TONBAY BEE: PART FOUR EDITORIAL PART FOUR AMUSEMENTS VOL. L NO. 7. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 1, 1920. 1 D TEN CENTS in REAL ROMANCE? Or TUE COMMCBCIAL VOBLT) ACE- UNFOLDED IN TWC STOQIES Or TUC SUCCESS QF OMAUA PUSlNfSS MEN The Omaha 1 imp By R. S. McCULLOUGH. Victims of the supposed-to-be na tional malady, of unrest, who are seeking their ideas of success by shifting from job to job, should have their pet theory jolted completely out of them by the life stories of leading business men of Omaha, who have acquired position, wealth, and, above all, the respect and confidence of ' their associates, through picking their own line of wprk and sticking to it until they came out on top. Examples 'of this solid success are to be seen on all sides in Omaha, but careers that illustrate as graph ically as- any the fruits of industry and persistence are those of Charles W. Tickens, president' of Paxton eV Gallagher; Everett Buckingham, president of Union Stock Yards Co.; Carl R. Gray, president of the Union Pacific railroad; A. C. Scott, presi dent of the Scott-Omaha Tent and Awning Co.. and George Brandeis, of the Brandeis stores. Mr. Picken'sbusiness growth has kept pace with the growth of Omaha, for he came to the city before rail roads did, and has been here ever fsiiice. He was born at Detroit in 1859. After the civil war his parents moved west, first to St. Joseph, Mo., and then to Omaha, by steamboat. Mo Pickens was 7 years old when he first saw the city. , . , , Carries Omaha Daily Bee. His '.first 'schooling in Omaha was a a small frame schoolhouse where Jefferson square is now. The next vintcr he attended classes farther up town, and later went for one year to' the- Seagrave Military academy, which stood on the site of the Union Pacific building. His first actual employment be- ' Ran with the establishment of The' Omaha Bee. Mr. Pickens was the circulation department at that time, and delivered all the city sub . scriptions of each issue. He con tinued to carry papers for five years, delivering his routes, riding his ponies. Mr. Pickens made his first "jump" when he gave up the newspaper bus iness and accepted a job at the lin seed oil mill of the Harris, Taft and Woodman company. In a few gears' time he had worked up from small position in the mill to super intendent, and on the side had found time to study telegraphy and short hand. His tutor for the later sub ject was John.T, Bell, then the only shorthand court reporter in Omaha. Mr. Pickens' next change in occupa tion was to-be his last. Chosen General Manager. In 1879 he became connected with the Paxton & Gallegher wholesale grocery, when that firm was or ganized. The late Ben Gallegher knew of his shorthand study and in duced him to enter their office. He started as bill clerk and collector, but during his eaerly years with the com pany did a little bit of everything around the warehouse and office. When the company left its original two-story building at Fifteenth and Farnam streets and moved to its present location Mr. Pickens was figuring profits, and later became a , s buver and had charge of house sales. The company was incorporated in 1895, with Mr. Gallegher, president; W. A. Paxton, vice president, and Mr. Pickens, secretary-treasurer and general manager. He served in that capacity until 1907, when he was elected president, following Mr. Pax ton's 'death. He has served in that position ever since. Mr. Pickens has been a prime mover in semi-public enterprises for more than 30 years. He has been a "V member of the Chamber of Com C"merce and the old Commercial club since the latter's organization. ( For 24 years he has been a member of the executive committee and served as chairman in 1900 and was elected president in 1901. Everlastingly at It, For 12 years he was a member of the board of governors of Ak-Sar-Ben, and served five years as presi dent. In 1913 he declined to con tinue as one of the governors, as he "was not able to devote the neces sary time to it. In accepting his resignation the remaining governors presented him with a valuable watch anH rtiain Mr. Pickens belongs to the Omaha. Universtiv, Athletic,, Country and Happy Hollow clubs, "fv secret of success?" Mr. Pick ens said when asked. "For 20 years I kept my motto framed on my desk. It was: 'Keeping ever lastingly at it brings success I took that sentiment seriously from the start, and I believe in it as firmly today as when I began.' "Success is bound to come to the man who will do his 'very best, no matter what his task may be, and practice the rules of honesty, integ rity, .loyalty and punctuality. When I started to work here my hours were from 7 in the morning to 6 in the evening, with a lot of night work thrown in, too. My first va cation came after I had been with the firm nine years. Railroad Messenger Boy. "My advice to anyone starting ir. would be to pick the line of work he is best suited to and give his job the best he has. It's only through that kind of effort that ohe tan reach the top." ' .' There is no one in Omaha with ' wider acquaintances or who has ' more warm personal friends . than Charles H. Pickens. So well does Everett Buncking ham, vice president and general manager of the Union Stock Yards Co., governor of Ak-Sar-Ben," and prime mover in nearly everything Jhat is going on to. boost Omaha, chas. rt. Pickens. FIRST-JOB WAS CARRYING PAPERS NOW PR6S OF BIG WHOLESALE GROCER FIRM wear his honors, that no one at first glancVAVould ever visualize him as. a one-time messenger boy in a rail road office. " Students of Train Loads. ?But he -was, nevertheless. For Mr. Buckingham began his business ca reer as a messenger in the St, Joe office of the St. Joseph & Denver railroad, when he was 11 years old. He then earhed the munificient sal ary of $2.50 per week, and .the hours were long. But he perserved and after 13 years with the same road had advanced to chief clerkship. In 1880 the railroad became a Union Pacific property and Mr. Bucking harit came to Omaha as chief clerk to the car accountant of the U. P. Shortly after his arrival he was ad vanced to the position of car ac countant. A few years in that capacity, and he became car service agent for the Union Pacific, then superintendent of car service, and finally superin tendent of transportation. In 1904 Mr. Buckingham was selected to go to Ogden, Utah, to keep things mov ing at that point of the Union Pa cific concentration. His technical position was general superintendent of the Qregon Short Line, but his duties were to keep things moving and on time on that road, the South ern Pacific and Union Pacific on the Ogden division. 'During his railroad career Mr. Buckingham was noted among his associates as a student ot train loads, and for continual study for means of increasing the sizes of freight trains. He was one of the earliest advocates of capacity weights behind locomotives, and extraordinarily long 'freight trains becaftje known on the system as "Buckingham specials." Station Agent's Helper. In 1907 Mr. Buckingham . termi nated his railroad connections, when apparently he was within, a step of the top, to return to Omaha as gen eral manager of the South Omaha Stock Yards company, the forerun ner of the present organization he is with. Housing conditions were scmewhat better that year than they are now, for within a week Mr. Buckingham had resigned his rail road position, accepted the one in South Omaha and had moved and fsettled his family and household possessions in Umaha. He has been identified with pro gressive activities in the stock' busi ness and boosting Omaha in general ever since. Like Mr. Buckingham, Carl Gray, now head of one of the largest ar,d soundest railroad systems in the country, began in a railroad office. The difference is, he stuck to the business; Mr. Gray vas brn at Princeton, Ark., in 1867. When he was 16" years old he began his rail road career, helping the station agent of 'the St. Louis &. San Fran cisco railroad in a litWe Kansas town. Later he became telegrapher and agent himself, and served in .that capacity until 1886. World's Crookedest Railroad In that year he was transferred to the Wichita office of toe road, and saw his last of station work. His first position there was clerk for the general western agent of the road. After a few years of training he became general afcent himself. He then successively filled the of fices of district freight agnt. divi sion freight agent, and division su perintendent. In 1900 he went to the St. Louis headquarters of the road as superintendent of transpor tation. In a short time he was made general manager of the road, then elected a vice president, and in 1911 vai serving as. senior, vice president ENERITT RUCKIN6HA1 ftAS ONCE A MESSENGER SOY HE'S MANAGER Op ISTOCKYAROS. and general manager cf the road with which he had started In that year James J. Hill, rail road genius of . the northwest, needed a man to build and have charge of the crookedest railroad in the world, the Spokane, Portland & Seattle railroad, -which follows the banks of the Columbia river. Mr. Gray was the man he picked and the late Mr. Hill had a facudty for getting what he went after. 5o Mr. Gray went to the Pacific north west to head the .Hill subsidiary lines,' which included the Oregon Electric railways.- In Less Than Forty Years. After the retirement of the elder Hill, Louis W. Hill, a son, became the head of the Great Northern rail road, the great Hill line, and so head of the famliy interests. In keeping with an announced plan. Louis NHill retired on his fortieth birthday, and Carl Gray was elected president of the Great Northern. He served with that road until a short time before the war, when he acceptid the presidency of the West ern Maryland road. While guiding the destinies of that system the war Came on, the railroad administration was organized and Mr. Gray was one of the selected for an executive post in Washington, x 1 When the return of the roads to private ownership was announced and railroad reorganization all over the country began, the Union Pacific, conceded to be. on as fine a footing as v any railroad in the country, reached out for Mr. Gray. In less than 40 years he has climbed from helper at a country station to head of one of the greatest transportation systems on the globe. No more convincing example of the fruits of application along one line of endeavorcan be found in Omaha than in the Jife of George Brandeis, head of the Brandeis in terests, who has climbed from the very bottom to apposition of national importance-in the department store world. ' ' Mr. Brandeis came to America 30 years ago from his home in Europe, with his uncle, the late J. L. Bran deis, founder of the Omaha stores. He went to work in the old Bran deis store on Thirteenth street and spent his spare time and evenings studying. It was his duty in those days to open the store in the morn ings, build fires and sweep out the rooms. , Worked for $2 a Week. After a year in his uncle's stor?. j Mr, .Brandeis went to Chicago and n 11 r- TENT AND AWN1N6 MAN fc 1 J I IN THELCOUNTRY ; ,, i i - .: ) secured a job in the Bos'ton store in that city. His wages when he began were the munificent sum of $2 per week. But he started work ing as soon as he got the job. Two years later he was promoted to the silk department, and after five years was made silk buyer for the store. The annual sales of that department amounted to $300,000 when he be came buyer, and increased to $1,300,- 000 before he left that position.. Becomes Firm Manager. On the death of Charles Nefcher, proprietor of the store, Mrs. Netcher selected Mr. Brandeis. out of .,4,400 other employes to become manager. He continued in that capacity until 1913, when he came-to Omaha, fol lowing the deaths of his cousins. Emit and Hugo Brandeis. Mr. Brandeis has only one recipe for success, and that is ambition and determination to forge ahead "You can't keep a good . man down," he declared "Anyone who is determined to succeed is bound to rise, maybe not in one year, and maybe not for 10 years, but if he has the spirit to climb,) notliing. can keep him down." ' Increase in Tents!. Al C. Scott, president of the Sfcott Omaha Tent and Awning Co., and a similar establishment at Seattle, and connected with other firms man ufacturing canvas goods, and also president of the Omaha Mnufac turers' association, hasn't always been a commanding figure in an industry. As a mattet of fact, only 15 years ago Mr. Scott still' had his future before him. At that time he was handling shipments for an express company, with $50 a month his re ward. He switched, however, to his present line, and began his rapid rise toward the top. It wasn't so many years ago that the old Omaha Tent and Awning Co. had the "Scott" prefixed to its title, signi fying that Mr. Scott had begun to arrive. That Was a Starter. That was only a starter, however and the- connections that make his iame known all over the country-in 'vitfc canvas roods, came later. Next he acquired the Seattle factory, the largest in the west, which gave him control cf one of the .largest com binations in that industry. When this country entered the war .there was an immediate demands for tents, tarpaulins, bags, and dozens of ether, .tems . of equipment, .The Pa Rpurke Oldest Owner Of Ball Club in America Completes 21 Years' Con tinuous Ownership of Omaha Base Bail . Franchise. With the completion 'of his 21st year as an owner of a professional base ball club in one city, W. A. (Pa) Rourke of the Omaha club of the Western league, today enjoys .he unique distinction of being the oldest ;'owner in point of years' service in the United States. And though the popular local sporting magnate -has had to carry his club through some varying vicissitudes, lie .ha; triumphed in a business way and made this point un mc western ci'. uuu ue ui wic most popular base ball towns in the country. "Pa" Rourke, as he is affection ately known to fans everywhere, is crowded close, however, in record of ownership by another equally famous base ball man, President Charles Comiskey of the Chicago White Sox. The latter has had 20 years' service as the owser of the well known "windy city" machine; and, strangely enough, the careers of the two great sportsmen have paralleled closely in the way of base ball success. Began 'As Infielder. Rourke started in professional base ball 38 years jiro as a thiid baseman with the Muskegon, Mich., team of the old Northwestern league. Since that time he had played ball on two Omaha teams, once in 1887 and again in 1894, be fore finally coming here permanent ly to acquire the ownership of Omaha's entry in the Western league. ' .' Starting professionally with the S.-.ott factories were able on a mo ment's notice to switch production from awnings and commercial can vas goods to military orders. Well Known in Army. If you were in the army, you mav have slept under a Scott pyramidal tent; likely you carried one of their shelter halves, and it's a cinch that if you were at Fort Omaha you helped pitch one of their tialloon hangars, juggled Scott sandbars and maybe packed Scott pmrachutes. Taking advantage of. opportunities and applicatioa to the job in hand is Mr. Scott's prescription for gei ting ahead. He believes that his own success is the result of practic ing those rules. Making the mcst of your job fits you for a better one, he holds, for the minute a man gets too big for one place there's a pisser one awaiting ' . . . . i - '5k - old Muskegon team in 1SS3, Rourke was the teammate of uch great players of the period as.John Clark son, Dave Fouts, Bobby Carruthers, Porter, "Lady" Baldwin and others. All of these old-tuners were great pitchers, and at one time or another found their way into the "big show" just the same as Rourke did before his playing days were -finally over. When' "Pa" referred to his service with -Muskegon a smile spread over his features. "I recall now," he said, "that the old Muskegon club still owes me money, which of course I never expect to get." With Columbus Team. The next year, in 1884, found Rourke with the Columbus team of the American association when it finished second, next to the New York Giants. "And that, by the way, was the year when the old New York major league club acquired the title of Giants," said Rourke. , "I remember the personnel of the old club well and say, they were whales of fellows, every one of them. There was not a man of the Giants under six feet, and the most of them were above that in stature. And myl how they could pound the old horse hide. They were fast fellows, too. Yes, the original Giants were well named and the title has stuck to the New York team ever since." In the fall of 1885,' according to the reminiscent narrative which "Pa" spun for the edification of the fans far and wide, he went to the Atlanta, Ga., club of the Southern league. In that year he was with his first pen nant winner, Atlapta capturing the bunting by a good margin. , The next year he was with Duluth of the Northwestern league and played hjs part in another pennant gain. , Joins Omaha Club. With the beginning of the season of 1887 "Pa" Rourke played his first professional basa ball in Omaha, the city which was eventually to be his home town, and in which he was to achieve such pronounced success. He played through that season with Omaha, which was then, as now, a part of the Western league. The next year he went to Lima, O., in the Tri-State league, and again there he helped to make a pennant win ner. . The spring of 1889 found Rourke lined up with the Fort Worth team of the Texas league, but 'in 1890 he again switched north and joined the St. Paul team of the Western league. The next year found him "in Cedar Rapids, la., of the Three-I league. It was in --the latter place that Rourke had his first experience as manager as well as player. HoVever, even this .berth failed to hold the wandering player, and the next year, 1892, found him in the Nebraska State league, an independ ent organization. He remained with this league through 1893. Scout for the Cubs. In the spring of 1894 Rourke came back to Omaha as manager and part owner of the local club.' However, he was not yet ready to settle down, and the succeeding year found him playing with Bloom ington, 111., as manager and sole owner. ' , This venture was not a financial success, and in 1896 he-went to Birmingham, Ala., to manage that city's entry in the Southern league. This was his last year as an active -ftall player. For the next three years he was . a scout for the Chicago Cubs. In the fall of 1899 "Pa" Rourke came back to Omaha and purchased the franchise of the local club, and he has continued as owner up to the present time. In the interven ing period he has had sometimes a good playing combination, some times a bad; but he has everdis r.layed such a spirit, of clean sports maifship and such a 1 fine zest for the game that he has Tiad the fans with him at all times, in the suc cessive years of fighting for a pennant.- t Displays Fighting Spirit. During the years that Rourke has been the owner of the Omaha club he has trained and brought out scores of young players who have made good here and been a credit to the game, passed on for a time to the "big show." and since either dispersed themselves here and ther as managers or owners, or YOUTHFULiTHIEF HAD LAID PLANS FOR LIFE OF EASE 1 6-Year-Old Boy Confesses to Robbery of 25 Estab lishments. By International Hmbfierrif. ' Detroit, Mich., July 31. Suave, well-groomed, .manicured and bear ing the mien of a "man about town," 16-year-old-Alton McGill was ar rested charged with the robbery of more than 25 business places. Young McGUl confessed, police say, and escorted the' officers about town, pointing out the" places 4ie ad mitted having pilfered. ( " The youthful Raffles" boasted of ;hisprowess since hist release from a boy' : industrial home. He told the officers that he. had planned a wild . life : fdr himself and frowned on the conventional method of ob taining money by labors ' . When arrested h had rooms in two hotels, both of which were hiding places for a miscellaneous collection of loot, about -which ; he, said he hadn't yet bothered to realize any money. , - . ' " His clothing was of the best and. he told the police, he was about to make the final payment on an auto mobile. In a tailor shop, which he is charged with robbing, he told the police that he picked out a new suit and left his old clothing with a note to the tailor, ordering them cleaned and pressed. The police turned McGill over to the juvenile authorities. who imme diately charged him with violatinjr. his parole. He has 10 brothers and sisters. Nebraska 02 Booms Are Due to Rainfall, Says Uni Professor Heavy rainfall in Nebraska's sand hills is the principal cause of the oil boom in this state during the last lew months, according to .Dr. George Condra of the University of Nebraska department of conserva tion and soil survey, who has dis covered the iron "pyrites" or "fools' gold" of the oil miners. The water tabid in Nebraska has risen during the heavy rains, Dr. Condra states, forming an iron compound which, seeping out on sandy areas, somewhat resembles oil. This compound has been the cajise of much excitement in various quarters, Dr. Condra finds. The de partment' of conservation and soil survey has been flooded during the past few weeks with requestsfor in formation on oil and gas 'forma tions. quit the diamond for business or .he professions. "It is fine and exciting to fight tor a pennant," he said, "but that fs only a secondary matter, after all, in playing the game of base ball. Good, clean diamond sport at all . times is . what the public wants; it is what the people pay for, and they are entitled to it Every team and , player in each respective league should feel that they are in the game to do their best and play it tor the winning of every contest In myv playing days we did M have anything like the remunera tion to' incite us to a high standard of talent as the players have now, but we played the game for all we were worth and enjoyed it" When he started out, like all young players, hw ambition was to climb into the majors, and "Pa" achieved that point of fame long before his playing days were c-ver. 1 As an owner and director of a Club in one of the best cities ' in " the country, he feels that he has many more years ahead before he finally relinquishes the reins to youngei hands. t !