n,wnift'mivpnwmfnumnmmfi't"i iijMgjf jim wini'miiw '" JjMBJilfff jriyy VW''t'' 'MHWyw'T1 "VpfM V . .' " 6 The Commoner. VOLUME 3, NUMBEltl fCURRGNT lrTSSTrrr.. ac V m- --t-- x AN INTERESTING CASE IS ABOUT TO COME to trial bcforo tho fedoral court In Boston. Referring to this caso, tho Chicago Tribune says that hoforo it is finished It may involvo tho In eldo history of tho Porto Rlcan campaign and mako rovoiatlons which will Interest tho whole country. Tho caso Is briefly this: Senor Mateo Tagado of Maynguez, tho richest planter and one of tho most Influential eitizons of Porto Rico, brings suit for libol against P. G. Badger & Co., publishers, of Boston, on account of cortaln statements in a book Issued by thorn purporting to lay baro Inner occrots of tho Porto Rlcan campaign and also making somo startling assertions about Senor Tngado. Tho book In question was written by Karl Stophon Ilorrman of Now York, one of Roosovclt's Rough Riders, and at ono time editor of tho Smart Set. Somo of tho mo3t brilliant law yors In Boston have been retained on both sides. Tho dofonso has summonod numerous witnesses, among thorn General Nolson A. Miles, General Thcodoro Schwann, ox-Secretary Alger, ox-Gov-ornor Charles II. Allon, and Governor Hunt of Porto Rico. Tho plaintiff also has summoned a long list of Americans and Porto RIcans. Tho caso has boon ponding over two years, but has only now boon reached, owing to tho crowded stato of tho doekot. Tho prominonco of tho prin cipals to tho suit and tho high station of most of tho witnosses invest tho caso with extraordinary lntorost, bosides which there is tho possibility of a docidod sensation, if, as is oxpocted, tho insido history of tho Porto Rlcan campaign becomes a featuro of tho testimony. "pIIE RECIPIENT OF A UNIQUE SENTENCE JL at tho hands of Judge Adams of the United Status clrcut court at St. Louis is John Fickler. ' Fickler was convicted of robbing a mail carrier. ' Tho penaltlos for tho offonses of which Fickler was shown to bo guilty aro ten years at hard labor for robbing tho mail by Intimidating tho carrior, Imprisonment for lifo at hard labor for robbing tho registered mail by placing tho lifo of tho carrier in jeopardy by tho use of dangerous weapons, and ton years' imprisonment at hard la bor for robbing tho mail by intimidating tho car rier. Judge Adams scntoncod Fickler to impris onment for lifo nnd then gavo him, two sentences of ton yoars each. Fickler Is in tho impossible position of being required to serve first a lifo sontenco and thon twonty years in addition thereto. THE VICAR OF CLERKENWELL, A PARISH in London, has announced that In future he . will havo his church darkened during services, , - hymns and prayers to bo thrown on a screen with a magic lantern. Thoro are many poor people in Dr. Parkor's congregation and ho says that ho has discovorod that a number of them remain away from service because thoy hesitato to compare their 'Sunday best" with tho elegant garments of well-to-do members. Dr. Parker thinks that when ills now plan is in operation many peoplo who have horotoforo absented thomsolves from service will nttond. Rovorend James S. Stone, rector of the St James Episcopal church In Chicago does not approve of Dr. Parkor's plan. Ono objection offered by Mr. Stone is that "the darkened church will put peoplo to sloop." Mr. Stono thinks that the remedy is to bo found In a cultivation among ly for0churPch tU hablt f drcssin& niodest- THERAPEUTIC PHOTOGRAPHY IS THE namo givon by a Paris physician to a nro cess for the examination of patients sufferine m halludnatlonB. , Th0 Paris correspondent of tho Now York American presents the Btory Tho name of tho doctor is Ilippolyto Boraduo! Ac cording to tho American correspondent Dr Bom duo holds near his subject a dry pia0 wrapped up in light papor-,proof paper. If the patient is suffering from melancholia it is impressed Srnm tho plato, showing as a whirlwind of lines The opposite emotion, of joy, appears upon tho Plato in flashes like Roentgen rays. Dr. Boradue claims cat 12 nCOrded graphically the purr of a ? i n? Kh0 co of a Pteeon, but his boliLf claim is that of his ability to take , photog?anh of persons resembling crayon portraimin "the hard lines, by light projected solely by tho con centration of thought by the subject. . tf1 J? A RESIDENT OF QUINCY, MASS., WILLIAM Hatch by namo, has invented what Jio says wnl prove to bo a substitute for coal. This ma terial is weed taken from the beaches, eel grass and rock, weed mixed with clay and subjected to a process, the secret of which is locked up within the Hatch breast. Mr. Hatch says that ho can produce this "coal" and make money on it by selling it for $2 a ton. TIIERE'IS DANGER OF THE Bl.EPHA'NT-BE-cbmlng extinct and tho authorities of the Congo Free Stato are taking measures to -prevent tho slaughter of these animals in their' domain. It is said that unless somo check Is placed upon tho slaughter of elephants, the species will be .corae extinct in Ihe Free State within eight or ten years. POPULAR SENTIMENT IN PEKIN IS VOICED in a memorial addressed to the dowager em press by tho censors asking her to retire in favor of the emperor. In this memorial it is stated that the retirement of tho dowager empress will be the first step in tho direction of reform and it is made plain that it is a very essential step. A MAN WHO INSISTS THAT HE IS A Sci entist has informed tho St. Louis Post-Dispatch that he has counted the hairs. of the human head. The results of these investigations aro stated as follows: "Blondes, for instance, have tho greatest number, and those with red hair the smallest In 'no caso is there much variation be tween tho sexes when the color is the same. Light-haired people have between 140,000 and 105,000 hairs. Brunettes avenige only about 105, 000 hairs. Red-haired people do not have much more than 0,000. This means that red hair is coarser than other shades, but it has the advant age of lasting longer." A PROFESSOR AT YALE, J.nL. WORTMAN, has been making investigation and an nounces that he has discovered that animal lifo originated in tho Arctic region rather than in the tropics. Professor Wortman spent" several months In Wyoming investigating the fossil monkeys and apes. He says that these apes lived in the eocene period and were Bimilar to the apes of Europo of that period. The professor explains: These facts are pregnant with meaning and can be explained only on the hypothesis that there was a common center from which these plants and animals were distributed. Considering further that the present continental masses were essen tially the same, in the eocene time as now and tho north polar region then enjoyed a sub-tropical climate, as Is abundantly proved by fossil plants WT t0,th conclusion that this common arctic" cirde?" 7 api)roximately within tho J-pHAT THE POWJBRS WILL ADOPT THE J. lead of tho United States and let China SShS n Uy alFosslble Is the VIw taken by Public Opinion with respect to the dispute over the payment of the Chinese indemnity It is said that "China owes the powers an indemnity of nearly eleven million taels, a tael be ng worth seventy-four cents in gold at the time the indem nity was agreed upon. It is now worth abot KCGnV? g0ld' and wl3lto5 The trltv ioPniWerS b0Ver a millIon d"ars. wmmKw1,01 says that the indemnity is a gold debt but it does not say anything about the rate of exchange, and unlna may be fxSused to? taking advantage of the existing rat fifTla more favorable to her than tho rate T prevailing atuE time the treaty was made." v"""b at uio HHHAT THE YEAR 1902 WAS A FORTUNATE a nS f7 presIdents kngs and emperors, not one death of a national ruler or president bavins been chronicled during that period, is an interest? lng fact pointed out by a witeV in the New York World. This writer says: "President Lou! bet of France was lucky enough last August to escape the bullet of an assassin while walking jin Rambouillet Forest. Tho nearly fatal illness- of Queen Wilhelmina of Holland last April, whon she wavered between life and death for days; the equally dangerous sickness of- King" Edward of England, which rendered it exceedingly donbf ful for a time as to whether or not he would -bo crowned, and the narrow escape of King Leopold of Belgium from assassination at Biarritz last April, all bear witness to-the fact that the lucky stars of European monarchs must have been fn tho ascendant during the past twelve months:" THE SAME AUTHORITY REMINDS US THJ? the year 1901 was.a most unfortunate onejijojr presidents and monarchs as the following list J? deaths will show: Queen Victoria of Great .Brit ain, died January 22, 1901. Milan, ex-king, of' SJ& via, died February 11, 1901. Ex-President Belija min Harrison, died March 13, 1901. EmpressV4p toria of Germany, died August 5, 1901. President """ William McKinley, uied September 14, 1,901. Ab-v durrahman Khan, amer of Afghanistan, died Oc tober 3, 1901. To this list may be added Li Hung Chang, the greatest man of his generation Wn .. the Chinese empire, who died November 7, 1901, in Pekin, and Count Bismarck, the "Man of Blood and Iron," of Germany, who died. May 30, 1901. Crispi, premier of Italy, and Hohenlohe, chancel lor of Germany, also died in that year of many fatalities 1901. " AN INTERESTING SIGHT WAS PRESENTED to pedestrians on tho streets of New York ' recently. The officers of the Hanover Natioflal bank were engaged in moving their offices from Wall and New streets to the new building at Nas sau and Pine. The bank clerks and messenger's, all carrying more than $60,0uu,000 in gold, green backs and securities, were linked together witha stout chain and marched through the streets 'with their precious burdens attended by a platoon of police. THE RACE QUESTION HAS BROKEN OUT IN a New York Sunday school, where a class of white girls have rebelled against the attendance . of a colored girl, the white children refusing -to sit with her. Here is an opportunity for Mr. ... Roosevelt to write a letter to some "prominent " ' citizen" of New York. Undoubtedly such a com munication would be read with great interest by 9. certain "prominent citizen" at Charleston, S: C. TT IS REPORTED THAT THE NUMBER OF 1 child tramps In England, most of them be ing children of tramps, has recently increased; and for the purpose of coping with the situation, the clerk of the Bridgeport board of guardians has drawn up a plan for the treatment of vagrants. The chief feature of the plan is presented by Pub lic Opinion in this way: "Every person leaving home for the purpose of obtaining work must ob tain from the police a certificate, stating his age. trade, whether single or married, number of chil- & n25Z?poBel r0Ut0, Upon Production of SS crtiIfcat? sucn Person and family shall- bo received into tramp wards and allowed to depart next morning without task. Any tramp present' ing himself or herself at any tramp ward or found by the police, shall be apprehended and unless he or she can prove that thoy are not w! ualftramP3' an are earning their Hving in a egitimate way, shall be liable to imprisonment ngonhVnumbernoff0r TtaS ' children X be removedCrLCtf Panmt the detained until alxuS years of a IfT and " pense of the state." agG' at the !x -pHE HEIRS OF WAGNER, THE GREAT (W AiKnffT' received durinS 1902 the sum i -$115,000 in royalties from wLn, Um ot "Lohengrin," which is said tn X S 0peras' nlar of Wagner's operas t0light SMOOO VT during the year. "Tannhe'gh? $& A NOVEL CONVENTION IS TO BE hwtti .t&ilKfa eTpranorK will " be tolnnttoJ? thIa" tno international earthquake i a i..'1'i.ii'M'wn JSfcwo