10 Conservative. nncl corrupted the choicest interests of onr country more and done more injus tice than oven tlic nnns nncl artifices of our enemies. " Strange that these lessons of history cannot bo learned. Stntngc indeed that these futile fallacies of flat money , this ignorance of the simplest principles of monetary science and this perversion of the powers of public law to purposes of private gain should recur again and again with each generation , making it necessary to repeat and enforce the truth which I have attempted to present in this essay. The vice of legal-tender is that it de prives men of their right to free con tract and that it enforces fraud upon an unwilling and ignorant community whether its members desire to cheat each other or not. It is a bar to integ rity on the part of the nation and its people alike. The sincerity of its promoters meters can only be sustained at the ex pense of their repute for common sense. Captain Charles King does not seem to have any stories running at present. Maybe he is in the shop being re- Kiplinged before he tackles the Spanish war. war.At At South Omaha , once or twice , per sons serving the Agricultural Depart ment have been separated from the Bureau of Animal Industry. Such per sons were in the classified Civil Service of the United States. They claim that they were removed for believing that forty cents worth of silver bullion could be made worth a hundred cents by the necromancy of a stamp. They pose as martyrs to the sacred dogma that one ounce of gold is worth sixteen ounces of silver and no more. They hold that paying any laborer or producer or any body else more than sixteen ounces of silver when one ounce of gold is owing to him would bo a great wrong and damage to him. That is to say if in stead of paying in an ounce of gold one should insist upon paying with thirty- four ounces of silver it would be a rob bery of the creditor. Such fanaticism should be fostered. Those innocent /ealots ought to bo re stored to the service immediately. The sooner the authority which removed them is reproved for the non-protection of those patriotic and candid men and women the better for all who get back. There are good men in all parties. But generally the meanest man in any party is the one who has tried getting an office in all the others and joined anew now one to try again. That fellow is always loudest in condemnation of the forces ho has deserted. He always de clares that ho left this party or that party because it became too corrupt for his conscience. Senator William Vin cent Allen has already held office as a democrat , as a republican and as a pop ulist. He is a very able man. He knows just -\vlien to leave one organiza tion and when to fuse with another. In Iowa and in Nebraska Allen's career is marked by an incandescent sagacity , which has led him as naturally to the cover of offices as a pointer dog's nose leads him to a covey of quail. Mr. Allen's instinctions arc unerring when ho hunts an office. If the microbes of millionairiMSiii and the bacilli of frugality together with the germs of avarice invaded and infested the curious convolutions of the corporeal system of the great and good Kern , pop ulist member of congress from Nebraska , and filled his blood , bones and alleged brains with the poison of accumulation to such a fever height that he saved all his salary and skipped with it into Colorado rado to avoid impecunious acquaint ances , who is safe from capitalistic con tagion ? Think of Kern exiled expatriated , to make himself a Colorado capitalist , with money secured by gulling Nebraska populists into making him a congress man ! ! Think of Kem the plutocrat made by populist votes in Nebraska out of Kem the lover of poor people who gave him ballots that bred a capitalist. Is there a , man in America who can find any glory for his country in the fact that the great Republic has beaten the Crippled Old Woman of Na tions in war ? It was Dr Johnson - PATIUOTISM. son who said that "patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel. " The shouters who forced an unwilling president and a vast ma jority of men and women in our coun try into the "hell" of war with a friendly and weak nation against their will would do well to study Dr. John son. CURRENT COMMENT. 1 fSS vSH T f TSH TS © Medical lucapablcs. The number of so called medical in stitutions which give degrees in this country is so great that measures have been instituted from time to time to re duce even those which have legitimate title under our laws. Of these "fake" organizations which sell the mask of wisdom and competence , under which impostors sometimes ply the privilege of trifling with the life of human be ings , we do not now speak. Those raise their heads for a year or two in abun dance in certain localities and then we cease to hear much of their nefarious trade. They are pretty generally severe ly punished once they emerge from their hiding places. But there is a keenly recognized pro fessional evil in the redundancy of per sons wearing the title of M. D. who have secured the appendage under con ditions which do not violate the law The graduate of some insignificant col lege may possibly become by natural aptitude and practice as skillful a leech as the graduate of the best. But there can be no doubt that there is a certain brevet of value in a degree received from a great institution. Independent ly of any other fact it gives reasonable assurance of excellence , and deservedly so. It is now proposed in England to make the statement of the source of the degree a necessary part of the title , im posing a heavy fine on the use of M. D or D. D. without this explanation It makes less difference concerning the other titles , but in the medical tag it would seem to be a matter of impor tance beyond the common. The parlia mentary bill to which reference is made renders it compulsory to add an expla nation to the title , so that the render may at once declare its authority. It leaves the onus of making discrimina tions to the public. It does not entirely eradicate a danger , but it goes far in the right direction. It will not prevent trickery of the ignorant and the credu lous , but no legislation would ever do that. Under the American system of charter - tor laws , whereby authority is derived from the state and not from the United States , the conditions to be obviated are far irore intractable. Just such a state of affairs as is is bound to recur. But the well known medical universi ties , which give a reasonable presump tion of professional acquirement , are known to people of ordinary intelli gence. For instance , a degree from the Now York College of Physicians and Surgeons , the Pennsylvania College of Medicine or the Rush Medical college ot Chicago carries at once with it a bre vet of distinction which implies a cer tain degree of competence. It would help to remove a state of uncertainty now existing ami in many cases guide a choice of medical advice. If it would not altogether prick a bubble , it would go far to reduce the number which have a living chance of keeping afloat. The difficulty in America would be to secure such a wide concurrence of state legislation as'would make the law of general good. A New View of the Turk. The stories of the Armenian massacres , with their atrocious detail of pillage , murder and every horrible passion lot loose , have been made the subject of careful inquiry by Mr. Sidney Whit man , who writes of them in Harper's Magazine. He has come to the conclu sion that the Turk has been grossly slandered and presents his reasons , based on personal research. The Turks of course adopted severe methods of re pression against the revolutionary Ar menians , wh'o came mostly from Rus sian territory. The Armenians in Asiatic Turkey had long lived on perfectly fa-