THE OMAHA DAILY NEE : SVNDAY , MAY 2 , 1807. CITIES LINKED BY STEEL New Bridge to Bind the Principle Sections of Greater Now York. REARING .AN IMMENSE STRUCTURE f the fri'ii ! Hint Hlv T HrldKe from Ken mint Inn in Sii- IIITK true ! ore Unite TIMV- I-FH of Stud. , , The early days of Mar will ECO an actual beginning In the construction of HID new East river bridge , wlilcK Is to Join the 'two prlnclpnl sections of areater New York and and become the twin of the prcfcnt Brooklyn bridge. Within the next few days the firat of the huge caissons which are to bo used In btilldltu ; the foundatlntie of the bridge plera will bo towed Into position and the work of creeling the piers will begin. It has taken n long time for the work to reach even this preliminary stage. It was In 1892 that a charter was first granted for the building of n bridge across the Kast river at the point where the new structnru will stand. Prac tically no progrcro wan made until IS'JS , when the task of building the bridge was undertaken by the cities of New York mid Hrooklyn and by them turned over to a board of commissioners. A year and a half was required for the completion of plans and the clearing away of legal dllllcuUlcs , and It wa.1 only last fall that the contract for the first of the work , that of building the pier founda- ' description , It Is In reality a , moat stupendous deus nnd difficult undertaking. THOUSANDS OP ( MIU33 OP WIIU3. Perhaps an Idea of Its extent may be ob tained from the statement that the masonry In the piers would build a large church , that the steel In the towers of the new bridge would build three miles of elevated railroad , and that the wlro In the great cables , If stretched out In ft single straight line , would reach almost around the globe. In the actual work of construction the order followed by the engineer Is reversed , The foundations nnd anchorages are first built. The work of building the foundations Is In Itself highly Interesting , slnco the work mutt be carried on many ftct under water. To tunnel to bedrock beneath the mud 01 eand nt the bottom of a river seems a dim- cult matter , but In reality It Is comparatively safe and simple. It Is done by means of cattsons , which , It not originally designed by Americans , have been ao greatly Im- proveJ by our engineers that they may be called an American Invention , In appearance - anc-o n caisson Is simply a huge Inverted dry goods box of steel or wood. Those which are to ho Used In the East river bridge will be built of Umber ? , stoutly braced lo withstand high pressure. The one that hns already been built Is 70x60 feet and nineteen ftvt high. In Its construction something like 400,000 feet of pine have been used and fome acres of Georgia limber land have been denuded to form these temporary structures for work on the new bridge. On Its lower fide , as It reals In the water , the caisson has a working chamber eight feet high , which will accommodate some forty or fifty workmen. The completed caisson Is to bo towed to the foot of Delancey street. New York , and when It lo located on the exact site where the pier foundation Is to stand work men will begin erecting the masonry foun dation on Its top , the weight causing It to sink In the wnler. At this spot the water Is only twenty feet deep , so that the cais son will rest on the ground as soon as It Is submerged , Hut the bedrock on which STHKL TOWER OP THIS NEW YO11K EAST UIVEU BRIDGE. ' tlon for the Now York end of the bridge was awarded. However , the old saw whlcl any a , "A thing begun Is liulf done , " seem : to api > ly with especial appropriateness to tin building of great public work * s.uclt as this and It Is confidently asset ted that the brldgi will bo finished ami opened to traffic wlthli a year utter the opening of the twentletl cuitury. .Mr. Huck , the chief engineer of the nev bridge , may be called a bridge expert. A nny rate , several of the greatest engliiccrln ; triumphs of recent ycara In bridge construe tlon were planned by him and he Is to hi classed \\cll up among the half dozen moi who arc the leaders of American engineer ; In this line of work. In this statement tin word American might just as well be re placed by "Tho world. " for It Is a fact tlml ' In thn essential points of cc-nomy , lls'nt ness and up-to-date construction American ; It-ad the world In building bridges. Ileslde the great spans already built In this countrj across the East river , the Niagara , th < Ohio and the Mississippi , American firms ami American engineero have constructcO giant bridges In Mexico , Australia nnd sev eral South. American countries , Including Peru , where Is probably the highest bridge In the world , in a number of these enter prises , both nt home and abroad , Mr. Iluch has been the engineer , and H 1 safe to say that there Is no man butter fitted to speak with authority on the subject than he. When asked recently to describe the construction of a great bridge from the engineer's polut of view , Mr. Duck said : AN ENGINEERING KB AT. "Tho bttlldliiR of on Immense bridge muwi bo looked upon an on engineering feat rather than as a Kettli'd business , such , for example , Us the erection of skyscrapers. The ri . KOII for this Is very evident. In putting up buildings , the conditions under which the work must bo done vary but little , and new problems once worked out. are settled for gorxl and nil. In bridge building , on the other hand , ono never has the same condi tions twlco over , and the engineer's task becomes ono of adaptability , while fresh and perplexing dimcultlea must t-e met and over come at every hand , Still , the general plan of procrduro Is In all capes much the same. "To begin with , In any given undertaking conditions ami re- there art ) certain fixed nulremeiits that cannot be departed from. The bridge Is to be between certain points ; therefore' it must bo of such and such a length. It Is 'o arry n certain ostlnuted amount of tratllo ; to have so many tracku , drives and pathways , That practically do- cldrn Its width. It Is to be cantilever or suspension , a seems most feasible under the existing conditions ; that settles the gen eral style of construction , "With thcso conditions OH the barls of hie calculation , the engineer sets to work to figure out his plaiiR , Since the bridge Is tote to , be suspended by huge cables , ho decides what I , to his mind , the deflection of the cables , or 'vcrsedsliuV that will glvu the greatest llrninera , durability ami sustalnlnti power. The answer lo this question has Us effect on tlio appearuiU'o of the completed structure. For example , In the now East river bridge the cable loop will fall away from the towers more eharply than In the old Hrooklyn bridge. The middle portion of the bridge n.ust bo 135 feet above high water , o the towers will have to 335 feet high to get the proper deflection , The next point to settle Is the carrying load of the cables , Having fixed upon a certain form of steel construction for the platform of the bridge , the weight per foot ol the sus pended superstructure can easily bo de- terminal. Then a certain live load la aa- eumi'd from the beat obtainable estimates , olid , with these two factors , the necessary sustaining power of the cable * U settled , Of cour \ In making these estimates every thing 1st taken Into account , such as the effort - fort of I ho temperature on the cables , and a margin ID allowed , aa In all these intimates. "Having advanced to this pulut , It is pos sible to determine how much weight will come on the towers , and this settles the Im portant question of how much foundation la nocesuary. The elze of the anchorages IH determined by the pull of Hie cables , and with anchorage * ami foundations completed your bridge U done. " "Although the rearing of an Immense bridge sounds a sluiplo matter under tbli modest the foundation must rest Is sixty feet be low , and the Intervening mud and sand for an oiea as largo as that of the caisson must nil be removed. This Is done by the utilization of compressed air. As the huge box gradually sinks in the water under the weight of the stone work piled upon It , strong pumps force air Into the working chamber through tubes provided for the purpose , forcing the water out. Thco workmen descend through an elevator pas sage , which runs up through the caisson. At the bottom they find a large workroom , lighted by electricity and having telephone connection with the outside world. As they shovtl up the carlh from beneath their feet the- place It In the mouth of a blower , which Ir simply a tube extending up tb the surface , and the pressure of the air carries It up through the tubo. With these conveniences the bottom of n river bed Is not a bad place In which to work. The greatest drawback is from the great air prccsure , which Increases as the depth be comes greater. IMPOSSIBLE TO DE LAZY. The Increased pressure Is about one-half pound for each foot of depth , or about two atmospheres at the depth of sixty feet. The first effect of the great amount of oxygei In this artificial atmosphere ) is to make the men unusually active , so that oven a lazy man will feel Invigorated and will make his shovel fly rapidly. For this reason however , they can work for short hours only , and they arc subject to n peculiar affection known as the "caisson disease , " but which the workmen themselves describe ns "the bends. " When the rock foundation Is reached the rock Is blasted and smoothed away until n level surface IB obtained. Then the work men 1111 the room In which they have been employed with conc jte , and the column ol masonry , which has been kept level with the water's surface , gives a solid and con tinuous foundation , on which the bridge proper will rest. In Uio picficnt Drooklyn bridge this ma cnnry Is continued for the. whole height ot the- lowers , but liv the new bridge the towers will be of steel. The latter construction hau many advantages. For Instance , In the prcs- ent bridge the- towers each weigh five times ns much as nil the real of the- bridge , whllo In thi ) now bridge the towers will weigh only about the same as the main span , although they will bo sixty feet higher than these of the older structure. These towers will bo built of steel plates and angles and will rest on the masonry piers just dcsrlbcd. which will stand twenty-three feet above high water. Steel Is cheaper than masonry , too. and less time Is required for its erection. It may bo remained hero that the substl tutlon of slcrl for stone Is an American development and that for this reason Ameri can bridges are the lightest and cheapest In the world , At the torn of the steel towers will bo sliding saddles , over which tho- four great cabins which are to sustain the bridge will nass. These great wire ropes will bo eigh teen Inches In diameter , three Inched larger than these In the p.-esent bridge. Each one of them will contain 08,000 separata wires , each 3-16 of an Inch In diameter. To gether they will have a sustaining power of 68,000 tons , or S < & tons for each wire. It would pbo Impossible to transport one of these huge cables after It Is put together , so the strandp that go to make up each one are made and tested separately at the fac tory , and then strand by strand they are strung across from pier to pier and fastened together. As these cables are to support not only the 12,500 tons weight of the bridge Itself , but the assumed live weight of 12,000 pounds per lineal foot , It U evident that they must be not only strong In themselves , but they must also bo strongly anchored , ANCHORING THR IWIDGE. The anchorages will be located botwcun r > 00 and COO feel back of tha bridge piers at each end. They will be of masonry , 100x150 feet , and together will weigh 160,000 tons , or thirteen times as much as the main spun of the bridge lUelf. The cables will bo se cured to them by plates and plus In the strongest possible manner. Next to ttieao essential features the most striking thing about the new bridge Trill be tlio great utirrenlng truss , which will extern from pier to pier and will bo of steel , forty flvo feet high. Their object la to make th brldgo rigid nnd to keep It from swaying , a H would If left entirely to the cables , Th superstructure of the brldgo will bo unllei to Iheso trusses by a double system of brae Ing from above and below , and wilt make tin whole structure very firm. The floor Itself on which will rest the two elevated tracks the four surface car tracks , the carrlagi ways and the footpaths , which altoRctbe make the brldgo 118 feet wide , will , o course , bo made of steel girders and plates To show the attention required by seem Ingly unimportant tletalls It may bo well ti note Uio precautions taken against damagi by the wind. What la called wind prcssun Is to be resisted by joining tbo cables In thi center and by a double system ot latera bracing , An allowance of several humlrei pounds Is made also for the "wind load" o the bridge. The great width of the nev brldgo will be a considerable protectlot against wind , but some other siispensloi bridges have been greatly Injured and cvet wrecked by great wind storms. Changing at mospherlc conditions , temperature , etc. Ii fact , everything that could possibly nffcc the bridge In any way Is provided for will equal catc , A , MODEL nmuan. When the new bridge Is completed , li will be the model of Its kind. It will nebo bo so long as the Gre.it.Foith brldgo In Scot land , In fact Its length will be nearly th < same aa that of the present Drooklyn bridge but It will have certain Improvements or both of these. The abrupt deflection of the cables , the greater height ot the towers anc the fact that they arc to be ot stuel Inslcai of stone , have already been mentioned , ant there nre various other new features. Foi example , the new bridge will be unllko the earlier ono In that only Its main span will be supported by the cables. The approaches will be separate deck bridges and will rest on piers of their own. It Is estimated thai to build the now bridge Itself will cost ? 7- 600,000 , and that , with the cost of approaches , etc. , It will Involve the expenditure of ' $12- 000,000. A few statistics of the brldgo fol low ; Feet Total length. 7.20J Length of ninln span 1,00. Heltflit of towers S33 Height of bridge ut towers ( nliove high water ) 117 Height of bridge In center ( nbovo wnter ) , 53- width . . .I ; ; ; . . ; . . ; -us Total coat { 12,000OW H Illustrates the rapidity of advancement in bridge building that this new structure , which Is a marvel of Its kind , will be eclipsed almost before It Is finished by the great rail way bridge across the Hudson between New- York City nnd New Jersey. This will be nearly twlco ns large as any suspension bridge now In existence. It will have a span between piers of 3,251 feet. Itsl steel towers will rla ? to a height of BS7 feet above high water. The contract for It , which has al ready been let , stipulates that It Is to be built within ten years , but Ita promotero say that It will be finished In raven years. Its erection will cost $25.000,000 , and with land approaches' ' will require the expenditure of something like $ rx,000,000. ) Truly thla will b3 a colossus undreamed of by the ancients. IM1MHTII2S. The priest and priestess of one of the minor religions contemplated the votive of ferings of edibles of the highest grade which had been placed before the Idol. "Pretty good layout today , " eald the priest. "And just to think , " said the priestess , with the light that can come only In the eyes of woman illuming her orbs , "we got them at a sacrifice ! " The Independence ( Iowa ) Herald tells a story of a country merchant who visited that city nnd purchased from a dollar store n table caster , which he took home with him , and after putting a tog on it , re'- marked $14 , made a present of It to n Methodist preacher , whose church his fam ily attended. The reverend gentleman took the package home , opened It and examined the contents. The next day he took the caster with the tag attached back to the groccryman , nnd said to him : "I am too poor In this world's goods to afford to dis play so valuable a caster on my table , and if you have no objections , I should like to return It and take $14 worth of groceries Instead. The merchant could do nothing but acquiesce. There was a written examination on the Book of the Acts the other day In a London Sunday school , and ono scholar turned In the following : "When they saw Stephen they were In such a temper that they knashcd him with , their teeth , and charged him to he taken out of the city and stoned. Ste phen eald : "Ye etllT-necked things , why speak ye so1 The second supernatural event was the striking down dead of Ananias and Sapphira his wife for telling lies to Peter. This was supernatural , because It Is not natural to have persons struck down dead for telling lies ! Ananias and Sapphira were two great prophets. Ananian prayed to God to take him to heaven , and it came to pass that as he was on his horse he was carried up to heaven. " Why is It that church stories are always funny ? Here is really a very good one : Not many years ago , In a country church , the rector , preaching with great earnest ness for home missions , took for his text "Feed mo with food convenient for mo. " As ho came down from the pulpit well con tent with the effect his eloquence had pro duced on the congregation , the disturbing thought struck him that he had made no arrangement for the collection ( sure to bo a liberal one on this occasion ) . As ho passed through the chancel he whispered hurriedly to nn Intelligent choir boy , "Go Into the vestry , take the plate you will find on the table , hand It round to the congregation and then bring It to me. " The boy de parted on his errand , and the rector took his place within the communion rails and gave out the offertory hymn : The laU words of this had scarcely died away when the boy stood before him , n plate of biscuits In his hand and nn apolo getic expression on his chubby face. "Pleaso sir , " ho exclaimed , In an audible voice , I've handed them all around to everybody , and nobody won't take none ! " 1 > OI3M IIY J01I.V UUIXCV AIJAMS. ( Miss Mary Thompson of Terre Haute , Ind. , eldest daughter of ex-Secretary of the Navy Thompson , has an autogrop'h poem dedicated to her by John Qulncy Adams. She recalls the writing of It when ehe , as a child , stood at his side and curlotsly ob served the movement of his palsitd hand whllo ho wrote the poem. A quill pen was used , and , although the lines are tremulous , ; ach letter Is well defined. Miss Thompson lias the distinction of Im-lng been the first remale child over taken on the lloov of the notiso of representatives ! , where- her father lat at the side of Mr. Adams , and where ho ivroto this poem ) ; TO MISS MAIIY GAUniNEIl THOMPSON. 3h ! had I , lovely mnlden , but the power Here , on this page , thy destiny to write , iVlihi lavish hand what blessings would J shower To 111 ! thy future days with keen delight. ipring , Hummer , autumn , winter , each In To then the tribute of his Joys should ; \ > r thco stern winter's social ( Ires should burn , For thee resound the minstrelsy of spring , i'or theo Bhould Flora shed her soft per fume , For theo her luscious fruits should sum mer yield. \r theo should autumn's waving1 harvest loom , For thee Pomona's vintage crown the fleld. , nd till the rollliiK Reasons should be thine , And thlno they shall be , for thy soul Is pure , iiid virtue Khlelda. with energy divine , From all the Ills that mortals must en dure , 'hus as through life thy fickle fortunes fly. Should winter's frosts with pain thy bosom wring , 'urn thee to virtue's sunshine In the sky And bloom afresh In never-fadlnpr spring. JOHN QI'INCY ADAMS. Washington , 24th August , 1S42. There Is not a headache lu a dozen ot ook's Imperial Champagne , It's extra dry , Dquet fine. lUcord , halt a century. i 111Tumapyjaj mi'ffin _ _ - i i ! ! ir-MnnTMTtw-r 1 T n iiniaiani n mirnrMTuwTrraui i tm vrmmtrim f VTnTMTrnT ir rm\njmwrrrmrmmrmmnmmrwm \ xmrrim mimrmiVimium A TERRIFIC UPSETTING " " * r * I" " * * 1 S \ 1" " " C * + NEVER wore wo so bountifully supplied with bargain am- Of" I I C I I ffH " munition. Now la the time to buy , when you can choose I I . I . B M . ' ILu-W V from hundreds of special purchases too erood to Instlonj ? . - Not in our twelve years'experience have such oil-around low prices prevailed. Tomorrow we cut ALREADY ABNORMALLY LOW PRICES rlqht and left-MERCILESS CUTS-to score anothsr triumph- That this is PRE-EMIN ENTLY the store for monev-saving people will be forcl- bly-INDISPUTAB-Y-oroven this week. Read these SUBSTANTIAL BARGAIN FACTS ( no Glittering Exaggera tions here. ) A BoW Determined' Hove to Make This tEte Busiest Week on Record. A lienullfnl Italian mill Heeil IliicUer , very ciinifiirtnliU' . Thr Ultnl Hint m-iu-r- nlly NCll for $11 ! , thin week. $5.45 Solltl Onk IHnliiw Itooni Clinlr , cam ; nun Inorth I i-U.r.O , tlllH 74 c we absolute ly proveheyoml < lls Ittitt * the flirt Hint ir Ht-11 " Good Goods CHEAPEST" Niile on Itein- lit IiliiolemiiN , liiN , Velvets , etc. , that we artH < -11- liip : for fnr helotv eost thin week. Kor'thlM week only , ne olVer 11 ntiiirter Naweil NO 1 III mik 12v- teiiHloit Tnhle , laa.s. nlve enrveil II-HH , eas worth i-tl-l , tills week only A "Heywooil" Unhy Carriage , npholsti-r- eil In Milk ninterliilN , eiiiliieil | | with hrnke mill Millii piirasnlt worth 1-0 , this week only $9.95 A line Pnrlor Suit , iilthnlMtereil III line talll-HtrlcS , IIIIIHNlVe frame mill full HirliiK | < north K..OI ( , tlllH wt'clc llrusuclN , Flnli Xetx , XottliiKlimn mill Ilt-iil Iiiiei * CnrtnliiK , lit n treat vnrlety of lii-mitlful ixittci-iiM. A H-l I null iv I il < > ; ! ' < , > -il . lonpr Inee Ciirlnln , woi-lli 1 ? < I | ii-r imlr for $2.35 lllKeut In KnxelH mill Sci-eeiiM. (1 Knsel < hlH tveek , 38c l-lll i > < M-eeii thin week $2.45 A line Steel l the CUM 1D10.VI , ! It IH iiiileeil ii perfect rniipre ; tlilH week 11 If IT one for Iovely jinltei-neil niiil Kfooil iiiiallty riiie li-y Curtains , heavily frhiKeil , nell worth 17 , thin week $3-45 K Chlliff. Crllm with woven wire Hlirliiif , mitliiie | Ilii- | HI : - . nil ivell eon- < trneteil , wtirth Sfl.oO , thl.t iveek llriulli-y .t Ilnliliaril llmuiliet Lamp , \o. U ronnil hnriier , Iliilsh- eil 111 iioll.sheil hriiNM , \\ortli . 7 , this week , sponiling' ' vibrations on the tympanum of my car , and , by maacs of tlipso , enable me to reproduce in myself his phantasms ? and his simple thoughts. All this would require a wonderful adaptation of means to an end , an Incomprehensible , an infinite wisdom In the Creator ; but this is no real objection , since , as a matter of fact , Ills wisdom i.i truly Infinite. SOME CONSEQUENCES. What a wide viata of possibilities opens hero before us. The telephone and tele graph may , perhaps , soon become thliiRb uf the past , relics kept In museums as tokens of the Ignorance of the nineteenth century , as we keep as curiosities Indian bown and arrows. Men will then converse with one- anothcr at any distance by mere brain power , "which Is to act without loss of energy due to distance.Ve shall need for this pur pose no machines at all. There will be i o patents taken out on the noophono or en- kepbalophone whatever name may be coined for It as there are'patents on the telephone , making the luxury e.o expensive that not every man can enjoy the1 use1 of one. With his brain power alone In action , th editor will sit In his easy chair and ask hi agent In Lincoln or Washington , or i'rt's dent JlcKinley himself , about the latjs phase of legislation , which will at once 1 mentally telegraphed while the editorial I being written. We bhall then be able t consult our lawyer or doctor by merely wls'.i ing It , or call for a policeman when wo nice a footpad on the street. Even the house wife will no * need to put on a wishing ca to have her orders conveyed to the butane or the milkman. Visits In the evening ti closely sympathizing friends will go out o fashion , for the parties can keep up a bral chat with one another all the day. Th general In a battle will send his order b telepathy , etc. WHY DELAY TUB I100N ? I am sorry that Prof. Crookes apcaka E dinidently of thd practical results. "Th tlmo may come , " he says , "when It ( th theory ) can be submitted to experiments ! tcat . " And why wait for a time to come What prevents us from experimenting u oneo ? .Men's brains ate , ready today for an ) now adventure. Why should wo wait til our posterity will reap the fruit of thcs wonderful discoveries ? If there Is anything In them , let us have It at once. The medlun of transference bo It ether or what noi ls ready now nnd has been ready for een turles. It may take tlmo to perf'jt tin piocess of telepathy , but if , as thn profejioi thinks , "Intense thought , concentrated b > ono person upon another with whom he I In close sympathy can Induce a telepathl chain along which brain waves filial ! go straight to their goal without Ions of energj duo to distance , " It must travel as well to day as It will In 100 years from now. If It will not do so , docs this not throw the strong cut doubt on the existence of the telepathic medium ? lAnd If nature uniformly persists in refusing to give evidence of such power In man as tlio theory supposes , does not tlu theory cease to be scientific ? For a theorj is called scientific In w > far only as It plausibly explains existing facts without coil- trmllctlng other facts. Hut where are the existing facts which the theory Is to ex plain ? LET US HAVE PACTS. As soon ao the principles of steam power and electric power were understood , wo at once had some of the effects made visible. So with the telegraph , the telephone , the telescope , the microscope , bicycles , photo graphs , etc , , etc. Let us have telepathic messages at once. Happily , I'rof. Crookes , as president of the much-vaunted Society for Psychical Hescarch , la In the best position conceivable to test the value of lita hypothe- nls and mature- his theory , \Vo have specu lations enough , the air Is full of them. Let us have facts solid , hard and stubborn facts , that will convince the most skeptical. The professor complains of hindrances In the shape of "scientific superstitions , " whatever - over that iray mean. There Is nothing that will dissipate the mists of superstitions but bright , luminous facts. Show us clearly what telepathy can doj show bow your theory Is carried out In practice , and all scientific [ irejudlces will give way before the solid firoof. I must confers , however , that , so far , : have never ecen those psychical phenomena , io much lauded as being fraught with prom ise of endli-FH possibilities , treated In that lommon-eense , straight-forward way In rt'hlch wo deal with real iclence. In the ihyslcal sciences we proceed by Induction , is liacon has taught us , though others did t before him. Wo first get the solid and indoubted facts , and then we explain them > n suggested hypotheaes , or theorlea. Hut n this psychical business we nee in to get ilenty of theories and few , If any , undoubted acts. U la all wrapped In mystery. "The Iaw of Psychical A recent work , * " ( liilek Menl" Cn o- llne Stove , it tinnier , Oeiierntlim1 S t o V e imnrnnteeil , worth J-tD.r.O , till $4.75 iionv Dnrieti | , hltrli nrt pnl- tcriiN , ( ( iinlily the luNtnorth : jjsi.a.l , thin week 98c Kvtra line AVnnl- rohe , HtnnilN 7 feet lilKli , tlonhle iloorH , worth about Ijtlll.OO ) thlx week Solid Onk Slilehonril lu'K < - hevel plate- mirror , rlehly enrv- i-d , oli-Kant IliilNh , w < irth fully ! ? : > , thin week $17.50 A henntirnl Niillil ink ] iliim > iiollKhcil ( 'iiiililniiloii II ii ii U CHM > ami IU-xt < , tvurtli .fVI .OOi tliN tvi-i-U only $11.75 101) ) pleee r.nuilMh Dinner Setn JiiHt re- eelveil , Iliu- Ni'tnl- liori-i-Itiln , hentillfitl- ly ileeiirntcil , Morlh IfiiO.OO , tit INeek $11.50 * Ilo yon \vant mi In- train Carpet f If HO , tnke nilviintiiKe of thlN i < iiiinrtiinly | ( anil liny oiir "i * Kraile for only 34c Solid onk , neatly em-veil anil llnely liollNheil rlilnn ( 'losrt trlanurliNhniie to lit In eiirner of room , worth ! 5 > O , this week lee Cremn Freezer , K'ltirniiteeil to freere ereiim In ! l iiiliinteMt family xlr.irvorth : t.r ( l , this week only $1.75 OUR NUMBERS ARE It pays to Trade 1313-1315-1317 Fartiam St. at Three Doors From "The " Peoples. © Paxtoti Hotel Corner © The Theory .of Thought Transference nnd What it Aunuiits To. CLASSED AMONG THE SCIENTIFIC FADS The Wlile Vista of 1'osslMlltIcs tliat l.ure Seekers After I'hyehlc Phe nomena AhNeiiee of Uein- oiiHtrnted 1'acts. The Scientific American for tne 13th of last March has an article headed "I'rof. CrooUcs on Thought Transference , " which will bo read by many with Intense Interest. It begins by remarking that no man of sclenco has contributed any thing to the re cent discussion of scientific subjects which will appeal more plausibly and more enter tainingly to the * public Imagination than has I'rof. William Crookes , F. H. 8. , In his recent presidential address delivered to the Society for Psychical Hcisearch. I'rof. Crookes , among other services to science , has Invented ( lie tube called by his name and which has re cently attracted eo much attention In : on- ncctlon with the wonderful discoveries of the cathode and the X rays. He occupies so distinguished a position In the scientific world that a suggestion of his deserves re spectful consideration , though ho has less ened his authority by his unscientific credul ity of fada. In the address referred to the learnpd professor said that the "psychical sclenco was the embryo of something lhal might in tlmo dominate the whole world ol thought. " Ho has certainly raised great expectations ; wb arc all attention to the novel views he may lay before us. With the modesty becoming a true scientist and which Is totally wanting in the usual style of < iuacks and fadJlsts I'rof. Crookeo did uot pretend In his speech to have demon strated the truth of his conjecture. Ho simply suggested a theory to explain how thoughts eoul-1 perhaps bo transferred di rectly from ono mind to another , as Is sup posed to bo done In telepathy. Was It not conceivable , ho simply atkeil ( after making an elaborate calculation as to , the vibrations which produce sound and light ) , that In tcnso thought concentrated by one person upon another wlthi whom ho was In close sympath } , could Induce A telepathic chain along which brain1 waves should go straight to th'lr < goal without loss of energy due to distance ? He does not here maintain the reality of such timtight transference , nor L-veu Its possibility or compatibility with the properties of material substances such as there are In thU world of ours , All he claims Is lhat w6 : shall not deny Us possi bility unless wo can prove It to bo Incon sistent'with laws ofmatter certainly klioivn to exist , IS III POSSIBLE ? Though a long pxperlence acquired In the itudy of scientific.fatli and follies and fancies ms made me be slow and reluctant to accept my startling1 discoveries In such matters , ind , as a consequence , I freely confess that : am Incredulous to ) the theory proposed by von BO distinguished a professor , atill I mist , and do , plaldly acknowledge that I annot see the absolute Impossibility of his lypothesls. U would be a vast , yet , as far is I can see , not an absurd extension , of the veil known natural' ' laws under which sound u conveyed by vibrations of the atmodphcro , ind light by vlbratlona of the thinner ele- nent either. True It Is that thought , In Its proper mean , ng of Intellectual action , Is spiritual , and , as uch" . Immaterial. The Immaterial cannot osslbly be acted upon or transferred by any naterlal substance ; the Idea , for Instance , of Irtue or vice , God or spirit , cannot be trans , nltted on wings or waves. But yet In man , , 'ho consists of cplrlt and matter , fub- tantlally united Into one being , thought orlcs In connection with phantasms , or bruin Ictures ; and these , for all we know , may onslst of brain waves , or undulation ) . If hey are such , nothing shows the Impotsl- Illty , but , on the oilier hind , nothing proven he slightest probability of their being car- led along a subtle substance It ether or onie material more subtle still till they ] fringe upon and affect another brain , on bo eame principle as the waves of air eet In lotion by my friend's llpa produce corre- Iroii Ileilx ilo yon want onef If HO , call nnil nee the $ ! , * > liriiKN trlninieil Iron lleil on sale this week for $7.75 payment fo suit your Phenomena , " by Thompson Jay Hudson , LL.D. , a book which In thin city haa nijij- tifled many minds little given to close rea- ponln ? . makes the honest statement that , In thn matter of whleh It treats , we are not In possession of well established facts by whleh wo can safely test the truth of new speculations. The author admits ( p. 82) ) , that "It Is comparatively rare that scientific In vestigators disagree regarding the demon strable facts pertaining to a subject under Investigation. " 13ut he adds : "Yet this Is the condition in which we find the tclence of hypnotism ( the effects of which he classcn under psychic phenomena ) after more than a century of research by pome of the ablest scientists of the world. Thus far , " he con tinues , "the different schools have distrusted or denied each other's facts and waged war upon each other's theories. The modt eare- fully conducted experiments of one ochuol will , In tlKj.hands of the other , product ) op posite results. " Notice , hn does not say "will receive different Interpretations , " but "will produce opposite results , " or effects. He justly adds : "Hence earn experimenter is Irresistibly led to district the nelcntific accuracy of the methods employed by others , or lo ndmlt their Integrity only at the ex pense ot their intelligence. " He admits that the well authenticated facts of one t-chool appear to the other as "an appalling hodgepodge podge of falsehood and delusion , chicanery and superstition. " GIVE US THE TEST. What can ho the value of Prof. Crookcs' present hypothesis cannot be ascertained till wo can lest It by undoubted results , not such ghost stories as Mr. Podmoro gives us in his "Apparitions and Thought Transference , " bu by experiments that cat' be repeated by va rlous tclent'lflc men so as always to yield the same effects In the srme circumstances Such teats may be required of any science for science consists In tracing known of fectu to their real causes , and In the easto physical agency , the seme causes working under the same circumstances must ovei produce the same effects. Hut wo have a special right to call for such teats In the caao of psychical phenomena , because they liavo been In all ages and Ihoy are toda > connected with a vast amount of 'imposture superstition and extravagance. Let the So ciety for Paychlcal Hesearch , over whlcl Prof. Crookes presides , draw up lists of sucl demonstrated facts as we can study up nut verify. Till this be clo P the professors shrewd guess , or theory , will deservedly bt received with the ordinary umile of polite. Incredulity. LI2AUN A LESSON KItO.M LOUltDES , Tills Incredulous smllo used to greet every reference to the wonderful events that have been attracting vast miMtltudcs of pllprlms to Lourdcs during forty yeain In succession and It Is still common enough among those who are proof against all facts ihul clash with preconceived notions. I suppoju that Is what Prof. Crookes would call "scientific superstitions. " If liio Society for Payrlileal Research would only do as Lnurdt-s Is doing wn should know where we stand with regard to Its pretensions. The hlstoiian of Lourdes , Mr , Henry Laserrcs , gives UR In his two works nn the subject not only the official reports and at testations concerning tl < 3 rcmarkablo facts which he narrates with full details , but also the names and addresses ! of all parties con cerned , and ho lian offered rewards , 10,000 francs , I believe , to any one who would prove any of the cures In question to have hoen misrepresented In his pigcs , That U the way to talk to an Incredulous generation. In coiifffUC'iicoiof | his universally acknowledged character for truth and accuracy , ho could write to the novelist Kola a recent public letter of scathing rcbuku for bis notorious perversion of the facts. The directors of the pilgrimages to that celebrated shrlnn employ a permanent open court of Inquiry , presided over by a learned uck-ntUt , and Inviting to all Its sessions physicians and other men of learning from any country or persuasion to partake In the dally Investigation of newly recurring wonders. They approve only such as are scientifically demonstrated to bo above all mtural powers. With such well ascertained lata before him , every man of thought can elsurely and deliberately make up his own nlnd and put his own conscientious Inter- irctatlan on the undoubted facts ; but to lueation the real occurrence of the facln liemselvcs would be unreasonable , unless laws In them be distinctly pointed out. And t Is very remarkable that , while not In- Idels alone , but also Rome Christian scl- utlBto , refuse to pronounce on the mlracu- ous nature of the cures constantly re- urrlng , no scientific s > rocets ; has been Instli i uted by any of them to dispute of the 1 ucta themselves as unreal or distorted. The I ourse pursued bu been that iany have < leonnril Cleniinhle llefrlm-riiturs nr < - Mjiniliiriluhey | liny for tlieiiinel * en lit the NiivliiK of lee. One \torth $11 ! thin k for $6.75 A It IIP xollil onk Iti-il llooni Suit , hlnhly pollNheil , lu-vol iitnti * mirror , > tell worth iui.w : > , this \\oi-u $14.90 Now IN the time to liny THiitfliiKM. Kluc ilnitineu | * .Haitian ; * , II in-n wiirp , worth HOe , thlH week 17c "VJ A very pretty Toilet Set , 11 ! iileei-N , ileeor- nteil In natural eol- OI-N , Htlpliteil ivolil eilnc- * , I a rue nice , worth fully tfl-.oO , tlllH week $6.25 Ileniillfnl IMetm-e , 27\tl ! ( Inches , frame llntNlieil In niahoH- any a nil silver , worth $ tl , this week $2.25 ! honestly acknowledged them to be genuine ' and coirectly reporttd ; many who went to scoff have remained to pray ; others have , gone 11 way thoughtful and hesitating ; others , I like the bravo boy pjsnlng a graveyard at I night , have kept up whistling or talking j aloud for fear of seeing ghosts : others again have refused to go near the place , and'these nre the loudest in ridiculing It ; a great multitude continue simply to Ignore It as If it werenot. . In existence. Mr. Hud son , In his "Law of Psychical Phenomena , " classes It with the Invocation of the gods by the Egyptian prlcstu , with mind cures , Christian science animal magnetism , etc. ( p 24) ) . Hut then he explains the miracles of Christ and tinnpuatlos on the aamo prin ciple , aa nil these ( cc. , xxlll. , xxlv. ) . Those Si who feel called HJJDII to refute the lessons fd that Lourdcs pretends to tench , Ignore the cures that the court of inquiry has approved , odIn and fasten upon the multitude of rejected cases , many of which are no doubt tha effects of an excited Imagination. CONCLUSION' . Lot the Society for Psychical Research , under the presidency of thtlr worthy Prof. Crookers , imitating the example of the Lounlcs tribunal , draw the line distinctly between reliable and unreliable data In telepathy , and give us , not a hodge-podgo of truth and action , like .Mr. Hudson's book , or llko the yearly reports railed "Proceed ings of the Society for Psychical Research , " but a series of demonstrated factu upon which we can base our test of theories. Till this shall have been done , I attach no im portance ( o a mere dlstnnt point of analogy , such as suggests the novel theory to the learned professor. If ihls be accomplished , and wo get fuels demonstrated alo.ig with hypothesfl ! , both plausibly coiineiited to gether , I for ono will hail It as n precious addition to the treasury of scleme. Till then , I class telepathy amon& the fads. X HAYS. XEW AMOVI3I , . Ill a newly painted hair brush for military or traveling IIKO the back Is hollowed out In and lilted with a sliding cover to hold a Inwj comb , snap , etc. nfl A recently designed chair can bo changed nfli Into a bed by dropping the buck and rais cd i ing the footrcat , the sides opening out flat it to make It wider If desired. ni A handy music-holder that needs no stand ard can bo attached to a table by means US nf a spring clump and has steel arms to so ! hold the sheets of music In place , T | Snare drums ran b attached lo chairs for orchestral playing by means of a now device , consisting of n frame to hold tha drum fitted with clamps to fasten to the chair. Cradles nnd rocking chairs are to bo mnnufactured soon which arc fitted with pneumatic and cushion pads on the bottonm of the rockers to make them nolselc ( > K and comfortable. To keep mucllago brushes from drying up a new device han the brush placed Inside a metal frame , to spring downward when wanted for use by pushing on a knob at the top of tha handle. A new collar button has points placed In side the hinged portion for tlic purpose ot holding the band of a nrcktlo and preventing It from turning arnuml an the neck or ullji- lilng out from under the button. The combination of a dipper and funnel haa lust been patented , a nhort nozzle being placed In the bottom of the dipper , with a , 'alvo operated by a spring level running par > illul to the handle of ( ha dipper. Ono of the newest designs for an oil can , lias wooden casing of cylinder shape sur rounding a barrel-shaped tin or glass can , tvhlch Is pivoted In the casing at the cmla ind tips downward to lot the oil How out. Tips and ferrules for umbrellas ) and cane * vhlch can bo changed for summer and wln- cr use are composed of rubber or utecl lolnts , and are fitted with a screw to fit n a metal socket In the end of the cane. Water bottlcu with small necks are ca llflicult to clean that ono recently patented vlll be much appreciated , the neck being letachablo and fitted to the bottle wltlt . glass collar holding a roft packing to pre- ent all leakage. Mimic leaves can bo turned automatically ] Itlier backward or forward by a new dcvlca emulating of two cylinders placed on oppo * lie nldtti of the music rack and connected , 'lth tubes running to two nets of bellows * ear the pedaU , pressure on either eet of idlowu moving ( he pliton rod on that sldu o operate the linger engaging the top uheU ( muelc.