' * - L'"V " - . . . . . . . . . . . . : - - - * . * - , . . . . .ly . .vrwr. . E n-n . . . . --.M . , . . . . . . .r. . . . . . . . . . . p . * ' ' ' * ' ' * * * ' " * " ' . * ' ' ' * * ' * * ' " * * % THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SUNDAY MAI 15. 1887.--TWBIiVfi PAGES , : - , > , , ' ; IN THE ELECTRIC FIELD , Remarkable Development of Electric Light ing Plants. THE TELEGRAPH N INDIA. Electricity an a Motive 1'owcr Type writer TclnjrraphH Electric l-'lro AlarniH In llotolti Mr. E. 1 * . Test on niectrlolty. Tne following interesting paper by Mr. E. F. 'lest , was read before the Literary and Scientific club , Wednesday evening , May 11 : Among the wonders of nature , ricctrlc- Ity is the most majestic. It Is every where and the range of Its possibilities is boundless. It pierces the sky with a Hash and the air responds with terrific reverberations. It catches the earth and the surface rocks and rolls like the wave of the sea. As the Indian truly says , "it is tlio voice of the Great Spirit. " Not only is it His voice , but it is one of the elements of His power. Its presence is seen and felt in the rolling worlds , a chip and tlio inmost delicate llower. It is indestruct ible ; hence eternal and it can carry the human voice , i thousand miJus. It is not only in the seat of life , but a part of it. It moves our bodies , as the servant of our Will. it moves the universe , and drives tlio whirlwind , tlie cyclone , and the hurri cane in its wrath. It rides upon the Btorm in a\\fu ! majesty. It's strength is great enough to wreek-a world. As to its possibilities , U ilt'ord snys in his "Problem of Human Life : " " \Vohoarthoinnsicofapiano by our Ride , and hear delightful strains , but on turning to look for the cause of such ex quisite harmony , behold no musician is visible , I ho keys move in correspond ence to the ringing notes , and the ham mers rise and fall , hitting the strin-'s in response to these movements ot tlie keys. " "Wo know there must bo a musician somewhere If there is music. Dut where is he ? His invisibility can have no weight as against his existence , so long as the music is heard , and the keys arc Been to move. " "We seek to unravel the mystery , and on searching , wo discover passing up one of the legs of tlio piano what appears to be a small rope , within which , upon closer inspection , we find a largo num ber of small copper wires. On raising the key board we observe the under sur face is lined with a thin plate of soft iron , and beneath each key , we discover an electro-magnet ; its wires connected witli suitable copper threads in the insulated chord. " Dut where is the player He must bo somewhere , possibly in an adjoining room. Oris it some llittingghosttouch- ing the instrument witli an invisible hand ? " "On lifting its lid wo discover a tele phone , and observing its cop-jor threads pass down the same insulated chord that conveys the Wires to the magnets , we take the hint and venture the usual call. I'hc answer comes from Philadel phia. " "There sijs the musician playing upon his grand piano , every key of which is connected with these of the piano by our side. " "Dut what is more wonderful still , the artist with a receiving telephone at his car becomes a combined dual musician and listener- every note is not only re produced upon tlie distant piano , but is actually returned to himself in Philadel phia , and repeated in harmony with his own , and with compound delight. " Is this fanciful f Lai us go back a cen tury , and see the rapid strides science has made in this respect : A well-known writer said : "About the year 1750 a nnrnh.int of Cloves , named Jorisson , who Had become almost totally deaf , sitting ono day near n harpsichord while some one was play ing , and having a tobacco pipe in Ids mouth , the bowl of which rested acci dentally against the body of the instru ment , ho was agreeably and unexpected ly surprised to hoar all tho"notes in the most distinct manner. " ' "Jiy a little reflection and practice , he acain obtained the use of this valuable Eense : for ho soon learned by means of a piece of hard wood , ono end of which he placed against Ins teeth , to keep up a Conversation , and to be able to understand - stand a whisper. " Hero wo have the principles of tlio telephone , that is , convoying sound by means of a hard substance. Two years later'(1702) ( ) Franklin made his discovery , and brought the lightning ( rom the clouds. Wo are familiar with the itory of the kite. It is said , observ ing an approaching thunder-storm ho went out on the commons with his son , Rotting under a shed to avoid the ram. Dreading ridicule , ( doubtless some wise men of that day wondered what ho was doing in the rain ) he made a confidant only of his son. Thu cloud passed , but no sign of electricity appeared. Des pairing , ho suddenly observed the loose fibres of the string to move towards an erect position. Presenting his knuckles to the key , he received a spark. His the ory became a fact and European scien tists hastened to crown the provincial doctor witli a wreath of fame. Such was the beginning of ono of tlio greatest conveniences wo now enjoy. The recent visit of General Wallace re minds mo of an incident of his father. Some years ago the committee of ways and means of the American congress was In session. They were considering the Morse telegraph bill. With the dig nity usual to our statesmen when handling an unfamiliar question , tlio members voted lirst on ono side and then on the other , until the letter "W" was reached. Then Governor Wallace of Indiana rose aud asked leave to con sider his vote. Taking his hat , ho went into the hall and asked a question of tlie "cra/.y man at the other end of the cap- Itol. " The answer came. Again ho naked , and again tlio answer came. Ex cusing him elf from tliu laughing crowd. ho returned to the committee room and cast the deciding vote in favor of the bill. The committee reported the bill to the house. It passed congress in the last hours of the session. The work waa finished , and Morse , in the hour of tri umph , exclaimed "What hath God wrought ? " Dut Governor Wallace , left to the mercy of his loving constituents , Wits defeated for re-election because lit .hud voted "to throw away thu people's money on a foolish thing. " Doth lived to a good old ago , ono , to receive the most distinguished honors ol the nation , tlie other with tlio sweet as- tmrtuico that ho had been the chosen In strument to make successful the most potent clvilizor of the age. Thus from the discovery of tlio deaf merchant of Cloves came the audiphonu and similar contrivances to relieve thu unfortunate , and through the genius ol Gray , Delle and Edison , the telephone , while that of tlio printer of Phllauelphiu led to the electric telegraph and Hi astonishing results. Following the spirit of the ago we see Creighton plung ing into the wilderness , and meeting the land from ocean to ocean with the mystic wire , and Field laying the cable on the bottom of the sea. What are thn deed.1 of a Ciusar compared with the achieve mqnts of these two men ! Ono reared ti fabric that fettered the nations aud enslaved slaved and brntali/od its own people. II wag crushed by Ignorance and slavery. > rom thn work of Creighton the sav Rjfo tied , while Field has bound the ig < HWHUCC of the world , and the nation ! arc destined to become ono universal land of brothers. Nor can wo lot this opportunity pass without calling to mind the eventful day in May , 180'J ' when thu Atlantic and Pacific wore united with bands of Iron , when the cannon on Capitol Hill saluted ihe conquest of pence as each stroke of the hammer fell upon the last splko more than a thousand mles ) a\yay. How little we realized tyhgp f ( ? ) heard the booming guns that they wore the ushers of a boom of a mighty city whose future will bo second to none in tffls vast republic - public ! Nor should it be forgotten , tea a citizen of Omaha , Kdwartt Kosewater was reserved the high privilege of Hash ing over the electric wire the language of tliu grandest Instrument of modern times , the emancipation proclamation , penned bv the most precious hand that ever mouldered in the tomb. These are a few of its territorial con quests. Let us look into the domain of nature and behold it there , and , by elec tricity 1 mean it in its broadest suiiho and all its attributes. In Hie heavens we sec the fail of a ( Treat comet traveling at the rato'of mil lions of miles an hour. Whence comes this ama/.ing velocity ? In the spring and fall the sko is luminous with a beau tiful cone the /.oiliacal lights and tliu aurora borealis spreads its roseate lines at various seasons of the year. Does it occur to any one that these phenomena have tlin same governor to rule them ? Such is the fact the spectrum reveals in each of the electric line of lights. Auain , the sun , moon and stars are moving in the places appointed by their creator. Each is connected by a law of magnetic attraction ; call it gravity , if you will , upon which its creation rests- each acting upon thu other as it rolls through space. In circling around the sun the eartii is circled by the moon. Hoth are electro-magnets. At a given point the moon passes between the earth and another world. The magnetic con nection between us and that world is in terrupted , and disturbances of the at mosphere ensue. Rolling alongthe moon breaks this connection between us and still another world , and the shock en uses the earthquake , sinking of mountains and islands and destroying thousands of the human race. Sometimes the sun and moon pass each other on the ecliptic , eclipsing the sun in its passage , when the combined electric force of two bodies thrills the earth , shaking its crust , and repeating the horrors of Lis bon and Charleston. So far as my ob servation lias extended. I find that all great earthquakes and volcanic erup tions are caused by the movements of the heavenly bodies and their relative positions with thu earth. It is tlio same with thu disturbances in the atmosphere the electric forces being weak or strong according .to the circumstances. Sometimes these disturbances come in the tornado , charged to the brim witli electricity , or in the hurricane , and the cyclone , where thousands who go down to tlio sea in ships are lost forever. Again they conic in the rain drop or snow Hake , or in the magnetic storm , which lowers the temperature almost in a moment. Once in a while the beautiful planet Venus , now seen in the western sky , comes between the eartii and the sun , keeping the eartii company for months and weeks. Then we have summer * of extreme hunt.while the passage lusts , be cause wo receive the borrowed heat of Venus in addition to our own supply from the sun. Such is also thu case concern ing the moon to a more limited degree. Again the eartii will pass between tliu great planet Jupiter , ( now seen in tlio southeast in the early evening ) and the sun , and again thu season will be warm near the time of thu passage , because wo not only receive our own heat from the sun , but we pass through the addi tional magnetic force put forth by the sun to hold the planet in his orbit. My observations in this have also led mo to believe this force is exerted by the sun in a curve , because thb clays preceding the opposition of a superior planet are al ways warm , while the day is apt to be cool or windy. These arc also the phe nomena attending the opposition of the planet Saturn , in the early winter months. At other times the earth is on one side of the sun , and the planets on the other. Like great magnets , as they are , they draw the sun's heat away from the earth , and ihu seasons are cool. When these planets and the eartii arc on the same side of the sun Ihe seasons are unusually warm. This is the principle pu which astro-meti'orolo- gists base their forecasts of the weather and the seasons. It is the basis on which Joseph predicted the good and the bad years in Egypt , while Moses from his knowledge of thu magnetic influence of these bodies , speaks of the precious fruits put forth by the sun , and the precious things put forth on the eartii b'y the moon. In our own day , it is the secret of success among so many of our florists and farm ers. They plant and prune by the signs of the zodiac , and tlio position of the moon. There can bo no question as to electri city being the motive povyer of thu uni verse. Hy what process it works 1 do not know , though others claim such knowl edge. 1 can see no other reason for the velocity of the heavenly bodies , unless backed by this powerful agent. Heat and light are too slow. Hcsules , they are not universal , but direct in their applica tion. It light was universal , there would be no slmlow nor darkness. If heat was universal , there would be no glaciers nor bitter cold. Its velocity has never been measured. Some claim this , but the claim is non sense. As an illustration of its speed , in 1857 or ' 58 , Prof. Carnngton saw a very bright spot on the sun. At the same instant the magnetic needles on the earth were violently agitated. Magnetic ; storms prevailed during the day , and at night the aurora borealis overspread the heavens. Here then , we have an instance of its velocity. It traveled CrJ.O'JO.OOO . . miles in an instant. One scientists says it travels 250,000 miles in thu sixteenth of a second ; another 200,0X10 miles in a second , and still another 4,000,01)0 ) miles in a second. This is equal to 210,000.000 miles , or ! ) ,0'JO ' times around the eartii in ono niinutu. Accepting -1,000,000 ai a basisin , ono hour it can travel a distance six times greater than tlio planet Neptune , twenty times faster than lignt , reaching thu enormous total of 315 billionGOO million ( IMJ.OUO.OOO ) miles in twenty-four hours. If this is not enough to demonstrate its atna/.ing power , an old writer savs the Star of Hethlohom , expected in 18U1 or ISUJ.must be traveling at the rate of 40:2,000,000 : miles a minute. Whether this star is a myth or not , I do not know , but an emi nent French astronomer claims to have located it in thu point about ] where it is expected to reappear. If wo admit this to bo true , ono can understand the rapid ( light of an angel from God's distant throne , and , if the voice can bo carried by an electric cur rent , how the prayer of a humau soul can be instantly heard in heaven. Electricity seems connected witli our lives and spirits. Who can doubt tlio first. Let us see how it is with the other. Two operators are talking over -the wire. It convoys intelligent answers and re plies. Wo know the source ! of < the intel ligence and how it Is contfoyett. A num ber of persons with lockM-wjiands sit around tlio table. The table moVes ask a question and an intelligent : answer is given. We know tlio table is electrified or magnetized , but what is the intelli gence controlling it. \ \ o see a man walking thu streets , every muscle moving in obedience to his will.Yhntis Mio in telligence that moves Ida body ? When thn man lives we know lie is magnetic. Hu has life. When ho died magnetism and life go out of him. Are they inseparable ? If then magnetism or electricity are indestructible , hence eternal , then wu arc immortal , because electricity is eur servants to do our will. Therefore It is logical to conclude the servant cannot bo greater than his mas- tcr , that is , tlio creator would not leave us , the superior to perish , while the ser vants livu forever. Electricity is luminous , so is the till of a comet , the aurora borealis and tlio zodiacal light ; so Is an angel and per force the spirit of a tuuu. Thu dying have testified time and again to the pre sence of bright beings around them and others watching at. the bedside have claimed to see a luminous something leav- the body at tiic moment of death. As clectricltv is luminous , has It any connection with the spirit ? When leav ing thu body docs tliu spirit assume a a shape or fotm ? We judge so bv " thu llirhtning when it strikes the earth. Now , as electricity and life are tangi ble fcitbstiincett. wo can perceive when they become visible to mortal eyes they are luminous ; hence thu reason for the brightness of thu angels of whom wo have read. Taking this view of the connection be tween electricity and the spirit , for thu holier tlio spirit , the greater its magnet ism , we can account for tlio raising of the son of the widow of Namtlio daugh ter of Jairus , and of La/.urus. In each was the exercise of the divine magnetic power and will , calling the disembodied spirits back to their mortal bodies. If wu take into consideration thu velocity of electricity we can account for the res urrection of tlio last day on seientllic principles. Matter is never destroyed , although subject to change , tlio particles remain. Let this agent loose under the control of the Almighty , and in an in stant by its magnetic power every parti cle of our bodies will be drawn into its proper place , having undergone the chemical changes nooossarv to make them immortal. The living"on the last day will go through the same change , by tlio same process , under the divine com mand. That it will be electric there seems to bo no doubt , In this we have the pi oof of the change in the body of Elijah , who disappeared in an electric manifestation ; thutransliguration when a bright cloud overshadowed them , and the ascension , when a cloud received him out of their sight. As no llesh'and blood can enter heaven , the bodies of Elijah and our Savior must havu ehruged in tlio whirlwind and the cloud. If electricity is an element of spirit and spirit is life , then tlio creator is iho source of life from whence it emanates. As it parades the universe it explains thu omnipresence of God. Even the pagans admitted the electric attributes of the doitv when they pictured Jove holding the lightning in his hand. The scriptures teem with these mani festations of the Almighty and Ids min isters , for they say Goit reasoned with Job from out of thu whirlwind , showed Elijah his power in the earthquake and the mighty wind ; led the Israelites with tlio cloud by day and thu pillar of lire by night , manifested himselt in the thick cloud at thu dedication of thu temple , and spoke the moral law from Sinai in thuntlerings , lightnings , flame and smoke. Thu light of the angel shone in the prison of Peter , and the plains of Hothlc- hem were illumined by the presence of thu celestial visitors. At the tomb of Christ , after the darkness and the earth quake at thn crucifixion , the angel sat , amid the quakings of the earth , with his countenance like the lightning , and his raiment whitu as snow. On thu day of Pentecost came thu rushing , mighty wind with the cloven tongues of fire , resting on each of tlie disciples. Paul and Silas prayed and sang praises to Goil , and thu prison was shaken and the doors thrown open by a great earth quake. These are but few of the cases oft ho kind. The prophets teem with predic tions of future electric manifestations on the earth , and our Savior foretells how this world is to be destroyed through the agency of electricity. 'Finally revelation says : "And there were voices anil thunderings and light nings ; and there was a great earth quake. " * * * * "And every island fled away , and the mountains were not found. "Heliold : i throne was sot in heaven , and onu sat on thu throne. " "And out of the throne proceeded lightnings , and thunderingsand voices. " Can anything than this be more ma jestic , showing , as it does , that , not only has electricity the strength to ruin : i world , but it is the powerful agent of the Almighty , proceeding directly from the throne of ills Omnipotence. Typewriter Telegraphs. Mr. J. F. McLaughliu , of Philadelphia , wliosu ingenious electro-pneumatic tube system wo described and illustrated re cently , lias now brought to a notable de gree of perfection a system for using the typewriter directly for telegraph pur poses. When thu typewriter is not in use on the circuit it can be switched out and put to ordinary olllcc work. Anyone able to operate the typewriter can tele graph , it is said , by this system. Klcctrlu Firo-AlurniH in Hotels. Electric World : Thu hotel papers are calling attention to thu desirability of ; - . moru general adoption of electric fire- alarms in hotels. The recent experience at Hulfalo , when an alarm by its timely warning helped to save a great many persons , ought to bo enough to convince anyone that some such apparatus is a necessary adjunct of every well con ducted hotel , and wo trust there will bo a general adoption of apparatus of this character. Electricity Applied to Agriculture. Electric World : The Marquis of Salis bury's country seat at Hattiold , Eng. , continues to be a livu example ot what can be done to aid the agriculturist in his work when a convenient source of power is at hand , such as is a Herded by elec tricity. Tliu threshing engine formerly employed has been replaced by an elec tric motor , and recently an electric ele vator , employed in raising newly-cut hay or corn sheaves to the top of the stack , has been introduced with marked success. Dispensing with thu usual horse or steam engine labor required for the machine , thn elevator is supplied with an electric motor , fixed upon its bed , and driven by a current brought by v. ires from a cen tral source. The wires are easily trans portable , so that thu elevator can betaken taken from stack to stack in a very short time. Thu greatest radius over which thu electric elevator has been used at Hat- field is half a mile , being all that is there required. The principle is evidently ap plicable to a far greater range of distri bution ami we shall sco thu time when our largo western farms will bo worked more or less with the aid of electric power. Whom a fall of water is avail able this is particularly easy of accom plishment , but oven the installation of a steam power plant to drive the dynamos will in many cases bo below the initial cost of horses and their maintenance , or that of a largo nuraborof individual port able steam engines such as are now largely in use. Compared With Europe. Electrical World : As compared with Europe , this country has shown a re markable development of isolated elec tric lighting plants. The dill'crenco between - tween the two has of ten called forth com ment , anb a farorito explanation has been the lack of enterprise on the part of Europeans. This opinion is not , how ever , well founded. Tlio well-known conservatism of the average citi/.on of Europe mav account for thu existing state of atVitirn in a measure , but there are other causes effecting the industry very directly. Chief among these , for example , is the fact that in Europe the rules and regulations regarding the placing of steam boilers are excessively stringent. We are accustomed to. place ONLY ONE MAN IN OMAHA Who has any connection with the American Wall Paper Manufacturers Association and hence he possesses facilities forjbuying WALL PAPER Over all others , and now he proposes to give you the benefit of this advantage , We open for sale on Monday a large invoice of goods just received , comprising numer ous patterns for parlors , dining rooms , and halls , for TEN CENTS PER ROLL. Hundreds of New Designs from I2c to 15c Per Roll. A large assortment Rich , and Artistic in Designs , suitable for fine residences at 25c to 35c Per Roll. We invite special attention to the wonderful decorative material callled Unexceptionally beautiful and artistic in design and finish. A descriptive cata logue of this material FREE ; 1508 Douglas-st. , Between 15th. and 16th , North Side , boilers in cellars , under sidewalks , or wherever it is found most convenient , but -uoli a proceeding would not for a moment be countenanced in most Euro pean countries. In some of the latter , nothing more than a two-inch plank is allowed to bo placed over a steam boiler. There seems to bo a strange idea in the old world that a boiler on exploding rises in the air and falls exactly in the same spot , and that if there is anything in the way to prevent this intelligent action on tne part of the bursting boiler , much damage may be done. In consequence of this 'Superstition. " boilers innsfbe placed in separate buildings , and thus valuable space is required for steam plants. Hence it is that tlio gas engine has come into extensive use abroad in eonucctiou witli isolated plants. In proof of the dillieulty encountered in the installation of a boiler in connection with electric lighting , we were recently informed by a foreign gen tleman that it took two years of hard work to obtain permission to erect the necess'iry power plant in a certain place. Under such conditions , evidently , elec tric lighting must languish. Of this trouble in an extreme form , example was given latcj.y with the Gordon instal lation at Paddington , which , according to American notions , is well placed , but which , according to tlio average Kuro- pcan idea , is an improvement not to bo endured. America is certainly to be preferred. " Klcotrlcity ana Alottrn 1'owcr. Springfield Republican : While railroading reading by steam and horse-power ab sorbs so large a share of ( public atten tion , the public must not fail to notice tlie rapid development which is taking place in the application of ) electricity as a motive power. Wcstfield , our enter prising neighbor , is subscribing $20,000 to introduce the Daft electric light motor syotqin upon a car route of two miles. ( hicopee is considering the use of elec tricity for tlio same pnriKiso. T. C. Mar tin , in the Railroad ( ia/.otto catalogues a large number of places where cars for city service are already operated by elec tricity. A car fitted to tin electric motor costs'about double the price of an ordin ary horse car , but the horses , reckoned at from six to twelve per car , make the first cost about the same. Tlio Daft company , of New York , which now op erates either by overhead wire or by third rail , is operating a road for the third year at Haltimore : it has one at Los An geles , Cal. , that carried 15,000 passengers in February , and one a Orange , N. J. Daft roads are under contract at Pittsburgh , Mans- Held , Ohio , and Ith-.ea. N. Y. ; the Van Donoolo company of Chicago has roads at Detroit and Port Huron. Mich. , Windsor ser , Out. , Appleton , Wis. , Scranton , Pa. , and Montgomery , Ala , and has eon- tracts for Lima , Ohio , and Hlnghainpton , N. Y. Other electric companies have lines at Denver , Detroit , Kansas City , Philadelphia , anii other cities. Throe systems are on trial or about to bo tried at New York , tlio Daft , the Hentley- Knight conduit system , and the Julian electric system as tried on the Eighth avenue elevated. The Haltimore exper ience has been the most extensive , and according to Mr. Martin , tlio eost per day per car Is sfl , against $0.50 for horses. Mo electric motor has boon ap plied on a scale equivalent to performing the present horse-ear borvieo for this city. Hut so many experimental efforts are now being tried that within live years \yo shall probably see great ad vance in the use of electricity as a motor. Worcester , Newton , and Hroukline have electric lines projected. As > to the meth ods used , Mr. Martin says : With electricity there is a remarkable flexibility of application r.ud range of choice to method. The car can carry its own power in storage batteries : the cur rent conductors may be placed on any existing track , or tlio car maydupond for current upon an overhead wire with contact trollery or bush , and all of these can bo used together , if necessary , on ono road. I have been on street railways whore each of these plans is exemplified , and have found all prar.ticablo and oper ative. The motor can bo put anywhere , even on the roof , and can be geared up in a dozen different ways. The average recovery of power is easily 00 to ( W per cent. , and in every case the current re quired is exactly proportionate , at the minute , to the work being done. The cost of the clcctrio conductors is more than offset by the wear and tear of a horso-.traek. The central station electric plant will , in many cases , be more than paid for by tlin economy m real estate , and it can be put anywhere alone the line or near it. It can also , as it does now , supply electric light and power for general purposes. The Telegraph In India. Electrical World : We have received a copy of the Indian Telegraph Guide , for April , 1880. It is a remarkable evidence of the extent of the growth of the tele graph in the far east. It is a bulky little book 8x5t } inches , and contains no fewer than liiS pages of mice , instructions , forms , list of oflicca , rates , etc. The Guide is at once interesting and sugges tive , and is full of details such as can only belong to a service under the con ditions prevailing in India. Thus , for instance , a list is given of public ollicurs who on occasions of great importance bayo the power to "clour the line , " or , in other words , suspend the receipt and dispatch of all other messages until their o vn telegraph business is transacted. A list of olllces opened and closed at certain times mentions some which are closed "during the rainy season. " Another list of ollicers open at special times "to the lonal requirements" includes a great many open , say , from ( i a. in. to 8 a. m. and then from noon till 0 p. m. or from from 2 to 0 p. m. The system is evi dently well worked out , and its cllicicncy no doubt contributes largely to the se curity of the Indian government as well as the comfort of the queen's Indian sub jects. In a private letter to ono of the editors of the Electrical World. Mr. P. V. Luke , superintendent of telegraphs , writ ing from Calcutta , gives an account of the extent of tlie work doneWe quote the following passage : "On the 21st of March , 188 ( ! , wo had 27,500 miles of tele graph line , with 81.T)0 , ) miles of wire be longing to the department , and 187 miles of river cable. This is exclusive of lines belonging to the rail way companies. Tlio message trallic is increasing so rapidly that the need for the quadrnplcx is beginning to bo foil.and we have just started a quadra- plex circuit between Madras and Horn- nay , 800 miles , with ono translating sta tion. In all probability we shall extend the system gradually over most of our main lines. Wo have been very busy in Hurmah , with over 1,000 miles of field telegraphs and no\v lines connected with the recent annexation of that territory , and the workas constantly extending in a very trying country. " Telegraphers in India have to do their work under many speeial and peculiar circumstances of difllculty.somu of which tne above extract gives an idea. BEATING THE BANDITS. Ivxprcssmaii Urown'a Wiiinlnc Fight with a ( lane < > ' " Train Hobucra. Chicago Inter-Ocean : "This last ex press robbery , " said an old railroad man , "calls to mind an exploit of an express messenger that ought not to bo forgotten. It was about eight years ago , and Frank lirown , then in charge of an Adams express - press ear on the Santa Fe road , was the hero of the occasion. Somewhere in Colorado the train was stopped by sev eral desperadoes , ttio engine , baggage car and express car were detached and run forward three or four miles whore the robbers expected to go through the express car at their leisure. They had the advnntagfl of the engineer aud fire man and brakeman from the start , because - cause they were unarmed , and the rob bers , with their revolvers , compelled them to do their bidding. "Drown , however , tlio moment the tram was stopped closed his ear and pre pared for defence. During tlio run from the' point where the robbers expected to enter upon ttio business of robbery Drown strengthened his position , aud when the gang attempted to force an entVanco ho was ready for thoin. Ho know that in about an hour a train would approach from the opposite direction , and his pur pose was , through parley and a show of strong resistance , to delay the entrance of the robbers until about the time the train nppuoachcd. Hu did not at lir.it hope to ko.ip them out , but ho deter mined to make the fight , and for an hour the struggle wont on. "The train robbers resorted to every expedient to induce Drown to surrender or to open the doors , and failing in that they proceeded to compel his surrender by opening a steady lire on the car. They would shoot fifteen or twenty times at different angles , aud then , taking it for granted that Drown hid boon frightened or possibly killed , would maku another attempt on the cir. : Everytimo they wore mo by hostile demonstrations by Drown and wore compelled to abandon the at tempt. Every time they were repulsed they opened tire more venomously , and when the whittle of the approaching train sounded there were 133 bullet holes in the express car , and Drown was still master of the situation. With tlio com ing up of the other train the robbers made u hasty lliglit , securing no booty at all. "This experience led the company to put guards on every express train , the manages choosing men who had a good deal of light in them , and who , under standing that they wore paid to fight , were always ready for an engagement. The result of the onperiuient was that no more attaoka were made on the trains in that section for a good many years. As a rule , the desperadoes who attack ex press trains are pretty well informed as to the condition of affairs , and if they know they are likely to bo mot with strong resistance or to come in contact with men who will shoot without cere mony , they are not inclined to make any ventures' , but if they know that the ex press messenger and tlio trainmen are un armed , they have little hesitation iu mak ing an attack. " * SICKNESS comes uninvited , and strong men and women are forced to employ means to restore their health and strength ; the most successful of all known remedies for weakness , tlie origin of all disease , is Dr. J. II. McLean's Strengthening Cordial and Blood Puri fier. GROVER AND KAPIOLANI , The President Entertains the Hawaii n Queen Under Difficulties , MRS. CLEVELAND'S SERENITY lll-brect Washington Audiences Pat- tl'H lia Traviata Kmina Abbott's Warm Ailmircr Secretary Im- innr'H Good Breeding , WSIMNGTON , May 0 [ Correspondence of the DEK. ] Ere this can roach you , you will have read tl\at \ Madam J'atti's com ing to Washington was a great success numerically and socially. And if a packed house fringed to the very edge with men in evening dress like so many black tassels dangling , with pricu of tickets all the way from $50 boxes down to $3 for the chance of standing all the evening , is a sign of a financial success , then most undoubtedly it was a big I'm un cial success to all but the. "almighty dollar" man who , expecting to make a golden fortune out of Patti's appearance in opera hero , for one night only , by buy ing up all the best seats and holding them so higii that at last as the hour approached to ring up tlio curtain , sold them for what ho could get , and was thoughtful. It made my cars tingle with delight to hear , "Opera tickets - , ets , price seven dollars , will bo sold for live , all along.thc line from tlio street corner to the very entrance door. The prino of tickets being o high and the wholesale buying up of the tickets by the sharpers , who must have slept on the curbing in front of the opera house the night before the sale so as to bo thu first in line in the morning , made hearing Patti impossible for the real music-loving people of Washington , and I'm ' thinking if tlio audience had boon composed of this class of people instead of tlicollicial , political and SOCIAL SWIU.I.S AND ( JliC IIKIJS , who were thinking a good deal more about their good clothes anil being looked at than listening to the whisperings of glorified souls through Adelina Patti's voice , she would have been inspired to her mightiest as she made her appearance in the festive scene in "La Traviata. " I wondered if a cold chill didn't creep down the divine diva's pretty round back as she took a looK at that brilliant gathering and felt that there was something lacking. A good-looking crowd , to bo sure , but it did seem to me during tlic first part of the play that they were wholly engrossed with their own line appearance , and how 1'atti was dressed an'd what she looked like rather than how she sail" and acted. However , the coldest ice ot Selfishness must melt before that warm , passionate s-oiil of music and art , and led by the peanut gallery ( nearest heaven ) , whore sat some of our very best judges of art and song , the audience broke'into one long , wild ronr of applause of apprecia tion. Anil how gracefully and graciously tlie fair goddess of music did bow her thanks , and especially did she smile , as she alone can smile , her gratitude toward the box where sat TIII : i'iti.siiiNT : : AND ins I.OVKI.Y win : , who , next to tlio dmi herself , took the hearts and admiration of all about her. I presume because flowers are Mich a cheap commodity hero in Washington , none were thrown at tlio feet of the greatest music artist of this age. After bi'ing again and again re called before the curtain , she sang "Homo , Sweet Homo , " as I never again expected to hear it till I hear it beyond the blue sky , as the angels of song wel come mo to the eternal home. 1 could not if I would , and would not if I could , attempt to describe that voice and singer as she stood in all her loveliness before ono of the most brilliant assemblages this country , or any other , can produce. She was dressed in a marvelous costume of white , composed of-'silk , satin , lace and llower ? , brilliantly sparkling with such an array of diamonds I have never soon in Washington enough to make Mrs. Frank Leslie and Mrs. .Senator Stan ford commit suicide out of sheer jealousy. Possibly Patti's voice may show to the very bo.st'advantage in tlio opera of "ha Traivlata , " which is nothing more or less than "Camilla" , and 1 hate that play 1 hate gilded folly set to music , put temptingly upon the stage there is enough all about us everywhere to light against. 1 hate to seo. people die al though thor % are a loti of people who ought to die. just as. woods ought to bo hood out of a garden especially do 1 hate love affairs to end in death as they surely must sooner or later ! Hut sucn lovely loveliness as I'litti to die in such a horrible way , bolt up-right in a chair with that rosebud of a mouth wide open and those beautiful cyca Mark and st.ir- ing. Awfull I should have forgotten , even the heaven in IIKK "HOME , SWKKT IIOMB , " had she not appeared before tlie curtuin to assure up she was u thing of beauty and joy forever. Of all perfection IndrcBiMaduniratti'i costumes in "La Traviata" arc the most exquisite and unequalled for richnrss of texture and artistic ull'eet. Much has been said and written of Sarah llernhardt'H wondortul clothes , they are wonderful , those that 1 have seen , but there is snvh a wonder of beginning and ending NO much of a muchness. So much of clothes to shake to find the woman , as though liernhardt was made for the clothes. Patti's clothes have the appearance of having been made for her the woman , first and then the clothes. And what costumes there wore in that audience May 31 The like of which have never been seen in the opera house bo- fore. A most desperate efl'ort to get riil of tlie objectionable bonnet and hats , but here and there tower-of-Uabcl a - - bonnet ! and a Washington monuiucnt-hat waa seen bobbing in front of opera glasses a nip and contest to see which should get full view of the stage. Mrs. Cleveland was resplendent in n rooshing costume of white satin and lace , and low-necked , the line drawn at the shoulder blades and arm pits , after tlie approved fashion of her sister-in-law. She carried an immense white feather fan , which she languidly moved to and fro , as a gentle summer bree/.o might ) have moved tlie large palms under the oriental skies to fan tlio beautiful cleopatra. Many times during the most interesting parts of the singing and acting of Madam 1'ntti , 1 noticed opera GLASSES LKVKLUl ) AT SI US. fl.lIVlII.ANI ) , all of which must have boon very gratify ing to her hubby , who sat in the rear of the box mopping his face. The night was intensely hot , every gas jot at full blast all over the house , which in a degree de tracted from the brilliant cfl'ect of the stage. 1 am pure that Madam Patti must have sufl'ercd from tlie strong light and over-heated house. All the rest of us wore uncomfortable. Thursday night Kmma Abbott in " 11 Travetoro' drew a splendid house. Tlio president and Mrs. Cleveland , accom panied by tlto over faithful Daniel anil his wife , accepted a box and and seemed to enjoy the play very much. Mrs. Cleveland , dressed in a black lace cos tume , looked very like the photographs of herself that are to bo seen in shop windows all over the country the most becoming costume she lias yet appeared in. Her manner in public is that of per fect composure and self-control. She takes the homage paid her as tlie just dues of tue price of being ( Jrover Cleve land's wife and mistress of the white house. It was with the most intense in terest she w atclied Abbott's handsome tenor in tlio role of Manieo , as Lenora'c lover. It was here that Mrs. Cleve land showed the nrompiiugs of her girlish , youthful heart , and seemed to forget all about her even the impu dent stare of a blase man of the world who set in a box near , and turning his back to the stage glared at Mrs. Cleve land all the evening. His want of good breeding and trim manhood made my fingers itch to grab him by the collar anil r,1 tumble him out of the window. Hut wo must expect these big plays as the re ward of fame. NEXT IN LINK to receive the best attention that this ad ministration can all'ord ( money no ob ject ) was the lavish attentions paid the calico queen. It is something to have a real live queen in our midst , even if she is as black as thu queen of spades I To think it should have been loll lor thu democratic udmini.stiation to embrace a queen of oil' color ! Surely this is an ago of wonders. It was a sight worth seeing , that of President Cluvo- land and the dusky queen sitting side by side at the state dinner last Friday night , lie appearing ill at ease , hot and doubt ful of his next line of action. She majes tic and .solemn as the bronze figure of Liberty on the dome of the capitoll An her majesty can't speak but a few word.s of Knglish , and as his presidency can't talk in tlie Hawaiian's , the Mltiation wan rather trying to say the least , and I lancy Mrs. Cleveland , who being hid be hind the big llond center pieee opposite with Minister Carter , her majesty's sub ject , was wriggling her big too under tlio table at the comical position her lord and master was in. As full dress at state dinners don't permit of ladies' wearing sleeves , all the sly giggling has to bo done in the boots. There is a great deal of snickering on foot these daysany way ! While Secretary Lamiir is a staunch ad mirer ol fair maidens we hardly think ho would allow his dislike for twilight com plexions to give oflense to his chief by refusing to accept , tlie hospitalities of his mansion on this Mate occasion. I cliooso to think that Secretary Lamar had fconio good cxcuvj for not attending the state dinner , and it must have been a good excuse that would keep him from accent ing an mviattion to a good dinner , for that man does like to be invited to lunch ordinu ! It must be remembered that Secretary Lamar has a bride wife1 , pos sibly she raised objections to sitting down to the table with a "colored pus- son. " The sunny south still feels a strong prejudice to the mixing of black and white. And yet the tin of blood in half-and-half race of the south wilt tell. How gratifying it must bo to the colored people of this country that at last one of their c lor has been royally treated by ttio democratic party. COM ,