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PORTRAIT OF HIRAM POWERS POWERS' DISTRUST OF THE HUNTERS FILIAL DEVOTION SHAPES A GREAT CAREER CARTWRIGHT CALLING UP THE DEVIL PORTRAIT OF NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE JEFFERSON, AS RIP VAN WINKLE PRESCRIBING AT THE BREAKFAST-TABLE "PRESIDENT LINCOLN HAS BEEN MURDERED!" CONTENTS. I. MERCHANTS. CHAPTER I. STEPHEN GIRARD. The fog in the Delaware--News of the war--Alarm of the French skipper--A narrow escape from capture--Arrival of Girard in Philadelphia--Early history of Stephen Girard--An unhappy childhood--Goes to sea--Is licensed to command--Becomes a trader in Philadelphia--Marries Mary Lum--Unfortunate issue of the marriage--Capture of Philadelphia by the British--Early commercial life of Stephen Girard--How he earned his first money, and the use he made of it--Aid from St. Domingo--His rigid attention to business--Thoroughness of his knowledge--One of his letters of instructions--His subordinates required to obey orders though they ruin him--Anecdote of Girard and one of his captains--His promptness and fidelity in business--He never breaks his word--How he lost five hundred dollars--Buys the old Bank of the United States and becomes a banker--Cuts down the salaries of his clerks--Refuses his watchman an overcoat--Indifference to his employes--Contrast between his personal and business habits--His liberality in financial operations--He subscribes for the entire Government loan in 1814, and enables the United States to carry on the war--His generosity toward the Government--The suspension of specie payments--Financial troubles--How Girard saved his own notes--His public spirit--How he made half a million of dollars on a captured ship--Personal characteristics--Why he valued money--His ambition--His infidelity--Causes of the defects of his character--A favorable view--Heroic conduct of Stephen Girard during the prevalence of the yellow fever in Philadelphia--The Good Samaritan--He practices medicine, and congratulates himself that he has killed none of his patients--His industry--Visit of Mr. Baring to Mr. Girard--A curious reception--Failing health and death of Stephen Girard--His will--His noble bequests--Establishment of Girard College. CHAPTER II. JOHN JACOB ASTOR. Legitimate business the field of success--Reasons for claiming Astor as an American--Birth and early life--Religious training--The village of Waldorf--Poverty--The jolly butcher--Young Astor's repugnance to his father's trade--Unh
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