THE OMAFIA ILLUSTRATED BEE. Jon 1905. Growth and Commercial Importance of the South Platte Empire " i ' ' : v - ,j : -;-..- i .. . : . . . ... i ... ...a. .lL.J... ....J.. ... . I-,- ; jnw lU ft I - ...i..:;-: . C' ' f !; IT. i- 7I 4 ill fei V' ; . ' rc J. rH V., . V-V,'''f'' '--'liN, "CDMMT5RCTA t. CLUB TO THE FRONT." THRKH dAvii tour of central and A I outhwestern Nebraska with the 1 triLrttt pxi'umion of tmAlin'n moil enterprlilntf and lubstantlal bul ness men. Including Jobbers, bankers, manufacturers and representa tives of the Live Stock exchange and packing houses of South Omaha, was a novel experience and a revelation. Under the directorship of B. J. McVann, com missioner of the Omaha Commercial club, and the guidance of Will Tetter, chair man of the trade excursion committee, the 160 live, wide-awake. Jovial and sometimes boisterous commercial tourists, comfortably housed In eight Pullman sleepers, passed out o the Burlington station on an Ideal Nebraska spring morning, while the siren whistle attached to the locomotive blew a gruesome goodby and the superb Flnst regiment band of Wlsner played "We Won't Go Home 1111 Morning." And the next day It rained, and the day after the next day It rained off and on, but there was no break In the procession of rd, white and blue umbrellas marching double file and no Intermission for the blue coated band or the yellow-coated and whlte-beavered minstrels and the giant Bcotch Highlander In full costume, who marched In single file playing "Auld Lang Syne" on his bngplpes, while the boys that followed on the flanks of the outlandish show blew shrill toy whistles that had been distributed gratis by the South Omaha tourists, and the little girls and big girls on both flanks, decorated promiscuously with ribbons and badges, played "catch as catch can" In the shower of candles projected by Omaha's Inimitable pltcljer, Dave O'Brien. So much on the score of the grotestque and descriptive. Passing from the picturesque to the objective, the trade excursion was admitted jn all nan la to be, a great object lesson and a phenome nal success. Welcome Along; the Way, At Milford, Seward, York, Stromsburg, Aurora, Hastings, Holdrege, MrCook, Sut ton, Clay Center, Geneva, Dorchester and Crete special efforts were made to enter tain the excursionists, and the population turned out almost enmasse. Among the surprises of the excursion were the auto mobile rides to which members of t-s ex cursion were treated over pavt-1 streets ind excellent roadways. Thr was notably :he rase at Hastings, wose people justly eel proud of their Ublic Improvements ind public buildings. The climax of en tertainment was reached by the FJks" club ove feast at Hastings, and the demonstra tion that greeted the excursionists with a lalvo of artillery and a brass band at Geneva, and the great popular turnout at Dorchester. . It was a continuous ovation from the Platte valley to the valley of the Blue, and from the plains of central Nebraska to the valley of the Republican. Everywhere the excursionists were greeted cordially and enthusiastically, and every town vis ited bore the untnlstakeable signs of phen omenal growth and unprecedented pros perity. In every town the banks were overflowing with deposits and most of these deposits belong to the farmers, who have not only paid off the mortgages and Im proved their farms, but have money to burn, or rather to lend to the banks. Extensive preparations for a popular greeting were made at Crete, where all the fraternal lodges were lined up In the street In regalia and uniform, and the children of the public and parochial schools and the students of Doane college were out In full force. Unfortunately, the excursion train had been delayed nearly two hours, so that the train did not reach Crete until 8 p. m., seriously disarranging the reception to the SCENE AT SEWARD. tisappointed excursionists as well as the people of Crete. To make good a part of the program Postmaster Wells, who Is also editor of the Crete Vldette; Mr. Bowlby, editor, of the Crete Demoorat, and their associates In the committee treated the excursionists with carriage drives about the city and entertained them at their homes. Beauties of Nebraska. It would take a master of word painting to portray Nebraska as it presented itself in the full glory of its verdure to the Omaha tourists. Never has Nebraska left such a profound Impression upon the minds of those whose eyes beheld a continuation of great cultivated fields of grain and rich pastures, with their numerous herds of horses, cattle and sheep, representing more productive wealth than all the mines of the Rocky mountain states. It was not at all surprising to learn that lands in York, Butler, Seward and Polk counties, which are regarded as among the most fertile of the state, have doubled and trebled in value within the last six years, but it seemed almost Incredible that the lands Id the Republican valley that were regarded as almost worthless without Irri gation, and did not command more than from $3 to 15 an acre six or seven years . ago, were today in active demand at 5 . ... .. Yz. mm . - . . . ;.: ' . :.r" .... .i.-rr voav. A ' Irak, ARTHUR METZ TAKES A DRINK. to $40 per acre, and even at a higher price (n some localities. As a natural sequence of this marvelous change, due chiefly to the change in cli matic conditions that have revolutionised agriculture in the semi-arid region, is the unex&mplod growth and prosperity visible .... r .i jjhiSj ft 5' Q$W-lr- ihz - C- DISTRIBUTING CANDY AND SOUVENmS AT YORK. PARADE AT SUTTOJf. Gossip and Stories About People of Prominence ICS Department Commander for Iowa. IENATOR 3. H. HARPER of Ot-. tumwa, who was elected depart ment commander of the Iowa Grand Army of the Republic at 1 the Oskaloosa encampment. Is the senior member of the Arm o( Harper at Mc Intyre company, a wholesale hardware, Arm of Ottumwa. He Is now serving his first term in the state senate. His service dur ing the civil war reaches over a period of three years and seven months, at the close of which he held the position ef captain. A Noted Sailor and Explorer v-.j ...-- , ..f. f - x , -v i. ' ' 1 ' - V! 1 J- ' I : v . ? i?" - V -v . ' . ivi1 t" ... " ' . - - . : r t A r' 'I Mr. Harper was born in Taylorsvllle, O., April 23, 1843, and ten years later came to Ottumwa, la. He enlisted in the Thirty sixth Iowa Infantry August 2, 1862, at the age of 19, and was later transferred to the Forty-sixth United States cavalry In June, 163. He was promoted to a lieutenancy and later promoted to. captain and was mus tered out In February, 186G. after a service of three years and seven months. In civil life Mr. Harper has held a prominent posi tion In the state. He engaged In the hard '"ware business in Ottumwa in 1868 and has remained in that business ever since. He is now the senior member ot the Arm of Harper & Mclntyre company. In 1900 Mr. Harper was a presidential elector and the year following was elected to the state senate, which position he still continues tq hold. Mr. Harper's opponent for the posi tion of department commander of the Grand Army of the Republic was P. A. Smith, editor of the Scranton (la.) Journal, and while the campaign for the position was somewhat spirited It was conducted without bitterness. Head of A. O. V. W. In Nebraska. O. J. VanF)yke of Shelton, Neb., who was recently elected to be grand master of the Ancient Order of United Workmen for' Ne braska, Is a native of Pennsylvania, and is 60 years of age. He was born at Harris ville and lived there until he was U years of age, when he removed to Nebraska, bringing with him a wife and two children. He took up a homestead near Shelton and lived on It some years. Anally removing to the town to engage in business. In 1884 he became a member of the Ancient Order of United Workmen, and two years later was appointed a deputy for the state, which position he Ailed for seventeen years, re signing becaune of his wife's health, which demanded his care. He was elected to be head of the order In the state at South Omaha after a most spirited contest. Fltahasjh l.re and Knnston. During his visit to Hartford. Conn., in April last. In the interept of the Jamestown exposition, the late General Fltshugh Lee related the circumstances under which he first met Fred Funston in Cuba. Just be fore the. Maine was blown up General Ieo received many threats that he would be killed and was in daily fear of his life. Soon after being warned of a plot to slay Mm the American consul got one of Ins worst scares In his life. lie was alone In his office when the door opened and one of the worst looking faces he had ever seen looked In at him. The man had long hair, unkempt beard, and a gaunt appearance. His hat was full of hole. shoes about all gone, and he had no clothing apparently but a linen duster. artillery, and wanted to go back to the United States. "He said he was from Kansas and had enough of the Cubans. I told him he was taking his life In his hands by coming into the Spanish lines and if he was caught they would make quick work of him as a spy. "He said he didn't care. I was satisfied he was telling the truth and sent him out for a bath and hair cut. When he came back in a new suit ot clothes you wouldn't have recognized him as the same man. I got him aboard a steamer the next day without arousing any suspicion. He landed safely in the United States. That man was General Funston, who captured Aguinaldo." Shrewdness of Morgan. George C. Thomas, one of the leading Agures in the Philadelphia house of the Morgans, tells a story which Illustrates the shrewdness of J. P. Morgan. ' Mr. Thomas' daughter was married not long ago and a day or so before the ceremony there came to her father's ofllce a paste board box wrapped In coarse, brown paper, broken at two of the corners, tied merely with twine, but distinguished among its fellows by the address, which was In Mor gan's own bold handwriting. Investigation brought to light that It carried a pearl necklace for the bride-to-be worth any where from $1,500 to $2,000. The sender had properly thought that the unnoticed was. after all, safer In transit than the parcel advertised as valuable by registry and wax seals. The nnardinn nf "tinnier Rrown." . More than any other comic-supplement character, reports Everybody's magazine, "Buster Brown" has made a hit. A lawyer1 and two secretaries are said to be em ployed constantly by Mr. Outcault, his author, to keep track of the "business end" of Buster Brown, for there are Buster Brown cigars, suits, garters, stockings, belts, sweaters; there Is a successful Bus ter Brown play. And In Buster's every effort Mr. Outcault proflts. He lives at Flushing L. I., and has an Income of some t2S,00O a year. His inclinations are to the theater; .he has contributed largely to the club's an nual burlesque, and Is co-author of "Bus ter Brown" as a stage production. He served his apprenticeship to art In Paris, and returned with the regular art-student's outfit a beret, or soft cap, and a velveteen painting Jacket. To this day, In his hours f ease, when not drawing Buster Brown or royalties therefrom, he dons this cap and Jacket and strums student songs on the banjo. He Is preparing himself for the stage, or says he Is; but Is also fond or 1903, be won on the platform: "I recognize God Almighty as my boss, and by Him alene will I be guided In my every act." He is a devout Baptist, teaches a Sunday school class and over the desk in his office are the lines: "For the cause that needs assistance, for the wrong that needs re sistance, and for the future In the distance, all the good that I can do." Mayor Weaver was born In England forty-two years ago and was brought to Philadelphia by his parents In 1869. By hard work he gained an education and now stands in tiie front rank of the legal fraternity. He also is considered to be one ot the best dressed men In the city. He approached General Lee cautiously, and btt, tu an(1 takes his children to the wild LA TIC OAPTATW It. F. RWTrTOIJr fWWWE, KeTk the latter Instinctively grasped his revolver. "If that fellow had once put his hand undor Ms duster I am positive I would have shot Mm without waiting for a word," said Gen--vjal Lee. "I as satisfied he had been hired to come and klU me. When he aproached to a speaking distance he astonished me by asking In good English If I was General Lee. I told him I was and asked him who he was. He said he belonged to the Cuban army, was General Gomel's chief of parts of Flushing and instructs them In the' mysteries of "Three Old Cat," as he used to play It In Ohio when he was a "Buster" boy himself. Philadelphia's Reform Leader. Mayor John Weaver of Philadelphia, who Is Just now irobitnent In connection with the gas lease. Is a talented lawyer. While he was district attorney he procured con vlctlons In many election fraud cases and when elected to the mayoralty In February, So Waste Material. Secretary Cortelyou tells of an English man who was out west in early days and fell in with a long train of prairie schoon ers. The leader of the caravan announced that he and his fellow emigrants were going to found a town, having everything that was needed and nothing that was un necessary. "We won't have any waste," he said. "Thero iRn't a person In our party who won't do some Important duty in the new town." The Englishman pointed to an old and feeble man with a bent back and a long, thin, white beard. "But that very old man there," he said, "he can't possibly, be 6f any use to you. can he?" "Oh, yes," said the lender. "We'll open our new cemetery with him." ltoal Tips. Some of the European monarchs give very large tips whenever they travel, and others, on the contrary, ar quite nig gardly. Emperor Nicholas ot Ruxrla is the most liberal In this respoct. During his brief visit to Frame three years ago he spent flii.oro on tips to servants, und almost as much on presents to officials and others. King Edward of England Is jtot quite so generous, but as he travels a good deal, both within his own realm and abroad, het Is obliged to lay aside each year $.12,000 as an allowance fur tips. Em peror William of Germany In much more generous In a foreign country then at home and during his recent visit to ("owes, England, he sppnt not less than $10.i0 on tips. Of the remaining rulers some spend lessons hie sums and others very little, but probably quite us much as they can afford. Boyhood of (.rent Men. One tint day in the summer of 1&44, re lates the Chicago Tribune, two 10-ytar-old bos who hod been Ashing Hi a stream near a little town in sum hern New York became hungry and weut to a farmer's bouse to get sumething lo eat. Thfc farmer's wile five Uium a bountiful supply of bread and milk and rtfmxxi U take any pay for It. One ef the hoys merely said: Thank you, ma'am." But the otiicr wiped his mnutb on Ms coat sleeve, huwetl. and w rented his grsxttuda at greater length. "To say that you have conferred a great favor up on as. madam." he said, "and that we are etirieepondlngfy fratefuL con veys the idea, feebly. Usre we were, mOed from home and suffering from hunger, having caught nothing in the little stream in which we were fishing. You have sup plied our wants most generously. Out of the abundance ot your larder youvhave ministered to the wants of two hungry strangers, and with a hospitality rare In deed in these days of sordid greed, you have refused to accept any remuneration for the same. It is scarcely necessary to assure, you, madam, that we shall always hold you in grateful remembrance, and should it ever be in our power to requite the favor, you may depend upon us doing so with the liveliest satisfaction. Madam, we thank you." "Good land, little boy!" exclaimed the farmer's wife, "what I done for you wasn't worth all that, but I like to hear you talk. You'll be a big man some day." Her foresight was unerring. The boy grew up to be Chauncey Mitchell Depew, the greatest after-dinner orator of his day. in the towns between Hastings and Mo Cook a section which ten years ago was impoverished and almost depopulated. At McCook, In the very center of the rainless belt, new churches, school buildings, busi ness blocks and dwelling houses have been erected within the last three years that would do oredlt to any city in the west of ten times Its population. At Indlanola, Cambridge, Arapahoe, Oxford and Hold rege the growth was almost as great as at McCook. In some respects Holdrege had ninny surprises In store for members of the excursion who had not visited the place since 1900. Notable Industrial Establishments. Most notable of all were the Industrial establishments whose existence was not even dreamed of by the commercial repre sentatives of Omaha. This Includes not only the large flouring mills at Milford, Seward, McCook, Stromsburg, Holdrege and Crete, but the. various manufacturing concerns, notably hydraulic cement block factories at Sutton, two incubator fac tories at Clay Center that are reputed to be the largest In the world, and a patent Index tag factory at Exeter that supplies the United States navy, War and Treasury departments, New York Central railroad, Westlnghouse Air Brake company and many great banking houses and railways In the United States and Canada. All In all. the trade extension flyer can not fall to have a salutary effect In draw ing Into closer mutual friendly relations the merchants of Omaha and their patrons in the state. E. ROSE WATER. Reasons for a Divorce Mrs. Julia 8. Grubbs of Lawrenceburg, Ind., aged 70 years, recently obtained a divorce from her husband, , Hamilton A. Grubbs, aged 76 years. This aged oouple were school lovers, and after a long courtship were united in marriage' nearly a half century ago, and have reared six children. Mrs. Grubbs alleged In her pe tition for divorce that over twenty years ago, after a family quarrel, Mr. Grubbs abandoned her as a wife, and although they have lived in the same houpa ever since they have lived apart. Mr. Grubbs selected a front room In the eastern portion of the old log house, and, placing his belongings there, requested the members of the family never to enter it. Although Mr. and Mrs. Cirubhs have eaten at the same table during, these many years they never spoke to each other, but were served by their children during the meal. A few months ago the last effort was made by members of the family and relatives to bring about a reconciliation, and, as It proved unavailing, the family decided to separate. This daughter dealred to Join her brothers In Kansas and keep house for them, and the mother, not wishing to remain alone with her aged husband, asked the court for a legal separation, and she will accompany her daughter on her west era visit. Commercial Club Gallantry ! ." - .- - . " V;''i v ' - c '3 . . v ST''. --Y...'-i- A t X taih. tjutt or FAntnrLix