KSssww - 9 The Commoner i -; 7 MAY 2.9, 19 0 3.', r Rome cablegram-to tlio Chicago Tribune sayn that "until the last few years Italy was the only ' .country In Europe showing an excess of males over females. The fact that females are now lu excess Is attributed to emigration. The census of those knowing how to read and write is not en couraging In 1872- the average was 31.2 per cent. In 1877 the law for compulsory education -was put into effect, and yet the census just com pleted .shows that only 48.5 per cent of the Ital ians are able to read and write. Newspapers la ment the difference between the results and the large sums spent for education and advise b. stricter application of the law. THE SUPERINTENDENT OF THE STEPHEN son county, Illinois, poor farm, James Eells by name,, says that after a careful investigation 'lie has concluded that paupers are longer lived .than other people. In a conversation with a rep resentative of the Chicago Tribune, Mr. Eolls said that he has in his charge thirty-four people whoso ages aggregate 2,387 years. The ages of one party of seven people footed GOO years, ine average be ing a fraction over 88 years. Another party num bered seven, and their ages aggregated 527 years, the average being 75. There is still another par ty of from eighteen to twenty persons, whose ages average between 60 and 70 years, and .the average of the whole bunch is over 70 yearsi IT IS ALSO STATED BY THE TRIBUNE writer1 that Superintendent Keyes of the Kane county, Illinois, poor farm, has a largo contingent of old people. Some of them are so old that it Is impossible to fix their age to .a certainty. Some of them move about over the premises, a few being lielpless. There is one col ored woman who Mr. Keyes says i3 at least 125 years of age. tano Is an inveterate talker and singer, was born a slave, and corved different masters in Dixie. She talks continually of plan tation days, imagines that she is in a cotton field harvesting this great staple of the south land. (From her disconnected talks one is able to take p the threads of some of the most interesting jepochs of ante-war days. She is tractable and gives less trouble than many others of lighter color. ; -pHAT THE HEART OF THE LUMBER BELT JL in the United States has moved westward is '&n. interesting fact presented by a writer in -the Review of Reviews. This writer says that at the beginning of the last century, almost the entire wood supply came from the then un touched forests 6t the Penobscot river region of Maine. As the woodsmen cut deep Into the he:.rt of the wood the industry -was forced to find other fields from which to draw its supply, and the vir gin forests of thd south and of the states border ing on the great lakes were cut itf1j..Although ithese regions are by no means depRted today, the Pacific coast is rapidly becoming tho"lioart of he lumber trade. And what wonder, for in the three states of California, Oregon and Washing ton there is at least one-third of the entire sup ply of standing timber in the United States. In gures it amounts to more than 600,000,000,000 feet of uncut wood. The forest reserves and na tional parks set apart by the United States gov ernment within the limits of these three states aggregate an area of 32,428 squaro miles, or more than 22 per cent of the total wooded area of the states. In the state of Oregon alone, where a careful examination has been made, the national -census officials have estimated the standing tim ber on these reservations at 55,000,000,000 feet, or one-fourth of the state's total suply. if tf WHILE IT IS NOT UNCOMMON FOR SO called conscience money to be returned to &he United States government, the Washington correspondent of the Des Moines Register -and Leader says that when a man has once secured a pension, it is the rarest thing in the world to find him willing to forego it It is thus that Pension Commissioner Ware regards the follow ing letter of sufilcient unique interest to give it to the public At the pension department at Washington the following letter has been re ceived: "Philadelphia, Pa., May 3, 1903. To tha .Commissioner of Pensions. Dear Sir: I would ask you to please remove my name from the .list of applicants for a pension by request. I am "working at my trade now and making a living. X am Improving right along and do ot wish to be a burden to the government, and don't think I will ever bo in need of a pension. Respectfully, John L. Rlegler." AN INTERESTING EXPERIMENT IS BEING mado by a Marlon, Ind., merchant, A. F. Norton by name. The Marion correspondent of the Chicago Tribuno says that Mr. Norton, who is conducting a number of grocery stores "as ho believes Christ would conduct them' has de cided to establish a department storo in a build ing that Ibng has beon used by the Presbyterians as a church. The old church was sold and. tho congregation Is now erecting a structuro a few blocks away. Mr. Norton, it is said, will rent tho old church. Ho will hang a boll in tha steeple and when the store opens In the morning will have It proclaimed over tho city. Tho building will be cleared of all its present fur nishings and the different departments will be established on tho first and second floors. Tho proprietor will hold to his rule that .ho will not try to get rich, and will pay his employes every evening. Ho will not employ as many clerks a3 other merchants, as ho dpes not believe In keep ing an eyo on people to prevent shoplifting. Ho holds that If a man Is trusted he will not betray his trust, and for this reason only a few clerkst will bo necessary. Tho goods will bo placed on counters and tho customers will have the priv ilege' of waiting on themselves and then go to tho cashier and pay for whatever articles thoy may wish to carry away. sv so THE METHODS EMPLOYED BY HELEN Keller in tho preparation of her book en titled "Tho Story of My Life," is told by a writer in the San Francisco Chronlclo in this way: First of all, Miss Keller puts down her ideas "in Braille," as tho blind express It; that is to say, in tho system of "points" raised on paper by means of a stylus and slate devised to aid tho blind; these "points" being read afterward by "passing the sensitive fingers over thom. When all of this Braille work has been completed Miss Kel ler goes to her typewriter and uses these notes as a guide to the rewriting of the story. As soon as a page of matter is typewritten it is, so to speak, lost to Miss Kellor, who has to depend upon her faithful teacher, Miss Sullivan, to re peat it to her by spelling out each sentence by, means of the hands. It is a tedious task, espe cially as some of the pages have to be read again and again, with changes here and there, before Miss Keller is satisfied. Th6n when the proofs .are sent to her, all this slow procees of spelling word- after word has to be gone through once more, so that each word that Helen Keller writes goes through her flngors at least five times. It will be a satisfaction to everybody to know that the book promises to bo ono of tho most suc cessful biographical writings of the year, and Miss Keller is likely to reap substantial rewards for the extraordinary ability and patienco which she has shown in her work, SOME ONE HAS BEEN SEARCHING IN THE! writings of old and new authors and he has been rewarded by the discovery of somo peculiar mistakes. Tho result of these investi gations is told in the "Children's Visitor," in this way: In "ivanhoe" Sir Walter Scott makes a kpight of Richard I. converse with a contempo rary of William tho Conqueror, who was Rich ard's -grandfather. The new moon appears In the western, sky an? sets from tho moment it be comes visible; but in "The Children of Gibeon" Walter Besantcaused a new moon to rise in tho east at 2 o'clock in tho morning. Trollope makes one of his characters, Andy Scott, come whistling up tho street with a plgar In his mouth. Tho man must have had a wonderful grip in his lips to smoke while whistling. In "Don Quixote" Sancho continues to rido on his donkey after having lamented the animal's death. In. "Tho Reign of Law," by James Lane Allen, ono of tho characters refers to a book which was not pub lished for ten years after the time tho reference was said to have been mado. Hamlin Garland wrote in 189G "The Rose of Butcher's Coolly," and one of the characters in the novel is given three different names. Jacob RIIs tells in "The Making of an American" that while a young reporter, la giving tho particulars of a river's overflow, ho described a- stone floating on the waste of wa ters. But that was not more wonderful than tho case of our old friend, Robinson Crusoe, who, after taking off his clothes to swim to the wreck, took the precaution to fill his pockets full of biscuits. Neither was it more surprising than the discovery by a Paris reporter, who found in the Seine "the nude corpse of a man with ten sous in his waistcoat pocket" THAT IT REQUIRES CONSIDERABLE MON ey to maintain a strenuous president Is a fact presented "by the Washington correspondent for tho Chicago American. This correspondent presents a fow items that Mr. Roosevelt has ex pended for luxuries and travel as follows: Spe cial trains, service, etc., $250,000; revamping and changing Whlto house, $475,445; privato tennis court, $2,000; new oxecutivo office, $65,196; in crease in Whlto houso running expenses, $25,000; now fittings and furnlturo for tho Mayflower, pres ident's yacht, $100,000; keeping craft in commis sion two months last year, $15,105; repairs last year, $23,297.33; estimated cost of repairs thia year, $30,000. Thus It will bo scon that Roose velt has cost $986,043.33 in extras to the people Binco ho has been in office. GENERAL NELSON A. MILES HAS WRIT ton to tho Army and Navy Journal a letter in which tho general says that ho went to tho l'hllipplncfi not as a tourist, but in an official capacity, and that tho instructions addressed to him as lieutenant gcnoral commanding tho army, camo from tho president in which General Mllco was directed to glvo special attention to "tho in struction, discipline and supplies of tho army." Referring to his much discussed official report of tho Philippines, General Miles says that "no ono can havo a more sacred regard for tho honor cf tho army than myself;" and referring to tho cruelties in the Philippines, General Miles says: "It Is not idlo to assumo that campaigning in tho Philippines has conditions that warrant resort to medieval cruolty and a departure from tho honorable method of conducting warfare and that such departure as havo existed should bo over looked and condoned. It is moat gratifying that tho serious offenses havo not been committed by tho soldiers unless they wero under the direct orders of certain officers who were responsible. Soldiers havo withheld fire when ordered to shoot prisoners, protested against acta of cruolty, and written to relatives at homo urging them to Uko action to put a stop to thoso crimes. It will over be ono of tho glories of tho army that such deeds, committed by whatever authority, aro ab horrent to tho American soldier. Tho officer who aro responsible for using tho cruel Macca bobces do not by any means constitute tho Amer ican army, and there must be an unmistakable lino drawn between the great body of honorable and faithful officers and .brave soldiers whpse rec ords havo been commendable and those of what ever station whose acts havo received and should receive the earnest condemnation of all honor ablo men." ANT ENGLISH EXPERT OFFERS THE IN formation that the supply of coal yet re maining to bo mined in tho United Kingdom amounts to 80,684,000,000 tons, which at tho pres ent rate of mining, would last 370 years and that therefore Great Britain is likely to be a competi tor of tho United States in tho world's coal market for some time. This expert gives tho to tal output of coal In the v.orld in 1900 as 767. 636,204 tons, of which Great Britain produced 229,000,000 tons, or 30 per cent, and tho United States 245,000,000 tons, leaving a balance of about 35 per cent for tho rest of the world. THE FIRST FULL BLOODED INDI ANTO- EN- ' list in tho navy is doing duty on tho Min neapolis. Referring to this Indian, the New York Tribune says: "Ho Is known in the Crow tribe, of which ho is a member, as Great White bear, and is descended "from the Indian chief of that name. Whltebear, as he is called at the navy yard, enlisted as a landsman. He was edu cated at the Carlisle Indian school, and has a brother who formerly served In tho United States cavalry. 'I havo been hero two days, and the officer has placed me In charge of a squad said the Indian Jackie, with great pride, when asked how be liked his experience so far. 'I felt when I. left Carlisle, that I would liko to do something for my country, and tho lifo of a sailor appealed to me. So 1 enlisted. They make a good Ameri can of you at Carlisle. I believe the discipline and training of tho navy will be a good thing for Carlisle graduates, and I hope other Indians will follow my example Whltebear is twenty-threo years old, and is a fine specimen of, .physical man hood." THE LARGEST INDIVIDUAL LIFE INSUR ance policyholder in tho world, excepting the King of England, is Rodman Wanamaker, son of John Wanamaker. Young Wanamaker recently -obtained a policy In the sum of $1,600,000, the premium on this policy alone being $30,000 a year. He already carried policies aggregating $1,000,000 and his policies now amount to $2,000,000. f M ""V 'Jt rsr thrrf .-' ' v. II " - .V s'