. The journal of a grandfather . mpanys affairs, have accepted his resigna-tion with the greatest regret; and, congratulatingthemselves that he still retains his seat in the Direc-tory, and the company, and that it is to still havethe benefit of his zeal and wise counsel, which hasalready in so conspicuous a manner had so much todo in achieving the marked prosperity of the com-pany: Resolved, That the Board of Directors of theTrust Company tender to their late President theirheartiest recognition of the service he has been to thecompany, and, recalling his administration, remem-ber him with un


. The journal of a grandfather . mpanys affairs, have accepted his resigna-tion with the greatest regret; and, congratulatingthemselves that he still retains his seat in the Direc-tory, and the company, and that it is to still havethe benefit of his zeal and wise counsel, which hasalready in so conspicuous a manner had so much todo in achieving the marked prosperity of the com-pany: Resolved, That the Board of Directors of theTrust Company tender to their late President theirheartiest recognition of the service he has been to thecompany, and, recalling his administration, remem-ber him with unqualified pleasure, as not only an ex-tremely able leader and an agreeable business asso-ciate, but as the personal friend of every one of them,and they desire to express their best wishes for hisfuture happiness and success. Committee. ^^Whereiipon, It was moved and seconded that thereport be received and spread upon our records, anda copy of it sent to our late President, which wasunanimously adopted. [Seal] Attest: An Only Child and Grandchild Page One Hundred Forty-One FROM 1865 TO 1895 This Trust Company, now consolidated with an-other large Trust Company in the same city, is, Ithink, one of the most conservative and best managedcompanies in the world. It pays a four per cent divi-dend quarterly, and besides its five million capitaland over six million surplus it has now near two hun-dred millions in trust estates. For twelve years, to be with an only child andgrandchild, we lived in Colorado. I have also man-aged to keep up, through all the years, my Southernhome and my interest in the cowboy and in CowboyLand, and nothing delights me more, to this day, thanto live at least a portion of the time at the old home-place, and to camp and coach in this, to me, delightfulCowboy Land. CHAPTER EIGHT COACHING IN COWBOY LAND I AM not presuming to pose here as a CoachingMan. My coaching has been in the main a half-Gipsy kind of life with the persons and thingsI love. I a


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhugheswi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1912