dollars he afterward amassed and be¬ disposed of its holdin 11r;t offence, men were excluded thirt Dunrobin Castle, nearby, belonging tc frequently thai Set.. $18.50 stowed in libraries, books, paintings at a large figure, and the enterprise I day.-; second offence, sixty days; thir the Duke of Sutherland. they were anywhere else in Scotland and so came known under its for the laird liked to hove iiis retinui charity gave him much pleasur" present name offence, we parted company. Dunrobin is the epitome of all thai look like as the first $1.20 he took home for a the Pullman Company. is ancient and Highland chieftains. It wa The Creat Homestead historic. But Skibc one of his week's work when twelve years old. Devised New Cipher System. Strike. brings a touch of New York into th' whims. He lived with his in a "We had Loved parents little When tho Civil War broke out ?¦ only one serious disastc quiet by-ways of the ighlands, wit! Picturesque Scotland dwelling in Rebecca Street, which with labor; but that was its its lie was Carnegie was assigned to in a terrible ir elevators, great furnaces and it: not particularly interests long since has disappeared. He had around duty deed. I was coaching the Sco electricity. It. was the of in the native a Washington, being placed through pride ill life save where it wa secured situation as a "bobbin boy" of the tish Highlands on my holiday and di owner and outrivals in and then he in a cotton factory. charge telegraphic servi. not hear of the his magnificenc« picturesque, wanted t Allegheny City. While at this work he devi lamentable riot i Fifth Avenue home. For orn make the most or ¡t. before the Civil War, was oee of the helped Homestead until after it it has an Every villag / PARTICULARLY the war cipher system, which was la1 days occurre tiling, incomparable situatioi within miles of his castle, no matte signifi¬ griîatest cotton towns in I wired at. once that I on a cliff the manufacturing adopted. In to this would take t! overlooking the Dornocl how mall the population, beasts a Car cant fact is country. There were no. eight- referring exj first steamer but was Firth. It is about our clothing hour rienco he said that he was the home, requests turreted like an old feuda jiegie library. His name is so ez J^ and thi not to come. deep! workdays half-holidays on man castle and has a window for inscribed in stone in its and ex¬ Saturdays then. The wounded in the war. ile had he "You like to in every da; Scotland that i general complete working people sent out to the wires might hear," he contii the year. The gardens are far will take centuries to erase it. labored from the earliest peen of dawn inspect betwe ued, "the following incident connecte famed, and the model cellence. until Eibridge Junction and 8 dairy and Turk His major passion was books. Hi darkness prevented the further Washington, with the : ish baths are use of the tallow found that the Confederates h other notable features o favorite guest at Skibo was dips which flickered "The Governor of Pennsylvania, I u< the residence. his always uncertainly about the pinned several of them to the grou ders'.ood, wished curtain writer; favorite after dinner tal machinery. Be¬ of our worke At Skibo Mr. was books. more If you on a fabric basis, ing a "bobbin boy" was hard work. Tt Carnegie accentuate« He was pleased t appraise have * kept young Andrew busily engaged, Kipling visit sim than to hav you are grat all and he had no time for crowned heads or American millior play or the One aires. And he had al lof them in hi wool. reading of books. He did not like his of Many Monuments to Mr. Carne time. employment, but he kept his hard work¬ gie's Generosity Years ago, before he had m( ing father and mother tors running between the castle an Ins from knowing the nearest ten men dissatisfaction. railway station, mil< If you lock to the tailorii r. For and women. Fibre cover¬ For one away, stage coaches carried you and year Andrew persevered his gui u ing binding. Fitted with hang¬ as a "bobbin boy." In the winter They were picturesque affairs, lookir find it splendidly iv,>ne. And for all v ers, drawers, shoe box, etc., $50 to mornings he ha»l to grope his the rid if they had trui about way died put of th< "Pic the of course, is th r- $182. Others from $42. Initials the streets going to work, as p ige of kwic style, there were no i' ipei >." Ciii chnn ;.. dressed in re painted without charge. lights. The streets were drove oughly Correct and M not paved and the cotton mills were giddily tsrough the villaf dark and dingy. This experience streets in their four-in-hands, blov i m. "CiKuntry Home'1 and Trunk brought him face to face with the ing horns to make way for Gladston hardships of child labor and undoubt- Pf.derewski, Sir Edward Grey, Kiplii Booklets Sent . Upon Request edly influenced him in later life to and others. We make thi ad- start economic reforms Fond of His Satisfactory tional ami educa¬ Daughter ,iea enterprises. Hard as this work But greater than his ditionally attractive by a price was. however, young passi >n f< to take Carnegie loft it books and pi« t ure ¡qui % rvani that true value. up even more strenuous labor range m delivers in the cotton his love for only d lughter. llw factory of John Hay. a of her life was pas led at Skil distant relative. His new consisted The World'» Greatest Leather Storct of the job :,he was known to every o in i firing boiler and subsequently as an of running the steam vicinity extremely intelligei Weber ah~è îleiîbroner Near York engine which con- frolicsome | trolled the machinery. youngster. Their life w 404 Fifth Ave. 253 simple and wholesome. Margaret a Clotiùcrs, Habe da Hatter».El i n S Looked for Better Time». her father roamed around arm in a; CJ.Í S'th ¿roadway .241 SlreeD (Ovp. City /loi« "I was young," he added, "and had in tie early days, when she was qu Broadway j43 Br »dw«) 775 Broadway "1185 Broadway Boston London my dreams, and something within al- a little person. But as she approac! *44th and Broadway 1363 Bi idway >q Nassau 150 Nih4U ways told me that this would not last her teen- she shot up into a tall, Ian 20 Cortlandt »30 Bi .¡ *4_'j and i .¡th Avaww 145 Tr. moni St 89 Regest St and that I should soon be in a better girl, who could look down on the lit* Dealer« Througioo* tha WorW position." uird. She. too wore Highland dress. w\ *''; / Carnegie'» next job, that of telegraph Mr. Carnegie and his wife nev boy, was secured, it in said, through his failed to go to Skibo each year un father's love for checker«. The father Home of the Peace Congress at The the war broke out, and the Highla Hague, for which the parish will sec no more of its philanthropist gave »1,500,000. laird. lit