That means factory sites.
That means me buying in the factory sites before anybody guesses the cat is going to jump, much less, which way.
Factories mean tens of thousands of workingmen and their families.
That means more houses and more land, and that means me, for I'll be there to sell them the land.
And tens of thousands of families means tens of thousands of nickels every day for my electric cars.
The growing population will mean more stores, more banks, more everything.
And that'll mean me, for I'll be right there with business property as well as home property.
What do you think of it?"
Therefore she could answer, he was off again, his mind's eye filled with this new city of his dream which he builded on the Alameda hills by the gateway to the Orient.
"Do you know—I've been looking it up—the Firth Of Clyde, where all the steel ships are built, isn't half as wide as Oakland Creek down there, where all those old hulks lie?
Why ain't it a Firth of Clyde?
Because the Oakland City Council spends its time debating about prunes and raisins.
What is needed is somebody to see things, and, after that, organization.
That's me.
I didn't make Ophir for nothing.
And once things begin to hum, outside capital will pour in.
All I do is start it going.
'Gentlemen,' I say, 'here's all the natural advantages for a great metropolis.
God Almighty put them advantages here, and he put me here to see them.
Do you want to land your tea and silk from Asia and ship it straight East?
Here's the docks for your steamers, and here's the railroads.
Do you want factories from which you can ship direct by land or water?
Here's the site, and here's the modern, up-to-date city, with the latest improvements for yourselves and your workmen, to live in.'"
"Then there's the water.
I'll come pretty close to owning the watershed.
Why not the waterworks too?
There's two water companies in Oakland now, fighting like cats and dogs and both about broke.
What a metropolis needs is a good water system.
They can't give it.
They're stick-in-the-muds.
I'll gobble them up and deliver the right article to the city.
There's money there, too—money everywhere.
Everything works in with everything else.
Each improvement makes the value of everything else pump up.
It's people that are behind the value.
The bigger the crowd that herds in one place, the more valuable is the real estate. And this is the very place for a crowd to herd.
Look at it.
Just look at it!
You could never find a finer site for a great city.
All it needs is the herd, and I'll stampede a couple of hundred thousand people in here inside two years.
And what's more it won't be one of these wild cat land booms.
It will be legitimate.
Twenty years for now there'll be a million people on this side the bay.
Another thing is hotels.
There isn't a decent one in the town.
I'll build a couple of up-to-date ones that'll make them sit up and take notice.
I won't care if they don't pay for years. Their effect will more than give me my money back out of the other holdings.
And, oh, yes, I'm going to plant eucalyptus, millions of them, on these hills."
"But how are you going to do it?" Dede asked.
"You haven't enough money for all that you've planned."