The Syracuse Journal, Volume 24, Number 42, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 11 February 1932 — Page 6
News Review of Current Events the World Over Japan Rejects Peace Proposals of America and European Powers —Mellon Quits Treasury to Be Ambassador to London. By EDWARD W. PICKARD
DESPITE the vigorous protests,and the proffered peace plans of the United States and the great European powers, Japan continued her relentless warfare on China.
Developments came swiftly and continuously and aS theQtveek drew .toward its close the situation was becoming more and more critical. Attacks on Shanghai by land, sea and air were renewedtwice within 48 hours; the WoosnAg forts at the mouth of the Whangpoo were bombarded: Nanking and its 'protecting forts
Admiral M. M. Taylor
♦Ore shelled. While the attack on the Wooshing forts was going on Admiral Montgomery M. Taylor, commander of A merlciin Asiatic fleet, arrived In the .Whangpoo aboard his flagship, the cruiser Houston, from Manila. and the Ainericott forces for the protection of bur nationals in Chinn were' reinforced also by nearly every warship that had been in the Philippines, together with the Thirty first regiment of regular in-’ fantry. Croat Britain. France.; Italy ami Portugal also rushed warships and troops to the China coast. America and England, supported by France and Italy, propos.-d in Tokyo through their ambassadors a plan for restoring peace that embraced these points: 1. Cessation nf nil acts of violence on both aides at once on the following terms: 1 . 2. No further mobilization or preparations whatever for further hostilities. 3. Withdrawal of/both Japanese and Chinese combatants from all points of mutual contact In the Shanghai fl tea. 4. Protection of the international settlement bjr the establishment of neutral zones, these zones to be policed by neutral nations and arrangements to he set up by consular authorities on the spot. • 5. Upon acceptance of these Conditions a prompt advance to be' made by negotiations to settle all ’outstanding controversies between the (wo parties In the spirit of the treaty of Paris and the resolution of the League of, Nations of I>eeember 9. without pri<>* demand or reservation and with the nid of neutral observers or participant*. After the etnperor had been consulted! the err rn.-iit l d I ■ .'fl ‘ rejected the second and fifth proposals and SCCCpted the' others conditionally. IMMEDIATE reason for the protests of the powers against Japanese tig gresslon In Shanghai was found In the persistent violations of the neutrality
of the International settlement by the Jap. anese. They took possession of t!>e Hongkew section and made It the base of thblr operations ago I® at Chapel, the native quarter, where the <'hinos? weft' Still putting up n strong resisteince and driving their foes back by force of numbers Ed--win S. Cunningham. American consul gen-
eral and head of the consular body there, was In the thick of things continuously, striving not only to curb the Japanese but also to bring about a cessation of hostilities. Once or twice he and his cojleagues did arrange truces, hut these were promptly violated and the fighting began all over again. For the details of that fighting there is no room In these columns. China's government offices were remo veil from Nanking to Honanfu. 500 miles In the Interior. In anticipation of an attack on the capital, and that attack s.«<n followed. Tdd cruisers and a destroyer shelled the Nanking forts and parts of the city. As usual the Japanese had their excuse ready, asserting that the Chinese fired the first shots. Howeapr, correspondents aver that neither the forts nor the two old Chinese warships there replied to the Japanese fire. The population of the city was panic stricken anil fled to the open country. Soon after the shelling the evacuation of the American citizeps there wns begun, although the firing had not been resumed. v Members of the league of Nations council held a special session In Geneva and were told by j. H. Thomas. •• British secretary for dominions, about the peace proposals put forward by the powers. There was a report there that Japan was planning to announce her withdrawal from the nine-power Pacjflc pact and also from the Washington naval agreement of 1922. < NATURALLY the opening of the international disarmament conference in Geneva was cloud.-d by the discouraging situation In the Orient. Little had been ex-
p»vte<! from the parley before by Independent observers of world affairs, and this little was lessened by the events In China. Arthur Henderson. former British foreign secretary, looking ill and worried. took his place as chairman of the conference and spoke for an hour, mostly In generalities, concern-
Arthur Hendereon
Ing what the meeting should accompllsh. * n refuse to contemplate even the : ■■
possibility of failure,” Mr. Henderson said. “If we fail no one can foretell the evil consequences that might ensue." With regard to the Chino-Japanese conflict, he said: “We feel bound to refer to the tragic fact that at the very moment this conference, whose purpose is to promote peace, begins its work, we are confronted with such a situation of extreme gravity as that Which now exists in the Far East. “It is imperative that all signat<>rft*s of the covenant'of the League of Nations and the Briand-Kellogg pact make it their business to insure strict observance of these two great safeguards against acts of violence and war." The three main objectives of the conference, as outlined by Mr. Henderson, are: 1. A Collective agreement on a practical program for.substantial reduction and limitation of armaments. 2. A determination that no armaments may be maintained outside the scope of that agreement. 3. Plans for-similar conferences in the future at„reasonably short intervals of time. After the preliminaries and the organization of the conference the thousand or so delegates adjourped until the following week to prepare for the long drawn out sessions and protracted discussions. The most prominent statesmen were not expected before February S. When Secretary of State Stimson, head of the American delegation. Would arrive was uncertain, Retiring from the position of secretary of the treasury, which he has held since 1921, Andrew W. Mellon' becomes the American ambassador to Great Britain. This was announced by President Hoover in a statement in which he gracefully called Mr. Mellon “one of our wisest and most experienced public servants.” The new: ambassador Is seventy-sev-en years old and his health of late has been so poor that Undersecretary Ogden L. Mills has been doing most of his work. It was deemed almost certain that Ir. Mills would be given the se-cri-taryshq*. ■' ■ '.i —— GOV. FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT, a leading aspirant for the Democratic Presidential nomination, has declared himself opposed to American membership In tlie League of Nations in ah address before the New York .state grange. In this he follows the lead of Newton D. Baker, also a Presidential possibility. who recently said that while believed in the league, lie would jo»t have the United States* I in in v/hile popular opinion was against It. ' .Governor Roosevelt said he had no apology for having worked and spoken In behalf of American particip:#tion*in the league when he teas the Democratic Vice Presidential candidate twelve years ago. He added: "The league is not the league conceived’by Woodrow Wi)«on. Rather, It Is a mere, meeting jtlme for the political discussion of strictly European difficulties." •Other pronouncements by Roosevelt were that Europe’s debts to America should not be canceled, and that an International trade conference should be called to level tariff barriers. SUCCESS crowned the efforts of the railway presidents and representaiivts of rail Libor unions in their Jong sessions in Chicago. A . formal
f s Edwin S. Cunningham
pact was signed by which the unions’accepted a wage reduction of 10 per cent for one year, beginning February 1. The detjuction is made from ca< h pay check on every pay day, but the basic or legal wage is not disturbed and the' full rates will be restored on January 31, 1933. A separate agree-
merit. In which the railroads made certain concessions along the lines of a program proposed by labqr for the betterment of working conditions and the relief of unemployment, was signed sinuritancously with the wage pact. Leaders In the negotiations were David Brown Robertson, chairman of the Hallway Labor Executives' ass</ elation, and Daniel Willard, president, of the Baltimore & Ohio railway. Mr. Robertson said the three things that strongly Influenced the onions to accept the reduction were: “j. A desire to do all within their power to aid in lifting the nation out of the worst depression of business we have* ever experienced. “2. A desire to show the capacity of organized labor to do a big thing in a constructive -way to advance the general welfare, even Mt the expense of personal sacrifices that would deter narrow-minded persons. “3. A desire to encourage our friends, not to encourage our enemies. In the railroad Industry and elsewhere.” HEADS of the leading civic organizations of the country met In Washington on Saturday, summoned by I‘resident Hoover to discuss and form a national organization for the purpose of conducting a campaign against depression and bringing out hoarded money. According to figures given by the President, a total of more than $1,300,000,000 of American money has been hoarded during the last year and is still out of circulation on a non working Im sis,
ORGANIZATION of the board of directors of the Reconstruction Finance corporation was completed with the election of Charles G. Dawes as president and Eugene Meyer as chairman of the board; quarters were opened in the old Commerce department in Washington and the reception and consideration of requests for loans was begun without delay. The senate already had confirmed the names of Harvey C. Couch and Jesse H. Jones as directors, and President Hoover sent in the name of Wilson McCarthy of Salt Lake City to complete the board membership. Applications for more than one hundred millions in leans had come- in before the board began to function. IN ORDER to curtail the current overproduction, the Department of Commerce Is making an effort to create sentiment against night work tn the cotton mills of the South, and the heads of the cotton textile industry are co-operating in this with the government, According to Edward T. Pickard, chief of the textiles division of the Commerce department, there Is considerable overproduction of cotton textiles and prices have been depressed as a- result. Any agreement between cotton manufacturers to abolish Operation of their mills at night would be illegal, according to. Mr. Pickard, but the department and the heads of the industry are trying to create a prohibitive “sentiment" against the practice. NEW hope was given the advocates of a large navy by the virtual
war in the Orient. Seria to r Frederick Hale of Maine (Rep.)chairman of the senate naval affairs committee, delivered a prepared speech In the seriate in behalf of his bill authorizing the building ol the American navy up to treaty strength; He said that of all world powers Japan has made the greatest
strides In naval armament, taking a legitimate under the terras of the treaties. of the laxity of the other powers. “The next difficulty that we shall have to face.” he said, “will, without doubt, be a demand on her part for parity with Great Britain and the United States,” and lie added that if we continue our policy of nonbuilding we shall be in a very poor position to dispute such a demand. . “A navy equal to our own in the Pacific.” Senator Hale went on, “opens up many interesting problems for the future, and is not at all in conformance with our declared needs, at the time of the Washington and London conferences, and no one can truthfully say the conditions in the East with the dove of peace in temporary hibernation on the China coast warrant any lessenings of those needs.” The senator presented official tables of relative, naval strength, and concluded, “as far as Japan is concerned, while we have a considerable superiority In tonnage due to the large number of over age vessels, in actual combat strength we have little superiority and are nearly oh an even footing.” SEA and land forces of the United States began their annual war gjfme in Hawaii, the problem being the defense of the islands from invasion. Fighting planes from Wheeler and Luke fields established air bases on various islands, army tanks rushed about through the cane fields and artillery and Infantry were stationed at points commanding possible landing places. All provisioning of troops was being done at night to avoid observation. Meanwhile the vessels of the navy were moving toward the archipelago preceded by seaplanes, for the attack which was to begin early Saturday B ECAUSE his release would be “unjustifiable and incompatible with the welfare of society” the federal parole board denied the application for a parole for Albert B. Fall, former secretary of the interior. Therefore Fall must serve his full sentence of a year and a day In the New Mexico state penitentiary where he was sent for bribery in connection with the oil lease deals during the Harding administration. SENATOR WESLEY L. JONES of Washington, of the “Five ,and Ten” law, has devised away t<> compel states without state prohibition laws to, enact such legislation. He Introduced a resolution to prohibit the navy from sending any vessel to a port in any state without state enforcement. and to prohibit the bolding of citizens’ military training camps or the building of government ships In states without state dry laws. - . The United Mine Workers of America, in convention in Indianapolis, adopted a resolution recommending the legalization of "good” beer, rather than an attempt to repeal the Eighteenth amendment, as the practical solution of the prohibition problem. SENATOR LA FOLLETTE started a debate of several days in the senate by moving to make the next order of business the bill prepared by himself and Senator Costigan of Colorado appropriating $375,000,000 to be given tne states for the relief of the unemployed and needy directly. The opposition held that the major contribution of the federal government toward relief should be the administration measures for the extension of credit. SANTIAGO, a picturesque and historical city near the eastern end As was badly shattered by a series of earthquakes. At first the deaths were reported to be In excess of a thousand, but when the people calmed down it teas found that not more than a dozen persons had "been killed. Property damage was estimated at more than $10,000,009, few buildings in the city having escaped unscathed. tfe 1»32. Waters Newspaper Union.) . ' .i
Si David B. Robertson
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.
Abraham Lincoln in 1864, From a Portrait Considered by Many to Be His Best
Bp (MWr - oth '• ‘Leffler
Senator Hale. . ■
Simple Beauty Marks Rebuilt Tomb of Lincoln Shrine at Springfield Now More Worthy of the Great President P‘ RESIDENT HOOVER dedicated a transformed > Abraham hincolu tomb at .Springfield, 111., June 17, last year. When the monument over the spot where the body of the Civil war President rests was given to the world again pilgrims to the grave found that it is a place of simple grandeur befitting « national shrine. For months it was closed to the public ’ while skilled artists plied their arts to repair and rebuild it and gave it beauty, simplicity and dignity. The reconstruction wak made possible by the passage of a $175,000 appropriation by the general assembly in 1929. Much the Same Outside. Outwardly the monument appears the same, except that it lias an air of newness, of freshness. In a terrace created at the south or entrance side of the monument there is a bronze head of Lincoln by Gutzon Borglum on a pedestal of granite. The great transformation is in the interior of the monument. Under personal Supervision of C. Herrick Hammond, state architect and former president of the American Institute of , Architects, the previously unused and unfinished area at the base of the LINCOLN’S TOMB ■HI I twl I ■ < S'. I • -1 s -' A "Ah ■ ■** • AM the .nh—ity aad decorum befittinc Um lut rwtaf plan of America’• below! Prmiwtoat has been eaampHfied is the re-4eai«mn* monument was opened and architectural skill and art combined to fabricate a rotunda connecting galleries and sarcophagus chamber. One of the main features of the galleries joining the rotunda and the sarcophagus chamber are nine Lincoln statuettes, of bronze depicting Lincoln at various stages of his career. These are the handiwork of internationally famous sculptors. At each of the four corners of the central unit of the monument there is one of these statuettes, about three feet in height, resting on a pedestal in a niche. Diagonally across from each of these is a statuette in a similar nlehe. These bronze statuettes were obtained by the state through the efforts of Mr. Hammond and H. H. Cleaveland, director of the state department of public works and buildings. The sculptors, Daniel C. French, Fred Torrey and Leonard Crunelle, are each represented by two models, while Lorado Taft, Adolph Weinman and the late Augustus St Gaudens each have one. Supreme Effect in Chamber. ■As a background for these statuettes there are rich, warm-colored panels of marble. Beautiful as are the rotunda and the
galleries, the supreme . effect is attained in the sarcophagus chamber. There the pilasters and frieze are of french black marble, as dark as midnight, with walls of St. Genevieve golden vein marble. On the upper portion of each jet-black pilaster there is a bronze The ceiling of the chamber is covered with gold leaf, and the room, like the rotunda, is lighted indirectly by lights hidden by an ornamental cornice. There over the spot where Lincoln’s body lies beneath many feet of concrete, has been placed a new sarcophagus of solid marble of warm red hue. Cn it is the simple inscription: "Abraham Lincoln, ■ ISo9—isiv>.“ Directly above what formerly was the north door, but nuw transformed, into a window covered with a iron grill, there is cut [in the marble' this famous tribute, to [the emancipator: “Now He Belongs to the Ages." Across from the sarcophagus in a crypt sealed with' slabs of marble rest the bodies of Mrs. Lincoln and three of their sons. Edward Baker, William Wallace and Thomas. Flags Form Honor Guard. , Arranged along th? semicircular wall of the sarcophagus i chamber, flanking the sarcophagus, there is an array of nine flags. In the place of honor, at the right of the sarcophagus, stands the Stars and Stripes. The official standard of the seven states in which the Lincoln family lived from the time of their arrival in America until the end of the emancipator’s career—Massachusetts, New Jersey. Virginia, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Indiana. Illinois—occupy the next seven positions. President Hoover personally Installed the flag of the President of the United States. Adversity Served Only to Strengthen Lincoln Against the hard blows of adversity Lincoln suffered as only sensitive souls like his can suffer. His tragic, love affair, his struggle to overcome poverty and for educational opportunities, his political reverses, his grief and anxious concern during the Civil war! Suffering embitters and defeats the weak man. It ennobles the strong man and makes him stronger. It brings him to. a closer, more sympathetic understand Ing of the needs of i bis feilowmen. Some one recently said that he never knew a great character that had not suffered. Perhaps this has not been the experience of all: of us. Rut I believe that we are quite agreed that most great characters have suffered, and that suffering had much to do with their greatness. Serious, independent think'ng was another cause of Lincoln's greatness. Somehow the myth has grown up among us that Lincoln was an omnivorous reader. Is it likely that a man who had to work so much of the time for a living should be much-of a reader? He doubtless snatched what moments he could from his work and read, as we like to think, by many a dim fireside, but even this would not equal the amount of time which the average schoolboy Is-required to spend in reading. Some of our dearest and most original thinkers have not been great readers. Jesus, one of the clearest and most profound thinkers of all time, was probably not a great reader. Lincoln was a dose observer of the realities of nature and human life, and thought much and deeply upon these realities. Few men saw so clearly, few have been able to think so clearly Thus his speeches were so much his own, so emphatically stamped with his own independent thought and personality- . Lincoln’s simple, apt, beautiful language, his almost unerring insight into human nature, and his strong, sympathetic humanity partly escape explanation, but partly they were developed and perfected by adversity and serious, independent thinking. — Boston Herald.
IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I chool Lesson (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER. D. D.. Member of Faculty. Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) <®. 1932, ‘Western Newspaper Onton.) Lesson for February 14 JESUS AND THE MAN BORN BLIND LESSON TEXT—John 9:1-41. GOLDEN TEXT—Then spake Jesus again unto them, saying, I am the light of the world: he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life. PRIMARY TOPlC—Jesus Makes * Blind Man See. JUNIOR TOPlC—Jesus Gives Sight to a Blind Beggar. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC —What lesus Did for a Blind Man. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP-IC-—Jesus the Light of the World. I. Working the Works of God While It Is Day (w. 15). 1. The disciples’ problem (vv. 1.2). In their minds all affliction, negative and positive, was God’s retribution for sin. Therefore, they argued that this man’s blindness proved his sin. They recognized also that the effect of sin Is sometimes hereditary. The; common philosophy of men about tik. today is that sickness, disease, and all sorts of calamities, is God’s Judgment for sin. 2. The Lord’s answer (vv. 3-5). Jesus affirmed that in this case there was neither sin on the man’s part nor that of his parents, but that it was an occasion for the display of the works of God and that he had come to execute this task while it was day because the night’ would come when no man could wofk. Since Christ is the light of the world the task which challenged his attention was the opening of this man's eyes. The purpose of Jesus in working miracles was not a mere exhibition of miraculous power, but . “to Illustrate in the physical sphere his power in the spiritual sphere.”: It was illustrative of man’s utter helplessness in his own salvation. The natural man Is blind and dead (II Cor. 4:4; Eph. 2:1). God. by Spirit, must quicken the soul dead in trespasses and sin before he can see to take hold on Christ, the remedy for sin. IL The Man’s Eyes Opened (vv. 6. 7), 1. The means used (v. 6.) Jesus spat on the ground and made clay of the spittle and anointed his eyes. Observe that the means used tn this miracle were a little less than foolish In themselves. The object must have been to show the man the utter Inadequacy of the means to the, accomplishment of the end. that he might be convinced that the power was of God. 2. His obedience (v. 7.) He Immediately obeyed. He did not stop to question the reasonableness of the command. Obedience only to that which seems reasonable' is not obedience! at all. He did not inquire as to what would the result. 111. The Man’s Testimony (vv. 8-36). In his testimony we have a fine example of the development of faith. I. He testified to his personal identity (v. 9). This was very easy. His self-consciousness enabled him to know that he was U>e same man who was born blind. 2. He testified as to how It was Jone (w. 11-15). So definite was his experience that he was able to tell lust how it was done. When he repeated It there was no contradiction. 3. He testified that the one who opened bis eyes was a prophet (v. 17) 4. He testified that this healer no doubt was sent of God (vv. 3D-33). 5. He worshiped him as the* Son of God (v. 38). * IV. The-Results of His Confession, 1. As to;the people, they were divided in their sentiment (v. 16). Some believed Jesus was from God because of his works. Others believed that he was a sinner because he did his work on the Sabbath day. 2 As to the man. they cast-him out (v. 34) Faithful testimony will often result In ostracism from religious people. but whatever the cost, there must be faithfulness. 3. As to Jesus, he found the man (v. 35). Being east out by men. he found himself in the arms of Jesus. He was led on to a deeper faith. He first saw Christ as a miracle worker, then as a prophet, and finally as the Son of God: and when he perceived him to he the Son of God. hg worshiped him. This whole lesson may be viewed from three angles: 1.. As. an acted parable of a life that issues from faith tn Christ. It is an illustration of the spiritual sphere In terms of the physical. 2. The testimony of the deity of our Lord. This testimony is fourfold: a. The miracle Itself an nnheard-of work, that a man born blind should receive his sight. b. The unwilling admission of the enemies themselves who made a public and official investigation. c. The testimony of the man himself. d. That of his parents. 3. An Illuminating example of the development of faith. «. SAGE REMARKS Unpolished Jewels do not shine. • • ♦ Happiness Is through helpfulness. • • ♦ Talk without action saps the will. • • • Example is the school of mankind. • • • 32) Good is best when soonest wrought ** * . The continuously Spirit-filled, cannot falL ... Be thrifty, so that you may be generous. * • * Ae the purse is emptied, the heart Is filled. ... |t is better to back out than to be thrown out • • • It Is bet>r to be saved by divine mercy than naed by divine justice.
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