10 strange Indians, who may have come from the "West, and mar even claim to have been in the immediate -vicinity of the new Mes siah, have recently joined the Sioux at these agencies is indisputable. They are spoken of as apostles ot the new relieion and it is by their advice that the Indians have rathered into camps, given up work ofall kinds and gone to eating, praying, isiiigiug and dancing until the niillenium come. TENETS OF THE SEW TAITH. The excitement began among the Sioux at the great council of the Sioux Nation, held about the middle of September, and is the direct result of the exhortations ot In dian emissaries from Montana, where the Messiah was said first to have been seen last spring. The main article of the new creed is tlie belief that the present surface of the North American continent will be covered 30 feet deep by a new stratum of hoil, which shall be inhabited by Indians ouly and be thick with game as were the prairies before the white man came. Beneath this new stratum the white man and bis cities and his railroads and his steamboats and his civilization shall be buried in the twinkling of an eye, and the New "World shall be as if it baa never known him, or at least as it was 300 years ago. But the Indians and here is a strange thing shall not be overwhelmed in the general ruin Thev will be endowed with a supernatural strength to wrestle with the difficulties of the occasion, and will squirm through the new soil until, after much l.tiA. itwT mn fieic ntitl In mpntfitinns flip red man shall" at last struegle out to the J new surface of the new earth where they will find grass waist high and immense herds of buffalo, antelope and wild horses ready at hand! There is Ermethingtouchingin this happy restoration. To reach it the red mau must pass through his purgatory the new earth stratum. C ENSEAL INDIAN DISTURBANCES. The outbreak of the White lliver TJtes, who have let the reservation in Utah and jtoue into Colorado to kill stock, is believed here to be a part of a general uprising pre liminary to the appearance in the flesh of the Indian Messiah. It is known that the Nez Perccs nejr Mullen, Idaho, to the num ber ot 400 have appeared in a band at that town and presented a formal demand that the whites leave the country, "to which they have no title." These are the same Nez Perces who took part in the massacre of 1S77. They are aistatisfied with heir reservation at La 1'itai and are said to threaten again to overrun that vast stretch of .Northern Idaho known as Camas Prairie. The excitement among the Cheyennes, Kiowas and Coinanches is scarcely less. Captain Tnmbleton, of the Seventh United States Cavalry, commandant at Fort Sill, is known to have declared within a few weeks that in his opinion "the greatest Indian up rising of recent times is certain to come soon," as "the Indians have got the idea that the Great Medicine Man is coming to sripe out the whites and restore to them the ownership of the country." Captain Trini bleton is known as a man of experience and discretion. His declaration that the G,000 Indians about Fort Sill have renounced Christianity and entered upon a series of in cantations and fanatical orgies is certainly worthy of note. ARE THE SIOCX STARVING? The opinion in this part of Dakota is that the Sioux have been so badly treated by the Government lately that their disaffection cas much to justify it In June, 1SS9, the Sioux signed a treaty for the cesvion of a part of their reservation to the Government. They have not yet received 1 cent of the consideration due them for that cession. General Crook was with the commission that secured their signatures to the treaty; General Crook had been their cooquerer, :iud atterward their benefactor and mend. They knew him and believed in him, and their is no doubt that it was owing ycry largely to bis influence that the treaty was ratified. v It was General Crook who promised the Sioux that the Government would pay them in full and promptly 'or their lands and that their rights should be respected. The Sioux have been repeatedly deceived by agents ot the United States Government, notably when the attempt, that so nearly re sulted, in 187S, in war, was made to remove them by Jorce to the Missouri river, but they trusted Crook. Now that Crook is dead the chiefs 'ay that his Government has failed absolutely to carry out his promises. ON SHORT ALLOWANCES. The recent census at Kosebud Agency and here was grossly inaccurate, my informant declares. The number of Indians was counted down instead of properly enumer ated, and as a result their allowance of rations has been greatly limited. Owing to the delay in tbc passage by Congress of the Indian appropriation bill not only the Sioux, but the Indians, of the entire country liave been and are suffering for food. It is sow October end the supplies due in July have not yet been sent out to them. As a result thev listen all the more eagerly to the emissaries who have come from that part of Montana where the Messiah is said to have been seen. The idea of an approach ing millennium and the extinction of the whites renders the reservation Indians all the more willing to eat their breeding sheep, cattle and lowls and quit work of every kind. The Sioux at tnese two great agencies Pine Ridge and Rosebud are receiving icareely unj thing at all, even under the re duced census appoitionuient, instead of the full rations they are entitled to. THET SEE NO HOPE. It is useless to attempt to reason with starving Indians, especially when the mys terious apostles from Montana and Utah have succeeded in convincing hundreds ot the Sioux that when the Messiah appears their druggie for their rights will at last be crowned with success. Indeed, a man offi cially acquainted with the Sioux lor 25 3 earn said to me yesterday: "Broken treaties, delayed appropriations and religious frenzy have combined to make the Indians 'eel that the worst has come to the worst, and that even if no Messiah came they might as well die fighting, with their wives and children around them, as see their dear ones pinched and starved by a Goirnruent that owes them a living and lias abundant means to pay that debt were it so disposed. By the very failure to deliver them their supplies in July, when they were due, the Government has, as a last stroke of cruelty, deprived the Sioux of the opportunity to earn money by freighting these supplies. Theresas nothing to haul, so they have ben deprived not only ot their Government food, but o almost ibeir only opportunity to make money enough to buy lood elsewhere." Collis Beelow. LIFE ON THE PLANETS. 2tot Enough TDeufcitj on the Outer Ones and Too Hut on the Inner. The question whether other planets are in habited is always an interesting one. It is certain that the four great outer ones, Jupi ter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, cannot support animal li'e. Their density is small and their consistency more or less liquid and gaseous. Jupiter, biggest of the planets, the diameter of which is more than ten times that of the earth, is a sun not yet quite extinguished and even now giving out heat From time to time a spot appears on its nurface, which is a black hole in the midst ot the fire big enough to drop the earth into. Saturn is hot, too, while Neptune and Uranus are so far oft that nothing much can lie ascertained about them beyond the fact that Uranus has four moons and Neptune ae. There may be li'e on Venus and Mercury, though it must be warm, inasmuch as Venus is a third nearer the sun than the earth, and Mercury is not half so far away. Sister Rose Gertrude' Furore. It is kUted in Paris that Sister Rose Ger trude is abont to return to Europe, and that if she obtains the necessary permission from her ecclesiastical superiors she will resume her duties at the large house oT business in Paris where she was formerly an accountant, continuing her researches for the cure of leprosy at the same time. THE EIPPER AGAIN. The Efforts of the London Police to Catch the Murderer. ALL L05DON YA1TIKG IN TERR01I. Women Tramping Throngh the Dark Pre cincts of WhitechapeL rORTBAIT FKOM THE LATEST PHOTO (COKSXsroSDXKcx or thi disfatcbi London, October 23. NCE again the air is filled with sensational stories concerning the reappearance of that mysterious modern monster, "Jack the Ripper." Aristocratic members of exclusive "West End Clubs grave ly discuss the situation, newspaper cranks abuse the police and advance preposterous theories, and juvenile denizens of foul-smelling "Whitechapel take huge de light in frightening to death, by divers practical jokes, the unfortunate class of women with which the locality abounds. Truly, the "Ripper" scare is the one ab- T J jVj X0SPI7AL - c N " y2sST;tfAxrs J SCENE OP THE NINE "WHITECHAPEL MURDERS. (1) Unknown woman, Christmas week, 1887. (2) Martha Turner, found stabbed in S9 places, August 7, 1SSB. (3) Mary Ann Nichols. In Bucks Row, August 31, 18i8. (4) Annie Chapman, Hanbury street, September 7, 1SSS. (S) Lizzie Stride. Berner street, September 3U. 1883. (o) Catherine Eddowes, Mitre Square, beptember 30, 1SS8. (7) Mary Jane Kelley, 26 Dorset street, December 2a, 18S3. (8) Alice Mackensie, July 17, 1889. (8) Body ot old woman found In Back church lane, September 10, 1BS9. sorbing topic, and cropping up, as it has, at the dullest period of an unusually dull season, it not only affords food for club gos sip, hut right welcome "copy" for great London's sensational dailies. Although during the past six months but little has been heard of the "Ripper" by the Scene of First Murder, George'M Yard. outside public, nevertheless within well informed circles the renewed activity of the Scotland Xard authorities has been freely commented upon; indeed, never have the police displayed such activity in their efforts to trace the "Whitechapel fiend as at the present moment. Superintendent Arnold and several of the chief detectives confess that it was a gross mistake to regard the "Jack the Ripper" postcards and letters as a hoax. They now incline to the belief that the communications have emanated from the real murderer, for although several ar rests have been made on evidence which ponted strongly to the suspects as authors of the diabolical correspondence, neverthe- Latest Photograph of the Ripper. less all efforts of the authorities to "sheet home" the charges made have up to the present proved tutile. It is known that the London police have lately obtained certain clews to the identity of the "Ripper" through the agency of a notorious woman, who, prompted by the Swearing in the Deputies. large rewards offered for his apprehension, has devoted herself to a task which has baffled the skill of England's picked detec tives. This woman claims to not only have "located" the assassin, but avers that she has obtained a photograph of the actual murderer by means of a detective camera. This photograph is sow in the bands of the police, who maintain the most dogged silence respecting both this and all other JatP developments, but frm th irnmsp' II li - tff tiliiilF 11 ii"D jj Wttfl description it Would appear that the notor ious butcher is anything but the repulsive looking character the public have hitherto regarded him, a The disclosures made by this woman, and Bcene 0 Iburth Murder. Banbury Street. the recent warnings sent to the police, emanating, presumably, from the assassin himself, have prompted the authorities to adopt extraordinary precautions, the most important being the employment as detec tives of the very class of women "Jack the Ripper" had hitherto selected as his prey. A large number of these unfortunates have practically been engaged by the police to aid in hnnting down the mysterious fiend. They have been ordered to parade the darkest and least frequented courts and I alleys of "Whitechapel and Spitalfif Ids with instructions not to repulse any man who solicits them. They are guaranteed that the will be followed and that in the event o. "any violence being attempted they shall leceive immediate help. Provided that they can be kept sober tho police consider these women well qualified to act as decoys; but the "free solicitation" order has already roused the ire of the army of morilists who are ever eager and ready to embrace an op portunity of this nature, and ventilate through the medium of the press their philanthropic, but nevertheless, unhealthy views. I 'As an extra precautionary measure the beats in "Whitechapel and Spitalfields have been completely reorganized, and the officers who were formerly employed on duty in the lo cality of the murders have been recalled to their old beats. It ts argued that these men will more readily detect the presence of strangers and recognize more quickly any former suspect Already several arrests have been made,but in each case the suspect has been set at liberty on satisfactory proof Where Lizzie Stfoude Wat Butchered. forthcoming of his innocence. Not only have most of the beats been shortened, but in quiet and secluded spots likely to be selected by the fiends for the perpetration of another deed.officers are to be seen parading in twos and threes. , Instead of a man being at a certain point on his beat once every half honr or 35 min utes, that point is 'passed by a constable every 15 or 20 minutes, so that in some parts the woman slaughterer woald have but a very brief space of time in which to decoy his victim, mutilate her and get away unde tected or unseen. Plain-clothes men also patrol these quarters, while others are con cealed in the courts and alleys frequented by the women. It is ,i noteworthy fact that, whereas dur ing the last "murder season" the police were persistent in their efforts to clear the streets at an early hour, their aim at the present time appears to be quite the reverse. Formerly women were seldom seen ont alone after 1 o'clock in the morning; now from midnight to daybreak they are to be seen prowling about in all directions, utter ly regardless of the threatened danger. Where the JTlnth Victim Lied. From the accompanying plan it will be noticed that the miscreant has confined his operations to a comparatively small area, and as he has faithfully carried out his avowed intention as expressed in his first letter to the police the latter still deem it expedient to concentrate their forces within the boundary originally planned out by the "Ripper" himself. The last epistle received by the police from "Jack the Ripper" was to the effect that the writer was mlly aware of the precautions that were being taken, while at the same time he assured the officers of the futility of such measures. He threat ens a tenth murder under their very noses. It remains to be seen haw far this bold challenge will be fulfilled. In the mean while hall London nightly quakes with fri?'it. MArT.rou. fhiaK I THE HTTSBTJRG DlSPATOH, ALL WIRE PULLERS. Pernicious Political Activity of Most of the Presidents. WASHINGTON COULD USE WHISKY. Gastronomies of the White House and. the Bills for Pine Wines. HOW JOHNSON TOOK TOO BIG A DRINK rCOBBEBFONDENCE OT TUX DISrATCn.l Washington, November 1. President Harrison believes that it is every man's duty to cast his rote at the polls, and ho thinks every American citizen should take part in the Government. He will, it possible, go to Indianapolis next Tuesday to cast his ballot and he has been a regular at tendant at the polls on election days since he became of age. He is following the ex ample of the Presidents of pur latter days, and it is now quite the thing for the Presi dent to leave "Washington for the State and National elections. President Arthur voted regularly in New York City while he was at the "White House. Cleveland not only went to Buffalo, but gave his check for $10,000 to pay a part of the expenses of one of the elections, and Arthur not only gave liberally to the cam paign funds, but he sometimes visited the State to regulate party nominations. This was the case when Judge Folger was nom inated for Governor in 1882, and this act undoubtedly did Arthur's prospects for a renomination considerable injury. LINCOLN HADN'T TIME. The only President who went home to vote back of Arthur was Buchanan, whose home was at Lancaster, not so very far from the capital, and who went there regularly to vote during his administration. Presi dent Lincoln never saw his home in Spring field after he was made President. His career in the "White House was such a busy one that he had not time to think of his own ballot, though he undoubtedly kept his fingers on the political wires and man ipulated them toward the great ends of pre serving the Union, whichhis genius largely aided in accomplishing. There was no doubt about Andy John son's politics. He was a tempestuous parti san, but he did not go to Tennessee to vote his ticket during his term. General Grant never voted after 1860, when he was a Breckenridge Democrat, until 1880, when voted in New York. He had never voted the Republican ticket until 16 years after he was elected as the Republican President, and Chief Justice Carter, who had much to do with getting Grant to accept the Repub lican nomination, said that the matter was pushed because the party feared that the Democrats would take up Grant and nom inate him. PRESIDENTS AS POLITICIANS. There is nothing wrong in the President going home to vote, and there is nothing wroug in bis taking part in politics to a limited extent All of the Presidents of the past have been more or less' of politicians. George "Washington was a first-class politi cian, and he did not scruple to use liquor in his elections. "When he was a candidate for the House of Burgesses in Virginia he kept an account of his election expenses, and among them was a hogshead o' whisky and a barrel of wine, which were used at the polk. Jefferson spent comethin? like $10,000 for wines and liquor; while he was President of the United States, and a large amount of this went to conciliate discontented voters. Jefferson was always laying political wires, and he was by no means scrupulons in his means of accomplishing his ends. Even while he was in "Washington's Cabi net he kept a man in the Department under him whose chief duty was to write political articles against "Washington. Those arti cles were published in the anti-administra-tioi papers, and Jeffersoa would mark them and send them to "Washington. HOW WASHINGTON WAS ABUSED. Few people appreciate how "Washington was slandered during his administration. The papers then called him the stepfather of his country and the American Ctesar. They accused him of wanting to become a king, and in 1795 the New York Journal had an artiole on "Washington as a thief. This was written by the Clerk of the House ot Repre sentatives, and it accused "Washington of having overdrawn his salary 6,150. It was John Randolph, of Roanoke, who proposed the toast at a dinner, "George Washington, may he be damned," and one of the leading writers of the day even ac cused Washington of haying committed murder during the time thathewas in Brad dock's expedition. It was at this time that that noted scene occurred In "Washington's private office which Jefferson records in his annals in which he got into a towering rage and said he had ''never repented but once of having slipped the moment of resigning his office, and that was every moment since." And be went on saying he had "rather be in his grave than in bis present sit uation. He would rather be on his farm than the emperor of the world, and yet they were charging him with want ing to be a king." JEyen Congress went back on him. and when he finally left the Executive chair the opposition papers were full of rejoicing. THE TWO ADAMSES. The Adams family was made up of born politicians. Old John Adams was a fussy little fellow as fat as butter and as vain as a peacock. He was very angry when he found that he had to leave the "White House and he went away bag and biggage the night before Jefferson's inauguration, say ing that he would' not stay to see his ene mies exalted. He was very jealous of "Washington, and one day when one of his friends iu speaking of some occurrence that had lately hapnened referred to George Washington and John Adams as having taken part in it, he interrupted the speaker and said: "Sir, you should not say George Washington and John Adams, but you should say John A'dams and George Wash ington, lor John Adams made George Washington." , It was the same with JohuQuincy Adams. He started out as a politician before he was out of school and at the age of IS was driw in? a Government salary as Secretary of our Legation at St. Petersburg. He led off the public pap during tne whole of his life and the salaries which he received from Uncle Sam amounted to about $500,000. His election was brought about, it is said. by a political bargain which be made with Henry Clay, and after he lelt the White House he again entered politics and came back to Congress. JACKSON AND TAN BDBEN. During the days of Jackson and Van Buren the Government had no use for any man who was not a Democrat. Jackson was one of the most violent partisans who ever sat in the White House, and he schemed for the success of his party during the whole of his two administrations. He helped Van Buren to become his successor because he considered him a first-class Democrat, and it was during his administra tion that the famous doctrine was brought forth which is embodied in the catch words, "To the victors belong the spoils." President Harrison's grandfather was a politician, and he was holding a petty political office at the time he was nominated for the Presidency. Polk was noted as a hand-shaker and a baby kisser long before he was thought of for the Presidency. He never had any idea that he would be nom inated at Baltimore, and when he received the news of his nomination he was trving a $10 Justice of the Peace case. His brother communicated the fact to him bnt he wonld not believe it, and it was some time before he would be persuaded that the fact was a genuine one. ITilmore was a politician, and Frank Pierce had had a long political career before he was nominated for the the t Presidency. GARFIELD'S OASTRONOMIC TASTES. "Mr, W. T. Crninn, ho "ct"! s the v STJNDAY, NOVEMBER ard of the White House during the Hayes and Garfield administrations, is near to death. Garfield was by no means a mascot to those who were employed about his bed side. He ruined Crump, and his sickness was the death blow to Dr. Bliss' health and prosperity. I chatted with Steward Crump not long ago about Garfield's table. He said: "President Garfield had the dys pepsia when he was inaugurated, and all the time he was in the White.House he would eat nothing but the plainest food. He was very particular abont his hours, and he ate his breakfast always at 850, his dinner at 3, and a light tea at 7 P. M. "He was very fond of a good beefsteak and he always had baked potatoes for breakfast. He had a way of his own for fixing these. He would have the potatoes broken open as soon as they came upon the table, and press the white mealy mass out upon his plate and poured cream over them. He liked this dish so well that he often made a whole meal out of it, and he once told me that it was far better and more digestible than po tatoes with butter. He ate beefsteak for dinner, but neither he nor Mrs. Garfield ever cared much for anything and his table was by no means so elaborate as that of President Hayes." "What were President Hayes' favorite dishes?" I asked. 'President Hayes," replied Steward Crump, "had a very tasty stomach. He ate a very good breakfast and was very fond of cakes made of Indian meal, and he thought a breakfast was not complete without the best of coffee. He used a mixture oi fine Mocha and Java. COFFEE AND APOLLINAEIS WATER. "At 1 o'clock I served his Innch. This consisted of cold meats, roast turkev, duck or beef cut down in 'slices and a salad. This with bread and butter, coffee and tea con stituted the noon meal. Onr biggest meal was at dinner, which was served at 6 P. M. It was served in courses: First, there were the oysters on the half shell, then a fillet or roast of Iamb, with some kind of croquettes and vegetable. Following this we usually had a course of game and then dessert, con sisting of cakes, irnit, candy and nuts. "There was always cake on the table, and Mrs. Hayes dearly loved angel's food cake. We finished the dinner with a cup of atter dinner coffee, and the first part of it was al ways washed down with Apollinaris water. President Haves was very fond of eandy. He dearly doted oh duck, and he had a special aversion to pork in any shape. It is not true that Hayes saved a great deal of money while he was in the White House and watched every penny. Some of his state dinners cost him $17 per plate. I was instructed to get the best in the market without regard to price, and Hayes never criticised niy accounts. I never lound any niggardliness about him. ARTHUR A NIGHT HAWK. "Hayes was a much nicer man to work for than Arthur, and he kept decent hours. Arthur never had his dinner before 8 o'clock, and his friends often sat at the table as late as 12 or 1. This would'run the dishwash ing away on into the night, and I found I could not stand the pressure. Garfield al ways had wine al his meals. He never ate anything but a cracker and a cup of coffee for breakfast, and he took this often as late as 10 o'clock in the morning. "President Hayes had wine only once on his table while he was in the White House, nnd this was when the Grand Duke Alexis was here. Garfield gave no state . dinners while he was in the White House, but Arthur's dinners were noted for the fineness of their wines, and Andrew Johnson had a special brand of Bberry which was very popular. Johnson was very fond of whisky, and kept a jug of old Bourbon always near him. He was druuk at his inauguration as Vice President, and he became so frorr hav ing been on a spree the night before, and going to the Capitol on an empty stomach. OVERESTIMATED HIS CAPACITY. "When he got there he found himself very faint, and asked John W. Forney if he could not give him a drink. Forney was, I think, the Clerk of the Senate, and he went to one of the cupboards, pulled out a whole bottle of rye whisky and handed it to Andy Johnson. " Johnson took a goblet and poured it full of the amber-colored liquid and drank the whole of it in three swallows. It scared Forney to see him do so, and as the burning fluid swashed around in his empty stomach it was no wonder that it made him drunk. About ten minutes after this he stood up to be inaugurated "Vice President, and, to the horror of all, began to make a speech. Everyone conld see that he was drunker than the traditional boiled bwl, and though there was an attempt to hush the matter up it was all in vain. "Jefferson always used the finest of wines. "Washington generally drank two glasses of old Maderia while at dinner, and Jackson on the night of his inauguration spoiled the East Room carpet with the barrels ol punch which he had brought in to treat his guests. In a cosmopolitan society like that of Wash ington it is impossible to get along without the use of wines, and the President who serves them creates less comment and does quite as much good as he who does not." Frank G. Carpenter. J0HAKN STEAUSS' OPERA. Kissing Is the Beginning and the End of the New Production. Philadelphia Times.! I am able to give you a synopsis of Johann Strauss' new opera, "Bitter Pazmann." The wife of the Ritter, when wandering in the green forest, allows herself to be kissed by a gentleman, whom she mistakes for her husband. After Bhe arrives home she nar rates her adventure, whereupon Knight Pazmann rises in his might and his stirrups and swears, like the ancient Queen Isabella of Spain, nevermore to change his dress until he finus the scoundrel who insulted his wife. Ritter and wife now travel near and far pursuing the villain, and finally come to the King's court, where the injured lady recognizes in His Majesty the man tbey are looking for. A court of justice is estab lished to hear the knight's grievances; the fool is elected judge, and he decides that Pazmann shall kiss the Queen, and this done the opera ends without bloodshed. FE0H HOMELY MATERIALS. A Thing of Beauty and Usefulness That Scarcely Costs a Fenny. St. Lcmll Republic! A pretty and serviceable shoe box is made of an empty half barrel, some ex celsior, some burlaps and some hammock mrii. The barrel must first be sawed in two, then fitted with a cover and the founda tion is maae. ao siues oi iub uox most next bo neatly covered with burlaps and the top stuffed with -xcelsior kept in place by a covering of muslin. Then the top must have made ready its outside cover, which is of burlaps decorated with a simple design, as shown in the illustration. The figures can be out from brown cloth or denim and couched, or they can be colored with thin oil paint; In this case brown shad ing to yellow will give good effect. The edges should be outlined with heavy brown linen floss. The fringe, like that of the cur tain, is of brown hammock cord, and is knotted into the edge of a narrow band of burlaps, which fits tightly round the top of the box. It should be sufficiently deep to entirely cover the sides of the box. When all is done the patient laborer'will surely be rewarded With a comfortable and handsome stool, as well (as with a most ute'ul rccepla- pi. i i r Uihi nil in al iiuimi A Lady's Shoe Box. ' 2, 1890. SOME SIMPLE TERMS That Are Now in Every-Day Use, but Are Little Understood. HINTS USED BY ELECTRICIANS. Explanations Which Will Enable One to Talk Intelligently of T0LTS, AMPUEES, OHMS AND WATTS iwwTTXN roa THB sisfatcii.i Electricians are often asked what a "volt" is or on "ampere" or a "watt," and indeed such expressions must be very puzzling to the layman. However, they are not nearly as mysterious as tbey sound. Familiarity and use is all that is needed to make these expressions just as intelligible as the foot, yard or quart. Comparatively few people know how many feet there are in a mile, and there are not a few people that would get but a faint idea from the expression 800 feet high. Yet all are perfectly familiar with the terms toot, yard or quart, and are capable of using them intelligently in gen eral conversation and for all ordinary pur poses. And now, in these days of electricity, when electrical topics are constantly before the public and electrics currents in every city, it seems high time that people in gen eral should shake off an indescribable dread, a sort of shrinking feeling about the electric current as though it were some monster or supernatural being, and become familiar with this new and wonderful agent, ever ready to do our bidding. THE rOTJB UNITS. Electricity is a form of energy, and, natural enough, like all other forms ot energy, such as steam, water power, gun powder, etc., can do much mischief when improperly handled. But when in telligently and rightly used it is one of the most easily applied and flexible forms of energy known. Let us then help and not hinder its progress in the industries, and the best way to overcome this almost universal shrinking from it is to become familiar with it and learn to appropriate its many good qualities. How, one of the best ways to be gin this is to obtain a clear idea of its prin cipal units of measurements. Electrical units have been given proper names. Ampere, Watt, etc., are the names of men who have made themselves famous in this electrical branch of science. But in themselves these names mean nothing more than do the expressions foot or pound. The four most commonly used electrical units are the volt, or unit of pressure, the ampere, or unit of quantity of current, the ohm, or unit of resistance, and the watt, or unit of energy. This last unit is always the product of the pressure into the quantity of current and is often called the volt-ampere. However, the expression watt is preferable. being shorter, and, in fact, volt-ampere is fast going out of use. The best way to make a first acquaintance with these units is to compare and liken tnem, as tar as posstDle, with units already. The volt or unit of pressure corresponds to the unit foot when used iu the sense of pres sure. When we speak of a hundred feet of pressure in a water pipo we know that the level of the water in the reservoir is 100 feet above th'e pipe in qnestion and we un derstand the expression 100 feet of pressure because we are familiar with it and know THE GENERAL EFFECT that can be obtained from that pressure. For example, we know -that if a hole is made in the pipe, a stream of water will, except for friction, rise 100 feet high. In the same way, anybody wonld make a pretty good guess as to how many pounds there are in one cubic foot of water, and this if only because we are familiar with those units of measure, and not because we know anything about their history or why they were given such names. In electricity the relation oi the units above mentioned is beautifully simple, and is called Ohm's law, Ohm being the name of the man that discovered the law, which is this: "The pressure is equal to the quantity multiplied by the resistance." That is, the volts always equal the product of the ampere into the ohms. To that if we rep resent the yolts by V, ampere by A and ohms by O we have these three simple equations: V equals A multiplied by O, A equalsVdivided by O and O equals V divided by A, from which, if any two of the three quantities are known, the third can always be calculated. For exam pie, i f we have V4andA 2, then O will equal 2, because O V-A 4-2 3 2. and so on. There is one other term to consider, and" tnat is tne watt or unit ot work (energy;. If we represent this by W, we have this very simple law: W V x A. That is, 6 watts are equal to 6 yolts times 1 ampere, or 3 volts times 2 ampzres, or 2 yolts times 3 amperes. Now, it takes 746 watts to equal one horse powe of energy, so that,, it we have 2 amperes flowing under a pressure of 373 volts, we will be able to do the work of one horse power with the current, for here V 373 and A 2, and so f rom W V x A we have W 373 x 2 746 watts or one horse power. It will thns be seen how very simple it is to talk intelligently about the power of an electric current. For example, if a man says he has an electric current doing a work of ten-horse power under a pressure of 1,000 volts, we at once know that be is using a current of 7.46 amperes, because ten-horse power equals 7,460 watts, and this equals 1,000 yolts times 7.4G amperes. In fact, energy in electric power is measured in very much the same way that it is in water power. THE ELEMENT OF TIME. With water the energy is measured by the product of the pressure into the quantity of water flowing id a given time. When we say that 746 watts equals one horse power, we mean the effort of one horse power; but if we wish to estimate the work that can be done with a given number of watts, the ele ment of time must be taken into consider ation. And so we speak of watt-hours or horse-power hours, that is, 746 watts will do in one hour the same work that one horse power from a steam engine will do in one hour. Also one watt will do in 746 hours the same work that 746 watts will do in one hour. Some examples now of common uses of the electric current may be of assistance tn familiarizing one with thr units that we have just been considering. Let usimagine an electric circuit haying 20 arc lamps in series, that is, one after the other, and let us assume further that this dynamo furnishes a pressure of 1,000 volts and a current of IU amperes. Now, neglecting the resistance of the wire, we can easily figure from Ohm's law the electrical resistance of each lamp, thus: O V-A 1.000-10 100 ohms. That is, the resistance ot all the 20 lamps in series is 100 ohms. Therefore one lamp has a resistance ot 100-20 6 ohms. If each lamp has 5 ohms resistance we can find how much pressure is needed to force the current of 10 amperes through one lamp, by "VOxA 5xl0B0 volts. PROVING THE FIGURES. To prove that this is correct we can 'de termine the pressure for one lamp in the following way: We have 1,000 yolts to force the current throueh 20 lamps, there fore it will take 1,000-2000 volts to force the same current through one lamp. -The energy required to keep the lamps burning is 1,000x1010,000 watts and 10,000-746 will give the energy in horse power, which is nearly 13. It the lamps are run for ten hours, it will require 135 horse-power hours to do the work. If we have a CO-watt lamp, giving, say 16 candle power under a pressure of CO yolts, we can figure What current will be needed to keep the lamp burning, and then, know ing the current, we can figure the resistance in ohms. For, if the lamp takes CO watts of power to bring it up to caudle-power, using the pressure of CO volts, the current Is found fro' V-'-V -!' C" KrWV-,.7il.' TV, current therefore is one ampere. And for the resistance in ohms we have OV-A50-150 ohms. MORE SIMPLE CALCULATIONS. If on the other hand this 60-watt lamp is so constructed that it takes 100 volts to bring ituptolGcandlepower, we have W VxA, that is, 60100xJ4, so that the cur rent in this case is only naff what it was in the other, bnt the pressure is doubled. If we wish to figure how many SO watt lamps can be worked with one electrical horse power, all we have to do is to divide the number of watts in one horsepower by the number of watts per lamp, thus" 746 50 nearly 15 lamps. If there is no use ful work to be done, that is, if there are no lamps or motors in the circuit, all the electrical energy will be expended in heat ing up the conductor, and this heating of the conductor is calculated by the product of the square of the current into the resist ance. There is nothing hard in the above figures, and if they are read over two or three times, the reader will be surprised at their simollcity, as well as pleased to know that he can now talk intelligently on the fundamental principles of the electric form of energy. Scire Facias. THE ELECTRIC WORLD. New Systems of Telegraphy That Is a Suc cessThe Berlin Telephone riant Ughtlng Street Cars From Storage Bat teries "Working Sheet Metal by Elec tricity. IWKITTCr FOB THE DISPATCH. ! A TELEQRAPn system Is now being brought forward In which greatly improved results are obtained by devices and arrangements of ex treme simplicity, both electrically and mechanically. In this system very high speed Is attainable, as it involves the transmission ot the Morse code of signals by means of perfor ations on a strip ot paper, which can be re ceived either by chemical decomposition or ink writers. The weak point In systems of this class has heretofore been tha difficulty ot se cnrlnijaccnrato perforating, while maintaining the desired speed. The perforations, too, have been somewhat complicated, owing to the necessity of transmitting "double" or alternat ing currents, which were deemed essential to rapid transmission. In the new system the full effect, which is designed to be produced at the receiving end is attained indirectly by single current transmission, which enables the per forators to be worked as easily and rapidly as typewriters. The record obtained is remark ably clean and sharp, and has been produced in a perfectly readable form at a speed of 3,000 words a minute over a low wire resistance cir cuit of Sol miles between New York City and "Washington. . Altoso new electrical processes Is that ot M. de Merltens, which prevents fermentation by the sterilizing of liquids. This is done by making a Leyden jar of the containing vessel, the liquid being the inner coating, and the electrical effect being produced by means of condensers. Another method, the practicabil ity of which seems, perhaps, open to doubt, consists in placing the vessel and the liquid to be sterilized in the field of a permanent or electro magnet. The German Government, it is announced, has consented to the establishment of a cable communication between Heilhronn and Lauf fen, for tho transmission of light and power, on the condition that the minimum height of the wires above the ground bo eight yards, the smallest diameter of the wire being 0,26 inch, and further, that thewlro be laid underground through the town, and the high tension be transformed iu a special bnilding into low ten sion current before entering the town. A London paper recommends theatrical en gineers who wish to increase their knowledge of typos of motive power, as applied to electri cal purposes, to call and investigate the capa bilities of an American windmill, which rears its head above the ancient thoroughfare of City road. The windmill is used for grinding pur poses and the pumping of water, and it is ex pected it will soon supply the motive power for all the electric light needed on the premises. . The underground telephone communications begun last year in the city of Berlin bare Just been completed. This telephone plant, the largest existing, has been so perfected that for many years to come an unlimited development of this important medium of communication may be expeoted. The different sections of cast iron pipes.each containing 23 wires, branch off the numerous exchanges, and lead to several connection boxes, where tbey are joined to the overhead lines. The total lengtu of these tubes is about 84,000 yards, 10, COO yards of which are laid down as double set; 43.000 yards of cast iron piping of inch to V4. inches diameter have been supplied for them, the biggest pipes being capable of holding W) cables. Within one year 7.3S1 wires of about 3,700,000 yards length have been drawn into the pipes, a large propor tion of which are now in constant working. . Most people are familiar with the manner In which, in manufactnrlng sheet metal arti cles, the workman forms in a lathe almost any desired shape. The electric current has now been applied to this process. As is well known the successful shaping of the article depends on the malleability of the metal, and by the new process the metal is kept constantly an nealed. A disk of sheet metal is placed in the lathe, and from a point near its center a cur rent of electricity is passed to the point where the burnisher makes contact. The conspquence is that the maximum of malleability is se cured, and the ease and celerity of shaping the metal is considerably increased. .. In the same way as the horse is being sup. planted by the electric nfbtor for street car traction, so gas is being superseded by tho elec tric light as a street luminant. There are still, however, places whero the confidence in the new order ot things is not yet absolute. A case of this kind has occurred In Canada. As the electric light has been put in in a large portion of the city of Montreal, the question arose: "What is to be done with the disused gas lamps, which are owned by the city? borne of the Aldermen thought it would be a good thing to sell them for old iron, but one of the "fathers of the city" suggested that the lamps be put In store, "so that the city would not be at the mercy of the electric light company," and he carried his point, .' A Western eloctrical paper points ont that while it is highly desirable that the activity of capitalists in building street railroads should be encouraged, a franchise for a road Is often of considerable value, and great care In grant ing them should be exercised by boards of trustees and supervisor". There are always men without means who are ready to speculate in franchises, as they would speculate in any thing else, and instance have happened more than once where improreraents were prevented because some irresponsible person held a fran chise and kept other out. It should be laid down as a fixed rule, that no franchises be granted except to parties who can prove that they have a lezitimate claim to the possession of what they seek. Sohz interesting experiments were made re cently In Bradford, England, on the lighting of street cars by electricity. A car was illuminated by three incandescent lamps of Ave candle-power each. Tbey were fed from three storage batteries placed beneath the seati, capable of supplying current continu ously for six hours. The light obtained Is described as beintr about equivalent to that given under the best conditions by the oil lamps at present in use, with, of course, the ad ditional advantages ot absence ot smell and necessity for trimming. A FACE ON A POTATO. Remarkable Freak Grown on a Montana, Ranch Tills Season. Mr. T. D. Duncan has sent to the Bt. Louis Republic a queer potato which he says he found on his ranch in the Flat Head Valley, Missoula county, Mont It is a small tuber of the Early Rose variety, and looks good enough for the table ouly that it If t- 41 few r.rh;Jr,te.rt" nniw'K TRAIM& THE BODY. Three leading Methods of Matin? Hen Physicallj Perfect. MB. CHECKLEI'3 K0YEL TflEOET. How John M. Laflin Trained Fred Gehhard, and Huldoon's Idea?. WILL POWER IX CDEIXG 0BES1TI rCOEBZSPOKDSXCE OT TnE DISFATCH.J Netv York, November 1. The diverg encies of opinion among teachers of physical culture are at present so great that the mau who would "train" his body is apt to be come more and more bewildered as he in vestigates the merits of the various systems now in yogue. The three men best known to New Yorkers as trainers are Edwin Checkley, John 21. Laflin and "William Muldoon. Superintend ent of Police Murray and John L. Sullivan are among the recent pupils of Muldoon. Sir. Frederick Gebhard is Laflin's latest subject. Mr. Checkley is now reducing the flesh of one of Brooklyn's most prominent i citizens, and has advanced ideas in training so revolutionary as at once to challenge com parisons between the results of his and others' systems. To bear Checkley, one would much rather not have Muldoon's or Laflin's training as a gift. Not that Check ley speaks disparagingly of these eminent athletes, but because that which tbey de clare beneficial to the body he believes posi tively detrimental. TEAfcflKGBV; VOLITION. The Checkley system is founded on this basic principle: Instead of drawing water, punching the bag or pulling a rowing ma chine for the purpose of making your muscles grow and your lungs expand, by an effort of the will restrict the contraction of the muscles. If lilting a 50-pound weight from the floor will cause a visible swelling of your biceps, and so exercise that muscle and produce what is conceded to be a de sirable result, then by the Checkley system one may "go through the motions," of rais ing the weight without doing any work at all for raising the weight would be "work" and, by an act of volition, swell and so exercise the same muscles and derive the same benefits from the exercise. Muldoon believes in work for his pupils. Laflin prefers outdoor sports to outdoor work and rowing machines to most other apparatus for indoor exercise. Instead of setting a man to raking hay he accompanies him on long fishing, shooting, swimming or rowing excursions. Checkley, however, not only thinks, but he seta others to .thinking. He exercises his brain as well as his body, and develops both through the very superiority of mind over matter. If a man may stay at home and by will power make himself as tired as he would be at the end of a day on the hay rake it stands to reason that a good many men would prefer the Cheekier system. It appeals to the curiosity above all others. MTJBBAT, StTLtrVAX AND GEBHAED. A day of Mnrray under the Muldoon regime was, iu a few words, as follows: Ex ercise with light dumb-bells; "firing" staffed balls across the room and catching them when "fired" back; pounding a block of wood with two twelve-pound hammers, one in each hand; a long walk, the latter portion of it done on a run so as to heat tha body up well; wrapping in blankets for a sweat and a rub down; a salt shower and an other rub down; shovelling hay all this varied with horseback exercise and general gymnasium work. A day of Sullivan under the Muldoon regime was much more labor ious and included longer and more violent exercise in the way of running, wrestling, punching the bag and walking. A day with Laflin is quite different. "Freddy" Gebhard has been with him for some time up in tike "county working up muscle and working oil' fat. A day of Geb hard with Laflin up in Pike consists of this: r.ising at 6 or 6:30; a short, brisk walk be fore breakfast; start for the woods after breakfast with gun and dogs, or up a trout brcok with rod and creel, in flannel shirts, stout walking shoes and knockabout cos tume; a brisk run, just long enough to set the heart pumping blood through the arteries on the return in the evening; then a rub down and sponge bath, and dinner or sup per; then a little smoke and talk and bed. Soth systems involve a good deal of hard work. MIND TEAIXrNG MUSCLE. Now, that was not the way the ancient Greeks trained for the Olympic games, the victors in which were the favorite models for the world's greatest sculptors. Theirs was nn open air training, however, and running long distances, throwing weights, wrestling and the cactus were their favor ite exercises. Yet Mr. Edwin Checkley declares that given the same training our modern athletes would greatly surpass the Greek records. "Muscle moulding schemes," says Checkley, "that makes men die in middle life may be pictorially interesting and may sound heroic, but they are not for that wise average mortal who wishes simply to feel light and strong, and, if need be, to find himself ready to enter safely on any reasonable physical under taking. There is more straining than train ing in a good'many popular systems prac ticed in and out of the college gymnasium. What do the adherents of other systems think of the following: "A man covered with hard muscles will often display great immediate power, but not endurance, and of after health he can have little chance. His muscles feed upon his vitality and threaten his general health. On the other hand, a man who keeps bis musculax sys tem in a state of comparative softness and high flexibility cannot only summon great strength, but Iii3 powers of endurance are surprising. He is easily kept in training." Checkley recommends that girls and boys shonld as soon as possible and first of all learn thoroughly how to breathe, stoop, stand, walk and sit properly; the proper uses of the joints, as the shoulder, hip, neck, etc. "Teach them tumbling, both girls as well as boys," says he. "There is nothing better. I advise generally a mixed diet." Of the various athletic sports, Mr. Check ley expresses this opinion: "I leak upon tumbling as the acme of physical perfec tion, because the person so fortunate as to possess thi3 ability yon will notice is gen erally strong, agile and intelligent; the very nature of the movements must make him quick, self-reliant and to a certain extent courageous. GET STRENGTH FIRST. "Bicycling, boxing, fencing, dancing and running are all good, bnt what I claim is that the power to enter any of these sports should be gained first It is rather in the conservation of energy we gain strenzth and not in the expenditure of force. The power to do these things should be mads the effect and not the cause." Mr. Checkley, who can lift 1,C00 pounds, two-thirds of the work in that feat being done, he says, by the will, prides himselt specially on his cure for adiposity. This is wnat ne says oi nis cure: "I first teach the person how to carry the body, then how to gain the control of the muscles of the ab domen mentally. A proper.carriage of the body is a positive enemy to the secretion of fat. A man may box and fence and even walk without losing his ter rible abdominal accumulation. But if be centers his efforts at muscular exertion on the abdomen itself, the fat cannot stand the attack and will gradually disappear. To get rid of it muscular control of the abdo men must be regained. "When once it has been lost this is no easy matter." To attain this result Checkley prescribes 12 exercises, and adds, "persistently subdue .the abdomen and give the prominence to the chest. Walk with the whole body, and do not move as il afraid of jarring some inter nal machinery. Give the hips free play, and in walking the more of this the better. Practice contraction ot the waist muscles. In this way a continuous training, the only training that is effectual, is kept up -ud the rttult will be Itacaediat a-d 1-'' " tt 3i . isfe Hi &ttS&Jiii &aamMamw wmmtmmmmmm , mi r - if I. Ib