OntheBrifeof t'.".1;"1?; 'tV1-- ,v- T.-g'-'jc..g. a" s 'A 1 A7!r:'.',A"?rT?r -..-. y y .. j ... . PEOPLE TALKED ABOUT njmrsllili li iiii IIWIIJIMIllimil M HE modern battleship In A marvel of concentra tion and space economy. Thero Is no room for things purely ornamun tal, but every foot ot bpneo Is used to somo purpfcao In connection with Uio storage or op eration of the myriad ad Junctu nocoBsnry for tho work, tho sofoty ana mo comfort ot the hundreds' of men who crowd one of these floating fortresses, If one were to choose, however, tho ono section of n battleship which above nil olhcra is n veritable neat of wonders, and surprises chplco would unhesitatingly fall upon tho "bridge" that elevated structure which Ib bo appropriately named and which ox teuds tho full width of tho dock on tho forward part of the ship In front ot tho htiffe smokestacks, ns a "land lub her" might designate H'rii location. For puo thing, we find on tho brldgo on even greater array than any where olo on the ship, of thoso re markable mechanical and oloctrlcnl leVlccs which do po much of tho work on shipboard thnt"vould soom to roqulro human Intelligence. But tf-.U urldge has-In addition-a npo cl:U nlgnincnnco which multiplies many times Its Importnnco and tho Intorout of Its cqulpmont It Is tho "norvo center" of tho Bhlp, tho seat of nuthorlty and command which directs all the operations within tho bounds of tho big armorclnd, and also tho In telllgenco ofllce through which this warship ' community communlcntos other vessels of tho fleet and, Indeed, with the entire outside world; Under ordinary conditions when tho battleship Is cruising at soa, par ticipating In battlo drill or target prac tltso or engaged In any of tho other Important functions of n sea warrior tho captain commanding, tho nnvlgat ing officer and othor responsible offi cials of tho ship hnvo their positions on tho bridge In tlmo of actual battlo thoso directing hunds of tho fighting machine would not cxposo thomsolvcs on tho brldgo, but thoy would not bo far away. Sheltered by conning tow era or somo other protcctlvo scroens, they would be as near na possible to tho vantage points to bo found only on tho exposed brldgo and from thoso substitute observatories Bomo of thorn located directly behind or otherwise ndja cont to tho bridge would dlroct tho action of tho battling rnjorclad. In order to tinnblo tho ofllcora on tho brldgo to bo at all times closely In touch with all parts of tho ship this elovatod promonado is mndo tho nerve center 6f elaborate tolophono, telegraph and slgnnllng systeniB that afford Instantaneous communication with tho engine and flro rooms, the ammunition magazines, all tho dlfforcut "gun stations" throughout tho ship, au,d, in fact, ovory Bceno ot activity Hint Jiaa part In tho complox mission of ono of thoso groat fighting machines. The tolophono system on a battleship is much ilk the private tolophono systom in a groat storo or manufactory, but with tho dlfforonco lhat on , shipboard most of tho recolvers nro of tho pattern which fit ojoso to tho bond, covering both pars and strongly resembling thoso usod by tho hollo girls In tolophono exchanges. This spoclal equip ment Is designed to shut out disturbing jioIbos and is very essential w"hon ofllcora and mon may .be caltod upon to listen to telephone conversation when tho guns nro ronrlng or against tho opposi tion ot tho various distracting noises always to 1e encountered on shipboard, Near the brldgo of a battleship Is tho wireless tolograph" BtnUmT whlcH Ts ono ot tho nower yet easily ono of tho most Important adjuncts of tho up to dato battleship. However, the wireless tolo graph Js not used for Interior communication aboard tho battleship but solely for tho oxchango of messages with othor ships and with shoro sta tions. W'hut nro sometlmoB roforrod to as "tele graphs" on shipbonrd aro not tolegrnphs at all, as tho lay reader understands them, but nro rather signaling systoms. Tho most common of thoso communlcatlvo Bystoms Is that whoroby tho prcssuro or a button or lovor at ono station on a battloBbip say on tho brldgo will causo n print ed command to suddenly appear In Illuminated form In a distant part of tho Bhlp. For Instance, the vhiovemont ot n certain lovor on. tho brldgo of tho battleship will causo an illuminated Blgn to Buddonly appear before tho eyes ot tho engi neers, 'way dowri( bolow tho water lino, reading, "Full Speed Ahead," or "Full Spood Astern," or any othor command which It Is doslrod to glvo. By moans of this method of signaling a command can, It need bo, bo communlcatod simultaneously to a number of different stations scattered throughout the ship. Indood It Is by thla expedi ent that tho captain ot tho battleship Insures unl formlty ot action during target pructlso or In battlo. In a twinkling ho can send tho command "Begin flrlug" or "Coaso flrlug," or any othor In structions to each and ovory gun crow acattorod .tbroBgWout tho leugth ot tho ship, t. On tho brldgo, likewise, wo And all tho paraphernalia for steering' tho ship. Including the great wheel, tho electrical control, tho compassos, tho chart board, with Its stores of charts and all tho othor mo chnnlcnl adjuncts for keeping tho hugo vessel on tho proper courso. Hero, .too, nro tho Booming iy slmplo dovlccB which now con trol tho manipula tion of tho hugo searchlights porchod up aloft on skeleton Btcol towors-a means of manag ing tho BonrohllghtH which Is not only more rapid but more effective than tho old plan of turning them this way and that by manual labor. On tho brldgo, too, aro no end ot signaling devices for supplementing tho wlroless tologrnph in communication with other shins or with tho shore. Thero nro Blgnal flags tor ubo wltn various codes and with tho always usoful wigwag, thoro aro tho Bomaphoro nnd Ardols ByBtoms for signal ing at night by monns ot different combinations of rod and white lights, and thoro 1b tho olcctrlc torch for unofllclal messages. Tho Amorlcan navy has boon tho most sue coBBful mllltnry organization, from Its vory lncop tlon, which tho world has over seen. That 1b a pretty broad Btntomont, but It Is absolutely truo. Thoro ard good rcaBonB for this. In tho early dayB wo were a commercial people Wo wero natural sallormon. Our peoplo lived along tho BhoroB. Thoy mado tholr monoy In commercial purButtB. Tho men who commanded morehnnt Bhlps woro not only good Bailors; thoy wero' good merchants, nnd tho foundations for many ot tho great fortunes of this country hnvo como from that Bourco, In order to protect thorn solves thoy woro obliged to go armed. Tholr Bhlps woro armed as woro privateers In tlmo of war. Tho result is that thoy not only know navi gation, but thoy know gunnery, and combined with theso qualities tho intelligence which makes great merchants. Naturally, wlion thoso mon camo into positions , whoro thoy commandod men-of-war, thoy woro equal to tho occasion, although thoy had had no naval training. As tlmo wont on thoy acquired n naval training, so that in tho later ware, in tho early part ot tho nineteenth contury, thoy mot ovory roqulromont, and In tho recent ware tho graduatcB of tho Naval 4ncadomy havo boon equnl to ovory duty which haa bceu imposed upon them. Thoy havo mado a record ot which ovory American citizen should bo proud. The Amorlcan sallorrnan haB always boon effi cient Thoy wero good men In tho tlmo of tho no volution; competent men In tho tlmo ot tho war of 1812. Thoy Uro bettor mon today than thoy woro in those dayB, because today 95 por cont. ot thorn nro Amorlcan cltlzons, and not a man is Bhlppod In tho Amorlcan navy who has not do clurod his Intontlon to become a cttlzon. Twenty flvo yoars ago not moro thau 30 per cent, of our men-of-war's men woro American citizens. Tho Amorlcan navy haa boon successful bo causo our ohlps havo always been ns good slnps as any that woro built in tho world. Our merchant men, In tho Revolutionary times, and down to tho Civil war, woro tho host merchant ships sail ing tho Boas. Thoy wore, no doubt, tho best manned, nud thoy mado tho fastost tlmo. During tho period ot woodon ships, when wo built mon-of-war thoy woro of tho samo genoral character. Qur mon-ot-war, gun for gun, wero oqual to, and probably superior, to thoso ot any other nation. Wo havo always been ahlo to shoot better than mostjieople Go back to tho early tlmos, to tho revolutionary war. Wo lost 24 mon-af-war, carry ing loss than BOO guns, in tho Revolutionary war, while tho British loat 102 men-ot-wnr, carrying moro than 2,500 guns. Wo enpturod 800 ot their merchant ships, and it lu not too niuch to say that It It had not boon for tho damage caused by ho Amorlcan navy wo would not havo won tho Revolutionary war at all; that Is, It might havo boon necessary later to havo fought that war over again. Tho Bnmo rolntlvo skill prevailed in tho Wnr of 1812. Our ships of tho Bamo class wero superior to tho ships of our opponents. This statomont is confirmed when wo Btudy tho exact figures. For Instance, In the Hornot Peacock contest tho British ship lost flvo mon klllod and 37 wounded, out of a crow of 130, whllo tho Amorlcan ship hnd but threo wounded this In oloven minutes. In tho Wasp-Frolic fight tho British ship lost 15 mon killed and 47 wounded, out of a crow of 110, whllo tho American ,shlp lost but flvo klllod and flvo wounded from a crow of tho samo size. I could mention a number of similar lnstnncos which demonstrate my statement that at that time wo wero ablo to shoot well, and wo havo boon shooting better ovor since. Not only tho men of tho north, but the men of tho south, shot woll dur ing tho Civil war; thoy shot well during tho Span ish war; and wo can shoot half a dozen times as well today as wo could during tho Spanish war. Never has tho American navy mado such n roc- ord as It Is making today, and never has thoro been a navy having a record oxcolllng tho ono which our navy Is now making for capacity to hit tho tnrget. That Is really tho wholo war problem to hit what you aro fehoatlng nt" Wo havo not" in tho past built homogeneous fleets. Wo build a surplus of battleships and then provide tho mon to man them, nnd frequently pro vldo moro than wo havo ships for. Wo build auxll- larles and torpedo boats, If wo do It at all, without any regard to tho relation which such crnft should boar to tho battleship fleet, and whllo wo havo built or have In construction 20 battleships, wo havo practically no means of furnishing tenders tor them under Bervlco conditions. When tho battleship fleot wns sent to tho Pa cific recently It was necessary to charter 40 foreign ships to carry coal for It. If It had boon found necessary to send tho fleet around tho horn In tlmo ot wnr It could not hnvo been attomptod, becauso wo could not havo furnished American vessels In which to carry tho coal. Vory fow peoplo rcnllzo tho doplorablo condition wo" aro In, ad far as our merchant mnrlno Is con' corned. If wo hnd a largo merchant marlno wo could draw from It without having spoclal auxil iaries for tho navy, but we aro bo lacking In both that It makes our present sltuntlon almost hope less. When tho Spanish war broko out It was noccs sary to purchaso colliers and transports. Ono hun dred and two vossols wero bought at a cost of some thing ovor $17,000,000, but thoy cost a very largo porcentngo moro than their market valuo, and moro than twlco as much as thoy could hnvo bocn sold for It thoy hud bcon put on tho market at tho ter mination of the war. In other words, wo paid out millions of dollars becauso wo had not provided oursttlves with sultablo auxlllarios for our battlc Bhlp fleot. Wo should havo a navy 'adequate for our needs; not only adequate In battloshlps, but ndequuto in ovory othor respect. RAILROAD HEAD RESIGNS Marvin Hughltt, who lias been president ot the Chicago and Northwestern Railway company for nearly 24 years, has given up that position to accept tho chairmanship of tho board of direc tors. Mr. Hughltt, who Is In his sovonty-thlrd -yonr, Is in many ways ono of tho most remark nblo men in the railway service Thoro probably is no man In tho railroad world today who is moro wldoly known and yet about whom bo llttlo Is known in detail as Mr. Hughltt This is tho result of a lifelong policy of doing things rathor than of talking. Ho was born In Genoa, Cayuga county, N. V., in 1837, and began his career as a telegraph oper ator at Albany for tho Now York and Buffalo Telegraph company In 1862. In 1854 ho located in Chicago and worked as an operator for tho Illi nois and Missouri Tolograph company. Mr. Hughltt entered tho railway Borv lco in I860, and until 18C2 ho was consecutlvoly superintendent of telegraph and train master of tho St. Louis, Alton and Chicago at Bloomlngton. From 18C2 to 18C4 ho was superintendent of tho southern division of tho Illinois Central. It was during tho latter period that Mr. Hughltt performed an operating feat that has novcr boon surpassed. Tho government suddenly called upon tho rond to movo a largo detachment ot'troopB at a tlmo when tho road wns flooded with traffic. Tho forco becamo somewhat demoralized at tho magnltudo of tho problem, whereupon Mr. Hughltt took his placo at tho dis patcher s key nnd performed tho task without interruption to traffic, at tho "vxponso of 72 hours of continuous service Whon ho awakoned two days Inter ho found that ho had bcon promotod to tho position of general superin tendent of tho road. In 1870 Mr. Hughltt left tho service of tho Illinois Central to becomo gen eral manager of tho St. Paul road, and a year later George M. Pullman Induced him to becomo tho manager ot tho Pullman company. Mr. Hughltt In 1872 accepted tho position of general superintendent of the Northwestern railroad, aftor which his riso to tho presidency was rapid and was marked by tho constantly increasing Importanco ot tho systom In tho western rail road world. Ono of tbo most tcmarkablo things about tho chairman of tho North- western's board Is tho fact that at tho ago of Hoventy-throo ho is ablo to do' and docs a moro strenuous day's work than most railway presidents who aro 15 yoars younger. Tho fact that ho camo from sturdy stock, thero being flvo living generations in tho Hughltt family, with tho fact also that ho took tho most perfect caro of himself, accounts for his remarkable activity. FRENCH REPUBLIC'S MASTER Tho great railroad strlko in Franco brought moro than ovor to tho notice of tho world a re markablo man. On the reassembling of tho cham-! bcr of deputies Premier Brland croatod some-' thing of a sensation by declaring that he had proof, through confessions of tho leaders of tho recent railroad strike, that thero was a dollborato plot to ruin France by violence, anarchy and civil! war. Brland, now prlmo minister and master of tho French republic, was nobody ton yenrs ago. At thlrty-flvc ho was an outsider, and, worse, seem-! lngly a failure oven ns a lawyer.' Suddenly ho! willed, and all camo easy to him. Easy Is tho; word that seems to charactorlzo him now and then. - ' , Born in St. Ndsarlno, he conquered a degreo of law. Would ho havo been content to nlend nartv wall cases, marry an' f8,000 dot, play tho violin, sing admirably, beat them all at billiards and talk! politics? Ho was not of tho ruling set of St Nnzalre. Ppsslbly resentful,1 i posslblo great-hearted, ho certainly felt for tho worklnEmeni who at once! understood him nnd aworo by him. ; i Buying a second-hand press In Paris, ho took it from the freight office alono with a horso and wagon, and with ono boy put It together, set tho typo, and launched tho Democracy of tho West. Brland oxcltod great anlmosltyr of tho ruling classes, and bo, for one reason or another, ho got himself dls-! barrod as n lawyer. Ho quit St. Nazalre, nls caroor apparently broken at tho start, and began to write Paris socialists wero cdlflcd by tho young stranger'o grasp of tholr. subjects. His articles In tho Lnntorno becamo at onco noted tor their clear ness and boldness. Thoy expressed tho discontented worklngmau to him self as If it were tho workingman who wroto them. Ho walked into tho sovereign office of French deputy, first In 1902, again in 190G, and now, ns simply, ho has walked Into tho cabinet and put hlmsolfi at its head. No ono realizes how ho does It. All happens tranquilly, without! flroworks. Ho steps through cruol difficulties without effort : MISTRESS OF BIG MANSION Surgery on Heart Surgical operations upon tho heart havo becomo nlore or less of n commonplace in medical history. Somothlng approximating 100 cascB of the sowing up of heart wounds nro on record, nnd tho recov eries havo been considerable whon ono considers the highly dnngorous character of such work. Hith erto, howovor, hoart Burgery has boon limited to nc- cldcnt ensos. In n rocont Issuo of tho annals of surgery ono ot tho workers at tho Rockefeller lnstttuto for medical resoarch discusses tho possibility ot treating diseased hearts surgically. Ho has mado numerous, experiments on animals and bollovos that such operations will bo successfully performed on humnn beings In tho nonr future. His tests havo convinced him that tho heart can be oponed, Bcrnped outdcloaned, so to speak), sowed up Lnd started off on Its "bontlng" path again without any great, at loast Insuperable, difficulty. By an In genious systom of aldo piping nnd now chnnnellng ho Is nblo temporarily to cut out of tho circulation portions of auch Important vessels as tho descend ing aorta tho largest artery In tho body, without killing tho anlmnl. Among bis suggested onorn. tlons Is ono on tho coronary nrtorles ot tho heart for tho euro of angina pectoris. This doctor haa apparently proved to his own sat Isfactlon on animals that successful surgical Inter ference with tho great vcssols nnd tho heart ltsolf Is a possibility. It Is, of courso, n long ston from theso experiments to actual operations on humnn bolngs, but thoro is ovory Indication thnt tho latter teat will bo nttomptod In tho nonr future Tho in. tractability of cardiac affections and tholr hltth fn. tnllty mako tho proposed now surgory a thing of groat gonoral interest, and may Justify tho oxtrerao Doianoss or mo proposal. After nlno years tho most costly houso In America has been Anally completed, and prosld-j Ing ovor it will bo a pptlto young ltfdy who has, won her way to this queonly position through a courtship which onco threatened to upset a sec lion of Washington politics. Tho houso Is that of Senator W. A. Clark of Montana and Now York, and Is situated at tho corner of Fifth ave nuo and Savonty-soventh Htreet, Manhattan. Tho house, when viewed from tho oxtorlor, appears rather heavy and mnsslvo for tho spneo occupied, but, onco within, ono appreciates tho real harmony of it all. Each of tbo nlno stories Is massed with every concelvablo adjunct of com fort and luxury; from top to bottom Is a storo of storied wealth and mechanical device unsur passed In tho modorn construction of houso build ing. Tho baro structure alono cost $5,000,000. And the coppor king has reared this palace for ono who not so many years ago was tho daughter of a poor physician in Montana. At that tlmo her name was Anna La Cbappello, and her father, dying penniless, com mended her to tho caro ot Senator Clark, urging his interest in her maaical talent. Tho Bcnator sent his ward to the Boston Conservatory ot music, whero her progress was bo marked as to causo him to Bond her to Paris, to perfect her studies. It was during this porlod, says Human Life, that tho senutor began to reallzo that his affection for his ward was of moro than tho fatherly order. Whllo Bocloty was busy Unking his namo with that of noarly every oltglblu young lady, he became assured his ward's feelings wero tho samo as his own, and nskod her to becomo his wife. . RESEMBLES "FIGHTING BOB" John C. Hartlgan, BrBlgndlor-Gencral of tho Nebraska National Guard, frequently designated as tho prototype ot "Fighting Bob" Evans, Is a conspicuous figure, particularly In tho West at the prosent tlmo. Forty years of ago, a nativo of Missouri, ho is described as a natural born flghttcr who never knows when ha is beaton, From boyhood Hartlgan was always "licking" somebody. After his school days woro ovor ho licked his opponents In two races for tho mayor alty at Falrbury. In 1897 ho went to tho Philip pines as a private soldlor and camo homo a cap tain. Ho did somo gallant work in actlvo sorv ice, and on his return was successively promotod to hlB present position of honor and usefulness. Hartlgan Is knrfwn as a knight of tho mailed flat, and ho is one-to-ten shot as a favorite son of Nobraska, TUo forco and efficiency of his military caroor have boon fully demonstrated to his admiring follow citizens, and U hns como about that Hartlgan has overbalanced tho popularity of that othor Illustrious Nebraskan, William Jennings Bryan. Westerners admlro pluck, and it Is Bald that Hartl gan has lots of it. (i