v THE COURIER. w4 h ,, r- if 19 i- r bi c i tr, I; J 1 1 n r r i II I li i I.: it. i -4 t i effect of tbe morning, of exquisite strains, the unspeakable, ineffable fKietry of life ie incommunicable. So true is this that if an unborn, in telligent soul were given bis choice to be or not to be, and if he bad to form his opinion of the worth of life from treading the modern novels'-which 31 r. Bowells reveres so because be says they paint life as it is, 1 doubt if an intelligent spirit would- coaseat to Alve, even though he read also the nost triumphant songs of life-intoxi--cated poets. But few who have lived say that it has not been worth while, so much more is loving and being loved and the beauty and mystery of life than tbe most inspired descrip tion of it. Tolstoy is like a diver with a high dive to make who, instead of jumping arrow-shaped into tbe water and thus cleaving it, throws his body, -stomach first, onto the air, and gets a heavy blow on a most sensitive part of his body from an element which be might have cleaved, but which in stead he has clumsily and obstinately made into a solid resistant. Jokal's story is of a family cursed by the suicidal Impulse and the strug gle of the last male representatives to avoid their fate. In the last chapter all but two of tbe principal characters die. The heroine is stabbed by her own father, the villain hangs himself, the hero's leading man is killed by a bee-sting. Hot sealing wax dropped on the 'philosopher's hand, bis arm swelled, blackeaed, and in an hour he was dead. Another villain falls into a pit of boiling quick-lime and crawled out a ghastly white, with his flesh dropping, from his bones. 'You see how cheerfully the book ends, and ,'how pleasant the dreams of him who . sits up at night to finish Mr. Jokal's tale, are likely to be. BIoodpolsoning, banging, stabbing and quick-lime are crowded in at the end of the book evi dently to demonstrate the author's yersatility, and those who are allowed to live beyond tbe pages and the reader's cognizance are sorry for it and deprecate tbe habit of living which is too strong for them to break themselves of. This would all be worth while if it were true, because truth is worth -while being uncomfortable and un happy for. However, tbe story, as a whole, is false. Mr. Jokii does not preserve his values and It is a lack rather than a proof of versatility to dispose of one's characters by death, even if each one is killed in an orig inal and totally unexpected manner. Stories to be true in effect should be brighter than life, because the painter uses only pigments for sunshine aad for lustrous objects, the word music for music and only words for all tbe visions and perfumes of life. Sbak spere got the morning in with apple cheeked wenches and earth-flavored rustics, but it is not safe for any nov elist, however gifted, to have faith in his own Sbaksperean powers. It is much safer to tone up the heavy opaque shadows and make the high lights very bright indeed, brighter than they are, if he be such a master -of technique. A By-Product. In consequence of tbe competition between two electric companies at Evanston, Illinois, it has been demon strated that electric light as a by product of a heating or of any large manufacturing or energy-producing business can be manufactured with greater economy of fuel and labor than hen the plant is built entirely for that purpose. The Yar-Yan company of Evanston supplies beat to the citizens by means of hot water piped to its customers. After tbe piping was laid the com pany made a proposition to furnish light to the municipality, and to pri vate citizens,at areatly reduced co9t.Then the electric lighting com pany metfthe Yar-Yan company's prices with a still lower reduction and' tbe competition has become so spirited that 'stores in Evanston are being lighted, for almost nothing. However large the capital of each company may be, neither one can long continue to sell light for a price less than tbe cost of its production. But the competition for business has disclosed a fact of great importance to all cities. Without regard to tbe final success of the heating and light ing company, future investors who put in public utility plants will util ize in producing light the surplus energy left over from pumping water into standpipes or forcing steam into conduits. The pumping and the man ufacturing energy is required in the day time, while the energy which produces the electricity Is, of course, required, for tbe most part, after the sun has set. The transference of' electric light from a main product to a by-product can not be made without tbe usual bitterness and strife between tbe long-established electric light com panies and the companies which will sell electricity by tbe way and as an afterthought, as a dry-goods store sells deal boxes, or as a gas company sells- coke. But when the change has been effected cities and homes will probably be better lighted and much more cheaply. Comparative Manners. Last spring Professor Charles Eliot Norton of Harvard university, in tbe familiar worried Boston manner, told the girls of Badcllffe college, as they were about to say farewell to a some what ungenerous and grudging Alma Mater, that he hoped they would pay special attention to their own man ners in their future intercourse with America. He urged them to do all they could to ameliorate tbe defects of "vulgar, semi-civilized America," where most of them would have to live. President Eliot and Professor Charles Eliot Norton occasionally dep recate America and Americans, most of whom receive such criticism as un graciously and to as little profit as in the early days when an English king's disapproval of our savage ways was one cause for the establishment of the American republic. A month ago Mr. Thomas Nelson Page returned from Europe, where he spent eight months. He says hat he "could not help noticing while away what good manners Americans have as a rule. He saw none of the gauch erie, loud talking and conspicuous ignorance that President Eliot com plains of in Americans. To be sure only the well-to-do or the poor but culture-hungry American goes abroad, and therefore America is represented in Europe by those to whom wealth has opened the doors of culture, or by those brilliant men and women whose cravings for knowledge have enabled them to overcome the obstacles in the way of obtaining it. When these few are compared with the hoi-polloi of America, to whom, perhaps, Professor Norton referred, it is easier to under stand the difference between his opin ion and Mr. Page's view of American marfbers. It has been said by more than one student of human beings that the polite world has the same boundaries, the same internal characteristics, and, with few exceptions, the same cus toms, whether located in Hungary, Russia, France or America. If Pro fessor Norton has formed bin opinion of Americans from observing tbe manners of tbe uneducated in Cam bridge, and Mr. Page's gratifying ob servations refer only to tbe Americans rich and aspiring enough to go abroad, there isflo conflict between them. There is abundant testimony from travelers returned from Europe that the manners of tbe peasants of France and of Germany are much better than the manners of tbe lqwcllss Ameri can. It must not be forgotten, how ever, that feudalism and the still re maining result of sharp class distinc tions may have produced io the Euro pean peasant a consideration for and deference toward those abore him that is accepted by a member of the greatest democracy as spontaneous politeness. In America, members of one class rapidly graduate or degenerate into another. Luxury applied to tbe same race or family for a certain number of gen erations invariably enfeebles it, and the last scion of an old fortune meets on his way down to poverty the ascending sons of hod carriers, diggers and ditchers on their way upward to commercial and consequently to social eminence. A sense of a lack of permanency and fixity of poeition pervades and ani mates all America. Thus the tempo rarily elevated do not expect and tbe temporarily obscure do not render tbe deference paid to tbe upper classes abroad. T A genuine American or democrat' rejoices in tbe phenomena of demo cracy and believes that self-assertion will eventually become dignified self respect so well founded that its possess or need not fear to be courteous. The HoMcwivcs' Union. The Chicago branch of the House maids' Union held a meeting last week in the Auditorium, at which Mrs. Henrotin was one of tbe speak ers. She advised the housekeepers to form a "Housewives' Union," whose officers and delegates might confer with delegates from tbe "Housemaids' Union" and aid in the adjustment of grievances. Just what such a combination of housekeepers could accomplish in the case of a general strike, is only vague ly stated. If the cooks, second girls and nurses of Chicago laid down their skillets, sifters and spoons, their brooms, dusters, trays and white aprons and their infant charges and walked out of the houses with the dec laration that they would not return until certain grievances were righted and certain demands complied witu, what would happen? Two meals a day would still be served in most households, although the hotels and restaurants would be patronized by a larger number of hungry people. The children would still be washed, dressed, fed and put to bed. Booms would not be so fre quently swept and dusted, but there would be no closing of houses as there is of mills when the employes walk out. Then it would be the duty of the president ot the Chicago union of housekeepers and housewives to call a meeting for tbe discussion and ame lioration of tbe situation. Unaccustomed to organization as tbe housemaids aie and without the always acquired ability to comprehend a complicated case involving all sorts of mistresses and all varieties of maids, in the large, conferences with the housemaids would, at first, pro duce nothing but confusion. Later conferences would inevitably develop the capacity for affairs and execution possessed by one woman in a hundred, and the two organizations might con fer profitably on a situation an . on relations which have been unscUed and unsatisfactory to both since the first servant agreed or was coinnt .ed to serve the first master. A New Washington. - -TheFillpine commission, in der.d ing to give the city of Manila a mu nicipal government closely resembhin: in its fundamental features the ad ministration of tbe District of Co lumbia, could not have arrived ai a better solution of the problem whu-li confronts it in the largest and nut important community of these far away American possessions. Wa?ii ington is the model city not only f the United States, but or the world. In nearly every respect the manage ment of affairs may be truthfully said to be ideal. Its magnificent avenue and streets are almost as pure as are the hallways of tbe residences that frame them in such stately array. The parks are gems of shade and flower-: and verdure and fountains which cannot be paralleled anywhere on earth. Nowhere is there a more eftic ient police department. A better tire department cannot be found. The public school regime also.is excellent. The James Method. There is, it seems, no brain so great that it can defy the ravages of a method. When an artist or a critic'or a scholar invents a method and pro ceeds to coddle and develop .it, then you need look no more for the good things you once expected of bim. Henry James-has shown symptom of an incipient case of method for a long time,- but tbe ravages that Jt has wrought in his dignified andfgenlle manly manner of novel-writingjwere only recently exposed in "The Sacred Fount." Mr. James has long held that the most trivial incidentlcan be exhaustively and interestinglyjtreated through the various personalities con cerned in it, and that every afternoon tea presents material for a novel. He has dangerously expanded! this theory before and on more than one oc casion has come near being tedious: but he has reached the apotheosis of his method in "The SacredjFount." The first thirty pages containj.abso lutely all the material of tbe novel; after that it advances not all. Such petty and melodramatic devices as action and movement and climaxes are entirely dispensed with. Tbe characters are denied any tang ible physical characteristics and are defined only by the vaguest generali ties or ambiguous psychological attri butes. They are not in the least people, but the disembodied minds and opinions of people. When&tbe first situation is at last outlined, noth more is accomplished except conver sation. Among the guests at a house party, the author, or at least the ego of the book, discovers a former guest who has grown much younger than she appeared when he last saw her, five years before. Upon investigation lie discovers that she has married a man much younger than herself, who, since their union, has aged in ratio as she has grown younger. From this cir cumstance he draws that in all un equal unions one of tbe twain battec on the other, so to speak. At the same house-party he finds a young, formerly a stupid fellow, who has sud denly become clever, and he finds the woman by whose reflected light the fellow shines. But the woman, he votes, has lost none of her old brill iancy; so he infers that she must be borrowing from another source in order to replenish her own store, ana r I-1. r ii n 1 J r '3 1J