Men Who Manage Great Railroad Systems D E' V E L O P -MR NTS In the Rock Inland system's gen eral scheme have been no rapid of late that the public has hardly been able to keep tip with the movements Of the magnate In con trol. From a compara tively conservative road, with wa territory con siderably circumscribed. It lina been developed as If by magic Into the most extensive system In the world. Line after line has been taken Into the system, until its map, which not ao very long ago didn't require more than four or five tatea, now takes In the greater part of ' the" union, and "The Rock Island States of Amer ica" has more signifi cance than a mere ad vertising catch phrase. The mun who has been given the active man agement of the affairs of this extensive system hns doveloed almost as rapidly as the plans of the road'a owners. Ben Wlnehell has long been known In railroad cir cles and to a certain narrow element of the railroad r patronizing public as a man of ap- parent ability, affable, genial and pushing. He ROBERT W. R A hiwl no.,-. K.I.I XJIIAOIVA 1J1V ery prominent position with a big road, but had had an Immense amount of training on "Jerk-water" lines, where he had all kinds of chances to prove hla executive ability. He has apparently proved It, for he was recently called to Chicago to become third vice president and general manager of the Rock Island system Thl gives him more power than Is vested In any other railroad gen- eral manager In America, and that means In the world. s" Benjamin 1 Wlnehell Is one of those men In railroad circles whose rise has been steady. Mr. Wlnehell first entered the rail road service In 18TS as a clerk In the office of th general superintendent of machinery on the Hannibal A BL Joseph. From 1875 to 1877 he was a clerk In the auditor's de partment of the same road, and from November 17, 1877, to December 81 of the next year, when he was promoted to be chief clerk in the office of tho general freight and ticket office. dn January 1, 1S79, he was made assistant general pas senger agent of the Atchison A Nebraska railroad, which position he held until March 11, 1880. From April 1 to June 1 of that year he was chief clerk In the general passenger department of the Kansas City, Fort Bcott A Gulf railroad and the Kan sas City, Lawrence & Southern. Mr. Wlnehell was then mode assistant ajcfieral passenger and ticket agent of the same roads, which position he held until June 1. 1882. He became assistant general passenger and ticket agent of the Kansas City, Fort Bcott & Memphis and the Kan sas City, Memphis A Birmingham rail roads, and was In this position until May 1, 1895. For the next year he was general passenger and ticket agent of the Union i'aclrie, Denver A Gulf railroad and the Leadville. Denver & Gunnison. He after ward resigned this position to accept a similar one with the 'Frisco, of which he became general passenger agent, with headquarters at St. Louis. Subsequently he became general manager of the Colorado A Southern at Denver and developed his executive ability In all departments. He afterward returned to Kansas City to the Fort Scott line as chief executive officer nd when the 'Frisco consolidation waa effected he went to St. Louis as vice presi dent and general manager of the 'Frisco system. The Rock Iwland appointment will not disturb his relations as vice president of the 'Frisco system In general charge of Its affairs and he will be frequently called to St Louis from Chicago, where his head quarters are now located, on 'Frisco busi ness. Mr. Wlnehell will have entire charge vt the affairs of the new Rock Island sys tem In the west, having also special charge of the deve'opment of the commercial in terests of the system. In the resignation of Robert W. Baxter from the superintendent of the Nebraska division of the Union Pacific, the employes feel that they have lost a warm friend. AJr. Baxter was a man who was ever ready and willing to listen to any employe who came to him, and the general impression anions them is that he always gave them good advice. He was always In clo?e touch with his men. Mr. Baxter was born In 1851 and entered the railway service when but 10 years of ge, working under his father as a mewen gcr boy. He served in almost every capacity up to roadmaster, and prior to August, lsso, he was euperlnten dent of the Wyoming di vision of the Union Pacific. His term of 1 J V V J. '' ' I .. ... ' ' f'-:' ') " . v . .. . XTER. LATE SUrERlXTEXnF.NlT VP. 1SJON, UNION PACIFIC RAILWAY. service hue been continuously with tha Union Pacific with but one brief interval, when from April to Eeptember, 1891, he was superintendent of the midland division of the Baltimore & Ohio, located at Newark, O. Later he received an offer from the Union Pacific and accepted It, belngent to Portland as superintendent of the Oregon division.'- This was In September, 1891, and he remained In the far northwest until June of the following yeur. For a short time Mr. Baxter was stationed at Laramie, and he and Bill Nye became lifelong friends. They were always seen on the stree'.s together, and every time they could arrange it they took their meals together. If Nye was not at Baxter'a house a visitor was always sure to find Baxter at Nye's home. Mr. Bixter was acting general superin.entlent of the Oregon dlvMon for two months in 1892, and later in 1891 he became the general agent for the receivers of the Union Pacific at Port land, Ore., which position lie held until 1896, when he became general superlntend- WILT.TAM A. DEUEL. WHO SUCCEEDS R W. BAXTER AS ?PfRIN,'K.Nn5NT NEBRASKA DIVISION, UNION PA CIFIC RAILWAY. ent of the Nebraska Uvitlon and. removed to Omaha. His stay of ten years In this city has been full of pleasure, and although a very busy rnun he always had. time, to stop long enough to listen to anything called to his atten Ion He was thoroughly liked by his employes and they are sjrry to see him go, as he will be inifsed. One of the yardmen ur.der Mr. Baxter has this to eay: "It didn't make any difference where I met Bob (he waa always Bob wl h everybody), ho milter how I was dressed, he always knew me and had a klnl word for me. Hie head never got large, and I thick If he was the president of the United Etates he would sliil wear the same size hat." MORE William A. Deuel, who succeeded to the place made vacant by the resignation of Robert W. Baxter, has been in charge of the Colorado division, with headquarters in Denver. Mr. Deuel is a very close friend of the higher officials of the Union Pacific ! 1 t it r r i f HE?,r'.,VR.H0. 8l'COEEI8 W. A. DEUEL AS SUPERINTENDENT COLORADO DIVISION, UNION PACIFIC RAILWAY. and Is almost as popular with his men as was Mr. Baxter. A man whom any workman Is not afraid to ap proach and one who lis tens to what Is to be said and then proffers) his advice, which is al ways the very best, and If the man seeking as sistance heeds what Is fold to him he will profit by it. Mr. Deuel was born November 30, 1842, In Niagara county, New York, and entered the railroad service In Au gust, 1866, an a brake man on the Union Pa cific. In November, 1882, he became assistant .superintendent of the Nebraska division, re maining In this capacity until November, 1888, ..when he was made su perintendent of the first division of the Union Pacific, Denver & Gulf, with headquarters in Denver. . December 1, 1891, he became super intendent o'f the Colo rado division of the Union Pacific, Mr. Deuel's residence still remaining In Denver, but he having charge of a different portion of the road. This position he held up until Octo ber 15, when Mr. Bax ter's resignation took effect, and on that day his appointment to the superintendency of the Nebraska di vision was announced and he has pre pared " to remove ' his , family . to Omaha. " Besides being superintendent of the Colorado division of the Union Pacific, Mr.' Deuel was also president of the Denver Depot company, which Is controlled by the various roads for use as) a union depot. This position Mr. Deuel had to resign, but In accepting the position as superintendent of the Nebraska division he also became superintendent of the union depot at this point. On October 15, the day on which Mr. Bax ter's resignation took effect. President Burt announced the appointment of Henry' C Ferris, then assistant superintendent of the Nebraska division, to succeed to the su perintendency of the Co'.orado division made vacant by the transfer of W. A. Deuel to Omaha and the Nebraska division. The ap pointment came as a surprise to the many friends of Mr. Ferris, as he Is a nephew of the late general manager of the Union Pa cific, E. Dickinson, who recently resigned to go with the Orient as second vice presi dent. Mr. Ferris had only been a resident of this city for the laBt two years; and during all this time it was as assistant superintendent of the Nebraska division. Henry C. Ferris was born in Sandusky, O., in 1863, and after attending the Cleve land public schools was graduated from the Stevens institute in 1888 with the degree of M. E. He obtained, a position with tha Musslllon Bridge company and later went with the Toledo, Columbus & Cincinnati railway as superintendent and engineer of maintenance of way. This position he held until he was made superintendent of the western division of the Toledo & Ohio Cen. tral, and at this time his headquarters were In Columbus. On April 10, 1902, he received an offer from the Union Pacific to come to Omaha as assistant superintendent of the Nebraska division and he immediately ac cepted. Mr. Ferris has been an efficient -manager during his stay here in connec tion with the Nebraska division, and it Is believed by his associates that it was his careful business ways which gained for him his recent promotion. A Bachelor's Reflectidns Maybe if women were not so busy with their mouths in another way they would really learn to smoke. When a woman says a man treats her brutally she means she can't make him give In In an argument even by crying. When a woman brags about a thought ful child she has she means he forgot to pull its tail out of the cat that morning. The man who got up the theory that you) can save money by being married must have been the same idiot who started the flying machine Idea. Nothing makes a man feel to queer when the minister calls as to hear his wife tell him all the signs their father has no'.lced In the children of a very religious sp rit. New York Press. As at the Zoo Miss Pepprey When you speak of your "man" you mean your "valet," I supposeT Cholly Aw, yass. You wouldn't have me call him me valet, would you? Miss Pepprey Oh, no; under the circum stances I think "keper" would be a belts word to use. Philadelphia Press A r i a