THE MORNING OKEGONLtfN, HTJESDAY, OCTOBER "8t" Entered at tho Potomce at Portland. Oregon, as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid In advance) Sally, with Sunday, per month ..?0.83 Dally, Sunday excepted, per year ".50 Dally, with Sunday, per year..... Sunday, per year 2.00 The Weekly, per year ; l-JO The "Weekly, 3 months 50 To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday excepted.l3o Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico 10 to 14-page paper... ........... ..le JOito 30-page paper 2e Z2I to 44.-page paper ......3c Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication la The Oregoalan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the name of any individual. Letters relating to adver tising, eubscrlpUon. or to any business matter should be addressed simply. "The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It 'without solid. t&Uon. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Eastern Business Office. 41. 44. 43. 47, 4S. 49 Tribune Building, New York City: 310-11-12 Tribune Building. Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency, Eastern representative. For sale In San Francisco by L. E. Lee. Pal fice Hotel news etand; Goldsmith Bros., 23G Butter street; F. XV. Pitts. 100S Market street; J. JC Cooper Co.. 74C Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear, Ferry news etand; Frank Scott. 80 Ellis street, and N. Wheatley. 813 Mission street. For sale in Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 058 South Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, 05 Eouth Spring street. For sale in Kansas City, Mo., by Rlcksccker Cigar Co.. Ninth and Walnut streets. For cale in Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 517 Dear&orn street; Charles MacDonald. 03 Washington street, and the Auditorium Annex oews stand. For tale in Minneapolis by M. J. Kavanagh. ;C0 South Third street. For eale in Omaha by Barkalow Eros.. 1012 Farnnm street; Megeath Stationery Co., 130S Farnam street; McLaughlin Bros., 210 S. 14th street. For sale In Ogdea by XV. G. Kind. 114 21th etreet; James H. Crockwell. 242 25th street; F. It. Godard ana (J. II. Myers. For sale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co., ii West Second South street. For sale In Washington. D. C by the Ebbett House news stand. - For cale in Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrick. 900-012 Seventeenth street: Louthac & Jackson Book Sc. Stationery Co.. Fifteenth end Lawrence streets: J. S. Lowe, 1520 bevtn teeth street, and Julius Black. TOD AT S WEATHER Threatening. with possibly showers during the afternoon or even ing; winds becoming youtherly. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 01 dg.; minimum temperature. 44 deg. ; no precipitation. r- POItTIiAXD, THURSDAY, OCTOBERS. IT IS AO EXIGMA. The Chicago Inter Ocean predicts that , Tammany will win in New York, large ly because the business classes believe it mo"re profitable, or at least more gainful, to have the town kept "wide open," or at any rate fewest possible limitations Upon the human disposition to order one's life as one pleases, with out interference of law. It is more than .probable, indeed, that Tammany will '.recover control of the metropolis; and thls will be one chief basis of Its suc cess. In every city there are large classes "of business men and .owners of prop , erty who are opposed to any restrictive regime drawing the line only at actual crime. Canvass of the City of New Tork shows that the German voters, ."Who were very largely for Low two I'years ago, are now against him almost 'solidly, because his administration has 'not been "liberal"" in dealing with their t customs and habits. They want hon est government, but they will not have t their concert halls closed up, nor en forcement of Sunday laws. Other multitudes object to various re strictions that check them continually 'With reminders of authority and power, 'in matters that they hold concern merely the ordering of their own con duct Small shopkeepers also are up In arms against restraints that are put upon their old ways of doing their busi ness, and cry out against vexatious regulations. There are not enougn of the vicious classes in any city to control it; but "when these classes are reinforced by the great number who will not have the law put them In strait jackets for ac tions or habits which they hold to be harmless, or at most concern them selves mainly, you will see an uprising that is very likely to sweep "reform" away. The outlook in New Tork, there lore, is for a very heavy majority against the Low administration. It is unfortunate, for this administration has corrected or checked many real evils. For one thing the cltj' is now In better sanitary condition than ever be fore in its history- Needless to say, however, that multitudes who have been forced to "clean up" will vote against the Low administration for that very reason. The owner and the tenant get on the same ground here. The reg ulations are expensive to the one and annoying to the other. A congested population, at home In the filthy reek, Is content with it; and reduction of the death rate through sanitary measures Is no. argument to them. It Is easy to make men believe that their "liberty" is curtailed by regula tions that compel them to conform to unaccustomed requirements. People like to do as they please, especially when they believe that it is "their own business." Even the effort to maintain wholesome regulations is often baffled by this disposition. It is the case in New Tork, at the present time. ITS Tins 3IATX SUCCESSFUL. It must have been mere inadvertence that caused the press dispatches last night to refer to Professor Langley's contrivance for celestial navigation as a flying machine. A mechanic might construct a flying machine, and aero nauts experiment with dirigible bal loons or airships; but the work of the real man of science should never be characterized in any less dignified man ner than as an aerodrome. "Whatever its fate, the Langley article is an aero drome. The difference between a flying ma chine and an aerodrome will appear when we contemplate the marks which distinguish Mr. Langley from the ordi nary run of machine-makers. He is, so his biography Informs us, an astron omer and physicist; secretary of the Smithsonian Institution; D. L. C, Ox ford; D. SC., Cambridge; LL. D., Har vard, Princeton; Ph. D., Stevens Insti tute of Technology; member Royal So ciety of London, National Academy of Sciences; author "Experiments in Aero dynamics," "Internal Work of the Wind," etc, etc., etc. It is Impossible, therefore, to speak disrespectfully of Professor Dr. Lang ley or his aerodrome. And in the main It performed Its work at Wldewater, Virginia, yesterday, well. Upon the ini tial momentum imparted to it by the starter, It traveled unfalteringly some 100 yards. The five empty conical floats performed their functions well, so that In five minutes after the experiment the aerodrome was floating in calm dignity on the water. Dr. Langley professes himself well pleased with the experi ment, and will soon launch the aero drome for another trip. It seems unnecessary and perhapa discourteous to advert to a single un toward Incident In connection with the experiment. The aerodrome fell pre cipitately to earth, smashing Itself Into a thousand pieces and unceremoniously ducking the dignified person of Dr. Langley in the water. The wings re fused to flap, the aerodrome refused to mount, fly or soar. The wreck was towed away by the expectant but disap pointed tugboats. Dr. Langley was fished out and put ort a steamer, where he changed his clothes. Only the true man of science could be depended upon to acquit himself creditably In such an extremity. Where the ordinary mortal would have been overcome with chagrin or the sense of humor. Dr. Langley was serene. He graciously submitted to an Interview, In which he pledged renewed confidence In the aerodrome. "I like flyln' well enough," said Darius Green, "but it ain't such a thunderin' sight o fun when you come to light," Darius undoubtedly told the truth; but he lacked the mettle of the true man of science, with long biography, endless titles and Impenetrable nerve. Dr. Langley should make his next experi ment on solid ground. He would not get wet and the story would not be dry. HOIV CIVIL SERVICE HAMPERS. Every energetic administrator Is apt to feel Just as Mayor Williams, of Port land, felt a few weeks ago when vigor ous projects of municipal improvement were embarrassed by the difficulty put in the way by the civil service rules. A curious confirmation of this view Is af forded by a recent utterance made by Carter Harrison, Mayor of Chicago, which is utilized against him by his op ponents. One of the October magazines con tained a spirited denunciation of Chi cago's city administration and affairs, including a severe condemnation of Mayor Harrison, who Is opposed by most if not all the Chicago newspapers. But when these papers saw that their accusations against their town and Its Mayor had been taken seriously and were employed by outsiders to Injure the estimation of the city abroad, they showed that the magazine's conclusions were erroneous. The Chicago Post, in particular, which Is the organ of the select circles, proceeded to give Mayor Harrison a fine character for honesty and efficiency. When, therefore. Mayor Harrison said that the City Hall was full of graft ers, and that every department of the city government had. grafters in it. whom he would put out if he had the authority, but whom he could not put out under the civil service rules because he could not formulate the necessary accusations In writing and submit evi dence to prove them when he said this It Is fair to assume that he sincerely meant a good deal of what he said, and that he was not merely, as has been charged, voicing the natural chagrin of spoilsmen at being restrained of their will In all the appointive ofilces under the city government. It is Idle to assert that restlessness under civil service rules springs always from advocates and manipulators of the spoils system. We have had this same protest against the aid given Incompe tent fixtures In the departments at Washington from nearly every Secre tary that has gone in there with the desire of getting honest work out of the superannuated and idle clerks who encumber the payrolls and get in the way of the few who do the work. The man of business training knows-that he can't get results out of a force of men If the men know that however worth less they are he can't remove them. When the president of a bank, who has won success for his institution because he has had free course to hire men he can use and discharge men he can't use, becomes Secretary of the Treasury, for example, and flnds out that the Treas ury Department is full of inefficient clerks whom he can't replace with good ones, it is no wonder he rebels at civil service restrictions. This plain situation is sought to be explained away by the plea that it is easy for the administrator to weed out Incompetents under civil service rules by simply preferring charges against them. But this is an answer in theory only, and to no practical purpose. It Is simply out of the question to get the evidence to correct clerks of Incompe tence or In municipal government to prove license or police officers of graft ing. These offenses are not committed in such a way that the law can get at them. A Captain of Police, or a Deputy Sheriff, or a District Attorney, receives a $100 or $1000 bill by mall in an en velope. He doesn't know who sent it, and only supposes In the most general way It comes from a contractor or a gambler or a go-between with vile re sorts. In such cases as this it is out of the question for an executive to prefer charges of corruption against persons whom he cannot prove guilty of a sin gle act of misconduct. If they are pro tected by civil service rules, they are Safe. If they are not, the honest and efficient executive will let them go at once. No merchant would consent to file written charges against a clerk he had found to be associating with loose characters. He merely finds out that he doesn't need the young man, spares the clerk's feelings and saves himself a libel suit. The civil service system, as it is loosely and Inaccurately called, seems to be necessary In order to pro tect Federal and municipal affairs from falling into hopeless confusion through Inexperienced officials put In by vic torious party machines; but it Is far from an unmixed good. It restrains the purification work of honest officials as much as it does the corrupting work of the dishonest. It tends to create an office-holding class, and in a sense it violates the theory of our popular gov- eminent, under which the control and administration of all public matters ro. vert at stated Intervals to the people. The office upon which the Incumbent is given a life tenure by civil service j rules does not revert to the people at j all. It is questionable bow desirable It is for our bright young men to be drawn into the vortex of political life; bub it is also questionable whether our public life is greatly the gainer from any system which drives the ambitious and capable Into private pursuits. The country will never be saved by filling Congress and the police force up with nincompoops. The way to get able ad ministrators is not to tie their hands. They will go some place where they can get results. Joseph Chamberlain is easily the ablest man In English political life to day. He is the ablest debater, the ablest man of business; he Is a man of strong will and bulldog tenacity of pur pose. He knows what he wants; he, refuses to temporize like Balfour; he knows that tariff retaliation is as much an attack on free trade as the preferen tial tariff is. In his eight years' ad ministration of the Colonial Office he has Identified himself more than any other English statesman with the cause of Imperial consolidation and Imperial growth and power. He boldly tells his countrymen that a preference to the food products of the colonies Is right in principle and in imperial policy. He is determined to win with colors flying; he will Ink before he will surrender to compromise. This kind of a man is likely to be popular with the English middle classes, and whether he wins or loses Chamberlain is sure to be the most conspicuous if not the most influ ential figure in Engliah politics. He starts out with this advantage, viz.: He knows exactly what he wants; he does not equivocate; he Js .not afraid. Such a man is dangerously likely to win In the long' run. The Liberal party contains no man who compares with Chamberlain in political astuteness, courage and tenacity. Sir William Harcourt is too old; Lord Rosebery is a fine public speaker, but he Is a dis credited leader. It looks today as if Balfour means to make a covert fight for Chamberlain by throwing up his hat for retaliation while he merely touches his hat to. the preferential policy, for which Chamberlain fights in the open, if Chamberlain lives ten years longer he is likely to augment rather than di minish his high fame. ' THE TOWER OP THE SEX ATE. Representative McCall, of Massachu setts, contributes to the current num ber of the Atlantic Monthly an admira ble article in exposition of the power of the United States Senate, setting forth Its constitutional endowments and those powers which it has appropriated by illegitimate encroachment upon the prerogatives of the House. The text of the article is the remarkable speech made by Representative Cannon on the 4th of March last. Senator Tillman, of South Carolina, had announced that unless an ancient claim of his state should be fastened upon one of the great appropriation bills necessary to run the Government, he would talk until the end of the session and defeat the measure. In this .event it would be necessary . to have an extra session. Under the rules of the Senate it was clearly in the power of Senator Tillman; under the pretense of debate, forcibly to stop the legislative machine. Mr. Can non in his memorable denunciation of this action of Senator Tillman declared with emphasis that "the Senate should change its rules, or that another body, backed up by the people, will compel that change, else this body, close to the people, shall become a mere tender, a mere bender of the pregnant hinges of the knee, to submit to what any one member of another body may demand of this body as a price for legislation." Two years ago the river and harbor bill, after passing' both houses, had reached Its last stage in the report of the conference committee within less than twenty hours of the final adjourn ment of Congress. Senator Carter, of Montana, who had made an unsuccess ful attempt to attach to the bill an Irri gation scheme Involving many millions of dollars, determined to defeat the bill, and by talking against time for nearly twenty hours forced the supporters of the river and harbor bill td Withdraw It from consideration to save a little time for the transaction of other urgent pub lic business. A great measure may be perfected in the House, may also receive the approval of a majority of the Sen ate, and then the measure can be over thrown unless consent is given to en graft upon It the pet scheme of some Senator to which the great majority of both bodies may be opposed. Mr. Mc Call sums up the present situation as follows: "Unless a change of the Sen ate rule is made, as applied to new mat ters sought to be put upon bills which have received the approval of both houses, the House of Representatives will be compelled to submit to the de mands of Individual Senators and ac cept the principle of government by unanimous consent instead of bv major ities, or see necessary legislation fail of passage. The Senate, not satisfied with the great powers conferred unon it bv th Constitution, has directly encroached upon the prerogatives of the House. One of the provisions of the Federal Constitution declares that that instru ment should never be amended so as to take away the equal representation of the states In the Senate without the consent of every state, which is obvi ously equivalent to providing that the kmstltutlon, in that particular, should never be amended at all. This orlelnal inequality was a clear violation of the democratic principle, but by the admis sion of many new and small states It is possible today to select fifteen states having together in round numbers fiv millions of people, or about two-thirds of the population of the State of Now Tork. The Senatorial representatives or tnose five millions would lack only single vote of the number necessary to aeieat some great treaty which the Sen ators of the Other seventy millions might support States having less than one-sixtn or the population choose majority of the entire Senate whii more than five-sixths of the people of tne country are represented bv a minor lty In that body. The State of Nevada under the last census had less than 43, 000 people. If New Tork was given' i proportional representation In the Sen ate. It would have some 350 Senators. Mr. McCall fairly inaulres "What eon ceivable thing is there in the State of Nevada to entitle one individual there to 100 times as much weight in govern lng the country as Is possessed by : man residing In New Tork. Psnnsvi vanla or Illinois, or indeed to a particle greater weight?" He finds in the ter rible battle against the Imposition o the silver standard unon our financial system a notable illustration that this system of Inequality has serious prac tical results. In this memorable batti the Senators from states containing mining camps but comparatively few people almost held the balance of power. and, having an equal voice with that of the populous commercial states o; the Union, struggled so desperately t continue the fatal policy of the Gov ernment purchase of silver that but for the firmness of President Cleveland supported by the great body of the Re publican party, the commercial Interests of the people and the financial honor of the Nation would have been sacrificed. The Constitution provides that all bills for raising revenue shall originate the House, reserving to the Senate the right to propose or concur with amend ments as on other bills. But thl3 power of the purse has been practically de stroyed by the Senate's interpretation of this clause of the Constitution as permitting such a "thing as amendment by substitution. It was such an abuse of -the right of amendment as to de stroy the power to originate taxation laws when the Senate, in 1S72, substi tuted for a House bill relating to a tax On coffee a general revision of the tariff. Garfield held that this action of the Senate was an abuse, and that its ac tion should be confined substantially to the subjects In the House bill. Webster always held that it was purely a ques tion of privilege, and that the decision of It belonged to the House. Benton, Seward, Wilson, Sumner and Hoar have also declared in the Senate for a broad construction of the prerogative of the House. Two years ago the House sent to the Senate a bill which removed nearly all the vexatious stamp taxes which the war had Imposed upon all the agencies of trade. The Senate, un der the guise of its power to amend, struck out all after the enacting clause of the House bill and substituted a measure of its own. This Senate bill extended the amount of the reduction of the tax on beer and tobacco by about $12,000,000 and retained many of the stamp taxes which the House bill had removed, and especially the stamp tax on checks. The House repeal was hi favor or the greater number and the Senate repeal was In favor of the few. The Senate has been the citadel of spe cial Interests in the consideration of tariff legislation during the last twenty years. There Is a growing tendency to in crease the great powers of the Senate, which Is seen In the conferring of spe cial official functions upon the Sena tors individually. Of the five commis sioners to negotiate a treaty with Spain in 189S, three were Senators. Two of the three American members of the Alaskan Boundary Commission are Senators. There is also a growing tendency to pass taxation laws by treaty. Revenue bills must originate in the House. How, then, can they orig inate byy treaty? Mr. McCall's conclu sion Is that the only practical hope of even-a partial remedy lies in the zeal ous insistence by the House upon its constitutional prerogatives. "The pres ervation of our Institutions in their purity requires that each branch of the political department of the Government shall be the guardian of Its own pow ers, and, without encroachment upon any other branch, shall stand firmly for Its own prerogatives.'' Oberlln I. Carter, once a Captain of Engineers In the Army of the United States, who graduated at the head of his class at West Point Military Acad emy, wlli be released from Fort Leav enworth prison, where he has been serving his sentence for embezzlement while In charge of Government work at Savannah. Carter was convicted about six years ago. Stupid stuff Is printed to the effect that "Carter's social standing has not been impaired, either In Wash Ington, New Tork or Savannah. He will be cordially welcomed back to so ciety after his release from Fort Leav enworth." This Is stupid stuff, because every Intelligent man knows that an Army officer who disgraces his uniform by cowardice In action or breach of financial trust Is' socially dead among Army officers beyond hope of rehabili tation. Social standards of business honor may be feeble In many places; the "leaders In society" at Newport, for example, have Included some per sons of both sexes that were disreputa ble, but an officer who disgraces the uniform of the Army of the United States, who has been sent to the peni tentiary af ter a careful trial by his mil itary peers for robbing his trust, can never be restored to fellowship In the Army, and when an Army officer has disgraced his uniform no "society lead ers" can rehabilitate him. A man may behave badly In civil life; he may suf fer Imprisonment for crime and by emi gration to a new country he may live It down, but an Army officer who has been convicted of cowardice in action or of robbing his financial trust leaves all hope behind when he is driven from the Army. New Tork at the last session of her Legislature closed the season for killing water fowl on January 1. Heretofore the custom has been to allow shooting till May 1. Texas has stopped the ship ment of wild fowls out of her-borders. All the states of the Union now have such a law except Mississippi and Ken tucky. New Tork has also passed a law In line with the statute of Massa chusetts, which cuts off the sale of woodcock and grouse for a term 'of years. Every New England State save Rhode Island has such a provision, and adds quail to the list. A hunter can kill and eat these birds at the proper season and give them to his friends, but cannot expose them for sale. Every nonresident has to pay a license to shoot game in Maine, New Hampshire, Virginia, New Brunswick, Quebec and Ontario. The big-game hunter In Maine must also hire a guide who Is licensed by the state. Idaho, Utah, Colorado, Tennessee and North CaroHna have adopted license laws for big-game hunters, and Virginia re quires a license for any shooting what ever, and has established a warden service. The states that lead In effect ive enforcement of game laws are Wis consin, Minnesota and Michigan, in the West, and New Jersey, in the East, Outside of Virginia- ew Southern States have game-warden service yet. In thirty-three states the enforcement of game laws is entrusted .to game war dens, commissions or other state of ficers; In Florida, South Dakota, Georgia and Nevada, to county war dens. Russia's armed forces In the Far East are now reported to number 250,000 men, distributed thus: Fifty thousand, with eighteen batteries of artillery, in Manchuria proper; 110,000 on the lines of communication between Port Arthur and the Amur River, and 90,000 In gar rison at Port Arthur and Talien Wan. Thirty forts have been erected at Port Arthur and fifty more are being built. Eighty warships are at Tallen Wan, forty of which are kept constantly un der steam. The Milwaukee Sentinel has an Inter view with Michael Walsh, a former president of the-Typographlcal Union of that city, saying that the form of oath prescribed by the international union for its members will be changed. He declares that It was never Intended to make allegiance to the union para mount to that due to the church or the Government. Tbeatricnl Xote. Philadelphia North .American. Hecedlty Is a marked trait. Lillian Rus sell's daughter has begun getting mar ried. Possibly Thickheaded. Atchison Globe. It is said of an Atchison girl ythat she is thin enough to make a good book mark. THE DECLINE OF DRINKING. New Tork Sun. Itw rarely happens that the periodical announcement that intemperance is in creasing among women comes from a playwright. That is the chief novelty about the recent atterances cf Bronson Howard. As has been said many times, anybody who comes in contact with society wo men of the day knows that indulgence in liquor has not increased among them, but declined. They have learned that their health and beauty are to be kept only through sanitary living. Indulgence In liquor is one of the first things that doctors nowadays prohibit. Indeed, most hyslclans of the younger school are so rabid and uncompromising on that point that thp effect of their ad vice is sometimes lost on patients. I can always tell at a glance." said one of the physicians who have manyJJew York women of social Importance unaer meir care, tne man or me wumu.ii takes too much alcohol. It produces fat In nine cases out of ten, and fat of a kind that is immediately recognizable. Bloat is the x'Ulgar name for It. and that de scribes it accurately enough. "Any woman who drinks to excess is going to show the first effects in that way. And tho stout woman 13 now entirely out of the mode. "Athletics are bo common to the younger generation of women that they have the advantage in retaining their figures over those who cannot indulge in these sports. So tho others struggle by prudence la eating and drinking to keep as attractive in figure as their friends. "They know that massago alono will not do this, nor will exercise by itself keep them down. They must give up fat tening things, and women willing to do without bread, sweets and starches are equal to abstaining from liquor. Cock tills, even though they be rather dry, are the most fattening drink a woman can take, and next to that comes sweet cham pagne. "Formerly women, and for that matter men, never know what caused their trou bles until it was too late. But in recent years there has been such a spread of publicity on this subject that-the effects of alcohol are now well understood. "Certain things are going to happen If people Indulge In too much drink, and nowadays they know it Formerly they .dli not. "The general decrease in drinking dur ing the past few years has had its effect chiefly on the women, of the kind that Mr. Howard spoke ot-because they, more than any others, are compelled to guard against the results that liquor causes." The testimony of one expert at the head of an Institute for the treatment of the liquor habit, that the number of his wo men patients had Increased during recent years, has no bearing on the habits of women of fashion. As a matter of fact, there have been, during the past ten years, only three cases in which women that could rightly be placed among New York's smart 6et have been criticised for drinking too much, whether Justly or un justly It was not In every case possible to tell. One of them went to a regular hospital for that kind of treatment, and as she remained there the time necessary for a cure it was supposed she was taking one. In former years there was more talk of this kind heard about women well known In society, but for at least a decade only three names have been mentioned In city gossip. "The Increase In drinking," said the head of the Institute visited by the Sun reporter, "seems to be the result in a measure, of our prosperity, and the re suiting growth of the drinking on all sides. People go to expensive restaurants now and order wine usually -champagne who would not have thought of drinking such a thine a decade aso. They have more money now, and spend some of It In that way. "Again, women find that they can order drinks In public without causing criticism It was an unusual thing ten years ago to see two women lunching together Order a cocktail. Now they think nothing of It, nor does anybody who sees them. "Unlike the women of the set Mr. How ard criticised, these women have not al ways been familiar with the effects of wine and drinking In general. They are much more likely to go beyond the limit than women who hnvo always seen wine about them, have had it on their tables, whether they drink it or not, and are familiar with the harm it will do them. Such women are much less likely to go to extremes than those who come to look upon drinking as the accompaniment of every diversion and entertainment." That men drink less in New York clubs than they did some years ago Is a reality that has made intoxicated men in clubs rather a rarity. There are. of course, men In every club who take too much to drink; but they are exceptional. One reason for this change Is the fact that men now frequent clubs in the larg est numbers before dinner. The most pop ular hour in the clubs Is between 5 and 6:30, as most men are going afterward to dinner, and they must restrain themselves. During recent years only one man has been discussed In New York from his habit ots becoming Intoxicated in public. He became so notorious on that account that he was no longer invited out, and before his death was a confirmed drunk ard. His conduct practically compelled his young wife to retire from society, so great was the disgust he caused. Yet if drunk enness had become so common, he would never have been ostracised in this way. Dinners in New York now are shorter than they used to be and simpler, so far as the wines go. The old programme of sherry, Rhine wine, claret, champagne and cordials Is a thing of the past. Two wines are the usual' number nowadays. Last Winter there was a fashion for white wine and champagne that put that combination on almost every table at less formal din ners and tn nearly all the restaurants. The number of courses at a dinner is much smaller than it used to be. These changes have all come because men and women not only eat. but drink, less than they did when a formal dinner wa3 a spe cies of gorge In both respects. Even at these diminished feasts in vogue today it Is Interesting to notice how little women eat and drink. They value their appear anco and their health very much more than the satisfaction of eating and drink ing. Effect of an Execution New York Sun. The effect of a single execution on con victs In a large prison like Clinton Is well known. They grow morose and sullen and guards are doubled and trebled everywhere. The effect of this triple kill ing was plainly noticeable at Dannemora. Even the exact hour that the work wa3 to begin was known to the thousand des perate men housed there, for It Is only the most desperate who are sent to Dan nemora. They showed their resentment In many small ways, but the most re markable outbreak occurred at noon, when a gang of some 50 long-term men, -marching along an upper tier, saw tho witnesses leaving the death-house. In stantly they set up a most hideous shrieking., chilling the very blood of the already wrought-up civilians. It was with difficulty that they were checked by the keepers. Such outbreaks are not uncommon among convicts' on days of execution, but for a whole, company to burst Into such a nerve-racking, blood-chlillng rage Is unusual and not a pleasant thing for a layman to see or to hear. The men were all placed In solitary confinement at once, and the other convicts who showed signs of Increasing nervousness after this hid eous yelling from above were hustled to the dining hall in a hurry. How They View It. (Correctionvllle (la.) News.) Mr. Clarke, of Ohio, "has incurred Mr. Bryan's support," Is the novel way a con temporary puts It, but some people view; it that way. ' TflENBL00D OF HIS F4.MILY. "Jim" Tillman, whose trial on the charge of murdering N. E. Gonzale3, edi tor of the Columbia, S. a. State, is now proceeding, is at present the center of interest in the South. As to the outcome of the trial, the general opinion Is that It will result In a disagreement of the Jury. Much importance is attached to the question of whether or not the Judge will allow testimony as to tho defend ant's character, for -If it should be ad mittoi cnmA snlrv revelations are an ticipated. Gonzole3 published some bit ter attacks upon Tillman, but how far the courts will open the door to such tes timony is, of course, unknown. "Jim" is not the only memberjof his family to be tried for murder, his father before him being imprisoned for the same crime. A citizen of Augusta, where the Tillmans are well known, recalled some of the incidents of their stormy careers. "There has been no lack oE excitement in the fives of most of the Tillmans," said he. There are a number of dark tragedies in their wake. Besides the crime of Jim in the murder of Mr. Gonzales, at least three other members of the family have been concerned in miirder, either as victims or as murderers themselves. "John Tillman, brother of Senator Ben and uncle to Jim, was shot down and killed la the highway as the result of his violent character. John was physical ly unlike his other brothers. Ben and tho rest, grew up into tall, raw-boned men. John, on the otner nana, was snorter anu Inclined to stockiness. He was a hand some fellow, and in his normal condition rather an engaging person in address and bearing. "But -he had wild blood in his veins, and it frequently came out in crazy sprees. It was a favorite amusement of his when he was on one of these tears to strip himself stark naked, mount a horse and ride like a madman about the coun try in broad daylight "On one of these excursions ho in sulted an old and peaceable farmer named William Mays, over In the Edgefield country. Both Mays and his son were quiet and orderly Iff their lives and were much respected. Yet everybody who who knew them well knew, as the say ing goes among the crackers down thl3 way, that they were 'mighty onsatisfac tory people to do any protestin' with in other words, that they would fight at the drop of the hat, and that when they fought tney snot to kiu. "I don't know Just what particular of fense John, In one of his Lady Godlva excursions, gave the Mayses, but It was a mortal one, and Farmer Mays and his son John cleaned up their shotguns and went out prospecting for John Tillman. "They were not long In finding him. They were in a buggy on the highway and saw John coming In another buggy. John apparently saw them at about the same time, and, being In ono of his moods, drove like mad straight at them, smashing his buggy right into theirs and partly wrecking both. At the moment of the shock both the farmer and his son emptied their shotguns Into John, stretch ing him mangled and dead on the high way. "In tho trial they were defended by ex Unlted States Senator M. C. Butler, who was then a young lawyer not very long In practice in Edgefield. Tho Mayses were acquitted. "Then there was another uncle of Jim, Oliver Hazard Perry Tillman, who camo to a tragic end. He went down to Florida, where while seated at a hotel table ho got into an altercation over some trifle with a man who sat opposite him, and who right then and thero drew a plstor and shot him dead. "George Tillman, brother of Senator Ben and father of Jim, now about to bo tried for the Gonzales murder, was him self a murderer. He shot a man in a quarrel over a game of faro. George fled the country and went down to Mex ico or Central America and remained for two years. Then he came back, stood his trial, was convicted of manslaughter and was sentenced to two years' Im prisonment and to pay ?2000 fine. He served the full term of imprisonment but could not pay the fine. After a time therGovernor remitted the fine and George was released. T linflerstani" that thero was a tacit agreement that George was to enter the Confederate army on his release. He did not enter the army, but busied himself making powder for the Confederacy down on the Savannah. "Senator Ben did not enter the army, except as a sort of home guardsman, along toward the close of the war." Crowing: of Cock Cheered Dying1. Philadelphia Inquirer. Cincinnati. The last hours of Tom Flanagan, who died here yesterday, were made easy by compliance with a request made by him, and which is considered a very strange one, m view of the fact that the man was believed to be sane. Shortly before his death he called his sister to his bedside and asked her to buy a rooster for him. "I want to hear him crow like they used to crow when I was in the country," said he. The rooster was purchased for him and taken to his bedroom. 'I want the rooster to have his liberty in this room and not be shut up like a prisoner," said Flanagan. The rooster crowed lustily the first night, much to the dying man's delight and continued do ing so at intervals until death came. J. C, Ex-minister. . T. N. In New York Sun. Joe Chamberlain, my Joe, Joe. "When first we hoard your name, 'Twas moro mixed up with steel, Joe, And factories, than fame; But once emerged from Birmingham, You Quickly let us know Brains lay behind your monocle, Joe Chamberlain, my Joe. Joe Chamberlain, my Joe, Joe, "When Birmingham first sent Her Iron Idol and her Mayor To servo In Parliament Tho world looked on in wonderment And laughed- to see you throw Those somersaults political. Joe Chamberlain, my Joe. Joe Chamberlain, my Joe. Joe, The other side soon found Your tongue was steel of Birmingham, Keen edged and finely ground;' Of manufactures and Of trade You showed how much you know, And made the Ministry afraid, Joe Chamberlain, my Joo. Joe Chamberlain, my Joe, Joe. They could not understand "What sort of British Joe-Joe Had taken them In hand; And when the whirligig of time ' Upset your party foe. You. too. became a Minister, Joe Chamberlain, my Joe. Toe Chamberlain, my Joe. Joe, Then came tho heavy loads. The task to guide the colonies. Including Cecil It nodes; How close were you to that strange man. What aid did you bestow To further his ambitious plan. Joe Chamberlain, my Joe. Joe Chamberlain, my Joe, Joo, Then came the story old As old as British conquest And British greed of gold: Your hungry eye was on the Rand, On Transvaal fell the blow. Carnage and blood filled all that land, Joe Chamberlain, my Joe. Joe Chamberlain, my Joe. Joe, Now Cecil Rhodes Is dead. You turn from gold and diamonds To plan a tax on bread; But taxing bread and beef and beer With Englishmen don't go No Cabinet can stand for that. Joe Chamberlain, my Joe. Joe Chamberlain, my Joe, Joe, Pray do not overrate y Tour powers as a citizen To educate the State;. Had you not left the Government,. But gone a little sjow. You might have been Prime Minister, Joe Chamberlain, my Joe. BOTE AND COMMENT. HurIi Didn't Malce a Mnslt. There was quite a mistake in the news last week. It was George DeweH Instead of Cera that called on Hugh "Vrlght- Elg Creek Cor respondence of CarrectionvUle (la.) News. First blood, for Brummagem Joe. Southward- the course of crime. It would seem that more mall should, ensure more mail-carriero. This is October S, but then Russian calendars are still made in the Old Style. The Japanese Iriing is dead, but the Japanese Pattl has not yet said good-bye. Ex-Mayor DouoAf "Woodburn. has go out of the woods. Some other Mayora have not Judging from all its talk of sugar, the department of Agriculture must be full of beets. The bogus son of J. P. Morpan gave him self avay by purchasing an opera, cloak that coat no more than $300. M. J-.ebs.udy thinks of founding an em pire in the Sahara. He won't leave any footprints in the sands of time in that manner. By all meaais let" us caD the woman that packed with the Lewis and Clark outfit Tsakakawla. It looks more Indian than Sacajawea. A youngster tried to hold up a man In "Astoria and gtft a walloping. In some re spects the Oregon Venice sets the state an example. The police seem disinclined to work over time for nothing, which shows that in spite of white gloves, they are just like other people. New Tork scene-shifters having mixed up in a scrap after the show, along comes a non-property patrol wagon and takes a bunch off to jail for chango of scene. Mr. Howe, of Atchison, appears to havo grown intoxicated on Seattle spirit He gravely records tho fact that the "Flyer! is said to be the fastest steamer afloat Oh. Itfr! It makes one feel young again to read of the two embezzlers in the Philippines and their stolen steamer. Crime had seemed to be so commonplace, and the field so hemmed in by telephone and telegraph, that all its romance was lost But two absconders, headed for Borneo, a stolen steamer burning pirate coal under them, and stolen gold In tho trcasuro chest there is a stirring picture. This, by Arthur Symons, 13 described In a recent publication as supremely great poetry: I drank your flesh, and when the soul brimmed up In that sufficing cup, Then slowly, steadfastly, I drank . Your soul; . Thus I possessed you whole. : "Why not this? I eat you up, because you ore so sweet, But, coming to your feet I strain and swallow, yet they won't Go down: No bigger feet in town. "Who is that mnn in the bullpen?" asked tho stranger at Cripple Creek. "That," replied his military monitor, "Is an editor." "And why is he here?" "He wrote an editorial." "wnai is in mat xong row oi tonisir. There Is a Colonel in each?" s tho train?" "They aro friends of people who knojy officers who can get transportation fo uiuir men. "Where are the privates?" "There are only two left; they didn't have pull enough to get commissions." "Why are the soldiers hero at all?" "There's money in it" "For the military?" .-f "Sure." Some people wero astonished and dis mayed yesterday to read that three men had died in Philadelphia as the result of drinking punch. But surprise changed to indignation on learning that tho "punch" was a mixture of sugar, lemon Julco and wood alcohol. To give such poison as this tho glorious name of punch, a name redolent of literary inspiration and achievement! Tho sugar and the lemon are of pleasing suggestion, and duly comT pounded with hot water and the spirit which has kept alive the spark of Irish wit for so many years, form the most delectable drink known to man. In many a hospitable Irish house, dinner is no ' sooner over than the host calls for tho "materials," and with jealous care mixes . the simplest and most potent drink 1 that can be found. Here Is no striving for strange effects, no mixing of incompatible Ingredients. The whisky's the thing. Su- trar and lemon are but to enhance the ' already ravishing flavor of the mountain dew, merely to intensify the central joy. Is not the Irish receipt for punch the only one of worth: "Put some sugar In to make It sweet some lemon to mako It sour, some water to make it weak, and plenty of whisky to make it strong?' No wonder the musicians with a skinful of this steaming inspiration gave the world immortal melodies, and how could a man full of liquid blarney be other than elo quent? ' "WEX J. PLEASANTRIES OF PAItAGUAPHEnS The trouble about never offending people is that It leaves most of them unconscious of your existence. Puck. "Seme people falls." salll Uncle Eben. "be cause dey tries to eat de persimmon befo' lts ripe, an some because dey lets It lay aroun till it's no good." Washington Star. Ida I bet Ernie and her fellow were kiss ing In the park. May Why should you think so? Ida They thought a lightning-bug was tho policeman's lanterri. Chicago News. "I guess you were right about Grindle having made a lot of money In the last few years." "What new light havo you had on the sub ject?" "He has begun to kick about the sUe of his taxes." Chicago Tribune. "Ward W'orker No, sir; I'd never sell my vote. I'd Candidate Ah! but won't you rent It to me for a day? Ward Worker. Well, that's dif ferent. New York Mall and Express. "So the little darling Is going to school, eh "Yes, indeed. She's too young to leam much, but as we have to pay taxes, we may as well get something for It." New York Journal. Mr. Misfit (savagely) Before I married you was there any doddering Idiot gone on you? Mrs. Misfit There was one. Mr. Misfit I wl3h to goodness you'd married him! Mrs. Misfit I did. Tld-Bits. "A Virginia woman has 13 sons, each ot whom Is six "feet tall." "I should think she'd feel superstitious about It."" "Well, I guess she doesn't feel superstitious enough to want another." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Teacher Now. Johnny, I think I have shown you how wicked It Is to fight. Tell me what you would do should a boy call you bad names? You wouldn't notice him. would you? Johnny How big Is the boy, teacher? Boston Trail- script. Proud Mamma You haven't kl3sed the baby. Bachelor Uncle Umer I'll try to remember next time. I'll kiss her when I er como back from China." "When will that be?" '"Iiet me see. In about 10 years." London Tlt-Blts.