.- 8 THE COURIER if i 1 1 The Courier Published Every Saturday Eatarad In the PoatofHoa at Lincoln m second cUm matter. OFFICE POO-BIO P STREET TmLW"0,fl41tortaIRooaa 90 SUBSCRIPTION HATES: Par anaum, In adTnaa, ILOO SlnglaCopy, 06 for this type of engine until he is told that it has a pull of from 16 to 30 tons, as against 919 pounds! A locomotive built not Ion? ago for the Santa Fe road weighed 133K tons. Trevethlck's engine, built Just a centruy ago, weighed five! Stephenson's "Rocket" (1829) was several hundred pounds lighter. Even between 1850 and 1860 the average weight of a passenger locomotive was twenty tons and of a freight engine thirty. One of the first advances In American locomotive construction was to mount the front end of the boiler by a stout pivot upon a small independent truck or bogle. Previously the forward wheels were secured to the whole frame. That plan made the machine exceedingly rigid and awkward on sharp curves, where derailment often resulted. An other improvement was the "link mo tion" for reversing, for which the credit has been claimed both for an American, James, and Stephenson. A more even distribution of weight on the wheels was secured by another Tankee notion, "equalizing levers." At the close of the fiscal year 1901 there were in operation in the United States 195.887 miles of track, or within about 25,000 miles of the total for North America. If these roads could be stretch ed out Into one continuous line, they would be long enough to encircle the globe at the equator about eight times, or to reach nearly nine-tenths of the dis tance from the earth to the moon. In Its "Transportation" edition. "The Scientific American" makes some strlk lng comparisons to Indicate the bulk of material used in the construction of these roads. It takes the Great Pyra mid of Egypt as the starting point in its calculation. That mighty structure Is 756 feet square at its base, and rises 481 feet, and contains about 91,500,000 cubic feet. If a shell of the same shape and dimensions were manufactured It could be let down over the capltol at Wash ington without touching, and the apex of the pyramid would be two hundred feet or more above the dome of the building. If the steel rails used in laying the track of these American roads were melted up into a single lump of a shape that would admit of measurement it would be found to contain 15 per cent more material than the Great Pyramid. Another comparison can be made with the Washington Monument, which rises 550 feet above its base. This same mass of steel would equal it In height If cast in a rectangular block 436 feet square at the bottom. Some of these rails weigh from 80 to 100 pounds to the yard, but most of the track west of the Mississippi is considerably lighter. Probably 25,000, 000 tons would not be a wild estimate of the total weight. One can't mould wood like steel, and even if one could It would doubtless be Impossible to cast in one chunk the tim ber now employed for railroad ties. One can compute volumes, though, and it is estimated that all the wooden, ties in service to-day occupy a space equal to twenty-four great pyramids. A similar calculation for rock and gravel ballast on these American roads gives a bulk 135 times as great as the above mention ed standard of comparison. Following the ratio of length to height which Is found In the pyramid of Cheops, the heap of ballast would measure 3,900 feet on each side at the base, and rise to a height of 2,500 feet, or about half a mile! When It comes to rolling stock, equally Impressive results are reached. The 39,729 locomotives In service are equiva lent to three great pyramids, 35,811 pas senger cars to three and a half pyra mids, and 1,409,472 freight cars to forty two pyramids. Over a million employes are required to operate and keep in running order the railways of the United States. Nearly half of them (459,704) are trackmen and laborers. These figures Include switch men, flagmen and watchmen as well as section bosses and track repairers. Then there are 204,194 machinists and shop workmen, 127,141 station agents and sta tion men, 116,585 conductors and brake men, 92,458 engineers and firemen, 39,701 clerks, 26,606 telegraph operators and 4, 780 general officers. Just now the United States does not enjoy the superiority which she once had in shipping. Her clippers were at- one time the speediest sailing vessels in the world. To Germany belongs the honor of having built the fastest steamships In the merchant marine today. England has made the best record for speed In naval vessels, and an American private yacht, the Arrow, owned by Charles R. Flint, has made the best time achieved by a craft of any description in the world that is prop'elled by steam. The two fastest Atlantic liners, the Deutsch land and Kronprlnz Wllhelm, have de veloped an average speed of about 23 knots for a whole voyage. The Kaiser Wllhelm IL of the North German Lloyd line, now undergoing the finishing touch es in her equipment and decoration, Is expected to beat this speed by half a knot. Two Cunarders, whose construc tion has been planned in a general way, although their designs are not yet on pa per, are to make 25 knots. The bulkiest ship afloat Is the Cedrlc, of the White Star line, which displaces 37,870 tons, is seven hundred feet long and 75 feet wide. This country can boast, however, of run ning nearly a score of lines of American built steamers to foreign ports, in ad- EDISON GRAPPLES PERPLEXING PROBLEM BBBBBBBBBBMffB ' n'K i bbbbbbm bBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBb?; JMSa-Bk. bSsRVBBBBBBBBBBBBH Having given to the world his latest invention, which is in the form of a storage battery, Thomas A. Edison, America's famous inventor, Is now try ing to solve the problem of how to derive power direct from coal. If the great inventor is able to achieve success in this line hfs discovery will un doubtedly be one of the greatest triumphs of modern science. V. dltlon to several others engaged in the coasting trade. The best time made by any of the vessels In this service Is 21 knots, achieved by the St Paul and St. Louis In their best days. These steam ships run from New York to Southamp ton. On the Pacific ocean the Korea has for several months been winning honor for her builders by a speed of 19 knots. She will soon be joined by the Siberia, a sister ship In size, power and equipment. Two recent additions to the Red Star line, the Kroonland and Finland, are a trifle longer than the Korea, but are good for only about seventeen knots. A couple of the most notable American steamships are now approaching comple tion at New London, Conn. They are Intended for the Pacific service, and will establish connection between J. J. Hill's railway system and Asiatic ports. These closely approach the Cedrlc In size, be ing 630 feet long and 73 feet wide. If loaded so as to draw 33 feet of water, their displacement will be 33,000 tons, but at 36 feet they will displace 37,000 tons. Naggsby It's funny how women will change their minds. When I first met the girl who eventually became Mrs. N., she declared she wouldn't marry the best nan In the world. Within a year she married me. Waggsby But what makes you think she changed her mind? Baltimore American. TO RIDE A MILE IN FORTY SECONDS. ABBBBjBVBBBBBBk lil ? 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Vanderbllt, Jr. He will also represent his country in the great international auto race. Fournler announces his determination to make a dash of a mile In forty seconds. He feels confident that he can perform this feat. He expects to fly over a long course at the rate of one hundred and six miles an hour. B " jBakes short roads. AXLE JL ' JbW light loads. ftHEASE ilU. C I Wbod for everything that runs on wheels. Said Everywhere. "UmMm by STAHD ARD OXU CO. 1 HAPNESSo HORSE COLLARS ASKYDUD DEALERTOSHOWTHfM BtFOREL. YOU BUY. MNurACTURED BY NARPHAM BR0S.C0. Lincoln, Neb. J u. JS