THE OREGON JOURNAL', PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, , MARCH '20, - 1004. fHE BROAD QUESTION OF LE HI ED BY ERENGfflAN: AND :M JAPAN'S ROSSIB CONSIDER A A . AMERICAN 5 Japan as She Really Is r.- . By Jules luii ' ,' "TIIE events lo the far east have .. . I .... caused a complete revolution 10 1 . the opinions held by . the na - tlons of Europe. There was cer talnlyno person In Europe or even In the : United States, who would have thought that Japan would dare to declare war " against Russia, and that country her 1 eelf, - though foreseeing "f that she might have to Show, her teeth to reg ulate her differences with the little Bra ' plre of the Rising 8un, had absolutely no Idea that the recent events , mlgtif ,( take place. ;'. -4i'r- ', The statesmen of the Whole civilised ; .world have almply failed' to recognise : h imnnrttnM at the ran 111 crorress of Japan. And still statistics show that during the laat 20 years Japan hal built ; more than ,000 kilometres of railroad and nearly 10,000 factories of all kinds. No one has even for a moment Im agined that this people, which was able to accomplish this in an Incredible short (apace of time, might become dangerous, ' IUI iiiera inline uyiiuuu uvm iioiv 111 'France by a party which, luckily, ,1s only a small minority of . our nation. Illaving for SO years thought of Japan as nation, capable only of making fans ; Ifor "Au Bon Marche.7 they have sud denly adopted another and more dan jgerous view of the Japanese. -: Idealists as M. Jaures, who have be i come aware at the rapid progress made by that nation and the 'growth of so- , Iclallstlo -Ideas in Japan, have become 'ravlngly enthusiastic over "this little rising people." To be perfectly frank, their great love f Japan is simply a result of their I hatred of Russia, but if they had only taken the trouble of looking deeper into 'the case they would soon have found that the Japanese in a still higher de 'gree posses the fault for which they blame the Russians. . Russia la an autocratic and Christian 'nation, and for this reason she has In curred thtf dislike Of the Socialists, but the Russians are far from being a war like nation. The character of the Slav ish people la Indolent, passive, patient, 'amiable and sensible. . Japan, which has given herself a par . 1 lament, aa aha has adopted our ma chines, still has kept., her mikado and her f anactio belief in the teachings bf ' Buddha. ; The people have always been fond of war and ready to fight upon the -slight-1 est provocation. No other , nation can poltt to a history of 2.000 years of al . ' most incessant warfare, the history of no other nation Is as bloody as theirs. Not so very long ago, at the end of the sixteenth century at the very time i when Henry IV of France said that he had no higher wish than that every French family might have a chicken for Its soup pot every Sunday, a military dictator in Japan sent to the mikado 20,000 human noses and 40,000 human ears cut from the heads of his enemies. In the seventeenth century the chief ef a Japanese clan decapitated 40,000 of hls adversaries, threw them into an enrotnous trench, upon which he built a . monument which still exists, and many of these were heads of Christians. During the reign of Louis XIV the Japanese massacred 87,000 Christians, who had fled to Shlmbaro, and pre cipitated 10,000 more front the top of a. high cliff at the entrance to the harbor cf Nagasaki,''. No nation In the world has so pro , found a contempt of death and so little regard for the lives of othera as the -', Japanese, the very qualities . essential 'to an ideal military nation. The Japanese have a great horror of l foreigners, and In this respect they even ! surpass the Chinese, a fact which Is easily proven by events, which have taken place even during the lifetime of the present generation. . . j ; It was in 1868 that the mikado wrote J to the chief of his army: "You will' HER.E AND NOW (By S1U Wheeler WUoos.) TT T HAS been the fashion for men and I .. women, particularly women. In all JL ages to bemoan the speedy passing I of time and to regard youth as the (only season of absolute happiness or satisfactory enjoyment j Poets and authors hava emphasized ithls idea to auch an extent and with i auch artlstio phrasing, and painters and , eculptors have so embodied It in living I works, that It seems almost a confes sion of utter lack of Ideality to question ;it -.A-.v ? , ... . Yet not only do I question it, but topenly refute the assertion of ages and ef my superiors in intellect, that there Is "no time like youth," and that during . a brief acore or score and a half of years Is the best of life's happiness and Its keenest enjoyment to be found. I recall a day in early youth when I looked out on a colorless prospect and rebuked Fate for delaying enjoyment. "There are only a few more years left for me to enjoy pleasure and amuse ment," I said. "After they pass there iwlll be nothing but duty; and ambition, i and usefulnessbut the power to enjoy the good things of Ufa will have gone i With youth. Do not cheat me, O Fate! ef my little share, while I am able to grasp it.". And then X shaped the melancholy thought in verse, and sent it out to de : press other lives and other hearts. .. It was something - about the cruelty j ef Fate which sent Joys too late and i j those final words were used as .a re ! julem over the graves of hope and hap r plness. That was long ago, and I Vave lived to learn that nothing comes too late, unless we ' choose to believe that all "happiness lies within a circumscribed period of years. It is the mind of man. ' not the irony of Destiny, which makes delayed desires 'disappointing, Keep the emotion alive with sym pathy, keep the ambitions alive with liopa, keep the activities alive with pur : rose, and the aeomlngly . close bounda . rles of Youth recede, as we Journey on ward, and lo! before we reach the bor der we are face to face with the other shore, where life begins over again, 1 under new and higher conditions new . and ., higher conditions, if we have ought for them here, for only as we have bullded by our desires, and thoughts, end efforts, In this graded chool of earth Ufa wlU be able to gather all your soldiers to chase all for eigners out of the country. Tou .will weep then out at broom sweeps dirt, and you will report the acootnpllshed result to me," 'i'?'v,:-y'- ''f-yi-?,-. I know very well w that all this is changed, that, the old Nippon no longer exists, that Japan has become an Euro pean country andJ& treated as an Euro pean nation. ', - "r . . ,V-v s. In this circumstance lurka a danger Which may become fatal to Europe if we do not open our eyes and look deep Into the violent fend treacherous char acter of this "little rising people." 1 - Because Japan. haa r changed the uni form of her soldiers, because she has adopted ft parliament,, because she has. bought & navy and imitated our social system, with a far greater proletariat, we admire them and attribute to them all the virtues of a civilized and civ ilising nation, : Let us be perfectly frank and admit that a nation cannot in a few years change her wnole character as easily as she can assimilate our industrial meth ods under the direction of English, French: and .German instructors, as she can learn from Germany to handle an army or from England to fire torpedoes. ,' Let Us Imagine that Europe, In a near future, should be overrun by Mongolian hordes, that we in our turn should have tar adopt their; laws and arms and . ma chines superior to our own, - Would we, therefore,' Immediately y adopt their Oriental and Buddhistic way of think ing? , Would we not In our inmost souls preserve for r generations an intense hatred of these foreigner! who had forced themselves upon us, ; who had trampled "upon ; our customs, whose Very odor from their yellow skin was dis gusting to'ua, whose slanting eyes and long fingernails were repulsive to us? The Japanese hava now for 40 years lived under these exact conditions. They hava 'bent their heads in submission to the inevitable and given way to the threats of strong European squadrons in 188 and lt(8. With their rapid and clear Intellect, they hava seen that they were forced to submit in patience. They hava come to us, have atudied the meth ods of our Institutions, , they have adopted them and thanks to the imi tative Instinct, which is a national in stinct with them, devoid of every trace of Individuality and inventive faculties, they have become our equals. But from the fifth Of December, 1168, when the mikado was forced to receive the ambassadors of the civilised nations with uncovered, face, they hava prepared for the great drama . which - has now taken lta beginning. - The national egotism and conceit of the Japanese surpass that of any other nation, with the possible exception of the United States. From . that great American nation they hava learned the principles of the Monroe doctrine, and even if the papers of Toklo dare not cry as did the old Samurai, "Death to ail foreigners," they have at least now the courage to shout defiantly, "Japan for the Japaneae."-. We have no right to blame them for this,' but it is our duty to realize their true nature. This national feeling is so strong with them that only a few years ago they assassinated those : of their ministers who dared to sympathise with the Europeans. ! The whole education given to the young in their schools has only one purpose, to Implant in their hearts hatred and contempt of alb for eigners. . '.V'.rf,; All travelers who visited Japan In 18S4 were struck by the undisguised en mity of the Japanese of. all classes not only In the cities, but in every town, vil lags and hamlet of the country. And this was even before the war with China, Imagine what would happen if they, after having conquered China, sue. ceeded in beating Russia, the strongest innuary power in Europe I How is It possible that the English, who are so rational, or the Americans, who are so practical, have not perceived tne possible eonsequenoes of the growth of the power of Japan? Because Japan still buys their products, their iron, their linen, their cotton and their grain they close their ears to the cry of the nationalistic party in that country that the Japanese must some day rule all Eastern countries, including the Phil ippines, China and the Dutch East In dian Islands. s, . . i i i And better surrounding on the other side. ' -,: - Immortality must be earned. Heav ens must be built while On earth. Not by the mumbling of formulas, and ad herence to. traditional' creeds; not by long prayers for God to do our work for us, but by our continual application of God-given qualities which lie with us love, will, self-control, helpful ness and hope. These are the qualities whloh pro duce heavens on earth, and in the realms beyond. . ' - . They do not depend upon youth for their vitality. But youth depends upon them. While they last youth lasts. Every day X hear men and women of middle age sighing for the lost illusions of youth. .. . . . -. ,: As the embroidered work of art is more beautiful than the stamped pat tern, so are the realities of mature life more beautiful than the illusions of youth, If we have used care in the stitch ing. Even if we have marred the de sign we have the added experience which youth lacks, and we are prepared to do better work on the next pattern, given by the Great Artist. Too late! There is no such thing as. any knowl edge, or success, or happiness, coming too late. ir'':1 There is no such thing asUime, save in our imagination. It la all eternity. It Is a Circle with out beginning or end. v v uwnya uvea, ana will ai waya live. There is no heed of letting your body, your heart, or your mind, wither awas because a few years have gone by, and the ; tradition of men tells you that youth baa, passed. Keep expectant keep hopeful, keep sympathetic, and ambitious, and be oce CUpled. '"':'''. '( ':':' j;. ..; The best of life is before you whether here or hereafter doea not mat ter, so long as you lose no hour of hap piness, and usefulness by mistaken ideas gained from mistaken traditions. Discard them. Right about, face! March! ' You are on the road of happiness now. There are goals at every step. And there are better goals further on. Keep marching! . ' More coal has been discovered, sear FossiL . :'. , . I .. ' t tu,'.:'-;'.-V--l.i.- -;.t- : ;;' ;ryA. 1-...V y i vi - V 'S: r.' ' "'t-v : '? r Jules Huret: Sounds a Note of Warning Do the Japs" Love the! Caucasian Any, Better Because -Christian ICivilizatioh Haseen Forced Upon Them? What Would Result: Should Japan Infuse Its Martial Spirits Into Chiria? The Women of, Japan and Theii?"' 1 ' 8 . '; Place in Its Modern Life ',' H' ERE we are throwing our ready caps in air and shouting over Japanese successes. It is A nat ural foellng-the ' sympathy with the little fellow in' the fight But are we not cheering on the one great pern of modern civilisation? Tint researches of the- plodding arch aeologlst and the -patient historian give us fragmentary . tales or civilization after civilization which have grown up in this world only to be swept, into ob livion,, a.: nation .nas waxea ncn ana great Art has flourished; literature has been established. .-The proud declaration has been , made: . ."Look on my works, ye mighty, and .despair!" Then some new and militant people with .none of the airs and graces," but' with a fierce lust for fighting,', has swept over that civilization! . -- The temples : have been wrecked; the statues cast down. 'The trumpet has taken the plaoe of the dul cimer ind the war chant has drowned the notes of the love song. Literature has' been lost and, -where 'the strong, proud cities stood "the lone and, level sands stretch far away.". Nothing', re mains save some lone monolith or shat tered pedestal to tell the tale of growth and glory and of wreck. r A There were civilisations before Nine van and Babylon. The aDDeirlnr alvoha or falenque tell that .on bur own contM nenv were cltiea and a civilization far prouder than any that greeted the eyes of , Columbus or the , conqulstadores. Athena and Rome we' almost know; and later still the art and literature which grew up around "the beautiful language of Oq" ; wera wiped away by the rude hands of northern warriors. In' the nature Of .things our present civilization Is not a finality. That, too. ??????? vvvvvvvvv A LESSON : (By Bailey Klllard.) (Coprrtgbt 1904, by W. B. Beant) HOUGH they disagree on many i other points, the biographers of Henrik Ibsen, the . great Nor wegian poet and dramatist, all concur in one particular,' and that is that personally hlf ia anything but a likable character. He is said to be a soured man, exceedingly .cynical, and crusty, taking umbrage easily a man who has managed to alienate even, those of his friends who have tried their best to "make allowances for him. So that in his old age he moves about alone and al most uncared for, saye by eurlous trav elera who hunt him up as one of the sights of Norway. ' With respect to great men the forth right assumption is made by aome writers that this trait of making one's self disagreeable is a mark of genius, and that the master minds in art and literature are privileged to .comport themselves in ways that would not be tolerated by lesser individuals. But it seems to me that what is insufferable in a common man Is just aa Insufferable in an "uncommon one. The moods of the choleric Carlyle were often very trying to his friends, and so at times were those of Tennyson, who would not brook the slightest criti cism of himself or his work, even from guch men as Thackeray and Fitzgerald, in their friendly talks. This disagree able attribute -resulted in a lack of -personal popularity for both the essayist and the poet Now, there is no reason why Ibsen, or Carlyle, or Tennyson, might not have been popular all his life in the circle of his immediate acquaintance.. -. It would have helped his fame. It would have laweetened the imagination of one con- TO SEEK THE ORIGIN OF LIFE From the Chicago News. . In a new $180,000 building, announce ment of which has just been made at the University of Chicago, research will be carried on by three Chicago men to "catch evolution In the act," or, almost literally to discover the "missing link." The new building . will be ereptea at once at Cold Springs Harbor, L. I., under the auspices of the Carnegie institu tion." The aim of .the scientists as signed to this work will be to discover, If possible, the exact boraer line be tween plant and animal life. It is un derstood that they have undertaken their life work, and the department wae founded with the expectation that the task would require the experiments of more than one generation. - Announcement that Dr. C. B. Daven port' associate professor of zoology and embryology at the university, would be come the director of this new, Carnegie laboratory ia followed by new that two other men from the Hull court labora tories at - the Midway would go with Professor Davenport. , They are Frank E. Lutz, A. M., a zoology assistant, who will do the detail work in studying animal variations; and George H: Bhull, 8. B., a botany assistant, who will do the detail work in the plant breeding and the study of "mutations" In plant forms. Miss Anna M. Lutz has been appointed to be the recorder for the workers. The permanent building for - the study of evolution is to be erected near . the Brooklyn institute laboratory on Long Island. The flrct wing, to cost approx imately 120,000, Will go up at once. An other wing is expected to be built next year, and the main structure the year following. As this laboratory is to be devoted exclusively to the one form of research, the Investigators consider it a aubstantiai sign that the study will be carried on there . well-nigh, perpet ually...-; '..j ;.:.'':'...i;;'.:,'v.;''? "And why should it not be an ever lasting work?" said Mr. Shull. "Where has .man come from aiid where is he going? That is a question which men have always thought about .It can be counted on to give, fascination and im portance to this work as long as man lives." ' .vi Dr. Davenport Is In New York Cftv making arrangementa for the ODenlna of the laboratory and giving the archi Is Japan the Peril of the World? (By Bdward M. XamUtoa.) V , (Copyright,' 1904, r W. B. Beant.): must pass. It wilt become another layer in the upbuilding : of . mankind.' The "lone fisherman will -wash his nets in the river . of the ten thousand' masts." Those which have emulated the glory of Athens will share her fate. , . ' .Where is the apparent "perilT China. Men who study the world 'condition long have felt that the yellow man was the menace civilisation had . to 'far. The numbers were there. All they needed, was the stirring leaven pi am bition. '; '.,-'; , ; ';, !-" . But China remained inert - When Ja pan attacked her aha was found flabby and incapable. Her hordes could not be made effective. It was like the laying of a ghost. The students and statesmen breathed a sigh Of relief. The bogy was not a menace at tfl. ., n: a j v. . But now comes a combat which really lea struggle for the, control of China. Diplomacy may .disguise the fact as it may; it remains a fact Suppose Japan should win. It is practically certain ffffvvvfvfyfvfvvffvffvvffi FROM 'THfc LIFE roooom templatlng his character, even at a re mote age. There la, Indeed, no valid reason why Ibsen, the man, might not have made himself aa popular as Ibsen, the artiste v ; .."; There;-have ' been those unbending idealists, like Jean Paul and Thoreau,' who have affected to disregard popular ity, but surely all men, great and small, wish really to be popular. ' Yet many take no pains to become so. - What la so cheap as politeness t The picture of tho universally popular Washington uncov ering to a negro in the street who had removed his tattered tils as he drove by is one for which I have an espeolal fondness. , .'- "What" asks , the great patriot's friend, "take oft your hat to a common colored man?" -" . "Certainly," replies Washington. I cannot afford to let a negro outdo me In politeness.' ' , . Alack! Why is there so little cf that spirit left In usT But we must not cultivate people In a wholesale fashion, like the politician or the young doctor who joins, so many fraternal societies that he gets their grips and passwords hopelessly mixed. That is the method of the oily opportun ist that Is, to be servilely popular to seek pnbllo esteem for the rewards of place and professional distinction. One distinctive characteristic of the most popular men I know is suavity. You need not hope to be truly popular in any circle If you are irritable. You must be urbane, without unctlouaness, and If you have moral or material de signs upon people you must occasionally mislay them not keep them In plain sight. " Suavity , does the trick the suavity of a Stevenson a man who was as popular with the rich and po tects pointers for the building. He will return April 1 and during the spring quarter will give his last course of lec tures at the University of Chicago. This will be a course on "Experimental Evo lution." He will go to; his new work about the middle of Juno or July 1. Mr. Luts will leave at the same time. Mr. Shull will go to his new post May 1. For the plant breeding he will raise during the summer months many plants out of doors. It is necessary for him to get them started early. Whether new species of animals and planta originate by sudden jumps ("mu tations") or the stow process'of gradual evolution is a question the answer to which would be finding the keystone for building up the scientific arch to day, according to the men about to go Into this work exclusively. The sports" of the plant and animal life are specimens which have recently led to a ' new theory. Gardeners and animal breeders use the term "sports" frequently. By it they mean, for n stance, , odd flowers that spring up In TMJt ZOO AS A rOBBSTZB. Leon Vandervort in March Outing. There are Innumerable minor influ ences 'that come 14 for the' forester's consideration, and what ia recommended in one Instance Is discouraged in the next Taking the matter of grating in a forest. - Throughout the more exten sive woodlands of the middle west run thousands of wild or seml-wlld hogs. In this Tennessee forest It waa recom mended that every , possible effort be made to exterminate these for the rea son that they eat the-mast and thus prevent the growing of young trees from the seed. But in the working plan before mentioned it is advised that hog grazing be encouraged. The reason for the difference ,i this, the former forest is chiefly of mast-bearing hard wood. The latter, is mainly pine, and what hard wood there Ms in mixture serves as a hindrance to young pine growth. There fore in this' forest the presence of hogs hlch -t the mast and check the hard wood Is a benefit; while in the other, where hard wood is the staple, the ani mals are a nuisance. .:V''.:;';':i;;:;v.'i ;;:'."vVv;v. that within a hundred years China would become Japanese rperhaps within a quarter of that time. Then what? Jap an la a new and militant nation- just such a nation as .always baa arisen to wipe away the old civilizations. ; The Japanese have a wonderful talent for military mobilization; , With the, hun dreds of millions of China mobilized, what would stop themT -j . The man of the oft-hand view says that, the Chinaman is ' not an effective fighter. Neither was the East 'Indian; but see -what England already has- done wlth' the men who. fled at the first Are of Clive's thin line or whimpered under the lash of the Tartar raiders. . The Chinese troops In England's army are among the best regiments. The oriental is a fatalist, and' the Saracens taught the world how fierce 4 f o is the man who- (eels that his soul will be tossed from the sword point into Paradise. It will be a ead day for occidental civi lization '. when China Is. mobilized , by Japan. 1 '; ;..v . 5l Is it not possible that the art of Whistler and Bastlen ! Lepage is to be lost In a flurry, of storks around the peak of Fujlatpa; that the Greek slave and the Bacchante are to give place to dragon grotesquerles in ' bronse and Ivory; that Buddhlam Is to supplant Christianity, and that Shakespeare and Erasmus are to become as mute as those who spoke and sang beneath the pll lared majesty of BaalbecT - May ' not the success of Japan mean the realiza tion of Macajilay's immortal picture of desolation, when "some traveler from New Zealand shall. In the midst of a vast solitude, take 'his stand on a broken arch of London bridge to sketch the ruins of St. PaulT" . OF IBSEN tential as he was with the poor em! grants aboard ship. And suavity, mind you, always includes a sympathetic re sponsiveness, a distinct personal recog. nitlon. When you talked with Steven son you- were for -the time the only person who existed for him. Ah. sirs and ladles, there is a great secret of friend-making, and- it la an open one; for you will observe this habit in every truly popular' man you meet He knows who you are; he always re members your, name and occupation, your likes and dislikes. But he knows, too, that nothing alienates friends worth having like a too ready acquiescence, which is often -really a form of conde- scenslon. With - the always lovable Stevenson, he sees that it la good to have friends, but that It Is not good "to capitulate to them." .With Chester- field, he holds for "suavlter In .raodo, f ortlter In re." l Gentleness in manner but firmness in deed. For no one whose friendship is to be prized is pleased with an Invariable acquiescence the attitude of a man who Is plastic to your every expectancy. , Such a man may pleaae a certain .order of minds, but he is far . from- being an ideal friend,." Aa for Ibsen, whose soured life was made the text of this little preachment; he need hardly have stepped aside from his work or his play to have made, eas ily and without capitulation, a host of warm friends; but he chose to act in such a way aa to be left friendless in his old age. And now he sits alone. sadly sharing the lot of the embittered. Is not here an example of the fact that no matter how soaring our ambition or our attainments; we should never rise so high as to leave our friends all be hind us? - . their gardens and odd animals among their herds. A study of these lower er dera of "sports" has led to the theory of "mutations." This Is the theory that new species Jump Into life sud denly. . . ,;'''.,.-;; ,' A Hollander, De Vrtes, at Amsterdam, is the one who has announced this new theory, which Is regarded as the great est contribution to, evolution since Dar win's day. De Vries took some "sports" of pink orange blossoms, which he found growing in the fields, and cultivated them in his botanical garden. . The re sult was that he developed a , new species. . "But all this has been artificial." aaid Mr. Shull, the botanist. "My work at the new laboratory will be to see if we can find new species being developed by mutation .naturally, to -catch new species 1n the act of being evolved." For the "quantitative study" .of snU mala, Mr. Luts, the aoologlcal worker, will have not only forma of land-animal life, but animals from their brooks, springs and Inland lakes and also the marine animals. Even the present lab oratory at Cold Spring Harbor is rated among the Atlantic ooean laboratories as second to only the Woods Holl Mar ine laboratory in Massachusetts. Being on the Long Island sound, the water Is not quite, so salt as that at Woods Holl, but the specimens of sea animals are satisfactory for the work. ."In studying the animals we hall get an immense number of observations on hybrids and concerning all the phases of heredllyu"..sald Mr. Lutz.: "We shall not get two or three examples, but thou'- sands. The trouble, with many past generalization's Is that they have been made from only a few examples. Work of this character demands great patience. nut tne men doing this kind of work hope to' add to knowledge, and then the human Interests gives a strong motive. Galton has shown that the effects of heredity are the Bame for all llfenlant and animal, in lower and higher forms. Hence in the end knowledge that will bear on the questions relating to mar riage, the Influence of tralta fnherlted from . parents on , children, and many other, questions of .interest to beoole. can be expected. . Such things, however, are , not of immediate interest to the men at work In the laboratories." (By ISary tiogan Tnoker.) :, (Copyright, 1904, by W. R. Beant.) w IULE the world is beginning to realise and appreciate the rapid strides made by Japan as a nation within, the last half century, still, her women are far from the summit of European civiliza tion. , ' i Tha men of the educated and progres sive class of this island nation have had' the benefit of the best universities of 'Europe and America, gathering from these nations fldeaa in every scienoe Lta contribute to the plan for the regen eration of . their people. Their 'efforts for the elevation and betterment of their women .-in- the social scale have been fraught with great labor owing, to the tenacity .with which the peasant class cling to the superstitions of their Bud dhist faith,', , , To overoom these old ideas 'and re ligious customs has been a . great task and one- 4n which their progress has open stow, put. Tne , new . tnougm ana the spirit -of liberty are abroad in their land and . we ahall before many . years see the ripened fruits of their labors. ' i Under the old system the women of Japan Were taught , constant eel f -re straint, a system of suppression of thoughts, ideas, talents and affections. No such thing aa Independence waa ever known among her 'women." '"Tdung girls were taught domestto arts and po lite 'ceremonies of the home, wh-cn must be performed always with a smiling face under perhaps a most cordial dislike. They roust be versed in all the arts of etiquette in order to please and en tertain, tne guests of the home or tea house, "If , of thes latter. her -future dopenda upon final ng a rich patron who will buy her freedom from the proprie tor to whom ahJK had been sold by her parents. While taught the smallest de tails of dainty, refined etiquette, music. dancing, polite speech, a multitude of songs, games,, and much of the litera ture of the land, It waa ail for the pur pose of pleasing and necessarily of a superficial character, with no solid foun dation, . building nothing for . the fu ture.,'1? ...j; ,'.. ," ,,',. ' The most serious defect of this sys tem was, while it cultivated the memory and powers of Imitation and observation to a remarkable degree and gave great sicm and deftness to the - fingera. It afforded little opportunity to the exer cise of the reasoning powers. This repression and restraint , which has been the custom for generations, are responsible for their courteous and dig nified manners. - However, that which seems so natural and attractive is really learned alter a long course of train ing. 'Vr, ; -.V-'-v. The only virtues worthy of Imitation in this respect ia the respect shown to old age and the deference to parental authority.. The latter, however, is car ried to the extreme af entire exclusion of any thoughts of a girl's happiness In the plans for her future, Her husband Is chosen without consultation, with her when sh has reached the axe of 18. and a simple toleration for, her future nusoana is au mar. is expected of hen Aiier marriage she becomes almost a slave to her mother-in-law, who rules the son's home, A wlfe.Js never regarded in tne ngnt of a companion by a Japan ese peasant She is simply a house keeper., If of the higher class, some honor Is shown her, and today these conditions are rapidly changing among the cultivated classes; . , v A Japanese mother's life Is One of constant devotion to her children. She performs happily the duties given to servants in this country. jne nearest approach to aoualltv rt the aexes in Japan ia among the farming peasants, where the "women work side by side with the men in the rice fields and on the tea plantations, often knee deep in water and mud, or -tolling all day In the hot aun, ever aharlna event v the heaviest labors with their husbands. ji G00& NAME OF SCIENCE IMPERILED f JteT. Thomas B. Ore gory.) (Copyright. ' 1904, by W. B. Hearst) OT only do false and unwarranted assumptions of the name of sci ence, as in the case of certain organisations which seek to cover with a nominal scientific mantle proceedings that are diametrically op posed to true scientlfio methods, tend to bring science into disrepute in the popu lar mind, but there is a still more seri ous peril to the good name bf science in such occurrences as. the terrible Dar lington hotel collapse. ' Modern architecture, as illustrated in steel buildings, is no longer art In any sensor it has become pure practical sci ence. The construction of such a build ing is simply a feat of engineering. It is not the outward embodiment of an artist's dream, created with materials supplied by nature for the purpose, and involving only the simplest understand lngof the law of gravitation to insure its security, but It is a mathematical skeleton, jointed and held in place and made to stand upright-by virtue of a profound study of forces and stresses of which the uninitiated hava no con ception. In short it Is the child of sci ence, and not of art .- '. AVe could not help this if we would. The requirements of the age have brought, about the change. The old methods and the old. materials are not sufficient for modern needs. What specially concerns us is to see that sci ence is fairly and truly represented In the matter. In the case of the accident on Forty-sixth street it is evident that there was falsification or misrepresen tation somewhere. . The , fall of that building was a blow to scienoe, the ef fects of which may be felt even after the exposure of the culprit, or the cul prits, hidden under her mantle. . It tends1 to diminish popular faith in her Infal libility Yet she- was in no sense sit fault, for, a steel-framed, building, if scientific . principles ' are , strictly ob served, can be made aa safe as the pyra mlds. ; ", ' - When a disaster happened with the Old type of brick or atone structure everybody could see at a glance where the fault-lay, and nobody s confidence n the strength of his own house was thereby diminished. .The principles on which the building was constructed were as old aa history, and if they were vio lated the violation! was patent to the whole world. - But If a towering steel giant tumbles Into ruins before It is fin ished, technical science alone can point out the source of weakness,' but even when the demonstration has been made U may not appear convincing to the lay mind, which naturally distrusts what t does not clear! K and familiarly un derstand. There ia .thus a special call upon science to guard -and, protect It self if aha Is to retain the confidence of the public One fallen mass of twist TheWomen of Japan ' As. one goes up the-social -scale the social gap widens. At old. age . enjoys an tne privileges among ;japanese wo-, men, naturally they look forward to that time in their Uvea aa one-full of pleas ure, comrort ana nonor, ana one whicn will free them from their dafly Ijfe of bondage to their eldera, ' , . I presume they often feel Ilka the little boy; who when bullied, said, 'When he was a man he would lick some other fellow." ' K At 38 their beauty disappears and lines of suffering and disappointment become fixed,' but. their voices remain always cheerful and sympathetic.'1 Divorce, though permitted, is not of frequent occurrence, for the reason the children belong-ta the father, no mat ter ho worthless he may . be. - So few are the occupations opened for women as yet that the wife has no-way of earning a living, for herself' pr .child-. ren. ,80 she endures silently the ,111a of her unhappy lot r-.1 v'.f-1 1'..' .". Today new. avenues are being opened to the women of Japan which- wlll grad ually bring about , liberty "and- inde pendence in thought' and action: which ill do, much ' toward; thelf -;dvelop The empress and the educated Women of the aristocratic -class of Japan have been foremost in aiding and furthering the work of advancement among the wo men of the laboring classes or peasantry. Schools have- been founded,', arts en couraged: and 'every aid given to afford a broader field of usefulness and thought to her vomM . The new law eradicating concubinage among the nobility, debarring; sons born of these .women from titles ;or Inheri tance, has done much to' raise the stand ard of women, and. in the future only a son born of the lawful wife of the Haws will be a great help in niacins- the lawful wife where she belongs. It is the change in the home life nd stand ards which must liberate Japan. The ladies attendant upon the empress are very cultivated, well read in the lit erature f their own country.', They are foremost In the .work of the schools, hospitals, asylums and training schools. Educated women are found' today as teachers, interpreters and trained nurses, establishing rapidly the future position of women of Japan, on a broader and Ml IliV, .UUUUH L ,U M. 4 . ' , ins routaao, or 'emperor, -muisunuo, 1s 61 years old, ' He ascended the throne at the age of 18 years, when his country was closed to foreigners, he himself hav ing never been outside the imperial gar dens, and to him Japan owes much of tho- progress she has made and the posi tion she has attained among thd nations of the world,.,.,,;- V-aVA:,.." . - He gave to .Jifpan a constitution, opened the gatea to foreigners, "bent the urignioi youn men oi tne nation over the world to study. Invited men of learn ing m all parts of the world to come to Japan to teach the people. In all this work he Is ably aided and encouraged by the empress. They have two child ren, a son and a daughter. ; : From an Insignificant power we have seen Japan, In the life of one ruler, de feat a great nation, and today she Is crossing swords with another long con sidered one of tbs greatest powers of the world, If she can mi.;t such stride in tne aeveiopmeni or ner mens ner wo men will soon take the position hoped for by her ruler, and her nation. ed girders does her more harm than a hundred wind-defying piles of super posed stories can compensate for, ' And this leads to the Inquiry whether there can be the least possible danger of pollution near any of the sources Of the great stream of practical science which is now bearing the world Onward In its mighty flow. I have been told that In some schools of technical sci ence there seems to be a tendency to accept the dictates of the commercial spirit, at least so far as concerns the question how close the limit of safety can be approached ln cutting down ex pens to meet tha demands of competi tion. Some students appear to be more impressed by the teaching of methods whereby money can be saved In engi neering enterprises than by what may be taught them concerning the neces sity and the ethics of considering f lrst of all tha excellence of the work. There can ,'be:no question that the spirit of our mechanical and commercial civilisation, of which many of us are so yiuuu, um vrer ivqii oi wnose xeaiures a Chinaman might easily make us blush, calls first and most insistently fori cheapness, for quantity Instead of qual ity. Put lAr th AVnia ti A .M. hfk the profits. Is tha principle of action most admired and demanded. It Is the duty of science to set her 1 faoe,,llke flint against this tendency. It is her duty especially because this is emphatically her own age. She rules the world now, and will continue to rule it to lta vast betterment provided that she successfully guards her good name una proves io xne commonest, under standing that her ways are really safer than the ways that preceded thenu- J'' ' " : WHAT! XV A VlUIt " (With apologies) By R. Q, R. "What's In a name?" the poet asks, . And leaves : the world to ponder . "What's In a name? echoes the world, And stin we pause' and ponder. ,-; I would not answer, tho 1 could, ' And cast a fling at others; For, fair or foul tha names we hear, i ne, waiter maae us brothers. Yet, when I think of men with names, Pronounced with prideful tones, . It seems to me I know as good Who call themselves Just "Jones," ' ; v His Adjustable Platform. ' , From the Chicago Tribune. Spokesman of Committee We have come, sir, to ask you if you are In favor of the eight-hour working day. ' Rising Statesman' Certainly I am In favor of it, gentlemen, but I shall h'm strongly oppose the principle that ' work shall be compulsory during those hourr ,.. v . .. .--.