<h3 align="center">CHAPTER XLVIII</h3><br/><br/>
<p>Lester had been doing some pretty hard thinking,
but so far he had been unable to formulate any
feasible plan for his re-entrance into active life. The
successful organization of Robert's carriage trade trust
had knocked in the head any further thought on his part
of taking an interest in the small Indiana wagon manufactory.
He could not be expected to sink his sense of
pride and place, and enter a petty campaign for business
success with a man who was so obviously his financial
superior. He had looked up the details of the combination,
and he found that Bracebridge had barely indicated
how wonderfully complete it was. There were
millions in the combine. It would have every little
manufacturer by the throat. Should he begin now in a
small way and "pike along" in the shadow of his giant
brother? He couldn't see it. It was too ignominious.
He would be running around the country trying to fight
a new trust, with his own brother as his tolerant rival and
his own rightful capital arrayed against him. It couldn't
be done. Better sit still for the time being. Something
else might show up. If not—well, he had his independent
income and the right to come back into the Kane
Company if he wished. Did he wish? The question was
always with him.</p>
<p>It was while Lester was in this mood, drifting, that he
received a visit from Samuel E. Ross, a real estate dealer,
whose great, wooden signs might be seen everywhere on
the windy stretches of prairie about the city. Lester
had seen Ross once or twice at the Union Club, where he
had been pointed out as a daring and successful real
estate speculator, and he had noticed his rather conspicuous
offices at La Salle and Washington streets.
Ross was a magnetic-looking person of about fifty
years of age, tall, black-bearded, black-eyed, an arched,
wide-nostriled nose, and hair that curled naturally,
almost electrically. Lester was impressed with his lithe,
cat-like figure, and his long, thin, impressive white
hands.</p>
<p>Mr. Ross had a real estate proposition to lay before
Mr. Kane. Of course Mr. Kane knew who he was.
And Mr. Ross admitted fully that he knew all about Mr.
Kane. Recently, in conjunction with Mr. Norman Yale,
of the wholesale grocery firm of Yale, Simpson & Rice,
he had developed "Yalewood." Mr. Kane knew of
that?</p>
<p>Yes, Mr. Kane knew of that.</p>
<p>Only within six weeks the last lots in the Ridgewood
section of "Yalewood" had been closed out at a total
profit of forty-two per cent. He went over a list of
other deals in real estate which he had put through, all
well-known properties. He admitted frankly that there
were failures in the business; he had had one or two himself.
But the successes far outnumbered the bad speculations,
as every one knew. Now Lester was no longer
connected with the Kane Company. He was probably
looking for a good investment, and Mr. Ross had a proposition
to lay before him. Lester consented to listen,
and Mr. Ross blinked his cat-like eyes and started in.</p>
<p>The idea was that he and Lester should enter into a
one-deal partnership, covering the purchase and development
of a forty-acre tract of land lying between
Fifty-fifth, Seventy-first, Halstead streets, and Ashland
Avenue, on the southwest side. There were indications of
a genuine real estate boom there—healthy, natural, and
permanent. The city was about to pave Fifty-fifth
Street. There was a plan to extend the Halstead Street
car line far below its present terminus. The Chicago,
Burlington & Quincy, which ran near there, would be
glad to put a passenger station on the property. The
initial cost of the land would be forty thousand dollars
which they would share equally. Grading, paving,
lighting, tree planting, surveying would cost, roughly,
an additional twenty-five thousand. There would be
expenses for advertising—say ten per cent, of the total
investment for two years, or perhaps three—a total of
nineteen thousand five hundred or twenty thousand
dollars. All told, they would stand to invest jointly
the sum of ninety-five thousand, or possibly one hundred
thousand dollars, of which Lester's share would be
fifty thousand. Then Mr. Ross began to figure on the
profits.</p>
<p>The character of the land, its salability, and the likelihood
of a rise in value could be judged by the property
adjacent, the sales that had been made north of Fifty-fifth
Street and east of Halstead. Take, for instance, the
Mortimer plot, at Halstead and Fifty-fifth streets, on the
south-east corner. Here was a piece of land that in 1882
was held at forty-five dollars an acre. In 1886 it had
risen to five hundred dollars an acre, as attested by its
sale to a Mr. John L. Slosson at that time. In 1889,
three years later, it had been sold to Mr. Mortimer for
one thousand per acre, precisely the figure at which this
tract was now offered. It could be parceled out into
lots fifty by one hundred feet at five hundred dollars per
lot. Was there any profit in that?</p>
<p>Lester admitted that there was.</p>
<p>Ross went on, somewhat boastfully, to explain just
how real estate profits were made. It was useless for
any outsider to rush into the game, and imagine that he
could do in a few weeks or years what trained real
estate speculators like himself had been working on for a
quarter of a century. There was something in prestige,
something in taste, something in psychic apprehension.
Supposing that they went into the deal, he, Ross, would
be the presiding genius. He had a trained staff, he controlled
giant contractors, he had friends in the tax office,
in the water office, and in the various other city departments
which made or marred city improvements. If
Lester would come in with him he would make him some
money—how much he would not say exactly—fifty
thousand dollars at the lowest—one hundred and fifty to
two hundred thousand in all likelihood. Would Lester
let him go into details, and explain just how the scheme
could be worked out? After a few days of quiet cogitation,
Lester decided to accede to Mr. Ross's request; he
would look into this thing.</p>
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