- - 9 , 't Items of Interest. - At the equator tho snow lino is over 15,000 feet above sea level. . Chicago is the third largest German city and the third largest Bohemian city in the world. English residents haVo 111,000,000 pounds sterling invested in mortgages in foreign coun tries. The great Austrian violinist and musical genius, Kubelik, will make a tour of America during the coming winter. In tho one week ending August 6, the canner ies on the lower Puget Sound packed 265,100 cases of salmon, worth $1,272,800. Tho largest match factory in tho United States is located at Barberton, O., and has a capac ity of 100,000,000 matches per day. According to a special report from Ambassa dor White, Germany buys more products from America than from any other one nation. There were 280,000 native German-speaking people within the United States in 1801. Now there is more than that number in a single city of our country. In proportion to population there are fewer houses in Italy and Spain and more in Argentine Republic in Uruguay than in any other countries of the world. The Canadian government lobster hatchery at Caribou, Nova Scotia, has put out 100,000,000 lob sters this season on the eastern coast of the Dominion. For the flrst time since 1860 the white, pop ulation of Louisiana exceeds the colored popula tion. By the census of 1900 the whites have about 75,000 majority. It is 'stated that the 'King- ot Italy received 26,000 congratulatory telegrams after the birth of his daughter, and 20,000 requests for money in honor of tho event. Of the 267,800 Indians in the United States 33,900 earn their own living by farm work. Tho total value of their farm products for the past year amounted to $1,408,865 over and above the expense of living. The reward of $500,000 to Lord Roberts for his services in England's behaif in the South African war carried in parliament by a vote of '281 to 73. The gift Vi as advised by the king in a message to the house of lords. A national convention of negro bankers, tho first of its kind ever held in this country, is helng arranged tc. be held at Buffalo September 26. The prime mover of this undertaking is John Clayton, president of the First Colored Bank, north of Phil adelphia. According to a recent report of the United States geological survey Pennsylvania and Illinois rank first and second for coal production In the United States. West of the Mississippi river Colo rado ranks flrst and Iowa second. The State Federation of Woman's Clubs at South Dakota, at a meeting recently held at Hot Springs, decided to provide a home for indigent eld ladies whose education and birth has been such as to make them desirous of a different en vironment to that obtainable at the various charit able institutions of the state. In the matter of per capita Interest paid on national debts, the United States ranks well. Each year the Australian pays per-capita in interest, $10.14; France, 6.28; Spain, 4.46; Italy, 3.58; Bel gium, $2.93; United Kingdom, $2.76; Canada, 2.u5, while the United States pays annually only .44 cents per capita in interest. A new magazine pistol lias been adopted by the board of ordnance, the cost price being, about $15 in lots of 1,000. The standard weapon of tho The Commoner. array up to the present time has been the Colt's revolver, which had a firing record of only 40 shots per minute. The new weapon is moro ac curate and can bo fired 116 times per minute. The United States geological survey shows the total production of petroleum in this country in 1900 to have been 63,362,704 barrels, having a valuo of $75,752,691. Of this amount Ohio pro duced 22,363,730 barrels, West Virginia 19,195,675 barrels, Pennsylvania 13,258,202 barrels, Indiana 4,874,382 barrels, California 4,099,484 barrels, New York 1,300,925 barrels, Texas 836,039 barrels. Lord Kitchener has issued a proclamation that permanent exile will be the fate of all Boers found in arms in Orange Colony or in the Trans vaal after September 15. Not only aro all in arms on that date to be permanently banished from South Africa, but "the cost of the maintenance of the families of all burghers in the field who have not surrendered by September 15 shall be recov ered from such burghers and shall be charged on their property, removable and immovable, in tho two colonies." The advent of railways in Asia is leading to rar-:h speculation as to tho future of that conti nent. There are about 470,000 miles of railway in the world and only 34,000 miles of this vast amount is in Asia, a continent containing about one-third of the earth's landed area and moro than one-half of the earth's population. Europe has a mile of railway for every 2,400 inhabitants, the United States has one mile for every 400 in habitants, while Asia has only one mile of rail way for every 28,000 inhabitants. A table giving interesting statistical informa tion concerning the national debts of the world was written for the August number of tho North American Review by O. P. Austin, chief of tho United States bureau of statistics. According to Mr. Austin, the per capita debts of the principal nations in 1900 stood as follows: Countries Debts. Per Capita. Amount of debts China $ 287,123,500 .72 India 1,031,603,705 4.67 Japan 206,799,994 4.73 German Empire 557,626,622 9.96 Mexico 168,771,428 13.36 United States 1,107,711,257 14.52 Sweden : 85,154,320 16.71 Denmark .".. 55,795,724 24.15 Russia 3,167,320,000 24.56 Austria 642,194,000 24.89 Austria Hungary .... 1,154,791,000 25.80 British Colonies (ex cept India, Austral asia and Canada).. 265,541,000 26.43 Turkey 726,511,195 29.25 Brazil 480,985,000 33.56 Chile 113,240,000 36.41 Roumania 280,136,991 47.37 Hungary 904,941,000 "'47.75 Canada 265,494,000 50.59 Egypt 500,402,729 53.61 Greece 168,548,444 . 69.25 United Kingdom .... 3,494,000,000 74.83 Belgium 504,459,540 75.63 Italy 2,583,983,780 81.11 Netherlands 466,419,294 90.74 Sp-in .1,727,994,620 95.53 Argentina 509,604,444 128.85 Portugal ...., 670,221,374 . 143.82 Uruguay ...: 124,374,189 148.06 France 5,800,691,314 150.61 Honduras .-. 89,376,920 219.60 Australasia 1,183,055,000 203.90 A writer in the Philadelphia Record has the following to say concerning the health of girls working in department stores: "I have under mo about 150 girls sales-girls, wrappers, and clerks. All o them aro healthy looking, and yet I noticed that they got sick a tremendous lot. The other day I had occasion to go to their cloakroom) and there I saw a sort of roster neatly typewritten on one wall. 'Mondays it said, 'Miss Brown, Miss Smith, Miss Jones; Tuesdays, Miss Bell, Miss Willing, Mica Grey.' And so on. I wondered what It meant, and then all of a sudden the scheme dawned on me. I took a copy of it. With that copy I can now tell boforehand what girls will plead illness on any particular day of the week. A wonderful thing, wasn't it? But it Isn't in operation any longer. Tho goneral health of ray department Is much better than it was." The magnificent organization of trade and technical schools In Germany is three generations old. Our competitors are not content with what exists. They are Incessantly employed in perfect ing their practical equipment. How can wo ex pect to compete with a country where thousands o apprenticed clerks, the business directors and commercial travellers of the future, attend their continuation schools for two hours in the morn ing from 7 o'clock to 9? Then they go to their offices, and long before attaining their majority they ai2 proficient in at least a couple of living lan guages, have a thorough grasp of the whole theory and practice of foreign trade, and, above all, in their own special line have got qulto to the bottom of their business. Between fifteen and nineteen with us the stato knows next to nothing of its youth, though that is tho vory period In which per manent character and faculty aro shaped. The thousand boys who might have become technical experts or commercial travellers as-fluent and per suasive as their continental rivals In as many tongues, would bo worth a million of the ele mentary Instructed, who retain little more on tho average than a strong taste for cheap fiction. Our expenditure upon education is largely a colossal vaate, and our failure to provide a secondary sys tem such as can alone bring the seed to harvest is a national disaster and a national disgrace. Lon don Telegraph. Abuse of Judicial Power. Tersey Justice has been discredited by the Pat erson, court that sent two striking workmen to jail for talking with a non-union man, who ad diessed them flrst and walked along- the street with them. Because they admitted that they were doing picket duty the recorder convicted them of dis orderly conduct and sentenced them to thirty days' imprisonment. Such abuses of judicial power may be tolerated for & time, but not forever. Usurpation of authority has gone to lengths never dreamed of by the founders of this government, and the courts have assumed to exercise, powers that are denied to the makers of laws. The limita tions put upon personal liberty by officials like the Faterson recorder are in violation of the spirit of free government and indefensible from any point of view. Philadelphia North American. Sparks of Humor. Probably the man whose wife owns a pug dog has the sympathy of the dog. If a husband and wife are unable to go away for Lie summer they can start a quarrel at home and have a little outing. There Is one redeeming feature about a folding bed: even the most timid female doesn't have to look under it before retiring. A financial journal publishes rules for discov ering counterfeit bank notes. What the average man wants is a few simple rules for discovering the genuine article. Said an Irishman: "If a Yankee was cast awayon a desolate island he'd get up early the next morning and sell every inhabitant a map of the place."