.rvmw'ifTJIfM "WW lM!'eW' ' 6 The Commoner, VOLUME 3, NUMBER t. - jr sfj-'-nn" Re IP m ht r '-- IW M 141 CURB8NT Topics w T mmrnWft A REPORT RECENTLY MADE BY THE CHIEF of the bureau of insular affairs shows that tho immigration into tho Philippines from the United States has greatly fallen off and that tho hulk of the foreign commerce of tho Islands is carried under the British flag. Tho Washington correspondent for the New York World presents an oxtract from this report showing that during tho fiscal year ending October 31 the total num bor of arrivals in the Philippines was 24.13G as compared with 30,094 in 1902. Of this year's to tal only 10,925 were Americans, 5,000 fewer than during tho previous year. The American la borers who went to tho islands this year num bered 8,074, a decrease of 2,303. There was a slight increase in tho immigration of lawyers, clergymen, merchants, clerks and farmers. ' ' -nine por cent of tho trade was carried in British ships, as compared with 67 per cent last year. Tho Philippine exports to the United States amounted to $14,000,000, of which only 3 per cent came under the American flag, while 90 per cent was carried by British ships. ! !? WHAT IS DESCRIBED AS A GREAT DE vlco for l ving lite at sea has been patented by a former lieutenant commander of the United States navy. A dispatch to the Cincinnati En quirer from Cleveland, O., says that this device is so arranged that if the water flows through one compartment of a ship from one ca so or tho other it can instantly be confined by tho simple pressure of a button. The Enquirer dispatch explains: "All the captain will havo to do will be to press the button on the bridge and every door and bulkhead on tho boat will be as tight as a drum. In tho event of a puncture in the bow or any other part of the ship tne closing of the doors and bulk- ' heads by electrical arrangement may save the boat from destruction and tho lives of -those on board. W. B. Cowles, manager of the Long Arm System company, at Lake and Wason streets, a former lieutenant commander of the United States navy, is the patentee of this arrangement. The government has adopted the device and has en tered into a contract with the company to supply all new battleships, cruisers arid other government boats with them." CHARLES P. W. NEELY, CONVICTED IN Cuba of appropriating $45,375 of its postal funds, while acting as director of tho finances of the postofllce in Cuba, was defeated in his effort to recover tho sum of $25,000 cash bail which he .deposited. Neely was relieved of tho court pro ceedings by the act of amnesty passed by the Cu ban congress in May, 1902, whereby all Americans convicted of crime in Cuba during tlio occupancy of the island were pardoned. NeeTy filed applica tion in the United States court before Judge La combo petitioning for the return to him of tho $25,000 cash bail. Tho United States goyernment filed attachment proceedings against the sum. On November 23, Judge Lacorabe overruled Neely's .motion, saying: "It is difficult to understand by what process of reasoning a provision as plain as . this (the amnesty act) can be so construed as to transfer the title to property from the true owner to the thief who stole it." A CABLEGRAM FROM NEW YORK UNDER datto of November 24 and carried by. tho As sociated press says: "Foreign Secretary Lans downo has requested tho council of the foreign bondholders to supply further details of the Co . Jombian loan. Whon drawn up these will be forwarded to Ambassador Durand and presented . to Washington to urge tho rights of British bond holders in connection, with the republic of Pa nama. .Tho council says: 'When Panama de . clared its independence of Spain, it was stated in the solemn declaration of tho revolutionary junta 'that' the territory of the isthmus belonged to tho j, sta,te of Colombia, to ttie concresses whereof it J should, in due course, send its deputy.' The war i with Spain coptinuod fpr some time thereafter, , ' drid ' in 1822 .Colombia Issued an external loan of $1'0"000,000, tho greater part of which was to bo 'devoted to prosecuting .the. war o independence. In 1824 Colombia issued a further loan of $23, 1 ' 750,000 for the same pifrpose. J,t would be, sur-""- prising If Panama attempted to repudiate respon sibility for 'tlie money which assisted her to be come part of a free state Tho foregoing is the gist of a. iengthy statement which will bo for warded to tho British embassy at Washington.1 THE STATEMENT THAT SOME OF SENATOR Hanna's friends havo been in Wall street sounding the financial interests with reference to Mr. Hanna's candidacy for the presidency, is vouched for by the New York Times. The Times declares that it is asserted by a person in tho confidence of Senator Hanna that tho senator will be a candidate for the republican presidential nomination next year to succeed Mr. Roosevelt. The Times adds: "It is said to be the hope of tho Hanna leaders to enlist also the aid of Senator Quay, despite tho part the Pennsylvania senator played in the nomination of Mr. Roosevelt for vice president in 1900 against the wishes of Sena tor Hanna. Local politicians pointed out last night that should Senator Piatt commit himself to the support of Mr. Hanna, and should tho pres ident consequently seek the aid of Governor Odell, there would be a situation somewhat similar to that which preceded the factional fight between tho 'stalwarts' and 'half breeds' after the quarrel be tween President Garfield and Senator Conkling in 1,881. The Hanna leaders are said to believe that President Roosevelt is weak in some of the east ern states, and that he is losing strength in tho south because of the race issue. They concede him strength in the far west." ACCIDENT BULLETIN NO. 8 HAS BEEN Issued by the interstate commerce commis sion and covers the railroad accidents in. tho United 4 States for the t.iree months-ending on June 30, 1903, and also completing the statistics of accidents for the fiscal year. .The Railway Age, referring to this bulletin, says;. "As compared with, the preceding quarter tho accidents reported show a' most gratifying decrease, the number of .killed in' train ..accidents being 230 and the num ber Injured being 2,629,, as against 300, and 2,834, respectively, in the preceding quarter. Other kinds of accidents to employes and passengers, not the result of collision or derailment, bring the total number of casualties up to 12,305, as against 12,308 in tho preceding quarter, the total num ber of persons Jrilled, however, being 83 less than in the preceding quarter. Tho total number of employes killed in coupling and uncoupling dur ing the quarter was 62, being 14. less than in the preceding quarter. Tho total number of colli sions and derailments was 2,605 (1,406 collisions and 1,202 derailments), of which 201 collisions and 126 derailments affected passenger trains. The damage to cars, engines and roadways by these accidents amounted to $2,476,934." AS COMPARED WITH THE PRECEDING year, this bulletin disclosed a large increase in the number of casualties. There were 3,554 persons-killed and 49,977 injured during the year as against 2,819 hilled and 39,800 injured in the pre ceding year. The Railway Age says: "This large increase is partially explained by the large in crease in railroad traffic that has taken place dur ing the past year, and the fact that there were therefore a much larger number of men at risk. The number of men employed in train service on June 30, 1903, was 12 per cent greater than on June 30, 1902. There Is also a good explanation of the increase to be found in tho fact that the inter state commerce commission has been persistent in its insistence on full reports of all accidents from all railroads during tho past year, and as a con sequence accidents are much more fully reported at tho present time than they were a vear aeo and previous to that time." b ' THE .INTERESTING PROPHECY IS MADE byj the London .correspondent of the Chicago later-Ocean that within three months telegraphic communication without intermediate 'repeating stations Will be established for the first tiinVbe tween Now York tn,d London' and telegrams4 Wll be exchanged at; a sbeed of more; than four times the, previous capacity of any cable. The same correspondent makes, tho assertion that within a year a will b6 as feasible to .converse by'tele . Phone hereon pwYprk and London as, it' is at . prpsent between' Ne York. and Brbojdyn foV in- ' it.- I stance. How these interesting results are to hn accomplished the Inter-Ocean correspondent dow not -divulge, but says that when tho permission of tho inventors is obtained, tho secret will be re vealed. ADMIRERRS OF ROBERT BURNS WlLb be interested in the statement that the Auld Brig O' Ayr, which bridge Burns immortalized in a poem, is in danger of collapsing, n will bo re membered that in Burns' poem, the spirit of the Auld Brig when reviled by tho spirit of the new Brig, made tho remarkable prophecy: "I'll be a Brig when yore a shapeless cairn, said the Auld Brig to the new." A cablegram to the Chicago Tribune, under date of London, November 11, re ferring to the old structure, says: "Tho prophecy has turned out true now, twenty-five years after, . and the Auld Brig is tottering on its old founda . tions, how old it is difficult to say. Cut deep into the wall are the figures 1252. There are people - who say the date is mythical, but Architect James . Norris, who is an expert archaeologist and who is interesting himself in stirring up the burgh council to spend the $3,600 necessary to restore the Auld Brig, believes there is nothing improb able In, the date. The Ayr council is beset by one difficulty in the matter, and that is why should they spend ?3,500 of the public funds if they can get tho money required for nothing? It seems that about a quarter of a century ago a man named Templeton left $50,000 at interest, which at the death of his two sisters was to be devoted to rebuilding the Auld Brig. But the will was a heliograph, written on a small piece of paper, and other distant, relations took proceedings disputing the will. Now the Ayr council will have to as certain their legal status towards the money, but the' wheels of the law revolve slowly and mean while the Auld Brig may fail.' OFFICIALS IN ST. PETERSBURG HAVE AD mitted that the Russian policy leading to the occupation of Port Arthur and Manchuria was a mistaken one and- there is little prospect that tho results of that policy will compensate for tho vast expenditure of money and blood entailed. This statement is made on the authority of tho . London correspondent for the Philadelphia Public Ledger, who explains: "M. Witte, author of the policy, has been removed to another sphere, and Admiral Alexieff is charged with the duty of re pairing, as far as possible, the errors committed. The attempt to secure an ice-free port in the Pa cific is believed to have failed. It was hoped that Dalny would meet all requirements, but it was found that the southwestern winds caused such high seas that a huge breakwater was constructed, costing 17,000,000 roubles. Since the breakwater was built it has been found that the water in the . harbor freezes in winter. It became necessary therefore, to seek a new port. There is an ad mirable ice-free port at Masanpho, Korea, but the Japanese thwarted the Russian attempt to secure this." A RECORD-MAKING EXPERIMENT WAS Re cently carried to a successful conclusion in Brockley, Worcestershire, in England. The Lon don Mail tells the story in this way: "At 8:30 o'clock one morning Messrs. Taylor & Sons, or tho Sheaf House farm, Brockley, started to cut a field of wheat. As fast as the sheaves were cut they were carried to the granary, and there threshed and winnowed. These operations tooic six and a half minutes. Thence tho wheat was taken to a mill of J. H. Painton, and there exvaa and dressed in five and a half minutes. At tne adjacent bakehouse the flour was made into dougji and molded into cakes and loaves. Seven small loaves were taken from the oven at 9 o'clock thirty minutes from the time the wheat was " standing uncut. The larger loaves were finisneci in forty minutes. One was sent to the king anu 'others presented to Lady Nortnwicn auu w "Redesdale.1 A HUMOR HAS-BEEN CURRENT. FOR MANY years in Hungary, that a son, of the German ,' emperor is learning the Hungarian language witn o ,i,. t.i U At,c VftA'-mvntrnrffiTi throne ,v.on the death1 of Francis Joseph,, The Buda Peatn resppndent;for;tho'St.;L6uIs"G19be:!uemol- mrrAR f . ir ""