-TJjsrpyil tmmmfmrfJCflf ' Vi-WW"! ' f W ! H U ! 6 Ivi , ft 1 b Philadelphia Zoological park, 9; Central parte, Now York, 6; Denver city park, 5; Buffalo city park, 4; St. Louis city park, 4; Montebello kennels, Phila delphia, 4; herd of Frank Rockefeller, Belvidore, Kansas, 3; in parks at Pittsburg, Toledo, Roches tor, Omaha, San Francisco, Winnipeg and other places, 30; individuals or small numbers in the hands of various persons, 36; in Germany and othor foreign countries, 114:" THE atlompt to "breathe life into the corpse of the Fourteenth Amendment," according to tno Washington Post, deserves from southern statesmen nothing more than contemptous morri- ment. The Post declares that the proposed re-" duction of southern iepies?ntftion in congress is. an absurd controversy and in support of this posi tion quotes from the Boston Post as follows: "The republican club oi tlm city ol New York now comes forward with a spur to tho laggards in Congress who hesitate to cut down the representation of those southern states which prescribe educational qualifications for voters. They say that there was a plank in the republican platform promising to do this and they want immediate action. Tho Now York republicans point out exactly where tho cut is to bo made. From eleven of the south ern states nineteen members of congress are to be taken. This reduction is based upon tho number of illiterates, mainly colored persons of voting age, who cannot read and write, and, therefore, are disfranchised. The demand is made practi cally along the line3 of the bill introduced early in tho present session. Will this scheme ever bo carried out? No, indeed. If it were to be applied to tho South, it would have to be applied equally at the North; and that never would do. Right here in Massachusetts our suffrage laws disfran chise for illiteracy as many as are excluded from tho polls in Tennessee for the samo reason, half as many again as in Arkansas, twice as many as in Florida, and almost as many as in Louisiana and North Carolina. If it is wicked down there, it is wicked up here. And unless a republican con gress is ready to wipe out one or two Massachu setts congressmen, it will not venture to rob tho south of nineteen." t OF THE young men who entered the United . States army under the act of Feb. 2, 1901, nearly 100 have terminated their connection with the service. Referring to this fact, theArmy and Navy Journal says: "Some have been unable to pass their examination ' for promotion and have been dropped; some are the victims of court-martial, neglect to pay their debts and the duplica tion of pay accounts being tho chief offenses, and others have resigned to escape a court-martial. The foolish conduct of some of these disgraced officers would seem to justify the plea of insan ity which has been offered in an unusual .number of cases. Our army is, unfortunately, too familiar with the sifting process to which it must always bo subjected under our system, or want of system, in the selection of officera when a large number are appointed from civilians, many of whom have no proper appreciation of the responsibilities they assume in accepting a commission. The army Will bo all right when it is shaken down -and has rid itself by a healthy process of elimination of the men uniitted for military service. SEVERAL yeavs ago according to a writer in tho Now York Herald, Japan instituted an official search "for the secret of a powerful nation ality," and conceded that secret to the liberality of the United States patent office. The Herald writer explains: "A special commissioner in the person of Korekiyo Takahashi was sent from Tokio to Washington to make an official study of American conditions and to report upon them. Mr Takahashi called upon Dr. P. B. Pierce, at that time the ex aminer of designs in the United States Patent Of fice, and in the course of a conversation the doctor asked why it wasxthat Japan was so anxious to establish a patent office. 'For this reason said tho commissioner. "We have been asking in Japan, 'What has made the United States such a great nation in such a short time?' Wo have in vestigated, and wo have found that it was patents, and wo will have patents.' Senator Piatt, speaking ?4 a bin for tne reorganization of the patent office declared that the establishment of the patent office in 1836 "marked th? most impor- SwCh in .e history of our development-I think tho most important event inUho;hisory 'of our government from the- constitution t6 'thcivil The Commoneiv IT IS pointed out that the patent idea has been of slow growth, and tho Herald writer adds: "At tho time of tho colonies England'3 atti tude toward her dependencies wras to force upon them everything for consumption that possibly emild como from an English mill, while In every way discouraging and even forbidding tho manufac ture of anything that would, compete with tho English mills. England in thoso days had her patent laws and sought a tariff for the protection of her manufacturers, yet prior to the reign of Georgo III. English patents had been few. In 1800 only ninety-six patents were issued in Eng land and in 1850 only 523 grants were made. Massachusetts, of all the American colonies, had the .first patent office and .the first patent in its history wa3 granted to Samuel Winslow, covering ton years of a new process for making salt. If it is questioned that such a process, strictly speak ing, is an "invention," then the first invention of the colony was a scythe, perfected in 1646, with papers issuing to Joseph Jenks for fourteen years. In none of the other colonies aro records of pat ents issued prior to 1717. In the original draft of- the United States constitution there was no clause covering patents or copyrights, and in tho convention acts of August 18, 1787, Madison sug gested that provisions be made securing to auth ors tho benefits of their works for a limited time and to "encourage by premiums and provisions tho advancement of useful knowledge and discoveries." On Sept. 5, 1787, the copyright and patent clauses of the constitution wore submitted. The organic patent for the nation was passed on April 10, 1790. THE department of commerce and labor recently published a statement regarding the savings deposits of different countries. The figures given for Canada are as follows: "Number of de posits, 213,638 jv total deposits, $60,771,128; average deposits, $289.14; amount per inhabitant, $10.99." A Montreal reader of the New York Times says that these figures are very misleading, and adds: "In the first place no date is given, but as a mat ter of fact the above figures 3hould be dated Juno 30, 1903. Comparatively few Canadians deposit their money in the postoffice or government sav ings banks, and therefore the figures quoted do not "reveal different degrees of what might be termed the 'saving capacity' of the people of this country. The Canadian banking system is so thoroughly developed and understood that tho people place the great bulk of their savings in the chartered banks, as will be seen from the fol lowing figures, which are taken from the govern ment report of Oct. 31, 1904, and are therefore ab solutely correct. Savings deposits in chartered banks.... $315,323,000 Postoffice savings ban.:s 45,287,000 Government savings banks lOOOO Special savings banks, (under government supervision) 23,542,000 Total $400,786,000 THERE is besides the foregoing other savings in- stitutions whose deposits according to tho limes reader, aggregate more than $20,000,000. The Times informant concludes: "So it will be seen that the total of what may be called the legitimate sav S nnn SPof Canada amounts to not less than $420,000,000 instead of $60,000,000, as quoted by the Department of Commerce and Labor. The postoffice and government savings banks nro th only institutions that publish the number of the dX&i ' " ta, im to ascertain definitely the 'average deposit.' I can, however speak for one of the chartered banks, (tte Sov ereign Bank of Canada) of which I am generll manager and JJiis institution has over $5,000,000 of sav ngs deposits, divided among some 2400 0 de positors, or about $209 per head. If this is anv criterion, the savings depositors in all the char tered banks of Canada would exceed 1,000,000 in number I think I am on the safe side when I ?SL iat?e haveVeast WOO.OOO savings depos itors in Canada instead of 213.000 odd for which the department of commerce and labor gives us credit Taking only the figures above quoted 'a ldiact.lh, amount Per inhabitant" in Can ada is $72,87 instead of $10.99, the figures given by the department of commerce and labor." THE grandfather of President Roosevelt was tn7 , ?tt man t0 nav,Sate a steamboatbn the Ohio naues c. Allen in an interview with the St. VOLUME 4, NUMBER 51 Loui3 Globe-Democrat. Mr. Allen explains: "Capt. Roosevelt was a warm personal friend of Robert Fulton, tho Inventor of steam craft, and soon af ter Fulton's successful voyage on the Hudson ho conceived tho idea of launching such a vessel on tho western rivers. A good deal of doubt was ex pressed as to the practicability of the undertaking, but Capt. Roosevelt was enthusiastic, and along about 1810 made a personal survey of the Ohio and lower Mississippi to determine its feasibility be yond all peradventure. The result of his survey was entirely to his satisfaction, and, returning to Pittsburg, he began the construction of a steam boat from plan3 furnished him by Fulton and Livingstone. In the spring of 1811 the vessel was launched, and, accompanied by his wife, who had the true pioneer spirit and refused to be left be hind, the president's grandfather began his voy age down tho Ohio. He entered the Mississippi during the throes of the earthquake which devasted so much of southeastern Missouri, but weathered the tumult successfully and continued his trip to New Orleans, where he arrived a short time after, tho first man to build a steamboat west of tho Alleghanies and the first to navigate one on West ern waters. It is an interesting historical fact in itseltand doubly interesting for existing reasons." EVERYONE who has had the grippe, and very few have been free from that annoying ali ment, will be interested in a statement made by an "observing man" to the New Orleans Times Democrat. This "observing man" says: "There aro many persons in the world who look upon "the grip,' as we have come to call it, as a product of our particular brand of civilization, but they aro mistaken. True it has npt always been called 'tno grippe,' a term first used in this country by a French physician. I was reading some interesting facts about this curious ailment the other day, fur nished by W. L. Morgan, who addressed a Balti more paper on tho subject. According to what ho .says, grip is a disease known in very. ancient his tory by the ancient Romans, and moro recently the Italians, by the name influenza, meaning influ ence. In 1500 an article was written in London fully describing it as we have it now, and calling it influenza, but the French speaking people used the name of la grippe. The American people, fol lowing tho English, used the Italian name of in fluenza until 1842, when John Tyler was president of the United States and vetoed the bill for re newing the charter for the United States Bank, which was a pet scheme of the Whig party. A few days afterward the grip appeared, the first for Beveral years, and spread all over the continent and 500 miles east of the Atlantic ocean in a single day, President Tyler being one of its first victims, and thought to be dangerously ill. The. Whig pa pers declared that it was a judgment, sent from heaven to punish him for his sin of vetoing their bill. A French physician rIn Washington called it by the name he knew la grippe. From that timo it was called Tyler's grippe till about the year 1860, when the Tyler was dropped, but la grippe con tinued to be used. It is a disease with many pe culiarities; it belongs to all countries; it is never known where' it starts from; it may not be known in a country for many years and it will appear there and spread over an entire continent in a day, as in this country in 1842, and afflict millions of persons at the same time. I suppose, after all the people of ancient times, suffered very much as wo suffer now, and about the only change that has taken place is in treatment and the nomenclature of the medical profession." IT IS not yet half a century since Colonel Drake discovered petroleum near the waters of Oil creek, Titusville, Pa., but a writer in the New York American says tho total production of crude pe troleum from 1859' to 1902 forty-three years has been no kss than 1,165,280,727 barrels. Of this out put, Pennsylvania and New York contributed 53.9 per cent; Ohio, 24.3 per cent; West Virginia, 11 3 per cent; Indiana, 3.9 per cent; California, 3.6 per cent; Texas, 2.1 per cent, leaving 9 per cent to bo supplied by Kansas, Colorado, Louisiana, Illinois, Missouri, Indian Torritory, Wyoming, Michigan and Oklahoma. L. C. McCarn has disposed of his interest tn the Joplin (Mo.) Daily Globe and retires from tho editorship of that sterling democratic newsjmwer. Mr. McCarn has mado the Globe a force in demo cratic councils and nis .retirement is a distinct loss to the party. Ill health is tho cause of his action, and his newspaper and political friends will join with The Commoner in wishing him a speedy recovery.