Show SOME English Newspapers Wanted Japan Japar 1 to Fight for In London Aug ros or of the peace conference at Portsmouth wi will not be known in and other parts rt of until Logdon 9 morn morning ing Te The bare ann that the had reaCh an nc ac accord cord on al all points appeared hl i the very last editions of the evening papers and the terms wJ will reach the tho public for the first nt tm time through this mornings papers AU Alt In pal pol 10 of town and there therefore therefore fore It Is impossible to o anything like a a consensus of pUblic opInion than at ad represented by te the lead morning newspapers The AssocIated Press conveyed the first Information to t office HayashI Would duld Not Talk Baron Baron ya JapaneSe n mm tS als received the thie Associated Press The min minister mm ister wa at his country horne home here he was seen by the Associated Press correspondent He said sd sdI i I ot my mv first Intimation or of the Ule re result sult for of th the cone conference nce tram from the As ted Press telegram sent to me here but I must decline to comment thereon until I receive an official all ah from my government A long dispatch was w received at the Japanese later in the evening and Was forwarded to Baron HayashI In al all official circles In te the clubs and elsewhere the announcement ot of the Ule terms came as a complete and responsIble persons decline to express defnie definite opinions until more ton tion regarding the terms have been ye re received Praise for Japan The Tue morning papers while hire sharIng toC of the public at the nature of the he peace terms accord he greatest praise pace to Japan for tor having chosen so 0 a course ourse I It Is contended that by waiving Ing the queston question of indemnity Japan might justy justly claim the whole of the Island Of Sakhalin and that there therefore therefore fore the return of half ot of the island is isa Isa a made entirely in time the inter est eat of peace Al All the papers express gratitude to President Roosevel Roosevelt and admiration of hl his untiring zeal giving hIm fun full credi credit for being th the one man who made peace possible English papers have tave been beell strongly the negotiations express at at Japans failure to be reimbursed for tle the expenses ot of the war At Ut the same time several ot of them admit that she has chosen the wiser and more businesslike course Cleat Clear Judgment The Chronicle attributes the decision which led to peace to t e Emperor of I Japan himself and sa says s When the Japanese generals and admirals extolled the magnanimous virtues of their emperor as the sole cause of their they did not use empty phrases The emperor and his have hav kept their judgment plear olear They knew that would not pa pay because she could not and that at t the end f another eighteen months while Japan debt was doubled Rusala would sti still be les less able to pay an Indemnity That Is why WE we consider even cen from the finati cia side that Japan has chosen the I te wiser course The guidance ot of the far East Is now In Japans hands and she holds an opportunity for lor expansion and commercial growth that in a few years ears make the concession of an indemnity appear to be B a very smal small affair The Daly Daily Graphic commenting on Japas Japans extraordinary magnanimity considers that coming front a vie vic power on the eve eve of furher further victories such stick concessions point to a higher code of ethIcs than that which prevails in any of the European na tons and to a deeper appreciation f the causes that make nations realy really great Whether her magn magnanImIty wi will prove costy costly In the future I It Is ipos Impossible sible to say but In any case Japan secures th respect of the world and that Is an asset which Ia may perhaps yet et prove more valuable than many The Daily Graphic also comments on the thc relief or of Europe through the cessa ton tion of the struggle on the ground that the utter destruction of goud power in the far eat east would have hae In the shifting of te the blance balance of power In Europe Europ ond been fatal to the I I long contInuance or of European peace |