CHEMAWA AMERICAN. with ns and a member of tlw Arm. He is the one man iu the establishment ihat we couldn't do without. He was thir teen years old when he hr apprenticed to us, and hp was with us eleven yearn act ing us salesman. Wheu lie first came we told him for a long time his wng.8 would be very smalt, hut that, If he proved to be a good boy his salary would be increased ed out, when, according to agreement, we should have been paying him 80OO a year, we payed him 8000, and he never Baid a word about increase of salary. From the very outset he showed that he hud an in terest in the business. He was prompt in the morning, and if kr pt. a little over time at night it nevHr seemed to make any dif ference with him, He gradually came to know where everything was to be found, and if Information was wanted, it wan to this boy. Frank Jones, that every one ap plied. The entire establishment seemed to be mapped nut in his hand and everv thing catalogued And numbered. His memory of faces was equally remarkable, he knew the naniK of every man who came to the store to buy goo.ls, what, he bought and where he came fmm. I used often to say to him, "Jouei, your memory la worth more than a gold mine! How tin you manage to remember?" "I make it my buninefn to remember," he would say. "I know that if I ran remem ber man and call him by uame when he comes into the store, and can ask hi in how thimts are gninK on where he lives, I will be likely to keep him as a customer." "And that was the exact. case. He made friends of buyers. He took the Sam, in terest in their purchases as he took in the store, and would go to no end of troub'e to suit them, and to fulfil to the letter every, thing he promised. Well, affairs went on in thin way until "he had been with uh eleven years, When we concluded to take him into the firm aa a partner We knew that he had no extrav. agant. habits, thnt he neither used tobacco nor beer, nor went to the theatre. Hecon tinned B a the beginlng to board at home, asd dren whtn his nnlrjry wan ihw very lrx est he paid his mother two dollars a week for his hoard. He was always neatly dress ed, and we thought it was probable thnt he hid laid up one or two thousand dollar? an his salary for the last two years had been twelve hundred dollar. Ho when we made him the offer tc become a partner in Hie business, and suggested that it would be more satisfactory if he could put snme monev into the firm he replied: "If "ten thousand dollars will bnolarfyob. jeet T can put in that much. I have saveri out of my salrv nine thousand four hun dred dollars, and my sister will let me havens hundred." 'I can tell you that I was never m r me tonished in my life than when that fellow said he could put in ten thousand dollars, aud most of it his own money. He hart never spent adollar, or twenty five cents or five cents for an unnecessary thing, and had kept his money in a bank where li gathered a small interest. I am a great be liever in the Rinle.you know, and I always kept two plrtcnrds in big letteis up in th atore. One was this text : "Hethat ifi faith ful in that whiWi inlcaHt, is faithful also in that which is much"; and on the other: "He that in diligent in business shall stand before kings and not before mean men'' And Frank Jones's success was the literal fulfilment of those two texts. He hart hren faithful io the smallest things as in the greater ones, and delieent in onstneM. That kind of a boy always succeeds,' con cluded Mr. Aldrn. A. small boy of ten, who had listened to the story with eager eyes, as well as rp, But we don't have any kings in this lOiB'try. Mr. Alden, for diligent boys to ,'Yes, we do,' laugher) Mr. Alden. We have more kings here than in any other country in the world. We have money kin eh, and land kings, aud uierchant kings, nnd publishing kings, and some of them W'eld an enormous power. This Is a great country for kings. Mary Waguer Fisher, in 'Wide Awake.'