Moseby Redivivus
Speed over Cables
One of the essential features of a submarine cable is the speed of signaling. In operating long cables delicate instruments are required, and the currents arriving at the receiving end are feeble in comparison with those employed in land-line signaling. The longer the cable, naturally, the feebler the impulses arriving at the receiving end.
A short cable, a cable of under 1,000 miles being generally considered a short cable, gives a speed of signaling amply sufficient for all purposes, with a conductor weighing about 100 pounds to the mile, surrounded by an insulating envelope of gutta-percha weighing about an equal amount, says Scribner’s Magazine. When we come to a cable of about twice this length it is found necessary, In order to get a practically unlimited speed — that is, a speed as high as the most expert operator can read at — to employ a core of 650 pounds of copper to the mile, insulated with 400 pounds of gutta-percha to the mile.
Sioux on the War-Path — Several Cattle Raids Reported
Omaha, Neb., Feb. 9. — Official letters from the commanding officer of Sidney Barracks reports that Pawnee Killer and Two Lances, accompanied by ninety-three lodges of Whistler’s band of Sioux and two of the Brule band, have left the reservation, and are moving to the hunting grounds south of the Platte, by way of Lewis Canon. They claimed that they bad the verbal permission of the Agent to do so. Two Lances reported two other bands near Lewis Canon, one of twenty-five lodges of Arrapahoes, and another of some fifteen warriors, after the Utes, who had a few days previous stolen a largo number of horses from there. There is no question but that the Indians are highly incensed at the treatment.
Motoring Accidents
Worth Knowing
Boxers Slay and Mutilate
Speed of Railways
Wild Boar Menace in Rhenish Prussia
COBLENZ, Feb. 5 — Judging by the number of letters from German civilians of the American occupied asking for special permits to carry firearms for hunting purposes, the wild boars in Rhenish Prussia more numerous this season than in many years. In fact, several letters written to the headquarters of the Third American Army stated that the wild boar menace this winter greater than any other year in German history.
Every day from various parts of the occupied territory letters into Coblenz from German civilians who have been deprived of their usual winter sport by the American decree forbidding civilians to have possession of either rifles or revolvers. In nearly every case the letters agree that the wild boars are overrunning the country, destroying crops and eating certain winter growing plants which should be preserved for the horses and cattle.