THE OMA1IA DAILY 1J33E : TFESDAY , SEPTEMBER 27 , 1898 , TllE FIELD OF ELECTRICITY Peaca Proclaimed and a Trust Formed by "Warring Electrical Firms , POWER FOR A LONG-DISTANCE TROLLEY How the I.luc Iletvrcrn ChlrnRO nnil MUtrnukcc Will lie Hnppllcd The Klcctrlc Van Tele phone education. A protocol and peace treaty have been signed and sealed between the Wcstlnghouio company and the Walkers of Cleveland , O. , whereby the war on prices of electrical sup plies comes to nn end. Tbo outcome of tbo understanding is an electrical trust with a nominal capital of $25,000,000. This combination ends long litigation be tween tbo companies. The most Important question nt Issue between them was the priority ot invention of the "broomstick" trolley connection , and the courts recently decided in favor ot the Walker company. This Is believed to bavo been the Impelling force that brought about thn consolidation. Tbo officers of the two companies confirmed the consolidation , which , they claimed , was "merger , " rather than a purchase , of the Walker corporation by tbo Wcstlnghouse. They declared that it was a good thing for both companies , and that each would bo operated separately , but under a board of control , made up from the directors ot each company. This merger reduces the competition In the electrical business to the General Elec tric , Wcstlnghouse , and Sprague systems. An understanding has existed for some time between the first two companies under which they hod equal use of all tbo patents con trolled by both companies. The financial conditions of tbo business are much Im proved and the Manhattan Elevated railroad is likely to have to pay a much higher price for its electrical installation than before. Messrs. Gould and Sago will probably turn to the Sprague company for relief. ChlciiKO to Mllwnukcc liy Trolley. Skimming over the ravines and through the tree trunks of the pretty wooded coun try around Fort Shorldan is an electric car. It seems strangely out of place so far away from the city , frightening the birds and the rabbits with its noisy eong and whirring trolley wheel. With the rails on which it runs hidden from sight by the goldenrod and wild asters , and with its trolley poles concealed by the branches of the trees , It hurries along , around curves , over hills and throuch craves , a vision of the city seen In tbo heart of the country. This Is the beginning of the new Chicago & Mil waukee Electric Street railroad. From Highland park to Waukegan the line is already in operation , whllo the rest ot the route Is planned to bo finished this fall or next spring. When It Is finally working It will bo possible to rldo by electric cars from Milwaukee , Wis. , to Hammond , Ind. , a distance of over 100 miles , through three states. The Chicago & Milwaukee Electric railway is the last link In this chain of electric car lines. But It Is re markable not alone ' tor that. It contalni n radical and now departure In street rail road engineering , which , It proved success ful , Is ono moro step in advance toward the goal of universal electric traction. With a straightaway length of line of be tween fifty and eighty miles , the Chicago & Milwaukee line presented a hard problem for a trolley equipment. It was just such an engineering dlfllculiy as has stopped the building ot hundreds of Inter-urban roads throughout the country , or has rendered their operation unprofitable. U la the same trouble which has so far kept the steam railroads from running their cars any dis tance by electricity. The question was how to supply the entire line with electric cur rent from ono power station , with economy and without the Investment ot great sums of money in copper wire. This problem I ) . J. Arnold of Chicago , the consulting en ' gineer for the road , has attempted in an . \ entirely now way , and with the greatest prospects ot success. If the system devel oped by him proves economical and reliable In operation a great advance will bavo been made toward the universal electrification of transportation lines. In the application of electricity to the ordinary trolley line , a pressure of COO volts , which Is safe for man , and a direct current is used. To transmit electricity any considerable distance at this pressure , -without suffering a serious loss , requires extremely heavy copper wires. The scheme which has usually been employed in long street railroad lines is to build two or three power houses along the route of the road , thereby securing several distribu ting centers for the electric current. But every engineer knows that two or three small power houses cost much more and dc not run nearly as economically aa one. In mechanics , as In business , consolidation and centralization produce the greatest econo mies In operation , So to produce tha best working conditions for a long car line there should bo 'but ono power station , and several distributing points for the current. This atato of affairs Mr. Arnold has secured. The essential points of the new scheme are a power station located a't the middle of the line and distributing stations at in tervals ov r the entire route. The powci station supplies direct current at the ordl' nary pressure to the trolley wlro near by , end also sends alternating currents at the high pressure ot C.500 volts to the sub stations. Owing to the high potential used this transmission can be effected econom ically on three email wires. At the sub. stations pieces of apparatus known a : "transformers" and "rotary converters" re duce the pressure to 600 volts , and change the current.from alternating to direct , eult. able for use on the neighboring stretches o trolley line. The possibilities In Interurban electrli traffic ooened up by the 'new system bolnf tried on this line are enormous. It 1 proves successful In the present case thi Wisconsin and Inland Lake Electric Hall way Is expected to adopt the same system and possibly the Geneva Lake , Sycaroon and Southern. Installations of It will bi numerous In a few years and the posalblll ties in the ease of the steam roads Immense The Street Railway Review of Chicago glvei the following expert editorial opinion ot the outcome of the new idea ; "Althougl there are a number of electric railways re celvlng power from high voltage alterntU. Ing current transmission this Is the pTo neor road for which the current for trans mission Is generated in a central sfean plant and carried ut a high voltage to sub stations placed at suitable points along tu > route. Much credit Is duo the promoter ! ami engineers of the company for carrylni out this bold plan , which. If successful will bo ot inestimable value In furntshlni data for projected Interurbans of grea length. " The Electric Fan. The electric fan has sprung Into great ri rule in medical circles. Ono well know ) practitioner in New York says that durlni the hot months ono of the first things h Insists on bla patients providing themselve with is an electric fan , which baa an ad mlrable Influence on the nerves , no Its than the temperature ot the patient. 71 condemns , however , 1n the strongest term all fans that make a wbirring , singing o humming nolio , which has a most perul clous effect on Invalids , and may even tel ft seriously in the course of a few hours on stroug man , unconscious though ho may b of the cumulative ( train on the nerve ; Nolay fans should bo absolutely tabooed , a cocial evils , and In the sick chamber non but the Bolieleea variety should , on an ; ac count , bo admitted. Itt \ not always neces sary to keep the fan at Its most rapid revo lutions ; Its speed should bo varied accordIng - Ing to atmospheric conditions. A banker In a large city , who heard of the illness ot a woman and her llttlo one , Instead of ( tend ing boxes of dainties , had a wire run from the railway circuit near the houto to the Invalid's room and an electric ton placed I nt the foot of the bed. The teitferaturo ot the mother , whoec case had been pro nounced hopeless , began forthwith to"m - provo and she was eoon out of danger. The physician said tbe recovery was duo far less to medicine than to the soothing in fluence ot the electric fan. Another source of health , which doctoro are freely recom mending to natlents who bavo no vehi cles ot their own , Is tho. trolley ride. The trolley goes right out into the suburban and country districts and takes the pas senger not only Into the freshest and best air , but Into bits of country that surprise and delight him. The benefits thus brought to children are Incalculable. A physician recently made the assertion that the num ber ot children who actually ewe their lives to the electric can may bo estimated by thousands. Ho added : "Few people can realize tbe eood that a * ride Into the country does a baby which Is fairly pros trated with heat. The cool , fresh breeze after a stifling hot day , in a close room in town , means a new lease of life for the blld. Many places are run Into on tbe lectrlc roads where the temperature 'U 20 cgrees lower than in town. I wonder thai orao fresh air society doesn't charter a : ar on some of the lines and reserve it In ho evenings for mothers with sickly llttlo hlldrcn , letting them rldo free. I can hlnk of no finer bit of charity or ono that rould glvo moro gratifying returns. " In many cities during the late hot spell one f the remarkable features ot the trolley Inea was the number of people , having as laggago a pillow and a covering of some Ind , who late every night thronged the ars , going out countryward. These pas- engcrs would came out in thci woods , like o many traveling bands of gypsies , and re * urn to the city by the early morning * cars. Telephone The modern telephone exchange la a mar- el of organization and of engineering skill f the highest type , and very few people ppreclate the complicated and beautifully orked outopcratlon ot Its system. All that subscriber usually knows about the cx- hange is that through it ho can communi- ate -with and bo reached by thousands of ther subscribers. A telephone company baa made a wise move in throwing its exchange pen to the public , and thus giving Its sub- crlbers an opportunity of studying the rne- ihanlcal arrangements of the exchange and ocomlng familiar with its many branches. t is pointed out that these visits have many lements of value. In the first place , they .each the subscriber the possibilities ot the .elcphone , and open his eyes to the fact that .Is . individual co-operation is of the greatest aluo to the telephone company. In the econd place , they remove from the sub- icrlber's mind many fallacies regarding the handling- calls. Beyond this , they make 1m acquainted with tbo limitations ot the elephone. Probably the two most common omplalnta In the telephone exchange are in regard to the reports by operators that 'the line la " " ' " busy" and "they don't answer. "ho Ignorance of the people who make these omplalnts Is astonishing. A man recently Iropped into a real estate office to use the lay station there. The line ho wanted was ironounced "busy" by the operator. The proprietor of the office on learning thU aid : "That's only an excuse. I'm dis gusted with the tricks of these operators ; hey'll say anything1 to save themselves rouble. But whenever they try that 'busy1 dodge on Je , I always 'glvo It back to hem. ' " A visitor to jt telephone exchange earns that when an operator has answered ' ils telephone she has 'done about four-fifths f the -work necessary to make a connection , and it Is much simpler for her to make the connection than to report the line busy and have to go throuch the same motions again a few minutes later. It la found that many eports that "they don't answer" are caused by th Indifference as to prompt responses of a large number of subscribers , many of whom are so constituted that they take a distinct pleasure In "making the fellow at the other end wait. " In tooth these cases he absurdity of being Impatient with the operator la palpable. Xew Car Ininertloii SyMem. The verarles of electric street railway equipments are often sorely perplexing to the superintendent. The causes for mechan ical depreciation are strains , frictions and vibrations , and the remedies for them can bo cosily applied , but the electrical part of the equipment depreciates from otfrer causes , euch as heating , oveloadlng of the motors , lack of equalization between the motors , the improper use of tbo controller by the motorman , etc. But these effects are not necessarily visible , and they are ordinarily only remedied after a breakdown has occurred. An inquiry Into the various elements of outlay In electrical repairs In a number of car barns made It apparent that a largo part ot the cost was chargeable fo the time taken to locate them and often in dismantling the equipment to find them. Moreover , whllo the repair was made on the broken part , the primary cause of the breakdown was often left unrcmcdled. In many cases the cost of these electrical re pairs has been abnormal and quite out ol proportion to the revenue obtained from the operation of the equipment. In"wo instances which came within the scope ol an investigation on the subject tbe coal of the electrical repairs of the equlpmenl per car rollo exceeded the repairs per car mile of a 100-ton freight locomotive on the Pennsylvania railroad. An electric railway testing sot has been Invented by A. 0 , Herrlck , which enables the superintended to know just where he stands. This sys tem locates any of the equipment trouble ! before they develop Into breakdowns and so render the equipment inoperative. A complete Inspection ot the line can be madi in three minutes , and In that time the inspector specter can bo acquainted with what Is goIng - Ing on at all points of the line. How sure and reliable ho regards this information ia seen In the fact that In many shops ho wIT write out the order for the electrical repah of the car without having seen It. By tFe adoption of a system which will thus enable them to Instantly find out the nature one the location of any trouble on their lines many electric railway companies are no only greatly decreasing their cost of main tenance per car mile , but largely iniprovint their class ot service. Markvtlnnr in Sautlnito. A friend of Miss Clara Barton , house keeping In Santiago , says : "The first tlm I visited the market a woman pursued m from stall to stall , chatting Spanish like i magpie. She only wanted to buy the clothe right off my back , by beginning with m : necktie and ending with my shoes ! Thl female pawnbroklne business seems to be i favorite method of 'railing the wind' ii Santiago. Every day we are visited by mys terious women , some ot them evidently be longing to the better class , who wish to buy sell or exchange all manner of truck , fron a broken-nosed teakettle to a jewelled sword The other day a young Jamaica negres brought a rose-colored silk shawl , ruagntfl cently embroidered , price not stated. An other female brought an ancient mandolin made of tortoise shell , that she said wa 'dirt cheap' at J75. Maybe , but we are no investing in musical Instruments just now A third had an old waihtub , ona hoop gone which she offered for 2 and I bought II A tub wo needed badly : a new one coats I the shops of Santiago from $3 upward , an th * extra dollar may go into tomorrow' soup. " You Invite disappointment when you ex perlment. DeWltt's Little Early RUors ar pVeatant. eaay , thorough little pills. The cure constipation and sick headache juit a lira u ran take them. THE WORKINGS OF A NEW ENGLAND CONSCIENCE. By HARRIET CARYL COX , Mlsi Hannah Davis sat In her accustomed rocker and began to sway gently to and fro. Rocking was helpful to thinking , and just now she v'95 perplexed. It was a question of conscience , n New England consclenco at that , moreover it be gan with a capital C , "I'vo got U In the house and I might as well make It up , " she mused , "It" was a dress , a silk dress , a relic ot days gene by. "It'sjjeen lying there oil these years , " she went on , "and It seems real kind of sin ful packed away there and not doing a soul a mite of good. It ain't right to have things put away 'whcro moth and rust can cor rupt. ' " She quoted this bible authority with satis faction. "And 'twill look awful handsome made up. I guess 'twould be becoming , too. " She blushed guiltily as if the thought ere too vain for contemplation. "And it would save me buying , too , " she udded hastily. "My old alpaca isn't very ood. I'vo turned and washed it till it eally ain't decent , and 'twould cost consld- rablo to buy a new one. And this dross all Ight In the house and costing nothing. "I s'poso folks would think I was terrible xtravagant , but then I don't care. I guess f I give the money I'd take for a new black dress and glvo It to the missionary society , and wear the silk Instead , nobody can find fault , but then , I ain't obliged to tell 'cm inyway. 'They ' don't know how much I give to church purposes , and they couldn't say nothing even If I bought the silk outright. But then , I ain't doing that. "It's really saving. And it's awful hand- orae , too , " she added in an undertone. Miss Hannah surveyed herself in the small mirror. She readjusted the light and then moved It from ono sldo to the other that she might see the imago reflected moro clearly. It was a very neat llttlo figure tbat she saw. A somewhat wrinkled face , yet with a touch of youth , and a pleased light n the steel blue eyes. The golden brown silk shimmered and shone and reflected the rays of light. "I shall look better than any ono there , " she said half aloud. "As well as any one , " she corrected. "And I sha'n't tell any one tbat it's an old silk made over. That ain't necessary. You needn't tell all you know , Aunt Jane used to say , and I'm sure she was a very oed woman. " She smiled happily , as she gave one parting glance and turned away. * * | * * There was a perceptible stir when Miss Hannah Davis , closely followed by her slstcr-ln-law , entered the parsonage. "Hannah Davis' got a new dress , " someone ono whispered loudly as she passed through a llttlo knot of women on the way to the bedroom to lay aside her wraps. "And It's a silk one , too. " The eyes of the entire assembly were on jer as she1 emerged from the llttlo room and sank down Into the nearest empty chair without making the usual round of landuhaklng. "She feels stuck up , " one woman whis pered to her neighbor. "Well , I guess a silk dress don't make her bettcr'n the rest of us. " The speaker reared her head and spoke across the intervening sewers to Miss llannah. "We were Just talking about a sub scription. Miss IJannah , " she said In very audible tones. "It's for the Leavltts. You know them. They've had awful luck lately , and we thought if we could Just give them a little lift It would bo real Christian like. " "I think 'twould bo real nice , " Miss Han nah asserted warmly. "I'll be glad to glvo something , though I can't give much , you know. " She blushed as she spoke. All eyes were on her in the most uncomfortable way. Why did they kind of smile ? They must know she didn't have much money. Could she afford to give 50 cents , ehe wondered. "Well , how much will you give ? " The voice came with startling distinct ness. "Five dollars , say ? " Mibs Hannah started visibly. What were they thinking of ? Her hands fell into her lap. They touched the smooth silk. It must bo the dress. "It's an old " she started to say , but the words died on her lips. "What did you say ? " Her tormentor leaned forward. The minister's wife was standing in the door , smiling. "Miss Hannah shut her lips tight. "Yes , you can put me down for five , " she said , In a metallic voice. A thrill seemed to pass through the room. Then somo'newcomers entered , and eager attention was turned to them. "I hope you realize that you are properly punished for your sinful pride , Hannah Davis. " she said , as she locked the door ol tier llttlo room that night , and hastily took off the offending dress. "It was vanity nil the time that made you do it , nnd you know it , but tried to salve your consclenco with saying it was 'econ omy. ' " She spoke rapidly. "If you was so terribly anxious about be ing economical , " scornfully , "why didn't you make over that mngenta delaine ? 'Twouldn'l have been half as becoming , but 'twould have been Just as economical. But you dldn'l think of that , did you ? " a pause. "And then you tried to hush your conscience - science by saying you'd give the money a new dress would cost to the missionary so- clcty. "And now now you've gene and given $ E to that woman for her subscription , and yoi couldn't afford It , and it's a sin to spend money you can't afford. " She stared hard at tbe dress. "And then you waa scared into It because you was proud , and pride la another sin You didn't want them to think but whai you could buy the dress and give awaj money , too. That makes three sins. " Sbo closed her lips tight , then resolute ! ) crossed the room and wrapped a clean pleci ot cotton about the neatly folded dress. Then she went to tbo llttlo davenport am wrote two notes. Into one she slipped a J5 bill and dlrectci it to the treasurer of tbe missionary society then she directed the other to the minister' : wife and went steadily across the room am pinned It on the bundle. "I shall send It over the first thing In th. morning , " she said. A happier light crept Into her eyes as sh blew out tbe candle. "I guess my conscience will rest easlc now , " she said. JIISMAIICIC AND AMHHICA. Didn't I.Ike Till * Country , lint Two o 111 * Heat Krleml * Were American * . In the October Century there Is an artlcl on Bismarck by Prof. William M. Sloan-c Prof. Sloano says ; Bismarck's feelings towards tbe Unite States have been ot a composite charactei Oa the one hand , he saw with dismay th extent and quality of German emigration A landed proprietor himself , be could no but sympathize with bla fellow younken wbftio ueiaant village * r re partly and i ; nany cases entirely deserted by their In- labltants. Labor becoming scarce and dear ; American and English agricultural ma- hlncry forced on unwilling buyers , who retted under the compulsory use of what tiey could not easily manipulate ; prices of arm products no longer assured by the do- mnds of a home market , but subjected to lie fluctuations of a world market In which he United States are the controlling dealer all these things gave him pain and anx- cty. He suffered , too , along with his class , s a patriot he felt It likewise to be a grave matter that so many thousands should evade heir military service , and still more grave hat millions should substantiate the saying hat Germans had little patriotism , exempll- ylng , In the ease with which they acquired new citizenship , the motto : "Ubl bcne , ibl atria ( My fatherland Is where I am pron erous ) . The prosperity and contcntedness t the German-American were a menace to h Institutions under which ho had been neither prosperous nor contented. Ho alao aw that the growing Industries of the Jnlted States would make them a dangerous Ival of Germany In the coming struggle for ommcrclal supremacy with Great Britain. On the other hand , two of Bismarck's warmest friendships were with Americans iancroft and Motley. It was by his favor lololy that the existing emigration and Ulzenshlp treaties between the German em- ilro and the United States wore negotiated , hrough Bancroft. In 1SC9 there was a sus picious outburst In the public prints of both continents against the American historian. This Bismarck attributed to the combined lostlllty of England and of the German larttcularlsts. Accordingly , ho wrote to Motley with the frankness of Intimate ac quaintance , begging him to do what he could o prevent tbe threatened removal of his 'riend. ' Ills language In speaking of Ban croft la remarkable : "Ho represents prac- Ically the same great process of develop ment In which Moses , the Christian revela- -lon , and the Reformation appear as stages , and in opposition to which the Cacsarean lower of ancient and modern times , the clerical and dynastic prejudices of the people ple , offer every hindrance , Including that of nlumniattng an honest and Ideal minister Iko Bancroft. " \ < MV CitHi-N of Yellow Fover. JACKSON , Miss. , Sept. 20. The Board of Health Is In receipt of a message from Ur. W. A. Hatllff nt Edwards , stating that a case of sickness has appeared In the Tatum family which shows symptoms of yellow : cver. The tone of the message clearly In- llcates that the case is u genuine one. Three members of this family were exam ined by Dr. Purnell on September 7 , but at that tlmo the patients were convalescent , and It was Impossible to make a positive .llaRnosla. The house has been thoroughly Isolated and there Is , llttlo dancer of a spread , an nearly everybody rn Edwards and vicinity had the yellow fever during the epidemic last year. The Board of Health lias heard of no new cases of fever In Jack son , but several are under survelllanco anil the symptoms are such as to expect devel opments. America makes the finest brand of chaui- lagne. Cook's Imperial Extra Dry. It Is Jtllclous , fruity and pure. Indian Sunn * In MlniH-Modi. CAS3 LAKE , Minn. , Sept. 26. It Is rc- > orted hero by a half-breed and others that the Indians of Loch lake ore threatening o burn and destroy the tulldlngo , bridges and other property of the Grc.nt Northern railway. The trouble is In part the result of the road crossing , the reservation and the arrest by the United States marshals and a largo force at Walker of some Indiana for selling whisky to their own trlbo and trying to create a rebellion against peaceful In- llans as well as whites. There is much uneasiness among the settlers and the gov ernment will likely be requested to Investi gate at once. The half breed said that there should bo a company of soldiers located at this station. Ilucklrn'M Arnica Salve. THE BEST SALVE in the world for Cuts , Bruises , Sores , Ulcers , Salt Rheum , Fever Sores , Tetter , Chapped Hands , Chilblains , Corns and all Skin Eruptions , and positively cures Piles , or no pay required. It is guar anteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Kuhn & Co. LAIIOU AND 1XDUSTIIY. Telephone lines use 12,000,000 pounds of copper yearly. Mexico continues to furnUU the United States with more than half of its supply of mahogany. Southern cotton manufacturers nro taking active stops to develop trade with Cuba and Porto Rico. Representatives of the south ern mills will canvass tbe Islands this fall. It Is said that the sales of looking glasses In the United States amount to about $8,000- 000 a year , and that the Industry gives em ployment to more than 2,000 persons , not Including , of course , those who use the mir rors. rors.The The pay roll of the cotton Industry in Massachusetts is much the longest of any In the state. Boots and shoes como next with 00,700 ; machines and machinery Is third , with 20,607 : woolen goods has 18,913 and worsted goods , 13,783. Almost 70 per cent of the foreign trade of Mexico Is with the United States. Mexico ice has great natural resources and their development is progressing at a rapid rate resulting In continuously increasing ship ments of machinery and manufactured goods from tbo United States. A now use for a Minnesota product has been discovered. It has been found that the moss of the tamarack swamps is as good as that of the south for upholsterers uses , and there Is promise ot an extensive Industrial development in the preparation of the new commodity. So successful has been the cxperlmcn of Massachusetts capitalists In cotton manu facture in the south that those Intercstci In the mill at Rome , Ga. , have just decided to double its capacity. The new venture calls for an Investment of moro than a quarter of a million dollars. Winston , N. C. , claims tbe distinction o selling more pounds of leaf tobacco dlrec from the 'hands ' of the farmer than any other loose market In the world. The pres ent tobacco year tbe market will sell two million moro pounds ot tobacco than it has ever sold before , the sales reaching to more than 18,000,000 pounds. To supply the present demand of the British market requires the importation o more than 500,000,000 pounds of bacon a year. This bacon la procured almost en tlrely from three countries , the Unlte ( States , Denmark and Canada. The United States Is the chief source of supply , sup plying moro than 300,000,000 pounds pc year , Reports from California state , that th walnut crop this season will bo the Urges ever produced. The walnut business Is on ot the Infant industries nt California , bu for the last six years has Increased rap idly. Last year tbe output amounted t 3,700 tons. This year it is estimated at 5,00 tons , which will bring tbo growers mor than $500,000. Moro than 1,000,000,000 gallons of mlnera oil and its products were exported from th United States during the twelvemonth onde JUDO 30 last tbe first year in tbe hUtorj ot the trade that tbe billion export mar has been passed. Foreign nations paid to this oil $5tf,126.78. or about 19,000,000 mor than was received for the 678,000,000 gal Ions exported in 18SS. Cotton Is the only one of tbe nine lead Ing Industries ot Massachusetts whlc showed a reduction of capital Invested I 1897. In the other eight tbe gains were a follows. Woolen goods , 17,25 per cent wbrated goods , 12.12 ; carpetlngs. 11.89 leather , S.08 , boots and shoes , 6,79 ; machines chinos and machinery , G.S2 ; metals an metallic goods , 1.20 ; paper , 0.00. , Are ft $ Bright ftft SnapShots and Full ft ftft I of Life ftft ftft Shots ftft ftft Forty-eight ftft * ftft ft (5x7 ( Inches ) ft ftft Covering ftft ft Every Phase ftft of the ftt t ft Exposition fti ft ftft ft At the Business Office of The Omaha Bee. ftft ft ft ftft . ft N. B-BY MAIL 3 CENTS EXTRA FOR POSTAGE ft r H H H 4 0 j ? PHOTOGRAPHY IN COLORS Chicago Man Claims to Have Solved th Problem of the Times. HUES OF THE RAINBOW REPRODUCED HomnrknUle Development of nil Iilea Generated liy the Color * of fhl- Prnitrnnt lllver Story of the Proem * . Chicago newspapers proclaim , with slight qualification , that color photography has been perfected by a Chicago man. The process of using an ordinary camera and in one-fifth of a second accurately pho tographing nil of the brilliant hues of a flower garden , all the contrasts In green of a landscape , all the wonders of a summer sky , the Jewel upon your fingr , the ribbon at your throat , the stripes In your clothes , the decorations of your hat , the bouquet on your lapel Is now a reality. Not a canvas of the old masters but what may be reproduced with every tint of the original ; not a shade of color in the most brilliant flower garden but what may greet the eyes from a photograph ; not a color line in the features and dress ot a friend but may be retained forever upon tbo plain panel of a photographic card and this all done , not by retouching or tinting , not by laborious processes after the picture itsclt is taken , but done by the sunlight instead , In the same second tbat the picture itself is taken. This discovery and its practical applica tion is the work of the late James W. Mc- nonough of Chicago. Ho has been dead n year , but what he discovered has been In : ho hands ot friends and business associates ever since. CirnnpliiKr an liloa. What ho discovered Is due primarily to the dirty and nasty condition of the Chicago cage river. Crossing the river on the Mad ison street brldgo one day in 1S70 , Mr. Mc- Donougu noticed on the surface of the murky wateV the colors of the spectrum caused by escaping oil from some near-by warehouse. The thought came to him that tbo river would present a beautiful specta cle if covered with these colors. His second end thought was aa to why that river's sur face could not be photographed. I'Vom this thought gradually developed and grew the process of color photography the first ever given to the world that will always be known us McDonough's. Mr. McDonough was , in the early years of his life , wealthy and given to scientific pursuits. Ills work in connection with tbe telephone was primarily along the line to the discovery ot the receiver , and he fought his rights in the courts until he and all others were defeated. Worn In health and weakened 'In ' fortune , Mr. McDonough turned from the telephone to his old dreams of color photography and pursued them until satisfied that the work could be done. Ho died just as success was at hand. The process which ho created Is a color photography which is purely mechanical. The ordinary camera is used , and tbo nega tives are produced and developed by the usual processes , but before exposing tbe negative In the camera a transparent screen , ruled with the three primary colors , Is In terposed between the negative and object to bo photographed. After developing the negative a positive plate Is produced from It , which , viewed by Itself , does not differ from the ordinary black and whlto plate , but when It is laid upon a viewing screen , ruled with the pri mary colors , a duplicate of the taking screen used In the camera , the colors in the object photographed appear. I'rlnoliilu and I'rocrim. The principle of color photography Is a mixture of colored lights on the retina. A transparent medium is ruled in fine col ored lines , 300 to COO to the inch. These lines are red , blue and green , commonly speaking. They are the fundamentals of the spectrum the yellow of school days now belnc rejected and their mixture pro duces white llsht. In other worda , the color of each is such as to absorb the re maining two and transmit only Its own light. To take a picture , It is necessary to place one of these ruled screens In Imme diate contact with the sensltve surface ot the dry plate and expose the same , as in ordinary photography. The sensitive plate must bo what Is known as Isochro- matlc plates that is , sensitive to nil the colors of the spectrum. After a negative is made a positive la also made by contact printing , as In the usual manner. This positive Is then placed over tbe ruled screen and brought Into position with the colored lines on tbe screen. When this Is done the picture Is aeen In it * natural color. Paper photographs are made by printing In the usual manner on tbe sensitive paper ruled with the three colored lines as on the screen. Half-tone pictures In colors are also made by printing with black ink from a half-tone plate made from tbo original upon paper having the three- colored lines ruled on its surface , the same as a screen. Photographers and chemists of an In quiring turn of mind have attempted In various ways to make color photography a possibility since 1870. The experiments necessary were so costly , the possibility of failure so great , tbat all ot them with the exception of McDouough surrendered at one time or another , and announced tbat the camera would never be able to re- picture the rose with all the gorgeousnees In which It hung from the parent stem , FlrHt ii ml LuMt Picture * . McDonougb said that It could be done , and the day before his death photographed himself in one of the Mower gardens of Jackson Dark. Ho never lived to see the picture completed , but It stands today In an ofllco In Dearborn street , with every hue of the blossoms surrounding htm faithfully reproduced the work of the sun and the sun onlr. Ho read In a newspaper one morning that I.lppmnn , a foreign sclenllnt , had advanced the claim that he could photograph in colors. His process was what is now known as the "interference" method. By "inter ference" is meant that tbe rays of light an they pisteil through a transparent medium of unequal thickness , and were reflected back to the eye by a mirror , interfered with each other nnd created different color effects. Llppmau'8 method was purely a scientific experiment , and it was impossible to see his colors or pictures , as he termed them , except in a certain angle of light. Llppmun'B work stirred McDonough , and ho started to work out his own theory as to bow the natural colors ot the sky and earth could bo photographed. A majority of his experiments for years were absolute failures. Ono effort after another was rejected until he came to the correct principle , which was to cover a flat nlato with very flno Hues and then to endeavor to reduce these lines to greater or less angles , FO as to give off the caters from a picture photographed on their surface. Ills perpetual assumption was that the sun would reproduce nature , after the re ceiving plate was of the proper kind. His work was to find that plate. Developing ( lie I'roueN * . The plato or block , which ho finally de termined to be tbo proper one , Is what Is known technically as a diffraction grating , and gives off colors when a beam ot light strikes its surface at an angle. Tbo first experiments with such a plato were more than discouraging , and when further efforts seemed useless McDonougli was about to cast it aside. The day that ho determined to do BO he accidentally policed on the surface of the block what seemed to bo spots of different colors. The thought came to him Instantly , "Why not put on the primary colors , photo graph through them and try nnd get some color results ? " He purchased an air brush , and , after securing such colors as red , green and blue , began blowing them in small particles nnd attempting to secure an evenly grained plate. Every device known to photography was tried , but McDonough did not get just the result ho wanted until ho took up the transparent screen. Then his scheme for photographing colors by absorption worked. Ho tried ruling lines with a common draughting pen , but the lines varied so much in width and thickness that It was Impossi ble to make a good picture. He then se cured a lithographic ruling machine and with this made some fair screens with which a few pictures were taken. After this so determined wore his efforts that he devised a machine which would rule flexible ma terial llko celluloid , gelatines and mica. He found that celluloid nnd gelatine were of no practical use , owing to their expansion and contraction under tbe Influence of heat and cold. Mica could not be skillfully used be cause largo shceta of it were dinicult to secure. Ho eventually produced tbo ruling process now being used for his pictures. The work of this man was little short ot heroic. He labored days and weeks to secure a single color that would bo suit able for making n screen. The shade , solubility , transparency and fading quality of this color bad all to be considered. Thousands of colors wore rejected by him after tests. I'rliillnir on I'll per. When McDonouzh had secured a perfect transparency he turned his attention to printing on paper. His idea was to rule the paper and emulsify or sensitize over this ruling. He tested many methods and filnally succeeded In ruling the paper BO that a beautiful Picture could be printed by simply using the negative made through thla ruled screen over the ruled paper and registering the lines created on the nega tive by the subject through tbe screen , so tbat they would bo parallel , and placing this In the sunlight to print , and then ton ing the print as Is ordinarily done , the result being a picture in colors on tbe paper. Before McDonough succeeded In this branch of hla work colors for papers hail to be made. Ho was months finding UK-BO colors , aa they had to bo Insoluble ono with another , and also In the toning and flxliu ; processes. They also must stand the wui- llRht and not fade or wash off during the operations necessary to produce a photographic - graphic print on paper. In astronomy the color work of McDon- ough is already in experimental use In thd Yerkes Observatory at Williams Bay , near Chicago. Of the McDonough sensitive * plates George K. Hale , director ot the ob servatory , writes- "With their old I bavo been able to pho tograph for the first time the red portion , of the spectra ot very faint stars and it In easy to see that plates of this character will provu invaluable in both solar and stellar upcctroHCOpIc Investigations. The possibility ot photographing the rod region , of stellar spectra opens up an Immonsa field of research hitherto unexplored. " in the detection and prevention of crima the color photograph promises to bccomo an Important adjunct of the Berttllon sys tem , Ono of the best experimental pictures re * coolly taken by the process is that ot Ferd * inand W. Peck , commissioner general of the Paris exposition , where appears the lapel of his coat with the red rose ho wore , radiant with all tlm colors It had blos somed In. Mr. McDonough Is dead , nnd cannot toll hly own story , but there remains some testimony from his own lips as to what ho passed through whllo discovering color pho tography that Is extremely Interesting. More than EOO examples of the practical working of the McDonough plates Rive proot of the practicability of the process. Some of tbe scenes from Douglau park others from Jackson park , still others of promi nent persons or of highly colored Japanese screen and fan work are a continual do * light and feast for the oye. H is believed that Mr. McDonough's pro cess will revolutionize all color work lit magazines ; that the moie or less laborious process over the lithographer's stone U to bo done away with and that the color Il lustrated magazine of the future will be a thing of beauty , bcsldo which the produc tion of today cannot hold up its bead. The llewt Ilenu-ay lor Kin * . Mr. John Mnthlas , a well known stride dealer of PtilnDki , Ky. , says : "After Buffer ing for over a week with flux , nnd my phy sician having failed to rellove me , I wai advised to tiy Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Homedy , and have the pleas ure of stating that the half of one bo'tla ' cured mo. " THK oin-TiMius. Otis Allen , tbe father of the assistant secretary of the navy , has Just celebrated his ninetieth birthday in Lowell. MUBS. Jacob J. Schwartz , who died this week In Boston , had been fifty-eight years n Boldlor , having enlisted In tbo German army In 1812 , nnd left it and Joined ours In 1811 , serving In the Mexican and civil wars. Mrs. Amelia Vollar. who died In Chicago ) last week , had Just passed her hundredth birthday. For a score of yrors until over SO she had been a peddler about the strcct of the city , to which she had rome whea It was only an extreme frontier trading post. In a suit at Waco. TPX. . ta settle a question of boundaries be tween land owners , one of the wit nesses was Captain Isaac Brock , wbo de posed , when examined touching this point , that ho Is 110 years old. Captain Broclc resided eighteen miles west of Waco , near the Falls Bosquo. Ho fought In the war of 1812 , In the Texas \\ar of Independence , in the war between the United States anil Mexico and In tbo civil war. Ho Is In good health , has a clear mind nnd is a strong territorial expansionist. Mrs. Rllzabeth J. It. Messenger of St. Louis has just retired from active work a * a school teacher after forty-woven yours of unremitting service. In that time she has seen the school system grow from the old fashioned country school , where all ages of scholars and all branches of learning ; were taught In ono room , to the present graded Hystem. Bho Is a bit in doubt , too , as to whether the old system or the new produces tbe best results , whun she sees thn successful men of the city about her whoso young ideas eho first taught how to shoot. The distinction of being the oldest singing master In the world is claimed for the vet eran Manuel Garcia , who at the mature age of 94 Is still giving lessons. He Is the only surviving brother of the famous singer , Mollbran. who was the chief star in the musical firmament In the earlier part at the century. Another and younger ulster , Mme. Pauline Viardot , is a famous teacher , but no longer gives lessons. Garcia used to live In London when Mallbran was them and ho delights in telling how tbo duke of Sussex went to hear Mallbran sing at \espera. Mrs. Cynthia Conant of Springfield , Mass. , wbo has just celebrated her hundredth birthday , U In excellent health and in con- iersatlon is bright and lnterentng. ! Sbo na\v I < ofayetto when he visited Boston and often tells how handsome he wan and how < IU- tlngulHhcd ho appeared. Still more vividly she recalls the war ot 1812 and the part her1 father played therein , He wa ono of u party that captured a British vrsxel that bad been brought to HyaunlH harbor and there set on fire. The fire was put out and the boat was toned to Boston , with her father in charcci