Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 101, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 September 1929 — Page 7

SEPT. 6, 1929

FAR EAST WILL DECIDE WORLD PEACEOR WAR Editor Sees Russia, China and Japan Sparring for. Manchuria. BY MAX STERN Time* Stiff Correspondent BAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 6. "Upon th* solution found and applied to problems In the Far East in the next decade or two depends world peace." So concludes William Philip Simms, foreign editor of the Scripps-Howard newspapers, following a five-month tour of the Orient under auspices of the Carnegie Foundation for World Peace. Simms, with one other corresponent left the Carnegie party of journalists en route home at Nagasaki, braved hardships of Manchurian travel and saw the Russo-Chinese “war” at first hand. At Manchuli, 600 miles northwest of Harbin, he saw between 50,000 and 100,000 Soviet troops lined in battle array against some 30,000 Chinese, the former armed with airplanes, tanks and other modern armaments, the latter pitifully outnumbered. . Will Settle Nothing "The ‘settlement’ of the present dispute between Russia and China really will settle nothing, and the peace wdll be only a truce,” he said. "Russia never will give up her dream of empire in Asia, Even the present dictators in Moscow look upon Mongolia and northern Manchuria as their sphere of influence and plan to consolidate their position there before they finish. "Today three nations face one another in Manchuria and Mongolia These are Russia, China and Japan. China claims the territory as hers. Russia has economic and political interests so to cause her to keep up a steady stream of antiChinese and pro-Russian propaganda there. "And Japan, having defeated Russia in war and spent since then some $2,000,000,000 developing middle and south Manchuria, looks to that part of Asia as vital to her existence as an empire and plans to stay there at any cost.” Sims says that Japan probably was the deciding factor in the recent "settlement,” that while Russia may have decided she could lick China she could not lick Japan too. China Is the Hub China, Sims says, is the hub about which future world-rocking events will take place. Nationalists there has come to stay and "will grow like a snowball.” "Those who believe this movement was born in Moscow and that China is going ‘red’ are clear off the track, he declares. "Nationalism in China antedated Russian communism by at least five years. The movement is bigger than any man or group of men in China, for it is part and parcel of a world-wide phenomenon of the submerged trying to get to the surface and determined at all costs to get there. "It is like a rising tide which waves on the surface that come and go. Leaders in China may rise and fall, parties be created and destroyed. but the slow-moving tide will go on rising all the time,” Gone, but Not Forgotten Automobiles reported to police as stolen are: Service Cab Company, 432 West North street, Ford sedan taxi, no license, cab No. 73, from Indiana avenue and North street. Charles Thomas, 1710 West Minnesota street. Ford roadster, 732-662, from Maryland street and Kentucky avenue. Russell Ballard. 312 Beecher street. Overland touring. 734-817, from Michigan street and King avenue. James R. Kidwell, 1812 Southeastern avenue. Ford sedan, 79-363, from Noble and North streets. „ Herman Skelton, 1754 Madison avenue, Ford coupe.'739-040. from Woodlawn and Virginia avenues. Ewan and Eleanor McClain. Danville. Ind., Ford roadster, 563-271, from Senate avenue and Washington street. T. L. Tantis, 657 East Thirtyeighth street. Oldsmobile sedan, 11855. from 637 Highland drive. Francis McCain. Rockville, Ind.. Chevrolet roadster, 570-970, from Fall Creek boulevard, west of Maple Road boulevard. W. E. Jeffrey. 804 Fidelity Trust building. Chevrolet coach, 55-574. from New Jersey and Ohio streets. William Waggoner, 1513 Central avenue. Ford roadster, 81-727, from rear of 221 West South street. BACK HOME AGAIN Stolen automobile* recovered by the police: Elizabeth Hesselgrave, 1112 West New York street, Ford touring, found in front of 326 North Randolph street. BUS MEN BUY TABLET London Drivers Will Honor Pioneer of Business. By Cnittd Prrtt LONDON, Sept. 6—A group of Lon aon bus drivers have voted to gnct a tablet to the memory of George Bhiilibeer who is credited with having established the first omnibus service In this city, in 1829. According to present plans th* la V) be erected in St. Ma-y's church, at Cbigewell, Essex, where ShlTUbeer and his family are buried Diamond Theft Is Charged Mrs. Francis Patrick. 32, of 1257 Bridge street, today was charged with grand larceny. She is alleged • have stolen a 175 diamond ring from Mrs. Maude Springer, 2011 Applegate street*

Judge Flies

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Asa relief from the tedious process of selecting a jury for the trial of the sixteen Gastonia, N, C. t textile mill strikers on trial for murder at Charlotte, Judge M. V. Barnhill took his first airplane ride the other day. Here you see the jurist emerging from the plane at the end of the trip.

ETHER GOING OUT OF^STYLE Doctors Look for More Humane Anesthetic, By Science Service HONOLULU, Sept. 6.—Fashions in anesthetics are changing and ether is going out of style. At least this is the impression gained from a summary of the anesthetic agents used for thyroid operations at the Mayo clinic, reported to the PanPacific surgical conference here by Dr. John S. Lundy of Rochester, Minn. Ether alone was used in less than 1 per cent of the thyroid operations at the Mayo clinic in 1928, Dr. Lundy declared. Gas, the old time “laughing gas” of the dentist’s chair or the comparatively new anesthetic, thylene, was employed in over 60 per cent of the cases. Over 20 per cent of the thyroid operations were performed through the aid of local anesthetics only, while the bulk of the remaining cases were handled through a combination of all three agents, local, gas and ether. Ether has gone into comparative disuse because of the subsequent nausea which frequently developed after its use. The most satisfactory method of producing anesthesia, according to Dr. Lundy, from the point of view of the surgeon, and the patient is by combining the effects of local and general anesthetics. This method allows patients to regain consciousness during the operation without suffering pain. HOMING PIGEON RACE WILL START SUNDAY Schedule Is Set for Series of 100Mile Events. A 100-mile bird race from Jeffersonville. sponsored by the Indianapolis Pigeon Racing Club, with homing pigeons reared in 1929, will begin Sunday, according to H. S. Wyeth, 5250 College avenue, secretary. Races are to be held each week with the following schedule: Two 100-mile races from Jeffersonville, one 150-mile race from Elizabethtown. Ky.; two 200-mile races from Bowling Green, Ky.; one 250-mile race iron Gallatin, Tenn., and two 300-mile races from Columbia. Tenn. The local pigeon club Is affiliated with the American Racing Pigeon Union.

CLUB DELAYS OUTING Advertising Event Will Be Held Sept. 19. Annual outing of the Indiana Advertising Club of Indianapolis at the Indian Lake has been postponed from Sept. 12 to Sept. 19, it was anonunced at the club’s meeting a* the Columbia Club Thursday noon. Dr. W. Stewart Carnes of Canton, 0., president of the Car-Van Steel Company, told club members modem advertisers might well take lessons from ancient Assyria, Egypt and Persia, whose rulers realized the value of "advertising” and erected monuments that have withstood the test of time to herald their message to the ages. HEIRESS ASKS DIVORCE War-Time Romance of Chicago Girl Is Shattered. By United Press CHICAGO. Sept. 6.—The wartime romance of one of Chicago’s richest heiresses was revealed as shattered today, when Mrs. Ermina Carry Nicholson filed suit for divorce. ' Mrs. Nicholson, daughter of the late Edward F. Carry, president of the Pullman Company, charged her husband, whom she married during the war, with undue familiarity with an unnamed woman. . _

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

All-Wool Suits, Topcoats and Overcoats For Men and Young Men LAyf'jMi \ •10.95 M; and iff *12.95 ml An advance sale of clothing—appropriate I for now, for fall and for winter—at two great | I value-giving prices—$10.95 and $12.95. Emphasizing quality, style and service! All-Wool Two-Trouser $ ffc.9s High School Suits . xt ,. m £j|| Men’s Trousers Moleskin and iqq Hart, Schaffner & Marx Gray Flannel d> Iqq Trousers $8 to $lO dr QQ Trousers vI.JJ Auto Brand 4Q Tr ° UserS 32 ’ 33 a " d 34 Khaki Trousers.. 1 .fts/ All-Wool Qft $3.50 and 84 All- (ho r/| Knickers Wool Trousers .. Overstocked! (Pirn Fom,l Sale Os Men's S6 While Flannel ts. . QC o Linen Knickers T ™ ,s “* Si I*l STn $2.00 $1.35 r%mr\ $3.50 and $4 |“A Khaki Riding (h sqq &jgk jPi ¥/s"{ j Qualities .... &“•*'! Breeches 1.5/0 jrjjP / J I Qualities ~..53.50 94C $5 and $6 All- dQ Cfl Striped Flannel C? CQ I Wool Trousers .. .a U Trousers |I Light Tan Col- (j>o A Q Khaki ni _ /V a lege Corduroys .. Trousers */”IC —J™/ 1 J

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