12 THE OMAHA DAILY BBB ; SUNDAY. OCTOBER 21. -SIXTEEN PAGES. Never overvalue any article they quote in the papers. There is so much "Buncom" in the general style of advertising that it is hard to discriminate between the real and fictitious. Barr's have no need to resort to such methods , their goods and prices speak for themselves to every intelligent pur chaser. When Barr's make any special mention of prices on goods "bought way below their value , you may depend upon them being just as represented. Our success in the past has been achieved in that way. We are meeting with the same success here by following the same rule. GOOD GOODS at LOW PRICES i Being constantly in the market looking for SPECIAL DRIVES we have something new and cheap to offer you at all times. The express companies and freight lines bring new additions to our store every day , so you can't help finding bargains in all our departments every time you pay us a visit. We call your attention to three of our departments , namely : Millinery , Cloaks and House Furnishings. These departments have been patronized by the people of Omaha and vicinity to an unusual extent and we are anxious ALL should visit them and get some of the Novelties and Bargains there. INTELLIGENT INVESTIGATION PAYS. Wm. Barr Dry Goods Co. , Sixteenth and Douglas Streets. * Facts and Figures of Modern Rail road Affairs. YOUCANTRAVELONYOURTRUNK An Odd Coincidence 1/csn Risk But More It < > 8iioii8lbllity A Phenome nal Ilailroad Year Tha Duiunud for Gnr . You Can Travel on Your Trunk. Indianapolis Journal : "Do you know that if a man has a heavy trunk he can sometimes travel a long distance on a railroad without a ticket or any mouoyV" said a young mun yesterday who had recently made his way back from Texas with but a few dollars. "When I reached St. Louis I had but 5 cents in my ) x > ckot and I did not know a man there I could ask for a loan. I went to the ticket agent , and , making known my condition , asked him how I could get to Indianapolis. 'Have you a trunk ? ' ho asked. 1 told him that 1 had , ana ho said ho would introduce mete to the conductor. When the conductor came up I was introduced , and he asked mo for the cheoic to my trunk , which I gave him , and ho then gave me a small ticket which he said would get my trunk in Indianapolis. I asked him bow much the trunk would cost me when I wont to got It out , and ho said $7. Well. I got through all right , but when I presented the ticket > for the trunk it cost mo $9 instead of ST. 1 have boon wondering over since > vhc got that money , but I didn't care , for I was glad to got back to Indlanapoli < ven on those terms. " Ail Odd Coincidence. Commercial Advcrtibor : From Birm Inghani , Ala. , comes a weird story o ! two friondb George White , ongincui of a fast passenger train , and Boll White , foreman in the machine shop- of the Louisville & Nashville road. They had a habit of making each othoi small , pretty gifts , nnd this summer the machinist constructed a clock rathei out of the common as a present to the engineer. When finished ho bet it run ning to insure purfuctness , and foi awhile it ticked away as merrily as yoi please. Suddenly , without cause 01 warning , it stopped nt - : ! ! ' , ! a. in. , bu nothing was thought of it till next day when naws came that exactly at tha hour its prospective owner had booi killed in an accident , and the oddos part of all is that no amount of starting or regulation since has ever boon nhli to make the clock run past that fata minute. HUk , Hut More Ite poiitlhillty Glebe Democrat : The running of i locomotive is becoming a position o more responslbllsty , while tlio danger of the position are becoming less. Ant with these changes the more itnporta-i it is becoming to have competent mei ou the footboard. A few years ago tin engineer hud no .ilr-brako to take can of , but ho might gut killed for the wan of ono. If ho wanted to stop bad h whistled "down brakes , " put her in tin "brcoohlu1 " and waited for the brake moil to got in their work. Now ever ; Improvement puts moro cares on hi head and hand. Ho has the care of ani bandies a complicated brake , he is ro sponflble for tlio observance of a thou and signals , tljo heat of the cars ha boon asked ( rota his supply , and ho wil soon have another little engine and \ dynamo to care for , yet with all thosi things to look after , unless one stops t < think for a moment , an engineer ! ookcd upon as a man who has a soft nap. _ _ _ _ _ Flattering Outlook. Globe-Democrat : Tha last quarter of the year promises to bo a phenomenal one for the railroads , affording a remark able contrast to the light business and neagor revenues of the earlier portions of the year. They uro now beginning a handle the largest amount of traffic , hat was over ottered to them , and with rates generally restored to a remunera tive basis , there is no reason why earn ings for the next few months should not be equal , If not greater , than any over recorded for a similar period. All the roads east and west are short of cars and every wheel that can be turned is in motion. Under such circumstances the companies are not likely to furnish any motive power for cut-rate competi tion , if they can possibly avoid it. It is easy to see that , with good paying rates and all cutting done away with , a larger mileage than ever before and all the traffic that can possibly be handled with tliis increased mileage , and more effi cient equipment , the lust quarter of the year can scarcely fail to be one of unex ampled prosperity. The railroads have made the worst showing they can this year. It must bo admitted , however , that , while all iu serene in other quar ters , the situation east of Chicago is rather slow in righting itself , and some of the managers are growing very im patient at what they call the perverseness - ness of the Pennsylvania road in refus ing to restore the rate on gruin. There is a good deal of doubt as to the atti tude of the 1'emisylvania , which is just now moro of an enigma to the other roads than it over has boon before. Someof them say it does not know its own mind. Certain it is that the other lines do not know what it wanta , and are somewhat suspicious of its motive in adhering to the low rate. The curi ous part of it is that the Pennsylvania is apparently making no effort to secure the grain traflic , and other roads are really carrying the greater portion of it. Hut whatever stumbling-blocks there are in the way of full settlements , it will be found that bettor rates and good profits will come with the enor mous business ahoiul. The < 'nr Dcm.imt. Globo-Democrat' There is one great annual ebb and llo\v in the demand for railroad pars. The active season gen erally opuns about September and con tinues for perhaps six months. During this period the demand for cars exceeds the supply , Then comes another nix months of comparative dullness , during which side-tracks are often incnmborod with long lines of empty and unused cars. It is the movement of the great crops siimiltaneouly in all parts of the country that swells the demand of cars in the autumn to an excess of the sup ply. In regions where this trafllu of the earth's annual products constitutes the main business the difference between dull and busy seasons is of course most clearly marked , and in districts ol heavy miscellaneous trnltlo the lines ol differeiu'o are often almost % blitorntcil , nnd Un approximate uniformity tlioyeav through takes their place. Hut on an average the relative demand for cars on roads in the north varies for the two seasons as two and three. If 2.000 cars flufllco to move the freight on u road In April it may bo expected that In October 8,001) ) cars will bo re quired , In. the south , because of the relative importance of the cotton crop , the difference is greater. If 1,000 cart nro ample in bummer 2,000 will ba needed in winter. Most railroads have more cars than thnir minimum require ment and fewer than their maximum needs. The recent failure of the per diem rai charge and the complete return of all v _ , incs to the mileage system of rental 'or foreign cars diminishes the chances of a road keeping its own cars , for the cost to other roads for retaining them is less. When n car now once leaves the line of road that owns it , it never returns until loaded , and is often de tained for months for local business. Southern roads , from their greater needs , "steal" more cars during this season than their northern neighbors. Let a car once get beyond the Ohio river and it is useless to hope for its re turn before spring. General managers may promise to return it promptly , but once in the southern service it success- tully eludes all efforts for recapture , and the owner must content himself with the mileage. A car tracer re cently wont after one of his missing cars and found it at last down in a remote corner of Texas , where the enterpris ing borrower had converted it into a station house for a new town. A post- office was established in one end and a country store for the other. It required considerable diplomacy to oust the ten ants , but the car tracer finally won his point. Under the mileage system the possessors had no rent to pay. A Venerable Locomotive. Kenosaw Ga/.olto : It is not twenty steps from the leviathan locomotive , Governor Joseph E. Brown , now re ceiving the finishing touches in the lo comotive paint shop of the Western & Atlantic railroad , in Atlanta , Ga. , to another locomotive , dilapidated , com paratively insignificant , exposed to the elements , without shelter or care. It is the North Carolina , and the legend on its boiler front reads : M. W. 11ALDWIN , lS.7i , Philadelphia , Pa. The North Carolina was built for the Western & Atlantic railroad thirty-six years ago , and at that lime rated as one of the finest locomotives in the south. Master Mechanic Collier regarded the old "scrap heap" mournfully , and with a sigh hixid : "I would regret to see her broken up. I passed wood on her in 1858 I'll keep her here as long as I can she'll do to pump water with in case of accident to the waterworks. " Mr. Collier says ho presumes the North Car olina is the oldest locomotive in the south. She Was used during the war , hauling refugees to places of safety , but hasnotbeun in aotivo service of late yoara. As compared with a locomotive she is certainly a curiosity. Stanford to Uotire. Globe-Democrat : It may bo stated on fir t-ruto authority that Senator Leland Stanford , ono of the four founders of the Southern Pacific company , will soon re sign the presidency of the company , which ho has hold continuously for a quarter of a century. The annual moot ing takes place early next winter , and it is then that Stanford will rotiro. He will reach New York next Saturday from Europe , where ho has been trying the waters at Hamburg and Budon with out much otToct. His health and strength are seriously impaired , and ho doeires to give his time to the manage ment of the now university at Palo Alto , which is a memorial of his dead son. This university will probably lie opened to students early next yoar. Stanford , it is said , has only a few millions of boiuls and stock of the Southern Pacific. The heavient owner of the heirs of the original founders is the CrocUer estate , which is managed by Colonel Charles Prod Crocker , the man who is generally regarded as most eligible ! to the position of the president. Ho was thoroughly trained by his father in all the details of railroad , bu.sinoas , and ho has dovelopcd executive ability of u high order. I-'or several years Stanford has done very little work at ' the railroad offices. M'ost of his duties have devolved on Stephen T. Gage , an old and trusted official , who was lately made Stanford's assistant in the man agoment. The Southern Pacific , though the gross earnings are very largo , does not pay as good an income as many eastern roads. The reason is because the high officers draw unusually largo salaries , nnd because so much railroad building is being done. They pay well , and the company's salary list includes some big salaries , the president ( Stan ford ) , vice president ( Huntington ] , and second vice president ( Crocker ) all got 825,000 yearly each. Timothy Hopkins draws $15,000 , Stephen Gage , Stan ford's assistant , gets $12,000 , whtlo a half Aoion others , including the counsel receive 810,000. The business of the road is growing BO rapidly that the com pany has been unable to meet the de mand for freight carriage this year , and the prospect is that another yoa'r will witness an oven greater development of overland trallc , of which this great sys tem gets the lion's share. Tabulatinu the Accidents. In every well-regulated railroad of fice , says the Globe-Democrat ; there is a department where an exhaustive rec ord is kept of every accident , trival or serious , that occurs on the property of the company. The record is kept as a necessary protection against unjust damage suits. Experience has demon - stratcd thai quito often a suit will bo instituted against the company several years after the in jury complained of has been received , and at a time when the witnesses to its occurrence have either boon forgotten by the company or hayo themselves forgotten the occurrence in its essential particulars. In consequence the defence of the company has been lame and halting when , in the estima tion of the company , it might have been bettor. Now , when an accident occurs , be it only the mashing of some poor brnkoinan's thumb , the unbending rules and regulations require that each em- pioyogivo a writton'statoincnt of the affair , and if the accident be serious that the names and statements of other witnesses also bo procured. Those are tiled for future- reference , to bo used as circumstances may require. In a ponderous folio arc carefully indexed the names of all persona injured or killed , with their residence , the place of accident , otc. This-book on a largo railroad system is rupldly filled with names , for each day' ' brings a number of casualties. It is a 'gory record. Per haps half the total ( iiHihiltics occur to trainmen while coupling cars , but there Is a prontiful sprinkling through the list of tramps fulling bonbath the wheels , of passengers injtirdd While alighting from or boarding a train in motion , mid many other varieties. ' Some are pecu liar. Hero is an irfstance : Following the address of a cdlintfry physician in the record of a local1 road is the single announcement. "StoYxl out in the ruin and caught cold , " etc. , a curious entry indeed. The history of the case is that the country physician , ono damp raw evening in December , tramped from a patient s residence to u lonely railway station and arrived in a state of profuse perspiration. The station was locked and the passenger was compelled to await his train by standing out in a drizzling rain. Ho caught u severe cold from exposure , sued the railroad company , and settled UU cat o for $1,500. A bachelors' club , organised at Heuton- vlllo , Ark. , Is to iuipo-o a hoary fine on mom- bora unmarried nt the end of ISS'J , exco | Una those who can Kivo aatisfoctory evidence that they have proK | > sod and been rejected three times during tlio your. , \ AMONG THE ELECTRICIANS , Development of the Great Agent of Modern Civilization. ELECTRIC POSTAL RAILWAY. Use of the Electric Light in Fishing Electric Cable Rood Use of the Phonograph Shocks and Flashes. A New Electric Postal Hallway. Electrical World : The Sprague Elec tric Railway and Motor company is now building for the Electro-Automatio Transit company , of Baltimore , three twenty-five horse-power railway motors of a special typo for operating a car on the last named company's experimental road. This road has been erected at Laurel , about twenty-five miles out 'of Baltimore , nnd carries three rails , ono above the car for carrying the current , and two below , which support the car and constitute the return circuit. The motive power for this road will bo sup plied entirely by electricity , and the cars will be controlled and the brakes applied by the same power. Each car is mult of sheet iron , is two feet squat e and about twenty-one feet long. Two cars constitute a train , and when joined , they are connected after the vestibule pattern by a flexible connection the size of the car itself. The speed which it is expected to attain is live miles per minute. It is the intention to boon build two roads for carrying mails and other light freight , ono between Balti more and Washington and the other be tween St. Paul and Chicago. UHO of tlio Electric Iilcht in Manyattcinptssays Knginooring.havo recently boon made to employ the olcu- trlc light as a means of attracting fish to a particular place so as to facilitate their capture. The arrangement gen erally adopted has boon to plunge an incandescent lump in the water , connec tion being made by loads with some source of electricity on board the fish ing craft. When , however , this ar rangement is adopted in dcep-oea fish ing , it is found that the mains to the lump are very liable to foul the fishing appliances or the cable of the vessel. In short , it has been found impossible to maintain a permanent communication with a lain ] ) plunged tea a considerable depth bo low the surface of the water. M. Paul Hegnard has got over this difficulty by adopting a lamp worked by a primary battery , the whole of which can be tossed overboard and reclaimed at some future time. The battery used consists of six Bunsen cells , in which , however , the nitric acid is replaced bv chromic acid. These cells run a small Edison lamp. Electric Cable Iload. Electrical World : Reports como from Switzerland of a novel combination of the olectrio and cable systems on a road up the Burgonstock. Current is trans mitted three miles to the road from a couple of Uvonty-five-horso-porfor dyna mos driven by water power , and the dynamos , charging accumulators for the purpose , operate two motors stationed - tionod at the head of the road , which is OH8 metres in length. The motors are connected with and drive a rope system which hauls two cars up nnd lowers them. Each ear will curry fifty or sixty persons. It might be mentioned that the sumo water power furnishes current for lighting the big hotel and pumping up spring water by motor , but the chief point to us lies in the suggostivonebs of the first application. Such a plan ns this might well bo adopted on street car lines which happen to include a steep grade or two , for it would cer tainly avoid the necessity of subord- nating the whole plant to the require ments of a few short sections. Use of the Phonograph. Electrical World : Whatever may have been the criticisms against the old phonograph , the conviction must force itself upon those who have studied the subject , that with the rapid improvements that are going on in the phonograph and graphophono , their use will become general in a short time. The experience of those who use the instruments for the first time is no guide in any way as to their values , because , as in the case of the telephone , it requires a little practice to become accustomed to interpret the sounds which emanate from the cylinder. Once acquired , however , the reading from the phonograph is as simple a matter as the reception of a message over the telephone ; and , indeed , in some cases far easier. Electric Tramway a in Salt Mine * . Science : In the new Stassfurt ( Ger many ) mine an olectrio tramway has been in operation since January , 1884. It wus built by Siemens & Halbkc , and was a success from the start. The en gine is of twenty-horse power , and is placed above ground at the mouth of the nhaft. The dynamo is compound wound , nnd give5 * about forty amperes of 800 volts. The current is taken through cables to the tram-line , a dis tance of 410 muters. The motor is sup plied from overhead iron conductorsm- sulntod from the ground. The motor is simply one of the well-known typo of Siemens dynamos , placed horizontally on a car to economize space. The dyna mo supplies about twenty-horse power of energy , the motor gives about ten- horso-powcr an olllciency of only 50 nor cent. The weight of the wagons to bo drawn is about 2,500 pounds , and there are sixteen in a train. The mean speed is about six mile.i per hour. This line is not in any way so olllclent as those that can bo put up to-day , but some fig ures as to the cost of working are of in- tercbt , especially ns the road has been long enough in operation to allow an accurate estimate to bo made. In 1821 , 170,11)0 ) trucks were handled , and the working cost , including all itemswages , fuel , etc. , with 15 per cent for intdrot and depreciation , was 10.1 pfennig ( about 2Jc ) per truck , while the cost be fore had been 20 pfennig ( Go ) . In 1887 the figures are still more favorable , as the underground electric way hud boon considerably increased. The cost was H.t ; pfennig ( about lie ) per truck , or 12.02 pfennig per kilometer ton , as compared with 3-1.2 pfennig per kilometer ton by human labor , which the electricity dis placed. If the few olootrlc tramways in mines that are now in operation in this country were investigated as to cost , it would bo found that , their economy is ns great us that given nbovo , It is only a question of a few years when mule and man power in mines will bo replaced by electric motors. Machine Telegraphy of To-day. Now York Sun : Mr. D. JJ. Craig , formerly manager of the Associated Press , "has dovotcd nineteen years to the development of machine telegra phy , and claims to bo able to telegraph 2,000 words pur ininuto from each end of a wire , a total of 4,000 words in sixty seconds. The mosxagoi or reports are legibly nnd uniformly recorded in ordinary tel egraph characters , which can bo road by clerks familiar with them at the rate of about one hundred words per minute , Messages , to bo sent over tlio Morsn lines , must bo written or printed ; but * message to bo telegraphed by the noW system must be perforated , for which Mr. Craig has a beautiful little maj chine , 8x10 inches , with two bunks ol keys , called a "composer , " which oven a child can operate reliably and quila expertly after an hour's practice , und after u reasonable atnou nt of pracllu fifteen to thirty words per minute can be perforated. Simultaneously with the perforations the inachino prints , in plain Roman letters , every word of the message , which is re tained , while the perforated message is sent to the telegraph cilice the sixmo ai a message is Hunt in manuscript to bo telegraphed over a Morse line , with this difference tho. machine message will bo transmitted at the rate of 1,000 or 2,000 words pur minute , and be leglblo and accurately recorded in telegraph characters , and the Morse message will be telegraphed by the hand-koy syHtom nt the rate of fifteen to tvronty-flvu words per minute and be recorded by ' 'sound" reading in ordinary manu script. It is claimed that the machine record is three times moro uccuratu than "sound" recording. With the regular olllco perforator experts ports do , reliably , fifty words per min ute , or 8,000 per hour , and it is claimed by Mr. Craig that the actual cost of transmitting 1,000 words 1,000 miles in not over 2 cents. The coot of paper to perforate 1,000 words is 1 cent , and 2 cents for record * ing paper. Experts , young men or young ladies , do perforating for 10 cents per 1,000 words and the saino for copy ing on the typewriter -total , 25 cents for completing 1,000 words. On this basis it would co t for labor and paperless loss than KtO to tologrunh and complete forty-eight columns of this newspaper from New York to Chicago. Mr. Craig hasnlso devised a new tele graph wiru'inudu of nuro copper with u slight mixture of silica , which is said to increase the tensile strength to twiea the btrongth of steel of equal si/.o , the exact tensile strength being reported as iM,000 ; ! pounds to the square inch. No. 4 gauge wire weighs over 000 pounds per mile , and has but ono ohm of electrical resistance per mile. With such a wire , extending from Now York to San I'Yancibo ' , the electrical ro-ilst- nnco would be about ! ! , ( )00 ) ohms , \rhila a majority of the telegraph wires be tween Now York and Washington flhow an electrical resistance of moro than 4,000 ohms thus the now slllconizud copper wire will bring San t'runcilRoo nearer to New York , electrically , than Now York is to Washington. Mr. Craig's apparatus Is now on exhi bition at Washington , in a room in the capltol near the bonato chamber , The most efficacious stimulant to or- cite the uppotitu is Angostura 131 tiers , the genuine of Dr. J. G. B. Siogort &t Sons. Why They Preferred It. Minneapolis Tribune : They mot In a restaurant and fall into convocation about their lunch. "All me , " said the first , "tho approach of winter saddens mo. I would it wore always summor. " 'Now I , " replied the other , "hko tha winter season , In winter I regain my health , enjoy life , inoet friondg and huvo n jolly tune , which I never do in summer. " "What is your buinesi ? " "I am an umpire. What is yours ? " "I am a snow shovolor. " "Ah ! " Ilorflford'H Acid For IiidlecNtlou , Uyapnpila , nud dUeawet * thereto ,