* r The Conservative. Human lives are EX-PRESIDENT regulated by will- PERKINS. power and the capabilities for success. The individual selects a call ing , enters upon it during the early years of responsibility and begins in it at zero. Necessarily he rises or falls by his own thoughts , words and acts. Ho remains at zero , goes below zero or mounts to wards , or to the maximum height in the avocation which he has selected. In December , 1868 , Ohas. E. Perkins , then a superintendent on the Burlington system in Iowa , In 1868. visited Nebraska City with Henry Strong , then a solicitor and gen eral counsel for the same corporation. That was more than thirty years ago and froni ihac date to this the editor of THE CONSERVATIVE has known Mr. Per kins. In all those years his character istics , intellectual and moral , have been of the highest , most admirable and forceful type. And in every relation of life he has been a model of loyal , cheer ful , self-forgetting devotion to duty. His career has been most useful and practical. It has been such that the most ambitious and affectionate parent may commend it to a son as worthy of emulation. And when one conscien tiously after an intimate acquaintance of more than a quarter of a century declares that a man has character so solid and sound that he would have his sons pattern after it , further praise is impossible. Few men know how much , how earnestly and efficiently Mr. Perkins labored to open up - For Nebraska. the resources of Nebraska by build ing the B. & M. lines. He antagonized in his advocacy of the value and possi bilities of Nebraska lands older and more experienced men , among them that great financial leader of investors from Boston , James P. Joy , who declared as late as 1866 , the lands in this state absolutely valueless for agriculture. But at last Mr. Perkins and the few Boston men whom he could influence as against the judgment of Mr. Joy , began the building of the road from Platts- mouth to Lincoln. But in 1874 and 1876 the grasshoppers came down upon the state and complete ly destroyed the Grasshoppers. crops in many counties along the western limit of settlements. There was absolute hunger and freezing nakedness confronting some of the pioneers , and then it was that Mr. Perkins , more than any other dozen men inspired the editor of THE CONSERVATIVE to organize the Nebraska Relief and Aid Society. He headed the heavy donation lists with a gift of five thousand dollars. The so ciety had among its active members Gen. E. O. O. Ord , E. B. Chandler , Judge Wakoloy , Alvin Saunders and other responsible citizens , and during its career distributed in goods and cashmere more than two hundred and fifty thousand dollars among the stricken settlers. Without that aid families might have perished , farms been aban doned and the state reverted in part to wilderness. Not one of the Nobraskaus who has a recollection of those terrible years and the trials and hardships then entailed can fail to recall the great and generous farsightedness and the judicious management of Mr. Perkins at that time. Under his orders all com modities for the sufferers were carried gratuitously over the B. & M. and in thousands of ways he contributed to the Nebraska Relief and Aid Society's use ful activity and success. It was a crucial period in the history of the commonwealth. And now after a ser vice of forty years he resigns from the presidency of the Chicago , Burlington & Quinoy road , leaving a nume synon ymous with uprightness , honor , truth , and a record of persistent work which even a mogul locomotive engine could hardly duplicate. He is a man for those who have ambition , love the truth and admire honesty , to copy. His successor is not wanting in the elements which have made Mr. Perkins so valuable an offi- Geo. B. Harris. cer and so good a citizen. Like his lamented father , George S. Harris , who managed the settlement of millions of acres of Nebraska B. & M. lands , the new president of the 0. B. & Q. is strong , honest and unflinching in doing right and carefully and conscientiously guard ing and promoting the vast interests entrusted to his conservation. The new popu- REINCARNATION OF list combination THREE IN ONE. for the pursuit of p o 1 i ti o al offices recently dined at Columbus , Ohio. Croker of New York and Clark of Mon tana were missed from among a lot of prominent reformers. But the peerless perpetual from Nebraska was present. His speech connected Jefferson and Jackson and Lincoln in a manner to offend each of those patriots. However , the reincarnation of the three , the speak er inferentially admitted , might have been possible in the one man who was then addressing the new combine. Some commoner NO GREASE. watered-stock , it is said , is paying the largest dividends of any aqueous se curity in America. Ifc has no bottom whatever. Nota press , not a font of type , not even a keg of printer's ink. It is by a trust , for a trust , in trust for a beneficiary who will not allow kerosene to be used where he is because he so abhors the Standard Oil Company. It is not the DREADFUL. smallpox , typhoid fever , pneumonia , nor diphtheria that Nebraska law-makers are awed before , nor the possible ravages of those terrible disorders that make them tremble. The great calam ity , the hideous disaster , the gigantic evil that causes the average partisan to howl with wretched anguish that is , too much incorporated cash may crawl in if not fenced out by fool statutes. Just yell out "trusts" and the Ne braska legislature turns as white as slummed milk. The populists have the "trust" scare in chronic form and are emotionally insane for fear the dollar will get above the man so far that the man cannot pocket it. And many of the republicans have intermittent types of the same craziness so that they are incapable of useful service as repealing legislators. The bouuced-out- PAINED. of-the-pulpit preacher who , in the Lincoln Independent , exhorts for populistic purity among public men , laments the exposure of the condition of William V. Allen on the clay of the late electoral vote count. The aforesaid apostle of temperance thinks it very in tensely awful that Curtis should have intimated that Allen , in the senate , on that occasion was too drunk to count , or even to open and read a telegram. Who will ever believe that William Vincent Allen was ever drunk ? Will the laud- lords at any hotel in Lincoln or Norfolk ? Will Gen. Joe Hawley of Connecticut or other United States senators credit such a charge ? In proportion to LARGE RETURNS capital invested ON NOTHING. if all accounts are true the new organ of Bryauarchy at Lincoln is making bigger returns than stock in the Standard Oil Company. The wells , ' machinery , ships , pipe lines , tank cars , lands , warehouses , and general plants of the Standard Oil Company , at auction , will come nearer selling for what they are capitalized at than will the fake plants of the fake organ alluded to. The men most DIVIDENDS ON denunciatory of WINDED STOCK. dividends upon watered stocks have nothing to say against dividends on winded stocks. They make a living on aerated flabbergast which they peddle out as oratory. Money is the MONEY AND only thing which SATISFACTION , men work and struggle to get that never gives them any satisfaction until they let go of it.