TIIE MORXIXO OREGOXIAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1911. 10 (DiTirnmnn ronruvn, omco. ; CIrlCT LATIOX gTATEMKJIT. During the month r.f October. 111. , th avaraste circulation of The Ore t gonlan was: ' Are-rase 4ay Clrelatkm-...fi5.470 i jiTfrift Daily Clrewlatlosi 52.695 ! County of M-iltnomah. lt Plat of Ur"n. I ...... i This la to certify that th actual elr ! t-ulatlon of Th Ore-onlan for tne ' month of October wa. as above let forth- E. P. HOPWOOD. .' ,orln- circulation Manager. ! Subscribed anl sworn to before ma jthla r.t da, l 'skax.) .Notary Public The above circulation waa distributed ..fallow.: D(r ,..y. (Oregon 43.11T j?,1 .Washington 7-010 .1 I Ail other states . . a.SBM 3.x5 Total.. 65.470 Entered at Portland, Oron Poatoffic aa ' Fe.:ond-c:aae Matter. . . , .,., tutwipuoi Kates Inrartably la Advance. (BT MAlI- ' Pi?y. Handae tnrluded. mm Tr. ' ti:y Sunday Included, ala month.... tally. Sunday included, tnr month.. ; ' X..r. Sunday included, on raonta.... 1 1 i y. without runda. ona year . J-' i sl . w.thout r-unday. I month! -; 1-ally. without bunilay. tnr months... lally. wltnout Sunday, e&a moota. A ee k I y ona year . t- Sunday, an year ualay aad Weekly, on year.... " , IBT C.RBlia.) Patrr. Sunday Included, on yew JJ Xl.y. Sunday Included, on month. .... 'J Ilea, temll ofld Puatofttca money cder. npr order or personal cheek year local tank. Stamp, cola or currency 1 ara ai in senders riaa. OI postofflc I ad dree la fill. Inciudin. county and aial. I-oataa Rataa 10 to 14 pasee. 1 cant: IS to J P'fea. 2 cents; SO to 4u pa. canta; 40 to ki paa-aa. 4 casta. Fore.- poaia- aoubie rata . . i xnslara Boeloe-e Offices VaTT at Cons ' tin .New Tor. Hronaalca kuUdiaa. Ckl- crt. steles bulMlna. I tarmii ofac .No. Resent elraaC B. W. u4aa rtiRTUxn. uMn.iT. sot. i. itu. i , THE TAWXIxn Ml AT tTOLLMiK. i From tho number of the Oregon i Emerald for October 28 we learn to - our consternation that "cajnpua feel ln has been at white beat durtna; the . past week" at Eugene, the seat of the ' Ftate University. The cause of tola 1 emotional Incandescence appear to be an offense of & rather serious na . ture committed by a member of the facility. Who the audacious culprit may be one cannot g-uesa. since the Emerald charitably suppreaMe his i name, but hla misdeed Is held up to public reprobation without pity. lie 'poated a prominent football man for deficiencies tn his work and kept him out of two games, one of which." alas, "needed hla services) badly." The work In which this "prominent" per sonage waa deficient waa that com paratively trifling- portion of his du ties which g-oes by the name of study. To his really Important obligations, such a. football and college society functions, we understand that this eminent dignitary was unflinchingly faithful. What a scandal that one of his professors should have punished him merely for neglecting his books. Had he shirked football practice or violated the training rules, there Troul'i have been some decent excuse f.r severity, but to disgrace a man because he makes bad recitations what are our colleges coming toT Nest thing we hear faculties 1H be forcing football heroes to forego train ing altogether. We have gleaned this shocking tale from an editorial article In the Emer ald and It la followed by some com ments which have set us thinking. The writer goes on to remark porten tously that "this Is the third time In two years that this has happened." with a plain Implication that if It con tinues to happen some professor must expect to be disciplined. "Such things do not promote harmony and co-oper-atlon between faculty and students." we are warned: "they only widen the gulf which Is already difficult to span In many caee." We wonder what has caused this terrible gulf to yawn between students and their teachers tn the colleges and why It la so difficult to "span." The thought obtrudes Itxelf Insistently that It Is because the colleges have per mitted two antagonistic Interests to develop side by side. One Interest 1. that of the students' Intellectual cul tivation. The other Is their sports. We do not say that they are neces sarily antagonistic, but practice has taade them so. When sport, or play 11. It ought to he called. Is kept where it belong. It brightens the student's mind and wholesomely regales his -Oexly. Hut when It la made a busi ness, as It Is tn many collcgea. It iurpa the place which study ought 4o occupy. Instead of wholesome di version, sport becomes an exhausting vecuptlon. The student looks upon It as the all-Important object of his x-ollege life. Study or anything else hleh Interfere with this business Is .n Impertinent Intruder and the fac Vilty. who are forever Insisting upon J he duty to study, become the stu lent'a foes Instead of his guides, phi losophers and friends. It is the an tagonism between the business of ttudy and the business of sport which y made the g'J'.f yawn mVilch the J.meraM believes It will be so difficult 3 bridge. If the profe-wors keep on fnstlng delinquents who are needed In football games. - Our college editor makes no bones about expressing his warnings clearly and vigorously. The faculty, he ex plains, "says that the students are jt o young to know their own good." ,tn the other har.d. "the students say .the faculty are an Impractical people who have never had thler roses out ride of books and are Incapable of Judging what a young man has to contend with out In the practical Srortd." Then ccmee a declaration of jrpen ho::!ltls: "So long as either ride Insists on forcing Its view upon he other, to the exclusion of the ether's view, war will ex'-t and co operation and harmony will be rele arated to the back yard." , Certainly when students are permit ted to publish opinions of this sort .bout the authority ef their teachers, there can be no complaint that dis cipline at the State University is tyrannical. It la a goo-! old American doctrine that teachers both In school and college tnd In loco parentis, to borrow a barbarism from the abun dance of the lawyers. ar.d that their authority over the youth placed under their care la pretty nearly absolute, at least In the particulars if morals and study. This dovtrlne has been tested la the courts many times by rebellious youngsters of either sex. and the Emerald would have some trouble to find an Instance where It ; ISas not been sustained. Not only Is j It, good law. but It la sound sense as rll. Wnea boys and girls are per- J mltted to lay down the law. of con duct for themselves, they are only too likely to exalt play Into an all-absorbing duty and shunt work "Into the back yard." Just as the young people at .Eugene seem to desire. If one may judge by the language of their col lege paper. The professor, whoever he may be, who has had the courage to take the bull by the horns and actually exclude from games a Inry football magnate no doubt knows that he has taken his life In his hands. The atudenta can worry him to a skeleton by their pranks, and if his colleagues stand by him loyallv exceptional Indeed will be his lot. The pica that he ought to have warned the football man before punishing him Is infantile, fny stu dent who knows enough to go to college understands perfectly well whether he is doing honest work tn his studies or not He does not need to be told by his teachers that he Is neglecting his books. His own con science, if he has one, la all the men tor he needs. As a rule a student knows as well as his teachers what kind of work he Is doing, and In the rare cases when merited punishment falls upon his head it Is babyish for him to complain that he had no warning. THE U.W SOT TO MAMS. The Albany Herald declares that the "illicit sale of Intoxicants com monly called t)llnd-plgglng has reached a malignant stage" there, though the town haa been In the dry column for a number of years. The Herald declares that the arrests for Inebriety outnumber those, for all other causes combined and are "far In excess of those for the same cause when the licensed saloon waa in vogue." The prohibitionists are said to have rested after they voted the county dry and to have left the law to enforce Itself. Continues the Herald: Hut th "Mind pig" I her and ha at tained decrae of thrift whlrti damnd irly attnil"n or a:aa th return of tha aoloin. which umler rl.ld regulation could b little If n wor than tha peasant con dition. Tha baat that can b ald of th alooa buflnfn la that it l an avlL It can not ba defended on any mort! ground othae lhn that It may b re.ulated. Tha "blind pis." becau of Ita mlseatory habit, la here and thsr and alaewhara, almost beyond th rerh of th law th greater portion of th tlma. Linn Is a dry county: but Albany la a wet town. That is the source of the whole trouble. If the people of Al bany really want the law enforced the sale of liquor suppressed the sa loon, the blind pig and the speakeasy eradicated they ought to elect offi cers who will do their duty. There is no city or town or com munity In Oregon where under pres ent law there may not be prohibition If it really wants prohibition. The laws are ample, specific and suin clent: but the law officers are lax or indifferent or collusive. For there la no rigid public sentiment behind them requiring them to do their duty and accepting no excuses or evasions for their failure or neglect to do It. There Is plenty of law In Oregon against the blind pig and the saloon. The remedy Is not more law, but more Law enforcement. aOClETT AJTD aOUTVDF. The Wasco County sheepherder who murdered his mother at the conclusion of a drunken debauch could not have been entirely sane. The poor woman waa urging her son to forsake hla evil ways. He flew Into a fit of rage and stabbed her before the spectators could seize him. No doubt drink had dissipated the feeble remnants of his- wit which years of aheepherdlng had not already de stroyed. That occupation Is said to lead to insanity in almost every case if It Is persistently followed. The solitude exerts a baneful effect upon the Im agination. Alone for week after week in the mountain desolations with only the "silly sheep" to exercise his at tention, the herder often becomes sub ject to delusions. Hla mind creates figments of terror. The sense of real ity Is lost and Incurable Insanity fol lows. That a herder should plunge Into debauchery when he returns to town after a long sojourn in forsaken solitudes is perfectly natural. Cow boys were said to do the same In the days of their glory, but we do not read of any cowboys losing their minds. The fact that they worked in com panies aeema to have been their pro tection. No matter how far from civ ilization the ranch might be, there waa always a band of men employed who, could spend their nights In the same house and cultivate sociability after the day's work waa done. Hu man beings are very dependent upon company. A man who dwells In soli tude may retain vestiges of his finer nature, but the chances are that he will lose all of it trait by trait and degenerate into a brute as well as a maniac Robinson Crusoe must have had a remarkably strong Intelligence at the outset or he would have lost It in his long sojourn on his lonely Island. Do Foe showed keen appre ciation of this danger when he Intro duced the Man Friday Into the story. A great story teller must be a great psychologist. The nature of man Is such that he must live with his fellowa tn order to be healthy in body and mind. Our social aide Is a profound reality and wise legislators never neglect It. Laws which try to deal with each Individual as if he had the whole world to him self seldom prove capable of enforce ment and when they can bo enforced they Invariably do harm. TUX SHORT BALIXT ASSEMBLY. "The Government should be a democracy, but the party should be art autocracy." We have heretofore quoted this statement from the book called "Short Ballot Principles." of which Richard S. Chllds is the author. Mr. Chl'.ds Is secretary of the Short I.allot Organization, of which Wood row Wilson, of New Jersey. Is Presi dent and W. S. Ul'.pn. of Oregon, a vice-president. The book is presented by the publishers mith a rrtnted an nouncement that it is a statement of the principles of the Short Ballot Organ liatlon. In following up Mr. Chllds trend of thought on autocracy of parties, we are both surprised and shocked to'dls cover that he proposes as a means of making parties autocratic the forma tion of what. In Oregon, would be termed a wicked, boss-controlled as sembly. Here Is his plan for autoc racy in a "progressive party": Snrpo a group of th leader who hy parfact mutual confMane form thmalve Into "Th FrocrelN a Committer." They mB-ra lhal thetr tnemt'erahlp In that eom mitte shall ba unuaalsah'.c They fill by appointment ail laoanele In their own number h mT occur by death or ralr.a llon. When Concraa!onl election p pmacb they meet and draw" up th prorraa at p'atferwi t th year, detailing thoee laslf proBoaa watca taey beilev should b enacted by th ont Congreaa, . . . Th Prograealv Committee, after du examination ot condition and can 41 datea tn the rarloas district. Uiuti Ita en dorsement to one man tn each tcalllns a new man into the field If neceaaary). aaylng to the people: "Thta man In your district ha eubarrlbed to the pro;reale platform; w belter him clneer and capabi; w hop you wlU lect him." Practically the only difference we are able to discover between Mr. Childs' proposed committee and the late, lamented assembly is that Mr. Chllds' committee Is to be self-constituted in lis entirety. The Oregon as sembly was self-constituted in part and elected In part. It adopted a platform. Indorsed certain aspirants for office and said to the people, "These candidates have subscribed to the assembly platform; we believe them sincere and capable; we hope you will elect them." Mr. Chllds' plan did not work out well in Oregon. He shows how mis taken he is In the temper of the peo ple, at least those In Oregon, when he says that the voters who believe in the principles enunciated by the com mittee "would be glad to find in the field a candidate who represented them accurately, and would have no reason to worry about the procedure that brought him there." In Oregon the Republican voters did not object seriously to the princi ples Indorsed by the assembly; they did not could not find fault with the character of the men Indorsed. They objected to the procedure that put them In the field. To the voters It savored of return to boss rule and convention system, which they be lieved they had rid themselves of when they adopted the direct pri mary law. How about Mr. T7Ren? He Is vice president of the Short Ballot Organi zation, and autocracy of parties is presented to us as one of the princi ples of the organization. Does Mr. ITRen believe that the party should be an autocracy? Has our Oregon City lawgiver become an assemblylte? And how about Governor Wllaon? Can ho forswear the principles of the organization of which he is president? Can he come before the voters of Ore gon in the Presidential primaries next April and consistently put forth the .hole of that effective and resounding ballot slogan: "Anti-assembly, and be liever in Statement No. 1. the Initia tive, referendum and recall?" WHAT PrxrilOTlSM DOES. No one need be greatly disturbed by any suggestion that The Oregonlan has become "Pinchotlzed" because it haa approved the Taft-Flsher policy of opening up Alaska. The Oregonlan has declared repeRtedly that It Is for any rational plan that will develop Alaska or permit the opening up to settlement and civilization of the vast area of public lands belonging to the United States. That is true conser vation. It is not Plnchotism, which would dedicate the forests to the primeval wilderness and the sagebrush plains to the coyote and the prairie dog. I'lnchotlsm has branded as crimi nals and lawbreakers men who have in good faith sought to create indus tries and found communities. It has paralysed Alaska. It has driven the bona fide homesteader from forest re serves that never should have been created. It has usurped tho power of the states and taken control of water power sites over which It had no legit imate authority. It has sustained In practlcul Idleness a vast army of use less employes, and haa educated other employes In private institutions at public expense. It has stayed the march of progress, put its stifling hand over the entire Went, and set back the development of Alaska many years. President Tuft and Secretary Fisher are going ahead sanely and intelli gently to work out problems that Plnchotism merely confuses, compli cates) and abandons. Are they Pin chotlzed? Hardly. They are doing what from the first they declared they would do, and what Plnchot falsely ac cused the President of refusing to do. EIXCTIONS A rOUTiCAL STRAWS. Interest in the elections of this month attaches more to their value as straws showing which way the po litico wind blows for 1912 than to their inherent Importance. Only six state, elect Governors, Including New Mexico, and btjt two elect Leglsla turea. The most significant- of these contests will be in Massachusetts and Rhode Island, manufacturing states where the tariff Is a vital issue; Mary land and Kentucky, border states which have wavered between the two parties in recent years; New York, where part of the Legislature la to be elected; New Jersey, where Gov ernor Wilson's progressive Democ racy will contest with party machines for control of the Legislature and and where a vacancy in Congress is to be filled; In one Congressional dis trict each in Pennsylvania, Kansas, Nebraska and Tennessee, where va cancies are also to be filled. - The extent to which President Taffs fight for tariff revision by schedules on the basis of Tariff Board reports has caused a recession of the Democratic tidal wave which fol lowed the passage of the Payne-AJ-drich tariff may be indicated by the results in Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Republican chance, are pro nounced good of defeating Governor Koss In Massachusetts and of electing a Legislature which will sond Crane back to the Senate. The result in Rhode Island, where the Republicans elected the Governor lost year by a very narrow majority.. Is uncertain. The same tickets are In the field and the Democrats predict victory by 8500 majority, a greater claim than the Republicans have ever mode. Should these two states go Republican, the fact will go far to prove that the tide of Democracy is on the wane and President's Talt chances of renomlna tlon and election will be greatly strengthened. A split in the Democratic ranks in Maryland, due to the nomination of Arthur Pue Gorman for Senator, gives the Republicans a fighting chance in that state. The battle In Nebraska rages around the recall of the Judi ciary and may have an effect on the policy on that subject which will find place in the National platforms. As bearing on the Democratic nomi nation for President, the New Jersey contest Is the most interesting. If Governor Wilson's progressive Democ racy should carry the Legislature, he will remain tn the front rank of Pres idential candidates. If he should suf fer a setback, doubt whether he could carry his own state In 1912 would materially injure his prospects. Any attempt to draw an analogy between the elections of 1S1 and those of 1911 is rather strained. In the former year the Republlcana, who had suffered defeat In 1890 aa a coo- sequence of the McKlnley tariff, "were sUU standing pat; in 1911 all except a reactionary remnant are ready for real revision downward and have had an opportunity to prove It, while the Democrats have lost ground through their bungling attempts at revision during the extra session. In 1891 the Populist party was rising as a menace to a united Republican party; In 1911 there Is no Populist party, but the Republicans are divided. .The ground lost by the Republicans in 1910 Is apparently much less than in 1890 and the President's progressive policy has done much to regain It. Extraordinary prudence was dis closed In the cose of a young man and maiden of Seattle who five years ago had set their wedding day and pro cured a license to be married. An un expected load of Improvement assess ments was lodged against the young man's realty holdings in that city, whereupon, taking counsel together, the pair determined to postpone their wedding until they could start out on their joint way unincumbered by debt. The license was thereupon deposited in the bottom of the young man's trunk for future use. The patient twain went to work and but yester day the last obligation was discharged and they were married serene In the knowledge that they would be able to maintain a home and discharge any accruing obligation to posterity "with out being burdened with debt. The sequel will doubtless reward the pru dence and patience of the pair. , Raw owl and wild grapes compose something truly novel In the way of diet We hope the California boy who was forced to live upon It for a day or two had good teeth and a strong stomach. Even when cooked the flesh of the owl Is not relished by epicures. "Tough as a biled owl" Is about the last aspersion one can cast upon a beefsteak. John tho Baptist ato lo custs and wild honey as a regular diet. We think we should prefer lo custs to owl and wild honey certainly Is more delectable than wild grapes. But the boy ought to he thankful for his mercies. If he had been up a tree In Oregon he might have caught an owl. but he couldn't have found any grapes. It Is true, as Dr. Purtngton said at the National W. C. T. U. Convention, that as much core should be given to the breeding of children as to that of horses and hens, but how would she go about It? Horses and hens allow man to choose their mates for them, but men and women insist on choosing their own mates. If any government attempted to pair off men and women for breeding purposes, as horses or poultry are paired off, it would last no longer than the average French cabi net. MeJi and women persist In pair ing off according to the dictates of their affections, wtlhout regard to the quality of their offspring. The young Emperor of China 1. eating humble pie with a vengeance. The slices ore wide and thick, but if he can digest them they will do him good. Being caught young, he can perhaps be made over Into a consti tutional monarch without fatal conse quences to himself. If he cannot, the Celestials seem disposed to try to get along without hlra. In these days a monarch barely escapes being ridicu lous when he Is old and wise. If he happens to be a boy he does not es cape unless, like Alphonso, he betakes himself frankly to play. The Adventists at Washington who deplore the "widespread apostasy" of their fellow Protestants, do not make their indictment specific They speak vaguely of "principles of truth" which have been forsaken, but do not state what they are. We dare say that most churchmen of all denominations be lieve fully as much truth as they ever did. Their fault does not consist so much In abandoning old truth, as in rejecting new ones. There are only about 1,000.000 peo ple in Tripoli's 400,000 square miles of territory, but Italy seems to think even that Is too many and Is thin ning out the population by the meth ods sanctioned by ancient Turkish practice. - If Nils Florman should, after all, win the girl who rejected him be cause she thought his blood not blue enough nor his purse long enough, he will not have won much. If Speaker Clark had been offered that private dining-room In the Capi tol the year after Instead of the year before the Presidential election, he might have accepted It. Action of the United States Court on the scheme for reorganization of the tobacco trust will indicate wheth er the trusts are really to be dissolved or are only to change their form. Private furnaces, it seems, must not be used to cremate garbage, yet there Is much rubbish In almost every home that by right should be burned on the premises. " Child-breeding, declare the women in convention at Milwaukee, is as Im portant as chlcken-ralslng. Cluckl cluck! This is almost revolutionary. The President was tired at Chicago and anxious to get home. Just like any man would be. That was all. A fat man cannot be pesslmlstio. The month just ended was the dry est in sixteen years. Thia should give hope to Brother Amos and his faithful c o- workers. Absolute control of transportation by the Interstate Commerce Commis sion is a step toward Government ownership. If socialists carry Los Angeles there will be little surprise. That city has had almost all other kinds of "bug." The Governor has eliminated the militia from the State Naval Board and made it strictly amphibious. Thirty dollar, a head for yearlings In Eastern Oregon In the Fall la the latest In bunchgrass aviation. The great benefit of an all-night service will appeal to the arrival, on belated trains. Arabs and Chinese do not appear to fear death, by the way they face the guns;. There was great vuta of good pie material last night. MR. FISHER'S ALASKA POLICY. A clean-cut plan for the development and government of Alaska Is set forth In detail In the address of Secretary Fisher at the American Mining Con gress, of which the full text has Just been received by The Oregonlan. With the courage of an unprejud'eed Inves tigation he develops the strong and weak points of the schemes of the var ious Interests and from them all gath ers the parts which go to make up a consistent policy, designed to carry out the good purposes of all these inter ests and to prevent the sacrifice of the public Interest while offering every en couragement to enterprise. Mr. Fisher proposes that all coal land to which valid claims have not been established under present law be leased to mining operators; that cer tain tracts be reserved for development of mines to supply the Navy and as a check on any evil tendencies of private operators; that the Government buy the Alaska Central Rallroal, which has been built for 70 miles, and extend it to the Matanuska coal field and thence' to the Tanana and Yukon Valleys; that this road be either operated di rectly by the Government or leased to an operating company; that Alaska be given some territorial form of gov ernment. On the authority of tne best geolo gists and mining engineers he pro nounces the Matanuska coal Meld larger and superior to that on Bering River. Both fields contain anthracite and high grade bituminous coal and are the only known fields In Alaska of such char acter, though there are great quantl tltles of lignite and low-grade bitu minous coal In Alaska. The Bering River field has been crushed and con torted by upheavals, so that most of It Is good only for coking, or briquettes, and operation there would be risky and expensive. Hence, he turns to Mat anuska as the best field for the Govern ment coal mine. Mr. Fisher decides In favor of leasing only after considering the merits and emerlts of the alternatives outright sale of coal land to Individuals or Government ownership and operation of coal mines. He finds effective reg ulation under private ownership diffi cult, even if not Impossible. He op poses direct Government operation, be cause It Is not a function of govern ment, as an Invasion of the field of private enterprise and as involving such general and uncompromising op position as would tie up the Alaska coal fields until the controversy was fought out. The leasing system he finds free from the controversies and difficulties of both extremes of public and private owner ship. L--er leases from private own ers 84 per cent of the coal output was mined and 80 per cent of the coal land was operated In the United States In 1909. The leasing system Is In oper ation with signal success In Australia, New Zealand, Nova Scotia and Yukon territory, also both Colorado and Wyoming state land. If the land were to be sold outright. It would probably be leased by the purchaser after the price of the land had been enhanced by several soles, all to the detriment of the coal consumer. The advantages of leasing are summed up in the fol lowing words: That th consumor has everything to gain under the Governmental leasehold must be apparent, for the Government can make Ita royaltlee aa little aa it chooaea and it ha no Inveated capital and no unearned incre ment on which to pay returns. Opposition la to be expected only from those who wish to aecure our coal land for stock Jobbing or pcuiatlv purpose or ao that they may make a greater profit than la eaaenttal to aecure Immediate development. Indeed, Immediate development can be assured only under the leasehold' aystm. without It there la no reaeon why private Indlvdul ahould not secure th property and hold It out of devolopment until they can taJc advantag of the Increaalng demanda ot the future. The leastng ayatcm can ba given much of the flexibility nceaaary for meeting auto matically th fluctuating demanda of th market. He would accomplish this last end by restricting the coal area leased to the development of the market. The terms of the lease could be made to meet the legitimate demands of the prospector, the Investor, the operator, safeguard the health and life of the mine worker and the property of the Government, to the end that the pub- llo may seoure an adequate supply of fuel at the lowest cost consistent with these conditions. e e e As to the arguments of thoee who are unalterably opposed to leasing and who predict that Congress will not author ise It and that. If it should, no person will lease the land, be says that "Con gress Is far more likely to pass a rational leasing measure than It Is to throw the coal fields of Alaska open for unrestricted private exploitation." He also, cites the emphatic Indorsement of the system by coal operators In Aus tralia, Its success already mentioned and its approval by prominent coal operators in Pennsylvania, oil produc ers In California and by the Philadel phia section of the Mining and Metallur gical Society of America. He was also surprised to receive from the Chambea of Commerce of Cordova, Alaska, a statement withdrawing opposition to leasing and suggesting certain con ditions for leasing. e The objection that the leases might fall into the hands of the railroad com panies Is met by the statement that the Copper River Railroad Company Is prepared to accept the principle that railroads shall not be directly or In directly Interested in the cool business. Mr. Fisher", opinion of the terms on which coal land should be leased Is given in the following paragraph: Tho prim requisite of a leasing system axe that only sufficient coal land ahould be leased to meet the existing market and encourage Its development: that the quan tity leased to any one lessee ahould be lim ited to the amount that can be profitably mined as a unit and yet be large enough to attrect lnvators; that the lessee shall pay his royalty a he mlnea his coal; that thia hall annually amount to at lfteat a fixed minimum which will make it unprofitable for him to bold the land without produc tion; that he ahall mine hla coal without unnecessary waste and with due regard to the health and safety of his employes; that b shall not ncac diractly or lndlrctly in any comblnatlona, agreement, or under standings to oontrol the price of coal, and that the rerenuea derived by the Govern ment ahall not be used as a source of Fed eral revenue or a a substitute for taxation, but ahall b dvotd to the development of the atat or territory in which th coal Is mind. Candidate Deal 1st Toothpicks. Carlisle, Pa, cor. Chicago Inter-Ocean. In his primary expense account, which ha. ju.t been filed. Joalah W. Kline, who was unopposed for the Re publican nomination for Clerk of Courts of Cumberland County, specified that he expended 157.50 for toothpicks dur ing the primary campaign. Kline ad vertised hi. candidacy thoroughly with toothpicks, and, although be had no opposition, expended a total of 8168.99 to obtain the nomination. GRAPHIC, accounts of the extraor dinary powers of memory posessed by the well-known English literary man, John Churton Collins, and inter esting ylews concerning his rugged personality are met with In the new biography of the writer mentioned, at the hands of his son: The reader is also amused at the account given of a very human side of Swinburne, the poet. The London critics of Collins' time considered him to have powers of memory similar to those possessed by the great Macaulay. "Collins must have known most of Shakespeare by heart," says one story, "and not only poetry but prose was prisoner In that retentive brain after a single reading. He could reel off 15 pages of Napier without a mistake, and years after Swinburne had scattered his torn frag ments over three columns of a Journal, the victim would recite with glee the whole attack." Collins had to contend against poverty, overwork, disappoint ment, and recurrent fits of melancholy. He was passionately Interested In criminology and spiritism; to an ex tent, Clement K. Shorter believes, that reacted seriously on his health. It Is well enough, says Mr. Shorter, for men of good nerves and good muscle like Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Max Pem berton to sit around a table and dis cuss grisly murder, but Collins' was a different temperament and constitu tion. The relations between Churton Col lins and Swinburne were most original. The two men were close friends till Churton Collins, wishing to show an other author how to take a thrashing, pointed out that he himself, by a printed attack, having thrashed Swin burne, had retained his friendship. So he had; but only because Swinburne was unaware that he had. been thrashed. When he heard of the oc currence the friendship was broken abruptly; and years afterwards Swin burne checkmated an attempt to heal the breach by exaggerating his deaf ness when Churton Collins came to dinner. But the friendship, while It lasted, was genuine. Swinburne writes of the rather dull monotonous puppet-show ot my life which often strikes me as too barren of action or enjoyment to be worth holding onto. ... I don't know myself any pleasure physical or spiritual (except what comes of the eea) comparable to that which comes of verse In ita hljher moods. . . . But It is odd how a book once pub lished goes out of my heat drops, aa it were, out of one's life or thought, not to be taken up again for many daya. Swinburne consults Collins about his poems, praises his writings, and tells him how, wanting "something big to do or at least attempt," he had "always thought of and recoiled from and put by" an historic tragedy on Caesar Borgia, "magnificent but un manageable," the catastrophe "about the most moral thing I ever read In history," but the handling of It mak ing hlra "conscious of something like the sentiment called funk," e The arranging of "Pickwick" for the French stage, under the title "Lea Aventures de M. Pickwick," it Is con sidered, would have been highly grati fying to Dickens, who did not have much confidence in the potency of the book to charm Frenchmen. The Sphere recalls that when on on occa sion Dickens was traveling abroad he found a French admirer who was read ing the novel. "If I had one of my other works with me," Dickens wrote to Forster, "I would have given it to him, as I am afraid he would make nothing whatever of 'Pickwick.' " e e "The Dairy of Gideon Wells," la promised this week. A collection of poems dealing with the liberation of Italy under the title, "English Songs of Italian Freedom." is a new book of note. . The University of Chicago press will publish "Heredity and Eugenics," edit ed by John M. Coulter. This book will consist of a series of public lec tures given during the first term of the Summer quarter, 1911, at the Uni versity of Chicago. The lectures were given partly by members of the uni versity faculty and partly, by investi gators from other Institutions. The purpose of the volume is to present an account of Important and Interest ing movements In biology. The same press also Issues "Agricultural Edu cation," by Benjamin Marshall Davis. The matter is treated under the fol lowing heads: "The United States De partment of Agriculture," "The United States Bureau of Education," "State Departments and Legislation," "Agri tural Colleges," "Normal Schools," "The National Education Association and Other Associations," "Periodicals," "State Organizations and Farmers' In stitutes," "Societies," "Boys' Clubs," "Schools," "Textbooks," Bibliography." Archibald Colquhoun, author of the book "China in Transformation," called China the classic ground of rev olutions, as many as twelve having oc curred, he says, between 420 and 1644; but rebellions have been innumerable, the empire, indeed, never being free from them. The present uprising Is thought to have for Its aim the chang ing of the Middle Kingdom Into a re public It Is Interesting to note that Mr. Colquhoun says of Chinese de mocracy: "But of the contributory causes of a national vitality which has vanquished all conquerers, certainly not. the least Interesting Is the faculty of local self-government which runs In the Chinese blood. . . . This dispo sition of the Chinese people to arrange themselves in special organizations or coteries is clearly congenital and Its action automatic, as In the elective af finity t crystals." , Publisher: "I hope your novel ends happily?" Author: "Indeed, It does. It ends In the marriage of the heroine and hero; does not go into their married life at all." Houston (Tex.) Post, "Did Algy make a hit at the literary club?" "I presume he did. He pro nounced 'Les Miserables' in a brand new way, and then alluded to It as Victor Herbert's masterpiece." Wash ington (D. C) Herald. v Identity of titles has been making trouble In England again, this time In connection with a volume of poems which was to be called "From the Four Winds." As It has been discov ered that Francis Sinclair had used the phrase for a book published a year ago. Miss Jessie Annie Anderson's poems will appear under the amended heading, "Breaths From the Four Winds." By a curious coincidence, .Mr. Sinclair also has Just had to alter the title of a book, the one announced having been used by another author. Curious. "With Napoleon at Waterloo," by the 1st E. Bruce Low, edited by MacKen sle MacBride, is said to oontaln much Important unpublished material relat ing to the Peninsular and Waterloo campaigns. Among the documents are translations of the diaries of two of Napoleon's officers, which describe his conduct during the closing hours of Waterloo. The account of the Passage of the Douro, one of the most daring feats In the history of British arms, and uf the campaign In Egypt, also adds new facts to our knowledge of those event N. Nitts on Apples By Dean Collin. Nesclus Nitts, he whose saplency Was Punkindorf's wonder perennially. Projected, with uttermost dexterity, A nicotine Jet o'er the edge of his knee. And spake for a space on the fruit ot the tree. "Historical facts has a way that's - plumb beatln', Repeatin' themselves with unendln re peating Which fact is especial borne in upon me By things In the paper I recently see, Proclaimin' that somethin' has hap pened once more, I know to have happened in '74. "In "74 Zekel Waller, he found A shrub growin' up In some old fal low ground, Which same, by inspection, was prov en to be No more ner no less than a strange apple tree; While closer examinin" showed up, to boot. The branches was bearln' some sam ples of fruit, "A-bltln" the apples, he found, further more. No seeds, and not nary the ghost of core. The fruit, from the samples that later I seen. Appeared 'bout the size of a big Lima bean. The flavor, I also took 'caslon to mark. Was much like the taste of Peruvian bark. "Our whole neighborhood was en thused by the find: 'Twould be a big thing fer the town, we opined; And so it perhaps might have turned out to be. If Sprague's dappled mule hadn't et up the tree, And squenched In his Jaws that which might have made Waller Famed clean from Grass Prairie to Beaconhurst Holler. "But hlsfry ain't balked: though 'the first tree was eaten. She got right, to work on the Job of repeatin'. I reckon they've .found night a hun dred or more Since Waller found his back in '74: Which shows one may find, if he care fully seeks. That Nature's plumb prodigal fash ionin' freaks." Half a Century Ago From The Oregonlan, November 1, lstil. It is said the TJnlo can run up to and above Salem in low water. If so, she will do a capital business, should the State Fair be at Salem next year. John Orvis Waterman, surveyor of customs at this port, yesterday ap peared before the United States Dis trict Court and took the oath of alleg iance to the United States Government, lately prescribed by the Treasury De partment for Federal officials to take. Mr. J. A. Cornwall. We have re ceived a communication of some length from this gentleman, relating to his suspension from the ministry by the Cumberland Presbytery of Oregon. We briefly stated the circumstances under which this was done in our paper some weeks since. We have no reason to doubt its correctness. Mr. Cornwall, then an authorized minister, presented charges against two of his brother ministers. The charges were submitted to examination and sent to trial. No proof wae presented to - substantiate them, and the Presbytery, considering the false nature of the charges, felt It their duty to suspend Mr. Cornwall from the minlBtry. They did this. Mr. Cornwall now desires to appeal from the Judgment of the church, to which he submitted his case, to the public to politicians to his brethren of the secession faith, and asks us to' do this through the medium of The Oregonlan. This cannot be. . . . The wriggling and twisting and squirming of this Mr. J. A. Cornwall; first, in the false charge, he made against his brethren in the ministry; second. In the proof of their falsity; third, in condemnation of their author and his expulsion from the ministry; and, fourth, in this last effort to break the force of his pun ishment by an appeal to the public, remind us of that oft-quoted distich: No man e'er feels the halter draw with trood oolnlon of the law. Conntry Town Sayings by Ed Eowe Somehow, a barefooted woman always shocks a man. A man knows a' woman has feet, but he hates to eee them. What do people talk most ahoutT I have concluded they they talk most of Outrages. Some men are like phonographs; every day they reel off exactly the some records. Some people think that if they do not eat with a knife, or drink out of a saucer, that is enough to know about etiquette. It makes very little difference with some men whether they make a state ment on oath at the courthouse, or on the street. A great trick of pretty women is not to be very fond of anyone. The popularity of dogs is due to a story told years ago, and never authen ticated, that there was once a dog that would go after the cows. It alwayB makes a man mad to CLsk him to be ldentlfled. Experience indicates that If a girl wants a husband, she must get out and hustle for one, the same aa a man hus tles for a Job. I try not to be prejudiced, but do not make much headway against It. Carries Individual Beer Glass. Baltimore Sun. "A glass of beer, bartender, and here's my own glass! None of those others for mine!" With these words a well-known ex saloonkeeper ordered a drink, and at the same time drew a medium-sized shell glass from his coat pocket. The bartender, surprise was so great he nearly dropped to the floor, and the customers gaped with wide open mouths, while the hangers-on fell back against the wall. "Fill 'er up again, bartender"" said the antlseptlo man. This man has been carrying his own glass for two years now, and when one breaks or gets smashed In his pocket he buys another. The "Anguished" Ottomans. Constantinople Tanln, Translated in the Orient This fury that the Ottomans nourish while they are condemned to suffer, is not the fruit of the state of war which now commences between us and the Italians; it 1b that of the caged lion, powerless to defend himself against the insults and attacks of wolves. Oh, if we only had a common boundary with Italy, were it but one foot long, what a burst of vengeance would come from the. anguished breast of all the Ottomans!