Newspaper Page Text
K
MAY 6, 190S
VHE SUNNY SOUTH
NINTH PAGE
| Tales of Infinite Variety for the Wise and Otherwise
Big Fortunes Lie in the Invention
& of Little Novelties
N modern Chicago a man
wjjo can prove that his
business is the invention
of novelties in the wide
sense of the term may es
tablish the conventional
“visible means of support’"
to the, satisfaction of any
court of record.
Inventing novelties to the
order of manufacturer,
jobber, or retailer has
been developing in recent
years until enough men
flpvete their time to it to rank it as a
business. Incidentally the whole field
c f promise in patented novelties is such
BS to invite the attention of thousands
of those who are of the disposition to
“havt idoBs,” if only as a side line. Some
of the most unexpected ideas concerning
gome of the simplest possibilities in the
novelty field have made fortunes for the
one who has availed himself of his in
spiration through the patent office.
Th> man who conceived the idea of a
little brass paper fastener which, made
of a doubled brass strip in “T” shape,
coul 1 be sold by the quart at a cost of
g. few cents, made a fortune for him-
ro’f and for his manufacturers. In the
sharpest possible contrast with this is
th» story of one of the most compli
cated and costly ventures in the type-
getting machine pntents.
This was the Paige typesetting ma
chine. which handled the newspaper typo
itself, setting it, justifying it, and after
ward distributing it. A first machine
was built more or loss crudely in order
f,. temonstrate its practicability, after
w!i:'h a comparfy was formed to manu
facture it. Practically the first machine,
b tit cost SI,000.000, having 15.000
I'!‘ ees in its composition, the descrip
tion filed with the patent office contain
ing 204 pages, with 160 of these rae-
chanical drawings, $5,000 having been
■p-'nt in preparing the case for the pat
en; office, and another $2,000,000 going
Into the manufacturers' scrap heap be-
f re the company decided to go out of
business altogether.
In the eye of the expert in patent fields,
the ideal conditions for a patent are,
first. that it shall be in universal de-
nun 1, even If It be something that shall
sell for I cent. Experience points to
the fact that in these days of the busy
penny, a novelty that must retail for as
much as 5 cents never becomes popular
In the widest sense of the term. Two
cents for a simple novelty that may be
manufactured for every school child at a
fraction of a penny each has alj the
suggestions of a modern gold mine to tile
patent attorney of experience.
Tn a practical way the majority of
sis h inventions are of metal, and arc die
struck, perhaps at the rate of scores in
a minute, with the stretching of the
metal to the last limit of economy. In
the manufacture of such novelties the
greatest cost is for the dies that shall
strike the article at a blow, for or-
di-. rily tho manufacturer of such an ar
ticle has made other similar die struck
articles and with only a change of dies
in a machine little other alteration is
necessary for tho production of some
thing entirely different.
Something distinctly whimsical and
novel, coming within marketable figures,
making it within the reach of anybody
to whom it will appear, is preferable to
something costing 25 to 50 cents and
more Household novelties of practical
use will stand a retail price of 25 cents,
but to exceed 5 cents as the limit on
the small novelty designed to amuse is
to make the thing not worth while un
less the invention be of striking interest.
There is scarcely a patent attorney or
a person interested in a patent of his
own who does not refer to the old re
turn ball of twenty-five years ago. and
repeat the story of the’ $150,000 which
the inventor made of it. The original toy
at the time was of a character to in
terest everybody in the household, from
grandfather to baby, while it was sim
plicity and cheapness to the point of
ideality. A ball of soft pine, attached
to an India rubber strip 2 feet long,
the whole costing about V* of a cent,
retailed for a nickel in those days, and
everybody in the household had to have
one, sooner or later.
In all the line of small Inventions, per
haps no novelty ever cost its exploiters
as much money for advertising, as did
the little mat a I hook made known to
everyone in the country who could road,
by that pioneer of catch linos, “See that
hump?” Tons of those minute bits of
wire were sold, and money made for all
concerned.
Not all of the physically small novel
ties belong strictly to that classification.
The metal "link belt” was one of those
small things which revolutionized for
mer methods of transmitting power. One
of its first noticeable applications was to
the chain bicycle when the modern wheel
buried the old high pattern for all time.
From the bicycle the chain has passed
to the automobile, where it U most fre
quently seen, but its field rtf usefulness
extends to nearly every condition where
power is transmitted to geared me
chanisms. This inventor was a Chicago
man, and he made $500,000 out of it.
Chicago's piacc among the cities turn
ing out inventions of universal use is still
further attested in the fact that the
modern mechanisms for lifting transoms
and securing them from closing and
against any possible depredator from the
outsidlc, originated there, as did the
first spring mattress and the first folding
bed.
To got a patent on the average small
novelty which is in a class not requiring
tlie limit of investigation into tho pat
ent office records will cost the average
Inventor about $65, and lie will have to
wait from two to three months for the
completion of the necessary routine.
Some of this routine involves a good
deal of red tape, but the patent attorney
appreciates some of the difficulties in his
own investigations, whether his client
does or not.
For example, the fact that no such
thing as the inventor lias completed can
bo found on the market does not indicate
that no such thing was ever patented.
Mere lack of energy in the inventor has
buried scores of otherwise valuable pro
ductions in the scrap piles of the patent
office, where many of them are merely
obstructing creations blocking more or
less the latter ideas of other men on
the same line.
Some of the novelties that have their
origin In Chicago and elsewhere nowa
days are the result of invitations from
manufacturers of novelty goods who have
heed for a newer novelty or who havs
seen an opening in the Industrial world
for some appliance that is needed and
will make a hit. Some of these manu
facturers, having plants designed for this
especial work, in this way develop a
continued trade for their manufacture.
Rut an unexpected small novelty that
has all of the attractiveness of the
whimsical or the phenomenal, costing at
the rate of ten for a cent and retailing
at I or 2 cents each, is a good deal better
than a sure thing on the Derby—Chicago
Tribune.
Passing of the
Bonny Blonde
Elephant Besieges Human Quarry
APT AIN MEDLICOTT, of
the Royal Irish rifles, and
Mr. Ballard, late of Lums-
den’s horse, accompanied
by several natives, set out
from Embabane for the el
ephant bush to tlie east
of Mapungwanais. They
succeeded in getting right
into the middle of a troop
and fired, upon which the
elephants made off, with
trees snapping and bushes
cracking, The hunters fol
low,-i led by Umhlope, the tracker, and
at Iasi confronted a huge elephant.
The tusker trumpeted "charge" and as
the rifles rang out—there was only his
l>lp oiiest to aim at, for he raised aloft
his trunk—he came at full speed across
the clearing, a red-mouthed, glaring, tusk
ed. reaming, active mammoth.
-Mr. Ballard made a rapid flank move
ment to the right, his objective was the
thorn tree; lie and the.elephant arrived
ther together. Down came the tree in
front of the elephant. Ballard's gun was
Hung In the middle of tlie clearing, and
boughs and thorns pinned the hunter to
the ground. The elephant swerved like
k skater doing the outside edge.
Ctnhlope, the tracker, did not wait.
M'lth a yell to Captain Medllcott to “Run,
boss!' he made a franctic leap for the
flg trees which his trained eye had lo
cated as the best harbor ol refuge. Then
the elephant charged Captain Medlicott,
who saw 3 feet in front of him a hole
bt the ground.
DIVES INTO THE HOLE.
He didn’t wait to investigate, but with
tli giffty of a rabbit and tlie thunder
°f tlie elephantine charge in his ears he
dived feet first down the aperture. His
Sun, which he had held aloft, crossed the
hole aid remained outside, almost dislo
cating his arm with the jerk. For a mo
ment ho was so dazed that he didn’t
know where he was, but a few second
sufficed to reassure him.
He had landed in one of the old mealie
Pits of a disused kraal, those circular ex
cavations about 5 feet deep and 8 feet
in din meter in which natives empty their
Stain through the little hole, sufficient for
a,i adult to pass, that connects with the
surface.
Thinking of Mr. Ballard, the captain
crept quietly up to the hole and listened.
No, no sound. He raised himself cau
tiously and pushed his head through the
orifice. The sight that met his eyes froze
his blood. The elephant stood right over
him, both wicked eyes on the watch,
and as he ducked his head a long, ner
vous, sinuous trunk followed him into the
pit—a terrible death to be dragged from
the hole like a trout from the stream,
and crushed to a pulp under tlie huge
pedal extremities of the mammoth.
He began dodging the trunk—under it,
past it, behind it, around tlie edge of
tlie pit, into tlie center, now crushed
against tlie walls, and, missing it by a
hair, round and round and round, until
it almost seemed best to put an end to
all by one final, desperate, savage on
slaught on the thing that pursued him.
Umhlope watched a strange scene. The
elephant, with a scream of triumph,
withdrew his trunk and waved aloft a
remnant of human clothing—a khaki coat.
The captain hud lost his coat. Casting
it on the ground tlie huge animal danced
with rage on this outer shell of the hu
man form, and, having pounded it into
the now dusty earth, he resumed liis
search.
The next event, after a prolonged un
derground search, whs the abstractions blondes being confined almost wholly to
of a shirt, which his lordship tore into tlie country. Professor Virchow, the
shreds and cast to tlie four winds of ; greatest of all modern anthropologists,
heaven. This was soon followed by a | who died a few years ago, became deeply
pair of trousers, and these, after being I interested in this matter, and with the
for a moment or two used to flick the flies help of the German government examined
off his aristocratic back and loins, were i over 6.000.000 German school children,
ripped to pieces, and followed in the wake I When he summarized this data hS~ found
EVERAL months ago, when
the report of the in- j
vestigation Into the status
of the lower classes of
Great Britain was made
public, revealing the alarm- j
ing fact that the submerged
tenth of the great English ■
centers of London, Liver
pool, Manchester, Birming
ham, Glasgow and Edin
burgh were a sad lot of de
generates, a great deal of
publicity was given to that
part of the report dealing with the theory
that blondes are disappearing in the large
cities, where the brunette tend to survive
at the expense of their lighter compiex-
ioned fellows.
The fact of this triumph of brunettes
over blondi s had been known to anthro
pologists for thirty-five years, as had also
tlie still more Interesting fact that people
of round heads and short statue are also
disappearing from the cities, the tendency
being, as Lapouge, the great French In
vestigator, puts it, toward the formation
of "a foreordained city type," the charac
teristics of which will he tall stature.
Ior g heads and dark hair, eyes and skin.
That there has been produced a distinc
tive human type as a result of the over
crowding of citifs is regarded by scien
tists as one of the most important of
modern discoveries. In ills work entitled
"The Races of Europe,” Professor \V. Z.
Ripley calls attention to the fact that the
tiiodein large city is a thing of quite re
cent development the worl dover. We
are accustomed in this country to regard
the growth and development of such cen
ters as New York, Philadelphia, Chicago,
St. T/ouis, San Francisco, etc., as a phe
nomenon strictly American.
This is a mistake. In tlie days of
Henry VIII London was a mere over
grown hamlet of mud huts with a few
buildings, such as the towe.", Bucking
ham palace, Westminster, etc., of stone.
Paris was then little larger than Charles
ton, S. C.; Berlin was a villAge, while
the still elder cities of Rome and Con
stantinople were more like overgrown vil
lages than they were like modern cities.
Ripley shows that Berlin has in the
last twenty-live years added as many
new residents as Chicago, twice as many
inhabitants as Philadelphia, and has in
addition outgrown New York. Since
1875 Hamburg lias gained twice as many
people as Boston; Leipzig has distanced
St. Louis, while Cologne, which in 1880,
was smaller than Buffalo, Cleveland or
Pittsburg, is now larger than all three.
During the last ten years Magdeburg
has grown faster than Providence, R. I.;
Dusseldorf has outgrown St. Paul; Stock
holm has doubled in population; Copen
hagen has increased in population two
and a half times; Christiania has trebled
in population within the past generation,
Rome Increased from 184,000 in 1860 to
450.000 In 1894; Vienna has increased
in (population three times over in the
last ten years, while from 1881 to 1891
Paris absorbed four-fifths of the total
increase in population of France.
It was not until some twenty or twen
ty-live years ago that men of science
discovered that along with the growth
of those enormous centers the dwellers
therein were undergoing a change, so
that we may confidently expect that
within the next twenty years the cities
will present a special type of humanity
as different from the country dwellers
as Swedes are different from Italians.
Mayr, a German scientist, was the first
to drop unexpectedly upon this fact, al
though, as Ripley states, the discovery
had ben foreshadowed as early as 1865
by Dr. Baxter, of the United States
army. Dr. Baxter was connected with
the surgeon general’s office and during
the civil war took occasion to measure
and register over 1.000,000 soldiers and
recruits for the union army. He had a
wide experience in hospitals and in the
field, and in the book which the govern
ment published for him at the close of
the civil war, he observes that during the
struggle between the states "soldiers of
the brunette type opposed a greater re
sistance to disease and offered more hope
of recovery from Injuries In the field than
those of the blonde type.”
Dr. BeddOe, an English anthropologist,
made a nearly similar observation about
the same time. He took a census of the
school children of Bristol, and in his
report on tlie same, said that the dark
haired, dark-skinned, dark-eyed children
of that city were more tenacious of lit©
than the blondes, and that, in his opin
ion, the brunette type possessed a dis
tinct superiority over the blonde in the
severe competition of urban life.
Later Mayr took a census of 760.000
school children in Germany and was
astonished to find a striking predominance
of long-headed brunettes in the cities, the
of the shirt, and the hunt was resumed.
GOES TO SEEK HELP.
Next time it will be tlie Katiteni him
self, thought Umhlope, when at that mo
ment he heard a groan, and looking to
his right he saw a slight movement in
the fallen thorn tree branches. So tlie
other inulungu was not dead, after all,
but only stunned. He must get help,
otherwise, should one of them survive,
he would have to account for his inac
tion. He did not hesitate, but slid quiet
ly down that part of tlie stem out of
sight of the lord in possession, crept si
lently into the jungle and made all haste
to tlie nearest kraal.
When he got back witli help Mr. Bal
lard was rescued from the bush, where
lie lay seriously injured, and the next
move was toward the mealie pit. Calls
to “Come out” brought no response.
Then two adventurous warriors de
scended and soon a human shape, with
nothing European about it but the boots,
was passed to the surface. Caked from
head to ankle with red clay and congeal
ed with perspiration, no one would have
identified in the inert form tlie agile fig
ure that three hours previously, like Me-
pliistoplieles rind Ills trap door, had de
scended to the depths below.
Monte Cristo Dungeons
a Gruesome “Reality
(From The Milwaukee Evening Wiscon
sin.)
R. JENNER gives a de
scription of the castle made
famous by Alexander Du
mas in liis novel of "Mon
te Christo.’’
"Who has not read the
‘Count of Monte Christo’
and formed an opinion as
to its possibilities? I had
my doubts regarding Us
truthfulness, for the ter
rible tale seems to appear
exaggerated and impossi
ble, but I am now con
vinced that Dumas has intended to place
before us a fairly accurate picture of tlie
grewsome prison of bygone days.
"During my travels in south France,
while stopping at Marseilles, I had an
opportunity to join a small party on a
steamer plying between the city and a
group of islands In the Mediterranean soa
► belonging to France. The smallest or
this group, a solid rock, not more than a
quarter of a mile in .circumference, ris
ing almost upright out of the water and
accessible only on one side by steps hewn
into the rock, is known as the I’le
d’lf.
“On this rock is built the celebrated
prison or castle which Dumas has im
mortalized in his ’Monte Christo.’
"The keep or dungeon was constructed
in 1529 by King Francis I to imprison
his captives after the victorious battles
with his adversary, the duke of Bourbon,
and subsequently used for centuries by
the later kings as a state prison. It was
known at that time as she ’Bastile of the
South.'
WAS LIKE A FORTRESS.
"The outside walls are 15 feet thick.
In the middle is a small open court suf
ficient to give light to the entrance of
fourteen encircling cells, which are di
vided by partition walls 10 feet thick,
and can be entered only by one small
opening from the inner court.
"Directly opposite the entrance to the
court Js the cell which was occupied by
Edmund Dantes, made famous by Alex
ander Dumas as the hero—the ’Count of
Monte Christo.' Dantes and the Abbe
Faria, who was sentenced by order of
the pope as a conspirator, each passed
sixteen years of their lives in those
cells.
“The suffering of these and other un
happy prisoners who were confined here
must have been horrible. The cells lack
air and ligiht. The walls, celling and
floor are of solid stone, and escape was
utterly impossible, it being a veritable
sepulcher.
"In going through the prison one feels
that from behind these walls you hear
the cry of suffering—the last breath and
rattle of those who died in despair.
“All of tlie other cells are labeled with
tho names of the most prominent pris
oners wiho had been incarcerated thero-
ln. Among these were:
“Beernardot, a rich trader, who had
been arrested on suspicion of having de
signs against Cardinal Richelieu. He re
solved to die of starvation and for eleven
days refused to eat or drink. With a
piece of charcoal he wrote on the wail
the torture which he had endured. He
died on the twelfth day.
"John Paul, a sailor, for slapping his
commander, died in 1779, after thirty-
one years of captivity.
"Marquise De Lavalette. minister of
finance under Louis VIII. for disloyalty
to the king.
"Tho brothers Serres. for assisting in
the escape of Chevalier Niozelles, who
was condemned to death by Louis XIV
for refusing to uncover his head or bend
his knees while in tlie presence of
his king.
"Albert Campo, for having! published
the secret of a prison which he had dis
covered.
"Paul and Louis Martel. Imprisoned for
life on suspicion of murder.
"Boissow, a religious fanatic, who
made an attempt upon the life of a Pro
testant nobleman.
"iLajolats, for an attempt to assassi
nate Consul Napoleon before he became
eptperor.
“Prince Casimir, brother of Ladislas
VII, king of Poland, imprisoned by Na
poleon I on having betrayed the French
and serving the Spanish.
“Louis Phillipe D’Orleans. father ot
King Louis Philippe, for siding with tlie
revolutionists in 1793.
"Mirabeau, for general insubordination
dueling and publinMnig inflammatory
writings against the royalists.
"Chevalier De Ballesteros, consul from
Spain at Bayonne, imprisoned by order
of Napoleon I for opposing and interfer
ing with the introduction of the Na
poleonic law codes.
IMPRISONED WITHOUT BAIL.
"This castle w’as crowded witli political
prisoners sentenced during and imme
diately before the revolution of 1789.
when it was possible for the leaders to
order the arrest and imprisonment of
any citizen without trial and upon pure
suspicion or ‘trumped up’ charges.
“Napoleon I. during his early reign,
sentenced many of his opposers to this
isolated dungeon.
“In 1853 over 400 persons, principally
political agitators, were imprisoned here
for an attempted plot to overthrow the
government, and as late as 1871, during
the commune. 500 were massed together
in this limited space, sentenced as par
ticipants in the revolt against the gov
ernment.
“Since France has become a repub
lic new prisons have been erected
throughout the land and the dungeon on
the I’le d’lf is now deserted, but its
dark and grewsome history of the past
can never be blotted out.
“I left It with an indelible impression
after having been conducted through the
empty prison cells.”
MimiiMNMHNNHHHnnnnnnitMnnnniM
The
Union Savings Bank:
S PIONEER IN ATLANTA OF •
s BANKING BY MAIL
a Pay* 4^5 Interest on Deposits. Compounded January and July. •
* Every Man, Woman and Child Should Save Something. "
ONE DOLLAR STARTS AN ACQOUNT. ■
UNION SAYINGS BANK,
a
■
»
■
» Write ter information.
■•■•I
ATLANTA, GEORGIA, m
that in twenty-five out of thirty-three
German cities brunettes were in an over
whelming majority, the city of Metz, in
Alsace-Lorraine, alone having a prepon
derance of blandes.
Tlie work of Virchow in Germany was
taken up in Italy by Professor Livi. Pro
fessor Livl reasoned that inasmuch as the
southern Italians were almost wholly
brunette, it would be more reasonable to
expec t to find blondes in the cities, where
one is generally certain to find foreign
ers and people of mixed blood, than in
the country, where the possibility of
blonde outsiders settling was nil and the
pure brunette type of southern Italy re
mained pure and unmlxed. Greatly to his
surprise, after completing a most thor
ough examination of the people of thirty-
two south Italian provinces, he discover
ed that, quite to the contrary, the country
contained more blondes than the cities.
Of late years Ripley examined 500
students in the Boston institute of Tech
nology and found 9 per cent of pure bru
nettes among those students of country
birth and 15 per cent among those born
in cities.
What is still more curious is the fact
that the case seems to be very much
against the blondes any way one ap
proaches the subject. Professor Morseili
shows that in Europe the blondes furnish
the greater per cent of suicides and that
! more suicides take place in blonde Ger-
I many in a year than in any other quarter
of Europe. In Great Britain one finds
the brunette types mostly among tlie
Welsh, Cornish. Scotch highlanders and
Irish, among whom suicide is extremely
rare, while among the blonde English it
is common. Ripley accounts for tills dis
appearance of the blonde type by refer
ring ills readers to the testimony of nat
ural history.
De Candolle, one of the pioneer natural
ists. was so much impressed by the vital
ity and vigor of black, dark-hued and
brilliantly colored animals and birds over
white and light-colored types that he gave
It as his opinion that “pigmentation is an
Index of force,” and this dictum remains
to be successfully gainsaid.
It is claimed that the faculties and
senses of brunettes, as well as of Bark and
full-colored animals, is much more acute
than that of blondes and white animals,
.| thus enabling them to avoid dangers
12 which their less fortunate brethren would
; not notice.
TRAILERS.
The chase continued through Manchu
ria.
“At last,” exclaimed the breathless Jap,
"we have caught up with the Russians!”
"No; we have just caught up with their
names,” replied the commanding officer.
"The Russians are still 5 miles ahead.”
AS COMPARED.
Mumm—Cheer up, old man, and don’t
be so melancholy. You remind me of
Jonah.
Glumm-Remind, you of Jonah?
Mumm—That’s what I said. He was
down in the mouth, you know.
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Do you have an offensive dls-
sherge from the nose f AB r D** n eye#
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