The Commoner. V 6 VOLUME E. NUMDER ?i 3rf- -i. ' ir " y -- -T CURB6NT H"" GOPICS M wHv5a ri. s- . iSc: 2IC g i'- - NEW YORK'S anti-tipping law took effect Sep tember 1. Senator Martin Saxe is the au thor of this law. A Now York correspondent for the Chicago Record-Herald says: "It has been estimated that la. New York $50,000,000 is given in tips annually. Probably half this sum is given in sums of from 10 cents up to the waiters in the cafes. The other half is used in bribery pure and simple, meaning bribery to influence trade, not to induce a man to do the work he is supposed tt get a salary for doing." SENATOR SAXE, referring to his .bill, says: "Do not think I am aiming at the servant girl who accepts a present of a bottle of perfume or a cake of soap from a grocer. My bill aims at higher game, such as railway officials who as sist in the robbery of their employers and the stockholders. The imprisonment of a few offi cials of this character will teach others a val uable lesson." It is further explained that the measure was really designee to reach those cases where the supply houses have found it necessary to fee purchasing agents of railroads or other corporations in order to sell their goods. THE real meaning of New York's anti-tipping law is explained In brief by the New York correspondent for the Chicago Record-Herald in this way. Here is what you can do and what you can't do since the anti-tipping law went into effect: You can tip anyone for good service. You can't tip anyone as a bribe. You can tip a waiter for bringing your din ner hot and without delay. You can't tip him to serve you a $1 dinner for 50 cents. You can tip a coachman for driving you fast. You can't tip him for paying you $1,000' of his employer's money for a 'horse worth $250. You are at perfect liberty to tip the butler in the home of your friend for being attentive to you. You can't tip the butler for buying goods from you for his master's table. You can tip a hotel maid for fresh sheets and pillow cases. You can't tip her for giving you soap to carry away in your grip. You can give a railroad purchasing agent a Christmas gift or any other gift if you choose. You can't tip him for ignoring other Didders and buying goods from you at the expense of the stockholders. In other words, a tip must he truly a tip, a gratuity, and not a bribe or a commission. THE Ellis Island authorities ar.e struggling with a weighty problem. The Providence Rhode Island Telegram says: "August Albert, who went abroad a short time ago, has just been pronounced ineligible for re-admission to the coun try because he is too old to come in as an alien and can not come in as a citizen, because, al though he took out first papers In Michigan, where he resided for thirty-two years, and voted, he did not, through an oversight, secure his final naturalization certificate. The decision of the Ellis Island wiseacres to exclude Mr. Albert raises the interesting question whether a man can be a citizen of one of the United States and not bo a United States citizen." T-HE monthly report of the government re ceipts and disbursements -for the month of August shows a large increase in customs re ceipts. The increase over August, 1904, being $3,763,608. There is, however, a deficit for the month amounting to $4,660,061. The receipts from Internal revenue sources also show an increase for the month of $779,791. The total receipts for the month are $47,490,432, and the expendi tures $52,150,493, which leaves a deficit for the month of $4,660,061. Last month the deficit was $13,855,663 and for August, 1904, the deficit was $0,343,212. The receipts from the several sources of revenue are given as follows: Customs, $26, 181,281; internal revenue, $19,556,476; miscella neous, ,$1;752,673. The civil and miscellaneous 'expenditures were a little over $1,000,000 in ex cess of those for August, 1904, and those on ac count of the war department were nearly $2, 000,000 less than for August last year. The navy shows a slight increase. AN INTERESTING plan for the solution of the problem of prison labor was suggested recently by Rev. George B. Wight, New Jersey's state commissioner of charities and correction. Mr. Wight said: "I wish that when a man o family is in prison the work that he does in an institution might go for the support of his fam ily." Commenting upon this statement, Public Opinion says: "The suggestion, which, if not ab solutely new, is new to the majority of those who will read of it, is receiving much favorable comment. Truly, the plan would do away with many difficulties. It would bring the value of prison work up to the market value; thus the labor unions would no longer have reason to dread 'cheap prison competition.' It would give the convict a sense of moral responsibility. It would relie.'o the state of the care of convicts' families. To try to work this plan out will be well worth while." IN CONNECTION with the peace negotiations at Portsmouth newspaper readers have read much concerning the Hankow railroad. The Lit erary Digest tells the story of the railroad in this way: "China, in 1898, granted a concession to the American-China Development compahy to construct an 800 mile trunk line railway from Hankow to Canton. The concession, which in volves coal mining rights and industrial fran chises, was to run for forty-five years, at the end of which period the property was to go to the Chinese government. The proposed railway is the southern extension of the -Belgian line from Peking to Hankow and forms part of a great transportation route running directly through the heart and commercial center of China. However, the company built only about thirty of the 800 miles, but surveyed 100 miles more. Only thirty miles had been built because of the unflagging opposition of the Chinese inhabitants." AMONG THE stockholders of the company is King Leopold of Belgium who, according to cable dispatches a few weeks ago when Mr. Mor gan was abroad, urged the latter not to accept the offer of the Chinese government. The Lit erary Digest says: "Mr. Morgan had recently visited the president at Oyster Bay for a con ference on the Hankow question, but no news as to the course that would be pursued was given out; but at a meeting of the stockholders of the American-China Development company on August 29 it was decided, with the consent and advice of President Roosevelt, to accept China's offer. It Is said that China is to pay $6,750,000 for the concession. Edwin H. Conger, former minister to China, opposed the sale, on the ground that the surrender of the concession would be a se rious blow to our interests in China, and that American prestige would suffer. But in a state ment from Oyster Bay it was said that it was the wisest plan which could be devised touch ing our national interests in the east, and that Mr. Morgan had adopted the only course 'which ho could take with due regard to the interests of the stockholders he represented.' Another reason for the sale is, in the words of General Charles A. Whittier, 'that the Chinese government has decided to force all American and European interests out of China, and that under these con ditions further development of the concession would be difficult and unprofitable, if not im possible.' " A TALKING postal card is a novelty described by M. H. R. d'Allemagne, In a recent num - her of La Nature, Paris. M. d'Allemagne says: "We present today the phonograph of the twen tieth century, an entirely new invention, and one that, is destined to revolutionize the industry. The phonopostal is an apparatus that registers and reproduces the human voice by means of a sheet of cardboard, which is in the form of a postal card. The idea of substituting a sheet of paper which may be sent as a letter, for the wax cyl inder of ordinary phonographs originated with . Jules Verne, but the scheme as worked out today camo from the artist, M. Armbruster, and was made possible by the experiments of MM , v, rotte, Bucherious and Tochow. "Tin- advantages of the phonopostal," continues M. d'Allemarae "are many. While one is touring, this apparatus occupying' the space of two or throe boxes of writing paper, may be put in the automobile or valise, and one is in a position to register on the .prepared cards the impressions of the journey Again, the explorer in ay receive news from home not only the routine news of the ordinary letter' but he may hear also the voices of bis corres pondents. This experience may bo renewed in definitely, as the card will reproduce ihe sounds any number of times. The card may be used to register the songs of different countries, and on the back of the card the customary photo graphic views may be printed. The postal, in fact, is prepared on the address side, and the mark traced by the point of the diaphragm is so hard that the postoffice stamp does, not affect it in the least. The address is written on the pre-pared-side without the slightest injury to the regis tered sentence." PUBLIC OPINION, from whose columns the above translation relating to the talking card was taken, describing the process in its own words, says: "The voice is thrown Into a littlo funnel which is placed in contact with the regis tering needle. The latter is a sapphire point which passes over a layer of a preparation known as srnorine, which has been previously spread over the paper. The chief merit of the inven tion is in having found a substance that could be easily spread over a sheet or paper, which possesses all of the advantages of wax. One o' the particular advantages of the sonorine is that it can stand the hard usage of the post. The sounds are inscribed by means or a spiral which commences at the edge of the card and proceeds toward the center, finally stopping outside of a ciicle about the size of a quarter. The number -of words that may be sent on each card is be tween soventy-fiv,e and eighty. The construction of the apparatus is very ingenious. First, it was necessary to mal i a machine that could be sold at a very low price. Then, the machines had to be regulated in such a way that the repro duction might be made with one which came from the factory months and years after the registra tion on the card was first made. This result was obtained by careful regulation of the speed or each machine. And last, the constructors had lb invent a very sensitive diaphragm, not only for registering, but also for reproduction. THE Subway Tavern, which was dedicated bv Bishop Potter twelve months ago with prayer and hymns will hereafter be conducted as an ordinary grog shop. Those who criticised tno Bishop for his part in this effort, as some caiieu it, to "mix whiskey and religion" freely express their gratification at the failure of the enterprise Referring to this affair the Literary Digebt .sa s. "There seem to be many causes which contnou ted to the defeat of Bishop Potter's scheme to es tablish a decent' and law-abiding saloon m ue slums of New York. 'It was impossible to to.iow God and chase the devil,' said the propnetoi m venting his indignation at the regulations "ii forbid him to cater to the low elements ot so cietv, or to sell drinks to any one after no n.ui 'liquored up' to the point of becoming &'m" and profitable.' Furthermore the proprietor ioi mi that the man who wants a drink, while in u act of quenching his thirst hates to bo 'rumVi by a delegation of W. C. T. U. women, or a p i of sociological students or- curious strangers wnu are taking in the sights in a 'Seeing New w automobile. Too much publicity, therefore, in -peu to 'crimp the Tavern's trade. When the novelty oi it had worn off. it became a deserted hole m m, ground. Bishop Potter, however, Is not down a He still believes that his 'idea is a good one. . is reported as saying that 'the, success or Ju" of q single institution which attempted to cuy out the idea does not detract from its merit THE BRITISH government recently Pb,ihl" jj a report compiled from memoranda i- nisned uy us diplomatic anu consumi i. tives, uses the .&." - . !.mhf-n giyfcjSfoMMbml-f." ijMfiUa