THE MORNING OEEQONI'AN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1902. Entered at the Postoffles at Portland, Oregon, as second-class' .matter; REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid; .In adrance) Pally, with Sunday, per month..'. 85 Dally. Sunday excepted, per year - " 80 Dally, with Sunday, per year 000 Sunday, per u' tar. . 2 00 The Weekly, per year 1 50 Tho Wceky. 3 months BO To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday excepted. 15c Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to 14-page paper lc J4 to 28-page paper 2c Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be -addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan," not to the namo of any Individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan-." Eastern Business Office. 43. 44. 45. 47. 48. 40 Tribune building. New Tork City: 810-11-12 Tilbune building. Chicago: the S..C. Beckwlth Special Agency. Eastern representative. For sale In San Tranclr I. E. Lee. Pal ace Hotel news stand: Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Sutter street: F. IV. Pitts. 1008 Market street: J. K. Cooper Co.. 746 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear, Ferry news, stand; Frank Scott. SO Ellis, street, and N. Wheatlev'Sl3 Mission street. For sale In Los Angeles by JJ. F. Gardner. 259 South Spring-!street. and Oliver & Haines. 205 South Spring street. For sale in Kansas City. Mo., by Rlcksecker Cigar Co.. Ninth and Walnut streets. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 217 Dearborn street, and Charles MacDonald, 83 Washington street. For sale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros.,1612 Farnam street: Megeath Stationery Co.. 1303 Farnam street. 1 For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co.. 77 West Second South street. For sale in Minneapolis by R. G. Hearsey & Co.. 4 Third street South. For sale in Washington, D. C, by the Ebbett House news stand. For sale in Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrick. 906-012 Seventeenth street; Louthan & Jackson Book & Stationery Co.. Fifteenth and Lawrence street; A. Series. Sixteenth and Curtis streets. TODAY'S WEATHER Showers, with eouth to west winds. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 60; minimum temperature, 54; pre cipitation, 0.3S inch. I PORTLAND, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10 THE OPERATORS AXD THE LAW. " When The Oregonlan, a week ago to day. called attention to the effrontery of the anthracite coal-carrying railroad9 In demanding the letter of the law, the while they were themselves such flagrant violators of law, some very' good people hereabouts, who are still living in the industrial atmosphere of ten years ago, were much alarmed at what seemed to them "popullstic" utter ancjea They will be reassured to know that the identical views and proposals contained in The Oregonlan were put out at the same time by conservative journals elsewhere. We have hitherto reprinted many utterances of papers like the New York Evening Post and Brooklyn Eagle in reprobation of the operators, and now we wish to call spe cial attention to what two of the ablest and most conservative papers in the United States, one -Republican and one Democrat, say with reference to the defiance of law shown by the coal-carrying railroads. First, the Chicago Tribune, conservative Republican: The coal-carrying roads nullify the constitu tion of tb state which gave them charters. They violate the National laws governing Interstate--.-commerce. They defy the common law,Tvhlch is rooted in fundamental principles, which experience has 'proved are essential to the welfare of the people and to the growth and maintenance of human liberty. The-. coal carrying roads are engaged in an unlawful- con spiracy, yet their managers complain -of breaches of the law in the anthracite coal "re gions. They are the most flagrant and Impu dent lawbreakers in that part of Pennsylvania. Whenever a coal road mines coal It openly vio lates' the .constitution of Pennsylvania. Every meeting of the representatives of the road to fix the price of coal or the rate charged for carrying it to market is an open - violation of the laws of the Nation and the state. There Is no law designed to protect the consumers of coal against extortion which the coal-carrying roads have not persistently and publicly vio lated. The roads are "habitual crimifcils." By their reiterated offenses they have put them selves out of court. They are entitled to no consideration or -compassion. They have worn uui me patience or the people. The severest treatment they are likely to receive will not uaiaucr man tney deserve. Next the Chicago Chronicle, conserva tive gold-standard Democrat: When these organized criminals -who to be In prison, demanded of the President that lie send troops Into PennsvlvnrMn c.oi,.. the miners as criminals they demanded than H.m. 5 i 'awless act- ad Mr. Mitchell demanded In return that tho President put the UnYtaT? I" Prison for violating laws qf the t r7..T "" come mucn nearer X """"""'"B i oniy something that ought to be done but something that the President 1 f t ,ih0at overriding the law himself! r,, 4 .. uenmna iat the laws be cured. By all means let their dm k . piled with. Let steps be taken at pnee which &tl the law by pWlng tne - . uiiuu ucmnu me oars These papers have fous-hr 'w..iicm ror; years. They are still Its uncompro mising foes. But they realize that when it comes to defiance of law the coal carrying roads themselves have set the pace and that under rigid application ui. id.w meir properties could be pun Ished and their officials convicted. Justice is not an instrument for op pression of the weak bv thP nnworf,,! The law Is not aimed at support of one bet ot-laworeakers and attacks upon iiuuier set ot lawbreakers. Courts are not established as the peculiar resource oi one party to Industrial disnntp When one order or type of the enml munity's elements comes to regard' the law as us special possession, for em ployment or disregard at its conven lence, it needs to be undeceived, in the interests not only of law and order, but oi common morality. The Tacoma News, having no direct knowledge of the wheat business for this year, last year or any other year, is unable to determine whether the figures It prints on the subject are cor rect or otherwise. On Monday the fol lowing appeared in its editorial col umns:. Bradstreet's reported 008,000 bushels of wheat In stock at Tacoma on October 1. 1002. whii Seattle had 105,000 bushels, and Portland 693. 000 bushels. Tacoma had 108.000 bushels more tnan I'ortiana ana Seattle combined on that date. At the corresponding date in inni rnrt. land reported 823,000 bushels; Tacoma, 69S.O00 bushels, and Seattle, 235,000 bushels. Do you see where the wheat center on the North Pa- kjuc ioasi now is? With all due respect for the occasional accuracy of Bradstreet's figures. It Is a tact that the stocks of wheat at Port mna on uctober l were over 1,100,000 bushels. They were so large that with the heavy daily arrivals at that time exporters were obliged to order the Dy nomene ana .pass of Brander around from Puget Sound, where they were unable to secure cargoes. There was but one lone vessel on the disengaged list at .Portland, but the engaged ton nage had a capacity of over 1,600,00(T bushels. There were six disengaged grain ships on Puget Sound at the time, and they are still there looking for bus! ncss. The wheat shipments from Pu get Sound from July 1, 1902, to October 1, 1902, were over 200,000 bushels less than they were for the same period last year, , and even record-breaking ship ments for the month of October will hardly bring the shipments of Seattle and Tacoma up to the figures reached by November 1 last year.. Incidentally It might be remarked that two-thlrds of the wheat shipped from Pugot Sqund is handled by Portland and San Francisco .buyers, and Portland banks supply the finances for handling moro than two thirds of it. DO IT RIGHT OR NOT AT ALL. On the eve of the consolidation of Portland, East Portland and Album, the Councils of the last two places rushed through a number of franchises grant ing privileges to corporations. They did this because they knew that the consolidated city would be bound by their actions, and they wanted to make hay while tho sun shone. That action forms a black chapter in the history of Portland. It Is never mentioned but with regret and shame, and to the dis credit of the conspiring Councllmen. The situation in 1S90 has Its parallel In 1902. In the expiring hours of the present charter an effort is under way to bestow upon certain applicants a Job lot of franchises of various kinds. The extent and moment of the privi leges asked may be accurately meas ured by the formidable array of legal talent that interests mena'ced have en gaged to contest their issuance. Due al lowance must be made for that portion of this .opposition which springs solely from undue conservatism, from purely selfish Impulses, from rival concerns, and from the natural disinclination of any man to see the street In front of his own property approprlatedfor pub lic or quasi-public uses. But with al lowance for all this, it is perfectly cer tain that no considerable body of oppo sition could be enlisted to applications of this kind, unless they found suffi cient ground In justice and reason to justify an appeal to public opinion. In every Issue of this kind,-wisdom must steer its course between the two extremes, corporate aggression on one hand and selfish obstruction on the other. Nothing Is more certain than that a town of 100,000 people scattered over forty square miles of territory must have plentiful street-car service, and that liberal facilities for extensions not only encourage Investment, but pro mote municipal development. It has been a very prominent factor In Port land's progress that Its street-car sys tems have constantly spent money like water for extensions and equipments. On the whole, their policies have been too liberal for the good of their stock holders. Millions have been lost in un profitable lines to ambitious suburbs. Some, like the Barnes Heights road, have been abandoned. Some, like the cable read, have been sold for a song and reorganized. The town has been well served by Its street-cars and will be better served If the ambitions of their managers can be be realized. All thatthe companies are making Is spent for new lines, new rails and new cars. It takes a good many nickels to buy a single seven-inch rail. On the other hand, the Councilman's first concern Is his oath of office and his duty to the people. It Is exceedingly doubtful how much revenue could now be. justly exacted from our street-car lines. But It is Inconceivable that any franchise should now be granted which does not fully conserve every right of taxation which will justly belong to the people ten or twenty years from now, and which will accrue under ;the char ter adopted by the people in June. It is idle to eay that the charter Is not yet law and may not become law. It has been approved by fhe people and a Legislative betrayal of It Is the remot est of possibilities. No privileges Incon sistent with the new charter should be granted now. The present Council has a commend able example before it in the care which the last Council devoted to undertak ings of this kind. If it Is less faithful t,o the interests of the people, its record will forever rise up to condemn it. It does not behoove the present Council to rush franchises through in plain defi ance of the mandate of the people last June. It should either do the work right or leave It alone. MITCHELL, OP THE MIXEWORKERS. Mitchell, the leader of the anthracite coal strike, has won the good opinion of fair men of high ability, like Abram S. Hewitt, who is entirely opposed to him from the beginning. "Holland," tne New York correspondent of the Philadelphia Press, writes that Journal that ex-Mayor Hewitt thinks the coal strike an event of deep significance; that he has been led to this opinion through a recent Interview with John Mitchell. Mr. Hewitt's impression of Mitchell was that he was a man of ab solute sincerity, of unquestionable per sonal integrity, of unquenchable zeal, who has committed himself with the en thuslasm of a possible martyr to his convictions that the day la not far dis tant when the great body of wage-earners, the wealth-producers, of the United States, are to control not only their cap ital, which is their labor, but must be dominant In the Government Itself. Mitchell holds that labor can never hope to receive Its fair share of the increase of wealth in this country until It pos sesses majority power in Legislature and the control of the Executive. Mr. Gompers shares these, views with Mitch ell. . Mr. Hewitt thinks the day is not far distant when there will be a formidable struggle for a change Involving govern ment upon socialistic lines, or by class, such as Mr. Mitchell and Gompers contemplate; that Is, the test must come which Macaulay, Carlyle and De Tocquevllle pointed out long-ago as in evitable In America. Mr. Mitchell would have every trade completely unionized, and when that Is done there is also to be perfected a federation through the machinery of the American Federation of which Gompers is chief. Mr. Mitch ell looks forward to the day- when there is to be government by a class, by the great body of wage-earners in the United States, who will, through the ballot-box, capture majorities in "the Legislatures, In the Federal Congress and ultimately choose the executives of the State and Nation. This estimate of the ability, courage and sincerity of Mr. Mitchell by Mr, Hewitt Is. vers' complimentary to the leader of the coal strike, but it Is some thing confirmed by the fact that Mr. Mitchell, at the recent conference with the President, offered to leave the issues to be arbitrated by a disinterested tri bunal to be named by the President of the United States, promising to abide by the decision, even if it were against the appeal of the miners. Mr. Baer contemptuously refused ' to have any thing to do on this occasion with i tribunal of Mr. Roosevelt's choosing, but shouted for more soldiers and sneered at a Government that would not furnish them. The public were most favorably impressed by the action of Mitchell In meeting President Roose velt's request more than half-way, and wero correspondingly disgusted with Baer and his associates. The mine operators seem to have lost their fight by their folly and Insolence in their conference with -the President, and the proof of their defeat is fur nished by their willingness to arbitrate now before a tribunal of the President's choice. They had reached a point where they had to fish or cut bait, to, work their mines or confess that they could not obtain a working force, even with 10,000 soldiers for an escort and a de fense for their miners. There was no prospect that the Governor of Pennsyl vania would call upon the President. for troops without good cause, which was wanting. They are forced to arbitrate or let somebody take the mines for whom miners will work. NEGROES AXD INDUSTRIAL EDUCA TION. The Oregonlan of re6ent date con tained a letter from Brunswick. Ga,, in which the subject of "Negroes and Edu cation" was discussed by a corespond ent in a spirit of injustice, brutality and gross, willful misrepresentation that falls not much short of falsehood. This Brunswick correspondent In his bitterly expressed hostility to industrial educa tion advocated and executed by Booker T. Washington asserts that "petty edu cation" has made the negro "lustful"; that"the Ignorant negro Is of more benefit to his race than his 'educated' brother, who would advance more rap Idly behind a mule and plow than a history." The long list of "black" crimes will only terminate when we discontinue to educate the negro -more than is essential fo$ his exist ence. When we place him on our farms, and wjiere his labor is required, then will we elim inate him from the evil derived through his Insignificant education. This letter Is so full of falsehood that It Is difficult to believe It was written by a Southern man born and bred; it reads more like the work of a "carpet bagger." Intelligent Southern men who were born and bred at the South as a rule- favor negro disfranchisement for many years to come, but that is urged on the ground of political and social expediency, just as at the, North we do not grant women as a rule full suf frage.. But Intelligent Southern men are not only not hostile to Booker Wash ington's scheme of Industrial education for the negro, but they help support It by their money and by their speech. General Herbert, of Alabama, ex-Secre tary oi tne .wavy, ex-confederate sol dier and ex-slaveholder, has always cast his Influence in favor of colored industrial education. The Montgomery (Ala.) Advertiser, an able and conserva tive journal, recently has editorially advocated such education, and there is not a leading Southern newspaper which has ever assumed the absurd position that the presence of a depraved criminal class among the negroes of the South was due chiefly to '"the petty" education he has received since the close of the Civil War. The Nashville Amer ican, an able Southern newspaper, re cently made a most vigorous1 protest against the view that negro education is of no substantial benefit to either blacks or whites, but rather an injury to both. The American said that "If the negroes were slaves, as was the case, it might be advisable to keep their minds in bondage, but the policy which could keep the mind of a free citizen steeped in ignorance cannot be wise policy." The American concludes that the education of the negro Is not only a benent to him and his race, but to the white race among whom the negro lives and must live, and among other things has this to say in defense of Booker Washington's practical, far- reaching service in the South today: Practical education, manual training, Is what the negro needs most. There may be many half-educated negro preachers In prison, but there is a vast number of negro convicts who are absolutely illiterate. There are not too many negro schools. There are not enough good ones. A more general and thorough edu cation of the people of this country, of all nationalities, sexes and races, cannot weaken or Injure the people or -the Government, un less an tneones of education are false except tho theory that only a selected few should be educated while the populace should be kept In Ignorance. The meanest slur cast by. this Bruns wick (Ga.) hegrophobist upon the col ored race is the statement that until the negro was free and obtained a "petty education" he was not guilty of aeeas or criminal lust, etc. This Is ab surd. It is not the "petty education' conferred upon the negro that has mul tlplled this class of criminals, nor is the negro of so-called "petty education" chiefly distinguished for the commission of such outrages. The negro Is at some disadvantage, and as honest men we ought to remember that we are respon sible for it. The Southern necrro of to day cannot but carry some moral taint in his blood of the degrading, brutal iiing scnooi or numan slavery. For xuuie man years tne ancestors of these Southern negroes -were educated lu animalism ny their very environ ment; there was no sanctity of marriage enforced or respected. The great states of Virginia and Kentucky bred slaves for the cotton-picking and sutrar-frrow ing states just as the great cattle states breed cattle for the Chicago market Under these conditions slavebreedinc cultivated the animal passions of the negro, who by the law of hereditary transmission of moral defects would be likely in his ignorant, imbrute.d condi tion, to become a creature of turbulent lust. For more than 200 years slavery edu cated the negro Into a contempt for con tinence and encouraged him to unre stricted Indulgence. Given six genera lions or more of such slave fathers and mothers, what less terrible result could be expected than a race In which lust raged In the blood by the time emanci pation was suddenly effected? Nobody asks clemency for negro miscreants. but since we of the North and South assumed the responsibility of educating. a wnoie race of men and women, father. mother, to a life where the only mar riages were cattle marriages, 'we at oci owe oiesK ooutnern negroes we doomed to the training of brujes under amvei me ruuimentary training and education to better things that the lowest white man expects and receives from the state. The least we can do in reparation for the degrading education we gave their slave fathers and mothers and more remote ancestors Is to give their tainted and corrupted children the simple fundamental Industrial educa- tion that Booker Washington and Coun clll advocate and administer. We have no business to ascribe to recent "petty education" these monster children that spawned by slavery are sometimes ac cused of crimes slave-born and slave bred. There was a gangof white rapists recently discovered In Brooklyn. The four men who were sent to state prison from Paterson, N J., lor rape and mur der were all educated whites, and yet we do not argue that they were mur derers ' and rapists because of their schooling, but In spite of it. The Chicago Inter Ocean has been in terviewing pVomlnent men on the coal strike. "I am more in sympathy with the mlneworkers," said Charles L. Hutch inson, of the Cora Exchange National Bank, "than with the operators. In in sulting the President the operators la- salted the entire American people."' "The miners are gaining in favor," added James H. Eckels, of the Commer cial National Bank, "with all interests, finahclal and otherwise. The operators, made a bad Impression at the confer ence In Washington. 'John Mitchell's attitude, on the other hand, was praise worthy." "Although I am a strong be liever In the right of all employers to manage their businesses as they see fit," said Ernest A. Hamill, another leading banker, "I think that in this .case the miners have shown themselves more deserving of public sympathy than their employers. I believe I am echoing the sentiment of the entire street." "The , sentiment of La Salle street," terssly remarked John J. Mitchell, head of one of the two greatest banks of Chicago, "Is now with the miners." And as the Inter Ocean itself remarks, such men as those quoted are lmpelledl by all their environment and by the mental habits of years, to regard the strikers In Pennsylvania with reserve and even with distrust. Therefore, when they are moved publicly to condemn the attitude of J. Pierpont Morgan's hard-coal mo nopoly, and pubiicly to express their sympathy with the coal miners, there evidently has been such a change "in public sentiment as amounts to nothing less than a revolution. The Supreme Court of Nebraska has handed down a decision forbidding the reading In the public schools of the Bi ble or the singing of such songs as "Nearer, My God, td Thee." The decis ion is: Exercises by a. teacher in a pubic school. In a school building, in school hours, and In the presence of the pupils, consisting of the reading of passages from the Bible and In the slnglnj of songs and hymns and offering prayer to the Deity In accordance with the doctrines, beliefs, customs or usages of sectarian churches or re ligious organisations, are forbidden by the con stitution of the state. This Is the tendency of present-day theory and practice., and It is doubtless better all round. The spirit of our pub lic educational systems is more and more hostile to religious or even moral instruction. Persons who prize these things ase coming in increasing num bers to support denominational schools, both intermediate and advanced. The Catholic Idea is gaining ground, and is measurably justified by its works. A possible indirect effect of the develop ment Is a decline In reliance upon the state for things that private enterprise may properly and In most cases advan tageously achieve for Itself. Much good is likely to result to Ore gon from the visit of Eastern bankers and capitalists who are here as guests of Messrs. Morris & Whitehead. Thin will .be both general and specific. To have a definite place in the mlnrls nf these men, who are so closely associated with the business life of the East, is important. It is sure to result in spread ing information in circles where It will greatly benefit Oregon. . The state -at large, and the entire Pacific Northwest, stand to gain greatly from this ac quaintance. Specifically, it Is under stood that these men already have In terests m tnis country which they are willing to augment considerably. They have seen the Pacific Coast under con ditions favorable for making a just es timate of Its character and Its possibili ties. We have every reason to believe they are pleased with what they have seen and the treatment they have re ceived. This excursion is a strokp of business policy that is in every way commendable. It is a credit to the en terprise of Its authors and Is sure to bring results beneficial to the state.. J. P. Morgan Is credited with having persuaded the coal operators to consent to arbitration before a tribunal of the President's appointment. Morgan is the dominant member of the Reading and Erie voting trusts, and, of course, .he could have ended the strike long ago If he had desired to do so, and the fact that he did not do so has cost the an thracite railroads and the anthracite mines a vast deal of money. Six of the anthracite coal-carrying and mining companies report losses in net earnings for August of- 60 per. cent, compared with August of last year. The Reading Company loses over- 70 per cent. The Lehigh Company falls from a surplus of $430,433 In August, 1901, to a deficit of $359,371. The Jersey Central loss is over one-half, and that of the Ontario & Western Company is 60 per cent. The September returns, when reported, will probably make no better showing. Add to these losses the similar results for the months of the strike before August and It is clear that the coal operators have suffered enormously by this strike. Such credit as accrues to the operat ors for the apparently near end of the strike will rest upon Mr. J. P. Morgan, but it Is doubtful If he has added greatly to his prestige. Mr. Mitchell, Indeed, has proved himself the abler general. Morgan has misread the situ ation, and appears to be one of those able men of business who lack the vis ion of a statesman, or he would have used his paramount Influence over the coal combination long ago and settled the strike. John Mitchell was a better judge of the ppwers at his command than was Mr. Morgan. He knew that, other things being equal, the working men In a great strike generally have the press of the country and the people behind them; he knew that in a year of Congressional elections the professional politicians, if not actually disposed to give the glad hand to striking labor, are afraid to give it the frozen eye. In his way Mitchell has proved himself more than a match for Morgan & Co. An Indirect but Important result of the great anthracite strike has been to rouse the anthracite-consuming public to the danger of being dependent upon a source, of supply that may be sud denly cut off for months by a great strike, and some substitutes' for hard coal are likely to obtain permanent foot hold. The use of gas from soft coal has Increased, and, it is reported, will be tremendously developed as household fuel. It Is said that a device whereby mineral oil can be used in a like man ner is already finding application. The practical Inventive genius of our people has been so strongly' turned In this di rection that It is quite probable that anthracite coal as fuel has exhausted Its best welcome. SPIRIT OF THE NORTHWEST PRESS " "When Wall Street Trembles. Eugene Register. When Hussel Sage takes a pill Wall street trembles. If the 'aged miser should die, it is thought' Wall street would shut up shop. Where the Tramp Gain. Salem Statesman. ' The cost of living has gone up 40 per cent ifi five years, but that does not affect the tramp. He finds that he can get. a living now with 60 per cent les3 effort than it took Ave years ago. Knock Off Some ot the Grafts. Albany Democrat. The next State Legislature, instead of adding to the tax burdens of the people, should knock off some of the grafts that were thrown upon the people by the last session, Increasing the state tax to the immense proportion of 7 mills. Oregon Weather Can't Be Beat. Salem Statesman. An old-timer says that four out of five Falls In the last 40 years in the Willam ette Valley have been just like this one. The years when we have stormy weather at this time, we ae apt to forget about the average, which Is as fine as could be desired in any country. Happy Lot of Farmers. Elgin Recorder. With live hogs selling at 6Vi cents per pound, wheat at 50 cents per bUshel. agd other farm products bringing profitable prices, the lot of the Eastern Oregon farmer is evidently a pretty easy one at present, especially as the-present harvest has yielded good crops of -almost every thing -produced in this climate. People Must Rale the Cpnventlons. Joseph Herald. ' In the conventions which will elect del egates to the National Republican Con vention care should be taken to see that the trust magnates and coat operators do not secure control nor be trusted as del egates. The people want Theodore Roose velt for President In 1904, and these mon ey bags politicians should not be permit ted to thwart their desires. Presidential Duties Not Easy. Pendleton East Oregonlan. President Roosevelt Is advised to seek rest. What Is considered rest for a Presi dent would be irksome toll for most mea The matters of state demand his" constant attention, and there are politicians that will find their way to him and bore him, though they knew It would cost his life. A well President deserves the sympathy of the public, and a sick one should have the prayers and best wishes of all of the people. Wants State to Supply School Books. Astoria Astorlan. It Is quite probable that, at the ap proaching session of the Legislature, some member will Introduce a bill pro viding for the supply by the state of school books. The law is one that Is bad ly needed In Oregon. Many pupils attend ing the public schools are unable to se cure all the books necessary for the courses taught, and it seems only right that those children should be given an op portunity to obtain a thorough education. A law of this kind would have the effect of doing away with the constant changing of text-books, and in many other respects of Increasing the usefulness of our school system. Have Become Commonplace. Lewlston Tribune. Political corruption In cities has become so common that the fact that two police men in Seattle have been "suspended" from duty for a limited time for extort ing money from women to save them from criminal prosecution, and that a Portland Alderman charges that the city authorities there have collected for their own benefit $500,000 from the disorderly, classes, passes without a single comment These things are now looked upon as matters of. course, because they are done under the name of party, and as long as it is our party it is all right. That Is why the boosters preach party loyalty and seek to drill the people like they were a regiment of soldiers. Hasn't a Safe Pilot. Boise Statesman. Richard Olney, In his Boston speech, congratulated his audience because, as he said, the Democratic party was head ing in the right direction. Just how he arrived at that conclusion is not ex plained. The party never was more to tally wrong than It is at this time. It has some good Ideas and some bad ones, and the two kinds are so mixed together that the party is addled. Mr. Olney may think it Is headed right on some question, but even if it were It would amount to nothing, for there 13 no bid derelict that is not headed right at some time during its tosslngs on the bosom of the waters. What the people want Is a party that heads right all the time. They find it in the Republican organization, and for that reason they, prefer to take passage' upon that craft. They could get on a raft and be headed right some time, but they would never get anywhere unless It were upon a rocky shore. Refuse to Initiate. Eugene Register. With all the noise made by the Salem Journal for a special session, and the pe titions that paper has sown broadcast over the state, urging the public to sign them, it develope3 that only about 500 names have so far been secured as favor ing such a session, and most of these probably come from Marlon County, amongst the Immediate readers of that paper. As Oregon has close to 10O.Q0O vot ers, the result is that the Journal's In itiative and referendum on the special session shows, unmistakably, that the people, as well as the press, are practical ly united In Its opposition to such a move. If perchance the Journal still insists on having a special session called. It will be giving a black eye to its pet theory of in itiative and referendum, which it urges should apply in all matters of legislation. It has given the people a fair chance to speak upon the special session, and they positively refuse, almost unanimously, to stand for such a session. In view of this fact. It Is time for the Journal to "lay down" and let the Initiative and referen dum govern in this as in all other matters of important legislation. Initiative and Referendum. Pendleton Tribune. The people of Oregon may have forgot ten, or perhaps many never knew, the powers they delegated to themselves by their June vote on the initiative and ref erendum amendment to the constitution, How many voters know that it requires only 8 per cent of them to compel the Legislature to refer any measure to vote of the people before It becomes a law? Every law must begin with: "Be it enacted by the People of Oregon." The Legislature Is no longer the state law making body of the state, but the final enactment of any law lies with the voters of the state and Is governed by public opinion. The Tribune was not in favor of the in itiative and referendum unless restricted. as the evils of the system were too ap parent. While the people should be given every opportunity to express themselves on matters of public interest, no small. disgruntled, unworthy element should be given the power of hindering legislation or obstructing the well-meaning actions of a big majority. Any expression of the people on nefr laws should be well sup ported, and the cause should justify def inltA nrirnnlzation. Tho new method of making laws will probably become very' cumbersome when put into action, and it would not be surprising if it failed to be enforced In most instances. It. however, has its advantages and fundamentally Is right. It will require care In Its administration. VIEWS OF THE STRIKE. May Not Be Necessary. Buffalo Express. So far. as la now apparent the only course which the Administration can take is to attack the coal-carrying railroads, which are generally believed to . be the real owners of the Coal properties, through the interstate commerce law, or the alleged coal combine under the anti trust law. LaTvbreaklnjr Railroads. Senator Spooner at Milwaukee. It is a quarrel between the operators, the coal-mining companies and their men, in which I sympathize with the men. The . coal combination Is one, gentlemen, which exists in violation of the consti tution of the State of Pennsylvania, which prohibits any railroad company from own ing or operating coal mines. The Interstate "Lavr -Available. Chicago Chronicle. Men sworn to respect the Constitution perjure themselves by Ignoring It. If to daythis hour a Federal order were Is sued for instant procedure to apply the Interstate law, the threat of the group of mine operators, combined with the threat of the group of miners to set aside the sovereignty of the American people, would become empty, the National sovereignty wjuld be immediately and effectually re established. The Real Striker. Memphis CommercIal-AppAl. The real striker Is the anthracite trust. It has struck against fair wages. It has struck against honest measurement. It has struck against arbitration. It has struck against union labor. It has struck against the Federal anti-trust act. It has struek against the constitution of Penn sylvania. It has struck against the Presi dent of the United States. And now It is demanding Federal troops to support it in its strike. It Works Both Ways. Portland Northwestern Churchman. In England about 200 Roman Catholic priests have just united In a movement to renounce the authority of the papacy in England, declaring their refusal to obey Cardinal Vaughn and the pope, and preparing for the consecration of one of their own number as their bishop. Even should this English move prove unsuccess ful, still it proves that Intelligent Roman ists are not going to be enslaved by papalism, and they are looking for a high er kind of Catholicism than can be found in the Roman church. Several hundred Roman priests have be come members of the Church of England during the past 50 years, and perhaps tho above 200 will do likewise If their church movement be unsuccessful. ' We have In our American Episcopal Church many clergymen and laymen who once were Romanists. Violators of the IiO.Tr. Indianapolis News. The situation then Is one In which the operators are autocrats, having no compe tition In marketing their coal and none in fixing the price of labor. It may be added incidentally that they have attained this condition by violating the laws of Penn sylvania, which, forbidding a railroad to own a coal mine, were intended to prevent just this monopoly. They violate the law by owning the mines in one capacity and owning the roads In another the same men and then they prate about "observ ance of law," and expect the American people to be fools and children enough to do their work for them, and back the troops while they periodically drive back this segregated labor to its unrelieved de pendence when desperation prompts hu man nature to acts of violence. Thus the proposition is that the people are to protect this monopoly in its control of all the anthracite coal In the country and all the means of transporting it, and in the recurrent task of "putting down law lessness" when labor attempts to. combine to relieve its oppression. The MlneoTcners the Conspirators. Chicago Tribune. It Is an axiom that those who Invoke equity must do equity. It Is required of men who go Into court for relief that they appear there with clean hands. These wholesome requirements are ig nored by Mr. David Wilcox, vice-president and general counsel of the Delaware & Hudson, one of the roads engaged In the mining of coal In defiance of the Pennsyl vania constitution. Mr. Wilcox has writ ten a letter to President Roosevelt in which he makes the Impudent request that the Federal Government proceed against the United Mlneworkers association in the courts on the ground that it is a con spiracy to prevent Interstate commerce by stopping through a striking the min ing of anthracite, and as a consequence its shipment from Pennsylvania to other states. It is not necessary to consider the legal points made by the writer of the letter. It is sufficient to say that he Is not the man to accuse the miners of being In a conspiracy, and to ask the Federal Government to proceed against them. The road he represents has for years been conspiring with other coal- carrying roads to nullify the National anti-trust law and the Interstate com merce law. Their conspiracy was in work ing order long before the miners' union was organized. iThe unlawful purposes of the conspiracy have been carried out per sistently and defiantly, to th egreat In jury of the public. Therefore charges of conspiracy and of violation of the inter state commerce law by miners do not come with good grace from a veteran con spirator. The confederated coal roads should clean their hands before they ask the President to , order the prosecution of the miners for conspiracy. They should disband their own lawless organization. They should desist from violations of the laws they accuse the miners of violating. Then they will have some standing in a court of equity. Mr. Wilcox's letter, com ing as it does from one of a band of Im patient conspirators, is a bit of inso lence. Nothing in Shooting Xinparn. New York World. To such persons as yearn to "fill the noisy ear of Fame." Superintendent Welch, of the state reservation at Niag ara Falls, gives a valuable pointer. There Is neither glory nor gain, he says, in rid ing through the roaring waters of earth's mightiest cataract and surviving to tell the tale. Mrs. Taylor did It. She went through the Horseshoe falls In a barrel, escaped with her life a thing never before done and deemed Impossible and believed her fortune was made. She offered herself to the public gaze as a lecturer, using the barrel as an Illustration, but very few have gone to see and hear her. Mr. Welch thinks he has discovered the philosophy of this curious popular Indif ference to the nerviest deed of the time. "The people are simply resentful that any one should have triumphed over the mighty Niagara," he says. A plausible theory, too! To do a thing that mankind In general has long agreed cannot be done Is a dubious bid for popularity. The citizen of the earth who first lands on Mars will have a hard time of It. Who on Mars will believe his story that he came from the earth? Or who on the earth, when he comes back, will believe that he has been on mars? Republican Tariff Doctrine. "We favor such changes In the tariff from time to time as become advisable through the progress of our Industries and their changing relations to the com merce of the world. Ve Indorse the policy of reciprocity as the natural complement of protection, and urge ita development as necessary to the realiza tion of our highest' commercial possi bilities. Iowa Republican Platform, 1002. NOTE AND COMMENT. It comes hard when the barbers have' to answer questions. ' What's the matter? Mr. Lord hasn't butted In for two days. People In the East are beginning to get out tlieir coal scuttles again. The Chinese gamblers have discovered that a door In time saves a fine. It Is untrue that the moon will quit on account of the high price of coal. Now that tho baseball players are done, the directors will -do a few stunts. Now Is the time we begin to appreciate the full value of a stone sidewalk. So the Coroner may arrest the Sheriff and the Chief of Police? Is reform a dead Issue? A froshly spanked boy is uneasy in his seat. Mr. Mitchell is waiting for Mr. Baer to get comfortably settled. The earthquake In South America was no doubt caused by his Satanic Majesty shivering for want of coal to keep warm. "Let the strike be settled," advises the Post-Intelligencer. It will be. All hands were merely waiting for long-range ad vice from Seattle. Mr. Mitchell Is letting his recognlze-the-union fly float down the riffle awhile, and says nothing. The best of fishermA sometimes use bait. The bankers have seen the country, and now that the rain has come they have a good chance fo see what the lovely Ore gon maiden looks like. Really, it would be quite awkward for Mr. Lord to put tlie Sheriff and Chief of Police in jail, and exempt the Mayor and Police Commissioner Ladd. First Violinist Schmitz. -Mayor of San Francisco, is going East just to be around when they select the arbitrators. Brer Baer might, as well hang up his fiddle. "The season Is nearly at hand when we begin to unload our old stock of pipes," says a ueaier in smoKers articles. r we dont advertise bargain sales: we jus their 'smokers and the amount of old stock that Is worked off would surprise you. The pipes that are purchased for these affairs are not expensive ones, but they answer the purpose, and in the mean time we get rid of a lot of old stuff for which there Is no other sort of sale." Once in the course of a speech which was punctuated by interruptions in Parlia ment John Bright was saying: "Person ally I do not feel disposed to wage war agalnft these Philistines," when an unruly member of his audience shouted. "Hee haw!" "If, however," Mr. Bright con tinued without a pause, "my friend at the back of the hall will lend me one of his jaws I shall be encouraged to reconsider rny attitude, in view of the historic suc cess of Samson when provided with a sim ilar weapon." The late John FIske, the historian, was a man of enormous stature and extemely sensitive about any reterence to his un usual size. On one occasion when he was visiting 'a friend at his home in a beauti ful town In Connecticut, his hostess and her daughter invited Mr. FIske to drive with them one morning. The road was a picturesque .onek which, winds along the river at the foot of the mountains. At one point the hostess suggested that the party alight and walk a. short distance through the field to get a particularly at tractive view. Around this Held was a high fence, with no opening but a narrow stile. The ladies passed through and turned to wait for their guest. For a moment he contemplated the opening; to squeeze through was Impossible, to climb over was equally Impracticable. Finally his deep bass voice broke the silence: 'Ladles. I think we would better continue our drive." An automoblllst was beinsr examined in Cleveland, Ohio, as to his qualifications to run his vehicle safely through tne streets and public places of the city. The Plain Dealer gives the following extract from the testimony. Q. Are you ambidextrous? , A. I think I'm dexterous all right, but I'm not so sure" about the ambl. Q. Ever troubled with color blindness? A. Not when. asleep. Q. How are your nerves? A. Nicely, thank you. O. What would you do if you etruck a stretch ot wet pavement? A. Slip. Q. If you were running your auto at thft rate of thirty miles an hour and a man should suddenly drop in front of tho machine, what would you do first? A. Run over him. Q.If you were bowling up the avenue at a lively clip and caused a spirited horse to run away, what would you do? A. Turn down the first side street. Q. Can you pronounce chaffeur? A. Not on your life. Whereupon the examining board con gratulates the applicant on the cleverness and directness of his replies, and gfve3 him the full degree of A. D., Automobile Driver, on the spot. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS "I want mv watch fixed. It has stopped twice " "It Is going now. Better wait till It happens again." "But what if it shouldn't stop again?" Life. "They say Mabel has married a-high church man." "Yes. He belongs to a little flock that ma in a room in the sixteenth floor of some business block." Chicago Record-Herald. Football Captain That "scrub" halfback has showed uo for practice with six ribs broke. Football Coach Well, the boys will have to practice breaklns his arms and legs, then. Judge. Judge Of course. I might let you off. Casey. If you had an alibi. Casey Shure. yer Honor. Oi haven'tr wan about me, but here's me lasth quarter, if that'll timpt ye. Philadelphia Even ing Bulletin. "Old man Tcllum thinks he Is sure to set a Government Job." "Why? He has no polltl-al pull." "But he claims he has. He says he ate the oyster that Oyster Bay was named after." Baltimore American. The Wife Really, my dear, you are awfully extravagant. Our neighbor. 'Mr. Flint, is Just twice as sqlf-denying as you are. The Husband But he has Just twice as much money to be self-denying with. Brooklyn Life. "Thought your dad wasn't going to send you back to college?" "Yes. dad did klek of the expense, but I threatened to stay at home and help run the business, and he decided college would be cheaper." Detroit Free Press. Grandma What? You don't want to go to heaven? Bessie Well. I suppose I might, if 1 have to go somewhere! Puck. "Let me show you our great 'North American electric fan." "You ouht to call It 'South American. Why so?" "It makes so many revolutions." Chicago Dally News. "Some of the magazines won't consider an article that Is not typewritten." said the young man. "Yes." answered Miss Cnyenne. "and some of them read as If they accented every thing that is typewritten." Washington Star. "I see that a pugilist was killed recently In a slugging match." "Well, that U no defense of tho sport." "Well. I should say not. You see" "You see we can hope for the same hap py result all the time." Baltimore Herald.