Many remarkable things have happened in my travels of sixty years on the railroads and in the hotels almost continually, but I never had so remarkable an incident to occur as happened last night. When I went into my room, as is usual, I took some change out of my pocket and gave to the porter who showed me into the room, and it happened to be about thirty cents. He threw it back on the bed, and said, "We do not accept any fees now less than a half-dollar." Well, I told him I felt more like thirty cents than I ever did before, and that I would not give him any more. That illustration shows how the porter who was dissatisfied with thirty cents was once satisfied with fifteen cents, then twenty, then twenty-five, now wants a half-dollar, and feels insulted if he is not given it by persons who are not obliged to give him anything. And Old Hutchinson's experience was that he wanted six millions, and he went after the six millions, but he had so far passed the Angel's Lily that it may have left him in suffering poverty, going to that extreme which many of our business men do.