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The Commoner. Aug. 1, 190a 7 r'v I.V: 11 Iflfi I ifletermlned to remain In South" Africa and that they wcro anxious that every Boer should remain iwith them and contribute to the general welfare oi the Dutch people. MANY YEARS OF EFFORT WILL BE RE emlred to repair the damage done the British finances by the South African war. The present cash balance In the British exchequer is $15,000, 000, said to be the lowest amount held in years as a balance. For tire last quarter Great Britain's expenditures have exceeded her receipts by $89, 848,290. Since 1899 Great Britain's national debt lias risen from $3,200,000,000 to $3,690,000,000. A writer in the Boston Herald, referring to this subject, says: British revenue was unusually large for the quarter. The effect ofnew taxation was felt; the new tax on grain brought in $3, 500,000 additional, and the taxes on sugar and coal exports, in force only a small part of the same quarter in the previous year, contributed a full quarter's receipts, amounting to $4,500,000. As a result, revenue was ,$26,838,450 larger than in the same quarter a year before. In expendi tures there was a diminution of only $1,240,000. Of the total of $255,570,435, no less than $218, 214,110 were for "supply services," indicating lit tle reduction in South African expenditures. War expenditures proper were $85,000,000, or over $6, 600,000 a week. If, as is likely, these expendl- tures reach $5,000,000 a week for the current quar ter, there will be left for South Africa In the last six months of the year to April 1 only $47,000,000. 'As much more is needed, a Transvaal loan must be issued before long. The quarter's deficit of $89,848,290 has been met by receipts of $55,000,003 from the last loan, and appropriation of $27,805, 000 from the cash balance 'and $7,000,000 from overdue money under special acts. By the end of the fiscal year in March next, however, ex traordinary expenditures will, it is estimated by the London Statist, be so lessened that a surplus ' of $27,480,000 should result after restoration of the cash balance. LONDON CABLEGRAMS TO AMERICAN newspapers offer an Interesting explanation con cerning Salisbury's resignation. It is stated that Queen Alexandria urged Salisbury to defer his resignation until the king should recover from his illness, but Salisbury declined to do so., It Is pointed out that at this time Chamberlain was sick and. that Salisbury's sudden resolve and his refusal to withhold his resignation was due to his determination to avail himself p& Chamberlain's illness in order that his nephew, Balfour, might succeed. These cablegrams say that the only ex planation Salisbury gave was that he was losing Lis memory, and was in need of immediate rest, tout it is also stated that this explanation was not satisfactory and that Queen Alexandria com plained bitterly because of Salisbury's lack of consideration. Whatever truth there may be in these reports, it seems to be generally accepted that Chamberlain's influence in the new cabinet will be considerably larger than his Influence heretofore has been, and it is not apparent that there are any strained relations between the col onial secretary and the new premier. COMMENTING ON THE FACT THAT while Joseph Chamberlain's popularity and strength is very evidently on the increase, he was passed by when the premier was to be chosen, n writer in the Washington Post points out that this is not the first time in English history that the most dominant figure of a party in power has ibeen passed over in connection with the premier ship, precisely on account of his masterful per Bonality. This writer says: Lord Palmerston, tor instance, was at least on two occasions forced io give way on this ground to statesmen who pos sessed nothing like his prestige or his popularity, and to consent to hold office under premiers of in ferior political caliber sometimes colorless mediocrities whose position, however, at the head pf the administration served to reassure foreign governments, and likewise those at home who preferred a passive and even a negative policy to one that was vigorous and aggressive. Neverthe less Lord Palmerston remained the predominating influence in the administration of Lord John Rus sell, and while Arthur Balfour is an immeasurably superior man to the latter, it will be much the game with Chamberlain, and although the recon structed British cabinet, will be nominally a Bal four ministry, it will in reality be a Chamberlain administration. office, and no mention thereof can be found In the official tables of precedence. It Is explalnod that the cabinet there is merely a committee of tho privy council and has, legally speaking, no cor porate existence of its own, save as a committco of this kind. Tho premier is tho chairman of this committee, which is recruited from tho mem bers of that political party which possesses a suf ficiently largo majority in the house of commons to be able to secure the enactment of tho neces sary legislation. The chairman of the committee is Invariably intrusted by the sovereign with its composition, and if ho happens to select men who do not already belong to the privy council they are created members of tho latter In order to en able their serving on the committee, which is known as the cabinet. In tho natural order of things tho lord president of tho privy council who happens to bo the Duke of Devonshire, ought to be tho presiding officer of tho committee In question. But tho crown retains the prerogative of appointing whomsoever it pleases as chairman of the committee, under whom tho president of the council is then compelled to servo on the com mittee, and so jealous is tho sovereign of this right that an outgoing premier is not permitted to offer one word of recommendation or advice about his successor unless specially asked by the monarch. ACCORDING TO THIS SAME WRITER, Lord Salisbury combined the office of prime min ister first with the secretaryship of stato for for eign affairs, and more recently with the post of lord privy seal. Roseberry, when premier, was first lord of the treasury and so, too, was Glad stone. It is explained, in this connection, that tho lords of the treasury are a commission of five persons, who for the last 200 years have been appointed by the crown on every chango of cabi net to administer the ancient office of lord high treasurer. Only two of tho lords of tho treasury occupy seats in tho cabinet. The senior of the two is known as the "first lord," while the second bears the title of "chancellor of the exchequer." The latter is the actual finance minister of tho government, and is of necessity a member of the house of commons, in which all questions of sup ply originate and are determined. The chancel lor has charge of the devising of the budget, while it is the first lord who has the appointment of all commissioners and other officers employed in the collection of the revenues of the crown, as well as the controlling voice in their expendi ture, subject, of course, to parliament. The first lord and the chancellor of the exchequer havo seals of office, which are handed to them on tak ing office by the sovereign. THE INTERESTING FACT THAT BALFOUR succeeds to an office that does not exist is pointed out by this same writer in tho Washington Post. It Is said that in England the prime minister has no legal standing as such, that there is no such CHARLES M. DOBSON, THE NEWSPAPER man who first made public the fact that Governor Wood had paid General Gomez $25,000, provided the Chicago Record-Herald of recent date with another interesting interview. Mr. Dobson ex plains the reason for the payment of this money to Gomez In these words: The negro element In Cuba, the element dominated by Maximo Gomez, in case Gomez could not be elected to the presi dency himself, was In favor of choosing Bartolo mo Maso, another negro. And the administra tion at Washington was as determined to defeat the election of Maso as it was to keep Gomez out of the political arena himself or to prevent his throwing the weight of his Influence that is, that of tho negro element of the Cuban population in favor of Maso. And that $25,000 was paid espe cially to make it impossible for the negroes to be come an important element in the first presidential election, which they could not be with Gomez quiet and in the background. MR. DOBSON THEN SAYS: "AS SECRE tary Root has admitted that the money was really paid by Wood to Gomez, there can scarcely bo any further doubt of the correct and truthful purport of the interview. The administration has done the only thing it could under tho circum stances, made tho plea that the buying off of Gomez was a mere matter of expedience. As tho governor general of Cuba Mr. Wood simply car ried out the' advices of the administration at Washington. Therefore, Secretary Root was more than right when he, in his explanation of my interview, assumed the entire responsibility for the payment of tho sum to Gomez." According to this the latest account, it will appear, therefore, that the payment of this money to Gomez by tho administration was for tho purpose of overturn ing what administration agents evidently believed to be the will of tho majority of the people of Cuba. ly In a recent Incident that stirred the people of Now York. Putnam Bradleo Strong was a youn society 'man who enlisted In tho army, becarao a captain and was finally, bc6auso of efficient ser vices, promoted to bo major. Ho becamo enam oured with tho charms of May Yoho, an actress, and finally threw up his commission and inado a trip around tho world with the woman of his choice. Upon tho couple's return from abroad, Strong disappeared, and Miss Yoho charged that ho had takon with him a largo number of her precious jewels. She caused to bo offered a re ward of $1,000 for his capturo and had a warrant issued for his arrest Subsequently tho offer of a roward was withdrawn and tho warrant can celled. It now develops that young Strong's mother, whoso health Is shattered and who, al though heretofore woll provided with this world's goods, is by no means a millionaire, caused the cancellation of tho warrant and tho withdrawal of the offer of a roward. Mrs. Strong pahJU$16,100 for tho redemption of tho Yoho diamonds and has obligated herself to pay $80,000 more unless the absent son restores tho jewels unaccounted for. Miss Yoho, who once professed ardont love for young Strong, now declares that all love Is lost; but the mother, against whom tho son sinned to & far greater extent than that involved in tho theft of diamonds, has paid over her gold In her hap less son's behalf without a murmur, and is now said to be "happy in tho improsslon that she has saved her son from prison.", RECENTLY NEWSPAPER DISPATCHES have cited many instances in which wagors wore made and won concerning one's ability to dlspoKd of food at a single sitting. For Instance, George N. Crouse, who Is said to bo a society man and residing at Syracuse, N. Y., made a wager with a friend that he could eat fourteen dozen of clams without rising. Tho newspaper dispatches show the result of the wager in this way: "Dozen af ter dozen went down his throat in rapid succes sion, until the feat was accomplished. Crouse la a Yalo graduate." Tho Chicago Inter-Ocean links these accomplishments under the significant title of "Strenuousness and Education," and tho Intor Ocean provides some interesting samples of dis patches which the public may confidentially ox pect if this character of contest Is encouraged. Here are the samples: "Roxbury, Mass., July 22. Augustus L. Lothrop, a society man, recently made a bet with Theodoro Peabody that ho could eat seventeen quarts of baked beans at a 'Sitting. Quart after quart went down his throat in suc cession until the feat was accomplished. Lo throp Is a Harvard graduate." "YonkorS, N. Y., July 24. Dledrlch Vanderventer made a bet with Hudson Rivers that ho could eat twenty-three lobsters in twenty-three minutes. Lobster after lobster wont down until the feat was acconi plished. Vanderventer is a graduate of Colum bia." "Paterson, N. J., July 25. Edward Jones made a bet with Henry Brown that ho could trap 500 mosquitoes in seventeen minutes. Taking a position on a summer resort hotel veranda ho gathered the mosquitoes in his net scores at a time until he had accomplished the feat. Jones is a graduate of Princeton." "Sheboygan, Wis., July 25. Walter Jenkins made a bet with Ernest Hamlin that ho could drink forty-eight glasses of beer in fourteen minutes. Glass after glass went down until the feat was accomplished. Jenk ins is from Milwaukee and is a graduate of Madison." "Lincoln, 111., July 25. Cornelius Brown made a bet with Everett McCabe that ho could eat ninety-three sausages at a single sitting. Link after link disappeared until tho feat was accomplished. Brown is a graduate of the uni versity of Chicago." "Lansing, Mich., July 25. Ebenezer Twltchell made a bet with Elihu Robin son that he could drink eighty-three pints of hard cider In the course of an afternoon. Pint after pint went down in rapid succession until the feat was accomplished. Twitcheli Is a graduate of Ann Arbor." "Waukegan, 111., July 25. Samphronla Wilson made a bet with Angelina Busklrk that sho could consume twenty-three plates of vanlla ico cream in fifteen minutes. Plate after plate went down until the feat was accomplished. Mlsa Wilson is a graduate of Northwestern." , THE MAN'S WEAKNESS, THE WOMAN'S frailty, and the mother's lov figured consplcuous- X PIERPONT MORGAN CONTINUES TO BIS the recipient of invitations to dine from, prominent political and commercial leaders of Europe. On Tuesday, July 22, he was the chief guest at a bis dinner given in the house of commons by Mr. A. W. Monconochle, M. P. The now premier, Mr. Bal four, several cabinet ministers and other promi nent representative Englishmen were among the guests. jtojiJifcLaj,'m'iffrft flrfMnf'iiiTiiiJfcfefc"lrlrtyaffci urtain 1