6r The Conservative * OBITUARY. David Brown. One by one the pioneers of the state do- depart for another unknown country. Those who camb to unknown Nebraska in the decade from 1850 to I860 may now bo counted in as little time as it took to count the cabins of Otoo coun ty in 1855. Among the best typo of the earliest settlers of this state was David Brown of Nebraska City , a citizen , a teacher and an exemplar of the homely and substantial value of truth , honesty and a blameless life. Among us ho lived more than forty years without doing an intentional wrong to any fellow mortal. Ho was temperate , industrious and prosperous without being fanatical , exacting or proud. Ho worked because ho joyed in work , and the results it gave in satisfactions for himself , his family , his friends and the community. His death , which came on Wednesday , March 6th , 1901 , was an irreparable loss to family , friends , city , county , and state , for ho labored well and loyally for all of them with an intensity of purpose which continued to his dying breath. His lost minutes confirmed his courage and consecrated the end of his useful life as a lesson , in bravely and tranquilly meeting inevitable death. Business affairs , letters to friends , solacing words to wife and sou and brother , were calmly attended to and with wonderful lucidity of mind. Min utes , in which is given a lesson so solemn ly and sweetly inculcated and so iu- offaceably registered on the memory , are counted as equal , in wisdom and sin cerity , to entire years of ordinary life. "For the tongues of dying men Enforce attention like deep harmony. " The. following letter is taken from the Omaha Bee and State Journal of March 11.1901 : SYRACUSE , Nob. , March 10. To the Editor of The Bee : A large contingent of the Nebraska legislature maroliiug through the falling raindrops to the home of their colleague , the late Hon. David Brown , and laying him away under the sod , covered by the falling snow , is typical of the purity of their late comrade's life. A more beautiful portrayal of the character and of the life that has just gone , out could not be portrayed than by a letter written by David Brown , while in the legislature , to his friend , J. Sterling Morton , upon the recent death of his son , Carl , which , thanks to Mrs. David Brown and Joy Morton , I am permitted to present to the public , feeling that the people are entitled to this glimpse of the sterling character of our late representative. The following is the letter : LINCOLN , Jan. 8 , 1901. J. Ster P ling Morton : My Dear Sir I do not I know what to say , but cannot keep silent. I beg you do not lot this over whelm you not to give up ; there is much yet for you to do for which no one is so well fitted as you. The other boys will draw oven nearer to you ; your friends and neighbors with a new ten derness will hold up your hands. Can not you spare him , her baby to his mother , when you still have three ? Even now , with one gone , who is so blessed in his children as you ? Other children have trampled their parents' hearts , wasted their substances , remorselessly dragged in the dust their honored names. Yours have kept close to you in honor and love and through the training they have received and the heritage of excellent qualities trans mitted to them have added to your lustrous fame. In the companionship of the three dear sons who remain and the grateful memory of the precious one who has penetrated the mysteries of that eternity wo are uearing can you not find consolation and renewed courage ? "With tears in my eyes and grief for you in my heart , I ask if you are not wonderfully blessed , even though terri bly bereaved ? And over us all is the pitying eye of the Great Ruler. May He comfort and strengthen you is the ever earnest prayer of your sincere friend , DAVID BROWN. Theron Nye. An eminent and useful pioneer of Dodge county has just passed away. Of him the Fremont Tribune says : "The death of Theron Nye removes from the citizenship of Fremont a man who was for many years a conspicuous figure. Mr. Nye was one of the earliest settlers of the town and county. In the pioneer days and for many years there after he was prominently identified with the material , political and social in terests of the community. He did much to build up all of them. To such hardy and sturdy pioneers much is due for the substantial foundations laid for what has grown into a thriving , intelligent , progressive little city , one of the best in the state and the west. He did his part well and the world is better for his having lived. " The builders are going out from among the temples of peace and plenty of which they were the architects and founders. THE DEVELOPMENT OP RAILROAD POLICY. [ Prom The Railway and Engineering Re view , Chicago , March 2. 1001. ] Elsewhere in this issue will be found extracts from an address delivered by Mr. Paul Morton , vice-president Santa Fe system , before the Los Angeles , Cal. , chamber of commerce at a banquet given by that organization on Washing ton's birthday. As a declaration of railroad principles and as an exposition of the progress made in .the policy of those organizations , the address is one of the best that has been yet given. Mr. Morton's theory and it is only fair to say that ho holds it in common with the most advanced managers of railway properties is that the interests of the community are the interests of the rail road ; that the best way to increase the earnings of a railroad is to build up the community in all that tends to make it prosperous. It will bo noticed that he suggests channels of industry which will materially lessen the tonnage of the rail road , although it will add to the wealth of the community. In former days it was a very general policy to take as much possible of the raw material out of a country in order that the greatest amount of finished product might be hauled in. This naturally resulted in an increased burden upon the people , but that was a matter to which railroads were or seemed to be comparatively in different. The newer policy , and the more correct one , is to foster the consoli dation of products , which , while it re sults in a somewhat reduced tonnage , so far as particular commodities are con cerned , has the effect of increasing the capacity of the community in the direction - tion of larger outlays and thereby creat ing a traffic which would be otherwise lacking. Mr. Morton sees no particular danger to the people through the rapid consoli dation of railways which has been going on for the past two years. On the con trary , he inclines to the opinion that through the economies thereby effected transportation charges will be reduced and a direct benefit to the people result therefrom. He refutes the very preva lent idea that it is only the direct ship pers that are interested in railway rates. The cost of transportation is a tax which , under our present civilization , is paid by every one. None can escape it. The last consumer must , of necessity , bear his portion of the burden , and it follows , therefore , that whatever tends to lighten this load directly benefits the entire people. The consolidation of railways will in evitably result in reduction of charges and at the same time , as Mr. Morton points out , as inevitably abolish unequal and discriminative charges. No one thing can more thoroughly demoralize commerce than a fluctuating and unequal - equal scale of rates , and anything that tends to bring about a reform in this particular will result in a direct benefit to the entire commercial interests of the country. It may be a question whether , as com pared with pooling , the unification of railroad interests will best accomplish this result. Many students of the ques tion will disagree with Mr. Morton in this particular. It is a very general no tion that the interests of the country and of the American people will be beat conserved by the maintenance of a large \ ' >