New Womanhood of Korea is Advancing from Slavery to .... i . 1' - - KOREAN WOMAN (Copyright, 1309, by Frank O. Carpenter.) ' - s t nee of The Ben.) The empress ,,..Uc, ... ... ' streets of Seoul. She was on her way from one of her pal aces t- another. She sat beside the em peror on the back seat The sun shone bright, her face was unveiled and all .the world could see. There were thousands of men upon the street! at the time. They formed long lines of white against the bla. k huts. With their big hats and long gowns, their yellow faces were turned straight toward her malestv and their al- mond eyes almost popped out In surprise. Such an event would mean little in any Kurupeun country. It marks one of the most striking changes that are going on fn I.". -...a,. T k I a i a ai a jhuic-t. ii lnuiuttipu inai me new won an is on the ground with both feet, and that from now on the sex will gradl rally make It. way upward out of If present state of degradation. Until now, no man outside the emoeror and th- ,vl .....k. - .v.- .. fe.7.,.. ,, rr V . V features of Korean female royalty. When t i. . . im?rfcr glrl'TaTTmTour as physician to the queen. She wa. the first woman doctor ever known In Korea, and her majesty awaited her coming rather than have the foreign medical mission- arles, who were at that time all men, examine her. When the latter were called In consultation they were not allowed to seo the queen, and when they felt her pulse her hand was thrust out through a screen and -nothing else wa shown. Where the T.ndlee "tar at Rome. Tin- Korean women are not gadabouts. Until now all those of the high and mid dle classes have been more secluded than the females of the Mohammedan harema Thcy have quarter, of their own. which are in the backs of the house, or in spe cial establishments far off from those of the men. Some of the noblest have never boen outside their own compounds, and of the middle classes very few go out . . today except in closed chairs. In the past It has been a crime for a man to lay his . hand on a woman outside his own family, and any man who looked over the wall of a garden to .ee the women within was sure to be punished. The husband ha. had absolute power over his wife and concubine.. They have been bound to him by fetter, of Iron, and to- dav hv. nrartinsiiv nn '.hkh k. h.. . ta-.a k. iftvnn women who inhabit this country are still as far a. the law. and the eu.toms which 1 1 .. .,.... . told that many of them have such -?L.h :,r..!. .w..-aI fw..h. homes. Nevertheless, the' fact remain, that the men can beat and mutilate th.m with little fear of the law ' Kfn Woman Anneal. All this has been so for Ages, and the arrival of the new woman I. therefore the more striking. One see. Indication, of changes everywhere, both In city and country. When I first came here the common women and slave girl, working In the fields carried cloaks with them to shluld their faces from the men Some of them turned their backs and ran away as 1 approached. On the streets of 8e- uul those who came out wore green cloaks over their heads, which they held clos together in front of their faces, lsaving only a crack for one eye. These cloaks hart flat, well Ironed sleeves which were bordered with white. The sleeve! were MerOv rested into the garments and were i 'iMi'vil fur the arms to gu through. The rlosl . ., rnsclve. weie so twin as to be of . ain0 for war-nth, und tiny were used . s veils. Today the co mmon women the same sort of cloak, but they a-e not held tightly, and o:u- i I- . i score of female face, on mi in" the i. uln streets during any work ing h ir of the day. These street women bei.ti.; to I he laboring classes. Many uf ,h i ae t'.ivoK and they are as a rule honuly, dirty and frowsy. s.i f.tr th" i.cv. woman belongs to the r.oti!l!'y or tlic upper clasps She is usually the da ii;htcr of o:no yansban who Is pro Jui 'Ka.i- or is anxious to ape foreign ways. Many of these gentlemen now dress In European clothes and not a few are anxious to havo their wives do likewise. They see the Japanese and European women going about unveiled and observe how they are treated by their husbands as a result and they allow their wives to copy these for eign examples. I attended a court garden party the other day at which many of the royal family were present. There were several princes, relative, of the emperor, all of hi Imperial majesty', cabinet minis ters, the high Japanese officials and others. The foreigner, brought their wire, and they wore, of course, European costume.. The Japanese women were dressed In beautiful kimonos. There were in addition about a half dozen Korean women, aome of whom wore European dres. and the other. Korean gown. Such women belong :r.' : B ' k . . ft I I J '. I I ii x. ......... ', -:.,-u: ::, v. t : r . ..''iJbw:? : r '.""3 TJr. ess- -j-v- :'khi AND HER CHAIR. to the advance guaid of the new move- MK - iii., j iii-j s om vii wtovb wiiu their husbands, and even ride In carriages or jmriKisnas, always creating a sensation among the natives wnen tney ao so. Tne dder men cannot realise that a good wo- man who has been raised a Korean would do such a thing and many of them con alder the morality of the new woman ques tionable, to say the least Girls -with Dlaphonous Skirts. As to the clothes the new woman wears, these at the present time are strange to an efeme. m Koreans have no Idea of wnat th proper foreign dress Is, and they aPPar In the most outrageous costumes, thinking them correct For Instance, the wife of a high Korean official came to an a . ... mwrnuun ie ai an American nniiNA thin week dressed In a trailing gown of gauze tissue, the material of which was of about the consistency of fine mljufto netting The dres. wa. properly ma but und !t " ? niale'but und" 41 UW w" "Jmosi notning. ine woman llad P"icoaU which reached only to her . th.t , . , , , , . Knee, so that her pipe-stem legs, clad In JJf" "f b?n ,heVT "whld hoe" t of the vmtae of do,en 'ea . The 1tUr WM of dingy straw, trimmed with motl-ten rosea, which hung down almost t0 her Bhulders. The combination was so grange that the foreign women could hardly keep their faces straight a. she moved about among them. Nevertheless, h M a woman of wealth, and money h.d been no object to her In securing the proper dress. I doubt not she considered herself more fashionably attired than any other woman present Such thing, occur from ignorance as to k i. 0W costume la, and the IhVfT , m" Uk'n adva,1"l; of wnat tne foreign costume is, and " " ji.iw. They have for sale a miscellaneous outfit of bygone clothing brought from Shang- nai ana otner part, of the east The S'" "J " ha.p" and 8ty,ea and 019 dress roods are of tvtrv niiiniu,,. a.- b - mmi.bwu ue- crlptlon. The.e thing, are bought by Korean parent, for their little children who are going to school, quite a number of whom are now wearing foreign dress and almost all of whom have foreign haU- 1 attndd athletic exhibition of the girl, of the public schools the other day. It wa. held in the grounds of the Mulberry palace and about COO girl., with their teachers, were present. They were a" ar(MM ,n cnooi unirorms, Korean in cut- but they wore orel"n which looked as though thev had been flshaxt nut ft the ash barrel, of the Bowery. They had flat crown, and broad brim, and were indeecrlbably ugly. Olrla Schools. ' The achoola which have been established for lrl are nerhaD. the moat strlldn evidence of the new woman movement There are many of these, some run by the missionaries, ome by the government under the' direction of the Japanese, and in addition many private school.. At this .thl.tlo exhibition th. girl, ranged in age from t to 1, and they went through their exercises in sight of ah invited crowd of Korean, of both .exes. Many of them . .w ;-m. ' . " ! ; M - ' !! 2 I : , ' 1 ; ' '' r.v . "; - V.V,V.J ' ' '.'". - "' - ' ? ' ' ' v . ' ..... r ..,. . . ' ..! . . : . came from well-to-do families, and their she was a (flrl as one of the court worn, tif-r nocessities. Finding that she could not BlKtpra, ouuslns and aunts were present to en. One story states that she 'started continue the supply for her school from her see them. The most of these had cloaks in as a hair dresser, but this Is denied, own purse, she made over certain ilea or veils of some kind or other over their She Is not pretty, but very clever, and lands which hud been given to her from faces, out the girls themselves had no the queen of Korea, who was assassinated those belonging to the crown, saying that such covering, and they exercised without by the Japanese, took her up and their revenues would be enough to support shame. mado much of her. She liked her clever- them. The Japanese, however, considered In the past the women of Korea have' ness, and she also liked her homely ap- the amount too liberal, and, as I under been almost entirely uneducated, and to- peaiance, as she thought that would stand It, they have cut down the allow day those of the higher class are Just be an obstacle to any love for her on ance one-half, end are now devoting the beginning to send their children to st-hool. the part of the king, who afterward be- remainder to the support of other The lower and middle-class women have came emperor. schools established by the government. On sent their children to the mission schools As the story goes, the king appreciated top of all this there was a short rice crop for a number of years, and for this reason cleverness as well as beauty. He cast last harvest, and, altoKether, the schools many of the teachers In the girls' schools, sheep'B eyes at Lady Om, notwithstand- are In much need of more money. which contain the children of the nobility as well as other girls, are of the lower ri.i Thl In nnt so of the hlaher school, founded by La(ly Dm for Bri8 cf the upper crus it Is composed of daughters ot the yan(5ban or nobles. There Is also a school for KrlB established by this same consort 0. ,ne retlred emperor, which has only tne daughters of the middle class. Both sehools are giving a foreign education to their pupils and are doing great good. About Lady Om. Just here I wish to say a few words about Lady Om. Until the of the emperor In 11)07 she abdication was th3 lending lady of this land, and as such aia much for her sex. While not the empress by actual marriage, she was practically bo to all intents and pur- poses. She Is the old emperor's favorite concubine, or consort, as she is called a... a i TnnM-.M..A T nniUi-Blo rA Vila oy jouonrsq, . majesty Is true to her. and that she al- low- no other, of the ladh-s-ln-walting ""out the court to come near hlm- Sh 18 the nlo,her of ,h Cr0W" Prl"Ce Wh ls now belnit educated In Japan, and as . ,,. kv.i ..i.t.u in. SUCH Ilia will fivuiuij - fluence even after that of the old em- peror has become less than It la now. Lady Om came Into the 'palace when Gossip and A Booth Incident Recalled. PROPOS of his 74th birthday, which he has Just celebrated at his home in Baltimore, Mr. J. M. Barron, friend and col- A 'league of Edwin Booth, Joseph Jefferson, Maggie Mitchell and many other stage giants of their genera- tlon sends the New York Telegraph this reminiscence: Tnose wno were noi lnumaie wim r.uin Booth invariably think of -hlm' as a man 0f melancholy, who did nothing but "ruml- nate all day hi. dreadful fate." Mr. Booth ad " moments of Jollity and loved to . v..n.j. .- im. near me Dauaaa ana stone ui uio nine of hi. youth. At the Russell house, De- trolt one afternoon, Mr. Booth sent for me. I found him alone in his room, smok- lng a pipe, of course. He said he felt very blue and had sent Mary, his wife, out for a walk with her father, Mr. McVleker. Booth and I being Marylanders and of long, enduring friendship, we had many chats of the old times. He asked me if I remembered any of the old melodies that wo ""l" lu " u"jui ..., ,unU of the songs of Stephen Collins Foster and especially "The. Old Folks at Home." I told him I though I could resuscitate one or two chanU that he had not heard for many yeara. Booth could not .lng a note and people who heard me try said I couldn't, either, Dut 'o's Kllle ,n where operatic angels fear 0 gurgle, so I sailed in with a tremuloso andante,, thusly: BatImora ris Wtn pretty faces pressed to death and trimmed with lace., Ankle, small and waists so slender; Ha! ha! ha! Good-by, John, Balt'T?. K'r'"' " 1 yU Cm OUt t0" Won't you come out tonight ,n1 ,anca,.by the V");.?' ae.m,oonT . stocking, I '4 Members of the Nebraska Bankers' Association GROUP NO. 6 IN IT8 THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JUNE KOREAN GENTLEMAN AND HIS WIFE. lng the presence of her majesty, and, as a result, Lady Om had to flee for her life. She left tho palace and remained a ay until after the queen was assassin- aiea, ana uien came oacK 10 ue me con- sort of his majesty. I do not know that she herself had anytning to ao witn tne selection or the crown prince as tne sue- cesser of the present emperor of Korea, but I doubt not she aided in the manipu- latlon. This boy Is only 11 or 12 years of age, and he was chosen by I'rince Ito cording to the class to which the girl be over Prince ldilwha, who was an older longs. Korea has a nobility, a middle son of the empereor by (mother mistress, class, common people and slaves. All of I'rince Kulwha Is the young fellow who the rich families own hereditary slaves, ran away from Korea to the United States and a daughter of a slave Is a slave girl and received somee education there. lie In turn. In the past such slaves have at llulu i. a va I 1 Q 1 1 (1 " aiierwara 10 a mne acuucuij ui ouii-iu, Va. He fully expected to be his father's successor, but I'rince Ito has set him aside, and he Is now living quietly here. Tho little prince, the son of Lady Om, Is ex- ... a j i. ,mi i. ... The nex enmeror be the ncxt emperor A' l B8ch00 'he T "T V? , T" porting them out of her private purse. She had nlontv of money ud to the time the - old emperor was retired, but her funds and those of the emperor were then ro- duced and she has now barely enough for Stories About Noted People And one heel it kept a-rocking. I dunced with a gal with a hole in her stocking. She was Ue prettiest gal in de room. Mr. Booth laughed heartily and beat time with his pipe and said: "John, how did you hold on to that? I have not heard It for eons of ages. We had a darky on our Belalr farm who sang something1 about the River O-ee-o." jn, baiu x, juu mean xuo puiu , Dance.' How does this mix with your darky minstrel: The boatmen dance. The tioatmen sing, .v. . , . ,.. - . And wh-n the boatman l-Hs on shore. He spends his money and works fur more, H,' !jn. 'don' deTlverOhlo wl dance 11 "n'ght tnibroad dayllsht, And so home wld de heifers In de mornln,. We shoutel, and, Booth slapped the table and declared he had not enjoyed a concert so much for many years. Wait Beau; pause and listen Just as ci, ..JU7..,S . Booth opened the door and in walked Mao with her. "What on earth are you two men re- hearsing?" ' Booth pointed to me as the guilty man and Mac said: "Rehearsing! If either of you culprits utter one more false note 1 11 have you ar- rested for counterfeiting." Thta threat broke up the concert Many Fortanes In "Ben Bolt." "Various persons have made an aggre gate of more than a million dollars out of Battle of Buena Vista,' died while at Chllll the song "Ben Bolt." said Arthur Eng- cothe. Mo., and near that city a monu- llsh, a lawyer of Charleston, W. Va., quot- ed by the Washington Post, "but my father, who composed the verses, never ,,u in mjii in . I ' 1 ' - i v "5 ft NINTH ANNUAL CONVENTION AT 13, 1909. Slave Ulrls of Korea. As I have said, the new woman movo- ment Is Just at its beginning. I doubt If iu"a w j There are certainly lesB than 1,000 who "e yei iu-"in io mrow on me siiuciiies oi me oio, customs; ana me re mainder, numbering millions are In the same conaition- mat tne sex nas neia tor many generations. The customs vary oc- 1 .. .1 . I .. Im.j. . I a " " " '"" mey were sola, wnen tne memDer oi a family committed a grave offense against the government, the whole family of the BUllty one was often reduced to slavary. T1ls, wa3 tne cae yvith the wife and ... da"BhtCr , ,,TT I . V, wnB .WlnaW by the orders of the of Shanghai some years ago. Quito a I ,nin lri" ve- d as such they have been bought and sold. Todnv almost every Korean ladv has her - slaves, who wait upon her and do her bidding. I understand that the slaves are usually well treated, and that most of them realized one penny," ' Mr. English ls a son of Thomas Dunn English, the poet, who served In congress as a representallye from New Jersey In the early '90s. "Three of the verses of the poem were written by my father a long time before the poem's first publication," continued Mr. English. "In fact he had cast the In- complete poem aside, when one day a re- quest came to hlm from N. P. Willis and George Morris, the latter the author of 'Woodman, Spare That Tree," for1 a con tribution for their magazine, the New Mirror, which was then about to make Its initial appearance In New York. They told my father they were 'hard up' and that any contribution he might make would really be a contribution, as he wa. to ex pect no pay except their sincere thanks. "As a consequence of the letter, the poem was taken up again, two more verse, were written, and It was sent on to New York, where in due time it appeared in the New Mirror. A copy of the paper ls still re tained by my family. "Since that time It has been published and republished throughout the world. It enjoyed a second life through the medium of Iu Maurler'. 'Trilby. "An Itinerant song writer, a brother of II. R. Kneass, then a district attorney In Philadelphia, took the poem and adapted to It an old German tune. He sang it in Pittsburg and afterward in various parts of the country, and 'Ben Bolt' became a popular air. This man, who was then alnglng between the acts of a theatrical production of that day, entitled The ment has been erected over hi. grave which ls 'to the memory of the author of "lien Bolt." ' " y 1 1 r i I . LEXINGTON MAY 27, 190. 3 I I U vw-.-it'""- I - 5,. -.! r ftp - 1 ,. 4.- ,v. . r . , WOMAN WITH CLOAK ON HER HEAD. would not leave their mlstres.es If they could. How the Court Ladle Dress. Until just now It ha. been impossible for a foreign man to know anything about the dress of the high Korean lady except from hearsay. I attended a garden party given by the Red Cross society in the grounds of one of the old palaces this afternoon at which several of the high ladles of the empress' court were pres ent. Among them wa. a sister of her majesty. They appeared In their court gowns, with great gold pin. studded with pearls in their hair and with gold bandages of their rank over their foreheads. Each woman had on a short Jacket of white or light blue silk, which reached only half way to her waist, and below this a very full skirt of dark blue silk gau.e, which was fastened around the body under the arms and trailed upon the ground. A. they raised thorn I could sea their stock ings of padded cotton and their low em broidered white or lilac .hoes. They were bareheaded, and their Jet black locks were put up in a knot which rested far down on the nape of the neck. They wore no veil, nor face covering of any kind, and moved about among the people, Interested in all the sight, of the occasion. During the celebration the court ladle., who heretofore have been abso lutely secluded, sat upon the platform, with the leading Korean and Japanese of ficials, representing her majesty the em press, and one of them even read a mes sage from the empress to the assemblage. No one would have dreamed such a thing possible five year. ago. Korean Girl. Costume. The dress of the new woman wilf1 be far more comfortable and more beautiful than that of the present. A Korean friend of mine has given me some of the details as to the costume of the present Says he: ""The first thing a girl puts on 1. a di vided skirt, consisting of a pair of very full drawers which fall in folds to her feet At the top of these is a band about eight Inches wide, which i. fastened tightly over the breast by a white ribbon drawstring, tied at the front The draw ers are so full that they might be fastened about the neok instead of the waist if the girl so wished. The walBtband is very tight, and it comes high up the back. Above It and just meeting it I. a little Jacket with long sleeve.. This is yellow, green, blue or white, and it Is tied together with ribbon, of the same color. The Jacket ls so short that a strip of bare skin an Inch wide show, out under the .houlder blade, when the woman bends over, and If she goes in the sun he may have a red .tripe there. The drawer, narrow as they fall to the feet, and are lost In great stocking, of wad ded white cotton, which make her .mall feet look five time, as large as they ase. They are more like boot, than anything else, and they take the place of .hoe. and Uppers at home. The better class houses are carpeted with matting, and the women go about In stockings. Out door, they wear low shoes with soles of ox hide or cloth. In addition to the divided skirt the "I o t) ! i. J Freedom 1 Korean woman ha. on a very full pair of white overpanta, which reaoh from the arm. to far below the knees, and over the whole a cloaklike gown tied at the front with a ribbon. This garment la often of silk of bright color. The younger women are fond of red, those ot middle age like blue and many wear white. Most of the women have more or lea. Jewelry. They wear hairpins of gold, .liver or amber a. thick as one's little finger, and many have two gold or stiver ring, on the third finger of the right hand. They paint and powder, covering the face with white, except at the Hps, which are red. They use India Ink to mark out the line of the eyebrows, and arch these in conformity with the Chlne.e Idea of -Aslatio beauty. This Is supposed to be a ourve like that of a line of swans flying through the sky, and if the hairs grow otherwise they are pulled out with tweezer, until they approach the ideal. The winter clothes of the better class Korean women are sometimes of fur and quilted silk. Padded cotton 1. also used, the gown, being so made that they can be rlppped apart for washing. Much paste and glue are employed in dressmaking, and many a woman of these high-class circle, would drop to pieces if she were left out all night In the rain. now Korean Women Lire. The new woman movement mean, that a great change I. to come tn the dally life of the Korean.. What with .tudy, school going and calling, a new world 1. Just beginning for these benighted mor tals. The well bred woman of today be gins her life of seclusion at the age of 7 and from then until her death .he 1. practically confined to the house of her husband or parents. She ls lucky, Indeed, If .he ha. a little garden to walk about In. If she ls very high class, she does not go out at all, or only In a closed box about three feet square, and not more than four feet in height. Thl. I. slung between poles. In bringing It to her house the chair bearer, take it Inside the yard, and then go away while she crawls in. The proper signal Is given, they return and carry her to the home of a friend, leaving the box and going around the corner until she crawls out Such visit, are rare. The Korean woman rise, with the sun and after spending perhaps an hour on her toilet directs her slaves how to attend to the household. She koep the acontints of the family and acts as mistress of the establishment. She may do a little em broidery or sewing herself, but outside this she has nothing to occupy her all day long. She usually sleeps on a mat on the floor and when she rise., If It Is cold oi:tside, her feet rest on a warm surface, for her bed room ha. flue, under It and straw fire, are started before daybreak. She sits down on the floor before a looking glass In mak'ng her toilet and eat. from a little table eight or ten Inche. high. Her telle furniture 1. composed of bowl, of brass and a pair of chop (ticks, and her ford Is largely rice, meats, fowl, fish and fruit. After eating .he u.e. her finger. In place of a tooth brush, washing out her mouth with .alt which she also rub over her teeth. She take frequent bath In the summer and on th whole la reasonably clean. New Marrlagre Cnstoraa. This movement mean that there arc to come change In all matter of lore and , marriage. Already the Christian girl., of whom there are many, are demanding that they be married In the church after our ceremony, or as near that a. Korean Ideal will permit. Today the million odd mar rlagea which take place yearly are as bar barous as those of darkest Africa. Chil dren are often betrothed at birth, and a 7-year-old girl may, be married "to a man of Z0, or a boy of 9 to a girl of 19. A a rule the marriages take place before the children have reached the age of pupil of the first class In the high schools, And a girl is an old maid at 18 or SO. Among the queer wedding customs Is the gluing the bride' eye shut, so that she cm seo nothing, and keeping them so for three day. Another la that th bride will not speak to the groom for at least a week after the wedding, and a third that a fight takes place between her frionds and his on the way to the ceremony, and the one represented by the pary defeated I con sidered unlucky. Neither bride nor groom sees each other until they are married. After that the girl Is practically the slave of her husband and his parents, who may treat her as they please. As h grow o!der or when her buxhend Is tired of her he brings one or more secondary wives Into the house and she has to submit Divorce are easy on the part of the husband, but they ar considered disreputable, and do mestic trouble usually result In adding a coneublne or so to the establishment rather than shoving th old wife out into the cold. FRANK O. CARPENTER,