-&M "- THE 8EMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE. NORTH PLATTE. NEBRASKA. IKTRK a RKMPt LEADER OF THE ENGINEMEN Jp i -ap 1 TBiIa 11 SSSSQfc) 4ttBBxEm&Bm& mvyyr'Utrn v t III f fntt M TDPBlHUSCBBEcS2Kt j-y, li" & tv. twr aB' 1HH' 111 In I clA ' S m m i B W w y H ti 1 M 1 i i 11 W vfw i J &l4 I ill 'A liIJm R HI I n (ABfi 1m 111 V 8 1 Sr ' I ItK i in "i '' m m m i I i tfnwm T i I a A uasaem i -?if Robert H'Moulfon yiK v : l-i'W 'fc. 'i i ,'. 2ma ' sr'. -.MFW'i'. '', ''. "? jrr ?.' n .K ?lfl "yAlT. '. :Sf Is tttyjftctt?z&i$i2iRTr OW thai scientists have discovered that high frequency electrical cur rents are powerful stimulants both of plant and animal life, the farm hand of tho futuro may have to bo a duly qualified electrical engineer beforo he can get a Job. It will not be enough for him to know how to manipulate tho mo tors and transmis sion gear by which 'tho farm machinery will bo run. Ho will lliavo to bo up on tho (chemistry of electric IJty. Ho will have not Vonly to know tho uso f violet rays In purify- nc tho (lrlnklni- wnlnr ut will also havo to cnow whothor ground wires are better for foeots, ruby lights for radishes, mercury va &or for tobacco and electric sprinkling for taomething olso. Ho win havo to bo teomethlng of a plant Neurologist, too. When ho corn In tho south forty is getting norves," or when tho pats In tho now ground Is becoming too Born Violent, ho will hnvn tn SSatmoStreCt dln8noS08 nnd Prescribe tho proper nCKmCll0n fr P,nnt growth haB arrIve(1' AnJ indi Amor,c rmor learns that ho S l . VV,V!ro.bl0 lh0 0UtmU ot h,a olda 1 y tho uso of electricity, somebody will havo to MnU a way for him to uso electricity and make a Jgood profit out of his cropB. kiiiT T,QlB ng? thoro was a convention of prac Weal electricians In Philadelphia. Among the ad dresses one virtually escaped tho atfi o tho corps of reporters. Yet of nil tho addresses, no o was moro pregnant of great possibilities. It was really part of tho report of tho conven tlons coinmittoo of progress nnd was road by tho committee chairman, T. 0. Martin of Now York an authority on things electrical. Ho gavo and figures to show that plants olectrlcaily treated row much more rapidly than thoso growln UnX normal conditions. Why this was so he "did ssumo to say. Ho simply gavo tho results of experiments. u,lB QI The wprk was started on Moralno farm in ihn fertile Miami river valley, four miles south of DaV ton, Ohio Dr. Herbert 0. Dorsey, an Jt tad charge of the experiments, which wore fostered by the -effort! of P. M. Talt, a former pres Wont of tho National Electric Light association In preliminary tests, according to Martin's re port, small plots wore marked off for exposure to different kinds of electrification. To insuro lhat tho soil of one plot was not bettor than that tot another, top earth was collectod, mixed and sifted nnd then woh laid to tho uniform depth of Boven inches over tho eutlro area. In tho soil of plot No. 1 was buried a wire pcrcon. Over tho plot was a network of wlro stretched about fifteen Inches from tho ground Connecting tho network nbovo tho ground and the screen below woro several wlro antennae The screen was connected to ono terminal of a Tosla coll and tho network to tho other. A trans former stepped a 110-volt alternating curront up to B,000 volts, charging a condonsor of tinfoil and Klass plates, which discharged through a primary of tlto coil. About ono hundred and thirty watts wero operated for an hour each morning and evening. Plot No. 2 was illuminated by a 100-watt tung sten lamp with a ruby bulb. Tho light was turned on for three hours dally, beginning at sun-" down. Plot No. 3 was illuminated tho sumo way, uxcept that a mercury vapor lamp wob used. No! 4 had no artlllclal stimulation of any kind, being Intended as a comparison botweon olectrlcaily oxclted plant growth and that or natural condl-tlons. fJtf VI vftX. a flBtfWrV. KRW . K r dT.MfcX . VQto.VlLVl!?WBBBrrt",v frtW.A jfiTlWr ,SKHK 4TOS ' - - 'VA (iaLbLK'lIV W t X , KaKLi. 1f uSi WVt TKXBHr vkv m&fixftf' Qf'3XSamtKSKii.KMSK)99 VX. rill lKr3iBWtf4w S1ftmt?fwln MBBlBHHnw 1 M' Hv yr VW -4 i'P! BBBBBBBIBBlBBBBBBBJIBBiBSS ". 'i Sfff iBwifiT HESSbhHbxl ' ffl EShbIHbIHHiK' CMSfr WKmSitwWiBjlMBMl laBMBPMHilB In plot No. 5 was burled a wlro network con nected to tho terminal of a 110-volt direct current. Tho positive terminal was attached to a small sprinkling can with a carbon electrode in its con tor. Tho can bolng filled, the wator was sub jected to electrolysis for soveral minutes. Tho plot was then sprinkled frm tho can, tho theory being that tho current might flow from tho can, through tho streams of water to tho soil. Plots Nos. C and 7 wore BUbdlvldod into four individual boxes, two feet square, separated by porcelain insulators and arranged with carbon electrodes at each end. To these electrodes wore appltod both direct nnd alternating currents. After radish and lottuco sood had been plantod nnd germination had begun, tho various mothods of electrification woro tried with oxtrcmo caro. Tho result of tho oxporimonts showed that tho plants in plot No. 1 grow in every lnstanco far moro rapidly than thoso in tho other beds and moro than double tho normal growth as shown In tho unolectrlflod bod. From this tho experimenters became convinced that electrification ot the ground by high-frequency curronts stimulated plant Hfo to an extent that warranted a more comploto investigation. So thoy selected two acres of flat, rich ground. First a network ot sprinkling pipes was built 15 foot nbovo ground. Tho pipes ran cast and west a dlstanco ot 200 feet nnd wero spaced at BO-foot 'Intervals. In the northeast corner ot tho tract seven copper wires were stretched north and Bouth, each being 200 feot long and an Inter val of IB feet separating thorn. Tho wires wero elovated suffi ciently for tho soil to be plowed with horses. The ends of tho wires wero attached to insulators on ton. of gas pipes Bet in con crete. At tho eastern odgo of tho house the experimenters built a small transformer house and In stalled machinery which would yield 10,000 volts. A choke coll nnd a Tesla coil wero used. Tho whole thing was connected up so that by moans of antennae current from tho wlro network was sent to tho network or sprinkling pipes, which, of courso, furnished proper connection with tho ground. i By the latter part of last July the system was In readiness and the currents were tested. At that tlmo a pressure of G0.000 volts was obtained and the frequency of tho oscillatory currents was estimated to bo about thirty thousand cycles a second. Birds alighting on the wireB wero Btunned and thrown tho ground, but none was killed. Tho ground was planted to radlsheB, lettuce, beets, cabbages, cucumbers, turnips, musKmoions, water melons, tomatoes, parsnips, beans, peas, corn and tobacco. All wero planted In rows running east and weBt, so that one-half of each row was electrified and tho other half was not. As a result it was found that practically all the plants In tho electrified area grew much moro rap Idly than those out of It. In almost every case the electrified .vegetables woro ripe two weeks earlier than those outside tno zone. Tho electrified end of the tobacco crop was cut and It was found that each plant weighed 1,087 grams. It was two weeks before the un treated tobacco could bo cut and then it weighed only 1,632 grams to tho plant. Taking into considera tion that the most rapid growth ot tho tobacco plant is in its last two weeks before riponlng, the exnerimenters esti mated that the actual increase In weight of tho plants in the elec trified zone was 20 per cent greater than that In tho unolectrlfled zone. It this could be followed out on a grand scale, it Is apparent that the effect ot elec trification on tho an mml tobacco output of the nation in a single season would be tremen- dIUn 'his formal report to the association, Martin said that many questions had yet to bo answered beforo tho uso of electricity for tho general stimu Iatlon ot plant Hfo could bo considered eco nomically possible. Ho declared, however. Urn many of these questions are being worked out in greenhouBos over tho country. Just aB those Amorfcan experimenters proved tho importanco of electrification to plant mo, a group of English oxporlmontcrs proved its im portance to" animal life. They took two largo brooders, filled with nowly hatched chickens or tho same breeds. One of them was subjected to tho Influence of high-frequency currents and the other was not. Those In tho former woro found to grow much moro rapidly than those in the other. . Following is a tabulation ot tho results ot elec trical stimulation of vegetables. It will bo ob served that in ovory particular tho plants in the first plot, where tho high-frequency curront and Tosla coll woro used, excelled those in plot No. 4, whore natural conditions prevailed: Prom farm boy, with few educa tional opportunities, to a leader of men now representing 55,000 fellow workers in their fight for better working condi tions and highor wages, is the record of Warron S. Stone, grand chief engi neer of tho Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. Mr. Stone has been tho principal figure in tho hearings of tho federal ar bitration board which undertook to settle perhaps the most serious contro versy that has ever arisen between capital and labor tho differences ex isting between 98 western railroads nnd their 55,000 engineers and firemen. Mr. Stono waa born in Ainsworth, Iowa, in 1860, and when not working on tho farm managed to pick up bits of knowlcdgo in a small country school. Six months in an academy also enlight ened him somewhat, ho claims. When nineteen he entered upon his career, whero he was destined to becomo tho champion of his fellow workers. He was a fireman for five years and six months and later became an engineer. During his 25 years in a railroad cab he worked for tho same road, tho Rock Island, and had tho samo run. ThlB was from Rock Island, 111., to Eldon, Iowa, a run of about 113 miles, and it passed his homo. Mr. Stono delights in telling how every day when ho'd come within dlstanco of his home, ho'd. lot out tho whistle and tho folks, usually his mother, would always como to the door and wave. Wmtikm BsBK&$&&JflBBBJBr(',' f I EBnpHBJBK - o , ,7 A BKBBBJBjBfllli I AH ENGLAND'S NEW SEA LORD John Arbuthnot Fisher, Baron Fisher of Kilverston, who succeeded Admiral Princo Louis of Battcubcrg as first sea lord of the admiralty, has long hold as his motto, "The frontiers of England are tho coasts of tho enemy." The son of an obscure Highlander cap tain and a high-born Singhalese wom an, Fisher combined a certain amount of oriental craft with traditional Brit ish tenacity and reasoning. By sheer force of mind, strict attention to duty and persistent labor Fisher rose, step by step, to the highest rank in 1904. But even then the commander accept ed promotion with reservation. Ho had plans for a reorganization of the British fleet British naval power then was not nearly so great as It is today, nor was it concentrated. In tho old days tho Mediterranean was regarded as the scene of possible activities. Fisher saw a change had been brought about in England's political relations and that consequently the North sea would bo the future fighting place. As a result, when the British empire entered the present war perhaps 86 per cent of the country's naval strength was in home waters. Fisher knows his officers. "Confound him!" snld one who served in tho West Indies, "I believe ho knows how many drinks I. take every tlmo I go ashore." Fisher Is silent and discreet. He is nverso to publicity. SBBBBBBBBBBIk Uk4 BBBBBBA BBBBBBBBBBrV r"wBBBBBBBl bbbbbbHhv '.' "jBPBHF SmtijtZ: ""Wr ' 'Lid v iNBBMBBBBBBBp "ja a t? jBBBBJBBBBBrR: ?!,?L. WOTHERSPQON'S NEW JOB Oo RadlHliPH (ten pluntn so lccteil nl random): 0 Po I W : c : -j 1 5 I. O K en CAMERA MEN IN DANGER Amateur photographers at the soasldo or ov?n In London and other big cltlos must bo moro careful than over how thoy take snapshots during wartime, for a thoughtless uso of their cameras limy easily ciiubo thorn to find themselves in lirlsoii for a few days, to Bay the loast, Pearson'B Weekly remarks. In the early days of tho war, for lnstanco, n perfectly innocent Hull ship chandler, on a holi day In London, with his wife," was arrested by the police for taking photographs of Dattorson bridge. After being detained tho best part ot lha day, during which inquiries woro mndo, tho authorities wero satisfied that ho wub merely a tirmleis snapshotter, but novortholcas thoy arned him to koep his camora out of uso until thevwar is over! There are probably many thousands of ama teur photographers who, wishing to snap scones thev neighborhood ot barrackB, or other mili tary or navl places, find thomsolves arreBtcd aa If they were apies. If they must tako photo KrapH In these war clays let thorn resort to tho Woods and -po'intry lanes, as far from military scenes as thoy can got. At tho outsot of tho war tho military authori ties Issued an ordor that no aoroplanos or air ships must bo photographed at a distance ot loss than forty yards, or of an air station at all, without tho permission of tho authorities. Germany lias always boon tho most dangerous country for tho amateur photographer, and moro than ono tourist has foundhlmsolf roughly ban dlod by tho Gorman police for innocently taking Photographs. A special bill was passed a few years ago threatening tourists with a flno ot 50 or two months' Imprisonment who took photo graphs without permission. Tho French officials In tho townB on tho Franco-Gorman frontier havo always objected to any ono taking snapshots, and, Indeed, many n tour ist haB had his camora temporarily confiscated, to find afterward that his plates havo all beon rendered usoless, Italy not only bars pcoplo taking photographs near fortifications, but forbids tho use ot n camera In most o the picture gallerlos and museums. Total plant weight, grams265.70 137.80 109.50 1S0.00 78.60 Kdlblu portion, tfram J39.G0 B7.0 40.00 79.40 31.00 Killblo portion, por cent.... 61.15 41.65 37.31 44.11 39.49 Tops and leaves, grams.,.. 120.50 75.70 C5.90 00.00 41.50 Tops and leaves, per cent.. 43.33 51,92 00,18 51.77 55.68 Hoots, grams 9.30 4.70 3.20 5.60 6.00 Hoots, per cent 3.50 3.43 2.43 3.12 4.S3 Lettuce (ten plants selected (at random) 67.00 52.00 56.50 46.10 31.30 Edible portion, grams 60.70 47.30 50.20 41.80 28.20 Hoots, grams , 0.30 5.30 6.30 4.30 3.10 Roots, por cent 9.41 10.0S 11.15 9.33 7.99 KJUjlo portion, per cent 90.59 89.93 8S.S5 90 67 92.10 THEIR DE8CENT. Hampton Dlnwlddow told mo his family Is. a very old ono. Thoy wero ono of tho first to como across, Rhodes Tho grocer told mo yesterday that now they aro tho last to come across. Judge. eral Miles, General Crook and others Apache band when thoy woro exiled to Alabama. Philippines and stayed there throe nnd a half years, Governor-elect Whitman of New York sprung a surprise on tho politi cians by announcing that ho had se lected MaJ. Gen. William Wallace Wotherspoon, late chief of Btaff of tho United States army, for state superin tendent of public works, and that Gen eral Wotherspoon had accepted the post. Mr. Whitman described him as "the best man in tho country for tho position." General Wotherspoon was retired from the army on November 1 becauso ho was sixty-four years old. His pay on the retired list is $6,000 a year. His salary from tho state ot Now York will be $8,000. General Wotherspoon is not a West Point graduate. A son of the lato AsHlstant Surgeon Alexander S. Wotherspoon, who served in tho Mexl ''can war, he enlisted In tho navy. He found ho preferred tho army and won an appointment as second lieutenant In the Twelfth Infantry. Ho served in many parts of tho West under Gen- In 1891 he took chargo of Goronimo's In 1899 ho went to the SAVED THE NATION MILLIONS SUITS HERSELF. "My wife is always asking mo what T would like td out." "That's kind of her." "Oh, 1 don't know. When I tell her sho saya, 'The Idea!' and orders something else," "Tho man who has saved tho na tion millions" is the manner in which David Watson Taylor, tho new chief constructor of tho United States navy, has been described. His achievement in this particular is not the product of economy atne, but directly the frutt of his raro scientific attainments. "Dave" Taylor, as his Intimates call him, was brn in Louisa county, Va., March 4, 1864. In 1881 he entered tho United Statetr Naval academy as a cadet engineer. In those days 26 cadet engineers were appointed yearly to the academy, and their admission was determined b competitive exami nations of candlda.es from tho country at largo. For a country-bred lad edu cated mostly under his father's roof tho manner In which", young Taylor j acquitted himself at the entrance ex aminations was spectacular, uut of 130 candidates ho passed No. 2, and soon after onterlng Annapolis ho showed that ho would not bo content with second placo. At Kraduatlon ho not only headed his clfUMhut lm limi won by Ills work the highest percentage of marks of any naval academy grad uate up to that dale. The record ho made has nover since been equaled at that Institution. With his academic days finished ho was ordered to sea fpr tho usual two yoara' tour afloat, but after a short cruise on the European, station ho was detailed, in October, 1885, to the Royal Naval college. Green; wlch, England, for a three-years' course in naval architecture. Chief Constructor Taylor is even more than a jiaval architect; ho la a marine engineer besides. This is an unusual combination ot technical talents BBBBBBBHHR?"' 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