Rmut a MTir wieTrn-»V How the Great Transcon- OIYIANTIC HISTORY tinental Line Was Built OF THE NORTHERN • *« d Its Eventful Finan nir , irir , r>Aii nAAn cial Career— Cause of Two PACIFIC RAILROAD. Bankruptcies. ! . — The appointment of a new president for the Northern Pacific Railway com pany and the successful completion of the reorganization project furnishes a fitting occasion for a rehearsal of the checkered history of this great cor poration, says E. V. Smalley in the Chicago Times- Herald. The story has many interesting features and derives added interest from the fact that the original underlying motive which gov erned the creation of this company for the building of a northern line to the Pacific coast was a patriotic impulse toward national development and for bringing into close and permanent re lations the then far distant communi ties on the Pacific coast with the great body of the country lying in the Mis sissippi valley and on the Atlantic coast. The first newspaper writer on this theme was Dr. Samuel Bancroft Barlow, a practising physician, living in Granville, Mass., and father of S. L. M. Barlow, an eminent New York lawyer, who died recently. As early as 1834 Dr. Barlow began to write arti cles for the papers in favor of the gen eral government undertaking the con struction of a railroad from New Tork city to the mouth of the Columbia river. These articles appeared in the local newspapers in Western Massa chusetts, and one of them, published in the Westfield Intelligencer about 1834, was preserved by his son. About the same time Samuel Parker, a mis sionary to the Indians, living in the heart of the Rocky mountains, added his testimony in print to the claim that the mountain range would be no bar rier to railroad construction between the eastern and western slopes of the continent. To both of these writers the valley route by the Missouri and Columbia rivers seemed to be the one evidently marked out by nature. ASA WHITNEY'S PROJECT. It is probable that Asa Whitney, who is usually regarded as the father of ths idea of a railway to the Pacific coast, and who began ten years later an agi tation in congress for legislation for the construction of the proposed line, had never heard of the writings of Dr. Barlow and Rev. Samuel Parker, be cause he had long been in China as a merchant and did not return to the United States until 1844. In 1845, in company with a party of young men from different states, Mr. Whitney ascended the Missouri river 1,500 miles. Returning he appeared in Washington in December of that year with a mag nificent scheme for a railroad from Lake Michigan to the Pacific coa.st, to be built by him with the proceeds of a grant of land for thirty miles on each side of the track. Whitney got little for his pains at first but ridicule, but he was a courageous man, who thoroughly believed in his project and was not to be put down by sneers and laughter. In IS4B Mr. Whitney made another effort in Washington., and obtained se lect committees in both houses for the consideration of his bill. This bill did not provide for any corporate com pany. It authorized Asa Whitney, his heirs or assigns "to construct a rail road from any point on Lake Michi gan to the Mississippi river he may designate, in a line as nearly straight as the face of the country will permit, and where the streams may be bridged, to some point on the Pacific coast, where a suitable harbor may be found." It set apart all the government lands within thirty miles of the line for the raising of money by their sale for the construction of the railroad. Whitney was to pay the nominal price of 10 cents per acre for the ground as fast as sales were made, and was to receive a five-mile strip of land, sixty miles wide, from the grant for every section of ten miles of road he com pleted. Whitney was to be the sole owner of the road. The government was to establish rates on the road and regulate its operation and pay him a salary of $4,000 for its management. The senate committee actually report ed this bill favorably, but Thomas H. Benton attacked it with such vigor that it was tabled by the close vote of 27 to 21. Whitney made a final ef fort in 1849 and published In that year a book entitled "Project of a Railroad to the Pacific." He estimated the length of his road at 2,020 miles, and the cost of its construction at $40,600, --000, which was scarcely one-half the amount the Northern Pacific subse quently cojft. ROUTE FIRST PROPOSED. The route indicated on the map which he submitted to congress was shown by a line drawn from St. Joseph, Mich., to Prairie dv Chien, Wis., then straight across the country to Lewis and Clarke pass in the Rocky mountains, then down the Clear Water and Snake riv ers to Walla Walla and the Columbia, finally crossing the Cascade mountains to Puget sound. This was, in the main, the route subsequently followed by the Northern Pacific engineers. Whitney spent his efforts and his for tune in educating public sentiment.aud passed his last years in keeping a dairy and selling milk in Washington. The next prominent advocate of a railway to the Pacific was an eminent engineer named Edwin F. Johnson, who probably knew more than any other man living in his time about the part of the country between the great lakes and the Mississippi on the east and the Pacific shores on the west. Nothing, however, could be done in congress for the reason that the South ern leaders had already begun their efforts for the extension of slavery, and they were determined no railway should be built to the Pacific north of the thirty-fifth parallel. A pamphlet by Mr. Johnson in favor of the north ern route spurred Jefferson Davis, then secretary of war, to immediate action and caus-ed him to secure the passage of a bill authorising government sur veys of all the proposed routes. When the surveying parties were sent it was allfg-ed, perhaps unjustly, that politi cal motives influenced the selection of the officers put in charge by Mr. Davis and that a report in favor of two southern routes was arranged for in advance, and., further, that the officers put In command of the northern sur vey were expected to report against that route because of their sympathy with the Democratic party as then con trolled by the South. The officers in Question were Stevens and McClellan. who both became famous during the civil war. GOVERNMENT MILITARY SUR VEYS. The military parties sent out by the war department made reports on five distinct routes from the Mississippi valley to the Pacific coast, the first one on the thirty-first parallel, the second on the thirty-fifth, the third on the thlrty-oighih, the fourth en the forts- first and forty-second and the fifth be tween the forty-seventh and forty niuth parallels. The report on these Burveys filled thirteen quarto volumes, which »ere printed by order of con- gress with a profusion of cuts and numerous maps. As was expected, Jefferson Davis, in summing up his re port to congress from the information obtained, strongly recommended the most southerly route, dwelling especial ly on its freedom from obstruction by snow. The gold discoveries in California concentrated public interest in that state. When opinion in congress had progressed so far as to make legisla tion for a transcontinental road re garded with favor by that body the northern line was abandoned in favor of Benton's line from the Missouri riv er to San Francisco by way of the Great Salt Lake. An effort to com bine in legislation the northern route with the middle route, then strong in favor, was unsuccessful. In the midst of sectional jealousies and the confusion of local projects for railroads to the Pacific coast, which prevailed in Washington previous to 1860, there appeared upon the ground a man of definite purpose and strong will, who knew exactly what he want ed to do and had sufficient earnestness and enthusiasm to convert other men to his views. This man was Josiah Perham, of Maine, born at Wilton, Franklin county, and in early life a country storekeeper and woolen manu facturer. Failing a second time, he former a partnership with a painter, who had produced what was known as the seven mile mirror, taken from the great lakes, Niagara falls and the St. Lawrence river. FAVORED USE OF PRIVATE CAPI TAL. Perham again accumulated monej and possessed a considerable fortune when the vision of a railroad to the Pacific dawned upon him in 1853. He did not first go to congress for aid. His idea was that the people of the whole country wpuld rush forward to subscribe small sums for stock which would aggregate enough to construct the road. Even the most discouraging expert- <^* CHARLES S. MELLEN, PRESIDENT NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY. ences failed to dislodge this idea from his mind. His first scheme was for a railroad from the Missouri river to the bay of San Francisco, and he held firmly to this route for nearly ten years, until congress, in chartering the Union Pacific in 1862, left him and his project and friends entirely out of the deal. Only then did he turn to the northern route. He rallied around him old friends in Boston and Maine and organized the People's Pacific Railroad company. The amount of stock sub scribed and paid for was very small. Perham failed to get a land grant from congress for this company, and, at the instance of Thaddeus Stevens, then the dictatorial leader of the Republican party in the house, a new bill was pre- I pared creating by national charter I the Northern Pacific Railway company j and naming as incorporators a long i list of Perham's best friends in Maine and Massachusetts. This bill finally I passed and was signed by President ! Lincoln on July 2, 1864. It gave no I money subsidy, but it gave a land I grant of unprecedented and enormous I extent, embracing every alternate sec i tion for twenty miles on both sides of the road in "the states to be trav i ersed by the line and for forty miles in the territories. One hundred and i thirty-five persons were named as com missioners to organize the company. The list Included the names of many governors, United States senators and congressmen, the general of the army of the United States, U. S. Grant, a few active railroad managers and a I sprinkling of capitalists. The commis ! sioners met in September, 1564, at Melo deon hall, Boston. Only thirty-three of this body were present. Mr. Perhanx was elected president of the company. He estimated the cost of the entire road at $120,000,000, and was not far cut of the way. FIRST EFFORTS TO RAISE MONEY. The charter required 20,000 shares of stock to be subscribed for before the complete organization of the company. Perham thought that most of the ] shares would be taken at once, but there was considerable difficulty ex perienced in getting the 20,000 taken, and this amount was only exceeded by seventy-five shares. The board of com missioners now went out of existence, and a board of directors was elected. The company started with $2,750 in its treasury, received from a 10 per cent payment of its stock. This was all that was ever paid; the other remaining 90 per cent was called for six years later, but the stockholders declined to pay it, alleging that their services entitled them to the stock without further pay ments. The board then in control of the company thereupon confiscated the whcle amount of the original subscrip tion. Perham had no further plan for raising money to commence the con struction of the road, and the great enterprise went to sleep for a time, all efforts to interest New York capitalists in it having failed. Col. William S. Roland appeared in Boston and New York in 1865 in com pany with Gov. Fuller, of Utah, and these two men secured the co-operation of Hamilton A. Hall, a merchant large ly interested in Canadian trade. Their plan was to use the Canada system of roads as far as then constructed west ward, and to persuade the Canadian government to extend this system around the lakes to the Red River of the North, and then build the Northern Pacific railroad on to Puget sound. This, they argued, would make the road THE SAINT PAUL GLOBE: SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1897, tributary to Boston. This scheme met with favor In that city. Stock to the amount of $150,000 was subscribed there, and the board of directors was reor ganized. In place of Perham as presi dent, John Gregory Smith was elected. He was then president of the Vermont Central road, and was well known in railroad circles throughout the country. All the other officers were changed. The new organization was strong in its personality and the capital it repre sented. The new directors, however, did not expect to put any money up for building the road. They only agreed to pay off the debts of the Perham organi zation. Their object was to get money from congress. Nobody at that time would take the bonds of a Pacific rail road company unless they were in r dorsed by the government, and there was no market for the Northern Pa cific stock put out by the new directors to pay Perham's debts. Perham died in 1868, a poor man, having wasted his fortune in a fruitless effort to carry out his grand Pacific railroad idea. JAY COOKE TAKES HOLD. J. Gregory Smith now came into ac tive control of the Northern Pacific company. His first move was to make an effort to obtain from congress an indorsement of the bonds of the com pany. It was a bad time for such an attempt. Hostility to land grants had become a political cry throughout the country. Besides, the Northern Pacific had no local strength outside of New England and Minnesota. All that could be obtained from con gress was an extension of time for building the road. An amendment was put upon the Kansas Pacific bill by Thaddeus Stevens, extending the time two years for the completion of the Northern Pacific. There was already strong opposition in congress, organized by the friends of the Union Pacific against giving aid to a rival line, and the guarantee bill supported by Ste vens was tabled by a vote of 76 to 56. The company was then thrown upon its own resources. Mr. Smith could not raise any money in New England, and New York capitalists were wholly in different to the scheme. Smith then conceived a plan of creating a railroad syndicate, embracing many of the lead ing railroads of the country. He en gaged Thomas H. Canfield to interview railroad presidents and to endeavor to get their co-operation. The first en- listed was William B. Ogden, president of the Chicago and Northwestern rail road, Avho aided in drawing up a finan cial plan, afterward known as The Or iginal Interests agreement, which di vided the enterprise into twelve shares, each to be valued at $8,500, which was one-twelfth of the money already ex pended by Smith and his associates. Failing to obtain any money or the indorsement of their bonds from con gress, President Smith and his friends now undertook to secure the services of the great banking house of Jay Cooke & Co. to sell the Northern Pa cific company's bonds and to manage its finances. This house had success fully handled the immense war loans of the government, and was very fav orably known on both sides of the At lantic. Mr. Cooke agreed to raise $5, --000,000 within thirty days from Jan. 2, IS7O. The building of the road was commenced at once, but as the bank ing firm already controlled the rail road then being built from Duluth to St. Paul, it was agreed that twenty miles of that line should be used by the Northern Pacific. So great was the influence of Jay Cooke in Philadelphia, that he raised the $5,000,000 within thirty days by forming a pool, the members of which took the bonds at par and were given the twelve proprie tary interests in the stock at $50,000 each. In this transaction Jay Cooke & Co. made an immediate profit of $600, --000 on the bonds, for which it had paid SS cents, and $600,000 on the stock, for which the firm had paid nothing. Mr. Cooke went to Washington in the face of strong opposition to secure the pas sage of another resolution authorizing the mortgaging of all the property and rights of the company and the issue of bonds. This resolution also made the Columbia river line the main one, and that from Puget sound to the Cascades a branch line. It also gave the. com pany the right to select lands within the limit of ten miles on each side of its grant. The grant was thus prac tically enlarged to tracts of thirty miles in the states and of fifty miles in tha territories on each side of their line. Next spring Mr. Cooke met at a din ner party in Washington two young bankers connected with good houses In Amsterdam and Berlin, and Interested them so far in the Northern Pacific plans that after visiting him at his country house they drew on their banks for a half million dollars and deposited the drafts with Mr. Cooke, agreeing that their banks would take $5,000,000 of the loan. This plan was on the point of being completed when the French emperor started with his army for the Rhine and began his dis astrous attack upon Germany. Then the whole transaction came to an end and Mr. Cooke was compelled to fall back on the American market. He set going his advertising and local agen cies which he had used in placing the government loans, and was successful in making large sales of the Northern Pacific bonds. CONSTRUCTION COMMENCED. The actual work of building the road was begun in the summer cf 1870 at a point about twenty miles west of Du luth, called Thompson's Junction. During the summer of 1870 and the whole of 1871 money poured Into the treasury of the Northern Pacific for its bonds under the sale of them by Jay Cooke & Co. In less than three years $30,000,000 were raised. The road was finished to the Red river of the North In 1871, and twenty-five miles were built north from the Columbia river toward Puget Sound. In 1872 the road was open for business from Duluth to the new town of Fargo, on the Red river. J. Gregory Smith continued to direct the affairs of the company, but was at all times under the dominant mind of Jay Cooke. It was, of course, Cooke who brought about the leasing of the entire line of the Lake Superior and Mississippi railroad, running from Duluth to St. Paul, and the purchas ing of nearly aH the steamboat lines on the Columbia, Snake, Willamette rivers and Puget Sound, which gave the Northern Pacific Railroad company clear possession ,of all the transporta tion facilities then existing in Wash ington and Oregon. *" All of this activity and buoyancy came to a sharp ami sudden end in the general and financial crisis of 1873. Already in 1872 the general company began to be pressed for funds for go ing on with the work. The road was built across the then unsettled prai ries of North Dakota, as far as the Mis souri river, and halted at the new town of Bismarck. Money was spent lavishly after the manner of railroads in boom times. All construction was inordinately expensive. In 1872 Jay Cooke & Co. informed the board of directors that the company was al ready in financial straits, and a loan must be raised on the credit of each individual member. The short line from the Columbia river to Puget Sound was only completed by the ac tion of Charles B. Wright, of Philadel phia, who bought the last ship load of rails and sent them out at his own risk. President Smith resigned in 1872, fearing the calamity that was impend ing, and was succeeded by George W. Cass, of Pittsburg, an energetic rail road man of large experience in the new railroad development of the West. INACTIVITY AND PRACTICAL IN SOLVENCY. The failure of Jay Cooke & Co. was followed by another period of inactiv ity and practical insolvency of the af fairs of the Northern Pacific. No more bonds could be sold. The road had been built westward from Lake Super ior to Bismarck, a distance of about 450 miles. There was little popula tion along it to support it. It was found that if the company were to go ahead and borrow more money it must in some way escape from the burden of its existing debts. Frederick Bil lings, of Vermont, came to the rescue, with a plan of reorganization, which he urged persistently on all persons in terested in the road whom he could reach. The plan was to take up all the $30,000,000 of the outstanding 7-30 bonds with new preferred stock, of which $51,000,000 was to be issued, and also an issue of $49,000,000 in common stock, to be divided among the holders of the original proprietary interests. The common stock was to receive no dividends until after the preferred stock had earned 8 per cent per an num. As there was five years of un paid interest due the holders of the old bonds, it took $42,000,000 of the new preferred stock to satisfy their claims; the remainder was put in the treas ury for various purposes. This plan was successfully carried out, and all the old bonded debt was converted into the new preferred stock. Thus the Northern Pacific Railroad company got itself out of debt, and found itself in possession of 575 miles of road free from incumbrance, and of 10,000,000 acres of land. The cost of this reorganization was trifling, and the bankruptcy proceeding.; were car ried forward so rapidly in the courts and with sagacity and harmony that the horde of wreckers and plunderers who usually pounce upon the fallen cor porations was completely baffled. CONSTRUCTION" RECOMMENCED In 1874, when Gen. Ca?s, who had done much to promote the settlement of the Red river valley, resigned the presi dency, Charles B. Wright, of Philadel phia, was elected to the place. He had been a merchant arid banker in his early life in Erie, Pa., and had been actively concerned in the building and management of the Philadelphia and Erie -railroad. He was a shrewd, cap able financier, and a strict economist, and was well adapted by experience and disposition to nurse the Northern Pacific through the hard times which followed the panic of 1873, and to get it upon its feet again. He succeeded in close of 1876, Mr. Wright was able to making the road pay expenses. The trains ran only to Fargo for two win ters, and during the third winter the terminus was at Jamestown. At the show the directors that the road had not only paid its way, but had left a surplus of $300,000. The value of the great Northwestern prairies for wheat growing was now fully established, and thousands of settlers moved in to oc cupy the new country. In 1877 provision W£s made for direct connection with: St.' Paul by the con struction of a shortj link of road in North Minnesota from Sauk Rapids to Brainerd. By ISJB .the general business condition of the'.coun^ry had so far im proved that it w«.s determined to make an effort to raise money for continuing the construction of the main line of the Northern Pacific westward from Bis marck. This was .done by issuing bonds secured by a ;- mortgage on the Missouri divisioVi, friom the Missouri river to Glendlve ori: the Yellowstone. The Missouri lo#n was speedily taken in 1879, and the, work of construction westward from ißismarck was actively carried on. Under Mr. Billings preliminary work had been begun on the Pacific coast with money raised by selling what are known as Pend d'Oreille bonds. This loan amounted to $4,500,000. Instead of beginning the construction at Portland, the chief city of the northwest, a seri ous mistake was made by commencing it at the junction of the Snake and Co lumbia rivers, where the town of Pasco now stands. From this point to Port land a route of travel had been opened by steamboats and by short portage railroads around two rapids in the river. The company determined to us? this disjointed route for its Portland connections and to «mploy its resources in building its main line from Wallula to Spokane Falls and farther east to Lake Pend d'Oreille in Northern Idaho. President Billings enlisted the friend ship of Winslow. Lanier & Co., of New York for the Northern Pacific. This firm associated with itself in the sale of the new bonds the house of Drexel, Morgan & Co., of Philadelphia and New York; the firm of A. Belmont & Co., joined the movement later, and for many years afterward these three strong "houses were the chief financial backers of the Northern Pacific com pany. A new general mortgage was prepared and $40,000,000 of bonds were issued and sold on it. This financial scheme was thought to be a great suc cess at the time. .President Billings was congratulated by President Hayes, Gen Sherman, Gen. Hancock and other prominent men. , The -work of construc tion was now pushed, with great vigor. HENRY VILLARD'S BLIND POOL. In the meanwhile a very able rail way promoter and organizer had ap peared on the P^acifitr coast. This was Henry Villard, aj Gernaan by birth, who first became kn&wn in this country as a war correspondent of the New York papers during 6ur Qlvil war. After ward he was ititrus^ed by German bondholders wi^h tn? financial man agement of the^ Kajisas Pacific rail road. After succeeding in this work he was sent ofit td'i Oregon by the same financial interests to take charge of the Oregon and California company, then in bankruptcy. Mr. Villard saw that a capital error had been made by the Northern Pacific management in beginning the construction of their road at a point 250 miles west of Port land, and he determined to take ad vantage of it. He organized the Ore gon Railway and Navigation company, obtained control of all the steamship and portage railroad interests which the Northern Pacific had dropped, and commenced the building of. a road up the southern bank of the Columbia river from Portland to Wallulu, then the initial point of the Northern Pa cific. He saw that the only open gate way through the great barrier of the Cascade Mountains was that of the gorge of the Columbia river, and of this he took possession; so that any railroad coming from the east and wishing to reach the tide water of the Pacific would have to deal with him or else build a very expensive line over the Cascade Mountains. After com pleting his railroad on the Columbia river he came to New York, and made one of the boldest and most successful strokes known in the history of Wall street. He formed what was known as a "blind pool," by inviting about fifty capitalists to subscribe toward a fund of $8,000,000, in order to enable him to lay the foundation of a certain enterprise, the exact nature of which he would disclose thereafter. The mys tery of this announcement appeared to be an irresistible attraction, and the result was that one-third of the persons asked to join the pool signed the full subscription list before the list could reach the other two-thirds. Then a great rush of applications for the right to subscribe ensued. Within twenty-tour hours after the issue of the circular more than twice the amount asked was applied for. RUSH OF INVESTORS. Men thronged Mr. Villard's office and pleaded for a participation in the scheme that had been allotted to the others and became angry because he would not take their money without security for investment in a project, the nature of which had been care fully concealed. The $9,000,000 was promptly paid in, and with this money, Mr. Villiard proceeded to buy the stock of the Northern Pacific, then at a very low price. Soon after he asked for $12,000,000 more, so that in all more than $20,000,000 in money was actually put into his hands. He organized the Oregon and Transcontinental company for the purpose of uniting and controll ing the Northern Pacific and the Ore gon Railway and Navigation compan ies. The success of this remarkable project placed Mr. Villard in control of the Northern Pacific. Mr. Billings resigned the presidency and Mr. Vil lard was elected to that office. His administration was marked by an epoch of rapid construction and gener al expansion. He leased the Oregon and California railroad, organized a terminal company at Portland infus ed great vigor and activity into the work of building the main line. Late in the summer of 1883 the long lines of the Northern Pacific advancing from the east and west up to the two slopes met at the summit ridge of the Rocky mountains. The completion of the road was celebrated by an excur sion that was without parallel for its magnitude and magnificence in the history of railroad building. Mr. Vil lard invited a large number of prom inent statesmen, journalists and finan ciers from Europe to take part in this event. He also invited many promin ent senators and members of congress, the governors of all the states trav ersed by his road, and a considerable number of leading American journal ists, artists and railroad men. This great party of excursionists was haul ed in four trains, made up of sleepers, private and dinning cars. Three of these trains started from Minneapolis and one from Portland. The last spike was driven at Gold Creek, in Montana, in September, 1883, amid much ora tory and cannon firing. The expenses of the visitors were all paid by the company from the time they left their homes until their return. ATTACKED BY THE BEARS. While Mr. Villard was conducting his army of friends across the plains to the Pacific coast the bears of Wall street began a determined attack upon the securities of the Northern Pacific. Notified of this movement by wire, the president of the company hastened to New York by special train and threw himself into the battle, making tre mendous efforts to sustain his stocks and to prevent their further deprecia tion. For this purpose he sacrificed his private fortune, but with no avail, for the decline continued, and he was finally forced to withdraw from the contest. An era of contraction and stringency set In which had its effect on railroad securities. Against this general strin gency the friends of the Northern Pa cific were powerless. Broken in health and spirits, Mr. Villard retired from the Northei'n Pacific presidency and went to Europe for rest. The preferred stock of the company, which had reached par during the spring of ISS3. declined to 40. and even the bond?-, which were amply secured, were look ed upon with distrust. With Mr. Villard's retirement, his splendid plan for making all transpor tation lines on the Pacific coast and In the Northwest tributary to the trans continental line of the Northern Pa cific speedily fell to pieces. He had already shut off the Union Pacific from entering Oregon by building a line of his Oregon Railway and Navigation company eastward over the Blue Mountains to the Snake river, where it intercepted the construction of tht. Oregon Short line of the Union Pa cific road. He had kent the Southern Pacific out of Orejron by extending his Oregon and California line to the Cali fornia boundary. He had captured, as we have seen, the Northern Pacific. All lines in Washington and Oregon were thus virtually under the control of this financial company known as the Oregon and Transcontinental. BUILDING CASCADE BRANCH. Mr. Villard was succeeded in the presidency by Robert Harris, of New York, a railroad man of long exper ience, on the Burlington system in the West and on the Erie road in the East. Mr. Harris' administration, which lasted about three years, was chiefly remarkable for the construction of the Cascade branch of the Northern Pa cific, which reduced by ever 100 miles the distance to points on the Puget sound. A practical pass was found in the mountain range, and, by the aid of a tunnel over a mile in length, the road was carried aceross the moun tain on grades not exceeding a maxi mum of 2 per cent. The construction of this line was rendered imperative by the fact that the Northern Pacific, when the Oregon Railway and Naviga tion company passed into the hands of the Union Pacific, found itself bottled up at Wallula, with no access to the sea save over the road of a rival com pany. The Union Facific demanded hig"h prices for hauling Northern Pa cific freight and passengers from Wal lula to Portland. By the building of the Cascade branch the company earn ed its land grant on this line, and found itself in excellent condition to compete with all rivals for Pacific coast business. In 1886 Henry Villiard returned to America backed by fresh German cap ital, and began again to take an active interest in Northern Pcific affairs. He was selected chairman of the beard of directors, and his old friend and as sociate, Thomas F. Oakes, who had served with him in railroad work in Kansas and Oregon, and who was then general manager of the Northern Pacific, was promoted to the presi dency. AN ERA OF EXPANSION. A second mortgage was now placed upon the road, and an extensive scheme of building branch feeder lines was undertaken. Mr. Oakes' close familiarity with the topography nnd resources of the country traversed by the Northern Pacific enabled him to influence the board in favor of build ing numerous branches, which had to depend largely upon future develop ment for their earnings. At that time the great railway systems of the West were all engaged in branch construc tion. The Northern Pacific went too far in this direction, but it can hardly E. LYTLE'S 1 I New Diamond Parlors, § l\ 415 ROBERT STREET, vu One Door Above Our Old Location. l 5 45 Our store is new, fresh, light, bright and neat, and ® £^ our goods are the same, except, we will add, they are very nu cheap. We recently bought the stock of goods of W. B. Rfc q± Smith, in the Arcade, from the assignee; this, being a 7| bankrupt stock, for less than one-half of first cost. The £i 5? goods consist in part of 1> 8 Silver and Gold Novelties, Solid Silver, Hollow and Flat Wear, Rings, Pins, Brooches, S "^ in fact all kinds of Jewelry, that we are selling for just p2 one-half that Mr. Smith marked them to sell for. W Our stock of Diamonds is larger than ever before. We m^ can save you from 35 to 40 per cent in Diamonds, and from L^ Qk 35 to 50 per cent in Watches and Chains. E- Lytle, Dia- C% ?lj mond Broker, established business in St. Paul in 1875. Rfc 7i Money loaned on Diamonds and other first-class goods. 32 Watch repairing, diamond setting and jewelry made to 1/ order. Goods sent C. O. D. with privilege of examination «7 (£5 to outside parties. I E. LYTLE'sIfIjnWD"POBLORS, I § 415 ROBERT ST., /V OPPOSITE: RYAN HOTEL. r^ be condemned for following the gen eral fashion of the times. The new branches in North Dakota, Minnesota, Manitoba, Montana, Idaho and Wash ington nearly doubled the original mileage of the Northern Pacific, in creasing it from about 2,000 miles to over 4,000 miles. All of this construc tion added very heavily to the fixed charges of the road. The branches were financiered by organizing inde pendent companies and issuing bonds which were guaranteed by the North ern Pacific. There was a universal era of expansion and speculation at that time in all parts of the West. Imml giation was rapidly pouring In, scores of new towns were built, new mines were opened, factories constructed, and the fever of business activity every where prevailed. The earnings of the Northern Pacific advanced with great rapidity and culminated in 1891 at $25, --000,000 gross. The bonded debt of the company at the same time Increased enormously and now reached the grand total of $156,000,000. The fixed charges amounted to nearly $10,000,000. For several years the net earnings equaled this heavy sum, but there was already a cloud in the financial sky. Immigra tion to the Northwest began to fall off. The land sales of the company, which had for several years been exceeding ly large, decreas-d steadily. Poor crops seriously diminished the earnings of the road, and the financiers of the com pany saw that there was no way to escape impending bankruptcy. This was hastened by the general financial crisis of 1893, which produced a great stringency in the money market and forced a large number of railroads into insolvency. APPLICATION FOR RECEIVER. When it became evident that the Northern Pacific could no longer earn its fixed charges steps were taken to secure from the federal court at Milwaukee, presided over by Judge Jenkins; the appointment of receivers who would be friendly to the interests of the corporation. -Bankruptcy proceedings were hurried through and a receivership was con stituted, consisting of Thomas F. Oakes, president of the Northern Pacific; Henry C. Payne, a Milwaukee financier, and Henry C. Rouse, a practical railroad man living in Cleveland. The receivers took charge of the property and operated the road for about three years. They unloaded all the dead weight of unprofitable branch lines, throwing these lines into the hands of their bondhold ers. The actual management of the road was placed in the hands of J. W. Kendrick, its former chief engineer. Many legal complica tions grew out ol the receivership, the most notable of which was an effort made by Judge Hanford, of Tacoma, to seize upon the Western lines of the company and to create for them an independent receivership. He appointed a receiver to act withirf his juris diction. This gentleman was wise enough, however, not to break the Northern Pacific into two sections, and he consented to have the treasurer and auditor in St. Paul act for the entire line. The receivership was finally terminated in the summer of m>6 by a suc cessful pian of reorganization formed by Ed ward D. Adams, of New York, which was carried into effect by the banking house of J P. Morgan & Co. Under this plan a fore closure suit was had and the entire property of the Northern Pacific Railroad company was sold to a new corporation called the Northern Pacific Railway company. The old bonds were called in and exchanged for new bonds bearing lower rates of interest, and the old stock was also taken up and new stock Is sued. The general financial result of the re organization was to induce the fixed charges of the company from about $9,000,00-0 per annum to about $6,000,000. This brought ths annual interest charges down to a figure not greater than the lowe&t amount of net earn ings made by the road in the year of the greatest business depression. WISCONSIN CENTRAL LEASE. During the Villard regime an ambition to make Chicago the eastern terminus of the Northern Pacific ltd its management to make a long lease of the Wisconsin Central lines extending from St. Paul to Chicago, and to enter into a scheme for terminal facilities in the latter city and for short lines extending to the suburbs. A company called the Chi cago and Northern Pacific was formed to build and to acquire such lines and to con struct the terminal improvements. North ern Pacific through trains now started from Chicago. While some prestige was gained in railway circles by this movement, the scheme proved to be financially unwise. There are six railway lines between Chicago and St. Paul and the acquirement of the longest of these by the Northern Pacific had a natural tendency to arouse unfriendly feelings in the management of the other five, and it coused them to divert a great deal of their Pacific coast freight and passenger traffic from the Northern Pacific to its rival, the Great Northern; thus the Wisconsin Central leasa proved a financial burden instead of an ad vantage, and the receivers made haste to abandon it. The plan of reorganization advised and carried out by Mr. Morgan and Mr. Adams was worked through expeditiously and with complete success. It was entirely fair toward all interests and the s:ock and bond holders accepted it with general satisfaction. E. W. Winter, general manager of the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha road, was elected president of the reorganized com pany and the Northern Pacific started out on what appeared to be a new career of pros perity. HILL ASPIRES TO CONTROL. James J. Hill, of St. Faul, president of the Great Northern Railway company, is a man of remarkable energy and ambition, of a very thorough and practical knowledge of railway operations. In 1595 he conceived the idea of uniting his own road to the Northern Pacific under one general management, and of thus obtaining complete control of the railway situation in the Northwest. The united roada would have over 10.000 miles of track, and would be the great dominant transportation power in the entire country lying between Lake Superior and the Pacific coast. For this plan Mr Hill obtained assistance of tho plan Mr Hill obtained tho assistance of the Dcutscho bank, of Berlin, the heaviest for eign holder of Northern Pacific securities. He proposed that tho Great Northern should guarantee $3,500,000 net earnings from tho Northern Pacific for it 3 bondholders, and that he should bo put in full possession of the great rival route ■which competed with the Great Northern at almost every important freight and passenger polDt in the Northwest. This gigantic plan of consolidation was in a fair way of going forward to success when it wa3 vigorously attacked in New York city papers in articles tl.at pointed out it 3 illegal ity and quoted the statutes of several of the Dorthwestcrn stater wbieh prohitHed the con solidation of parallel and competing lines of railway. At the samo time the attorney gen eral of the satto of ill^ni'sota. H. W. Ciiilds, applied for an injunction In Judge Kelley'a court. A "friendly suit" had already been put through the United States court at the instance of Mr. Hill and a decision obtained to the effect that the proposition for a con solidation was not unlawful. In the state court Mr. Childs was met with a great array of legal talent, headed by a United States senator. He won a complete victory, however. Judge Kelly decided that the Northern Pacific and the Great Northern roads were parallel and competing lines in the meaning of the statute, and could not be brought under one management. This decision alarmed the German bondholders represented by the Deutsche bank, and tha whole project fell through for a time. Mr. Hill Is not the sort of a man, however, that accepts one defeat as final. His next move was to enlist the backing of large English and American capitalists, to buy blocks of Northern Pacific stock. In order to secure such a heavy ownership in the road that it would entitle him to an Influence in its man agement WINTER'S RETIREMENT. The stock was purchased by Mr. Hill ana his friends, and he was again assured of tha co-operation of the Deutsche bank. Presi dent Winter resigned as soon as he was ap prised of the condition of affairs, not de siring to serve under Mr. Hill. The plan of creating a Northwestern railway dictatorship failed of success, owing to the attitude of J. P. Morgan, who was not willing to pass over his own control of Northern Pacific affairs" to Mr. Hill. When a successor was appoint ed to Mr. Winter, a compromiso agreement was reached by which Mr. Morgan named Charles S. Mellen, vice president of the New York, New Haven & Hartford railroad, for president of the Northern Pacific, and Mr. Hill was allowed to select the vice presi dent, naming Daniel S. Lamont, ex-secretary of war, who had been his choice for the pres idency of the road. As matters now stand Mr. Hill and his friends have a strong In fluence In Northern Pacific affairs, owing to their heavy holdings of the securities of tho company, but It is announced that the man agement In the hands of Mr. Mellen will be entirely independent, and that the two sys tems will continue to be operated In a com peting manner. i The building of the Northern Pacific was coincident with the development of our en tire northern belt of territory, extending from Lake Superior to the Pacific ocean. When the road was started In IS7O there were probably not 10.000 people living in the country it was to traverse. Now there aTio 500,000 in Northern Minnesota, nearly 300,000 in North Dakota, 200,000 in Montana, 130,000 In Idaho, and 400,000 in Washington, and 400,000 in Oregon. All this enormous settlement of a recent wilderness can be credited to the building of the Northern Pacific. The road has thus been a very great factor In national growth. The 11,000 men and women who originally subscribed for Its first bonds at I the instance of Jay Cooke, have never re ceived any dividend for their Investment. They have waited a long time, but as holders of the new preferred stock they may expect to get a dividend next year. Tho road Is now well manged and has plenty of business to do, and ought to ms>ke a profit over its fixed charges. Special Carnival Trains. For the accommodation of the peo ple of Oakland, Highwood, Red Rock, Newport and St. Paul Park, who wish to witness the Carnival displays dur ing State Fair week, the Burlington will, on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thurs day and Friday evenings, Sept. 7, 8, 9 and 10, run a special evening train, leaving Pullman avenue at 7:25 p. m. and returning leave St. Paul union depot at 11:20 p. m. The late traio Saturday evening will run as usual. NEW ENGLAND PLEASED. farmers Delighted by the Rise In Their Prodncts. WASHINGTON, Sept. 4.— C01. Brit? [iam, assistant secretary of agriculture, has returned from a trip to New Eng land. He reports that the people of Lhe section generally express them selves as pleased with the change that has taken place in Industrial condi tions. While the farmers are especial ly delighted on account of the en hanced value of their products, there is no disposition on the part of others to grumble because they have to pay more to the farmers, as they realize that their markets will Improve as the condition of the agricultural interests Inprove. Col. Brigham holds to the npinion that the aggregate value of ths entire crop of the country will be al most if not quite half a billion dollars In excess of that of last year, and saya that such a turn In the affairs of tha farming community must of necessity produce Improved conditions through out the country. HAM MS, FREE DELIVERY GvYOURj \ 'fj , STANDING- V ORDER AT ONC£ BEERS.]