CHAF r,VAC Dr. Orville Owen, of Detroit, Is Digging in River Wye in England, Declaring That a Ci pher, Which He Discovered, Will Enable Him to Find Manuscripts Proving That Bacon Wrote the Plays Credited to ShaKespeare He Says Bacon Murdered ShaKespeare and That He Expects to Find the Latters Head He Gives No Reason for the Murder. ENGLAND'S antiquarians ana soaae spearlas students ar following ta in dally paper with th most diligent car th accounts of th di mnrlK which ar being mad la ts m'-id of th River Wye. near Chepstow. r rr. Orvl.l W. Owen, or Liro:. a Shakespearian schoisr or wnrM-wllo reput. Tba Frltls:i puD.io 1 also becoming greatly Interested In lr. Owen's work. When th search was first bno a w week, ago England x:reele.l Dr. twn with equal parts of contemptuous et.ence and open ridicule. Now. kow- ever. all that la changed, and the dally paper record in proitrese i me l-n enthusiast's explorations with rW ousneas and at length, whi: th Illus trated weeklies derot pairea upon paxes to pictures of th ices of opera tions. Dr. Owen Is searching for manu scripts which h believe were niaaeu by Francis Paeon, the noted author and Lord Chancellor. II claims to ce e-nl.le.1 la his operations by a cipher. This Is worked out from bir jm.ip Sidney's -Arcadia." It la said to be e.ear and moai explicit. Sbakropares 1 1 rati In Box. Th latest assertion, which th doc tor has atade. regarding the cipher. Is tuat Bacon reveals In th cipher that .e killed Shakespeare and burled ma head in th box which Is now being reclaimed from the river bottom. Why should Bacon hav committed this murder la npt mad clear umrs P.akespar knew more ox iiacon fjrs. literary and otherwise, than was good for hlra In th troublesome age in which be lived, and that Paeon in mur- rtering the poet art actor wen uyuu tne tneory that "dead men tell no tales." . . Dr. Owen Is firmly of tills opinion ana also that itacon. iranui iter mtuht be discovered ana iraceu w Mrm-lf. and that the poet s nean w Price Collier Spends Several Months In vestigating Oriental Attributes and Dissects Japanese as Being Altogether Inferior to Oc cidental Peoples Japan's Logical Direction of Development Is Toward Korea and Man churia, He Finds, and Is Certain They Do Not Covet Our Possessions Not Yet, at Least. THE spectr of tt Biami-erea ytu low peril 1 hard to lay. In spit of th declarations of President .. tha tirotrstation cf statesmen, and the arrumenta of tnfluenttul newspapers. It Is seen rtalklng on tn norizou u . -nv, of our or land force U ocnteraflated or made. Th yellow press 1Ts a yellow tins; to to iimm i r..imn rtRn and cannon; th thousands of troop hurried to th Rio Orande. wer convinced almost t a nun that thT tottrlnf otr m forces of Dlax. v- iTir. Collier, who displayed pow er of acute observation and uoh an uncommon decre of common sense. In .Irawins conclusions when h wrote, i .,!.ia ru! th ETKlfsh" two or thre virs trv attempts in a new book. "Th m tha Est lately from th press f Charles ftcTlbnera fS.tns, to lay this irr-ost or at all events to e wnai su .;j.n e ther ta In It. Mr. Collier. In fathering material lor vi. K.kb in.it several months In Ja pan. Corta an! Manchuria. In Ms slow j.Mirtiey throus-h the orieni. wcicn cwn with llomlay and led throush tntca. in his chapter on "Japan" and "Thlnas Jspanese," h Brst gtrr sora vivid im pression of the JupaneJe . people i their way of I If and then analyses t-. i Tr-mf hort anJ m'ist fair from thm. Ill Idet and concluslcms differ In msny ways from thos ilrawn by any earlier writer or talker. Tni-litantatTv ha dlscUes an vent wMch wouUl hav rtvea a shock to every ctttxea la th United state, n iney had known tt at th tun tt happened. Suspicion In Hospitality. Tv-hM Ha American f.eet was wel comed w!th loud acclaims of friendliness at Tokchama." ay t. -J th rest ot ,v . t..imi ahia and men wr mob- l.laecl near Nacaa&kl and kept there, men mo deprived of leav. U.l th Anvencan r.eet soiled sway." r- foiTt.r ifoea not rive this ira- .r aa arklan of th hostility Of Ja- raa toward oa but merely lo Illustrate th character of th Japan: lo aow tiat -avan their hospitality is rjsjta beneath Its outward graclousnesa" xr- r-nttt.r manifests a belief that America ha nothing to fear from Japan at present that not only la japan m wiaittae. for a bic war. but that the direction of her logical development -U tmnl Cms and Manchuria, ano iaa of this sh Is fully awar herself. -Cora,- say ha. -a a muitaxy ana mvelal necaasltv to Japan, aa any .. -- u& wha travala frens TOkt tO ShlsnoBoaekL and ther takes steamer across to lnan. the southern port of I'area: trave's tt-e lengrth of Cures, from jrusaa to me ia:ti Mttr, aoa tmu throuch Soutbera Muvcbarla to Bukdea aid oa to K.naroin.--yuer ni"I jn-i to coco U tha rr. l. sine, by a xamlnatloa of Shak- peare s remains, wrote th epitaph on th actor's tomb, warning, under pain pf direful consequences, all ma to r fraln from touching or disturbing the remains of th poet, a warning which has served Its purpose to th present momcot Oaken Vox Is Found. Pr. Owen- cipher directed him In his search for a box 40 fet Ions; and ten fwt wld under water near a ford In this river. After tedious exploration In th mud a box 41 feet Ion and IS feet wld In th middle, with tapering ends, has bn discovered near th ancient ford. This box Is composed of oak logs, on foot squ.ir. carefully Joined and mad watertight. It Is dlvldd Into four compartments, which ar filled with heavy stones. Tha top of what tr. Owen thinks Is th each has been reached by the rods, but ther Is a considerable layer of c:y to be removed befor th logs or planking tormina" th cover can b re moved. When th blx U finally opened Dr. Owen believes that he will mak dis coveries which will prov that Baoon wrote not only the Sbakeapear plays, but also Spenser's "Faery Queen." Bur ton's -Anatomy of Melancholy" and th works of Marlowe. Greene, Pell and Sir Philip Sidney. Dr. Owen Is on of thos who believes that Bacon was a son of Queen Elizabeth. The Amorlcan says Bacon mad a se cret of his writings, fearing; that If th authorship became known his enemies would brand him as a wizard, on ac count of his marvelous mentality, and kill him and destroy hla manuscripts. Th cipher. Dr. Owen says, tells how Baron, preparing th each, worked with a bolst from a barge, using a horn to work th hoist that lifted th mud or lowered th cement. Then Baron carefully brought men b th line of development. If th be th outlines for Japanese energy and emlrTatlon, w In America hav nothing to fear either from coolt emigration or from military aggression. Only thos who do not know th situation; who hav not seen th feverish activity of bridge and railway-building; th push ing of Japanese settlers Into and through Corea and up Into Manchuria; th government refusal of passports to Japanese wishing to go West: and th coaxing of Japanese famllle and labor era Into Manchuria, talk of war as Im minent." "Ther is no mors doubt that both Germany and Japan look with envy upon th rich and thinly populated countrte of South America." be pro ceeded, "and that Japan has entered Manchuria to stay, than that Germany and Japan ar over-populated. Th thin mantl of th Prince of Peace conceal far.g and claw only until th opportu nity for profit, or th par. its of hunger. Induce us to throw It off. It would seem that our bureaus of agriculture, our schools of technology are useless without Annapolis and West Point. Th splendid gift of Mr. Carnegie for the advancement of peace doe honor to every Christian and to every Amer ican, but that traveled and Intelligent gentleman would b th last to sdvo cat th sending of emissaries for peace, with th baiters of ells armament and dafencolessness around their necks." Tlx-lr Vlosr of Womankind. trta conclusion regarding the Japan a people Is that they cannot Uv a companions of our race, that their Ideals ar entirely lncompatlbl with ours. Th on thing that he ssys chiefly ceovlnoed him of this In compar ability was their entirely different view of th relationship to women. Ha sets forth his conclusion boldly In tnea words: "Our Western coast Is right and not till victory over our forces on sea and land brings them will th Japan be permitted to col onls In any part of America, until her civilisation la purged and changed In this r aspect-" "If th American woman could are U whole Japan attitude ot this question, both at home and abroad." says be. In dlsousslng. what Is accord ing to our standard, th exceedingly low Idea of woman, "she would con sider th admission of th Japanese In any numbers ln this country, to b educated sta by side with our children. In th publlo schools, as an lnaoUrabl suggestion. And sh would consider that to permit freedom of social inter course between Japanese men and the young women ot America an Insulting usf estlau." mi- Collier avers that much of th admiration tor Japan tha enthusiasm witA TtH ail was walooroed Into th :- r'-f- .iVTr IL: ' ' I. V i i. e--,r, rt-M,lllf,f,r-T-,nr-- -J; : from OlouceatersMr toef.elp him In th masonry, telling; them they wer work ing In th BJvr Usk. (To this day ther Is much talk of treasure In tha Usk.) Finally, th chests containing tha orig inal manuscript, conveyed by a fisher boat, arrived from th old gray castle close at hand. They ar coated thickly with tar and pitch and wrapped around with -camlet." As they are set there a layer of Bacon's wondrous Iron oe mont Is laid round each. The boxes look Ilk a honeycomb In cells of ce ment no water can reach them. Then, to mak assurance doubly sure. A of mod am world powers is un warranted. H does not bellev that Japan naa by any means as yet proved her ability to rank with th great na tions, but that her social structure is at present held together by a belief In the divine authority ot the Mikado and that, she Is still in a regime of feudal Ism. Arguing that she was marvel lously successful In war. the author asks If that la so unexpected in a na tion that is based on those feudal principles. Besides be believes their Russian victory overrated. He defines tt is "inconclusive," saying: Russia Not Badly Drubbed. "Nearly (.000,000 Russians were se curely entrenched and more wer oo ru ing lnto Northern Manchuria, when peace terms were concluded at Ports mouth. Between March SI, 1904, and March 11. 1907, the national debt ot Japan Increased from 1280,000,000 to the Enormous amount of f 1.135,000,000; and Russia declined even to negotiate unless any consideration of an Indem nity was waived; and Russia paid nothing, ceded no territory ot her own, what she relinquished belonged to China, and lost nothing but prestige, for which she seemed to care nothing. This war cost the Japanese Sl.000,000, 000: 85.000 killed and over 600,000 cas ualties. A drawn battle with th Japanese did not seem to Russia then, and from what one bears la Russia to day, does not seem to them now. as a matter of much consequence. Had U not been for th condition of her do mestic political affairs, she would not havi.' consented even to appear at Portsmouth, for she knew, aa the chan cellories ot all Europe knew, that Japan was st her last gasp financial ly." It was easy enough. Mr. Collier be lieves, for a people with the past war like history of the Japanese, to recog nise an army and display an adapta bility for military prowess. "The di rection of true modern progress," says he. "would be the conversion of this clan system.' which despised commerce and Industry, which taught Ita youth that trade Is the only gam where the winner is disgraced,' into commercial and industrial efficiency." That would be the line of "hardest rcslantace." a avera. "Just as every- 6 i '. A . y "tXt , 'l ' . U I If. ,-'xyz - . ft;-A . 'teliirf e I lp?J" 1; It 4 '--asfC.. 9A. 'aj,- -Tt Ji.,'. r' .'V,SVV.,'!;.,?-':';-.rt .X-VU'-iir" s.'.; 3-tt III - ' --i ."v - -i ' II ;Vv '"v U'--i: ferric th masoned stones are set above them, covering the whole 40 feet by 10 feet. They, too, are plastered with pitching, and then on the top of It all he lays more rubble and stones, and. perhaps, the scattered piece of cement which he has not used, so that a triangular shaped mound forms the roof to his hiding-place. n "The pressure of the stone house, says the clpner. "serves to show you the right spot 40 feet from shore, hid In the mud of the river In line of the Ro man ford." And this Is what Doctor Owen says he has found, despite the contention of 1I..RF A body agrees to praise the Japanese aa a soldier, so everybody agrees to ques tion the honesty of th Japanese as a trader." Mr. Collier goes on to pile example on example of the low standards and actual dishonesty of the Japanese mer chant and business man Ue finds selfishness and a lack of foresight, and he does not find any progress to boast of In industry. Neither on this point of adjusting themselves to mod ern idess of trade honesty and trade development, nor on the other points, such as that of a high and fixed ethical standard, which the writer considers essential, has Japan proved herself capable of holding an eminent position among nations. Indeed, he does not believe that as yet the nation has been thoroughly tested even: that they have yet confronted, much less surmonted the real difficulties that prove a na tion's efficiency and define her stand ing among th nations of th world. He writes: , ' Have Not Tet Been Tested. "It is not worth gambling, with your soul aa stake, to win the whole world of Japan, because to the Westerner, b he right or wrong In bis apprecia tion, th whol world of Japan Is not ' ?ja. '-. - .. - ;. v - 3 t't r. v ' ilH IX v '.J& v 'f,d I I SSI I SSSJ lis H e" 1! worth having, at th prlc of their present slavery. We must wait until luxury oomea and wealth; the cry of their women for liberty and something approaching an equality Of opportunity; strikes and Uro qrganlxatlon of labor; the escape of the members of the Im perial Diet from the sway of a puppet king endowed with ghostly powers; the awakening of the nation to the pleas ures and opportunities of life as we know them; we must wait till then." "They have not been tasted 'as yet with thevreal temptations of power; with the strain and stress of represen tative government; with the poisonous vapors of prosperity; with the demands end expectations of the superficially educated; with the unpatriotic- lawless ness of millions of aliens; with masses of people under no religious restraint.. No devil has tajten mem up into me high mountain of civilization and shown them the kingdoms of the world and tempted them; and until that time comes, the Japanese must be consid ered as still in the making and outside of any but a hypothetical judgment." Nor have the Japanese, in Mr. Col lier's view, showed the slightest ca pacity for originality or Independent development. "They took their religion, their Con . K a fucian code of ethics, tneir art, ther alphabet even, all that they have. In deed, from India, China and Corea. They adopted them, but they have not Improved them. They have no porce lain, no- painting, no carving, no lit erature, no ethical code, no religion which are improvements upon what they imitated. Their past is a copy of the East, their present is a copy of the West. They have imitated our mHls, machines, arms and Instruments, but no Japanese even would claim that they have invented anything of their own, or Improved upon tne Western models. It Is evident that a man who can only imitate must always remain behind." The supreme test of a nation's ca pacity, of what may be called a na tion's strength of character. Mr. Col lier holds to be the governing of other nations. apan has in a measure felt this test in Korea and Manchuria, and she has not, says Mr. Collier, proved herself In It. He says: "Japan has not gained the respect, the oonfldenoe or the quiet oontrol of Formosa, Korea, or lower Manchuria. In all th months I was in India, I never saw a white mon Ill-use a brown one; I did not visit Formosa, but the Japanese are burning villages and shooting down the natives there 'as I write. I did travel through the whole length of the Japanese sphere of influence in Manchuria, and never a day passed that I did not see rough and often violent treatment of Koreans and Manchus by Japanese soldiers, police, and the lower class of labor employed there. . "It Is fair to say that the late Prince Ito and the present Consul-Oeneral of Korea, and all the many Japanese of ficials whom I met, were heartily Jn accord, and sincerely in earnest. In their endeavors to do away with these rough and bullying methods, but hhey have not succeeded in preventing tbem." " Mr. Collier's observations of Jap anese Hef. his descriptions of the houses of the Japanese noblemen, of the Japanese crowds, of Japanese man ners, and of various ceremonies and customs, such as the "Cherry Dance." are ourlously vivid and Intensely inter esting. Tet all that he sees tends only to strengthen his conviction that the members of this yellow race cannot be held by us as "brothers: that our Ideals are endangered by contact with them. Their morals, meir customs, are f a distinctly archaeologists that the doctor is only excavating a structure used as a foun dation for a Roman bridge. In reply to this sarcastic skepticism Dr. Owen Is going patiently forward with his work. Insisting that every thing tallies with his cipher forecast and in direot reply to the aoraeologioal critics he maintains that Bacon, who was a mental marvel, recognized the adaptability of the disused bridge struc ture as a splendid place for the burial, of his highly-prised manuscript Duke Foots the BUI. Dr. Owen Is working on the property of the Duke of Beauford. who thor oughly believes in the revelations of the Bacon cryptograph which the au thor left In order to establish after his death that he was the author of the Shakespearean plays and ae other works above mentioned. So thoroughly In syntpathy Is the Duke with Dr. Owen's work that he Is paying all the expenses. Dr. Owen is by no means the first scholar to Question the authorship of Shakespeare's plays or to discover a ci pher pointing to Sir Francis Bacon as the author. But In his claim that Ba con burled proof of the same In the River Wye he Is quite original, and the result. If any, of his discoveries, will attract wide world attention. lower' form of civilization than ours, is his verdict He finds their nature codl. selfish and deceitful. "It Is as tonishing."he declares, "that England and America do not see that Japan IB Materialism proving Its esclency. The Japanese are smiling atheists and ag nostics, and yet at one time America and Europe were hailing with admlra tlon their sanity, happiness, morality and ability. At any rate, that attitude means goodby Christianity, and Exeter Hall must.be very frivolous or very Ignorant if they preach a renewal of the' alliance in 1915. These people would make Darwin. Spencer, Wallace and Haeckel point in triumph. Not one of the sanctions or authorities of Christendom has con tributed to their success or to their present civilization. St Is purely ma terial, touched up with ghostly awe of ancestordom. If they and their gods, their women " slavery, their historical and commercial untrustworthiness, their Oriental secretlveness and cruel ty, their imitative militarism, their tyrannical anl unrepresentative gov ernment of themselves and their con quered aliens can be received on equal terms by England and America, then Christ is a mere ethical luxury, and no more necessary to uor civilization than the 'private god' of my Hindu friend in Udalpur." ' Norway's High Income Tax. New York Press. How should you like to pay an In come tax on next to nothing? If you were a Norwegian living at home and earning S134 a year you would be taxed on l-10th of it if you were un married on about l-20th of It if you were married and had no children. If you had children, you still would be taxed on l-50th of It. Rate high 17.2 per cent. With an Income of S538 a year you would be taxed, if unmar ried, on more than half of your Income; If married and having no children, on about 40 per cent of your income: hav ing one child, on about 37 per cent; two children, on about 81 per cent. Unmar ried and having an income of $2680 a year In Norway, your income-tax pay ment would be 1421.22; married, with one child. S389.94; married with six children, 1355.17. All that you would get off your income tax (married) for having six children would be S66; all that you would get off, by having five more children, would be $44 and six bits! Married or unmarried in Nor way, you could escape paying an in come tax only by having an Income less than. $83.08 a year. Think of pay ing an Income tax out of earnings of $1 a month!