TIIE OMAHA' SUNDAY BEEt SEPTEMBER 2, . 1903. Railroad Old PuMi Magician of the Overland - vf.ht business hour since the dlvl- change, a servant of fortune, student of way. It had a lot of things It should not v I T7 1 derid declarations ott tha 17th ult. times -and changes, a cold, bard, money- hare had, and had net a lot of thing- It I jy j I Wall street haa discussed Edward getting machine no more." should have had. Moat of the branches 1, " I H. fiarrtman end hla railroads. That Is the Harrlman handicap. He was were mere suckers. Huntington bad It at I jJ The dlscuMlon of the man end born In the east, educated In the east, his mercy through the control of the Pan ' hia methods has been International, for graduated Into the stock exchange with a Francisco route. Gradually this disability that matter, but the Wall street debate haa lot ' eastern money In his pocket, had all was overcome. Borne branches were sold, been particularly keen and searching ni( friends In the east, was full of the others traded. Control of the Oregon lines highly complimentary on the bull side and " f 'specialisation and high was finally clinched In 1899, securing at the reverse on Jlhe bear. slds.. Between the envelopment." Hbhorred the eKtravagant least one Paclflo outlet, two Interested estremes Is a large field for "ffulon of energy that Is the natural From this dates the visible working of dispassionate consideration of the president birthright of the true westerner-ln fact, the Harrlman railway policy. For. from , of the Pacific railroads, and therein the w" WPted by n unkind provl- tn. 0UtMt, u was K. H. Harrlman that ran ; Wall Street Journal takes position to view denp ? 1 on and "n"11 ' th Union Pacific The policy was drastic, the man, his methods and his alms. ' westerner with Definitely, he committed the Union Paclflo The Journal review Is cornprehen.lv, and Whom he "Z cnntra ted growth Having i... . . - obtained his terminals at Portland, Omaha . , ? Z . K.eewrt. . 0g6tn, he made the Union Pacific a T ,. i y.t l Mtt.rn AA d,d hhi "0t bM" ,h '" between those terminals. He ' . ,i " Chapters the tsuMt two years before Colli P. Hunting. r,,ke)I tn, antagon8m of tne we,tern press review follows: ton and he came to blows. His threat to and p,.0ple by refusing to diffuse the $ , whoy fc branch of the Oregon Short Line Btrer,gth and energy of the Union Paclflo i Mtai-rias.es. the Has. from Ogden Into Ban Francisco struck the ln tne building of branch lines In flew ter- . In the early spring of 189 the new board "kings of California" about the same way ntory. His gospel was that the Union ef Union Paclflo directors was elected, and, that A sight-seeing trolley line (round pacific, as a railroad, must devote Its ener- r down about the middle of the list, appeared Windsor castle would strike the toyal tarn- (e8 t0 becoming the most perfect main , the name of B. H. Harrlman. In- such a lly. Mr. Harrlman hated to build that una 0f traffic from the Missouri river west, ' list the name was unimportant . The names line tt . was such a waste of time! He ana must trust to alliance or control of of James Stillman, Marvin Hughltt. presl- dropped It when C. P. Huntington died. If thr lines for Its supply of traffic, and dent of the Northwestern! Roswell Miller, he had been the least bit of a pioneer at its nw development. ' president of the St. Paul; George J. Gould, heart he Would have shoved it through In All energies were bent to the Improve- presldent of the Missouri Pacific, over- eighteen months. If he had. his engineers ment of the nnon paclflo main line, and shadowed It The only question In men's would probably have dug cuts right tne purchase of stocks of connecting com- tnlnds was whom this Harrlman rep- through the heart of the new Nevada gold panics. No money was spent on- brnnches. : resented. fields 1 Which only goes to prove that no The mileage of the Union Paclflo in 1S99 , Yet In the next year E. H. Harrlman mftn everything. was actually greater than ln 1906. , was chosen chairman of the execuUve com- " ' ""necessary to tell the Walt street To Bhow at once the method - mlttee. He stepped at once from the ranks touhl, how "'T1? m t0 the n,xxU of thl" P0"0 th and assumed the power of command. In a blw, nce then wIWi J. J. Hill, J. P. Mor- following compilation Is made, being a com- community of interests railroad there is FW1 21" t X t par,,on of the rMuIt,, on th' whoIe 'y,tern always a mind above .11 other minds. In JTXltJ' n th 1S" and ln 1V1 ... . , . . - Gould, Btuyvesant Fisn ana almost every ,- ' ?Je?J. 0t !- with Whom he has been in con- Mlleag TsM Ts '; .J . ,l . .v Uct. Neither Is It necessary to go further Gross 2'5?1'1! 'S?1 li? In the eight years Intervening the policy fof tn rMU,on. jf Ms ambitions crossed Expense, and taxes W.9W.733 X.Kim of the Union Pacific has been the policy of tMn ht f()rgot nbout th,lrll, If nl, mood Net tjo.jn7.T70 )13.M?.8 f Harrlman. It has been a darin. prompted he did not hesitate to Insult Other Income 7,767,491 1.729.623 fearless, confident policy. Without bound- em-in fact, he did not know he was . tMwtw miqn less prosperity In the country at large It ioint it. wheh ha ar)(1 j. j. Hlll used to Chare. I'Im'S WW7I : would not have been possible. Because he gU on the Northern Securities hoard to- ' ' .. has worked hand-ln-glove with fate and gether a Wall street banker made this wise Surplus $29,201,844 $ 8,740,819 " fortune, this man has done in eight shnrt remark! The keynote of the Harrlman policy Is years a task equal to the labor of the life- "When I hear that those directors are in struck pretty clearly In this compilation. ' time of James J. Hill, lord Btrsthoona of session 1 always watch the ticker. Pro- His aim has been to Increase the surplus any other of the builders. plnqulty Is sometimes dangerous, as, for earning capacity of each mile of railroad. For E. H. Harrlman Is not a railroad Instance,. In the case of a bull pup and a He has been content to watch the Moorca, builder. He Is not a pioneer. He took the dynamite cartridge." J. J. Hill and even George J. Gould hulld- . labor off the hands of other men, Crockoi, In the matter of the declaration of the Ing new mileage for their systems. He has Stanford. Huntington, bought In a lump Union Paoifld and Southern Paclflo dlvl- ben content, on his side, to bring the sur- the life labor of these men, greater, par- dends last week he did Just v'mt one might plus earnings of his Union Pacific from , haps, than himself, and reared upon tholr expect. August 18, 1908, should have been $1,200 to over $S,400 per mile of railway. - hard-built foundations a structure of his the greatest day In the lifetime of B. H. Perhaps, indeed probably, the rights of own planning the Harrlman system. Here Harrlman. He probably Intended that It stockholders of the Union Pacific and the . , and there, In Arisona, Mexico, Oregon, he should be. It he had been a westerner, or Bouthern Pacific have been trampled upon Jlowed his lieutenants to break Into the even an easterner, with the least degree during the years of this slow building, wilderness, but for himself he followed the of tact, It would have been. Certainly It has required patience. Each ' bath blazed out by the great ploneors In his hour of triumph, however, he year the stockholders were asked to ap- . followed it and built It over anew upon a trampled upon Some small prerogatives of prove appropriations made by the directors plaft and scale of marvelous perfection. the great blind. Stupid public. Therefore, for Improvements and equipment. Almost , '. Therefore, Mr. Harrlman has missed the of course, the public forgot everything but every year they were also asked to approve . romance that clings about the names of Its own rights and what should have been purchases of stocks of other roads. It was j 'Inland Stanford, Collls P.. Huntington, a day of Harrlman triumph became a day a process of mixed methods. The growth r James J. Hlll, Lord Strathooma and the of publlo vituperation. of the Union Pacific Jtself was carried cut v rest pf the .coterie of daring men who ltd From the outset of his career as a rail- conservatively, slowK , surely, with the , the first struggling cohorts of capital and road power the policy of B. H. Harrlman least possible element of risk. The growth civilisation into the grim, forbidding wil- was pronounced. ' It followed the precepts of Its holding compay capacity was ac- dernes.. So It is that even today, If Mr. of eoonomy. At the beginning of this complished by the most daring, spectacular Harrlman were Inclined to say of the eight-year period the Union Paclflo was and danserous acts ln the history of high , . Union and Southern Paclflo, "Lo, this la just emerging from Its Ions; receivership, finance. , the work of my hands," there would be The government debt had been coin- An executive officer must be Judged by ; half a thousand men on his own payroll promised. After much opposition the bond- the results of his acts. His methods are a j Who, ln their hearts, would answer him: holders had also been satisfied, and the question of the day. His results are for all ?'It Is not yours-lt Is of the giants who stockholders of the old road had been as- time. The executive methods of E. H. Har- went before you, who plotted it all and Mstted $15 per share. The road had started rlman have been assailed at almost every i' planned it all and gave their Uvea and the on a new career with . a fair supply of step. Jame. K. Keene attacked in the v labor Of their hands to the breaking of the cash, a fair share of friendly alliances and court, his administrative methods on the . fields from which you reap the harvest, a fair volume of business offering. Southern Pacific. Financial critics, great Tou are a son of tfte New York stock ex- It was, However, a poorly compiled rail- and small, have called him a public enemy 7". ' - . ' , E. ROSeW&ter'S Last SpOCh that that man exerted while he was com- ducts while the other had cars whenever J tnander-Jnohlf waa pernicious to the ut- be called for them, (Continued from Page One.) most, so far as the freedom and Individual What the people of Nebraska and the fall of the confederacy those of us who rlht of tb PPIe ot Nebraska were con- people of the United States need is tho hv. .Jn .ilJlrv L tT.. ,!.. Tn2 the time he was commander- policy of Theodore Roosevelt for a square i wh. ha L it r.h To not wt "WW " thereafter, ft. was nothing deal-not, that they have got to depend t ... l ti but a common oil room lobbyist at Lincoln, upon any on. man. not that they have, thVW fret slavery in Another ln,Unot of tne Mme character got to depend upon any one man for gov- ,v- t. 2l;.7i!l ,,",. vL.!7' ..... .hi.. happened when a man who had betrayed ernor or president; the people must de- y. It Would be far better that we should Wg a,,,. a metnber of the leg- pend upon themselves alone. Those who : fe ,t k J ! ! b. . Ulature: who had played Into the hands would be free themselves must strike tfce .1 Wm V60Pl l T .Yn'ied BtVT; of the- gamblers of the city of Omaha wen blow. ,.; and the blacks, are to be ln the future held th. bm WM pn)iin4 to make gambling a Let me admonish you. therefore, fellow j. In the thraldom of corporate power. For felonV( wa, given an tna heIp that tn9 citixens and ladles and gentlemen, to se- there is a new species of slavery we have ri,. ciaCquers could muster and was rlously consider your Individual rights and been submitting to, gradually and slowly. ml commander ot the Department of privileges, and seriously consider the ne- It has found Its way insidiously Into every Nebraska at their Instance. That man had cesstty, the Imperative demand of the hour household almost Into our legislaUve halls, M iol(ller in tna army. He had been that every man that represents you ln pub- Into the halls of Justice, Into the executive a gpy an(j tnat ia aJ1 tne potion he ever lie life shall be your servant and nobody chamber, and Into the very capitol Itself. nw jn jt -j-et he became commander of else's servant; that he shall do Justice by It has found Its way into the hall, of con- army n Nebraska for one year as a all, do Justice to the corporations as well - Kress; It haa found It way clear up Into reward for treaohery to bis constituency. as to the Individuals, and that he shall jV the highest places In the land. and. In.ld- f history In not becuse Of special favors and bribes, !:'. lously but surely. It Is winding- the colls 1 ' "J n ow" liven ln any form whatever, disown you. V of serfdom around the American people by l""1 tb ?A Arm'ri nd J you r own w,nk t aKre8.iou. '. depriving them of the InUienabl. right miUe. wd children, you want to at once w,nk ' ve an(Toutrageous ex. to be free and to have a government by 'c thjB Puf ; ro want to stand up acton he been spe- ; the people and for the people. for Nebraska and for the nation, you want fayored wHh : Those of you. perhaps, who are not fa- u helJ M Pte this great state from your comml,Blon. : - miliar with the history of Nebraska, and nxrau control, and now la the hour. Jn concIuiion I want to read to you a '' the political history of our state, and the Tn h01" u c. because the struggle is part of th0 ,mmortal ap(cn delivered by states of the west may not be fully aware on; because these giant corporations are Abraham Lincoln at Gettysburg. It ap- cf these facts about this Insidious enemy oi content merely to have fair men in plleB funy. and f0rctbty to your present of the American people; this corporate - public office; not merely to be treated condition. It applies as much to those ltv- gregatlon . that endeavors to control our 'alrtT. honorably and Justly, but they want ng at the present time as It did to those political machinery; the machinery of all tools. living during the civil wat. It applies not parties alike, regardless ot who they may ' Instead of giving its oak and hickory In only to the grand army, but It applies to it ba the state house, they give us hasel brush every American cltlsen, whoever he may It has also got its hand; it haa got Ms and willow. Uasel brush, and willow ws be, because It Is of the utmost Importance, , ' power right Inside the Grand Army of the haye had, and, thank God, we are going to fr th next generation and for all future - Republic, and has exercised Its pewer to have at least one man ln that state house, tlme- thst the principles which we have '. Its detriment and to Its disadvantage In within the next sis months that is made 'ought for shall be preserved, and that we , the rast. and may continue to do so If the cf oak and hickory. . Of Ironwood, but haU be M "" trom aU the In""6" that Grand, Army of the Republic caa oon- t am Mi auf, about tn othert. j don.t go to enslave a people aa were the slaves tribute, in any measure, to Its enrichment want t0 poUtlca But thl, u not poI1. .. the emancipation proclamation. I and towards Its power. Thousands of you ,.. ,.m ,.. .,, , . t t..m will read Just this short extract: who have Bved with me here In Nebraska. JST ZLt f nt for 0,9 1,vlnff' rther t0 1 for more than a quarter of a century, re th' .? " tnJP0,nt- 1 d0 car dedicated here to the unfinished work that member that almost-not sv.ry-Tr.nd wh(th,r " or republicans. th9y haye one u father for u her, commander of the Grand Army ef the Re- " Jour ftttr " " mlne to " to be dedicated to the great task remslnlng i publlo was a tin-pan railroad soldier who tbat bonet me houl1 be nominated and befoM( u, ,hftt from theM honored dead . ba4 never heard a. shot Jlred out ot 1,cUdi nd whenever you find a railroad wo tak. inoreased devotion to the cause rebel gun and had never seen a rebel sol- ecrat d0WB nlm- and whenever you for whlch they nere gave thelr Xllat fuu dler except to surrender to him. (Laughter) flnd ,oad republican Is put up. let us measure ot devotion, that we here highly , That Is a fact. And why was he made SoM blm nd tof ouc ,at th people rule. reaolve that the dead shall not have died t a-rand commander-in-chief T I will go right (Applause.) Up with the people and down n Valn, that the nation shall, under God, back. I want to give you the history, for with the corporations, I say. in the political have a new birth of life and freedom; and ; I have got It In writing, certified to by ovrnment of our country. (Applause.) that the government of the people, by the the adjutant general ot Illinois. I do not Ws have been too neglectful for the last people and for the people, shall not perish ear about naming him, because he has few years because we have been too pros- from the earth." passed out of the world here, but I simply perous. We have believed that everything I thank you for your attention. I think I want to ahow you what haa been done In was tight that happened because we were have said all that is necessary, v the past. . This man bad enlisted In IllUtol. too comfortable. But prosperity cannot al- ' for three months; had remained tn camp ways continue. Another Rockefeller TriCK the whole time, and had a good time. Just xb,re are problems before us. aa the boys all did In those days, when ths There are great disappointments before us Ths tor ot Edgar Brown, the dlscov- girls brought flowers and smiles, and Xao, It Is not possible that prosperity wlli erer f the great Meuaba und Vtrmllllon things that were agreeable to the young )Mt forever. Within the next six years; ,ron ranges, the richest and most produc- . wen that were tn camp, and then, whtn po,ibiy within the next Ave years, you tlve ln the world, Is a pitiful tals of a that three months had expired, he retired may aee ona 0f tna reverses that happen tlwart optimist who struggled upward to private life agnln and so remained for evry twenty years. Tou may see one sa- galnst heavy odds, only to suffer defeat one yesr. lton aKajn m . which the people will nave when success seemed to be within his And the- next rear he enlisted on a all they can do to take eare of theniaelvts; grasp. Brown died last week, penniless, bounty ot $3uo In the cavalry He waa and the corporations are laying In a very ln pauper's bed In a Sault Ste. Marls mustered In, at the very place where he big surplus at your expense, and how do hospital. A few years ago he and hla . had been mustered the first time, and re- they get ItT By the subserviency ot your partner, Merrltt owned the two ranges matned there again about three months, publlo servants! By the subserviency of which were even then, in the early days and then he was "ordered to Cumberland tha men that represent you In the legis- of their development, valued at $13,000,- - Gap. )n Kentucky, which was the boundary iature; the men that serve you In the state 000. To tell how the owners lost their ' .line between the rebel and union forces, bouse and on the bench) They have sue- control Is but to repeat another chapter In There f was sent out on a scouting ex- ceeded for years In debsuchlng and oor- the long story in which John D. Rocke- . 'pedltlon for some-poultry and game, and ruptlng your public servants by. a whole- feller Is always the dominant factor. he encountered the first rebel force he 'bad sale distribution of bribes called passes. Brown was a Pcnnsylvanlan born, and. I .ever seen. He threw ud his hands and They have succeeded In bribing them in served with brsvery as an officer In a . surrendered and was taken to Richmond other ways, by favoring- one against the Keystone regiment during the civil war. as a prisoner.' and there all of his entire other.' They have succeeded in building up He knew something of the Iron butilness, military career came to an end. Thst is one community and ' Impoverishing the and tbat knowledge led him eventually - . the history of that man. Then he became other. They bare succeeded la making ono into proipectlng In the Iron regions of the . .grand, commander Tf be Grand Army of business man nourish, while they made northern Michigan peninsula. There he - the United States, and wviy? Because at another business man perish. Side by side fell In with his future partner, C. C. Mcr . that . time the Union Pacific railroad these men were ln business, honorably and rltt, and together they made their way to wanted to carry the Grand Army from fairly, and yet one waa prospering con- the bead of Lake Superior, and thence up Omaha to San Francisco, and they wanted stantly and the other could make no bead- into the barren, hilly region to the north, to have an Influential man who could in- way, and when you made inquiry Into the where the physical features gave promise dues the Grand Army to locate Its reunion reason, you found that It was because the of rich ore deposits. It took but a curacy In San Francisco, where the railroad rate, one - had special rates, special privileges, survey to prove the correctness of their were so heavy and where they could reap enjoyed drawbacks and rebates, while the belief. The next step was the develon- one hundred or two hundred thousand clear other had to pay full rates, or could not ment of the property. The ore Itself, which troat out ot the veniurs .qjUJm iufliMoc fV ft car to move big commodities or pro- uy n the surface la a remarkably pur. on account of the Northern Pacific panic, the recent dividend episode and many other things. His connection with the Equitable Life Assursnce society, his alleged stock market affiliations, his political life have furnished texts for moralists of every grade and caliber. Tet these things are hardly germane to the central question: "What has E. H. Harrlman done for his country, his followers and his railways?" For the west his policy has created a new highway from the lakes to' the Paclflo a highway hardly second to the great arteries of traffic from the Atlantlo to the lakes. He has undoubtedly brought a greater measure of prosperity to San Fran cisco, Salt Lake City, Omaha and all the Intermediate territory than It could have enjoyed without this highly efficient rail road highway. He haa opened little new country, but has Increased and centralised the business of the country he Inherited. For his stockholders, those who followed him through to the end, he has laid up a heritage of rich dividends today snd rich promise for tomorrow. The revenues ot the Union Paclflo and the Southern Paclflo are ample to reply to the question. For hia railways, he has brought them both from a state of poverty, decrepitude and danger to a high position among their peers. How far this work Is his and how far inevitably the result of nine 'years ot prosperity, It Is difficult to say. It Is enough to say that the growth ln strength end wealth came while the railways were In his hands. ill Old Dutch Cleanser quickly removes tho hardest crust of gtrease and grime from pots and kettles. Easily loosens and removes tho hard, blackened substances from burned pans, and keeps all kitchen utensils clean and bright. Excellent for cleaning cutlery and glassware. Old Dntrh Oanser cleanses, scours, Bcmbs and pol ishes wood and stone, tiling:, marble, painted -walls windows, etc., with less work and better aaUsactlon than any other cleaner. No acid or caustic and will not cratch. Bold in large sifting top cans at all grocers Write for handsome Fit EE. 10c Booklet III Harrlman What HextT The goal of the Harrlman ambition for the Union Paclflo and the Southern Paclflo has been practically reached. The era of danger, ot careful nursing, of painstaking economy Is psssed. Mr. Harrlman and his two Pacific railways have entered Into their heritage. Will Mr. Harrlman now change In his ways and become a second Vanderbllt, spend six months a year In .Paris, buy n racing stable of due proportions and give up the strenuous pursuit of railway power, the care and trouble of railway administra tion? Will he do as the Cables did with the old Rock Island, just let It run and enjoy his revenues ln the happy conscious ness that he has msde two great rail ways, and they owe him all they can pay himT No one believes It No one can imagine this man as the "gentleman president" of a nice, respectable and innocuous railway system out west such, for Instance, as the Northwestern, the St. Paul and the Burling ton until very recent years even If that railway Is giving him stupendous revenues year by year. The idea that this man, with his tremendous ambition, his terrific en ergy, his res'lss, tireless capacity for work, will long remain bottled up as the affluent president of an affluent and oompleted rail way strikes the west which knows him as a joke. Then what next? The answer to that question cannot yet be written. Because there surely must be an answer, the finan cial world Is full of rumors. It says thai Mr. Harrlman has used his profits tn Union Pacific to buy the St. Paul. He intends to exploit that staid, respectable, 'conven tional road as he has exploited the Union Paclflo. What he intends to do with It no on tries to guess, except that he Is going to bull r- the Pacific. It pays 7 per cent on alt ItV stock today. Perhaps he will double the stock and pay 10 per cent who knows? This Is cited but to Illustrate. Every one now knows that the Chicago X rthwest- ern Is held ln so close accord with E. H. Harrlman and the Union Paclflo that no resolution hostile to his Interests can pass Its board of directors. Every one knows also that the Illinois Central 1. within his grasp, when he wants to make a serious effort to tske It. Almost every one con cedes that a treaty of peace Is In force be tween him and the Vanderbllt Interests In New York Central. He Is a director of the Erie, the Baltimore tt Ohio, the Delaware ft Hudson and many other railroads that have nothing to do with the Union Pacific Surely the field Is wlds enough. Into what part of tt la the genius of E. H. Har rlman to be thrown? In the treasury of the Union Pacific there lies a fund of over $100,000,000 In cash and securities that are for sale at current prices. It Is to be In vested under the direction of TSL H. Harrl man. It la to create, under his guidance, new equity tor the stockholders ot the Union Pacific. What Is It to be? Glancing back over the investments made under his regime by the Union Paclflo, It Is singular to note that there are few such possibilities today as there were when these purchases were made. Northern Paclflo common at, say, 100; Southern Paclflo com mon at, say, 60; where are their duplicates In the west today? Almost every other Important system Is either, held by rival powers, or else Its shares are paying- big dividends and It Is a highly developed prop erty. The Harrlman genius for creating wealth from poverty, for building fortunes upon bankruptcy, lacks a world ln which to labor. Perhaps, therefore, he intends to fulfill a prophesy made by himself not many months ago; "We are running into an era of com petitive railroad building, just aa we have passed through an era of competitive buy ing." Perhaps ths Union Paclflo extension to Seattle is merely a beginning-. Perhaps the $40,000,000 Southern Pacific project In Mexico Is the index finger polnttng to the Harrlman future. Even the most Intimate friends ot Mr. Harrlman confess they are not certain what he Intends to do. He him self Is absolutely noncommittal. At any rate Wall street, the financial eye of the United, States, gates upon a specta cle today not particularly conducive to sound sleep at nights on the part of rail way executive officers and owners who lie within the Harrlman sphere of influence. It Is the picture of E. H. Harrlman, bereft of his pet vocation, standing amid a pile of money and capital, $100,000,000 cash, $100, 000,000 Union Pacific preferred, $100,000,090 Northwestern preferred, $60,000,000 Southern Paclflo preferred, and unlimited capacity for the Issue of bonds and sighing, aa Alexander sighed, for other worlds to conquer. state, was easily mined, but facilities for transportation were entirely lacking. Brown turned his energies to the task of Inter esting capital. A little Investigation sat isfied one of the first men to whom he turned that the properties were valuable enough to serve as ample security for the loan asked. This wise money-lender was John D. Rockefeller, who willingly loaned $1,500,. 000 to Brown and Merrltt, secured by tha claims themselves, Brown's next step wa. the construction of the Duluth. & Iron Range railroad, over which his ore was carried from the wilderness to the ore docks at Duluth and Superior. Today this line is the greatest carrier of iron ore ln the world. Negotiations were then en tered into with James J. Hlll and several associates for the sale of the property. When the deal was practically closed, and the purchasers were about to make their first payment on a purchase price that would have made Brown and Merrltt rich beyond their wildest dreams, Brown, sus pecting nothing, told of the transfer to a close associate of . Rockefeller. At once It became evident that Rockefel ler had considered his loan merely as sn entering- wedge which was to admit him to complete possession. Powerful influ ences, Brown always maintained, were im mediately set to work to obstruct, and eventually prevent the sale to Hlll and hla associates. At any rate, before Brown could enlist the support of other moneyed Interests, his notes to Rockefeller fell due, he defaulted ln payment, the mortgage was foreclosed, and the Standard Oil mag nate beeame the owner ot the richest Iron mines ln the country for a mere fractional part of their value. Within five weeks after this climax Merrltt died broken hearted. Brown's cheerful optimism en abled him to get on hla feet sgaln finan cially, and ha settled at the "Boo," where he met with some little success as a min ing broker. But It waa an uphill fight; a succession of failures led to a physical breakdown, and the strong man and good fighter at length succumbed. Rockefeller has expressed a desire to be better known by his countrymen. Here was a man who knew him not wisely perhaps but only too well. New York Evening- Post Hot After the Ice Men Whils the fight against the alleged Ice trust in Omaha Is lacking In vigor, other cities are doing much ln self-defense. The 'record Is thus summarised by a writer in the World today: In Baltimore, Md., dealers indicted; To ledo, O.. dealers clnvlcted and out on bond pending a hearing In superior courts; Washington, dealers Indicted charged with a conspiracy to increase the price of ice; Indianapolis, grand Jury Investigation of alleged Ice combine; Jacksonville, Fla., one Ice man goes to jail ln order to test the law under which dealers were Indicted by a hearing ln habeas corpus. Cleveland, O., dealers Indicted and ac quitted by a jury; Detroit, an Investiga tion preliminary to grand jury action; 8t Louis, Mo., state to annul charters and collect penalties from dealers charged ' with conspiring to fix Ice prices; Kansas City, petitions filed to revoke charters of alleged members of the Ice trust. Tonkers, N. Y., movement to furnish citizens municipal Ice at cost; Cincinnati, O., dealers indicted under Valentine law; Mt Vernon, N. Y., mayor plans to or ganise a company to manufacture ice and compete with alleged trust; Philadelphia, officers of alleged Ice combine subpoenaed to appear before the grand Jury; Great Neck, L. I., residents building ice plant of their own. Ashtabula, O., Indictment resulted In dissolution of City Ice Delivery company; Austin, Tex., city council considering legislation fixing maximum price of ico per 100 pounds at $0 cents; Schenectady, N. Y., Investigation of alleged ice com bine by committee of council. Hartford, Conn., petitions to revoke charters; Columbus. O., Indictments re turned against dealers. Newark, O., In dictments returned; Troy, N. T., prose cuting attorney investigating. Improving the Food Supply If there have been times when It seemed as If the various measures for the pro tection ot life and health from the Iniquities of certain food manufacturers were doomed to defeat there Is reason for hope at pres ent The Corn Products company, having fallen heir to something like 600 suits for supplying sulphur dioxide to candy makers In glucose, in violation of our state law, has withdrawn all bleached glucose from the market, not merely ln New York, but the whole country. Indeed, some of the candy makers may not Impossibly resume the use of sugar. And In Chicago 5,000 cans of spoiled or adulterated food have been publicly burned, therein offering up an Incense to the nostrils of the god of trade that may not be wholly grateful, but that will have its sanitary value none the less Chicago will lose nothing from this burnt sacrifice. On the contrary the confluence which It will restore cannot but rebound to Its credit. It Is no secret, on the con trary It Is a patent and agreeable fact, that when It was discovered that she was cheating, her trade fell off Immensely. It fell under the ban that Is always Imposed upon dishonesty. It Is significant that a local hardware dealer whose sales of can openers used to average 8,000 a month la now selling $,000. This means nothing less than that Chicago's meat packers Invited a boycott and are getting It. But open confession ot the right of the law to pro tect the public is made ln the destruction of fraudulent goods that a few months ago would have been sold and eaten. Nothing will stimulate honesty better than to prove that It pays. And when the mer chants and manufacturers whose departure from the ways ot our ancestors has aston ished and shocked the world begin to realise that there Is money In goods that are pre cisely what they pretend to be meat with out filth, wine without logwood, milk with out formalin, cheese without animal refuse. flavors without coal tar synthetics, ketchup without dye and turnips, tee fhat weighs as much as tt seems to, and drugs that are not "Just as good" as those the customer supposes he is pylng for they will be sorry that they ever darkened the pages of their personal history by acts of dis honor. For the successful man of business ln future Is going to be the honest man. Brooklyn Eagle. SCHOOLS AKD COLLEGES. BR OWII ELL HALL, OMAHA A Home School for Girls. Aoademlo and College Pre paratory Courses. Exceptional advantasea In Muslo. Art Do mestic science. German and Frencn. Aeaaemio course gives good general education. Certificate In college preparatory course admits to Vassar, Wellesley, Mt. Holyoka, Smith, University of Nebraska, University of Wisconsin and University ot Chicago. Instructors college graduates of large teaching experience. Thoroughness Insisted upon as essential to character building. Carefut attrition to social training. Well equipped gymnasium, with professional director. Tennis, hockey and other field sports. Students mothered sympathetically by experienced women who appreciate tha needs of young womanhood Address: MISS MACRAE. Principal. ST. BERCHMAHS' DAY ACADEMY FOR YOUNG LADIES, UNDER CAR! Or SISTERS Of MERCY Thorough courses In Academic, Preparatory and Primary departments. Kindergarten for little ones; Seminary for small boys. Muslo and Art under competent Instructors. SCHOOL REOPENS SEPT. 5. 27TH AND ST. MARY'S AVE. CHICAGO CONSERVATORY 707. WXXAXAM W. TCTBTBKAW, Pres. The Most Complete Ooaservatory of Ho ne ua vcuihu mx im America. The faculty embraces some of the most able and conscientious Instructors in this country and Europe. MUSIC AND DRAMATIC ART riAiro YOCAI. YIOLIW EX.OCUTIOTs' OBATOBY AOTIXTO OKCHESTTtAXt XMSJTKUHlBMTS OXtGrAST OBATOBXO OHTJKCK CONCEKT PUBLIC SOXOOTu MUSIO For more than a Quarter of a centurv tha e hlcago Conservatory of Music and Dra matic Art has stood in the front rank of educational Institutions in its special field 01 insiruciion.: Applications received until Sent. Btk foa SO free and 160 partial scholarships. 60 XlUHETfT IITSTBUCT0B8 Engagements tn Church. Oratorio. Con cert Opera, Drama, etc., secured. 31st Seasoa, Begins Sept. 11 Special inducements to talented papUa with Umltsd means. Catalogue Wo. 3 tree on request. Address I 8d rioor Auditorium SaUdlaa-, 6hioago. ST. MARY'S COLLEGE m ACADEMY "The Cares that Infest the Day" Tarrant's Seltzer Aperient teg. v. . r. os. sn4 yonll find bow light baartod roa are wh.i stomach, bowsi. and llvrar all wotkiii. wu ba puimif u, vomer. 1 II tilt rim in nfriihlnf illiniinni Trains Srinitit shtV y lu uitr ysrs nothing has soseroedsd TAB-RANT'S vita shy. jti tr,i, to 4uu tt oo i, mull fnm TBI TAIIANT CO.. 44 lasses It. Nt Tart. QHEHWOOFD MUSIC SCHOOL Fin Art Bulldlnar. Chleataro FACULTY INCLUDES: WXLX.ZAM X. VKZBWOOD, Director. Arthur Beresford, Georgia Kober, Adah Marklaad BhefBeld, Shirley Oandell, Daniel Vrotheroe, XilUian rrenoa Bead, Eleanor Cher wood, Walter Beller, Aad Othsrs. Completely equipped, and offers best modern advantages and methods in ail departments. u Tisit opzars btjpt. io, lsoe Applications for partial scholarships will be received until Bopt. 1st. For catalogue or Information call on or address BTX &. BTtTsCPXBBT, XlatfM FOR YOUNG LADIES lama Inrf hours (rem Chlcsoo- lalliCj I II ui Mile (rosi Notre DsmeUnl. - tji This Institution for young Udlas I today one of the best equipped schools in the country and enjoys sn international reputation for civins; the best possible mental, moral and physical training to its students. Collsglats, Acidtmlo and Preparatory Courssi. DEGREES CONFERRED Exceptional ad ran tares In Music snd Art. A fine Gymnasium for Physical Culture a model building of Its kind. Ideal and healthy location on sn eminence overlooking th his toric St Joseph River. Two miles north of South Band. Modern buildings, with dormi tories and private rooms, heated by steam, with hot and cold water throughout. For Cataiogua and other information, address THE DIRECTRESS, Bo SO ' Notre Dims, Ind. WMMtil mr Ike Slaters ef Htm Hely O Sakeel Veer kealae Sept. 10, "SOS. Bush Temple Conservatory NORTH CURK IT. snd CHICAGO AVE., CHICAGP KKNNtTH M. BRAOLIV, Dire tier THE LEADING SCHOOL OP MUSIC OPERA. AOTINO AND LANGUAGES Fifty Teachers of International re potation. School of Opera and Acting HSMKV O. OSS, OlreeMf Offers the etodenta fraetlral state training as In. elwlea Uebaenaif. Btee BoeiDeaa, Uunr.ee, Bight Beadlag. Modern Languaejee and rublio Appearsaoea. School of Laneiages(BsriiuMeihstf) MIL! LIOLISCQ, Dlreeler Trial laaiaai free. Mali re teackere is all depart men ta. 150 Fre and Partial Scholarships Fall term beclne September 10th. Catalogue free oa application to B O, SCHMIDT, Becretarr. , r'-" j a f rniranai French, German, Spanish Ghatelain School Davidge Block KIDNEY DIBEA8BS CURED by my aew eye- tem. ExamlDatton. opinion and book free.- Dr. 1. V. Bhafer, Kidney 6pm-. lallit, U Penn Ave., Pltuburg, Pa. Vhen You Write to Advertisers two of the pen to mention the fact that remember it takes only an extra stroke or you saw their ad In The Bee. How to write a Furnished room Ad Yon can't rent a baro, poorly furnished room as easily as a cozy, attractive furnished one. People wont answer an adver tisement as readily if you do not make it inviting if you do not make them; feel that yours is just the room they want. Htr U 0U kind not to vritu RBXT Qood furnished roons lint Parnam street. TOR for two Beauesaesj, ) TkU vodd U mors apt to rent V4 room) JTOR RE W T PI eaaant soufh front room, for two furnished eatb on srsntleroeq well same noor4 mlnc'as walk from dowa town, W4 Parnam sireeC Tb first ad wont cost aa much, bat if th longer ad wtll rent ta room, because) It Is aUraotlr, It's a food tavestmeat Telephone tas, t tO.OdO Rial CircuUtton. 1