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Title: The Tipster
       1901, From "Wall Street Stories"

Author: Edwin Lefevre

Release Date: October 24, 2007 [EBook #23171]
Last Updated: November 10, 2016

Language: English

Character set encoding: UTF-8

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TIPSTER ***




Produced by David Widger





 










THE TIPSTER  

By Edwin Lefevre  





From Wall Street Stories. Copyright, 1901, by McClure, Phillips &  Co.  










Contents  

I

II

III

IV

V

VI















I


Glmartin was still laughing professionally at the prospective buyers  funny story when the telephone on his desk buzzed. He said: Excuse me for  a minute, old man, to the customerHopkins, the Connecticut  manufacturer.  

Hello; who is this? he spoke into the transmitter. Oh, how are you?YesI  was outIs that so?Too badToo badYes; just my  luck to be out. I might have known it!Do you think so?Well,  then, sell the 200 Occidental commonYou know bestWhat about  Trolley?Hold on?All right; just as you sayI hope soI  dont like to lose, andHa! ha!I guess soGood-by.  

Its from my brokers, explained Gilmartin, hanging up the receiver. Id  have saved five hundred dollars if I had been here at half-past ten. They  called me up to advise me to sell out, and the price is off over three  points. I could have got out at a profit this morning; but no, sir; not I.  I had to be away, trying to buy some camphor.  

Hopkins was impressed. Gilmartin perceived it and went on, with an air of  comical wrath which he thought was preferable to indifference: It isnt  the money I mind so much as the tough luck of it. I didnt make my trade  in camphor after all and I lost in stocks, when if Id only waited five  minutes more in the office Id have got the message from my brokers and  saved my five hundred. Expensive, my time is, eh? with a woful shake of  the head.  

But youre ahead of the game, arent you? asked the customer,  interestedly.  

Well, I guess yes. Just about twelve thousand.  

That was more than Gilmartin had made; but having exaggerated, he  immediately felt very kindly disposed toward the Connecticut man.  

Whew! whistled Hopkins, admiringly. Gilmartin experienced a great  tenderness toward him. The lie was made stingless by the customers  credulity. This brought a smile of subtle relief to Gilmartins lips. He  was a pleasant-faced, pleasant-voiced man of three-and-thirty. He exhaled  health, contentment, neatness, and an easy conscience. Honesty and  good-nature shone in his eyes. People liked to shake hands with him. It  made his friends talk of his lucky star; and they envied him.  

I bought this yesterday for my wife; took it out of a little deal in  Trolley, he told Hopkins, taking a small jewel-box from one of the desks  drawers. It contained a diamond ring, somewhat showy, but obviously quite  expensive. Hopkinss semi-envious admiration made Gilmartin add, genially:  What do you say to lunch? I feel I am entitled to a glass of fizz to  forget my bad luck of this morning. Then, in an exaggeratedly apologetic  tone: Nobody likes to lose five hundred dollars on an empty stomach!  

Shell be delighted, of course, said Hopkins, thinking of Mrs.  Gilmartin. Mrs. Hopkins loved jewelry.  

Shes the nicest little woman that ever lived. Whatever is mine is hers;  and whats hers is her own. Ha! ha! But, becoming nicely serious, all  that Ill make out of the stock market Im going to put away for her, in  her name. She can take better care of it than I; and, besides, shes  entitled to it, anyhow, for being so nice to me.  

That is how he told what a good husband he was. He felt so pleased over it  that he went on, sincerely regretful: Shes visiting friends in  Pennsylvania or Id ask you to dine with us. And they went to a  fashionable restaurant together.  

Day after day Gilmartin thought persistently that Maiden Lane was too far  from Wall Street. There came a week in which he could have made four very  handsome turns had he but been in the brokers office. He was out on  business for his firm and when he returned the opportunity had gone,  leaving behind it vivid visions of what might have been; also the  conviction that time, tide, and the ticker wait for no man. Instead of  buying and selling quinine and balsams and essential oils for Maxwell  & Kip, drug brokers and importers, he decided to make the buying and  selling of stocks and bonds his exclusive business. The hours were easy;  the profits would be great. He would make enough to live on. He would not  let the Street take away what it had given. That was the great secret: to  know when to quit! He would be content with a moderate amount, wisely  invested in gilt-edged bonds. And then he would bid the Street good-by  forever.  

Force of long business custom and the indefinable fear of new ventures for  a time fought successfully his increasing ticker-fever. But one day his  brokers wished to speak to him, to urge him to sell out his entire  holdings, having been advised of an epoch-making resolution by Congress.  They had received the news in advance from a Washington customer. Other  brokers had important connections in the Capital and therefore there was  no time to lose. They dared not assume the responsibilty of selling him  out without his permission. Five minutesfive eternities!passed  before they could talk by telephone with him; and when he gave his order  to sell, the market had broken five or six points. The news was out. The  news agencies slips were in the brokers offices and half of Wall Street  knew. Instead of being among the first ten sellers Gilmartin was among the  second hundred.  







II


The clerks gave him a farewell dinner. All were there, even the head  office-boy to whom the two-dollar subscription was no light matter. The  man who probably would succeed Gilmartin as manager, Jenkins, acted as  toastmaster. He made a witty speech which ended with a neatly turned  compliment. Moreover, he seemed sincerely sorry to bid good-by to the man  whose departure meant promotionwhich was the nicest compliment of  all. And the other clerksold Williamson, long since ambition-proof;  and young Hardy, bitten ceaselessly by it; and middle-aged Jameson, who  knew he could run the business much better than Gilmartin; and Baldwin,  who never thought of business in or out of the officeall told him  how good he had been and related corroborative anecdotes that made him  blush and the others cheer; and how sorry they were he would no longer be  with them, but how glad he was going to do so much better by himself; and  they hoped he would not cut them when he met them after he had become a  great millionaire. And Gilmartin felt his heart grow soft and feelings not  all of happiness came over him. Danny, the dean of the office boys, whose  surname was known only to the cashier, rose and said, in the tones of one  speaking of a dear departed friend: He was the best man in the place. He  always was all right. Everybody laughed; whereupon Danny went on, with a  defiant glare at the others: Id work for him for nothin if hed want  me, instead of gettin ten a week from any one else. And when they  laughed the harder at this he said, stoutly: Yes, I would! His eyes  filled with tears at their incredulity, which he feared might be shared by  Mr. Gilmartin. But the toastmaster rose very gravely and said: Whats the  matter with Danny? And all shouted in unison: Hes all right! with a  cordiality so heartfelt that Danny smiled and sat down, blushing happily.  And crusty Jameson, who knew he could run the business so much better than  Gilmartin, stood uphe was the last speakerand began: In the  ten years Ive worked with Gilmartin, weve had our differences andwellIwelleroh,  damn it! and walked quickly to the head of the table and shook hands  violently with Gilmartin for fully a minute, while all the others looked  on in silence.  

Gilmartin had been eager to go to Wall Street. But this leave-taking made  him sad. The old Gilmartin who had worked with these men was no more and  the new Gilmartin felt sorry. He had never stopped to think how much they  cared for him nor indeed how very much he cared for them.  

He told them, very simply, he did not expect ever again to spend such  pleasant years anywhere as at the old office; and as for his spells of  ill-temperoh, yes, they neednt shake their heads; he knew he often  was irritablehe had meant well and trusted they would forgive him.  If he had his life to live over again he would try really to deserve all  that they had said of him on this evening. And he was very, very sorry to  leave them. Very sorry, boys; very sorry. Very sorry! he finished  lamely, with a wistful smile. He shook hands with each mana strong  grip, as though he were about to go on a journey from which he might never  returnand in his heart of hearts there was a new doubt of the  wisdom of going to Wall Street. But it was too late to draw back.  

They escorted him to his house. They wished to be with him to the last  possible minute.  







III  


Everybody in the drug trade seemed to think that Gilmartin was on the  highroad to Fortune. Those old business acquaintances and former  competitors whom he happened to meet in the street-cars or in the theatre  lobbies always spoke to him as to a millionaire-to-be, in what they  imagined was correct Wall Street jargon, to show him that they too knew  something of the great game. But their efforts made him smile with a sense  of superiority, at the same time that their admiration for his cleverness  and their good-natured envy for his luck made his soul thrill joyously.  Among his new friends in Wall Street also he found much to enjoy. The  other customerssome of them very wealthy menlistened to his  views regarding the market as attentively as he, later, felt it his polite  duty to listen to theirs. The brokers themselves treated him as a good  fellow. They cajoled him into trading oftenevery one hundred  shares he bought or sold meant $12.50 to themand when he won, they  praised his unerring discernment. When he lost they soothed him by  scolding him for his recklessnessjust as a mother will treat her  three-year-olds fall as a great joke in order to deceive the child into  laughing at its misfortune. It was an average office with an average  clientèle.  

From ten to three they stood before the quotation board and watched a  quick-witted boy chalk the price changes, which one or another of the  customers read aloud from the tape as it came from the ticker. The higher  stocks went the more numerous the customers became, being allured in great  flocks to the Street by the tales of their friends, who had profited  greatly by the rise. All were winning, for all were buying stocks in a  bull market. They resembled each other marvelously, these men who differed  so greatly in cast of features and complexion and age. Life to all of them  was full of joy. The very ticker sounded mirthful; its clicking told of  golden jokes. And Gilmartin and the other customers laughed heartily at  the mildest of stories without even waiting for the point of the joke. At  times their fingers clutched the air happily, as if they actually felt the  good money the ticker was presenting to them. They were all neophytes at  the great gamelambkins who were bleating blithely to inform the  world what clever and formidable wolves they were. Some of them had  sustained occasional losses; but these were trifling compared with their  winnings.  

When the slump came all were heavily committed to the bull side. It was a  bad slump. It was so unexpectedby the lambsthat all of them  said, very gravely, it came like a thunderclap out of a clear sky. While  it lasted, that is, while the shearing of the flock was proceeding, it was  very uncomfortable. Those same joyous, winning stock-gamblers, with  beaming faces, of the week before, were fear-clutched, losing  stock-gamblers, with livid faces, on what they afterward called the day of  the panic. It really was only a slump; rather sharper than usual. Too many  lambs had been over-speculating. The wholesale dealers in securitiesand  insecuritiesheld very little of their own wares, having sold them  to the lambs, and wanted them back nowcheaper. The customers eyes,  as on happier days, were intent on the quotation board. Their dreams were  rudely shattered; the fast horses some had all but bought joined the steam  yachts others almost had chartered. The beautiful homes they had been  building were torn down in the twinkling of an eye. And the demolisher of  dreams and dwellings was the ticker, that instead of golden jokes was now  clicking financial death. They could not take their eyes from the board  before them. Their own ruin, told in mournful numbers by the little  machine, fascinated them. To be sure, poor Gilmartin said: Ive changed  my mind about Newport. I guess Ill spend the summer on my own Hotel de  Roof! And he grinned; but he grinned alone. Wilson, the dry goods  man, who laughed so joyously at everybodys jokes, was now watching, as if  under a hypnotic spell, the lips of the man who sat on the high stool  beside the ticker and called out the prices to the quotation boy. Now and  again Wilsons own lips made curious grimaces, as if speaking to himself.  Brown, the slender, pale-faced man, was outside in the hall, pacing to and  fro. All was lost, including honor. And he was afraid to look at the  ticker, afraid to hear the prices shouted, yet hopingfor a miracle!  Gil-martin came out from the office, saw Brown and said, with sickly  bravado: I held out as long as I could. But they got myducats. A  sporting life comes high, I tell you! But Brown did not heed him, and  Gilmartin pushed the elevator button impatiently and cursed at the delay.  He not only had lost the paper profits he had accumulated during the  bull market, but all his savings of years had crumbled away beneath the  strokes of the ticker that day. It was the same with all. They would not  take a small loss at first, but had held on, in the hope of a recovery  that would let them out even. And prices had sunk and sunk until the  loss was so great that it seemed only proper to hold on, if need be a  year, for sooner or later prices must come back. But the break shook them  out, and prices went just so much lower because so many people had to  sell whether they would or not.  







IV


After the slump most of the customers returned to their legitimate  businesssadder, but it is to be feared not much wiser men.  Gilmartin, after the first numbing shock, tried to learn of fresh  opportunities in the drug business. But his heart was not in his search.  There was the shame of confessing defeat in Wall Street so soon after  leaving Maiden Lane; but far stronger than this was the effect of the  poison of gambling. If it was bad enough to be obliged to begin lower than  he had been at Maxwell & Kips, it was worse to condemn himself to  long weary years of work in the drug business when his reward, if he  remained strong and healthy, would consist merely in being able to save a  few thousands. But a few lucky weeks in the stock market would win him  back all he had lostand more!  

He should have begun in a small way while he was learning to speculate. He  saw it now very clearly. Every one of his mistakes had been due to  inexperience. He had imagined he knew the market. But it was only now that  he really knew it, and therefore it was only now, after the slump had  taught him so much, that he could reasonably hope to succeed. His mind,  brooding over his losses, definitely dismissed as futile the resumption of  the purchase and sale of drugs, and dwelt persistently on the sudden  acquisition of stock market wisdom. Properly applied, this wisdom ought to  mean much to him. In a few weeks he was again spending his days before the  quotation board, gossiping with those customers who had survived, giving  and receiving advice. And as time passed the grip of Wall Street on his  soul grew stronger until it strangled all other aspirations. He could  talk, think, dream of nothing but stocks. He could not read the newspapers  without thinking how the market would take the news contained therein.  If a huge refinery burned down, with a loss to the Trust of $4,000,000,  he sighed because he had not foreseen the catastrophe and had sold Sugar  short. If a strike by the men of the Suburban Trolley Company led to  violence and destruction of life and property, he cursed an unrelenting  Fate because he had not had the prescience to put out a thousand shares  of Trolley. And he constantly calculated to the last fraction of a point  how much money he would have made if he had sold short just before the  calamity at the very top prices and had covered his stock at the bottom.  Had he only known! The atmosphere of the Street, the odor of speculation  surrounded him on all sides, enveloped him like a fog, from which the  things of the outside world appeared as though seen through a veil. He  lived in the district where men do not say Good-morning on meeting one  another, but Hows the market? or, when one asks: How do you feel?  receives for an answer: Bullish! or Bearish! instead of a reply  regarding the state of health.  

At first, after the fatal slump, Gilmartin importuned his brokers to let  him speculate on credit, in a small way. They did. They were kindly enough  men and sincerely wished to help him. But luck ran against him. With the  obstinacy of unsuperstitious gamblers he insisted on fighting Fate. He was  a bull in a bear market; and the more he lost the more he thought the  inevitable rally in prices was due. He bought in expectation of it and  lost again and again, until he owed the brokers a greater sum than he  could possibly pay; and they refused point blank to give him credit for  another cent, disregarding his vehement entreaties to buy a last hundred,  just one more chance, the last, because he would be sure to win. And, of  course, the long-expected happened and the market went up with a rapidity  that made the Street blink; and Gilmartin figured that had not the brokers  refused his last order, he would have made enough to pay off the  indebtedness and have left, in addition, $2,950; for he would have  pyramided on the way up. He showed the brokers his figures, accusingly,  and they had some words about it and he left the office, almost tempted to  sue the firm for conspiracy with intent to defraud; but decided that it  was another of Lucks sockdolagers and let it go at that, gambler-like.  

When he returned to the brokers officethe next dayhe began  to speculate in the only way he couldvicariously. Smith, for  instance, who was long of 500 St. Paul at 125, took less interest in the  deal than did Gilmartin, who thenceforth assiduously studied the news  slips and sought information on St. Paul all over the Street, listening  thrillingly to tips and rumors regarding the stock, suffering keenly when  the price declined, laughing and chirruping blithely if the quotations  moved upward, exactly as though it were his own stock. In a measure it was  as an anodyne to his ticker fever. Indeed, in some cases his interest was  so poignant and his advice so frequenthe would speak of our  dealthat the lucky winner gave him a small share of his spoils,  which Gilmartin accepted without hesitationhe was beyond  pride-wounding by nowand promptly used to back some miniature deal  of his own on the Consolidated Exchange or even in Percysa dingy  little bucket shop, where they took orders for two shares of stock on a  margin of 1 per cent; that is, where a man could bet as little as two  dollars.  

Later, it often came to pass that Gilmartin would borrow a few dollars  when the customers were not trading actively. The amounts he borrowed  diminished by reason of the increasing frequency of their refusals.  Finally, he was asked to stay away from the office where once he had been  an honored and pampered customer.  

He became a Wall Street has been and could be seen daily on New Street,  back of the Consolidated Exchange, where the put and call brokers  congregate. The tickers in the saloons nearby fed his gamblers appetite.  From time to time luckier men took him into the same be-tickered saloons,  where he ate at the free lunch counters and drank beer and talked stocks  and listened to the lucky winners narratives with lips tremulous with  readiness to smile and grimace. At times the gambler in him would assert  itself and he would tell the lucky winners, wrathfully, how the stock he  wished to buy but couldnt the week before had risen 18 points. But they,  saturated with their own ticker fever, would nod absently, their souls  eyes fixed on some quotation-to-be; or they would not nod at all, but in  their eagerness to look at the tape, from which they had been absent two  long minutes, would leave him without a single word of consolation or even  of farewell.  







V


One day, in New Street, he overheard a very well-known broker tell another  that Mr. Sharpe was going to move up Pennsylvania Central right away.  The overhearing of the conversation was a bit of rare good luck that  raised Gil-martin from his sodden apathy and made him hasten to his  brother-in-law, who kept a grocery store in Brooklyn. He implored Griggs  to go to a broker and buy as much Pennsylvania Central as he couldthat  is, if he wished to live in luxury the rest of his life. Sam Sharpe was  going to put it up. Also, he borrowed ten dollars.  

Griggs was tempted. He debated with himself many hours, and at length  yielded with misgivings. He took his savings and bought one hundred shares  of Pennsylvania Central at 64, and began to neglect his business in order  to study the financial pages of the newspapers. Little by little  Gilmartins whisper set in motion within him the wheels of a ticker that  printed on his day-dreams the mark of the dollar. His wife, seeing him  preoccupied, thought business was bad; but Griggs denied it, confirming  her worst fears. Finally, he had a telephone put in his little shop, to be  able to talk to his broker.  

Gilmartin, with the ten dollars he had borrowed, promptly bought ten  shares in a bucket shop at 63%; the stock promptly went to 62%; he was  promptly wiped; and the stock promptly went back to 64%.  

On the next day a fellow-customer of Gilmartin of old days invited him to  have a drink. Gil-martin resented the mans evident prosperity. He felt  indignant at the ability of the other to buy hundreds of shares. But the  liquor soothed him, and in a burst of mild remorse he told Smithers, after  an apprehensive look about him as if he feared some one might overhear:  Ill tell you something, on the dead q. t., for your own benefit.  

Fire away!  

Pa. Cent, is going way up.  

Yes? said Smithers, calmly.  

Yes; it will cross par sure.  

Umph! between munches of a pretzel.  

Yes. Sam Sharpe toldGilmartin was on the point of saying a  friend of mine, but caught himself and went on, impressivelytold  me, yesterday, to buy Pa. Cent., as he had accumulated his full line, and  was ready to whoop it up. And you know what Sharpe is, he finished, as if  he thought Smithers was familiar with Sharpes powers.  

Is that so, nibbled Smithers.  

Why, when Sharpe makes up his mind to put up a stock, as he intends to do  with Pa. Cent., nothing on earth can stop him. He told me he would make it  cross par within sixty days. This is no hearsay, no tip. Its cold facts,  I donthear its going up; I dontthink its going up; I  know its going up. Understand? And he shook his right forefinger  with a hammering motion.  

In less than five minutes Smithers was so wrought up that he bought 500  shares and promised solemnly not to take his profits, s. o. sell out,  until Gilmartin said the word. Then they had another drink and another  look at the ticker.  

You want to keep in touch with me, was Gilmartins parting shot. Ill  tell you what Sharpe tells me. But you must keep it quiet, with a  sidewise nod that pledged Smithers to honorable secrecy.  

Had Gilmartin met Sharpe face to face, he would not have known who was  before him.  

Shortly after he left Smithers he buttonholed another acquaintance, a  young man who thought he knew Wall Street, and therefore had a hobbymanipulation.  No one could induce him to buy stocks by telling him how well the  companies were doing, how bright the prospects, etc. That was bait for  suckers, not for clever young stock operators. But any one, even a  stranger, who said that theythe perennially mysterious they,  the big men, the mighty manipulators whose life was one prolonged  conspiracy to pull the wool over the publics eyesthey were going  to jack up these or the other shares, was welcomed and his advice acted  upon. Young Freeman believed in nothing but their wickedness and their  power to advance or depress stock values at will. Thinking of his wisdom  had given him a chronic sneer.  

Youre just the man I was looking for, said Gilmartin, who hadnt  thought of the young man at all.  

Are you a deputy sheriff?  

No. A slight pause for oratorical effect. I had a long talk with Sam  to-day.  

What Sam?  

Sharpe. The old boy sent for me. He was in mighty good humor too. Tickled  to death. He might well behes got 60,000 shares of Pennsylvania  Central. And theres going to be from 50 to 60 points profit in it.  

Hm! sniffed Freeman, sceptically, yet impressed by the change In  Gilmartins attitude from the money-borrowing humility of the previous  week to the confident tone of a man with a straight tip. Sharpe was  notoriously kind to his old friendsrich or poor.  

I was there when the papers were signed, Gilmartin said, hotly. I was  going to leave the room, but Sam told me I neednt. I cant tell you what  it is about; really I cant. But hes simply going to put the stock above  par. Its 64 1/2 now, and you know and I know that by the time it is 75  the newspapers will all be talking about inside buying; and at 85  everybody will want to buy it on account of important developments; and at  95 there will be millions of bull tips on it and rumors of increased  dividends, and people who would not look at it thirty points lower will  rush in and buy it by the bushel. Let me know who is manipulating a stock,  and to hl with dividends and earnings. Themsmy  sentiments, with a final hammering nod, as if driving in a profound  truth.  

Same here, assented Freeman, cordially. He was attacked on his  vulnerable side.  

Strange things happen in Wall Street. Sometimes tips come true. It so  proved in this case. Sharpe started the stock upward brilliantlythe  movement became historic in the Streetand Pa. Cent, soared dizzily  and all the newspapers talked of it and the public went mad over it and it  touched 80 and 85 and 88 and higher, and then Gilmartin made his  brother-in-law sell out and Smithers and Freeman. Their profits were:  Griggs, $8,000; Smithers, $15,100; Freeman, $2,750. Gilmartin made them  give him a good percentage. He had no trouble with his brother-in-law.  Gilmartin told him it was an inviolable Wall Street custom and so Griggs  paid, with an air of much experience in such matters. Freeman was more or  less grateful. But Smithers met Gilmartin, and full of his good luck  repeated what he had told a dozen men within the hour: I did a dandy  stroke the other day. Pa. Cent. looked to me like higher prices and I  bought a wad of it. Ive cleaned up a tidy sum, and he looked proud of  his own penetration. He really had forgotten that it was Gilmartin who had  given him the tip. But not so Gilmartin, who retorted, witheringly:  

Well, Ive often heard of folks that you put into good things and they  make money and afterward they come to you and tell how damned smart they  were to hit it right. But you cant work that on me. Ive got witnesses.  

Witnesses? echoed Smithers, looking cheap. He remembered.  

Yes, wit-ness-es, mimicked Gilmartin, scornfully, I all but had to get  on my knees to make you buy it. And I told you when to sell it, too. The  information came to me straight from headquarters and you got the use of  it, and now the least you can do is to give me twenty-five hundred  dollars.  

In the end he accepted eight hundred dollars. He told mutual friends that  Smithers had cheated him.  







VI


It seemed as though the regeneration of Gilmartin had been achieved when  he changed his shabby raiment for expensive clothes. He paid his  tradesmens bills and moved into better quarters. He spent his money as  though he had made millions. One week after he had closed out the deal his  friends would have sworn Gilmartin had always been prosperous. That was  his exterior. His inner self remained the samea gambler. He began  to speculate again, in the office of Freemans brokers.  

At the end of the second month he had lost not only the $1,200 he had  deposited with the firm, but an additional $250 he had given his wife and  had been obliged to borrow back from her, despite her assurances that he  would lose it. This time the slump was really unexpected by all, even by  the magnatesthe mysterious and all-powerful they of Freemansso  that the loss of the second fortune did not reflect on Gilmartins ability  as a speculator, but on his luck. As a matter of fact, he had been too  careful and had sinned from over-timidity at first, only to plunge later  and lose all.  

As the result of much thought about his losses Gilmartin became a  professional tipster. To let others speculate for him seemed the only sure  way of winning. He began by advising ten victimshe learned in time  to call them clientsto sell Steel Rod preferred, each man 100  shares; and to a second ten he urged the purchase of the same quantity of  the same stock. To all he advised taking four points profit. Not all  followed his advice, but the seven clients who sold it made between them  nearly $3,000 overnight. His percentage amounted to $287.50. Six bought,  and when they lost he told them confidentially how the treachery of a  leading member of the pool had obliged the pool managers to withdraw their  support from the stock temporarily, whence the decline. They grumbled; but  he assured them that he himself had lost nearly $1,600 of his own on  account of the traitor.  

For some months Gilmartin made a fair living, but business became very  dull. People learned to fight shy of his tips. The persuasiveness was gone  from his inside news and from his confidential advice from Sharpe and from  his beholding with his own eyes the signing of epoch-making documents. Had  he been able to make his customers alternate their winnings and losses he  might have kept his trade. But, for example, Dave Rossiter, in Stuart  & Sterns office, stupidly received the wrong tip six times in  succession. It wasnt Gilmartins fault, but Rossiters bad luck.  

At length, failing to get enough clients in the ticker district itself,  Gilmartin was forced to advertise in an afternoon paper, six times a week,  and in the Sunday edition of one of the leading morning dailies. They ran  like this:  
     WE MAKE MONEY

     for our Investors by the best system ever devised. Deal with
     genuine experts. Two methods of operating; one speculative,
     the other ensures absolute safety.
     NOW

     is the time to invest in a certain stock for ten points sure
     profit Three points margin will carry it. Remember how
     correct we have been on other stocks.  Take advantage of
     this move.
     IOWA MIDLAND.

     Big movement coming in this stock. If s very near at hand.
     Am waiting daily for word. Will get it in time. Splendid
     opportunity to make big money.  It costs only a 2-cent stamp
     to write to me.
     CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION.

     Private secretary of banker and stock operator of world-wide
     reputation has valuable information. I don’t wish your
     money. Use your own broker. All I want is a share of what
     you will surely make if you follow my advice.
     WILL ADVANCE $40 PER SHARE.

     A fortune to be made in a railroad stock. Deal pending which
     will advance same $40 per share within three months. Am in
     position to keep informed as to developments and the
     operations of a pool. Parties who will carry for me 100
     shares with a New York Stock Exchange house will receive the
     full benefit of information.   Investment safe and sure.
     Highest references given.

He prospered amazingly. Answers came to him from furniture dealers on  Fourth Avenue and dairymen up the State and fruit growers in Delaware and  factory workers in Massachusetts and electricians in New Jersey and coal  miners in Pennsylvania and shopkeepers and physicians and plumbers and  undertakers in towns and cities near and far. Every morning Gilmartin  telegraphed to scores of peopleat their expenseto sell, and  to scores of others to buy the same stocks. And he claimed his commissions  from the winners.  

Little by little his savings grew; and with them grew his desire to  speculate on his own account. It made him irritable not to gamble.  

He met Freeman one day in one of his dissatisfied moods. Out of politeness  he asked the young cynic the universal query of the Street:  

What do you think of em? He meant stocks.  

What difference does it make what I think? sneered Freeman, with proud  humility. Im nobody. But he looked as if he did not agree with himself.  

What do you know? pursued Gilmartin mollifyingly.  

I know enough to be long of Gotham Gas. I just bought a thousand shares  at 180. He really had bought a hundred only.  

What on?  

On information. I got it straight from a director of the company. Look  here, Gilmartin, Im pledged to secrecy. But, for your own benefit, Ill  just tell you to buy all the Gas you possibly can carry. The deal is on. I  know that certain papers were signed last night, and they are almost ready  to spring it on the public. They havent got all the stock they want. When  they get it, look out for fireworks.  

Gilmartin did not perceive any resemblance between Freemans tips and his  own.  

He said, hesitatingly, as though ashamed of his timidity:  

The stock seems pretty high at 180.  

You wont think so when it sells at 250. Gilmartin, I donthear  this; I dontthink it; I know it!  

All right; Im in, quoth Gilmartin, jovially. He felt a sense of  emancipation now that he had made up his mind to resume his speculating.  He took every cent of the nine hundred dollars he had made from telling  people the same things that Freeman told him now, and bought a hundred  Gotham Gas at $185 a share. Also he telegraphed to all his clients to  plunge in the stock.  

It fluctuated between 184 and 186 for a fortnight. Freeman daily  asseverated that they were accumulating the stock. But, one fine day,  the directors met, agreed that business was bad, and having sold out most  of their own holdings, decided to reduce the dividend rate from 8 to 6 per  cent. Gotham Gas broke seventeen points in ten short minutes. Gilmartin  lost all he had. He found it impossible to pay for his advertisements. The  telegraph companies refused to accept any more collect messages. This  deprived Gilmartin of his income as a tipster. Griggs had kept on  speculating and had lost all his money and his wifes in a little deal in  Iowa Midland. All that Gilmartin could hope to get from him was an  occasional invitation to dinner. Mrs. Gilmartin, after they were  dispossessed for non-payment of rent, left her husband, and went to live  with a sister in Newark who did not like Gilmartin.  

His clothes became shabby and his meals irregular. But always in his  heart, as abiding as an inventors faith in himself, there dwelt the hope  that some day, somehow, he would strike it rich in the stock market.  

One day he borrowed five dollars from a man who had made five thousand in  Cosmopolitan Traction. The stock, the man said, had only begun to go up,  and Gilmartin believed it and bought five shares in Percys, his  favorite bucket shop. The stock began to rise slowly but steadily. The  next afternoon Percys was raided, the proprietor having disagreed with  the police as to price.  

Gilmartin lingered about New Street, talking with other customers of the  raided bucket shop, discussing whether or not it was a put up job of old  Percy himself, who, it was known, had been losing money to the crowd for  weeks past. One by one the victims went away and at length Gilmartin left  the ticker district. He walked slowly down Wall Street, then turned up  William Street, thinking of his luck. Cosmopolitan Traction had certainly  looked like higher prices. Indeed, it seemed to him that he could almost  hear the stock shouting, articulately: Im going up, right away, right  away! If somebody would buy a thousand shares and agree to give him  the profits on a hundred, on ten, on one!  

But he had not even his carfare. Then he remembered that he had not eaten  since breakfast. It did him no good to remember it now. He would have to  get his dinner from Griggs in Brooklyn.  

Why, Gilmartin told himself with a burst of curious self-contempt, I  cant even buy a cup of coffee!  

He raised his head and looked about him to find how insignificant a  restaurant it was in which he could not buy even a cup of coffee. He had  reached Maiden Lane. As his glance ran up and down the north side of that  street, it was arrested by the sign:  
     MAXWELL & KIP

At first he felt but vaguely what it meant. It had grown unfamiliar with  absence. The clerks were coming out. Jameson, looking crustier than ever,  as though he were forever thinking how much better than Jenkins he could  run the business; Danny, some inches taller, no longer an office boy, but  spick and span in a blue serge suit and a necktie of the latest style,  exhaling health and correctness; Williamson, grown very gray and showing  on his face thirty years of routine; Baldwin, happy as of yore at the  ending of the days work, and smiling at the words of JenkinsGilmartins  successor, who wore an air of authority, of the habit of command which he  had not known in the old days.  

Of a sudden Gilmartin was in the midst of his old life. He saw all that he  had been, all that he might still be. And he was overwhelmed. He longed to  rush to his old associates, to speak to them, to shake hands with them, to  be the old Gilmartin. He was about to step toward Jenkins, but stopped  abruptly. His clothes were shabby, and he felt ashamed. But, he apologized  to himself, he could tell them how he had made a hundred thousand and had  lost it. And he even might borrow a few dollars from Jenkins.  

Gilmartin turned on his heel with a sudden impulse and walked away from  Maiden Lane quickly. All that he thought now was that he would not have  them see him in his plight. He felt the shabbiness of his clothes without  looking at them. As he walked, a great sense of loneliness came over him.  

He was back in Wall Street. At the head of the Street was old Trinity; to  the right the Sub-Treasury; to the left the Stock Exchange.  

From Maiden Lane to the Lane of the Tickersuch had been his life.  

If I could only buy some Cosmopolitan Traction! he said. Then he walked  forlornly northward, to the great bridge, on his way to Brooklyn, to eat  with Griggs, the ruined grocery man.  













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