Wr t, iooo. TFTE OMAHA ILLUSTRATED BEE. Celebrating Their Victories Are Japs an Expressionless People? THE VERT REAL KNTHVSIABT8 IN JAPAN-SCHOOL. CHILDREN UNDER A CLOUD OP JAPANESE FLAGS. nb 10 cunni&nuy nearing now 1 J I adays about Japanese stolidity slonlcs In tha face of eventa that would turn any other nation upside down with Joy, and I spend much time In wondering- whether this Is a deep rooted national characteristic or merely a "pose" for the benefit of a world that fully expected Japan to lose its head In case It was victorious over mighty Russia. " I know if the United 8tates army had done what those little brown men up In Manchuria have put to their credit, and tha credit of their country, there would be a "Dewey arch" over every street cor ner from Maine to California, and we would all be g-olns; about shaking hands, waving flaiks and congratulating: ourselves upon tha fortune that made us God's own and only people. But I cannot Imagine any such demonstration of enthusiasm taking place In Japan, and If It did I suppose we Should all begin to cry about the "yellow peril" and to accuse this little people of too much self-appreciation and ambition. But this little people goes on winning great victories and celebrating them with tha utmost modesty and decorum until this little people has won for Itself a reputa tion for stolidity which I hardly believe it merits. Last year I was In Kyoto when the Japanese army crossed the Yalu. and, tak ing my Interpreters I went one night for a riksha ride out into the city Just to "get away from myself," to see If I could not And escape. In the Interesting strange ness of the little narrow streets, from the ennui and homesickness which possessed me, I remember I was on the point of taking the next steamer back to America, because I waa finding Japan so deadly dull. Well, In my vote book I find Joyful writing about that night, and I think It waa the turning point in my Japanese ex perience, the point at which I began to really appreciate as human beings the little people who had before seemed to me in comprehensible creatures of another sphere. The Lantern Parade. We hadn't gone far that night, Taklga San and I. before we come upon a mar vellous lantern parade led by a brass band that was playing "Marching Through Georgia" in all the keys at once. It was the most Joyoua thing I ever saw and my heart leapt into Instant sympathetic vibration with . the Jubilant note which rang In every voice aa they shouted "Banzai!' Dal Nippon Banzai! A thousand Uvea! To great Japan a thousand lives?" It waa the first time I had ever heard any thing like it and It brought me to my feet with a response that made me Instantly one of them, Joying in their Joy and bless ing all the gods at once for the deathless glory of Japan. Oh, it waa a wonderful thing, and nobody who felt its vibrant power could ever again think of the Ja panese people aa stolid. They were patriots gone mad that night, and as I rode along under the thousands of red and white paper lanterns made In the pattern of the victor ious sun-flag I wondered what the end would be and how this dancing crowd would take the'defeat which I and all the world thought waa ultimately inevitable for them. The army had only Just then crossed the Yalu and down at Port Arthur, the great siege had little more than Just begun, which waa to cos the nation sixty thousand men or more, and such suffering at home and in the field as can never be written down for the eye of man to see. Llao Yang was many weeks away and the moat sanguine of us could not hope that the Japanese success would continue with out a single interruption or defeat. But It has been so, and curiously enough, the public rejoicing haa seemed to diminish with every victory the nation hss won until now the attitude amounts to some thing which looks like the vast responsi bilities of the situation Into which the country haa so valiantly fought Its way. Wkfi TLiao Yang Fell. When Llao Yang fell I was In Yokohama. The town, the whole nation Indeed, had been holding lis breath for weeks expect ing every hour to hear a decision from that great battle-field. I remember every time a "gogal boy" went Jingling his little bunch of bells through the street every body Jumped and ran to sea If It might be the great newa A "gogal" is a Japanese "extra." and la published on a wee shtet about the sise of a bit of note paper, and the boys who carry these around to the people have a little bunch of bells of vail ing sixes and tones fastened to their belts which, as they run, make a most excited ' clamor. They say nothing, these boys, they only run swiftly along scattering the im portant little sheets and nobody can ever mistake their Jangling small announcement for any other noise vpecullar to Japanese street life. Well, one day there were more "gogal" boys than usual and the whole town seemed filled with their Jangllngs and Jingling; whistles blew in every direction and temple bells boomed sonorously across the. city, all out of their usual stately measure. Excited people ran hither and yon, and there was more chattering and gesticulating on street corners and at the entrances of shops than I had ever seen before. By these signs we knew that Llao Yang had fallen, and from these signs we gathered that there ' waa to be some great rejoicing. A Postponed Celebration. But days passed without any Indication i .. t t: I t? - 1 1 i - r 'V 0 " . : J v.' . TRIt'MI'HAL ARCH OF OREENERT ANP FLAOS KP.ECTED ON THE OCCA SION OK ADMIRAL TOGO'S RECENT VISIT TO TOKIO. . . - , TLAOS AND BANNER? AIRED OVER THE ENTRANCE TO HIBITA PARK, TN TOKIO, FOR A COUPLE OF HOURS ONE DAY RECENTLY. ' of an Intention to celebrate. I waa an noyeJ. It didn't seem healthy to me, and I longed to see the whole population turn out and hug each other in untrammeled Joy. But that was not the Japanese way. They met each other and bowed very low several times with their bands hidden away in their big kimono sleeves. They drew their breath in sharply through their teeth and murmured honorific and humilities, but nobody shouted and nobody sang a Joy song. Then one day we heard that they were waiting for Port Arthur to fall, and as soon as that happened, which must be In a day or two, there was to be a great "banzai," as a Japanese celebration Is called. But as . Port Arthur didn't fall, Japan finally decided to celebrate Llao Yang. It really wasn't many days, but It seemed an age to us, who would have filled the entire interval with one loud cheer If It had been our army that bad done so great a thing. At the time. In the midst of the excite ment, I thought this "bansal" was a splen did affair. And I remember Indulging In much hyperbole, which the grammar says is a Greek word signifying exaggeration, as I wrote an account of It. It was fine, really, but If I hadn't thought with every body else that It was only a foretaste of what would happen when Port Arthur should capitulate, I should have considered It quite mild and altogether inadequate, under the circumstances. Jubilation la Parade. There were 45,000 people In a parade, and each one of them carried a bobbing, danc ing paper lantern on a long bamboo pole, which created a decidedly brilliant effect. Then the town was decorated with mil lions of flaps and pennants, and banners, and lanterns, and there was much shout ing of "Dal Nippon, banzai;" and beating upon big bas drums with an energy that was far from Christian, but through It all ran nn undercurrent of expectancy, an Impalpable something which seemed a promise of a real outburst of enthusiasm when the great news should come that was supposed to decide the fortunes of this war. It was ss If the people were afraid of doing an Injustice to the men who were then fighting so bravely at Port Arthur, aa if it were unseemly to rejoice when so Important a victory hung aloof from the struggling army, when the very life of the nation seemed balanced upon a bayonet's point in that fortified penin sula in the Yellow sea. So our shouting day or two and see what will happen." We waited. The preparations for great rejoicing went forward.' . Hotels advertised special dinners and reserved tables weeks ahead for what was supposed to be only da s ahead. The whole country , waa cock suro of success and the foreigners espec ially did a great lot of anticipating events. Indeed, come to think of It. the foreign population was creating most of the dis turbance, while the Japanese, with their refinement of deliberative serenity which we call by various names under various cir cumstances, went on their way expression less and planned their Jubilation, If they planned at all, behind closed shojl. Weeks passed after Llaoyang and still the great conflict went on at Port Arthur. I was called back to New York In late October, and was sorry as anything because I should be In mid-Pacific when the great event should take plnce. I didn't doubt for a moment that when we arrived in America we should be greeted with this, so Import ant, news. Well, of course we were not. Homes of Workmen Employed on Panama Canal (Copyright 1905, by Frank a. Carpenter.) A NAM A Mav A ISnerljil Cor- PI respondence of The Bee.) Uncle I Sum will anon have 2OftO houses ready for his canal employes. Wlthfli the past few months millions of feet of lumber have arrived from the states. 8hipload after shipload has come from the Gulf of Mexico and Puget sound, and it is now piled up In the lumber yards at Colon and La Boca and scattered at different points over our ten mile strip. A big saw and planing mill has been formed out of the old French machinery at Cc-lon, and well-equipped tinning, blacksmlthlng and plumbing shops are In operation at A neon. At the several stations along the canal route gangs of men are at work building new houses and repairing the old ones left by the French. Altogether there are - more than . 800 plumbers, painters, carpenters, . tinsmiths, masons and other mechanics and laborers engaged in such construction. Outside the cost of the material, more than $100,000 haa already been spent, and It is estimated that more than $2,000,000 will be so ex pended during the coming year. In the ad ministration building at Panama a corps of architects from the Treasury department at Washington and from New York, Boston and Chicago is working away night and day making plana. and specifications, the whole force being under the direction of the supervising architect, Mr. M. O. John son, who was formerly one of the architects of the Illinois Central system, i and was brought here by Chief Engineer Wallace. Part of Uncle Sam's Bargain. During my stay at Panama I have spent much time with the supervising architect. I have traveled with him over the Isthmus Inspecting the buildings which came to us aa a part of Uncle Sam's bargain, and in looking over the plans of the new house in course of construction. He tells me that we received aa a part of our canal purchase more than 2,400 different buildings in varl- ous stages of dilapidation. We got 2.200 bouses, most of which were cottages in tended as the homes of the workmen. A few had been built in the United States and sent knocked down to Panama, and the remainder were made of Imported Ameri can lumber, roofed with a fine quality of galvanised Iron, which haa withstood this tropical climate for twenty-five years. These houses are to be seen at Ancoa and Colon, at the two enda of the canal, and they are scattered in villages all along the route flora the Atlantic to the Pacific They are of different sizes; some of one story, costing from several hundred to a thousand dollars or more each, and others the magnificent residences built for Dj Lesseps and bis son at Chtistobal and the mansion of Monsieur Dingier on the slope of An con, each of which cost from 150,004 to $75,000. In addition there are a score or more of great warehouses and machine shops scattered over the isthmus, railroad stations, office buildings and wharves at Panama and Colon, hospital buildings which have altogether cost millions, situ ated at tho two ends of the line, and two big three-story structures In the heart of Panama, one of which Is the Canal Office building, covering a full block, and the other the fine residence of the chief engi neer, which was formerly the home of the French canal director. Ravaged by Time anA White Ants. I asked the " supervising architect to give me some idea of the condition of these buildings at the time they were handed over to us. Said ha: "Nearly everything left by the French was In a state of dilapidation. No repairs had been done for years. The paint bad been worn off by the weather and the buildings had also suffered greatly from the white ants. These Insects have eaten at the porches, and they have made their way Into some of the larger buildings and chewed off the ends of the Joists, so that one side of the floors Is almost entirely unsupported. This was the case with the residence of the chief engineer. The floors were uneven throughout, and one felt very unsafe while walking across them. The supports of the front stairway were al most entirely eaten away, and the ants bad even fed on the furniture. One chair, for Instance, looked perfectly sound, but when sat upon It went down with a crash, carrying Its occupant to the floor. The ants had consumed the inside of the wood work, leaving only the shell of the var nish. These ants work in the dark and one ' cannot tell the amount of their de struction except by sounding the timbers. They are especially fond of white pine, but less so of yellow pine, Oregon fir, redwood and cypress, and for that reason we are using those woods. The French builders coated their girders with tar, but this causes dry rot when the wood is not exposed to the air. Extravagant Builders. "Speaking of the French as builders," continued Mr. Johnson, "their chief Idea seems to have been to make the buildings as expensive as possible. This is espe cially the case with the foundations, which have often-cost more than the structures Quaint Features of Current Life w Jast Like rinding It, K. VANDERBILT was "autolng" up a Long Island road recently. Ahead of him walked a man and I -1 a dog. The dog waa nosing around . among the bushes and fence posts. Suddenly, as Mr. Vanderbllfs auto passed the man. the dog started across the road. The auto hit him "kerplunk" amld hlpa. ' A few spasmodic kicks and he gave up the ghost. Mr. Vanderbllt immediately stopped his machine and getting out ap proached the man with his wallet In hie hand, saying: "I'm awfully sorry, my man. Will fix It right?" "Oh. yea, tu will do." Then, as Mr. Vanderbllt waa disappearing In a cloud of dust up the road, the man turned, and looking at the dog said: "I wonder whose beast It was?" Dreaa ef Fire Came Tree. Mrs. Maud Hopler of Wllllamsport, Pa., whoa apartments are on the third floor of a frame building over a grocery store, awoke one morning at 4 o'clock to find the building filled wtth smoke. She had Just been dreaming that a lamp upset by the grocer yman In an incubator in his show window had set fire to the building. Drawing on a pair of slippers Mra Hop ler tnsde her wsy to the street, and. true to her dream, she. found the window ablaze from the Incubator lamp. There were a dosen people asleep In the building, and she tried to get back, but found that the night latch had snapped, and she was locked out. Though attired only In her nightgown Mra Hopler ran two squares to a firebous and gave the alarm, when a chemical tank In the bauds of a fireman soon extinguished the flamea. x EsMrsintst ter Babies. , George W. Davenport of Greenfield, Maaa. baehelor and admirer of Infanta Bas Instituted aa anti-race-suicide move ment along unique lines. Every child bora! in Greenfield hereafter will receive from Mr. Davenport a savings bank account of SO cents. Mr. Davenport's main hope of Inspiring Interest in a plentiful crop of Infants Is an annual baby show to be held In May. The proceeds of the show he pro poses to devote to boys' club work, thus encouraging children of tender years, though too old for baby show honors. President Roosevelt haa approved Mr. Davenport's baby ahow plan and has sig nified his appreciation of the compliment of having bis likeness on souvenir badges which will be distributed among Franklin county babies. The trump card of Mr. Davenport will be an attempt to obtain the presence of President Roosevelt at the show. Jarring the Sargepa. The London Chronicle tells this story t "She waa a dreadful wreck when they brought her In to 8t Bartholomew's hos pital last evening. The youthful surgeon worked away upon her fare with sponges and plaster, and cotton wooL wondering aloud how she could have got into such a state. , Clearly the w:man had some thing to say but sl could not say It. When the surgeon had made a Job of It he gently lifted the woman over an arm and .asked, 'How lid it happen? She raised a fist to shake over his shoulder, and cried furiously: "E done It! ' done It! 'Im,' Turning his head the surgeon could see the man. who had been standing Just under the flaring gas Jet. sad watching the pro ceedings v.lth the Interest of a landed pro prietor ct a building operation. The brute! muttered the surgeon, as be shifted the woman to her feet. 8he turned on him. 'Brut! she shrieked through her ban dage. "You rail 'lm brute? And after he brought tue all th way 'ere ui hia arms. Gawd bless 'im!' above them. In the laborers' camp at Cule bra the cottages stand upon piers of solid masonry three times as large as are needed to carry their loads, and at La Boca there Is a two-story house built upon piers forty feet long, set close together, and of the finest construction. The house framework Is no- more than twenty-five feet high. The Ancon hospital buildings stand upon concrete blocks six feet square, where blocks two feet square would have served, and, Indeed, this is so everywhere. "The work was let out by the French to contractors at so much per cubic yard, so that the more concrete put In the greater the price. One of the most, extravagant of their houses Is the Folly Dingier, so called because M. Dingier, the chief of the canal, who built It, had his family carried away by the yellow fever before he could live In It. That building, we are now using for a hospital. It is a two-story cottage, which cost about 175,000, and it would be consid ered fine at Newport. The house has an enormous amount of concrete about It, and it has chicken houses and cow sheds built to correspond with Its architecture. The cow shed haa a solid concrete floor, the cattle ate their food out of concrete troughs and tlia horses drank out of a concrete basin of ornamental design which must have cost at least $5,000." $ What Is Belug Done. I asked Mr. Johnson to give ' me some Idea of the work now going on In his de partment. Said he: "We have already repaired several hun dred houses. We have thoroughly reno vated the canal administration building and that occupied by Chief Engineer Wallace, and have put the hospitals here at Colon in sanitary condition. We are building a large sanitarium on the Island of Taboga, to be used aa a convalescent hospital, and we will soon be constructing large additions to the hospital at Ancon. The Taboga build ings are about completed. They contain chamber dining rooms, amusement rooms, kitchens and bathhouses. They stand on a high bluff, surrounded by a grove of cocoa nut palms and overlooking the sea. The island has pure water, it affords excellent surf bathing and It will be valuable for our, people who are getting well or who have to He off for a rest. "We have repaired most of the bouses at Chrlstobal, Uncle Sam's beautiful annex to the city of Colon, and a large force of work men are now living there. I should say we have repaired JuO at that place alone. "At Culebra, where the moat of the canal work Is now going on, we are putting up a bachelor quarters more than 200 feet long, which will accommodate eighty-five men. Each man will have a room to himself, and there will also be large dining rooms, read ing rooms and a social hall. This building will be three stories In height, with ver andas running around It There will be double lattice doors Instead of windows opening upon the porches, and on the first story the inside walls will be rolling par titions, which will enable the whole to be thrown into one room for lectures and social purposes. Homes for Colebra. "We are also building quarters for mar ried men at Culebra. We ' have designed twenty and are completing four every week. We have twenty-five portable bouses there, each consisting of a room and a porch. They will do for bachelors. We are also re pairing a number of the old French houses, and a little farther on at Rio Grande Su perior are renovating forty such houses for the worklngmen. The latter buildings are dormitories, with a special house, contain ing dining rooms and kitchens, to be used as a canteen to feed the men. "In addition to this." the supervising architect continued, "we are repairing other buildings all along the line. We are putting up a big wharf at La Boca, and we shall add greatly to the horpltals at Ancon, erecting Ice plants and cold storage, plants there. We are also making roads and are rapidly getting the quarters for the employes into comfortable shape." American Homes at Panama. While in the architect's office I looked over the plans of the different kinds of buildings which are now being made for the American employes. The houses vary according to the rank and salary of the man and as to his family.' In the bachelor quarters at Culebra, above referred to, the ceilings are thirteen feet high. Each bed room is 12x14, with French windows to the floor. The doors open out upon' porches and the ventilation Is perfect. In ' that building there will be sixty-two rooms, each of which will be occupied by a bach elor workman. The rooms will be furnished by the gov ernment. Every man. will have his own furniture, consisting of two tables, a bed,' a mattress, a hat rack, two chairs and toilet conveniences. Wardrobes and book shelving will be built into the houses, and It is expected that they will be lighted by. electricity. Such quarters are for our me chanics, namely, carpenters, . plumbers, painters and others. Men of a higher rank, such as chiefs of departments, chief clerks, etc., will have better accommodations and more furniture. How MarrledTMen Will Lire. The married mechanics and their families will have good accommodations. Many of tho . French cottuges are now occupied by them. and. those which have been repaired are comfortable. Each cottage, has sev eral large rooms, with wide windows and doors. The walls, as is the case with nearly all the buildings here, are of wooo painted in bright colors, no plaster or paper being used. A common type of building is a one-story cottage, containing two rooms and a kituhen, with verandas at the front and back and a ehower bath in the rear. The rooms are 12x14; the partitions do not extend clear to the roof, in order to pro vide plenty of air, lattice work reaching from the top of' the wall to the celling. All such buildings, including the old French cottages, rest high up from the ground on concrete posts, giving free air circulation under the floors. The next grade of houses is intended for the siarried . foremen and clerks. These are also' of one story and cost about $1,600 apiece to build. Each is forty-five feet long and sixteen feet wide with a six-foot varanda running around three sides. Each contains a living room, a bed room, bath room, servant's room, pantry and kitchen. The rooms are large and the houses com fortable. A still better class have an extra bed room. Such houses will be occupied by clerks with large families. . In addition to these some two-story cot tages are now being built which have liv ing and dining rooms on the first floor and bed rooms above. Such houses will have porches, top and bottom, and the upper portion will be so screened that the family can sit out of doors during the evening. The quarters for the officers are even bet ter than those already mentioned, some of them having six rooms with furniture to correspond to the houses. All the bouses will have shower batha and all will be sup plied with cold water. Cooking and Eating. As to the cooking and eating arrange ments, the bachelor quarters will have kitchens and dining rooms, which will be .run on the contract steni, each man pay ing bis own proportion of the actual cost. Contracts for supplying the board for such quarters will be let out to the lowest re sponsible bidders and each man will pay his share of the contract price. If he chooses, however, he need not eat In the quarters. There will be canteens outside and a man can go where he pleases. The canteens will be of different grades. At some meals will cost much more than at others, and one can accommodate his stom ach to his pocket. There will also be cof fee houses where a man may buy what he pleases and pay for what he orders. Tha present rate for board at Culebra is, I am told. Just about $3 per week. As to those who wish to keep house and board themselves, the commission will soon have a commissary department like that found at our army posts. This will be in charge of Paymaster E. C. Tobey, the chief of materials and supplies, and It will result in the men and their families get ting their food and clothing as low. If not lower, than the same things could be . bought In the United States. This depart ment wlU Import all sorts of American pro visions and the other necessities of life and will furnish them to the men at a little over their actual cost. Including that of managing the department. It Is probable that fresh meat will be sent down from America and kept in oold storage here, and that the commtsslarit may also furnish Ice and Vegetables. Cost of Provisions at Panama. At present nearly every good thing eaten at Panama comes from abroad. The Isth mian soli is good and the climate such that almost anything can be raised; but we get our sweet potatoes from Peru, Irish pota toes and cabbages from New York, and other vegetables from New Orleans. Every thing is high. Chickens, for instance, cost 75 cents each, and eggs about 50 cents a dozen. Eggs are sold In the markets In couples, two being wrapped up in a corn husk with strings about the middle and at the ends to keep them from breaking. Fish are to be had In great variety and com paratively cheap. Fresh meat Is dear and poor in comparison with that of the United States. Tropical fruits are delicious and cheap. One can buy a pineapple for 7 cents and a cocoanut for 5 cents, while bananas cost 1 cent each. One of the best fruits here is the papaya. It looks like a cross between a tnnskmelon and a gigantic cucumber, and when cut open shows a rich yellow flesh. The papaya Is eaten with a spoon; It is much liked for breakfast or dessert. It grows at the top of a little tree, being at tached by a stem directly to the trunk. As to. servants, they are comparatively cheap here, but by no means so good as our servants at home. I know one woman who has a girl come In tor half of each day. It Is her duty to cook the dinner and clean up the house, and her wages are $3 per month. FRANK O. CARPENTER. and many more weeks went by until really the world ceasvd to hold its breath and as sumed at attitude of expectancy expecting nothing. .'j' t? 1 1 m loaf h ,r.R tlnmU t rm inn tA and on Broadway in. New York th bul letin was posted and the "gogal" waa printed which made me long to gat back' with th Jy-mad rrowd In ToWo. -I pic tured the people forgetting the restraint which nature herself seems to have put upon them, and for once really congratu lating themselves upon their triumph. Not so. I am told that the great Tens hi, tha tery within the Inner Moat, had caused an intimation to go forth that he had not ap proved of such extravagant decoration, nor too much expression or exuberatlon. Firstly, because the decoration cost a great sum of money which could and should be more Judiciously expended; and. secondly, be cause Japanese rejoicing must of necessity be at the expense of a noble enemy grimly bearing reverses in every engagement, to gether with the awful loss of nearly SCO. 000 men. So this nation, trained to obedience of the Imperial wish as no family of children was ever trained to obedience of the pa ternal command, ceased forthwith to apend Its money upon flags and bunting and ban ners and lanters by the tens of thousands) and settled itself to await the end with as little demonstration of Jubilant feeling as possible. The other day Mukden fell Into the kanda of the Japanese and was followed very shortly by Tlehllng. These were the first great events since Port Arthur,, and one naturally expected to see some evidence of Intelligent appreciation in Toklo. I left tha hotel In fact a number of times and went down through the Glnza, the Broadway of Japan, Just to see If I couldn't find some Indication that this country Is at war and winning such a succession of victories as would keep any other country In the hands of decorators week In and week out. Noth ing happened. Nobody said a word, and this time It looked Indeed like stolidity or stupidity, but it was not. It waa delibera tion. Early Saturday morning I looked out of my window, which commands a line view of Hlblya park and the moats surrounding the palace grounds, and I saw a thousand banners and pennants floating In the air. ( Deeornm in Place of Esthnstasia. "Glory be!" said I. "We're going to nave a banzai!" I hastened to get out Into the crowded streets. But it was more or less, nothing at all, and after taking a few photographs of the decorations that were confined to the little square of Hlblya park I came back to the hotel wondering. It wan a most deliberate affair. All the flags and things were put up at a certain hour in the morning, a few speeches were made in a stand erected for the purpose at a certain hour in the afternoon, and by 4 or B o'clock there was not a single banner nor bit of bunting left tn the air, and the crowd had quietly dispersed. It waa merely an . ar ranged meeting to offer publlo thanks to the army and navy for the splendid work they are doing for the nation, and It was carried out with as much dignity and de corum as If It had been some hero's funeral instead of a celebration. ' Perhaps this Is as it should be. Perhaps this is the correct pose for a victorious na tion to assume, but I hope I shall be here at the end and see some such demonstra tion as we inauigea in. in new ion aner Admiral Dewey destroyed Spain papier macho navy In Manila bay. There was en thusiasm that was worth living for, even if it was a bit overdone, and an infusion of some of that spirit Into the Japanese people would relieve It of that characteristic which la most exasperating to whole-souled Anglo-Saxons, a characteristic which a big hearty American friend of mine in Toklo rays makes him feel constantly like break ing something or "picking a row with somebody." ELEANOR FRANKLIN. Curious and Romantic Capers of Cupid M 'Mi Ac 1 j o TOirvBON. ewKKVitrrsa archt. TTT-T AT PANAMA.-1'holo ly Mr. terpen ter. COTTAOW AT (rT!f-r!n.B 8AM OOT ABOUT 2,900 BtCTI HOMES FROM TITS JfKtNClf. 1'Uoto by Mr. Carpenter. wtrli Widow Weds Yonnar Coachman. tS. N. C. GRIFFIN, an old gray haired woman of V), the widow of a Philadelphia carpet merchant, hJTa who left an estate valued at one s million dollars leaning on the arm of her coachman, John Wood, appeared at the Episcopal rectory In Whitehall, N..Y., and told Rev. Mr. Elliott that they wanted to get married. The forty-two years' dif ference In their ages was so apparent that the clergyman used every effort to dissuade them from their matrimonial venture. It was ell to no avail, however, and the only answer the woman would make was: "I don't care If Johnnie Is only ID, T am 60, and I guess I am old enough to know whether I love him or not." The minister performed the ceremony. The bride, beaming all over with content ment, as she boarded the train, suid she felt SO years younger, and she looked It, too. t Yessf Wives, Old Hnsbands. "Strange statistics," ssld an-. Insurance scent quoted by the Philadelphia Inquirer, "are collected tn my business. "I have found that the more times a man marries the younger In comparison with himself he wants his wife to be For Instance, his first wife on the average Is four years younger than he. His sec ond is ten. His third Is twenty or thirty. "What do these statistics prove? Do they prove that as a man gains in years and experience he finds that it Is best for many reasons to be almost ss old as his wife's father, or do they only prove that a men approach old age they are more foolish than they weer In youth? "Old X., aged 70, with a third wife of n . o- this hid the o'hor ley: " 'You can't ' marry a girl too young. The younger she is the longer she'll keep her health and strength and beauty.' Fur thermore, the older you are the more re ct she'll have for you. She'll reverence you and obey you aa she would her own father or grandfather.' "Young wive rejuvenate old husbands," the Insurance agent ended. "They make these old fellows dress younger, talk younger, set younger and feel younger. Youth Is contagious, like the croup. . "A young wife Is believed to prolong' at old husband's life. If a man of 70 Insured In my company should marry a girl of ! I'd consider him a better risk by t per cent than he had been before." Record-Breaking Ceremony. Alma J. Kenyon. daughter of the late John 8. Kenyon of Syracuse, N. Y., and Harold MacGrath, the author, also a na tive of Syracuse, were married in Bridge port, Conn., by Justice of the Peace Sid ney N. Lock wood, after a fruitless seatas for a clergyman. The ceremony was per formed tn the temporary quarters of th town clerk, snd was witnessed by Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Sharp, Jr., of Indianapolis; Blanche Bates, the actress: George B. Van Cleve of New York and C. W. Bobba of Bobbs-Merrill company. It la said that Mrs. Kenyon. mother of the bride, was opposed to the match, which was in the nature of an elopement. Fate seemed to have thrown many ob stacles In the path of the couple. The wedding waa to have taken place at 11 o'clock In the morning In Orange, N. J. Dr. Charles Townsend, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, had been selected te tie the knot, but MacGrath learned that unless one of the partlee was a resident of the state a license would be required. Plans were msda to go to Bridgeport The party arrived there at 4 and visited the homes of four clergymen, none of whom was tn. Vnable to get a minister, they were directed to the office of Justice Lock wood, who made a . record of performing the ceremony In fifty-nine seconds. Mis Kenyon gave her residence aa Sioux Falls, 8. D., age as Z. and stated that it was her second marriage. MacGrath said he was 13 years old, resi dent of New York City, and an author. He wrote "The Puppet Crown." "Arm nd th Woman." "Th Gray; Cloak-and Th Mao oa tk Box,