THE ECBANTON TBIBUNE SATURDAY MORNINCi.- APRIIv 27. 1895. lit Of; and Makers Books THE NEW JAPAN. "We lately had 1 occasion, looking through Chester Holcombe'8 eyes, to study the curious, superstitious, un wieldy peoples of the Middle Kingdom. It Is now our privilege, thanks to Lafcadlo Hearn's "Out of the East" (New York: Houghton, Mifflin & Co.; for sale In Scranton by M. Norton) to catch a few ' equally entertaining glimpses of the new Japan; the Japan civilized, mili tant and triumphant. Mr. Hearn, In a previous book, "Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan," has depicted Japanese life, cus toms and manners in elaborate detail. His present work Is a less systematic Jotting down of stray facts, fancies and traditions as these thingB have oc curred to him. but it presents several chapters of notable Interest. We may .nqtlce at this time one chapter only, that treating of the position of woman In Japan, and of th relation of the feminine to art. The Inability of the Japanese to enter Into the spirit of western aesthetics and emotions hat caused many travel ers to brand the Japanese as essential ly a materialistic people. Mr. II earn dissents from this harsh judgment, al though conceding that there Is a wide difference between the eastern and the western points of view. "Teacher, please tell us why there Is so much about love and marrying in English novels;" the author was once asked by his class In literature, composed of young men from 19 to 23 years of age, "it seems to us very, very strange." But for his familiarity with the Japan ese point of view in social relations. Mr. Hearn admits that he would have found himself unable to answer this question. To these people any social system of which filial piety Is not the moral cement; In which children leave their parents In order to establish families of their own; in which 'It Is considered not only natural but right to love wife and ohild more than the author of one's being; In which mar riage can be decided Independently of the will of parents, by the mutual In clination of the young people them selves, and In which the mother-in-law Is not in vested with supreme com- mand over the internal affairs of the new domestic partnership appears like a moral chaos. To the young Japanese, marriage seems a simple, natural duty, for the due performance of which his parents will make all necessary arrangements at the proper time. That foreigners should have so much trouble about getting married Is puzzling enough to him; but that distinguished authors should find it necessary or desirable to write novels and poems about such matter-of-fact subjects, and that these novels and poems, when written. should be read by great numbers of people, puzzles him, Mr. Hearn tells us, infinitely more. Indeed, the English love novel. In which the amours of the hero and heroine supply the bulk of the subject-matter ending with marriage ana eternal imppiueaa Dt ter, is more than "strange" to the JaDanese. He uses that word through Innate politeness, but the thought which Is In his mind Is that such a book is positively Indecent. This thought, It should be clearly under stood, does not arise from any sense of shame in love itself, but from abhor rence of the doctrine that with a man's marriage his duty to his parents be comes subordinate to his duty toward his wife and children. To the Japanese this doctrine seems the essence of Im piety and selfishness. By reason of this belief It happens that while the typical woman often figures in Japanese romanca as a heroine: as a perfect mother; as a pious daughter, willing to sacrifice all for duty; as a loyal wire, wno lonowea ner ' husband into buttle, fights by his side. .and saves his life at the cost of her own, she never, under any circum stances. Is represented in the virgin stage as a sentimental maiden, dying or making others die for love. Neltner, we are told, does she exhibit herself In literature as a dangerous beauty, a charmer of men. As In China, wooing Is utterly tabooed; for a man to tompll ment his wife or daughter is an out rageous Impertinence; and very rarely does a Japanese refer In any manner to his domestic affairs, even to discuss the Drosuects of his children.' Never does a beggar or an unfortunate suppll cate for alms In the name of his wife and children; but he may very properly work up a sentiment of compassion by depicting the want and misery of his poor parents and grandparents. As in China, also, the emperor Is supreme as the father of all his subjects; next comes the oldest surviving grandpar ents ana next me parent, n m ureram selfish in a man to love his wife and his child more than his emperor and his ancestors. Mr. Hearn scouts some if ' the Judg nunts which have been pronounced upon Japanese women by writers like that "extraordinary pwrson," Sir Ed win Arnold, "who make their short residence In teahouses and establish, mentsj of a much worse kind, and then go home to write books about the wo men of Japas." Family life in that country, he sayr, Is a life of which for- atmuM aaa 1 1 1 1 1 1, unil Irnnur olmrtat Huith- Uig. "Invited to the hoiw uf a Japanese friend, you may or may not see the family. It will depend- upon circum stances. If you see any of them, It will probaly be for a moment only, and In that event you will most likely sea the wife. Should you, after a brief salutation from your host, be pressed to stay for dinner, and accept th invi tation, It Is probable that the wife will do you the hon,r, as her husband's friend, to watt upon you during an in stant. You may or may not be for mally Introduced to her; but a glance at her dress and coiffure should be suffi cient to Inform you at once who she is, end you must greet, her with the most profound respect. She will probably impress you as a delicately refined and very serious person, by no means a wo man of the tnuch-emlllng and much Rowing kind. She will say extremely little; but will salute you. .and wilt verve you for a moment with a'natural ie of which the mere spectacle is a velatlon, and glide away again, to re nin invisible until the Instant of your enarture.. when she. will reamwor at b4 entrance to wish you good-bye. ring other successive visits you may e MmHar charming KllmbBea of hrt erhaps, also, some rarer glimpses of tha iwd father and mother! and If a much-favored visitor, tht children may at last come to greet you, with wonder ful politeness and sweetness. But the the Some of the Latest Volumes To Issue from the Press..1 innermost, 'intimate life of that family will never be revealed to you. All that you see to suggest it will -be refined, courteous, exquisite, but of the relation of those souls to each other you wilt i . ttehind ' tho beautiful screens which mask the further in terior, all Is silent, gentle mystery. There Is no reason, to the Japanese mind, why it Bhotild be otherwise. Such family life' Is sacred; the noma Is a sanctuary, of which It were impious to draw aside the veil." Upon rare occasions, when one is compelled to compliment a Japanese maiden or wife. It must be prefixed with a humble apology, as If a rude ness, ictuses, caresses and embraces are utterly unknown in Japan, except In the maternal fondlings of Infants, and these must ocase abruptly after babyhood. Never do girls lilss one an other. Never do parents kiss grown children. "You may see fathers and sons, hubandsand wives, mothers and duughtors. meeting after years of ab sence, yet you will probably never see the least approach to a caress between them. They will kneel down and salute each other, and smile, and perhaps cry a little for Joy; but they will neither rush Into each other's arms, nor utter extraordinary phrases of affection. In deed, such terms as 'my dear,! 'my dar ling,' etc., do not exist In Jupanese, nor any terms a ail equivalent to our emo tional idioms. Japanese affection is not uttered in words; it scarcely ap peal's even In the tono of voices; It Is chiefly shown In acts of exquisite cour tesy and kindness." II. . It Is Impossible for the Occidental mind to conceive of an art world In which there Is no evidence of what we calltheeternal feminine no Idealization of woman as the sum of beauty, grace and truthfulness. Yet In Japan, art Is utterly bereft of the feminine gender. Even the language of the Japanese Is unfitted to convey concepts of this Ideal. Its nouns not only have no gen der, but also Its adjectives, no de grees of comparison, and Its verbs, no persons. One of Mr. Hearn's classes In English literature was once called upon to study a well-known ballad of Tennyson; but It flunked completely when It came to the simple line " She Is more beautiful than day." Hia students could understand the use of the adjective "beautiful" to qualify ''day," and the use of the same adjec-t'.- c, separately, to qualify the word "maid." Hut that there could exlet In any mortal mlud the least Idea of anal ogy between the beauty of day and the beauty of a young woman quite passed ' their understanding. Before the In structor could clear up this mystery, he found It necessary to analyze It psych ologically, to prove a possible nerv ous kinship between the. two modes of pleasurable feeling excited by two dif ferent impressions. The author utterly rejects the hypo thesis that this complete eclipse of the feminine In Japanese art and Ideality Is due to Confucianism. It Is, In his opinion, due to "causes Incomparably older than the existing social structure; older than the Idea of the family, older than ancestor worship, enormously older than that Confucian code which is the reflection rather than the explana tion of many singular facts In Oriental life." Our author repels, also, the charge that Shintotsm and Buddhism, as religious influences, have been op posed to the natural rights of woman. "The ancient faith of Shinto," he de clares, "has been at least as gentle to woman as the ancient faith of the He brews. Its female divinities are not less numerous than its masculine divin ities, nor are they presented to the Imagination In a form much less at tractive than the dreams of Greek mythology. Virgins serve the ancient gods, and figure In all the pageants of the faith; end In a thousand shrines throughout, the land the memory of woman as wife and mother Is wor shiped equally with the memory of man as hero and father. Neither can the later and alien faith of Buddhism be Justly accused of relegating woman to a lower place in the spiritual world than monkish Christianity acoorded her In the West. The Buddha, like the Christ, was born of a virgin; the most lovable dlvlhltits of Buddhism, Jlzo ex cepted, are feminine, both In Japanese art and In Japanese popular, fancy; and in the Buddhist as In the Roman Cath olic haglography, the lives of holy wo men) hold honored place. It Is true that Buddhism, like early Christianity, used its utmoflt eloquence In preaching against the temptation of female love liness; and It. Is true that Jn the teach ing of its founder, as In the teaching of Paul, social and spiritual supremacy Is accorded to the man. Yet we must not overlook the host of instances of favor shown by the Buddha to women of all classes," one of which In which a dogma denying to woman he highest spiritual opportunities i sublimely re buked by the Buddha (hlmselt -the au thor cites In full. . .' : " It Is Mr. Hen.rn' conjecture that the feminine Ideal, which has so largely dominated our western civilization, mut have had Its birth In a race feel ing as ancient as Aryan speech, and utterly alien to . the East. Through all the ccnturlen, . western fancy has been making, neiture more and more feminine- "Whatever delights us. Inv agination, has femtnlzed-the Infinite tenderness of the sky, the mobility of the waters, the rose of dawn, the vast caress of Day, Night, and the lights of heaven, even, the undulations of the eternal hills. . And flowers, and the flush of fruit, end all things fragrant, fair and gracious; th'e gonial seasons with their voices; ' the ' laughter of streams,, and whisper of leaves, and rippling of song wfthln the shadows; all sights, or Bounds, or sensation that Can touch our love t)f loveliness, of deli cacy, of sweetness, of gentleness, make for us vague dreams of woman. Where our fancy lends masculinity to nature, It Is only In grlmness and In force, as If to enhance -by rugged and mighty contrasts the witchcraft of the Eternal Feminine. Nay, even the terrible itself, If fraught with terrible beauty, even Destruction, if only, shaped with the grace of destroyers, becomes for us feminine. And not beauty alone, of sight of sound, but well-nigh all that Is mystic, sublime or holy, now makes appeal to. us through some marvelously woven.l Intricate-piex us of passional sensibility. Hven the subtlest forces of, our universe speak to.ua of woman) new sciences have taught us hew names for the thrill her presence wakens In the blood,, for that ghowly shock which is first love,, for the- eternal riddle of her fascination. ' Thus, out of slmpU human passion, through Influences and transformations Innumerable, w;lmv evolved a cosmic emotion, a femlnlno pantheism." j As far from this as one pole Is from the other Is the Occidental view of na ture and -nature's forces. The art of the Japanese rises superior to gender, superior even to all fantasy, and be comes a "veritable-reflection of what has been and what 1b; wherefore, we have recognised that It Is nothing less than a higher education in art simply to look at his studies of bird life, in sect life, plant life, tree life... Compare, for example, our very finest, drawings of insects with Japanese drawings of similar subjects. The whole mlnuto exqulslteness of the Occidental draw ing has accomplished only an Indiffer ent realism, while the Japanese artlnt, with a few dashes of his brush, has utli:ed and reproduced, with an incom prehensible power of interpretation, not only every particularity of the crea ture's shape, but every Bpeclal charac teristic of Its motion. Each figure flung rom the Oriental painter's brush Is a lesson, n revelation, to perceptions un beclouded by prejudlse, an opening of the eyes of thoBe who can see, though It be only a spider In a wlud-shuken web, a dragon-fly riding a sunbeam, a pair of crabs running through sedge, the trembling or a fish's flna In" a clear current, the lilt of a flying warp, the pitch of a flying duck, a mantis In lighting position, or a semi toddling up a cedar branch to elng. All this art 1h alive, Intensely ajlve, and our cor responding art looks absolutely dead beside it." m. Take, ngaln, the subject of flowers. An English or aerman flower painting, the result of months of trained labor, and valued at several hundred pounds, would In Mr. Hearn's opinion certainly not compare as a nature study, In the higher sense, with a Japanese flower painting executed In twenty brush strokes, and worth perhaps five snn. "The former would represent tut VeRt, but an Ineffectual and painful effort to Imitate a massing of colors. The latter would prove a perfect memory of cer tain flower shapes instantaneously flung upon paper, without any model to aid, and showing, not the recollection of any Individual blossom, but the per fect realization of a genaral law of form expression, perfectly mastered, with all ita mouds, tenses and Inflections. The French alone, among western art critics, appear to understand these fea tures of Japanese art. Without lifting hla brush from the paper, the French artist may sometimes, with a single wavy line, Create the almost speaking figure of a particular type of man or woman." But he can never rise su perior to sex. To undestand what Mr, Hearn means by the ability of the Jap anese artist, the reader must imagine Just such a power of almost instantan eous creation as that which character izes certain French work, applied to almost every subject except Indlvldu ality, to nearly all recognized general types, to all aspects of Japanese na ture, to all forms of native landscapes, to clouds and flowing water and miBts, to all the life of woods and fields, to all the moods of seasons and the tones of horizons and the colors of the morning and the evening. All this dawns upon the western student gradually, but the truth once learned Is not easily for gotten. In the garden pf the little house In Kumamato which Mr. Hearn now oc cupies, there are about eighteen rocks, or large stones, of as many shapes and sizes. They have no Intrinsic value, not even as building material. "And yot. the. author tells us, "the proprietor of. the garden" paid for them something more than $750, or considerably more than the pretty house Itself could rs slbly have cost. And tt would be quite wrong to suppose the cost of the stones due to the expense of their transporta tion from the bed of the Shlrakawa. No; they are worth $750 only because they are considered beautiful to a cer tain degree, and because there Is a large local demand-for beautiful Atones. They are not even of the best class, or they would have cost a trre.it deal more, Now, until you can perceive that a big, rough stone may have more aesthetic suggestlveness than a cor.tly steel en graving, that It Is a thing of bsauty and a Joy forever, you cannot begin to understand how a Japanese sees na ture." The longer he dwells In the East, the more Mr. Hearn fegla growing upon him the belief that there are "exquisite artistic faculties and perceptions, devel oped in the Oriental, of which we can know scarcely more than we know of those unlmaglnablo colors. Invisible to the human eye, yet proven to exist by the spectroscope." Can we wonder at this fueling after comprehending its origin? L. S, H. AUTHORS AND PUBLISHERS: President Hyde, of Rowdoln, has writ ten a work on "Social Theology." Thomas Hardy Is dramatizing "Tess of the D'Urbervilles" for Mrs. Patrick Camp, bell. A sew edition of Motley's "Dutch Re public" is to be included In the "Bonn's Libraries. A collection of the lato Robert Louis Stevenson a letters Is to be edited by Sid. ney Colvln. ' - The long-promised biography of the lato E. A. Freeman will be brought out within a few days. Harry FurnlsB has abandoned his silly rival to Punch, Llko- Joka, and taken up the Pull Mall Budget, .reohrlstened the Now Budgot. . i 4 "Municipal Home Rule," a study ly Professor Frank J. Ooodnow, of Columbia college, Is announced. Mr. Btevenson's posthumous story, "St. Ive," wilt not be published by Stone & Kimball until autumn. Casnell & Co. (New York) Issue a cheap but pleasing and sufficient "People's Life of William Ewart Gladstone." Henry Norman, whose book on China and Japan has made him noted, Is a Har Vard graduate, although on Englishman. 'A new volume of poems, by Francis Thompson, will be published next month under the title of "Songs Wlng-to-Wlng. A new edition of Prof. Goldwln Smith's "Oxford and Her Colleges" will bs Illus trated , with . photographs of the various bulldlngR. ,. "All the Year Round," founded by Chatlcs Dickens, and. hitherto edited, by his son and namesake, Is to be Incorpor ated With "Household Words." Grant Allah's real name, states the London' Academy, Is Charles Grant Blalr flndle. He published his first novels under the pseudonym of "Cecil Power." , The rising Louis XVIIJ craze Is ex pected to oulminate ott the 8th of June the centenary of the day on which the luckless king -breathed , his last In the temple. , Charles G. D. Roberts, Jftts professor at king's college, Windsor, N. B., and' per haps the beat known of Canadian poets, has resigned his chair and Intends to make his home In the states. There Is to bs a reissue In ten volumes of Dyce's Baaketpears. The edition ap pea red originally, it will b remembered, In 1857, and during the last ten yearn it has been reprinted, twice . . The forthcoming subscription edition of Richard Realt's 'verses will contain one hundred and sixty poems. A biographical sketch fcrtfl thres portraits of Realf will be Included In the volume. I. Zaflgwell contributes to tha North Amorlcan Review a dobate-provoklng ar ticle on "The Position of Judaism." Ho denominates the literature of the day as thoroughly antl-ChrlHtlan. The Bookman says: "As tt In about time for the popular taste to take a new direction, we venture to predict that Max Nordau'a, 'Degeneration' will apoedtty sup plant 'Trilby' as a toplo of general Inter est. . 1 Another cony of Robert Browning's first book, "Paulino," has been recovered. It fell Into the hands of Jesae Joggard of Liverpool, who promptly sold It for 0, This Is the ninth copy now known to be extant. Eisenach, the alto of tho Wartburg, the scene of the sinner's battle, and tho Vo- nuauerg, has been solocted as tho place for the Richard Wagnor musoum. A Ber lin merchant has given 40,(iiHI marks of the 55,000 that were needed. It la auspicious for the cause of good citizenship that Mr. Cary's "Life of George William Curtis" was one of the six books moat In dvmand during Feb ruary In twenty representative American cities. "Despite Its passion, despite Its sntlro, despite even Its eloquence," auys tho out look, "Henry D. Lloyd's 'Wealth Against Commonwealth' In tho most powerful book on economics that has appeared in this country Binco Henry George's "Pro? rcsH and Poverty." Jose dp .Echegsray's "El HIJo de Don Juan" .(The Son of Don Jumi), ono of tho chief modern dramas of Simin, has been translated by Janiua Grahum (itoberts Brothers). This Spun'sh lben Is now (:), and he nun written fifty dramas s'.nco his forty-aucond birthday. Lopaa de la Vega's luurols are threatened. It Is good news that wo are soon to have a novdl of adventure from Frank R. Stockton's unique pen. It Is called "The Adventures of Captain Horn," with scenes laid mainly in Bouth America und Paris. Mr. Stockton has been engaged for two years upon this story, wliluh la said to be different from anything ha hud done thua far. John Luno, tho publisher of the "Yel low Book" and father of tho English De cadents, lias deserted "The Uodley Head" for a brluf American sojourn. According to him Aubrey Hcunlslcy has been merely plnylng the buffoon. Buld Mr. Luno to a Now York reporter: "I conalder Beards ley to bo the modern Uogurth. Ills fierce satire on tho nhsurdlties and morbid fan cies of Oscar Wilde and his adherents has done more In my opinion to discredit them und to mlnlinlza their Intliiuneo thun any other factor previous to Wlldu'a appcar anco In a police court." Another book of Napoleonic memoirs Is announced by the Applctons. It will cm body the recollections of an aldo-de-eump of Napoleon, tho General Count do Segur, who saw much service under the empire, and Is eiild to have put a groat deal of In teresting anecdote Into his nurrutlve. The same publishers are to bring out Mr. Dana's book on "The Art of Newspaper Making." Tho editor of "The Sun," in his n del reus on Journalism, has shed bril liant light upon hla craft, and this volume, giving his Ideas at length, will be a valu able work on Its subject. The anoynmous Joan of Arc series; In Harper's has been attributed by some to Mark Twain; but there have been guess era that Miss Anna Dickinson Is the auth or. Tho New York Tribune thinks that Joan'a reappearance In popular literature, the revival of her name upon the Hps of readers other than special students, syn chronizes with the swelling of tho Na polenlc tide. The latter representa one current, the maid Its antithesis. Napoleon apcaks for the purely sophisticated side of the French genius. Joan is tho type of her nation's saving grace and the mysti cal envelope In which Bhe survives is Identified with the healthier impulses of the French spirit. The contemporary Na poleon mania signifies nothing in the growth of France. On the contrary. It Is a mania and nothing more, a superficial frenzy over a character which speaks for the material history of France. Joan c.f Arc will become something more than the herolno of a cult, for she was Inspired by a spiritual fervor, and It Is a spiritual in spiration which lives in her name." A Feminine View of Things. This Is how the editor of the "Woman's Edition," of the Louisville Courier-Journal, pitches Into male-governed, fin de slccllsm. Tho excluslveness of churches brings out the Salvation army and Jump-to-Glory-Jane; from the Englsh law which forced George ElloJ. to public condemna tion this country is a flood-sufferer from wildly revolted 'Yellow Asters' and Heav enly Twins;' from the dull drabness of some exasperating old master Is born the red and purplo frenzy of the Impressionist, the riotoua green and the yellow meander Inga of Aubrey Beardslvy; the dismal gravity of morbid religion has provoked the seemingly Irresponsible but Instruc tive capers of Oscar Wilde and the 'Green Carnation' school of epileptic epigram; from the dearth of spirited priests end five flame on the altar of common sense have spread the vagaries of hypnotism ond spiritualism. Ye cumberera of the census, Inspect yourselves minutely each day as you rise from your couches and ask solicitously, 'Am I alive or dead this morning? If you decree you are alive, fall to heartily and give the world proof thereof; otherwise die well and thorough ly. Do something lively and Inspiring for ones; be dead all over and stay dead." A BALLADE OF DEBT. I owe her much, my laundress, she Of round, rose-cheek, air so sedate And killing business brusquerlg, My hamper comes a little late; A cuff returns without Its mote: Bays she, nor else, "It beats the Dutch Where things do go!" I can't berate I owe her much. I owe her much, and courtesy Demands that I reiterate At sundry seasons, earnestly - The fact that I appreciate Her services she tells mo straight She has a boy horseK! (And such A one makes brushes for the gtato!) I owe her much. I owe her much. Though there may be At certain trying times a great And sudden dearth of buttons, free Am I her worth to colebrnte, 'My linen Is Immaculate, My shirts come homo anns smirch or mutch: Here Is no matter for debate, I ows her much. Purse, later we'll Investigate When yorf and scrip are more In touch, What Is the debt If she will wait, I owe her much. Kate Field's Washington. BONNET AND THE BILL. Beholding all the miracles q'erflowlng Fashion's mart, , Wnat man but's filled with wondornunt At millinery art? So, in this little bonnet, now. Odd scraps of this and that -Combine to make a masterpiece , That all must wonder all How bold the fancy, and how deft The hand that managed thus . From such1 a hodge-podge, to evolve This headgear-marvelousl A bunch of flowers, a bit of lace, ' Some gausy wings, a bow, A pin or two but they're enough . For Gonlus, Well I trow. Such airy trifles I Who would think They'd make a man so mad, Or to the modiste's bank account Bo many ducats add? i- Yet, O, 'til hot In handling flowers The modiste most excela; 'TIs when she tackles figures than It Is that Genius tells! ;Tla when she takes to ciphering -: ' That most she proves har skill) For wondrous as the bonnet Is, . 'TIs nothing to the bill) , Mary Norton Bradford. . lit' the; World of Omtdoor SportSo Current Gossip of Baseball, Cycling, the Track Amid Various Other 'Popular Pastimes. LEARNING TO RIDE: , 'Twas at a female cycling school, Where bloomer costumes are the rule; And fairy forms In trousers hid, Ejuay the bike as she la rid. A rare and radiant vision she! A dream! u.aong! a rhapsody! To whom none other there was like, Camo forth to tame Ihe festive blko! She cast about a bashful glance, ' Uuzvtl at her wiry tee as-Uance; Then eyed her blfurcuted skirt, And wondered If a tumble hurt. Then, at the master's stern command, Bho grusped her steed with trembling hand; A gasp, a sigh, with anguish pent, A bounce, a boost, and up she went. Prute not to me of dire alurms, Of Uro und floods anil martial arms; For depth of woe there's nothing llko A frightened fomuio on a blko! Bhe stuck, she tra!ntd, she vainly strove To make that pesky pedal move; She pumped, h!iu pushed, turned ghastly white, And worked both foet wllh all hor mlaht! And now sho aturta! aho seoms to feel A thrill of life slung her wheel! Unt. oh! a bump! a z!nzug slump! Girl, blku, spokes; legs, all In a lump! New York Sun. . Scranton base ball cranks are gen erally Batlsfled with "Hilly" Harnle, the ex-Natlunal league manager, and tho now manager of tho Scranton team. , Ho , 1b practical, experienced and considers bane ball as legitimate tt business as dry goods or boots and shoes. Ills team, too, has shown up well In practice , play and Is not es pecially weak in any one position. The work of Rogers and I'utehen, who caught for Scranton last year, Is too well known to Invite description. "California" Johnson, Brown, who pltohed last'yeur for Baltimore; De Inney, an old Kastern leaguer, and Fox, the ex-Pottsvllllan, are each In good fettle for work In the box. Clarke, Ward and Whitehead on the bases and Sweeney (captain) at short, make an iron-bound infield. Brady in left fluid and Houle in right, cover their territory in excellent style and are good hltteni. Johnson, in center field, covered that position after Hogan left for St. Louis last year, and has con tinued to serve the club as well, If not better, than the Idolized "Marty." Wlnkleman, the extra man, has al ready supplied temporary gaps In the outfield, shortstop, third base and be hind the bat. He Is a youngster and has plenty to learn, but is satisfactory as, a substitute. All things considered the club should at least finish above 50 per cent., which means that It seems as good as the other clubs of the East ern league. Barnle's well known disci pline and knowledge of the game may do much toward landing the club among the first division. Some sport-loving antiquarian, has compiled a list of the "has beens," who were once famous twlrlers of the elu sive sphere. Of course Al Spalding comes first. Twenty years ago Spald ing was the cleverest pitcher known to base ball. Others famous In his time were W. A. Cummtngs, "Bobble" Mat thews and George Washington Brad ley. Spalding was a member of the Chicago team, and It won the pennant In spite of the fact that he could not pitch a curve and was obliged to rely altogether upon a straight arm de livery. It was not considered necessary In those days to carry more than one pitcher with a team. Arthur Cum mlngs was a member of the Hartfords. He could pitch a curve-ball, and is said to be the only pitcher who ever lived who was able to curve a ball with the old-fashioned straight arm delivery. He used a peculiar motion of the wrist that "put EngllBh" on the ball. In 1JS78 one of the watchwords among the cranks was the "Only Nolan." He was a member of the Indianapolis team of that year and one of the most promin ent of the professional pitchers, but he violated the rules of the club and was ruthlessly suspended and thrown out on the cold world. John Ward first saw the inside of a professional ball field in this year. The year following Ward pitched the Crovldence team Into the pennant. "Gentle Jeems" Galvln, and Jim Mc Cormlck, King Kelly's old battery partner, came Into prominence about this time, as did 'Corcoran and Gold smith, the then star twlrlers of the Chicago club. "Mickey" Welsh came to the surface In Troy, in 1880; so, also, In Providence, did the graceful Rad bourn, afterward denominated the "king of pitchers." In 1S82 Weldman, the Detroit "phonom," first, won his laurels In the big league. Next year the only Bufilngton, with his mys terious drop ball, dawned on aesthetic Boston; as did lanky Jim Whitney. In 1SS5 John G. Clarkson became a mem ber of the Chicago club, and from that date until 1891 there was not a pitcher In the league who excelled him, and probably not one who was his equal for everyday work. Ho was called truly and rightly tho "king of pitch ers." While Clarkson was prominent In the league thsre were other pitchers who were better than ordinary. Keefo, of the New Yorks, was one of the greatest tgener&ls who ever stepped Into the pitcher's box. Getzeln, of De troit, was the wonder of 18S7. O'Brien of Cleveland, flashed like a meteor across the sky In 1889, and for the brief time that he served In the National league was & wonder. Philadelphia, strange to Bay, with a' good base ball team and a good patronage, was never able to secure a star pitcher. Perhaps that should be modified to some ex tent, for Philadelphia had a good pitcher In the person of 'Ferguson, but he died suddenly, to the great regret of all the base ball patrons of Penn sylvania. In later years, notably In 1891, the three most brilliant pitchers who have come to ths fore are Rusle, Young and Meekln, Rusle Is with New York andaMeekin, starting In wjth Louisville, 'has finally reached New York. Young Is still with Cleveland, where he has been since he cams Into the National league. Other pitchers, like Nlcholi of Bolton, Ktlten of Pitts burg, ahd Breltensteln of St. Louts, are men with fine reputations and quits equal to Meekln. None of the three,- however,, has pltohed with the steady success that has sharacterlsed both Rusle and Young, fitrangt to Bay, both the Jatter pitchers began their career In Cleveland. DIAMOND DUBTt . Tha Louisvllles on Tuesday made ths , batting recerd of ths season. They aa- curod twenty-three safe hits off Griffith, of Chicago. Boston and St. Louis have played error leas games. Baseball patrons will demand Umpire Lynch's re-engagement. Billy Harnle was in New York Tuesday, He wants a good catcher. The Baltimore club will not allow any more presents to players. Th salaries of the New York players range from II, Goo to $11,000. Tho Philadelphia pltcncra have been hit harder than any In the league. Umpire Campbell was ordered to New York Tuesday night fo take 1-ynch's place. It la auid that lack of team work la the only shortcoming of the Phillies (his sea son. Harry Lyons, Providence's ccnterflelder, has rejoined the Grays. Hu has been coaching Lafayette. Ed (.'rune, tho pitcher, has secured an other chance to work In a big league by signing with Toronto. Manager DuvIb and other members of the New York team, have been practicing Eliding feet foremost. Anson Is willing to bet $500 even that Chicago will beat out New York. Your uncle will never grow old. Captain Grlflln, of the Brooklyn's, thinks that Baltimore and Boston will be light ing It out at the finish in 1895. Ex-League Umpire Lynch, It Is reported, has signed with President P. T. Powera to olflciatu In the Eastern league. Lew Whistler, formerly of the New Yoiks, Is manager, captain and first base man of the Chattanooga team. At Newark, N. J., Tuesday, the Newark and Toronto teams played a nlne-lnning tie game, each scoring twenty runs. McGraw declares that there will be no cause to cum j la In of his kicking this year, for he I t determined to hoM his peace. Anson has a rival. Bud Fowlor, the sec ond baseman of the colored Page Fenco Giants, Is 48 years of age. Hu has been playing bull since 1809. "Whltey" Gibson, at one time a member of the Philadelphia league team. Is man aging a road house at Parmersvllle, sev eral miles outBlde of Lancaster. John Comlskey, father of the celebrated '.Charlie, Is the superintendent of his son's ball park at. St. Paul. The park at Bt. Paul Is said to be one of the finest In the west. Munager Maddock Is much pleased with the showing of hla players up to date, and says they will prove great favorites when Toronto people see them on the field at home, Tho ball player who thinks that he is In dispensable to the game should reflect that Mike Kelly Is almost forgotten and the "king" hus not been In hla grave aix months. "Billy" Bottenus, of the Buftalos, has a brother who will be a catcher on the Al bany team. He has been playing In the Chicago City league, and Is aald to be a coming bavkstop. Pitcher Valleau, of Toronto, was sent home from Elmlra, with a rheumatic arm. Ho claims that the Canadian team will head the league in baserunnlng und prob ably in every) other way. Eagan, of the Syracuse team, has not yet reported, and with Barnett, their most reliable pitcher, afflicted with the "glass arm" complaint there is some reason for their two oonnecutlve defeats. Bangor has applied for Pitcher Hodson, of Boston, who refuses to be farmed out to Providence, but "Hoddy's" release had already been purchased by Cleveland. He will report there Immediately. Louisville has released Its first player, Pitcher Herman. He Is too light for league service and has been disposed of to Nashville, where hf lost his first game to Pittsburg by an overwhelming score. Of the champion New Yorks of 1889 but three met nre still ou the leagua diamond. Puck Ewiiig is with Cincinnati, Tiernun at 111 playa with New York and Roger Con nor Is at first for St. Louis. Captain Griffin, of Brooklyn, says: "La- chance will own Brooklyn befpre tho year ends or I shall be surprised. I honestly believe he Is tha coming king of first base men, and Is coming fast at that." The Pittsburg players speak In the high est terms of Billy Cllngman, the club's new third baseman. Nlles also played fine ball with the team in the south, and It Is going to be a hard matter to choose between them. Pitcher Setley Is the champion contract Jumper of the profession, and the State league should feel thankful It Is rid of him. He has now Jumped Norfolk, Va,, leaving many creditors behind. There Is a warrant out for his arrest. The Springfield management have been driven to seek other fields In which to practice than on the. regular diamond, as the Connecticut river, wbich Is adjacent to the grounds, has overspread Its boun daries and flooded the park. It, is estimated that 05,000 people wit nessed the five opening games In the Na tional league. The enormous attendance wns divided as follows: New York, 10, 000; Baltimore, 14,000; Cincinnati, 13,000; St. Louis, 10,000; Louisville., 8,000. Instead of being simplified, the playing rules are made mora complicated each year. There are now three kinds of strlkes-Mlie old-fashioned strike, the foul bunt strike and that new creation", ths strikes on a foul tip when caught. Despite the fact that tho Philadelphia and Baltimore tennis met nt the festive board and drank each other's health there still remains a pent-up feeling of bitter ness among the players, aroused by Tues day's game. There will bo fun later on when theae teams meet. - There Is a good deal of sickness In the Pittsburg club. Menefes hasn't pltchod a gamo for the club thin season, while Dono van and Niles are both on the sick list. Donovan Is with the club, but he Is af flicted with malaria, contracted during the club's stay In Savannah. ' Anson was tho so.-est man In the country Tuesday. In the second Inning, while Pfeffor waa on third one or the Louis ville boys popped up a fly to Ansa. The old man took II in tow, but Pfeffer slid to the plate before Anse could return the ball to Klttrldge.' It was a great play for Pfeffer. GOSSIP OF WHEELMEN: The Green Ridge wheelmen took their first club run last Thursday evening to Olyphant and return. The Scranton Blcych) club have an nounced the following gentlemen as their cracks this seaRon: John B. Corser, Er nest Ollmora and Harry G. Newman. The Scranton Bicycle club have received their new uniforms, which consist of bloomers and sack coat of the latest pat tern. The uniform Is a model of neat noss, . s; Soma ot the riders In tha Scranton club have started a fund, tho proceeds of which will defray tha expenses of a pleasure trip to Asbury Park some time this sum mer. - . , Th keystone Bicycle club, of Brooklyn, hsld a four-mHe road racs on the Coney Island boulevard last Saturday morning. There were nine starters, J. B. Annetnan, ot Scranton, Pa., winning la ten minutes flat. . ... ' One of the greatest races this Season Will bs the rsee which has been arranged b tween the Spalding and Stearns team. The Spalding team consists of Banger, Tttua and Cabanne. The - Stearns team It composed ot John 8. Johnson, E. C. Johnson and L. C. Johnson, batter known as "Too Much Johnson" team. Both firms are confident of victory and a great race Is looked for. A match race between Johnson and San ger has been arranged, ths conditions be ing that the match consist of a series ol three races, one to occur In the east, one In the west, and the third to be wherever the tralnora of the participants decide, v State Champion (John B. Corser, of PotitavlUe, is about to locate here. Ha. will wear the Scranton Bicycle club colors this season. Corser Is the moat promising iuji in r-ennsyivania, ana me ocranton , club are exceedingly fortunate In secur ing such a rider to represent them on ths track. Dr. Carver, ths champion marksman of tho world, was a culler at the Green Ridge club house last Thursday night. The doc tor Is a fine talker, and for two hours entertained those present with accounta of his travels and thrilling experiences while in me government service during tho In dian wars In ths west. The Green Ridge wheelmen will be rep, resented on the track this aeaaon by H. A. Gregory and Robert V. White. Gregory, who Is at present attending school in Phil adelphia, Ik expected home about May 1. He will Immediately go In training on his arrival here. White will commence train- , ing next Monday. The following race meets have been of ficially announced: Wllkea-Barr. June 25 and !iAllentown, May 30, July 4 and Bept. 25 and 20; Binghamton, July 4. As will be " oy mis scneuule, Wilkes-Barre will have ono two-day meet, and Allentown one two-day meet, and itwo one-day meets, while Scranton Is not likely to have any at all. This Is' not as it should be, as we have two clubs who heretofore have shown themselves very aggresalvo, and some- - ming snouiu do done in reference to the national circuit, which wants to meet here June 24. Wake up, boys! . After two years of patient waiting, local turfmen are at last to witness good, professional trotting and pacing races in this city. The gentlemen who recently purchased tha Scranton Driving park have secured a charter under the title of the Scranton Driving Park and Fair association, and the work of renovating the property and tearing dwn the old buildings, pre paratory to a summer and a fall meet ing, is progressing rapidly. In June" and September there will bo meetings of three days each for purses of $500, the races to be Included in the Eastern Pennsylvania circuit.- Plans for a new grandstand to seat 2,500 persons have been prepared and the contract made for building It. All the old sheds have been torn down and in their stead new stables for forty animals have been built. The new exhibition building has been changed into a stable and contalnb fifty box stalls. The track Is being pul in first-class condition. Tho entire property will be encircled by; new fencing. NOTES FROM THE TURFf Richard Croker complains of the crash ing weights allotted, hla horses by the English handlcappers. Tha Minnesota legislature has passed the anti-pool selling bill and It is now be fore the governor for hia signature. Byron McClelland has passed a rule that Henry of Navarre shall not be shown to visitors at the stable. They became so numerous that the horse waa kept out nearly o the time. Crescendo, the California crack, and LIs- sak, the favorite for the Chicago derbys, are In Kentucky, and are looking well. They stood the trip from California with out fatigue or injury. Thursday night's fight between Steve Judge, of the South Side, and Mike Duddy, Qt Old Forge, at Weber's rink, Taylor, was the hardest fought, aquarest fight seen hereabouts for years and yesterday there were a large number of admirers of the manly art about the city who were very sore be-. cause they missed the battle. There have been so many "alleged" fights in this region, that the sports havs wearied of them, whioh makes their regret all the keener for having missed a real battle for blood. Both of the principals were about yeaterday and did not show much evidence of the hard punishment they received. There Is talk of another fight between them, Duddy's friends claiming that he was merely knocked out by a chance blow, and but for that unfortunate occur rence he would have won. This is de nied by Judge's friends, who are very Jubilant over the victory. They say that had not Judge been over cautious the battle would have ended In the fifth round. Judge unquestionably showed good staying powers and was in shape for much more fighting after the battle was over. He is a brother of James Judge, Who entered the pro fessional ring at Camden some time ago. i I SPORTS OF ALL SORTS! Howard Gould's 20-rater yacht Niagara was given a satisfactory trial Monday in a stiff sou-wester. She is sailed by "Nat" Herreshoff. The match race between the horses Dr. Rlee and Simmons, which was to have been run today, has been declared off, and Dr. Rice will ba shipped east for ths Brooklyn, handicap. "Jack" McCarthy, of the Chicago Stock yards, and "Paddy" Slavin, of Australia, fought nine rounds on an Island In ths Mississippi river, near Alton, Mo., Mon day night. Light gloves were worn, and McCarthy, was knocked out in the ninth round. . The Columbia Fencing club has accepted May 4 as the date for the fencing match with Harvard. They suggest also that white costumes be worn Instead of the black velvet that was worn last year. The Judges will ba appointed by the Har vard Racquet and Tennis club, under whose auspices the match Is to take place. Tho representatives elected at the recent meeting of Dartmouth college students to present a new proposition to Amherst and Williams regarding membership of ath letic teams, were at Wllllamstown, Mast., Tuesday. Their plan Is to limit the mem bership of all the athletic teams to under graduate students studying for a degree. A roan entering from another college must pass one year In the regular work of ths Institution before he can play on any team. No student shall play longer than four years on th team of which he Is a member. '.''' ; '' ' . The New Jersey Athletic dull has novelty added to its programme for Deco ration Day, and many are wondering Just what a barrel race Is like. That there will be fun during the raco is assured, and, as this Is the first time such an event has been given In America, the winner, who ever he may be, will be known as ths champion. Tho race will be in heats, each contestant will have to dive through six barrels, and tho committee Is going to get them small enough so that eome of ths athletes will have a hard tlmo to get through. . . , Afraid of tho Consequences. 1 One of the favorite winter games of t,hs. small boy who lives along tho Hudson is "J umplng laddle-cakes. " This sport reaches Its height Just as the Ice in the river ls hreaklng up. and when the great cakes go floating up and down with the tide a doxen or more youngsters may be.seeii running from ono cake to another, and sometimes make really dangerous leaps. Ono day a boy, apparently about ft years' old, was to be seen standing on. a cak whioh was rooking In a. somewhat alarm-: Ing manner, and the. little fellow was crying In a frightened son oi way. "What's the matter r. called a passen ger from tha shore. ' " f And then cams the sobbing anayer:. "I'm afraid diss cake'll turnover, an' If I get drowned me mother' 11 lick me," " H