TTTE ( nrAITA DAILY BEE : PUT DAY , JULY 14 , 1895) , THE FIELD OF ELECTRICITY Threatened Raid on the Mellow "Voices of the "Hello Girl" TELEGRAPH LINE THROUGH DARKESTAFR1CA A TrnlnlnK School far Mntnrmcu Marled In : \ . , T York Frnnil Ilc- tcnlctl liy X-Ilnj-n Other Ilcv clonincntn < Competition telephone service , reduced rates and relief from "hollo-girl" worries ore promised to Chicago within a year. Ne gotiations were closed recently whereby the Illinois Telephone nnd Telegraph company ncqulrcs for the term of Its thirty-year ( franchise the right to operate the Strowgcr nutomatlc system In Cook county. H was announced by the Chicago Ilecord that the Illinois company would begin construction operations and canvassing for subscribers Immediately , with a view to having an ex change working in Chicago early In 1000. Papers were signed on behalf of iho Illi nois corporation by 'Albert O. Wheeler , though In what capacity could not be learned either from him or the Strowgcr of- flcUls. Mr. "Wheeler Is nn easterner , who came to Chicago In connection with trial In stallation of the Love conduit sjetem on the Yerkes lines. Ills name was later associated with General Electric company affairs and the alleged snlo ot its ordinance to the Chicago cage City Hallway company. Ho makes his boftdqunrtcra In the office of Perry A. Hull. Mr. Wheeler's representation of the Illi nois company leavew a mystery the dlsap- rcaranoo from interest In its franchise of the Buich-Lemp-'Kcnnaril ' millionaire Com bination. The Strowgcr deal also Involves rejection of the Kellogg multiple switch board system , which the Illinois ordinance promoters eald would < bo Installed , citing successful operations in St. Louis , Detroit nnd Indianapolis ns nn argument for its es tablishment In Chicago. The Illinois com- rany was Incorporated nt Springfield June S3 , 18D8 , with $250,000 capital. Permanent organization has never been announced , nor has Mr. Wheeler's name ever been asso ciated , except na a buyer of the ordinance. Hopkins J. Hnnford , < Mlle 0. Kellogg nnd others named as backers of the Illinois com pany have denied that It was over sold , Titmice Stone In Storage Ilnttcrle * . Ono ot < the most Ingenious Innovations in the manufacture ot storage cells Is the use nf granulated pumice stone with the lead ( from which the storage plates hre moulded. This method Is In use In at least ono fac 4' ' tory In Germany which turns out about fifty tons ot batteries per day. The heat from the molten lend expands the air con tained in the pores of < the pumice stone , thus creating an Infinite number ot cells throughout the mass ot lead. It Is said that a plate 0x7 4 inches thus treated is porous enough to absorb five and one-half ounces of water. This pumlco stone may tie removed It desired , but since it Is elec trically Inert and there is only about 10 per cent of solid matter , Its presence is of llttlo account , one way or the other. An enor mous range in weight and porosity is avail able "by this method. A AVlrc AcronN lAfrlcn. The telegraph line now building to con- Hoct the Capo of Good Hope with the Med iterranean will prss thiough a greater extent of wholly undeveloped country than nny other Hno In the world. For a distance tance- equal to that between New York nnd San Francisco the natives living near the route 'have ' rarely seen a whlto man , and nre almost untoucho-1 as vet by white Influences. The cnterprig'j is largely a pioneer venture'requiring special iilins an.l devices for construction ami for Insuring its saftey and durability S3 far as pos sible. The line Is already buililiui ; In the wilder ness far north of the ZnrnteM , nnd nt latt ( accounts the poles were being t eared tnd the wire strung on the plateau between Lakes Nyassa and Tanganyika , one ot the favorite haunts ot the wild elephant. These animals in fact , have bcldoru been teen In herds so large as near the north end cf NvassEi. Some interesting facts have come from tbo lake region deseilpilve ot the way In which the vl.i)3 are being strung in wild Africa. The most responi'blo ' part of the work is In charge of Mr. Otto Berlnger vvbo Is nbout 30 years of aie. Having advanced his surveys and arbitrations for the pole rearing about 220 miles beyond the point reached by the consturtors , who uro polng ahead at the rate o' two miles a day , Le is now on a flying visit to Unglaii'l. The completion of two mllei a day Is very ex cellent work considering that the Doles , wires ftnd other uiiurrl.il must bo trans ported hundreds of miles from the coast nnd that an enormous amount of wos.t mus be done to prepi.'o the route for the construction parties. Five psrliej are en gaged in the work and thu total force em ployed Is ten whlto men and about J.OOO Macks. Mr. Bcrlngor has personal chniEO of Rtirvevlng the route and his advance patty consists ot two whites and 200 native ? . H ? elects the route the > telegraph Is lo follow and clears a path for It nbout fifteen feet wide. This U no i\isy muter , for It In- lolves cutting n way through tl > o douse gnus and jungle , often eleven fcot hlgu. The second party follons nnd widens the fifteen foot path lo sixty feet , more rr lets , according to the nature of the country. It is easy to see why so wide a path 1s neces- cary. There will be no linemen every fe * miles , ns In our country to keep the service in repair , and It will bo far nioro costly than In civilized lands to mend a broken wire or repair other damages. So every preliminary caution must bo taken. No tree must be left which In falling would break the nlro and therefore thouuands of trees , many of them of great size , are be ing cut down , and Mr. Berlnger thinks that ornn of them are 3,000 years old. Then comes the third party which digs the holes and this Is closely followed by the fourth detachment , which plants the poles , nnd finally come the wire-stringers , who complete the work. The poles are of Iron nnd have all been sent out from England None of them weigh lefs than 160 pounds end most ot them rise fourteen feet above the ground. These are the shortest poles end higher and heavier ones are used where U Is necessary to make the spans of un- uiual length. When the line has to pass gullies or streams It U not unusual for Copper Colored Splotches , Mr. . TT. L. Myers , 100 Mulberry Street , Newark , N. J. , eays : "I contracted a terrible blood disease which broke out into sores all over my body. I spent a hun dred dollars with doctors but grew were Instead of better. Many blood remedies were also used with no effect , until I decided to try 6.8.9. This remedy oecmed to get at the neat of the disease and cured ma completely nnd permanently , " S.S.S.rfnoBlood . . . ( StvlftV Specific ) Is the only euro for OontnRious Blood Poison : no other remedy can reach this terrible disease , Hook on self-treatment mailed free by Kwlft Specific Company ! Atlanta , Qa. the p n to attain a length of 600 lo TJO feetTho The line has been carried up the we t coast of I akc Nyassa and will now pass to the wc t of I iKe Tanganyika through the Congo State territory. It will connect about half way up the lake with the branch-line the Congo State is building up the Congo from the Atlantic to the lake. Then the line will pm along the west shores ot Vic toria Nyanza , In German territory , lo Uganda , and from this point It will be In British or Egyptian territory all the way down the Nile. It Is predicted that It will bo a great boon lo the continent when this enterprise brings central Africa Into close touch with the rest of the world , U Is not so very long ago that explorers required from sU to eight months to reach regions whose news happenings of Importance will soon be read by nil the civilized world the day after their occurrence. We shall then bo able to hear In a few hours from the place where Livingstone lived for many months while the world was wondering 11 the great man had not perished In thu midst of his work. School ( or Motorinen. The New York Metropolitan railroad au thorities after considerable experience on their extensive sjstem , have como to the conclusion tha't the only wny to obtain competent motormen Is to maintain n train ing school for the purpose. Under the method commonly followed ot sending a new man out with an older man on a tun to receive his Instruction , ninny points arc Invariably overlooked nnd much left unex plained that ahnlrt have been explained. The Metropolitan company now maintains a , trolley school , through which all new hands must pass , and experience nhows that the school gives better men nnd saves thousands of dollars In the nccldcnt account , to say nothing ot the eavlng ot the motors and controllers. The new applicant has first to pasi n physical examination which Is particularly rigid ns regards the sight and hearing. It this is passed satisfactorily he Is next en tered In a student's course. Hn receives n text book containing nil the rules of the company nnd a description of the working ot the car , nnd after he has mastered the book ho is put through n series of class drills on skeleton cars and controllers mounted in the school room. The skeleton cars consist merely of a framework , showIng - Ing the wiring , motors , controllers , brakes , etc. , and Is connected with the power cir cuit , eo that the experience is exactly the same ns running n car on the street. In addition , nbout fifty controllers are mounted around the room , and these are manipulated In accordance with the bell signals for startIng - Ing , stopping , emergency stops , reversing , otc. It lo not the object ot the company to make the men familiar with the theory and application of electricity , but merely to glvo them a thorough schooling In the handling of the apparatus over which they have charge. When the rules have been satisfactorily performed the man is placed on a car with nn experienced niotorman , and he thus becomes familiar with the handling of the car on crowded streets , so that finally when he. Is given charge of a car , ho io thoroughly competent to oper ate It. After a motorman has been on the road he has the privilege of attending a course of free lectures provided by the company , on two evenings a week , where ho may perfect himself nnd pick up a very good knowledge of street railway work and Its requirements. The employes also have access to n very complete library of 1,500 books on all subjects , embracing electric ity and mechanlco , together with all the current technical and popular periodicals , so that it there Is anything In a man ho has a chance to develop It. X-Rnjn Reveal n I-'rntul. In revealing the unseen "works" which made a perpetual motion machine ' /mote" the Scientific American has found a now use for the X-ray , There came to the of fice of the paper not long ago a box con taining a mysterious machine. Along with it came a letter from a man in Bradford , Pa. , who said that the machine was the in vention of J. M , Aldrlch , now serving a sentence In Auburn prison for obtaining money by fraud. This machine from Brad ford on the face of it is an honest weighted-wheel motor , but unlike all other motors of Its kind , it goes. With no uncer tain motion docs it go , cither ; it is so lull of energy that it has to have a governor and a brake to keep it from running away with itself. A brake on a perpetual mo tion machine Is Impressive. The volghted levers ot this machine are so attached to the transverse arms that In the downward half of each revolution they fall outward and forward , thus lengthening the radius of the revolution. On the upward half of the revolution the levers close up and the weights describe an arc of rotation with a shortened radius. As each transverse arm with Its jointed lever and weight rises a little past the horizontal it slides forward and downward , thus throwing the weight on the opposite end still farther from the center and Increasing the turning moment on that side , at the same time decreasing the moment on the upward half of the revo lution. The transverse arms are kept In place by means of small rocking levers which extend Irom steadying arms at tached to the shaft. After Aldrich had been sent to prison some of his dupes were still ready to believe that there was some thing In his motor. They couldn't make it go , however ; something was wrong some where. So they sent it to tne Scientific American office. The examiners there looked it over very carefully and failed to find any concealed devices , They said It was the cleverest-looking motor they hnd ever seen. Ilather than destroy the ma chine they took an X-ray photograph of the Innocent-looking wooden base. The mystery vanished when the X-ray revealed the silhouette of a common , every-day clockwork , with Its big steel spring ex tended. The gears were connected with the main shaft of the motor by means of a small rod extending through ono of the posts , two bevel wheels In the top of thu post bcrvlng to transmit the motion of the clockwork to the revolving shaft nnd weights. The problem of concealing the Joint , after the "works" had been inserted in the hollowed-out base of the machine was solved by forming a bevel Joint and making it coincident with the bottom edge of the base. This was skillfully done and the effect WH ; heightened by making the joining ot the poets with the base rough. The keyholes 'by ' which the clockwork was reached were concealed under the base of the big brake. This Mock , It wns found , could be lifted from the pasteboard , but even then the two little keyholes were not ot suspicious appearance , for they were made to resemble wormholcs. Inilirot eineiifN In KleiMrlo Culm , The Electrical Engineer contains some particulars of the improvements made In the London Electric Cab company's vehicles , which are now on the road again. It ap pears that the electric cabs of the ne\\ type contain a number of radical depar tures , which tend toward smooth and more economical running. In the first place , the electric motors have been increased in power from 2H horse-power to 3V4 horse- poner. The motors are mounted on .1 hinged tray at the back of the cab , and , by means of India rubber studs , jar on the motor and gearing Is largely prevented , The driving gear is of the same general typo as of the older cabs , and chain-driving Is still used , The chains aio now ot the Brampton tjpe , In order to reduce the wear on the driving tires , the broke has been made to act on the band wheel Instead of on the rubber tire itself. Two of there band brake * , are provided one for each o ! the driving wheels and in this way the life of the tires will be very largely Increased. In addition to this , an electric brake Is obtained by means ot an additional etep on Die con troller , which provides for five forward rpccds and ono reversing step In addition The company is now generating Its own current At ihc rate ot 2 cents per unit nl the * wlt hboard. as against 5 > 4 cents per unit during the day and S cents per unit during the night , charged by the London Electric Supply company formerly. The batteries provided arc only supposed to propel a cab a distance of thirty-two miles which la tar lcs than was formerly Announced but lo keep on the safe ldo nn average run ot twenly-flvo miles with one set of accumulat ors is to be recognized. lllejclc I ncil to ( ieiuruteltn.tn. . . A physician of Belleville , Ont. , has re ceived n letter from a relative In England who was In the Soudan campaign. The writer gives the following narrative of ho surgeons in the Soudan developed an elec tric current "After the battle of Omdur- man wo brought back to Abadlch 121 wounded officers and men. Of this number there were twenty-one cases which could not bo diagnosed accurately by ordinary surgical means. By the help ot the Ront- gcn ravs , which were used nbout sixty times , wo found the bullet or proved Its absence In twenty out of these twenty-one cases , the odd case being so 111 with a severe bullet wound In the lung that It was not consid ered justifiable to examine him at the time. Of course wo had no steam engine to gen erate our electricity for us , and the desert heat had dissolved our specially prepared candles Into their oily constituents. Neces sity , you know , is the mother of invention , and we had recourse to a unique method. The pulley of a small dynamo was connected by means of a leather strap with the rear wheel of a specially constructed tandem bi cycle. The required velocity for the dyna mos wns thus obtained nnd our procedure wns as follows Having carefully adjusted the circuit with the storage battery nnd also with the volometcr and nmmcler , a warrant officer took his position on the seat of the bicycle and commenced pedalling. When fifteen volts and fourteen amperes were reg istered the snitch close to the handle of the bicycle was opened and the charging of the battery begun. As the resistance became greater a sensation ns If riding up hill was experienced , nnd the services of nn additional orderly were requisitioned for the front seat of the tnndom. This bicycle pratlco was generally carried out In a shade temperature of 110 degrees r. , so that at the end of half an hour the orderlies were not sorry when the switch was turned off nnd the machine brought to a standstill. " MISSOURI EDITORS IN TOWN McinlicTH of the Parts' Ilnll from \ortheiiM 1'nrt of Stnte Vlnlt n-tpoiltlou. A party of newspaper men and their wives , representing the Northeast Missouri Pros- } association , are in the city "doing" the exposition. They arrived from Hanni bal , .Mo. . , where the summer meeting of the association was held Wednesdaj- . How long they will remain in Omaha has not been decided , but they will probably tarry for a day or two at any rate. Superintendent J. W. Outright ot the De partment of Publicity and Promotion of the exposition , greeted the party upon its ar rival , and Is making everj' possible effort lo make their visit a pleasant one. During the afternoon the exposition was visited and everything was free for the qulll- drlvers from Missouri. They have been provided Tvith badges by Superintendent Cutright , and these , he saja , , eotltle th"Ti to the best that there Is. A luncheon at fi o'clock In the Boys and Girls' building on the grounds , rounded out the program for the day , and in the evening the visitors were free to Investigate the Midway and take ID the other attractions , according to their individual preferences. The editors speak in the most enthusias tic terms of their meeting at Hannibal. It proved a splendid success and the program as rendered la Bald by all to have been ex ceptionally good. The editors are not yet through talking of the Impression made by .Mrs. T. N. Frost , the wife of the Vandalla Leader's editor. She read n paper on the subject , "What Assistance Can the Wife Be to an Editor ? " and It Is considered to have been the feature of the association. The president of the association. Colonel M. A , Bates of Memphis , was unable to ac company the visitors , and In his absence Howard Ellis , first vice president , Is offici ating as the head of the partjHe Is ably assisted by the other officers , especially C F. Ridings , the serretarj' . The personnel ot the party Is as follows : H. C. Chlnn and wife , News , Canton ; C. M. Baskett and wife. Intelligencer , Mexico ; John Knott and wife , Journal , Hannibal ; John Sosey and wife , Spectator , Palmj-ra , John Beal and wife , Herald , Laddonla ; How ard Ellis , Leader , New Florence ; J. N. Frcst nnd wife , Leader , Vandalla ; A. L. Grem nnd wife , News , New Franklin ; Joe Hurnett , Record , New London ; C. B. Ellis , T. L. Andereon , Mnll and Express , Van dalla ; G. B. Shaffer nnd wife. News , DownIng - Ing ; H. L. Settle , Argus , Gorln ; Mrs. B. F. Woods and daughter , Tribune , Laredo ; J. O. Wilson , Republican , Truxton ; J. T. Evan * , J. W. Dickey , Union , Wentzvllle ; C. F. Rid ings , Messenger , Mcadvlllc. SOME PERTINENT QUESTIONS Ilnnril of Kdnrntluu Mny > nt Dmlre to .limwrr Mr , Harwell' * Queried. OMAHA , July 13. To the Kdltor of The Bee : Tbo Morning Bee ot July 10 contains this paragraph : "Tho taipaylng patrons of the public schools nro still waiting for some member of the Board of Education to explain why Superintendent I'earao was re-clecte-l at $3COO a year for a term of three year * . " The Bee could have asked a great many more questions which many taxpayers woulJ like to have the Beard of education an swer. There arc many people who would llko to know why { 2,300 would not be ample and not $3,600 ; also why the secretary bad his salary increased from Jl.SOO , which Is (600 ( too much , to $2,100. Then , again , when the Board of Education Is so genet oils In the payment of salaries , which range all the way from $100 to $140 per month , how does It come about that so fo men were emplojcd as teachers and principals * On the face of It one would think that the Board of Education desired to make the Omaha uchools a kind of female reservation. Whllo this sbtem of employing so many women teachers might bo all right If bos were ( upon leaving school ) thrown exclu sively with women In tbo world at large , as a matter of fact the reverse Is the case , and this uneven balance tells on quite n number of young men and women. And another question The Bee ehould have asked the board la , Why not have a civil service basin for obtaining and holding positions In all the schools ? Why is it not time to do away with favoritism and sub stitute civil tervloe ? Whllo some teachers now drawing $140 per month might not be able to hold on to such soft places , still as a matter of justice the system of favoritism should be put an end to And still another question The Bee should ask this honorable body. Why could not a mass meeting bo held at the board rooms and get the people who have to pay all these salaries to attend , thereby affording lo the board an excellent opportunity of learning what the taxpayers think of star chamber methods in this , the last > car of the nine teenth century. W. BUflWELL. A diseased stomach surely undermine ! health. U dulls the brain. Kills energy , de stroys the nervous sjttem and predisposes to Insanity and fatal diseases. All dyspeptic troubles are quickly cured by KoJor Dyipep- sla Cure. H has cured thousands of caiea and is curing them every day. DREYFUS TELLS HIS STORY Prisoner's Lsttan to His Wife Discloss Shams and Hardships Undergone. WRITTEN WORDS ARE PROOF OF INNOCENCE \ Irtlm ltrirc | CB III * lc | inlr In Order ( lint UN ( tnnil Nnnic Jlny lie HeMoreil IMllfnl .MrnRe l > Children. r.UUS. July 13. Emllc Zola may bo somewhat urcludlccd when It comes to crltlclslnc tbo letters ot Alfred Drejfus , but It Is certain that the letters In many rorpects bear witness to the truth of his statement. This Is how Zola described them : "Ther nro admirable. 1 do not know of nny pages ot a higher conception or more eloquent. They have attained the sublime In sorrow and afterward will endure like an Imperishable monument when our own writings , perhaps , shall have passed Into oblivion. For they are the sob Itself of nil human suffering. The man who wrote these letters cannot be guilty. Head them , read them some evening , with your family gath ered around your hearthstone. You will bo dissolved In tears " The Dreyfus affair hitherto has been llko a no\el without a hero that Is , the hero disappeared In the opening chapter , and It has tnkn e\er since to develop the plot nnd work up a climax which Is almost without parallel ( or Its dramatic quality. Enter the hero , mcto out Justice to tbo villain nnd the world Is satisfied. Thcfce llttlo plavs with destiny , the greatest and most artistic stage manager the world has ever seen , never fall of their effect and there Is more Joy In the world over the happy ending to this great historic play , the Dreyfus affair , than could be derived tram the best novel or short story In the world , because the degradation of this Innocent man was a thing which came home with startling power to all peoples. The hero of the tragic story was lost sight of In the first chapter. It was known where ho was and that wns almost all. The scene of the story ns told hitherto by the news papers was laid almost altogether In France. Of the scenes laid In I'llo du Diablo and of the feelings which ruled In the heart of a man , torn from his family and his honor , the newspapers hive not been In n position to speak. It had been left entirely to our Imagination to piece out that part of the story until the publication of Captain Drey fus' letters to his wife closed the gap and completed the sad history of 1'affalre Drey fus. 1otter * Itevpul n Trnftcdy. The translation of these letters , which Harper & Brothers are about to publish under the title of "The Letters ot Dreyfus to His Wife , " gives us for the first time the story in the prisoner's own words , and It Is a story that for pathos , tragedy , despair and true Spartan heroism Is unsurpassed in the an nals ot either history or fiction. The arrest , which took place on October 15 , 1894 , came upon Dreyfus like a bolt out of a clear sky. For almost two months the liberty of writIng - Ing even to his wife was forbidden , but on December 5 the longed-for permission -was obtained , and thereafter Fetters passed be tween husband and wife daily , and sometimes almost hourly , until he was removed to Devil's Island. The letters published in this volume cover the period from December 6 , 1894 , to March 5 , 1898. It goes -without saying that the entire cor respondence should bo read to appreciate their pathos and the hopelesi tragedy of the writer's lot. The extracts which this article contains will give some conception of their general character. They also give for the first time an intimate insight Into the heroic soul of their author. It yrllf be , perhaps , best to begin with the second letter ot the series , dated December 5 , 1894 , when Drey fus as jet hardly realized the danger that menaced him. I am waiting with impatience for a letter from you. You are my hope ; you are my consolation ; were It not for you life would be a burden. At the bare thought that they could accuse mo of a crime so frightful , so monstrous , my whole being trembles ; my body revolts against it. To have worked nil my life for one thing alone , to a\engo my country , to struggfe tor her against the in famous ravUher who has snatched from us our dear Alsace , nnd then to be accused of treason against that country no , my loved one , my mind refuses to comprehend it ! Do you remember my telling jou how , when I was In Mulhouse , ten jears ago , in Septem ber , I heard a German band under our windows dews celebrating the anniversary of Sedan ? My grief was such that I wept ; I bit the sheets of my bed with rage and I swore an oath to consecrate all my strength , nil my intelligence , to the service of my country against those who thus offered Insult to the grief of Alsace. Horror Threaten * Henaon. No. no. I wtir not speak of it , for I shall go mad , and I must preserve all my reason. Moreover my life has henceforth but one aim to find the wretch who has betrayed his country ; to find the traitor for whom no punishment could be too severe. Oh , dear France , thou that I love with all my soul , with all my heart ! thou to whom I have consecrated all my strength , all my intelli gence , how could one accuse me of a crime EO horrible ! I win not write upon thta sub ject , my darling ; for spasms take me by the throat. No man has ever borne the martyr dom that I endure. No physical suffering can be compared to the mental agony that I feel when my thoughts turn to this accu sation. If I had not my honor to defend , I assure you that I should prefer death ; nt least , death would be forgctfulneas. Write to me soon , My love to nil. ALFRED. Trom the letter written on the day pre ceding bin trial it Is seen that ho was still , after two months' Imprisonment , snnguli-o and hopeful , with never a doubt about his ultimate acquittal. It Is in striking contraHt to the letter written after the trial , when the worst had happened and the nightmare had come true , Wo subjoin both letters : At last I am coming to the end ot my sufferings , to the end of my agony. Tomor row I shall appear before my Judges , my brow high , my poul tranquil. The trlaf I have undergone , terrible as It has been , has purified my soul. I shall return to you bet ter than I was before. I want to consecrate to you , to my children , to our dear families , all the time I have yet to live. AH I have told ) ou , I have parsed through awful crises. I have bad moments of furi ous , actual madness nt the thought ot being accused of a crime so monstrous. I am ready to appear before the soldiers ns a soldier who has nothing for which to reproach himself. They will see It in my face , they will read my soul ; they will be convinced that I am innocent ; as oil will who Know me. On ! ) IVrlN for III * Wife. The letter written after his trial reads as follows I suffer much , but I pity you still more than inj self. I know how much you love me. Your heart must bleed. On my Bide , my adored one , my thought has always been o ! jou night nnd day. To bo innocent , to have lived a life with out a Etnln. and lo pee cnc's self condemned for the most monstrous crime that a toldlcr ran commit ! What could be more terrible ? It seems to me at times that I am the vic tim of an awful nightmare It is for you alone that I have restated until today ; H IB for jou alone , my adored one , that I have borne my long agony. Will my strength hold out to tbr end ? I cannot tell. No one hut you can give me courage. It la only from jour love that I ran draw It. Above all else , no matter what may be come of me , search for the truth , move earth and heaven to discover It ; sink in the effort. If need be , all our fortune , to rehabilitate - habilitate my name , which now Is dragged through the mud , No matter what may bo the cost , we must wash out the unmerited ttaln The follow lug 'fc taken from a letter in the same etraln written a few dajs later I do not sleep and It Is to you that I re turn , A in 1 then marked by a fatal seal , that I mint drink this cup of At this moment I am calm My soul Is I strong and It rises In the sllenie of the nlpht. How happy wo were , my darling ! Life smiled onf \ , fortune , love , adorable children , a United family everything ! Then came this thunderbolt , fc.irful. terrible. Buy. I pray ot you , plaj things for the chil dren , for their New Year's da ) , tell them that their father sends them. U must not be that their poor souls , Just entering upon life , should MilTer through our pain. Oh , my darling , had not I you how gladly would 1 die' Your love hold * me buck , it U your love only that makes me strong enough to bear the hatred of a nation. And the peopFe nro right to hate me , they have been told that 1 am a traitor. Ah. traitor , the horrible word1 It breaks my heart. I traitor ! Is It possible that they could neeuie me and condemn me for n crime so monstrous ! Cry aloud my Innocence : cry It with nil the strength of 5our lungs ; cry It upon the housetops , till the very walls fall. And hunt out the guilty one. U Is he whom we must find I cmbrnce jou ns I love you. lltiltl Spirit Ioe Not AVenl.cn. 'After ' his fate was sealed and he had been removed to Devil's Island , hU deter mination that the truth shall be brought to light Is stronger than ever. From the first ot the letters written trom Devil's Island wo select the following , which Is In Itself sufficient evidence ot the bold nrtd un daunted resolution with which he faced his fate. I made for your sake the greatest sacrifice a man can make In resigning myself to live after my tragic fate was decided. I did thlt bccnuse you hnd ! neutcntcd In mo the con viction that the truth must always como to light. In jour turn , my darling , do all that U humanly possible to discover the truth. A wife and a mother joursclf , try to move the hearts of wives and mothers , so that they may give up to jou the key of this dreadful mystery. I must have my honor If you want me to live. I must have It for our dear children. Do not reason with your heart ; that does no good. I have been con victed. Nothing can be changed in our tragic situation until the decision shall have been reversed. Reflect , then , and pursue the solution of this enigma. That will bo worth more than coming hero to share my horrlbro life. Say to jourself that It Is a question of life or death for me , as well as for our children- And what could be more touching than the following letter to his little boy , written from Devil's Island : Cher Petit Pierre : Papa sends good big kisses both to jou and to Httle Jeanne. Ho thinks very often of you both. I trust you vv 111 show llttlo Jeanne how to make big high towers with blocks , which it Is such fun to tumble down. Be good children and pet your mother when she Is sad. Also be kind to your grandfather nnd grandmother , and play no bad tricks on jour aunts. When papa returns from his journey jou will come to meet him at the station with Tittle Jeannie , with mamma and all the rest. More big kisses for you and for Jen mile. YOUR PAPA. TM fast letter but one that Is Included In the book is as follows- I have written very many letters during these last months. To add anything to these would be superfluous. I have told you con cerning all the appeals which I have written since last November to demand my rehabili tation , for justice nt last to so many Inno cent victims. In ono of my last letters' I told you that the last appear which I had Just sent to the government was stronger and more determined than ever. I am expecting every day to hear that my res toration has taken place , that our punish ment , as terrible as it was unmerited , is at nn end , that the day of justice has come for us. I dcslro today only that I may kiss jou with all my heart as I love you , as also our dear and adored children. Your devoted ALFRED. Letters n Iroof of liinooeticc. In conclusion , if there existed the slightest doubt ot Alfred Dreyfus' Innocence the pub lication of these letters cannot fall to dispel It. ( As Zola says , "No guilty man could have written them" One feels from the very first letter that the writer Is a bravo and innocent man. Hero is a passage from ono of the letters written from Devil's Island. "My mind , " ho writes , "cannot extricate itself for an Instant from the horrible drama of which I am the victim , a tragedy which ha * struck a blow not only at my life that h the least of evils , and truly it would have been better had the iwretch who committed the crime killed mo Instead of wounding- as he has but at my honor , the honor of my children , the honor of you all. " And again , In a letter dated June 3 , 1805 , he writes , "You remember these lines of Shakespeare In 'Othello. ' I found them again not long since amongmy English books. I send them to you translated : "Who steals my purse steals trash ; 'tis something , nothing ; T'was mine , 'tis his. and has been slaves to thousands ; But he that filches from me my good name. Robs mo of that which not enriches him , And makes me poor Indeed. "Ah yes ! he has rendered me 'vralment pauvre , ' the wretch who has stolen my honor ! He has made us more miserable than the meanest of human creatures. Butte to each one his hour. Courage then , dear Luclc ; preserve the unconquerable will that jou have shown until now. " And his own view of the tragedy In which he was the silent hero : "You see , darling , a man of honor cannot live without his honor ; It does no good to tell himself that ho is Innocent , ho eats his heart out. In solitude , the hours are long , and my mind cannot comprehend all that has come upon me. Never could a romancer , however rich his Imagination , have written a story more tragic. Some day when ray story is told it will be Incredible. But what wo must tell ourselves now 1s that I must bevindicated. . My name muet bhlne anew , with all the luster It should never have lost. I should rather see my children dead than to think that the name which they bear Is a dis honored ono. " I Liven in Ile < orp Honor. i This thought Is repeated again and again. It is the firm resolve that bis honor must be saved that prevents him taking his life. Throughout bo expresses the solicitude of a loving husband and father. He must live to save his honor and for the sake of his wife and children. And now , from present indications , the whole pitiful tale will have a happy ending , for It Is practically certain that the decision -\vlll \ bo reversed , and that Captain Alfred Drejfus will realize the dream which ho has expressed so beautifully In the following letter : The body may give way under such a burden of grief , hi t the soul bhould re main firm and valiant , to protest against a lot that vvo have not deserved. When ray honor IB given back to me , then only , my gocd darling , we shall havn tbo right to withdraw from the field. We will live for each other , far from the noise of the world ; we will take refuge In our mutual Hlfeotlon , In our love , grown still stronger In these > tiaglcal events. We will fcustaln each other , that we may bind up the wounds of our brails , we will live In our thlldren to whom we will consecrate the romandcr of our days. We will try to make them good , simple beings , etrong In body and mind We will elevate their souls so that they may always find In them a refuge from the realities of life Mar this day come BOOH , fcr we have all paid our tribute of sufferings upon this earth ! Courage , then , my darling , be strong and valiant , carry on > our work without weakness , with dignity , but with the conviction of your rights. I am going to lie down , to close my eyes and think of > ou. Good night , and a thousand Kisses. "What ralKht have been" If that cough hadn't been neglected U the sad re flection of thousands of consumptives. One Minute Couch Cure cures couthi and colds. 1"linerill of De.Molnm. The funeral of John DeMollns , who died at the Clarkson hospital" Monday night us the result of Injuries received at the hands of Charles Moore , occurred yesterday nt 10 o'clock at the undertaking rooms of M 0 Maul. Rev. T J Mackay conducted the Episcopal ten Ice. The floral offerings were \ OFF FOR A TRIP. ) "All ready to start ? " "Yes ; here is my Ivory Soap , that finishes my packing. I always lay in a supply before going on the road. It is one of the comforts a traveling man can carry with him. " . 1VQRY SOAPT , FLOATS. Cirjrtiu , UN , j r < iwn t Outi < c , c numerous nnd very pretty. A largo number of old friends ot the deceased wns present. The pall bearers were : Peter Bouse , Rowe Wliriums. Jud Crce , John Murphy , Hert Mc- Cune and Andrew Hanson. The remains were Interred lu Korebt Lawn cemetcrj- . FINDS COAT ON RIVER BANK \\llllnin rrllmrnky I-Vnr lie lln Found n. AVntcry Grnvc in the Mlniiourl. Ever slut * last Sunday afternoon young William Frlb-ifsky has been missing from the homo of his parents , 1406 South Twelfth street. Ho hnd b'nn ill for a week and wns accustomed durlnf . ! v\t time to gel up and say "I must go , " ti'itioiit giving any ex planation of the cxtr t. > > ' hli Intended jour ney. He would wander * * y for a block or two and then return a bng ( bad hap pened. Whllo bo and his inott , . 'o alone nt home Sunday afternoon he ro . possessed ot a notion that he had to < < 'v.swiiere about 3.oO. He took his coat C\T ils arm and left the house without beedis ; Ilio pro tests of hie mother. That WAS the i.itit seen of him. When he did not return as usual a search was Instituted. Not a trace of him could be found until Monday evening about S o'clock , when a brother of the missing man found his coat lying on the bank ot the Missouri river two blocks this side of Gibson. There was nothing to show whether or not ho had Jumped into the river and no ono living in that vicinity could recall hav ing seen the young man. Dr. Louis Swoboda , who has been attend ing him in his illness , snld that he came to bin office last Saturday afternoon and com plained that ho was not feeling well. Ho said he was light-headed and could not sleep at nlglit. Ho had some of the symptoms of typhoid fever and the phj-slclan gave him some medicine with instructions to return la a few dajs. Young Priborsky was In the employ of the Chicago Lumber company for quite a time , but his threatened attack of fever kept him from work about ten days before ho din- appeared. He Vtas 23 years of age , five feet in height nnd weighed 150 pounds. He had a small scar on tils left cheek. His face was smoothly shaven. Ho had light brown hair and blue eyes. When he left the house he wore a light gray pair of trousers , a light colored shirt and had his gray coat thrown over his arm. HP Is n son of Joseph Priborsky , U06 South Twelfth street. SEES BOYS STEALING BRASS Officer T.rnAcrton Find * Joe Mrclmn nml K'lprctt AVIlitoii Two hack * of .Junk. The Nebraska Plumbing company , 1316 Douglas street , complained to the police Wednesday that they TV ere being annoyed by boys stealing brass. Offlcer I eavcrton went there to Investigate , and arrived just In time to see Joe Meehan and Everett Wil son with two sacks of brass junk , which they were about to carry away. They were arrested and taken to the station. The plumbing company stated that about 300 pounds of brass were taken the ni&t night. Detective Kcysor and Officer Helgle- man found that it had been disposed ot > o Max Wlotraub , a Junk dealer at Twellth and Chicago streets. They have arrested Charles Tate nnd a toy named Casey for being im plicated In the thievery. KIToplx of Shot I'ruYcil I'ntnl. ST. LOUIS. July IS. A special to the Post-Dispatch from Dallas , Tex. , says : Prof. William Upscorab of the Dallaa High school died today from the effects of a wound re ceived from John T. Carlisle , former Janitor of the school , who shot him during rovlvnr sorvlcce at the First Christian church. The grand jury has been called to meet in special BOPBlon tomorrow to consider the case. Carlisle , who Is a cousin of Former Secretary of the Treaeury John O. Carlisle , professcB not to remember anything nbout the shooting. He is in jail nnd his defcnre will bo emotional Insanity. Carlisle lost his position as janitor nt tbo High school nnd Warned Lipscorub for U. Fcvor Yield * to So rum Treatment. NEW YORK , July 13. Oscar P. Lackey ot Baltimore , who was brought hero last week on board the United States transport Mc- ClelTan from Santiago suffering from jellow fever , Is reported to bo convalcficcnt. Mr. Lackey was in n very critical condition when he was removed from the transport to Swlnburno 'slnnd ' nnd vvns given the ecrum treatment by Health Olllccr Doty. A Word to Mother * . Mothcns of children affected with croup era a severe cold need not , hesitate to ndn'lnlfitcr Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. U contains no oplnto nor narcotic in any form nnd mr.y be given as confidently to the babe as 10 on adult. The great success that IIM a-imidiM Its use In the treatment of colds and croup has won for It the approval and pralso 't has received throughout the United Statca and In many foreign lands. Ilnil a PniiReron * AVcniion. Nellie DeLong was picked up on the street Wednesday night with a dangerous weapon In her possession. It wns a very sharp po- tatp knife. She informed the court that n young man had taken the knlfn down town to get it sharpened for her employer and as ho was not going back to the house ho had given it to her to take home. ( niiitillnpr O'nne * Are The complaints alleging gambling ngalnst George Brown , L. Harrold , nd Smith , Charles Holland , Oeorgo Jones , \ \ ' . Lyons , Joe Williams , WlFllam Stephens-cm nnd Frank Hnrtcr have been dismissed by Dep uty County Attorney Hclslcy. So Many People 1 Have headaches that tr& duo 'to the over tasked eyfs Eye helps that help and relieve nre the kind we have been furnishing Our optlcnl department Is in charge of a compe tent and practical optician who will examine your eyta tree ot charge We guarantee oatlsfoctory work. THE AlOE & PENfOLD CO. , Lrailliinr Scientific Optician * . 1408 Fnrnam. OMAHA. OPPOSITE PAXTON HOTEL. About Drex L , Shooman's ' S2 Shoes When you have tramped nil ever Omaha and never cnmo to our store you can't blame us If you've jinicl too much for your men's Hlioes This particular shoo him either a llpht or single sole congress or lace In all widths f.o that wo can fit all Itlnds of foot Ours Is not n store that has only one width which must flt prerylwdy AVe arc as particu lar In fitting these ? 1,00 ! bhoes I\R \ wo arc the higher-priced kind The quality of the soles Is the best there Is nnd the uppers No. 1 Nothing like them ever sold before for $2.00. Drexel Shoe Co. , Omaha' * Up-to-date Sboe Houa , FARNAM STREET. A Full , Clear Richness The features of tht > Klmball asldo from Its wonderful susceptible and re- pponsivp action Ho In the depth , power and brilliancy of Its tone It combines In a remarkable manner the crispy sweetness requlied for plnao py rotechnics with u full , clour richness and u tremendous reserve volume It Is equally pfTectlvo In swift plaiilsslmos and crabbing bravuras and under no conditions loses that sympathetic mel lowness so pleasing to trained ears Wo ainkc very low terms on the Klmball. A. HOSPE , W0 oalebrate our 30th buiitneu & ! vcriarr Oct. 23rd , 1809. Music and Ait 1513 Dougta *