Conservative. I the present republican and present democratic organizations. Tliese people arc for all that is good and beneficent in the capable , honest administration of a popular government. They are deliberate patriots. They are influenced by reason. They arc not the slaves of prejudice. Thoj" can not be carried away by emotions. They are conservative ; not radical. They are constructive ; not destructive. They iind no satisfaction , no safety in either the policies or administrative ca pacities of either of the two old parties. These two organizations in their present disguises could not be identified by their [ ' friends. Abraham Lincoln descending from heaven would not recognize the present republican party as one to which he ever belonged. And Andrew Jackson and Thomas H. Benton descending from the enjoyment of their gold standard beatitudes would never guess that the present agglomera tion of money fallacies and fanatics , headed by Coin Harvey , was the democracy - ' ( racy which they inspired and taught. Tliese two old parties are not new as suggested by Col. Watterson of the Louisville Courier Journal but they are wearing disguises. They are masked. They are demoralized. They are drunk. The republican drunk on success. The democratic drunk on defeat. The for mer is defiant. The latter is despondent and desperate. The bettor citizenship of the United States should evolve a now , a sober , a thoughtful , a high-minded , a patriotic , conservative party. It could intelli gently solve now questions. Russia has again A nussi AN sue- t J h d n CKSS IN CHINA. _ . . * , , , China. Her latest victory is not less important than those that have accrued to her previously , for she has at last secured the appointment of a Russian nominee upon the Tsung- li-Yamen. This personage is the well known Chinese diplomatist , Hsu Chiug Cheng , who is president of the Manchurian - ian railway , which is being constructed under the supervision of Russian engi neers. Hsu Ching Cheng was born in 1844 at Kia-ching-fu , in the province of Chekiang. He distinguished himself in his native colleges , and in his twenty- fifth year attained the degree of a "Han- lin , " which qualified him for the highest state employment. In 1877 he was of fered the post of ambassador to Japan , but he was unable to accept it. In 1884 Hsu Ching Cheng was sent to Europe as minister to Germany , Austria , Holland , and Russia. He hold this im portant position for three years , and in 1887 ho returned to his country with a great desire to introduce European im provements , especially in the matter of railways. It was due to him that efforts were made to remodel the Chinese army on a German pattern , and that German military instructors were engaged and argo orders for artillery placed with Krupp of Essen. In 1891 ho was ordered to rejoin his old post in Europe. On this occasion he gave a closer attention to Russian affairs , and succeeded in win ning the confidence of the imperial gov ernment. The extension of Russian in fluence in China has been much facili tated by Hsu's diplomacy and counsels. Hsu is a statesman of considerable abil ity , and a Chinese gentleman of many accomplishments and considerable breadth of mind. His memory is said to be phenomenal , and ho has a peculiar talent for languages. German , French and English ho speaks and writes with considerable fluency , and while in St. Petersburg he made creditable progress with his studies of Russian. St. James Gazette. V4 TIIK TUUTJI AllOUT VACCINATION. Iii a recent lecture delivered at Rome and reported in the London Lancet , Dr. Bizzozzcro made a deep impression by his summing up of the argument for vaccination. Ho said : "Germany stands alone in fulfilling in great measure the demands of hygiene , having in consequence of the calamitous smallpox epidemic of 1870-71 enacted the law of 1874 which 'makes vaccination obligatory in the first year of life and revaccination also obligatory at the tenth year. ' "What was the re sult ? "With a population of r > 0,000,000 , having in 187J lost 148,000 lives by smallpox , she found by her law of 1874 the mortality diminished so rapidly that today the disease numbers only 116 victims a year. These cases , moreover , occur almost exclusively in towns on her frontier. If it were true , continued Prof. Bizzozzero , that a good vaccina tion does not protect from smallpox wo ought to find in smallpox epidemics that the disease diffuses itself in the well- vaceinated no less than in the non-vac cinated countries. But it is not so. In 1870-71 , during the Franco-German war , the two peoples interpenetrated each other , the German having its civil pop ulation vaccinated optionally , but its army completely revaccinated , while the French ( population and army alike ) were vaccinated perfunctorily. Both were attacked by smallpox ; but the French army numbered 215,000 deaths by it , while the German army had only 278 ; and in the same tent , breathing the same air , the French wounded were heavily visited by the disease , while the German wounded , having been revacoi- nated , had not a single ease. " Prevention of consumption by means of secluding sufferers from the disease has now reached so practical a stage in Great Britain that a deoreaso in the num ber of cases is already shown. The opin ion is expressed by one authority that at the rate observed consumption will have disappeared there in thirty years time. AVAfJKS AND T.AHOU. While prices have generally fallen in the United States the wages of labor lave increased. The best authority on ; his subject is the woll-known United States senate report , which contains the following table of wages in 1840 , 1850 , 1800 and 1890 respectively : Labor is better paid in the United Status than anywhere else in the world. The London Times published an exhaustive article showing how the cost of produc tion is divided between (1) ( ) capital , in profits , (2) ( ) government , in taxes , and (8) ( ) labor , in wages , in different countries. In England 21 per cent goes to capital , 28 per cent to government and 5J ( per cent to labor. In France 81 ! per cent goes to capital , 28 per cent to govern ment and 41 per cent to labor. In the United States 23 per cent goes to capital , only t > per cent to government , and 72 per cent to labor. # -x- The average weekly wages in the United States as compared with wages in countries with a silver standard are as follows : Few people understand the enormous importance of the standard of wages in the United States. It is calculated that the money that is paid for 2 * < < days' work to our people who sell their services would purchase in the market the larg est output of all our silver mines. The money paid for six days' work would buy the largest annual output of both our gold and silver mines. The money paid for 18 days'work would buy our largest cotton crop ; that for 24 days our largest wheat crop ; for 80 days our larg est corn crop. The moral of this is that so long as labor is employed there can not help being money enough in circu lation ,