Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 157, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 November 1929 — Page 8
PAGE 8
PEACE PROBLEM HOLDS INTEREST OF ALL NATIONS Anniversary of Armistice Finds World Engrossed With Question. BY LYLE C. WILSON United Pre* Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Nov. 11. The eleventh anniversary of the armistice finds the world preoccupied with practical and theoretical efforts to perpetuate peace. In every part of the world some disputed international question either is working toward peaceful adjustment or is emerging from sur-h treatment. Many of these disputes are of minor significance, but successful settlement means a bit. has been nibbled from the I foundations upon which rests the conception of war. Tremendous penalties exacted by the World war focussed international attention upon the problem of peace which is being studied In
three ways: 1. To abolish war. 2. To prevent war. 3. To establish rules which would minimize the horror of war. Practical statesmen admit abolition of war largely is an idealistic conception although not necessarily impossible of achievement. The foremost movement toward abolition is contained in the KelloggBriand anti-war pact, in which all great powers and virtually all others have bound themselves to renounce war as an instrument of national policy. President Hoover’s practical program of naval reduction is based upon the theory that anew international atmosphere was created by the Kellogg-Briand pact. The impending naval adjustments promises to be the most important peace development of the next twelve months. Next in importance, from the American viewpoint, is the series of arbitration and conciliation treaties inn'ugurated In December. 1927. and now binding upon the United States with each of twenty-five nations. Great Britain’s failure to join this treaty structure disappointed American officials, but the British eventually are expected to sign. Statesmen disagree as to the possibility of abolishing war, although there is general American confidence it can be curtailed in frequency and perhaps in frightfulness. All shades of opinion apparently believe Europe is not likely to face another war for twenty years. That judgment is based partly upon ex- | pectation the World war will not be forgotten soon and partly upon the condition of European treasuries. Business Leader Dies Itii Time* Special RENSSELAER. Ind.. Nov. 11.— Willis J. W’right, 51, a furniture dealer and undertaker here thirty years, Is dead, a victim of brain tumor.
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POSTAL PROBE WILLJEASKED Money-Raising of Lobby Bodies is Cited. Bn Scrippe-TTntcard Metrspnper Alliance WASHINGTON. Nov. 11.—Moneyraising activities of J. A. Arnold and his two organizations, the Southern Tariff Association and the American Taxpayers’ League, will be called to the attention of the postoffice department, Senator Caraway, chairman of the senate lobby investigating committee, said today. Caraway said he believed the department ought to be informed as to what had been going on and that it might want to inquire what use had been made of the mails to raise funds. In addition, Caraway said he intended to issue a report giving the committee’s conclusions on uses to which Arnold had placed the funds entrusted to the care of his organizations. “I want to do this in order that those who have been contributing may determine whether they want to continue to do so,” Caraway said. Arnold’s testimony virtually is completed. Caraway said, and the committee next week will turn to other phases of its lobby inquiry. Mayor’s Store Robbed Bn T'nitcd Pres* LOGANSPORT, Ind., Nov. 11.— Bandits obtained about S4OO from the cash register at Mayor Frank Guthrie’s drug store Saturday night and relieved the mayor of his pocketbook, while six customers stood with upraised hands.
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U. S„ BRITISH NAVAL MOVES AREJDICULED Once Famous Expert Looks on Impending Parley With Pessimism. Bn United Press LONDON, Nov. 11.—Ameripa and Great Britain each should build the naval armaments deemed necessary for their respective defenses and “not squabble over the question of parity or similar practically unsolvable questions,” Lord Sydeham of Combe told the United Press in an interview today. Discussing the forthcoming fivepower naval conference in pessimistice terms the wTiite-haired octogenarian. patriot and once famous armament expert was emphatic in his opinion of naval parity negotiations, under way eleven years after the World war armistice was signed. Discussing Prime Minister MacDonald’s recent visit to the United States and the naval negotiations, Lord Sydeham expressed belief that Japan will demand more cruisers than she was allotted under the Washington treaty. He insisted that Italy is bound to claim parity of navies with France, which France probably will refuse. “As far as I can see,” he said, “Mr. MacDonald and Mr. Hoover have not got to the question of ‘How much can we come down on our minimum armament requirements in in order to meet the demands of other powers?’ ” Asa result, he continued, parity becoes the most dangerous question before the conference. Referring to future wars, Lord Sydenham predicted that, despite air bombing, the modified modem battleships will remain indispensable. Lord Sydenham Is known best for his book, “Fortifications Past, Present and Future,” written in 1890, in which he predicted the uselessness of European fortresses, as proved in the World war. He served in the army thirty-three years. ALLEGED ROBBERS HELD Two Prisoners Identified at Hartford City. Bv Time * Special HARTFORD CITY. Ind., Nov. 11. —Vaughn Abshire, 38, Keystone, and Roscoe Bowman, 40, Sturgis, Mich., held in the Blackford county jail, here, have been identified as the men who robbed the Adelphia Gardens near here, resulting in shooting of the proprietor, F. L. Hoffman. He suffered a slight wound. Both Hoffman and his wife are sure the prisoners are the robbers. Bowman, they say, actually committed the robbery while Abshire remained outside, and shot through a window at Hoffman.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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NOV. 11, 1929
