4 THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND;, SUNDAY MORNINO, JANUARY ' 22, 1911. THE JOURNAL AN IWDIPKSPtST ygW8PAPEE. ; , J", JACKSON. .PublUbar . niMi mnnlnr at Tba JoUTMl BUlld- Inf, fifth and mbiil itrtt, PortUad, Of, Portland. Or., for fraimlMloB tnrogs thUi wxynd-eUai matter,, i.. . t, . tvt TDonvra . fln TITS: Host. A-SOM. All A-partmenti ruchafl by thea. anmbera. Tell th operator what dprtmwt m 'ttiRKIQN ,AnVERTISISO BKPRE8EKTATITB, Bmmtn A- Keotnor Co.. Branawlrk BnlWln, , 226 Fifth imac, New York; . Go Building. Chicago, 1218 People's Subaerlptkm Trma by mall or Jo any addreM J a the LBlted Statei. caniaa or awucv. DAILY. Oaa rear 15.00 I One moots f .80 , Bl'NDAT. (?ne yean ...... .IJ.BO t One month.. I . DAILY AKD SDNDAT. One year $7,50 I One month I .68 Ik- -3 there , can b no tru rest . without work, and the full de light of a holiday cannot be known except by the man who has earned It. Hugh Black. THE DEMOCRATS T IHE ACTION OP the Democratic members of congress In caucus furnishes ground for hope that -they have gained wisdom from experience and recent events, and that their principal object In the next con gress will be to do what will please and serve the pedple best, rather than to play" politics for some real or Im aginary partisan advantage. 1 Their decision to have the com mittees of the house named by the ways and means committee, the Democratic members of which were Belected, Is evidence of the sincerity 'of their protest against Cannonism, as exhibited during several sessions In arbitrarily controlling legislation. The speaker-to-be, Champ Clark, was a leader In effecting this change, ? and cheerfully relinquished one of the large powers hitherto possessed by. the speaker, not only, we may Suppose, to be ' consistent with f or- . roer professions, but to bring the .'flower exercised by the house closer to the people. ; Jn..the matter, of tariff revision ', there will-be differences of greater i olr? less magnitude among the Demo - cratB, both as to the principle or policy of protection involved and -'also as to the method' of . revision 7 whether the whole tariff law shall ,be revised at once, or one schedule ; t a time. ' According 'to present In dications, the latter plan will prob . aiily prevail, nd It seems the wiser. lIf the Democrats of the .house will .next year revise the steel, sugar, t cotton, rubber, and perhaps two or ' three other schedules, and pass the bills up to the senate, they will have : placed the party In .a strong posl vtidn. If the senate rejects these bills, the country, that unmistakably ji wants those schedules radically re f vised,, will almost surely reject the f Republican party1 In and will 4 cdhi mission the Democratic party to 'cwrry on Its work. If the senate raeees the bills, It Will still be the J Democrats whd will get the credit for them. " ' It Is true that such piece-meal, re i vision would leave the tariff law as ' a whole In an Incongruous condition, temporarily. To make it symmetri cal and congruous revision should "take place all along the line. But Hhls can be done later. And It Is in this work that the findings of a tariff commission may be valuable. The Democrats have a splendid J opportunity, abd there seems to be taTTalr chance of their' Improving it. UNION OF METHODISTS 1 sHE MOVEMENT started for the j'1 unifying of the churches of j I America gains impetus as 1t 'com. Th ntnri mth - . lowed has been that those bodies which are kept apart by compara-1 tlvely slight differences in faith and practice should meet through ap pointed representatives. The points of agreement are first considered and then the obstacles to union. Tbeif Presbyterians and i the Baptists bave:already acted. , Now the great Methodist communion is falling into line. V The sub-committee of three from ach of the great divisions, the Meth odist Episcopal church, the Metho dist Episcopal Church South, and the Methodist Episcopal Protestant, church, having met at Cincinnati, $ave just adjourned. The commit tee have "formed a working plan that it helieves wilt eventually re mit in the unification of the three Ch-urches." The- Hllglit vHriatlon in doctrine between the Methodist tiplscopal churches north and south would hardly have sufficed to keep them so lone apart had not th spheres of the two churches been ! .larked out by the Mason and Dixon ! tine, .and the sectional' bitterness j thereby engendered. The present! blending of the two streams of' Christian effort is noticeable as still another proof that the east and west, ijutj oi uuiarcauon oeiween north and south can no longer serve as f of barrier between the two. St,' will not be, forgotten that the ontlnent-wide movement for unify ing the Christian church was born f missionary experiences in eastern lands. It was brought home to the little missionary garrisons, each supported by its home society, that only in union could .strength be found.,-' -t " - ; r - . In .the,' separate organizations of Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians, Episcopalians, Congregationallsts. Moravians, and the overlannlnar of their spheres"; of teaching, schools, churches, md literature a powerful -pi-WM-iut-into--thehari(1g--?)r the adherents of, the native faiths against which' all the Christian mis- ikmaries were . enrolled. And yet when the simple and basic principles of the Christian faith were the texts of al( their teaching; those points of difference became trivial In a true perspective, - So, when men had stood shoulder to shoulder among the crowding masses of the east, one in faith, in work. In life. In teaching. It was unthinkable that when each reached his native shore tne dead differences should be revivified. - 'This movement will surely be car ried out to the full, for It is ground ed on the spirit of the age, namely, to gain force by concentration, to seek"1 efficiency by discarding the ob solete machinery of the past TERCENTENARY OF THE ENGLISH BIBLE c ENTENARIES AND bicentenar ies and tricentenaries"'" of people without end, have come and gone. The keeping of the tri centenary of a book is utterly new. Centenaries Of events, too, are cel ebrated now and then, such as the declaration of Independence, or the promulgation of some epoch-making la or constitution. But a book? The1 growth of free thought in Eng land, the loosening of the bonds of Rome over the consciences and lives of the English folk, kept pace in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries with the restlessness among the common people under the oppression of king and nobles. Evidences in the field of religion are seen in the repeated retranslation, publishing In the churches, and then of the printing and scattering far and wide of the Bible In English la the homes of England. Proofs in the social and the political life of the people are written In the statute books, the journals of parliament, and the rec ords of the great towns and cities. Once started, these two move ments have never stayed, but often change places with each other In the rate of their advance. Many have been taught to regard the English Bible as we have it in the King James or authorized ver sion, revised and partly retranslated bythe company of 47 which sat in the Jerusalem chamber at Westmin ster, as a revelation straight from God. In that thought we do dis honor to the noble army of preced ing martyrs of whbse faith the Eng lish Bible was at once the evidence and the constant, dally food. Their battle had been won whether In the dungeons of their oppressors, or the public execution, or in the tri umph In parliament and ir the wider court of the religion of the nation. Having been won King James could call his revisers together at West minster In peace, thoy could answer hla summons without fear and in no danger of molestation, for the five years, at the end of which the authorized f version of eEhfllsK sneaking race was matured and published bv the king's command. So the King James Bible, like subi sequent revisions, was an evolution, not a new creation The flr6t translation Into English was Wyckliffe, the father of English reformers. He used the Latin Vul gate for hlSjfbaee. He died In 1492 In 1519 Erasmus wrote his Novum Instrumentum, in which he para phrased the New Testament Into Latin from the original Greek. In 1525 .Tyndale printed in Germany i and sent to England the first com plete English Bible. He paid for hnraudacity with his life in 1536 at 'Brussels. In 1538 Coverdale made a new translation by command of King Henry VIII. who was then in l the thickest of his fight with Rome. iThls Bible was set up in the English ! Attn HnhAi a A". vasin r Aiif 4 tlir r , " 1 ' crowd8 of liners. The King set the Price the parishes should pay at ! ten shillings, unbound, twelve shll- !,in bo"nd Mff,Ped l The Geneva Bible and the Bish op's Bible, ordered by Queen Eliza beth, came next. At last the Bible as the world took It from the hands of the Revisers' Company of King James saw the light. The date of the publication Is un known exactly, so the English speak ing races have set each, their own time for the celebration. On Sunday, March 26, special services will be held and ser mons preached in every place of worship where the Union Jack floats, and King George's command must be obeyed. In Canada a day In February, not yet announced, Is to be chosen, In the United States, the week begin ning April 23 has been selected. Here, at least, union services will be demanded, since, from this book of bookss every shade of the Christ Ian faith draws and has drawn its , , I lnttpirgyun. KEEP THE BOND A' BOUT A YEAR ago there were loud promises by the agents of the' Public Works Engineering comnanv of tha wonderfnllv effective garbage incinerator they would build for Portland If riven the contract. They made vehement protests when the city authorities seemed about to give the contract to .another firm, declaring that an efficient burner could be built for a much smaller amount. Their hul labaloo was as spectacular as were their ' promises of the. splendid ere t matory they would build If only given the chance. The city authorities were moved by the fuss, the promises were I trusted, and the Public Works peo ple given tne contract, ror many years the city had waited for an in cinerator that would incinerate. The refuse was almostmountaln h!hurW'TrulId8lake7Tnd 'ln it a million rats , held daily . carnival. Deliverance was wanted from the reeking mass, and the city ntrusted to the j Publlo Works people the building of a plant that would effect its removal. : 1 ' .: .- " '. The plant has been built, and is now in the midst of ltsofficial test. The builders promised that it would consume. 160 tons of refuse daily, but it is only destroying 100 tons. They promised that it would destroy every kind of refuse, but certain kinds have to be burned in the city's old plant- because the new one will not burn It . They promised that the cost of consuming garbage would hot exceed a certain figure, but it costs twice that amount. - , All these promises are In the writ ten specifications. They are named In the bond, and were the considera tion for which the Public Works people were given the contract. The cltv wants the. kind of inclnT l? erator for which it bargained. It wants a burner as efficient as that which was promised In the specifi cations. It wants an incinerator that will destroy all kinds of refuse as was promised. It wants an Incin erator that will consume garbage at the figure that was promised. It wants an incinerator that will con sume 150 tons of refuse -dally, as was promised. It wants Superin tendent Napier," City Health Officer Wheeler, the city health board and Mayor Simon to see that Portland gets for Its money Just the kind of Incinerator that it was promised. The elements of efficiency are all set out in the bond, and there can be no question. Let every stipula tion of the bond be exacted before another dollar is paid. The people are tired of being promised one thing and getting another. A TALE OF THE SEA T RUTH OUTCLASSES fiction. The tale of the rescue of the captain and his thirty-one sea men from the burnt steamship "Parisians" In yesterday's papers, and their safe landing in Albany, West Australia, from the British steamer "Transport," could hardly have been equaled in J. Fleming Wilson's short stories or Jules Verne's tales. So suddenly did; their ship burn that In the Immediate horror three men were lost. The captain and 34 survivors, crowded Into two boatH, and pushed off into the ocean, with no provisions, stores, or extra cloth ing, the nearest land, and that a barren rock, 40 miles away. Two days and nights of torment followed, then one man, then a sec ond, then a third, perished of the cold. The rugged outlines of the efktinct volcano, named St. Paul Isl and, rose on the horizon, and they landed on its bare shores to starve, unless a rescuing ship in , passing afar off in that lonely ocean should ce? thelf signals of distress. . Eagerly they climbed the Island's extinct crater. Inside Its rim a stone house had been built. They found there stored everything to meet their needs preserved meats, biscuits, woolen underwear, blankets, match es. In 1898, 17 years ago, the French warship "Eure" had landed her men, built and filled the store house. Year, after year passed and rro man In distress sought there for food In his extremity. At last the time came round, and over 30 men were saved by the fine forethought ed charity of the French captain and his Crew, whose work was done 17 long years before. Twenty-three days the ship wrecked, men lived on that bare rock, then were rescued by a ship of their own nation, with a tale to tell that falls to the lot of very few that go down to the sea In ships. Some day, one may Imagine, on these solitary rocks, standing like unlit lighthouses In the wild waters, wireless telegraph stations will be Installed, with a simple code of sig nals provided. So news of disaster and necessity could be sent far into the air and succor summoned from ships passing many miles away. HEROINES OF PEACE T HE COMING week Is to witness effort all over Oregon In be half of the Scholarship Loan Fund. The fund has been cre ated by the Federated Women's clubs of the state through a cam paign of four years. It Is the pro duct of an annual function In which the various clubs keep open house to j their friends and devote the pro ceeds to the enlargement of the fund. Tt has now reached a total of $2200, $900 having been added by the annual entertainment on Scholarship Loan Fund day last year. Next Wednesday afternoon is the day on which the clubs will make their effort for 1911. No philanthropy Is more practical or resultful. The fund is loaned without Interest to young women of limited means who are seeking edu cational preparation for the life struggle. The clubs have found that there are vast numbers of girls to whom these loans:; are a boon, and that an almost' unlimited sum can be employed in the activity. In the three years In which money has been available, 20 girls have "been aided, of whom 17. are still recipients of the bounty, and thefe is still a long waiting list, biding the time when there will be money available for their assistance. The organization has never lost a dollar of its loans, a fact that evi dences the worthiness of those who are its beneficiaries, and of how serious Is the general purpose of the borrowers. In every Instance, as soon as the educative process . has brjQugObe.earaiagioveroUllia borrower Into effectiveness, repay ment of the loan has been Immedi ately undertaken. If the true use fulness of the plan wre thoroughly understood by the publlo, the fund would be quickly Increased to many thousands, Instead Of the few hun dreds 'at which the asrrreraU now stands. - -. 1 a young gin struggling to lit. Her self by self .improvement, for .life's responsibilities .l80ne of 'the splen did incidents in the social order. No contest Is more to be admired, no endeavor more deserving of encour agement. We ara phenomenally gen erous with the heroes of .war; why should we not have at least some offering for the heroines of peace? A STORM SIGNAL - - S AGITATION for -the ' parcels post already bearing fruit? 1 An . announcement In yesterday's dis patches , seems to indicate as I much. A news dispatcli..sayAltliai officers of the Canadian and Amer lean express companies; in. confer ence ' in New York,, announce a re duction in through rates soon to take effect, between all .offices ; in the United States and many In Canada. Represented at the conference were the following express companies: United States. Adams, Canadian, American, National, Northern, ern. Western, Pacific, Wells-Fargo and the New York and Boston Despatch.'.-' :' . ': vy-. Explaining the changed rates, it was officially given out that the re duction is "of far reaching import ance. Instead of two companies which may handle an express pack age, making a separate charge on each -"line, the charge will be the same as if one company ha.d carried the package from shipping point to destination." Some of the reduc tions cited equal 33 per cent. No other interpretation can be placed on the announcement than that it Is the result of fright by the; companies at the prospect of legist latlon for Inauguration of a parcels, post. The reduction is in all human probability an attempt to forestall action by congress. The express peo ple doubtless hope by sacrificing a small portion of. their present exor bitant profits to still the agitation thundering at the doors, of the cap itol at Washington. It is a case of lightering cargo in the hope of es caping the fury of the gale. A sacrifice of 33 per cent on a part of their rates would scarcely be felt by the express companies. Few if any American activities gath er such enormous profits on so small an investment. The. United States Express company confesses to an in vestment of only $2,042,000, with an accumulation of $7,464,000, be sides $2,000,000 in collateral and $,895,000 in cash. Besides huge div idends regularly disbursed, it has accumulated about five times its or iginal investment Moody's magazine says that the Adams company,;, has 112,000,000 capital after paying big dividends, including the - disbursement of a special 200' per" cent' dividend in 1907. A recent statement of Wells-Fargo shows these assets: real property, $4,100,000; equipment used in transportation, $2,044,000; stocks owned, $3,211,000; bonds owned, $3,760,000; loans, $17,165,000; cash on hand, $5,455,000. 'AH this great property was accumulated on an in vestment of only $2,044,000 to say nothing of huge dividends disbursed at Intervals among stockholders. About a year ago, its surplus accum ulations were so enormous that It distributed a special cash dividend of 300 per cent, which means that every holder of a $100 share of stock was given $300 in cash. In addi tion, the company increased its cap ital stock from $8,000,000 to $24', 000,000, and gave to the stockhold ers the privilege of subscribing for two shares of stock for every one then owned. " The prosperity of all the express companies 1b like In kind If varying somewhat in degree. It has not been in vain that their special agents have sat in seats among the mighty In the senate of the United States. The passing of Piatt, the defeat of Hale, the disappearance of Aldrich, the going of Depew, the death of Elklns, the vanishing of Seott and the Htorm signals from the parcels post agitation are episodes compell ing the official announcement that express rates are to be cut MORE WAR -SCARE C ONGRESSMAN HUMPHREY of Washington runs about an even race with Congressman Mc Laehlan of California and Hob of Mississippi In depicting the son pitifully defenseless condition of this country, and especially of this Pacific slope, as against an attack and invasion oy japan. He says Japan could seize Seattle, Tacoma, Portland, the Bremerton navy yard, all the transcontinental railroads, could fortify mountain passes,' and begin to live upon the fat of this goodly land before the United States could get 75,000 troops across the country or make any effective de fense. 1 Suppose Japan could do all this; suppose as a speculative proposition it would be possible, the question arises: Is there the least probabll uy of tne occurrence or such an event? The talk of these men, if it la to be seriously considered, car ries the inference that what Japan could do .it probably will do, that Japan '1b likely to carry out this program, and seize and occupy the whole Pacific . coast. But Is there any real danger of this? Is-there the slightest rational probability of it? Can anybody suppose that Japan, groaidng.under-aoenormou debt, and with Russia ceaselessly watch ing a chance to retaliate for tho Russo-Japanese war, would, even 'f It had a real grievance against this country, precipitate a conflict with so mighty, a nation as 'the United States, a : conflict , that . could only end in. the defeat and destruction of the Invaders? . The affirmative of this theory seems always to be' assumed by these perturbed patriots. The talk of ths Humphreys, the McLachlans- and Hobsons Is mostly unreasonable, unhealthy and unwise. Traced to Its last analysis it usually reduces itself to absurdity. When they read in the urws dispatches the Other day that Japanese officers had viewed " the - works-; at the Panama canal, were they not at once filled with fear that the mikado 1s going to seize the canal strip and 'annex it to Japan? . : ,. " CrniNESE OATHS IN COURT 1 VANCOUVER, British Columbia,- paper has a rather : ludi crous account of a scene in court there the" day before.': The Chinese commission court - was sitting for inquiry Into the tricks and manners of Chinese smugglers, with whom, accusations had been made. South-fWtaln of the customs Inspectors' were in collusion. The members, one and all. of the Chinese firm were brought into court and examined.1 They 'were all educated in English, and claimed by their counsel to be christianized;. The mfin now in question la 1 de scribed, as tall, well dressed in our fashion, hair parted neatly tn "the middle, and "as smart as a whip"." The government prosecutor exam ined him, but never a straight an swer could he get. Up and. down and across lots counsel took him, but absolutely in,: Tain, so far as any admission of part or lot in the smuggling business went. At last the Judge interposed. "Let the " wit ness stand down," he said, "and fetch a chicken, and administer the Chinese oath In all its fullness." Then the Chinaman's counsel was on his feet at once with the loudest possible objections. "These men are christianized, your honor," eald he. "What' kind of a slur shall we cast on their new religion, and our old one, when we admit that we shall get more truth out of, a chicken killed In court to give authority to SEVEN HISTORICAL MYSTERIES Joan What became of Joan of Arc? Was she really burned at the etake at Rouen, as history tells us, or through some subterfuge was she mysteriously saved? In spite of the fact that many historians have painted her last moments lh a graphically descriptive way; have re peated as her last words, "Oh, Rouen I Rouen, must thou be my last sbode!" as she was led through the thronged streets, was It really Joan of Arc? Ar tists have painted pictures of har kneel ing at the stake with the crucifix pressed to her bosom, the flames mount ing all about her. And finally, tt Is told, that ber ashes were collected and thrown Into the river. Could there have been any mistake, and that Joan survived for a number of years after the date named of her execution, May II, 1431? There are ancient records that would go to prove that Joan was not the martyr she has bean pictured In history, or painted on eanvas. In August. 141$; more than eight years after the date of execution, there appeared In Orleans a woman who claimed to be Joan of Arc. This may not seem unusual In view of the many lmpostot-s who no doubt flourished at that period. But there Is testimony to prove that In the city of Metz. Jehan and Pierre de Lys. Joan's own brother, met the Claimant" In 1436 and recognized her aa their supposedly dead slstor. In Orleans also, where her etlrrlng exploits were wen remembered, she was rec ognized by many of the people who knew her during the thrilling siege as the missing Maid of Orleans. The an nual memorial service for the repose of the martyr maid's bouI, which had been held for eight years, was ordered discontinued. In the archives of Orleans, it Is shown Labors Power in Politics on Pacific Coast Frederick Palmer, who is studying the relations of capital and labor from such great viewpoints as those afforded by the conditions In Los Angales and San Francisco, Cat, and Columbus, Ohio, gives In the February number of Hamp ton's Magazine, a summing up of the personality of P. H. McCarthy, the labor union" mayor dictator of San Francisco. "If you are seeking Information about the situation there you go first to Mayor McCarthy himself," says Palmer. "After two hours with hljri you come away feel ing that you have gained nothing for which you came, while he seems to think that he has shown you everything with the candor of a watchmaker who has laid all the works of the watch out on a glass plate. "Seeking -explicit information, you start In with a question regarding the local labor situation. He waves his hand to you and begins: " 1, the present speaker, P. H, Mc Carthy, giving you the truth and the facts, tell you that I knew Chicago after the fire where they had no untons, and there were more sheriffs' locks on the doors ' and after a while he interrupts his speech: 'You were asking me a ques tion,' he says, 'So you were, and not about Chicago.'. . . "But he does not answer It. More questions and more orations, and finally you give up. The position which he holds Is due to a new type of political machine which h created himself. , "The "present speaker la 47 years old, one of a brood of nine little McCarthys, born ImCounty Limerick, Ireland. There he learned, the trade of carpenter and Joiner. "When he emigrated to America the post-fire building boom called him to Chicago. Subsequently, In St. Louis, he and . six fellow carpenters formed a union. That was the parent of the great national organisation called the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America. McCarthy has grown up with the, union, movement which , waa then In Its infancy. In place of the old Knights of Labor and many scattered organizations he has seen the American Federation of Labor, under the head of Samnei-t3MmiperB;"ttwtTnost,TisttiM poli tician and organizer of men, rise jo Ha present centralised authority. f "In 1886 MoCarthy went to San Fran cisco. The strapping, sturdy-faced youug Irishman had found his field in a ciUt the ceremony than on the Bible oath I that this man has taken?" ' But the Judge was, firm. The j chicken was decapitated . there in j court. What the result was in elic iting the truth or any part of it the reporter fails to tell. When, will people learn thejslmple way of enacting that a falserstate ment by any witness before a qual ified court carries with it the pen alty t of perjury when duly proved In a 'prosecution ! for that act? ' ,Mn these, days tne Vision' of the penitentiary has more weight on a witness ninety-nine times out; of a hundred than the spiritually out of date terrors of a past age. : . . 7. ; ' Getting Back" to the SoU. ' . By E. 'P.; Powell In Outing-. : Gardening as. a rule la the easiest hold forordlnary olty people. ' There are not so many secrets about growing beets, carrots, potatoes and-beana as there are about , crowing - plums ' and - apples and cherries. Any good asrloaUural paper will carry you through your experiments and lead you eately to success. There Is, of course, much more to gardening than appears on the surface, but you can learn most of it as you move on, You have to make your soil, as well as cultivate your plants. You must not count on large returns until you have planted considerable ex perience aa well aa seeds, but with the worst sort of blundering you can hardly fall to set enough vegetables for home consumption the first year; the waste can go to your cow and horse. , What you can do will be something like this: from a garden five rods square get your table corn In succession, from July to September. You will from the same field get plenty of green peas during the same period. For string beans and shell beans you will need an other strip about one rod by four or five. Potatoes will call for a third trip six rods by four and good mellow koII It must be to five you good re turns. Now when you come to planting for market, multiply the strips accord ing; to the amount of vegetables you are prepared to truck and sell. ' 9 Feminine, . From the Youngstown Telerram. A local Ironworker who had been mar ried a couple of years always declared that his first son should be named Mat, after one of his beat friends. learning that the Ironworker and his wife had recently been blessed with a charming baby, the friend smiled all over his face when he greeted the father on the street "Well." he beamed, "how Is little Mat?" ' "Mat nothing," answered the father; "It's Matress.". . of Arc. that during the month of July, 14S9, 810 llvres had been presented to-Joan dur ing that period "for. the good she did to the said town during the siege of 1419." Orleans, it would thus appear, feasted and honored Joan of Aro eight years after she was supposed to have been burned to death. If the new "Maid" was an Impostor, it Is odd that no one in all the throngs there (In cluding her two brothers), dlaoovered the. fraud. A letter written to the duke of Orleans lnvl44S, by Joan's elder brother, Is ex tant and speaks of Joan as though she were still living. Court reoords bear the testimony of a parish priest to the effect that as late as 1461, while a member of the original Joan's family, the woman was received as their own dear relative. . The famous Frenoh antiquarian Save made a thorough study of the case, ransacking all possible documents, and came to the -conclusion that not Joan, but another woman substituted in her place, was burned at Orleans in 14St Tha soldlory kept the populace at too great a distance for the deception to be noted. Historians have often wondered why the French king and the French people, who owed so much to her. ap parently made no effort to rescue the girl, if the real Joan was to be thus exe cuted. ' An old manuscript on the topic, now preserved In the British Museum, con tains the sentence) "They burned her, or another woman like her; on which point many persons are of, different opinions. Even as well known a writ er as Andrew Lang has pronounced the case "the most surprising and baffling of historical mysteries." Tomorrow "Man In the Iron Mask." then experiencing its first labor fever over the Chinese Invasion. The one thought was exclusion; and skilled la bor, generally speaking, waa without organization. " Boys, we must get together, he told the carpenters; and he marshaled them with phrase-making. Labor men like oratory and, like It at length when they gather in the evening. It takes them out of the monotony of their daily toll. If P. H. McCarthy bores the outsider with reiteration, he dues not bore his fellows. "Along with the 'gift Of gab' McCar thy has another, which rarely goes with oratory. He can organize as iwaH as agitate. Soon after reaching San Fran cisco he had a union regularly paying dues. He dropped the plane; he became a walking delegate. Always talking and organizing, attending labor conventions east and. west,, ho was shortly the na tional spokesman of the San Francisco unions. He ltked his job as well aa evef Theodore Roosevelt liked being presl dent or Sarah Barnhardt liked to act. "In 1894 he formed the Fan FranclsoO Building Trades council, wlrh himself as president, on a basis Of argument more substantial than words -which ex cited the imagination of the mon. Al ready he was winnlrig Victories for them. They were feeling tho power of unltv. When he had brought the hod carrier and the mason into the same bond, his next step was along the same- lines that have made the' American Federation of Labor what' It la. He would make all the trades of the city act together. "Then he made the general Labor council va dominant hierarchy; a oabl net . and supreme ccurtiof labor in one for all the unions. Having brought all' the unions together, the next step was to make them vote together. Some of the men were slow to see that : They had the old fashioned. Idea that your pontics- nas notnmg to Co with your nccupat'ioh. Republican or Democrats loyalty had the same hold on them as on farmers or clerks. MrfurfViv nnf nnlv orated aboui the value of political power in behalf of labor rights, but as usual made phrases good with deeds. Having secured a placa on the charter conven tion appointed i byMayorjj rorcea tne shortening or hours and- In crease of wages ftir t;lty laborers, and then refused to s'kti .the charter till the police and the firemen were guaranteed their demands which ' mad him th voice of a still wider following." - New Forecast ofVN' i doming Week Washington. Jan. 1L The outlook Is for ja busy and Interesting week In con gress, and lthe legislative session In several of the states also will lay claim to ; a large share of pubHq attention. In several of "the states the efforts to elect i .United' States . senators will be continued, while In others the senators now holding office will be' reelected Without' onnoaltlnn ' t. in-i . mv..ww JmMB i'VI- lette of Wisconsin and 8imfn, rnih,,-. son or Texas are among those slated A In Cclorado Urn leiltnr SsH11 atiAAaa a successor to the late Senator Hughea jujw .Dpetr, xr Denver, former Gov ernor Alva Adams and Gerald Hughes, SOn Of the lata HAnlttnV bm mnm prominently mentioned for ths senators3 A meeting of the Prohibition National committee wUl be heM In fT,n Am day to consider the general prospects of . mjitx - io tusoufs preliminary plans for the presidential campaign of next year;..-,';, -v-eLi; y'. The habeas eornii nnMuutin n ... vent the extradition of Porter Charlton w "a-iy to stand trial for the murder of his wife, Mary Soott Castle Charl ton, will again come up tfor hearing Monday In the United States oiroult court at Trenton. The department of state has honored the request of the Italian government tot Charlton's ex tradition, but the turning over of the young man to the Italian authorities was blocked by the prisoner's father, who applied for the writ of habeas cor. Th week will be marked by the con secration of three new bishops, two of ths Episcopal church and one of the Roman Catholic church. The Rev. Louts ChUds Sanford will be consecrated In San Francisco Wednesday as head of the new Episcopal diocese In the San Joaquin valley. In St Paul the am day will take place the consecra tion of the Rev. Theodore Payne Thurs- ton as missionary bishop of the Epis copal district of eastern Oklahoma The Catholic priest to be elevated to tha bishopric is the Rev. Father Edward D. , Kelly, whose consecration as auxil iary bishop, of Detroit is scheduled to take place Thursday In Ann Arbor. Other Intereatlnv v,nt. k ..w will Include th celebration of th birth day ajinlviwaar nt th rumo v J " . v. .1. BM peror, th twenty-fifth annual meet ing ox uie uanaaian society of civil Engineer In Winnipeg, the annual con vention Of tha ImnMiHnn e ,...- can Advertisers in Chicago, th meeting of the National Merchant Marine Con gress In washlnarton. ni1 tha nnnln of the recular session nt tha nmln. Mini l.nt.ln.i... A M Sv . .. V Electricity Makes Wool Grow. From the Technical World Magazine. According to rroretsor Blla Went- WOrth Of LOS Oatoa. Cal. him nhaafva. tlons of the influence of Ma-h vni . wires on animal and vegetable life dur- "u mo put year nave provea that eieo- incuy win more than double the normal tnareas of the flock and alao a-rMtiv Increase th yield of wool. on his experimental farm on th Tyler place, Roseville, CaL, a band of 1000 Sheen waa dlvidnd. nnm hnt h.lr.. placed in ft- field under th power, wires of the Great Western Power company, while th others were kept entirely away from all electrio Influence that might emanate. In th field undar tha alantrln line th production of lambs averaged a iraciion over two lambs to each ewe. In th adjoining field whore electrical Influence was lacking ,the lambs aver aged less than on to each ewe 1 " Similar difference. Professor Went worth declares, was noted In th wool yield. From th sheep kept In the elec trically lnflnenftMi fUM ih, fiuMi proved not less than 20 per cent heav ier man tnose rrom the other sheep kept remote from such Influence. Prenaratlons are now halna- ma A. n plow up both fields and plant th grounds in wneau Tne power company will be requested to extend th power lines throughout entire Tvlnr fialrt , an that the measur of the Influence of tn powerful electrio current may be In creased. Professor Wentworth declares that he Is verr confident that thvlall of wheat In the Tyler field will be over ioo per cent neavier than In th adjoin ing iieia. - . Good Roads Prospect. From th Astorlah. Th Good Roads cause deserves sup-' port and success. The announced Inten tion of the Oregon Good Roads associa tion to promote and energize campaign for the making of a good roads system In each bounty can have only practical benefits for the people of the counties. Good roads are always an Investment They are never a loss. The point Is well taken that by Issuing bonds to meet tho cost of construction, th Improved highways themselves pay. In use, both principal and Interest, by means f In creased property values and aooelerated development of all kinds. The thought of giving work to" men out of work, making them producers and wealth builders for the 'community Instead of burdens', should not be forgotten. The utilization of convict labor In road mak ing from city, county and stat prison will remove another burden. There is, tn short, presented now for acceptance of the Oregon .legislature, a eerie of measures that together constitute an effective plan for providing Oregon with permanently built highways. Thes adopted, the way Will be opened to a greater and broader development of this state than has ever before been possible. Public duty suggests the serving of the need in effective and unselfish way. New Export Record. From the Iron Trade Review. November made a new record lh ex ports of tonnage lines of iron and steet, and by th comfortable margin of more , than II per cent Th total exports of scrap, pig Iron, rolled Iron and steel, nails, pipe and fittings, etc., amounted to 154,725 gross ' tons. The best month had been December, 1909, with 1S7.I8I tons, last November exceeding this by mora than 12 per cent. It Is rather' unusual for a new monthly record to be made, and It is quite unusual for a monthly record to be broken by So large a percentage. Thus th record mail? In December, 190T, exceeded the previous record by less than a thousand tons, and that previous record had been mad long before. In May. 1906. There Ain't No Remains." J From the Pittsburg Post Tou hav all heard the story about the gentle and considerate cowboy who re sponded to a telegram f rom , "Jim's widow" about caring for the remains: "There ain't no remains; he was et by a bear." Now if -that was not what hap pened to Mr.' Roosevelt's celebrated libel suit against the Mew York World and th Indianapolis News, it must hay been a dynamite explosion. Tn era ain't no remains. And isn't 1t awful, Mabel,'" that the stiff state's sights decision was consigned to the new Chief1 Justice ISrWlA-OwprepwhawerietheraOTT w naa been expecting the Mad Mullah of the New Nationalism to emerge from his hole about groundhog day? After this unanimous decision of th court mere ain't no remains: ther ain't Be hola