THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN. PORTLAND, APRIL 7. 1907. mw)Mm, Mm Wkm 7"(9 27" THEIR, Sudd en 4 Growth of Xov.eJor Art That Often Comes to the New . Rich of America Harriman's.Failure to Get Social Recogni tion and How He" Took His Revenge RT DEXTER MARSHALL, "S" i EE that chap on the other side of the street? -Well he's set ting to be a millionaire," said a. rather cynical man to a friend on Broadway the other day. It won't be long, before you'll hear of his buying a few famous paintings, or a delicate ly tinted peach blow vase or two or an exquisite groupe of statuary, Just for the name of It; simply to win recognition In circles ihaf are sup posed to care nothing for a man just because he Is rich. "Possibly he won't turn to art col lecting, however; he may go Into the endowment line, beginning on a few beds in a hospital, if his Impulses are charitable, or' a scholarship In a uni versity If he wishes recognition form the scholarly. If his efforts to get his name up take the form of buying pict ures, or vases, or statuary, it will be because he likes artistic things of course; If he enters the endowment or cliartiablo field It may be partly be cause he wants to help others less lucky than himself, but most folk will believe his chief motive a desire to get his name up, whatever he does. It Is good for the world that men are moved In order to force recognition and the praise of their fellows to do many things which they need not do. The desire for the world's attention has resulted In the enormous enlarge ment of the world's knowledge. In the endowment of schools and universities, hospitals, museums and art galleries. In the establishment of many of the most useful and necessary charities. This desire has Impelled men ot wealth to use their money to pay the salaries and expenses of scientific in vestigators ; to equip and send expedi tions to 11 tie known region In order that the secrets of geography and geo logy might be sought out; to estab lish astronomical observations that the mysteries of the heavens might lie revealed; In a thousand ways the almost universal desire for recogni tion has worked out to the great bene fit of mankind. y James Lick's Way. Some men who want recognition are so constituted that they are willing to wait for It until after death. James Lick was ono of these, and his way was highly successful. It will Insure recognition from astronomers as long as they continue to study the stars, and from the rest of the world as long as Mount Hamilton, on the summit of which the Lick Observatory stands, escapes the California earthquakes. Lick started out In active life witn a grim determination to win recogni tion, not from the great world at first, but from a queer old Pennsylvania Dutchman, a miller for whom he worked when a boy. The miller had money In plenty and a pretty daugh ter. Lick had no money, but he wanted the miller's daughter and told the miller so. The latter wouldn't put up with any Buch nonsence as His daughter marrying a poor young man, even If she was In love with him. To impress the situation upon Lick's mind he reminded the young man of the mill and asked; "You see that mill, Jimmy? When you can show me through as good a mill which you own then you can come to me and talk about marrying my daughter, but not till then. Young Lick had nothing further to say about the girl. He learned the trade of piano and organ building and went into business for himself In Han over, Pa.; Baltimore and Philadelphia successively, after which he aband oned nis native country nnd located In Buenos Ayres. He worked like a i-i at tils business to get enough money together to convince the old miller that he was well enough off to knarry the girl. Not progressing fast enough, he added stinginess to his hard work and became close almost to miserliness. He remulned in Buenos Ayres some years and got moderately head of the game. In 1847, hoping to do better, he returned to the United States, settling near San Jose, Cal. He was then a year past 60, a soli tary, sulky sort of Individual, who had no friends to speak of and about whom nobody even dreamed that there was a shred of romance. Before he had been In California long, however, ho showed that he had never forgotten the girl he had lod SO years earlier, and. also, that the overmastering idea of his life had been to make her father sorry for the course he had taken. Lick's method of cirrrou out his Idea took tho form of a flouring mil!, which was admiring ly termed "palatial" by the Callfor nians. since he spent $200,000 or more upon It, laying floors of mahogany, putting In dividing walls and ceilings of other rare woods, and lavishing no end of ore and attention upon Its ma chinery and construction. He knew that he couldn't win the hand of his oldtlme sweetheart then, for she had long been married, but as soon as the mill was completed he had a whole series of photographs i.ui'ii which he sent to the miller. Apparently Llek was unsatisfied with his long-deferred and empty triumph. At all events he planned the observatory which boars his name with direct reference to winning the recog nition of the entire world. This was shown by the wording of the first Lick will drawn up that contained an observatory clause, since It stipulated distinctly that the observatory should contain "a powerful telescope, superior to and more powerful than any tele scope yet made '' He was so anxious that there should be no hitch about It that he had the will redrawn repeated ly. It served Its purpose In Its final form, although the executors had to m:ike big concessions to his brother before they got through with him. Lick made a dosen other bequests, varying from $5000 to $300,000 for less spectacular objects, one ot which was coa cooc&ooeooo '. "BB K 1 -KBwSB 5 H " " in I1'' i sa i iii ii Aim i IHHIilHHHBiilll I 1 li W. Hi f nr$ii'iH SMHKr - S the erection of a monument in San Francisco to the memory of Francis Scott Key. author of the "Star Spangled Banner," and another to found a California school of mechan ical arts. None of these other bequests carried with It a stipulation that the Institution benefited should bear his name, but such a clause did go with the one providing for the observatory. Nobody ever knew why he decided upon an astronomical observatory for his monument; it wasn't because of any special interest he had either in the stars or telescopes, but he could have selected no better way of get ting his name up after death than by doing exactly as lie did. Lick's entire fortune did not ex ceed M.030,000, so that his benefac tions were small compared with the benefactions of Carnegie or Rocke feller distributed during life and not withheld until after death, as he with held his. In 1S7S, however, when Lick died, at 70. the size of his telescope bequest was ' almost unprecedented. To this day nobody else, either before or after death, has given a million in a lump to further astronomical Investigation. Explorer by Proxy. Morris K. Jesup, who has been giv ing freely to all sorts of philanthropic and scientific purposes for many years, has got his name up chiefly as an ex plorer by proxy. He stopped trying to make any more money 23 years ago. In 1SS4. and since then has devoted practically all his time to spending it in the ways that suit him best It would not be fair, probably, to speak of Mr. Jesup's course as a planned out campaign for recognition, but his activities have brought It to him In great parcels. He now Is only three years less than 80. He was bom at Newport, Conn., In 1830, found his way to New Torjt when only a lad, and went o work in the office of Rogers, Ketchum Grosvenor, of the Paterson Locomotive Works. The only knowledge he got of what a college or university is like, during tho years that he might have been a college student, was got from the out side and from hearsay, although his father was a college man. Morris K. Is now entitled to write A. M. and LL. D. after his name, however the degree of master of arts having been conferred upon him by three of the oldest, universities in the country Tale, Williams and Columbia and the degree of doctor of laws by Princeton. Thus he may properly be termed "doctor." but he doesn't like the title, and it Is seldom used in connection with his name. Besides these academic nonors. he has received unusual recog nition from abroad In the form of the rmmmMmwrrirrw i n i u i m kimhmi inn n 9 C0l-:CT0V Jskovt Hy Hoxsi he ALASKA WATVZS ter iHe expeditions ss-ii ou.i Oy JWoRJ?S AT, ysvZ3 ,,7 order of St. Stanislaus of the first class, conferred by the reigning Czar of Russia a little less than two years ago, and he is held in the highest esteem the whole world over because of the "way he has spent his money to push along scientific investigations. The Jesup name Is certainly "up" among the scientists, and almost as much so as in artistic, philanthropic and religious circles. The movements financed by Mr. Jesup which have won for him such exceptional recognition have covered an extraordi nary range. He began giving to the Pres byterian Church, of which he has been a member since boyhood, years before he retired. He was one of the founders of the Young Men's Christian Association. He built the Boy's Lodging-house for the Children's Aid Society In New York near ly 20 years ago. Merely to list the other Institutions he has founded or helped would be to write a catalogue, and to tell how much money he has spent upon them would involve a table of figures the ag gregate of which would be decidedly Im pressive. His pet is the American Mu seum of Natural History, and he has won widest recognition from the exploration parties which he has sent out as presi dent of that institution and paid for out of his own pocket. There have been lx or seven of these expeditions and they have penetrated some of the most remote parts of the earth. One of them went to Northern Si beria, where the traveling scientists learned a good deal in support of the theory that North America was originally peopled through a great tide of Immi gration from Asia. The scientists also visited the island of Sakhalin, or Saghalien. which Russia held through seizure for many years, but now holds jointly with Japan. There the Jesup explorers rediscovered the rumored hairy, aboriginal, Ainu race. Another Jesup expedition visited Alaska, where painters and photographers and writers made graphic and" written records of the things found by the scientists. Other ex peditions visited other strange lands, everywhere studying men and women, their ways of life, the traditions, their folklore, their songs and their ways of living, as well as the physical features of the country, to which the observations of nearly all the earlier explorers and some of the modern ones have been con fined. The halls and rooms of the Museum of Natural History contain many trophies brought back by these expeditions, some of which have been away years at a time. Their collections have been so large that important selections have been presented to many other museums. It was a pre sentation of much interest and value to the Academy of Sciences at St Peters burg which brought the recognition of the Czar. In the form of the order of St. Stanislaus. Jesup furnished Peary with the good ship Roosevelt, on which the latter made his recent famous journey to the "furthest north." As a proxy ex plorer, Jesup has added more to our knowledge of out-of-the-way places than any other living man. Jesup amassed part of the wealth which has made his remarkably wide recognition possible In the banking busi ness, but a part of it was got together in the building and financing of railroads at a time when railroad building in this country was very profitable. He got out of his railroad directorates, however, soon after quitting the occupation of banker. The South Carolina Central was the last road with which he retained of ficial connection. Morris K. Jesup seems to be quite ready to suffer the greatest publicity of his exploring expeditions, but he is un usually averse to seeing anything about his own personality in print. He is a handsome man for one of his age, and full of dignity, with heavy mustache and luxuriant old-fashioned side whiskers. He is a man of great suavity and is de cidedly in earnest with regard to any thing and everything which he under takes. He Is nearly as fond of the New York Chamber of Commerce, witji which he has been connected since 1863 and ot which he has been president for years, as he is of the Museum of Natural His tory. He dresses with extreme care, and, despite the almost. Invariably decorative design of his neckwear, in excellent taste. Fight for Social Recognition. The two greatest railroad leaders now In this country, J. J. Hill and E. H. Har riman. have sought, apparently, to win the recognition for which both have been undeniably eager, chiefly along the lines of their business activities. Tet there is a story which you have seen in the news columns, no doubt, within the last few weeks, that Har riman's ambition for the social recog nition of hi8 family, at least, has be come as keen as his desire for recog nition as a king in the transportation world. This story has it that he de sired Mrs. Stuyvesant Fiah, daring, not to say eccentric, society leader, to in troduce his daughters Into New York's most exclusive social set; that Mrs. Fish declined decisively, not to say rudely, and that it was because of her declination that H&rrlman relentlessly forced her husband out of the Illinois Central presidency. Such a course would seem too trivial for a man of Harriman's caliber. The knowing ones say they see no reason, if Mr. Harriman has really entered the lists for social recognition, why he should not succeed in winning all he goes after, even if it should Include the social humiliation of Mrs. Fish. The Boys' Club in New Tork. of JrOC Mivse Oy o .., L.. J which Harriman was one of the found ers at 28, more than 30 years ago, was not in all probability started as an aid to the recognition of anybody, but simply as a good sort of thing to have a hand in. as indeed it was and is. That the big railroad man coasiders it an asset now, however, seems to be borne out by the circumstance that the institution received plenty of attention in a recent article about him, the only one which, he has ever authorized. He sometimes tells his friends with pride that, as president of this organization, he is at the" head of the biggest club in the world. This Is true, since its membership includes nearly 10.000 of the Fast Side boys who by and by wilT be voters. Harriman's push for social recogni tion is not. being made along lines sim ilar to those adopted by any of the other big railroad men with a hanker ing for society. George J. Gould, it may be remembered, found It Incon tft!?-sissBtfW' Tc(rrM&5jff& sVCy? &wJbf -. , nen NELSON (N venient to win his social fight on American soil, and so fought it out in foreign waters, sailing yacht races with the Prince of Wales, wow King Edward VII. Jay Gould knew he could not win social place and never tried; neither did any of the Vanderbilts un-i til William K. and Cornelius, grand sons of the Commodore, were big fig ures on the stage. The Rockefellers, Carnegie. John W. Gates, H. H. Rogers and many others who have became abnormally rich In the last twoscore years or less have not yet made any effort whatever for social prominence. Washington Is a bigger battleground for that sort of recognition than New York nowadays. It was at Washington that Levi Z. Lelter. illiterate, but rolling tn wealth, won social place for his family by slop ping his dollars all around in ways which brought about the marriage of each of his three daughters to a for eigner of such "exalted" social rank .,-Tur'vfCfdRy. TH'untiuseu JLCK OBSERVATORY . I yVbif Zfam i 'Mozi.-jCei. that New York's society folk had te take them and all the others of the family up whether or no. No not all the family. "Joe" Lelter never was a society favorite, but that is probably because he preferred to get his name up as a wheat pit king and in other ways than In society, spending a million or so to learn that he didn't carry quite guns enough. The social campaign now being waged at Washington by Thomas R. Walsh, the gold miner who made such a tremendous strike some years ago. is one of the most interesting that has been organized for years. Like George Gould, Walsh began his campaign abroad, making friends with Leopold, the amazing Belgian King, whom he entertained in Paris at several ban quets whl h cost so much money that the French Journalists were confirmed In their strong suspicions that the Americans were all crazy as well a too rich for their own good. Walsh's entertainments in Washington last Winter "were hardly less spectacular than those which he gave In Paris. Bets are freely made that, although he and his wife have not penetrated the real inner social circle, they will ultimately arrive. Although J. J. Hill never has made a move for social recognition once. Indeed, his wife administered a decided snub to some society women of St. Paul who tried to conciliate her he has made a strong effort to get hls name up as an art con noisseur by the lavish purchase of paint ings, and. being a better judge of pictures than most millionaires, has won his point decisively. Morgan. Hill's great ally In the financial transportation games In which Harriman and the Rockefellers have played for years on opposite sides, has striven hard er for recognition as an art patron than Hill, having assumed about the same at titude toward the Metropolitan Museum of Art that Jessup has toward the Mu seum of Natural History- Morgan's In vestments in pictures, vases, statuary, wonderful wood carvings and almost every other form of art have cost him millions more, perhaps, than has been expended along similar lines by any other living man. Both he and John D. Rocke feller haVe made big olds for recognition abroad by spectacular traveling, but ap parently not with ulterior society mo tives. Thomas F. Ryan's chief efforts for rec ognition, outside his business of gather ing In all the traction and insurance In terests in sight, have been in the way of cathedral building. Some Unusual Ways. The most astounding move made by an "exalted personage" for social recognition was made by Napoleon when he divorced his wife Josephine, whom be bad married for love, to marry the daughter of a Hapsburg. Napoleon had supposed thathe winning Concluded on Page 11.) p