f jw- tt yriifffi-t Tm-iy?,yF'r'?tzl jus-ir4nvivm ffri Items of Interest. . 4 The beard of the average man grows six inches year. Norway hanks hold more specie in their safes ' than they issue. Sugar can be made from the sap of nearly 200 different kinds of trees. Great Britain derives $40,000,000 yearly revenue from the Chinese opium trade. Americans excel all other nations in electrical engineering and photography. The Baroness Burdett-Couts has recently cele brated her eighty-eighth birthday. Cremation has been placed under the ban by the Roman Catholic archbishop of Montreal. The only surviving pensioner of the war of 1812 is Hiram Cronk of Herkimer county, New York. The Romans knew how to build good roads. . Many roads built by them are yet in good con dition. The Wisconsin legislature refused to. enact a law prohibiting mamage between whites and negroes. Iceland has no millionaires. The people are . all poor, but there are no almshouses and no de pendents. The earliest mention of shoes is found in an Egyptian papyrus, written nearly 2,200 years be " fore Christ. Chicago Hebrews have established a theatre for the presentation of dramas that appeal to the Jewish taste. Richwood, N. J., is suffering from a plague of cats. The cats were turned loose on the town by practical jokers. The United States produces 775,000,000 pqundg - of tobacco yearly. One-half this amount is con- sumed at home. In 1832 Buffalo had only 8,000 inhabitants. Now it has 852,000 and is now the second city in New York state. The British Museum library has thirty-one miles of shelves. The French Imperial library has but eighteen. Silk worms thrive best on a diet of mulberry leaves. Ten pounds of mulberry leaves yield one ounce of raw silk. The gold of Australia and California could be made into a mass twenty feet square at each end and forty feet long. The fir timber of the North Pacific coast ha wonderful strength and t ridge builders are using it more and more every year. A university exclusively for women Is nearing completion in Tokio, Japan. TJireerich Japanese merchants furnished the funds. Gustavus Adolphus originated the idea of '"running the gauntlet." He used it to punish thieves in the ranks of his armies. There are" now 175,000 children of school age in Cuba. Of this number 132,000 are in the public schools. One thousand school houses are in daily use. -, Black walnut is becoming more valuable than mahogany. Fifty years ago it was plentiful in .Ohio, but extravagant waBte has denuded the forests. At one month a boy baby has an equal chance of living forty-four years. Five, years later he ha ' an equal chance of living fifty-one years and six months. , r There were 162 complete engines on the bat tleship Maine. It is believed that most of these engines were uninjured by the explosion that wrecked the ship and brought on tho war between the United States and Spain. The Commoner. Honolulu, Juno 7. Via San Francisco, Juno 13. ' Dr. Sen Vet Son, tho Chinese reformer, left on tho American Maru June 5 for China for the pur pose of starting a revolution. His intention is to overthrow tho empress dowager and tho man darins. His idea is to have China ruled by a presi dent on lines after the government of America. He says that there will be a strong force at his back, and ho has the support of many prominent white men of China, as well as thousands of natives. This is the third revolution which ho has at tempted in China, and ho is confident that this at tempt will prove successful. Dr. Sen would not state where he intended to land in China, or give the details of his plans. There will be bloodshed very soon, he declared. Philadelphia, Pa., Juno 13.- Mayor Ashbridgo late tonight signed tho ordinances passed by tho city council yesterday granting franchises for city railways, surface, elevated and underground. Ex Postmaster General John Wannamaker sent a let ter to Mayor Ashbridge today offering to pay tho city $2,600,000 for these franchises. , The ordinances give to a number of capitalists who are friendly to the dominant faction In the republican party in the state, tho right to con struct underground and elevated railways on streets now occupied by surface railways and to build surface roads on the streets not so occupied. Mr. Wannamaker urged the mayor to veto tho ordinance.? before him in order that new ordi nances might be drafted conferring the franchise In Question only upon the payment of a sum of money lu to the public treasury commensurate to the value of the grant. Mayor Ashbridge refused to talk about Mr. Wannamaker's protest against his signing the bills. Scientific American: Document No. 384 of sec ond session of the Fifty-sixth congress, dealing with the damage to property at Pomeroy, Ohio, The secretary pf , war states that ho has the honor to transmit a letter from the chief of engineers, U. S. A., submitting certain facts relative to the claim of Mrs. B. N. Reuter, amounting to $1, for damages to a window and curtain in her residence, caused by a fragment of rock thrown by a blast by government employes while removing rock from the river bed and banks of the Ohio river, at Pomeroy, O. The chief engineer considers that damages Inflicted by tho torts of the government officers or agents are in the nature of unliquidated damages which no executive officer has authority to settle. He therefore recommended that con gress be asked to insert the following amount in the next general deficiency bill: Pomeroy, Ohio, Nov. 5, 1900. U. S. Government, to krs. B. N. Reuter, Dr. To one 14x32 double-strength glass $ .50 Glazing same .25 One curtain damaged 25 Total $1.00 St. Paul Pioneer-Press Special Service. Wash ington, June 11. William E. Chandler today in closed to Senator Lodge his check for $100, the re ward offered by him to the person who placed in the financial plank of the republican platform of 1896 after the reference to International bimetal lism the words: "Which we pledge ourselves to promote." The delay since 1896 has been occa sioned by the claims of various persons that they conceived and wrote the words, and in this con nection have been mentioned the names of Frank S. Streeter of Concord, N. H., United States Sena tor Hansbrough and Former Representative D. K. Watson of Columbus, O. It has taken Mr. Chand ler all this time to settle the conflict of claims. .Very lately Senator Foraker found the final draft of the platform, and it appears from this that tho words, "which we pledge ourselves to promote" wero interlined in pencil above typewritten mat ter, and that the written words are in the hand writing of Senator Lodge. The correspondence be tween Mr. Chandler andenator Foraker, Mr. Wat son and Senator Lodge is voluminous and interest- 9 lng. Mr. Chandler closes his letter to Senator Lodgo as follows: "By reason of tho premises you should without hesitancy accept tho $100 as right fully your money. All wise men know that Mc Kinley and Hobart would not have been elected if tho platform had not, whilo declaring opposi tion to tho frco coinage of silver except as the re sult of an international agreement, also declared that tho republican party favored such an Inter national agreement, if it could be secured. If Mc Kiuley and Hobart had not been elected in 1890, Mr. McKinley would not havo been re-elected In 1900. Therefore, those six words were of priceless value, and I trust that when all the facts arc known ray humble offering of $100 will be supple mented by such generous donations, not only from many members of the republican party, but as well from democrats who have so much trembled at ov ery prospect of tho election of Mr. Bryan as to adequately recognize tho sagacity and courage which led you not merely to conceive, but to act ually Insert Into tho platform of 1896 concerning bimetallism the words, 'which we pledge oursolves to promote.' That immortal declaration twice made Mr. McKinley president, and the fidelity with which tho pledge has been fulfilled the world knows." Special Cablegram to tho Globe-Democrat Ma nila, Juno 11. There was a seneation yesterday in tho court-martial of Capt. Michael Spellman, Lieut. Delbert R. Jones and Surgeon Dudley Welch, of the 43d volunteer infantry, in Southern Leyte, on the charge of trading in permits to ship hemp from closed ports. Surgeon Dudley Welch turned state's evidence and gave testimony incriminating Captain Spellman and Lieutenant Jones, who will probably receive termB of imprisonment, Welch, who appears to have been a tool of the others, has returned $1,000, his share of the spoils, to tho gov ernment. The evidence1 disclosed that the value of the hemp cleared from Maasln was about five hun dred thousand dollars in the last sfx months. The officers indicated levied half a peso on each plcul of rice entering insurgent territory, while steam ships, schooners and bancas trading with closed ports in Malitbog Bay paid from 30 pesos to 500 pesos, according to their tonnage. The presidento of Maasin and a go-between who is connected with a Spanish firm, have also been arrested. Spellman was formerly a major in tho 69th New York regi ment The 43d infantry was stationed in the Island of Leyte, and the accused oUcers were detailed for duty in the port of Massin. Tho trial began about the middle of last month, and evidence was brought out showing that hemp steamships calling at Maasin had paid as much as $500 for the priv ilege of going in and coming out Captain Spell man was well known as a national guard officer. He enlisted as a private in company G, 22d regi ment, national guard of the state of New York, on January 17, 1888. He was promoted to be a ser geant in 1891, and two years later he left the 22d to be a first lieutenant of company I, 69th regi ment. In July, 1895, he was elected captain of company G, and was chosen second senior major of the regiment on July 23, 1896. He served with that rank while his regiment was in the service of the United States during the Spanish-American war. Later Major -Spellman applied for a com mission in one of the volunteer regiments then re cruiting, and was successful, obtaining a commis sion as captain, through the influence, it was said, of Lieut-Col. Putnam B. Strong, then of the 69th. While in the 69th regiment Captain Spellman was a stanch partisan of Colonel Duffy, a loyalty which gained for Spellman quite as many enemies as friends. He is unmarried and Is about 35 years old. He has a father and two sisters living In New York city. Surgeon Welch was an appointee at large in the volunteer army., Lieutenant Jones was .appointed from Connecticut, having served in the Spanish war as first lieutenant of the 1st Connec ticut infantry. 1