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and interdependent people, it found itself suddenly welcomed as the most suddenly to the ground as he was about to step into a railway carriage. team of galloping horses, became very nearly uncontrollable. a vast mutualism of industry such as no other age, perhaps, has ever It was a fast and furious period. The whole country was ablaze with a and folly of competition had everywhere driven men to the policy of passion of prosperity. After generations of conflict, the men with large cooperation. Mills were linked to mills and factories to factories, in It was adapted to all kinds and conditions of men. A great corporation, He pushed the policy of expansion until he broke all the records. He nerved at every point with telephone wires, may now pay fifty thousand known. And as the telephone is essentially the instrument of co-working and the pay station, the telephone was now on its way to be universal. When the message rate was fairly well established, Hudson died--fell demanded, and more, and more, until his captains, like a thirty-horse immigrant boy, just arrived in New York City, may offer five coppers and find at his disposal a fifty million dollar telephone system. opened up the way to such an expansion of telephone business as Bell, was a popular, optimistic man, with a "full-speed-ahead" temperament. there were twice as many users; in six years there were four times as ideas had at last put to rout the men of small ideas. The waste flung it into a campaign of red-hot development. More business he in his rosiest dreams, had never imagined. In three years, after 1896, dollars to the Bell Company, while at the same time a young Irish many; in ten years there were eight to one. What with the message rate In his place came Frederick P. Fish, also a lawyer and a Bostonian. Fish borrowed money in stupendous amounts--$150,000,000 at one time--and

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