Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 113, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1929 — Page 3
SEPT. 20,1920.
KEY TO PEACE SEEN IN SALE OF MANCHURIA Purchase by Japan Is Held Best Solution of Clash in Far East. By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Seripp*-Howard Foreign Editor WASHINGTON. Sept. 20.—8 y taking a leaf out of the book of any one of a half a dozen other nations, for instance. Trance, Spain, or Russia, China, in the opinion of the writer, can save herself and the world from almost certain war and at the same time enable herself to complete the, at present, well-nigh impossible task of national unification. In previous studies of the situation in the Asiatic Balkans, Manchuria and Mongolia, I have described how three great nations today stand menacingly face to face over the control of this part of the world. The claims of China, Russia, and Japan, in this region already are historic. China and Japan have fought a war over it. So have Russia and Japan. And today China and Russia are in a state of war there, and blood actually is flowing. Tomorrow there must be a showdown. The strongest nation will win, eventually, and openly take over control as a result of its victory unless, in the meantime, some less costly and less bloody solution is discovered. Might Sell Country Such solution might be found in the purchase of Manchuria and part of eastern Mongolia by Japan, from China, the nominal proprietor, followed by a live-and-let-live agreement between Russia and Japan with regard to the Chinese Eastern railway, now the object of a bitter wrangle between Russia and China. Establishment of an independent buffer state in Manchuria hardly would do the trick, since Russia China, and Japan would continue to maneuver for position there until war broke out, in spite of themselves. For Japan insists, and many agree with her, that the very existence of the Japanese empire would be in peril were any other strong powei ever to become dominant in this corner of Asia, and her policy now is, and will continue to be, based on that premise, whether liberals or conservatives are in power. Worth Great Price China would be in good company were she to part with this territory for a money consideration. Most of the United States was acquired in that w r ay, and from some of the proudest nations in the world. The Louisiana Purchase, from Prance, gave us the bulk of our territory west of the Mississippi. Alaska we bought from Russia. Much of our southwest was sold to us by Mexico and from Spain we purchased Florida, the Philippines, and other lands. China today could get a stupendous price for Manchuria and eastern Mongolia from Japan, .which country wants that territory as she wants little else in this world. At the same time China now holds them but vaguely. They not only claim a large measure of autonomy, but practice it, and little love is lost between the inhabitants of these northern regions and he Chinese to the south. In fact, throughout the Manchu regime, the Chinese were barred from emigrating northward, so that
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Storm Center
r\ Ha* JMEL- * WK % m ’ ' .vn;
Storm center of the senate in quiry into ‘‘big navy” propaganda is William B. Shearer (above>,lobbyist representing shipbuilding interests. Shearer claimed that it was the navy department itsell that supplied him with “confidential data” on the strength of the United States and foreign navies which he used as propaganda at the Geneva arms conference.
up to fifteen or twenty years ago there probably were not 2.000,000 of them in this vast region. Given a smaller, more compact territory, and shorn of some of the races who must remain for a long time a thorn in the flesh, China would make much more rapid progress while remaining potentially one of the greatest powers on earth : if not the greatest.
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Basement
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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