Omaha- Daily Bee FOIt ALL THE NEWS READ THE OMAHA BEE BEST IN TIIE WEST WEATHER FORECAST., For Nebraska Unncttlrd; colder. For Iowa Rain or show; colder. For wrathrr report oa pap, 2. "VOL. XL NO. OMAHA, MONDAY MOliNINU, NOVHMULW JS. l'MO-TKN 1(1KK. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. MEMBERS AWAIT TAFI'SMESSAGE rreiidtnt'i Communication to Con gress to Give Key to Work of Short Session of Congress. C uon is Likely APPETITES GOOD; "OLEU'Umc'ES Feople of United States Drink More and Smoke More, but Draw Line on Dairy Butter. A Mighty Hunter ALASKANS MUST PUT COAL IN USE Oovernor Clark Sayi Poor Policy U t ina unanengo Vf His Leader sihp Membe Uhering in Washington Are Bk ing to Discuss What to Dv" ling the Session. Withhold This Kesource from Publio Demand. HARD TASK BEFORE EXECUTIVE ONE WAY TO REDUCE HIGH COST MUCH NEEDED FOR TERRITOli The Defeated Members May Make Path of FrogTam Difficult. TARIFF ACTION NOT OUTLINED Possibility Definite Work May Wait Till Next Congress. DEMOCRATS WILL BE FOR DELAY leaders of Coming Majority Party llonse Inclined to Poitpnne Rrnernl Legislation t'nlll They Have Majority of Votes. WASHINGTON, Nov. 27.-When congress irienti week from tomorrow It will liae three months In w-Uch to perform whatever may be the demands of a republican aJ ministration'. After that the fate of the Taft legislative program will depend upon the will of a democratic house and a re publican senate, a condition which will continue until the- end of President Taft's present term. Confronted with a situation strewn with confusion, the success or failure of the approaching- short session of the Sixty-first congress Is believed to rest with the char acter of the executive message to be sent to the legislative bodies, according to re publican party leaders who arc now In the city. Many of the regular republicans defeated In the recent elections are not expected to carry with the best of grace the blows so harshly administered, and this fact of it self gives the president a task offerina difficulties far more complex than any that have been presented to an executive within years. Realising that he will be criticized If he falls to demand of congress further re vision of the tariff especially of the wool and woolen schedule and fully cognizant of the fact that the prospects would be all acalnst the suoccss of such a program if submitted, the president, It Is said, has not made up his mind definitely what his course will be. The Tariff Program. The chances are he will not insist upon action within the approaching session, but that he will offer to the democratic house and the republican senate, a year hence, a program for tariff revision which will be bolstered up with facts and figures gath ered In the meantime by the tariff board. Out of the whole membership of congress comparatively few have reached the city and there has been little opportunity for exchange of views as to what should be dona during the remainder of the present congress. 80 far as there has been ex piesslon, the pre-elections of congress are against any extended proRr&m. Nevertheless, the administration Is mani festing a desire to utilize the time to the best advantage In carrying out the plans formulated before the change In the politi cal complexion of the country had taken place, for, gratifying as was the record of last session from a party point of view President Taft finds his demands for legislation still incomplete. Personally the president has made It clear to his callers that he does not pur pose to withdraw any part of his program, although compelled to alter his plans somewhat, Just because the democrats are about to come Into control of the house. The short time that remains of republican majorities In both houses is used by him him as an argument In favor of pressing forward. Revolt Aaalnst Cannon. Many of his callers conceded the point he makes, but being more familiar than he with filibustering methods, they are not so sanguine of the feasibility of the administration's ambitions. The revolt against Cannon rules, which the country applauded only a short year ago will not tend to heighten the chances of quick action for administrative measures at the coming session. Within the coming short session fourteen regular appropriation bills, carrying an aggregate of a billion dollars or more must be passed. Otherwise there would be necessity for an extra session next spring. The result of such a session would bring the democrats face to face with the neces sity of doing something nine months In advanoe of the time they would ordinarily be called upon to assume responsibility. For many reasons neither democrats nor republicans want to precipitate this situa tion and it will be avoided if possible. 80 far as appropriation bills are concerned it is not believed there will be lack of co operation to facilitate their passage. Democrats Jlealre to Walt. Leaving the appropriation bills out of consideration, the dtmocrats are disposed to take the broad position that legislation of a general character snouia do pomponeu until they come Into the degree of power that has been conferred upon them. Con tending that the last election was an ex pression of the popular will, they urge that It should be heeded to the extent of per mitting the democracy to take the Initiative In whatever new action Is to be considered. But, while so contending, the democratic leaders are much embarransc-d by the pres ident's position In favor of beginning the revision of the tariff by schedules. They go even farther than Mr. Taft in their denunciation of the wool schedule and. while preferring themselves to designate the way of Its rewrlUng. they admit that they would find it difficult to resist an ef fort at reduction whensoever and by whom soever it might bo undertaken. Such also Is the case wlih reference to other schedules; they could scarcely do less than co-operate In reductions at any tune. 1 here Is sympathy among many democrats with the president's plan for a federal Incorpora tlon act and for the modification and of the laws relating to Injunction and trusts. All these Questions are complicated, how ever, and the time is far distant when any one can say with assurance what may bo tits fate of the administration bills along j the lines contemplat. d. I'nder the clrcuni- stances the chances are strongly agalnbt most of them. FortlfylnsT the Canal. Among the measures to be pressed are 1 those providing for the fortification of ' the Panama canal, and this, it is conceeded, I will provoke controversy; the amendment of the postal laws so as to provide for a parculs post along rural delivery routes and for Increased postage on the advertls- Ing portions of magazines; the granting of I ship subsidies; the pensioning of super- 1 annuated employes of the civil service; the - Continued on cenl Page. WASHINGTON, Nov. 27 -tSpeclal Tele gramsThey are on the trail of Speaker Cannon and Intend to wrest the honor of tho minority leadership In the Sixty-second congress away from him. ordinarily, with a change of the parties In power in tho house, the retiring speaker would be ac corded the place of minority leader. Hut a movement to deprive him of this leader ship has already started and is seeking pledges which are not in the interest of Mr. Cannon, providing he choi'lslies the ambition to bo the minority leader, as Is generally believed he does. Representative Mann of Illinois Is loom ing up as a strong possibility for minority leader In the next house. It is conceded that he would be a resourceful one. Walter I. Smith of Iowa is another mem ber of tho house who Is expected to be foremost In the handling of the republican affairs, at least from the standard of the republicans. As the nearness of the time of the opening of congress approaches the clearer it becomes that the Usuo of tuklng rom the speaker the power to appoint committees and providing for a committee on committees will come up. Already a number of progressive demo crats In the house have spoken out for a committee on committees. One of the most recent to do so is Representative Kims of Tennessee. Mr. .Sims has given out an In terview on the rules In question in which, In effect, ho declares war on any candi date for speaker who Is not for a com mittee on committees. Mr. Sims has Just been returned to congress by the biggest majority he ever got. A new possibility Is looming up for clerk of the house in the Sixty-second congress He Is former Representative John Wesley Gaines of Tennessee. Mr. Gaines Is not an applicant, but many of his friends think htm good timber. South Trimble ot Kentucky and Representative Livingston of Georgia are candidates for this position. The question of senate democratic leader ship Is causing discussion already. Sena tors Bailey, ltayner and Bacon all are mentioned for chairman of the democratic caucus to succeed Senator Money. NEGRO LYNCHED IN FLORIDA Black Man Quietly Manned by Party of Forty Men Body Hlddled with Bullets. MA.TO. Fla.. Nov. 7.-RIchard Lowe, a negro, was quietly lynched, several miles outside the city, before noon today for en tering, the bedroom of the daughter of R. M. Coob, In the heart of Mayo, late last night The crime and the subsequent lynching was a secret until this afternoon. Cobb was awakened late last night by his daughter's screams and went to 'In vestigate. As he entered the room the negro Jumped through the window. A searching party was sent out and arrested the negro, who was later Identified by a portion of his hat. Forty men gathered quietly this morning and effected an entrance to the Jail. The negro was taken outside the city and hanged from a telegraph pole. After the body was riddled with bullets the party dispersed. The county Judge has empanelled a Jury and will hold an In quest. MANY LOSE THEIR SAVINGS Postmaster General Hltrhcork Com ments on Many Complaints Re ceived from lmall Investors. WASHINOTON. Nov. 27. "This Is a pitiable sight," said Postmaster General Hitchcock today, as he pointed to a pile of letters a foot high lying on hts desk, all of them complaints from people throughout the country who had Invested money In "get rick quick" concerns, whose alluring announcements had promised large dividends to the purchasers. Many of the letters contained Btock certificates and bonds which were worth no mli than the paper they were printed on. "Many of these letters." said Mr. Hitch cock, "are sad commentaries on the mis placed confidence which men and women, many of them poor, have placed In their fellows. Thousands of such letters are received annually. The department Is go ing to do Its best to put these concerns out of business." Month Dakota Expense Accounts. PIE Kit E, a D., Nov. 27. (Speclal.)-The expense accounts of the candidates In the late election are showing up In the office or secretary foiiey. 1 ne heaviest enow- ing yet made is that of Chauncey U Wood, the democratic candidate for governor, who admits that It cost htm S2.01& to be badly defeated for the position he sought Congressman Burke admitted the expendt- j ture of S675, State Secretary I'olley says he spent SUM to secure a re-election, and State Land Commissioner F. F. Blinker only paid out 1130 to secure his election to that office. ! Lawyers Threaten Song In addition to being there with Its hair In a braid when It comes to soothing the savage breast, music possesses even more remaikable powers for winning the favor of the not-so-savage Juror and this ex plains how the damage action of Mrs. j Katie P. Raff ayalnst Charles Carlson came 1 tu be settled before It went to the Jury In j Judge Willis Q. Sears' law division of the district court Saturday. The plaintiff was a woman who sued for heavy damages on the ground that the llijuor dealer, Carlson, Injured her by sell- ing her husband so much liquor that his, I earning ability was practically nil. H. C. Murphy and H. C. Brogan were tie attorneys fur the defense, while A. ti Murdoek and A. C. Paucuast represented the plaintiff. Now, the aforesaid Murphy Is a vocalist of no mean ability. And that Un't all. He has UBed hi powers In the court room with I telling effect. Several years ago he made an argument to the Jury and Interrupted I his remarks with a few stanias of "Die I Warht am Rhine." That settled It. The I Jury found for Murphy's client. The csss was appealed to the supreme court on thu grounds that Murphy "went outside the record" when he sang; that his singing wa- Iliiiprot La UK) per conduct and piejudiclal, aud that tuok au uaalr advantage of counsel. Figures of the Internal Revenue Bureau Disclose Condition. ILLICIT STILLS ARE ON INCREASE' Especially is This True Where State Wide Prohibition Exists. TOTAL REVENUE IS $308,000,000 Coat of Collection One Penny anil even Mills to Dollar Packers Make Oleo to Take Lower Tax. WASHINGTON. Nov. 27. The United States has Just passed through n banner year for drinks, smokes and oleomargarine. Here Is the notion's record for the twelve months ended on June SO. as It shows In tho figures of the Internal revenue bureau: DlHtltled spirits, ltl3.0cHl.0O0 gallons, or 30.000."0 gallons more than the year before. Fermented liquors, UMSTi.Ul barrels, an Increase of 3,000,000. Cigars, 7,600.0011,000, or 100,000.000 more than In 199. Cigarettes, S,S30,000,000, an Increase of a solid billion. Tobacco, 402,000.000 pounds of plug, fine cut, cube-cut, granulated or sliced smoking or chewing tobacco or snuff 4,100,000 more than the year before. Oleomargarine, 141.W2.282 pounds, an In crease of 50.000,000 pounds. Illicit distilling and other manufacturing of moonshine whisky Is on the Increase, "especially," the bureau says, "where there are state-wide prohibition laws." The Internal revenue receipts on all these things and certain other things, such as playing cards and mixed flour amounted to more than 2SD,000,000, and Commissioner Cabell's organization collected It all at a cost of about J.sOOO.OOO. It cost a penny and a little more than 7 mills to collect each dollar. Three Hnndrod riant Millions. When the present year Is endod. next June 30, Commissioner Cabell estimates his men will have collected at least 1:108,000,000 at practically the some cost. Commissioner Cabell's report, speaking of Illicit distilling, says Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina lead In offenses of that character. Within the year officers closed 1.911 plants, 200 more than last year. While the manufacture of oleomargarine has Increased, the tax receipts were dis appointing. That Is said to be because a large proportion of the oleo Is no made as to take a lower tax than formerly. There are many prosecutions under way, charg ing violation of the lay. but Commissioner Cabell declares he believes they constitute only a smaU. proportion of the real of fenders. iiunois leaos an the states as a PrO- i ducer of Internal revenue. More than S49, 0"0,000 was collected In that state. New Tork was second with t36.000.000; Kentucky, third, with 132.000,000, and Indiana, Pennsylvania ' oraer named, nil- ; nols produced most of the distilled spirts Prl"d mot of the fer- mented liquors. BUILDERS ENGAGE IN STRIKE I Ten Thousand Rmnlovca of Ml ' Valley Iron Brldire and Const roc tlon Company Involved. 8ACIUMENTO, Cal., Nov. 27 A gen eral strike order was issued today by the State Building Trades counoll against the Missouri Valley Iron Bridge and Construc tion company, and it applies to every union man employed by the ooncern In the United Btates. Ten thousand men, Including carpenters, structural steel and Iron work- ers, engineers, cement workers, pile drivers, laborers, firemen and others are affected The strike order Is based on the claim that the contracting firm Is iHu-rlmln.K.. in the matter of wages against the men em ployed on the local bridge piers. 1'nldentlfled Man Killed. ABERDEEN, S. D., Nor. 27. (Special.) A young workman, a stranger In that vicinity and whose name was unknown to his fellow-workmen, was accidentally killed, while working with a ditching crew Mrs. Luther Calvert of Clinton, S. C, ex tiear Webster. The young man was In the ! peets to get new notes from the United bottom of the twenty-.'lve-foot dltoh, lay-' States treasury. Mrs. Calvert dropped her Ing tile, when a big chunk of froien dirt I roll, consisting of five $J0 bills, one ten, fell and struck him on the head. klllln one five and three $1 bills, while milking, him Instantly. He was buried Catholic cemetery at Grenvllle. I in the Ratification of Appointment. ROME, Nov. 27 -The pope has ratified the proposal of the conslstorial congrega- tlon. recommending the appointment of the : e,y ,vev jonn ara. rector or St. Mary's, Kansas Ctty. u blshoo of I-utvn ts," art V Monsignor Thorns F. Hills, bishop of Leavenworth was some months ago ap pointed coadjutor bishop of Kansas City with the right f succession. ' to Settle Court Case The supreme court upheld Murphy and to st me extent went Into the question of pro priety of singing to a Jury. Somehow no one seems to know Just how a rumor was started Thursday to the effect that Murphy proposed to sing to the Jury In his closing plea In behalf of Carl son. Murdoek and Pancoast quaked. It was a dreary outlook for them. Something must be done. They held a whispered con ference. A few hours later another rumor got Into circulation. This was to the effect that Murdoek and Pancoast had decided to sing a duet to the Jury when the time for jaigument should come. It was the turn of ( Murphy and Brogan to be fearful. Murphy felt tiiat meeting either Murdoek or Pan- coast alone he could nail their musical hides to the barndoor of oblivion, but when It was two agiinst one he was afraid that thty might make his own music sound lumpy. Brogan couldn't slug a note. t'slurday morning It was heard that Mur doek and Pancoast had practiced for two nights and were doing so well that they figured on quitting law and going Intq, vaudeville. Murphy and Brogan offered to settle for fit) and Murdoek and pancoast said. "Taken." They satd It quickly. All of which may or may not be true. At any rale It's the story the lawyeis aie telUug. iM I It ' MA I" srP ' vf AwmmF55 From the Cleveland Leader. TAFT WORKINGTON MESSAGE Document Begun on Shipboard is Nearly Completed. BUSY DAYS AT WHITE HOUSE President's Callers MakJnar ngr Hons Rea-a.rdlns; Appointments to a pram Be-nHlt nad Legis lative .tVosrrarav. (From a Staff Correspondent) WASHINGTON. Nov. 27. (Special.) The . n9 r-l1-n T ft frnm It I Tunm 1 trip and the fact that not more than a I week remains before the assembling of ' congress will crowd his business hours 1 with a vast amount of affairs that de- d attent)0n. The president is reported t0 nave caTrlM wlth hlm aboard ship pI.nty of m.t.rla, upon which to work In ,elaure nourSi including his message niiu mm minicn - pected to make choice of two members of the United States supreme court ana live members of the new commerce court. It Is assumed the president will be subjected to an unusual pressure of visitors. Then too. It Is pretty well understood that there will be a large turning up of members of his party who will be desirous of swapping observations about election results, along with suggestions about future party policy. It Is also to be expected that the i president will wish to Indicate to me party leaders In congress what he would j prefer should be done, or attempted, by ! congress at the short remainder of the lty-first congTess, when at least In one I Of Its hOUBOS poimcai F will be transferred to the cpposltion. all President Taft, Is likely So. all In to be the busiest man In the country for the next hundred days. Money Swallowed by Calf. Cnmlns for redemption, resurrected from a hungry calf's stomach, are themutllated I remains of nearly a hundred dollars, which and the cair. depnvea ot naiu.e. tenance attacked the greenbacks on the I ground. The poor beast naa to oe mneu 'and Its stomach raided for the lost lucre. i Mrs. Calvert will get, she Is assured. ! upon proper affadavlt $78 of the amount !hwet and swallowed ,the rest having :" " ... . , vv. nv semblance oee ll ij b",, nt ever having been money. Bl.h Hlte Temporal. Washington Is soon to hava another bauU ful building when the plans and specifi cation provided are carted out The struc ture will be a H.000.000 temple to be erected at the comer of Sixteenth and 8 stret by the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry for the southern Jurisdiction of the United States. Work on the build ing will begin about the first of next month. The foundation will be or granite ana nm superstructure of white marble. The consensus of view so rar as Known (Continued on Second Page.) A new heading on the first Want-ad page "For Christ mas." This classification will run from now until Christmas. Shoppors will find it most UBeful, as aJl sorts of pretty and useful Christmas presents are advertised. Ixok this column over; it will help you boIvo your Christmas iprob-lems. Have you ada today I read the want Milwaukee Municipal Dance is Big Success Playground Association Would Afford Young; People Opportunity to Avoid Saturday Night Meetings. MILWAUKEE, Nov, 27. MJlwaukee's first municipal dance was a decided suc cess. . Juneau hall, one of the smallest halls of the city auditorium In which la was given tonight, proved too small and KUbourne hall adjoining was thrown open to accom modate the crowd. The grand march, In which approximately 2!0 couples took part, was lead by Louis W. Vlzay, 82 years old and Milwaukee's oldest dancing master, and Mrs. C. B. Whltnall, one of the leading figures In the associa tion of publio play and soolal education, under whose auspices theje dances are given. Several leading socialist officials and their wives attended. The dances are being given by the play ground association to afford young people particularly an opportunity to break away from the evils customarily attending on baturaay nignt dances. This Is not a mu nicipal organization, but the city has prom ised to stand for any possible deficit. It Is believed that by this arrangement much of the vice among young people will be curbed and better citizenship brought about CHURCHILL ATTACKED BY MAN Male ttoffraclst Attempts to I'm Whip on Homo Secretary on Train. Uoi LONDON, Nov. 7. Winston Spencer Churchill, returning to London tonight, af ter a speech at Bradford, was attacked on the train by a male suffragist with a dog whip, who cried out: "Take that you our!" Two detectives who accompanied Mr. Churchill parried the blow and arrested the secretary's assailant, who Is believed to be a man. who Interrupted Mr. Churchill In the course of Ids address and was ex pelled from the meeting after a struggle. When the train arrived at Loudon three women tried to assault the home secretary, but the detectives drove them off. Physician Arrested for Blackmail. MOLINE. III., Nov. W. Dr. J. T. Lamp ing, formerly president of the Rock Island County Medical society and a physician In Mollne, was arrested today by federal of ficers, charged with sending threatening letters. The last alleged to have been sent was addressed to Mrs. Butterworth, asking for 136,000. Woman Candidate's Change of Name Basis for Contest MASON CTTY, la.. Nov. 27. Speclal.) One of the most strenuous campaigns that any candidate ever made was that of Mrs. Carrie Vaughn-Anderson in her ef forts to be elected recorder of Wright county. She won as most women do. In polling sufficient votes to be elected, but a protest has been filed against her qualifying, and It all came about In a most natural way. Mrs. Carrie Vaughn Anderson was a widow with a widow's charms. W. W. Lucas, a traveling sales man from St. l.ouls. met her, the two became Interested In each other and elec tion, or no election, they got married This was October aud ths event transpired In Omaha, away from the tars of every voter of Wright county. It was agreed between them that It was not to be an nounced for at least a year. She would return home, fight her campaign for recorder to the finish, and if she was suc cessful, would f'll the office for a term, and then the announcement would be made. Mrs. Lucms returned home, tha ballotk were already In tl.e hand of thu primer, nounce- and she resided that If tue auno MICHAEL CUDAHY IS DEAD Head of Packing Finn Expires in Chicago Hospital. DOUBLE PNEUMONIA Brother of E. A. Cudahy of Omaha, Came to t'nlted Mates as Boy and Worked War Wealth from nflWoall Itirtt CHICAGO. Nov. I7.--Mlchael Ctidah?.. founder of the packing firm beating his name, died at 1:48 o'clock tonight at a hos pital here of double pneumonia. Mr. Cudahy had been 111 for five days, the disease becoming serious early Saturday. The members of his family were at his bedside when death came. Receives Extreme faction. Extreme unction, the last sacrament of the Cathollo church, was administered shortly before noon Saturday. In the after noon all the members of the family who could be reached were summoned to his bedside. They remained at the hospital until the end. The effects of an operation for appendi citis, a slight stroke of paralysis and dou ble pneumonia combined to doom the mil lionaire. He was 6 years old. Mr. Cudahy caught cold ot Hot Springs, Va., a few weeks ago, and was complain ing when he came to Chicago for the wed ding of Miss Preston Owsley and Sterling Morton. After the wedding he complained of a pain In his side, which was diagnosed as appendicitis. He was rushed to Mercy hospital and a midnight operation was performed. The rich packer reoovered from the shock of the operation, but paralysis of one side developed. The doctors were not greatly alarmed, however, until double pneumonia developed Friday. Ill After Trip. "Three weeks ago Mr. Cudahy returned from Hot Springs, Va., and on arriving at the Blackstone hotel his left side bees, me paralysed," said Dr. J. B. Murphy. "On Monday last he developed appedlcltls and was brought to Mercy hospital, where he was operated on. Saturday morning hs de veloped double pneumonia." Mr. Cudahy has lately resided at the Blackstone hotel. He is a member of the Union League, Chicago Yacht, Exmoor and Glenview clubs. Friends of Mr. Cudahy expressed deep sorrow when they learned of his death and all of them voiced ths highest regard for him. One friend, who has been In a posl- (Continued on Second Page.) ment was made and her name was put on the ballot as Mrs. Carrie Vaughn-Anderson-Lucas, that might surprise the natives and undo all the good work that she had done. With her at this time s.letice was golden, and she put in the remaining six days canvassing the voters with renewed determination. She swept the county. But now comes her opponent and expaaes ths nioe little secret that was thought to be in the heads only of Mr. and Mrs. Lucas and Mrs. Anderson Lucas has confessed that It was true- that she would rather hava her hubby than all the county offices In Iowa. And she has him and she would never give a bird in the hand for a bird In the bush. The claim is made that Mrs. Lucas was not elected to the position, that If the facts of her marriage had been known she could not have been elected. The Board ot Supervisors will determine. So far as can be learned there Is no precedent. No matter what the decision may be the matter will go Into the courts and It Is provable that the present Imcumbent of the office may have the pleasure of hoKl- j Ing j oat the fort uutll this matter is fought Industries of North Badly in Need of Cheaper Fuel. RAILROADS AWAIT NEW ORDER One Line Susepndi for Lack of Mining Facilities. LEASING SYSTEM ADVOCATED Riff nllvf Recommends Government A lil of llnllrnnila In Form of tJnar a liter of Interest on Bonds Traile Cnnilltlnns. WASHINOTON. Nov. 27. lOx pressing It as his opinion thst the want of cheap fuel ami the delay In opening the Alaska coal fields aro the stroiiK''st adverse factors In thu present pinhlcm of territorial progress, (lovernor Walter V. Clark of Alaska, In his annual report lo the secretary of the, interior, ma. In public today, declares that "the 111 a.UlHi i policy of forbidding all de-velnpim-nt of the large coal resources ul Alaska, or of pluclng such restrictions upon development as to make the embarkation of private capital impossible, Is to be deprecated, whllu the policy of conserva tion by proper usm Is to be encouraged. This coal," he says, "Is needed for ths Industries of the territory and fur the physical comfort ot our people, and on no account should it be withheld from these uses." The present Impossibility of mining coai, either under title or lease, Is In a ineasmi responsible for the suspension of one of the principal railroads. . This has caused a general feeling of discouragement over the business situation in those parts of Alaska where development and sottlement ought to be going on most rapidly. Favors Leasing; System. Oovernor Clark says It appeared in pub lio discussions of the subjoct that the opposition to opening the Aluska coal fields "springs chiefly from two sources those persons who fear a monopoly and those who would have tills coal held as a reserve supply for the future." He further says that while the present coal land law Is not a good one 'It certainly lends no hope to monopolists, but rather Is' calculated to discourage the embarkation of capital." In declaring his hope fur the adoption ol II the leasing system to develop the lands, I Governor Clark says: "it will be found I quite teaslble, according to t..e best autnori THE CAUSE! ties, to devise suitable terms for leases. protecting both the public and tha opera tors, and Insuring Intelligent conservation." The governor aays that tha views of ths extremist that all ths Alaskan coal should be kept as 4 -reserve jtUitpU'. -has, nothing . lo commend It A conservative estimate, bo , mads by Alfred H. Brooks of the geological survey shows that at tha pres ent rate of consumption the marketable Alaska coals would last 5,000 or 6.0U0 years. 'At ths end of that period," he continues, 'posterity may be using solar energy or some other means than coal for light, heat nd power." Ilallroad Building limits. Little progress has been mad In rail road building In the northwest territory during the last year. It Is asserted. The officers of tha Alaska Northern railway. which will tap ths Mantanuska coal fields. declare that ths principal factor In pre venting a continuation of construction Is the unsettled stats of ths coal land ques tion and the Inability of any citisen to ob tain title or lease to theae lands. Governor Clark recommends government aid for tha railroads In the form of a guarantee of Interest on their bonds. He declares that the opening of new wagon roads and trails, with the accompanying lower freight rates on supplies, has en abled mining to be carried on In districts which either could not have opened at all or would have offered only a precarious opportunity to the miner. Ths governor recommends that under ths present conditions of fuel supply la Alaska and until the territory reaches a more ad vanced atags of development the govern ment should maJce no charge on ths cut ting of firewood. Certain changes In ths mining law ars recommended. These are characterized to discourage speculation among nonresident claimants who give powers of attorney to some person In ths territory. Praise for Signal Corps. Signal corps men who have charge of the telegraph system of Alaska are com mended by ths governor. They endurs great hardships In the maintenance of soma of the lines and are "to be commended for their brave efforts which result In keeping the lines open with remarkably few Inter ruptions." He declares the ocean cable will hava to be replaced In a few years "urless a large Improvement In wireless communication takes place." Ths visit of Attorney General Wlcker- snam ana secretary of Labor and Com merce Nagel to Alaska In July and August, he says, "was extremely gratifying to ths people." mscusslng ths "serious defect" In the code laws caused by the absence ot legal requirement for ths regulation ot births, marriages and deaths In the territory, the governor says that Instances have multi plied In the last few years Illustrating In a sulking way the svtls which must surely result from the absence of vital records Coal la Imported. Domestic coal to ths value of $.Sl. was shipped to Alaska from ths United States during the fiscal year ended June 30, ac cording to the report. In addition to this, foreign coal valued at I350.4& was Imported during the year, bringing the total of all coai Importations fur ths year up to !.:, TVt. The Increase In the total value of the do mestic coal Imported during tha year over DOS was l-KUn. The Importations of domestic merchandise from the United btates. Including coal, lumber, hardware and machinery, pro visions, liquors, etc., showed an Increase In 110 over l:o8 of t:,sot Merchandise and precious metals shipped from Alaska to the Unll Mates duriug 1910 amounted to JM.ta.Uo. Increase ovei I of 1293,:'"OU. according to the report. Faalaeer'e Heath Accidental. ClUUHOLM. Minn., Nov. 17. That Culiei. P Purple, cliltt mining engineer for tile -Oliver Iron Mining company in this dis trict, came to hts destn through the acci dental discharge :t his own rifle was tlx verdict of the coroner s Jury touy. whlcn Investigated the f.iuliti of Mr. Purple tio.lv near a turning shack io the wootls north of here eten!a. The victim evi dently crawled eighty yards toward ths shack after being wounded.