The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 12, Number 42, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 12 February 1920 — Page 4

I —First session of the League of Nations m Purls, with eight uauons represented. 2—Monument erected in Prague to Czeeho-Slovak volunteers, who fought in other lands. 3—Last contingent of the A. EL F. to come home marching through New York city.

NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Germans Protest They Cannot Surrender War Criminals for Trial by Allies. SAY GOVERNMENT WOULD FALL -e Council of Ambassadors May Consider Some Modifications—Great Fall of Foreign Exchange May Stop Exports—Results of iT'.:.. Viscount's Grey's Letter. By EDWARD W. PICKARD. Germany's always, evident intention to evade as much of the Versailles treaty as she could brought matters between her -and the allies to the critical stage last week. AT he test of the ability of the allies jto enforce full compliance with the terms of the pact comes up in the case of the Germans who are accused of war crimes and whose extradition for trial is demanded, in accordance with the treaty which Germany signed. The list, comprising S9O names, was handed to Baron von Lersner, head of the German delegation at Paris, for transmission to his government. He had been protesting, verbally and in writing, against the enforcement of that clause of the treaty, and, finding his arguments futile, sent the list back to the French foreign office and resigned his post. The list was sent to Berlin by telegraph, but the Berlin government made it plain that it would'never consent to extradition of the accused. Its*attitude was expressed by Miniser of Defense Noske, who said: .‘‘The surrender of these men is , virtually impossible. Suppose I succeeded, in getting the men arrested. Do you think the train taking them to Prance would lie allowed to cross the frontier? And if a crowd lield up the train, do you Imagine that I cbuld order Germans shot down so that other Germans should be handed over to the revenge of their enemies? The * government might resign, but what party could take its place?" Passive resistance, it was said, would be the . course followed by Ebert's government. The Berlin press agreed that delivery of the men could not be made, and the general assertion was that insistence by the allies would mean the downfall of the government and a probable revolution. The council of ambassadors in Paris was sufficiently Impressed by the German assertions to consider a modification of its demands. Its plan as outlined there was that Germany should accept the list of offenders and thus admit their culpability, and that the allies should then consider the exigencies of the situation. As for the former kaiser, his fate seenss to be either trial and punishment by the allies or exile from Europe. Sir Auckland Geddes, British minister of national service and reconstruction, declared in a speech at Andover that the government intended to put the former emperor on trial and carry out' w’hatever penalty was provided-; and he added that if Holland persisted in giving him asylum it must put him on some island belonging to it outside of Europe, for the fallen ruler could not reside on Dutch territory in Europe. ’ There has been talk of a trade embargo against Holland to compel her to surrender Wilhelm,' but it is not considered likely that this will be resorted to by the allies. Foreign exchange, which had been steadily falling for some time, went down with a crash last week, and financiers of all calibers were thrown Into a near-panic. On American stock exchanges prices tumbled fast and (holders of securities added to the collapse dumping their stocks and bonds on the market. The causes and probable effects of all this must be left to the financial experts to tell. But one thing is made clear to every one. That is that the high cost of

TO HAVE LIMITED POWERS . united States Delegates to International Financial Conference Must Observe Stated Conditions. Washington. —American delegates to the proposed international financial conference will be appointed if their status in the conference is recognized along the lines as outlined recently by former Secretary of the Treasury CNass. In waking this announcement the

living in America is due to shortage of production no more than to the greed of the producers. For the downward trend of foreign exchange Is putting a stop to the export of American products to Europe, and those who should know agree that this is almost certain to result in a decrease in prices in this country. The j European importers cannot afford |to buy these products when exchange is so much against them, and there will be a “backing up" in all lines: of goods, which will be thrown on the American market. This movement already is under way. Prices of grains and other commodities declined considerably last week, and in the casei of grains the drop was helped on bjy the action of the railway administration which placed a ten-day embargo on the use of freight cars for the shipment of anything except graiii, wood pulp or sugar in the Mississippi valley states. This was done to provide the farmers with cars with which to send their crops to market, relieving the artificial shortage and releasing immense funds. .1 —— Dispatches from Warsaw made it plain that Poland was about to accept the peace offer of the soviet government of Russia provided guarantees were given that bolshevist propaganda in Poland and other European stated would cease. Poland’s aim, says Prince Lubomlrski, minister to the United States, is to serve as a peaceful and moral bulwark against bolshevism, and for this she must have the economic support of the allies. By the Russo-Esthonian peace treaty the soviet government renounces all sovereignty over Esthonla and recognizes its independence. Both parties renounce claims to compensation for war expenditures. The treaty provides that prisoners will lie repatriated shortly by both. Russia is to pay Esthonia 15,000,000 rubles in gold. There are to be no customs or transit charges on goods by either country. The soviet armies meti with some reverses last week, notably one in the region of the Don where the best of the bolshevik cavalry was routed by the Russian volunteer forces. In general, however, the soviet forward movement was continued on all fronts. A local revolution in Vladivostok put that city in the hajjds of the rebels. In England and probably elsewhere the opinion is gaining strength that peace should be made with the Lenine government because the return to normal life in Russia will soon destroy bolshevism. When Viscount Grey’s letter to the London Times, justifying the delay of the senate in ratifying the peace treaty and explaining to the British the attitude of America toward world affairs, was made public, It was at once assumed that acceptance of the pact by the senate, with the Lodge reservations little modified, would soon follow. Both sides admitted that the Grey letter had knocked important props from under the opposition to the Lodge program, in that It made clear that Great Britain and, presumably, the other allied powers would welcome the adhesion of America even with the reservations. The Informal committee of the senate had failed to reach a compromise and Hitchcock had given notice that he would move to take up the treaty in the open senate on February 10. Lodge countered with the statement that the Republicans would bring the pact before the senate one day earlier. As the days passed with no comment from the White House on the Grey letter, however, hope for early ratification fnded, and toward the end of the week it was widely reported in Washington that the letter had angered the president and increased his determination never to accept the Lodge reservations or anything like them. It was said Mr. Wilson and his firm adherents looked on Viscount Grey’s pronouncement as an unwarranted attempt by the spokesman of a foreign government to interfere in the legislative affairs of this country. Though it seemed the letter had persuaded many Democrats that it was best to accept the reservations, It was admitted that the president could still rally a sufficient number to prevent ratification.

Chamber of Commerce of the United States, to which the question of the conference was referred, declared this would mean the delegates would go into the conference under modified conditions. These conditions were drafted as follows by a special committee of the chamber: “That there be brought to the notice of the European governments and of the signatories of the European memorial, the letter of the secretary of the treasury, dated Jan. 28, 1920. “That If, thereafter, the European

THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL

As a matter of parliamentary procedure, the treaty now goes through the entire course through which it passed before Its rejection on November 19, so any amendments are in order. Senator Johnson hurried back from the far West with the assertion that he would push his amendment giving the United States six votes in the League of Nations, the same as the British empire. This, Lord Grey intimated, was preferable to the Lenroot reservation, which sometimes would bar the empire from voting at all. Johnson and his supporters say now that opponents of his plan will find themselves in the position of being “more British than the British.” In any event Lord Grey’s letter has Justified, to the British and to many Americans, this country’s hesitancy to enter the League of Nations without full consideration and carefuj examination, since it is so radical a departure from our traditional policy. It will go far toward restoring or maintaining sympathetic relations between America and Great Birtain, especially if we do finally enter the league. Secretary of the Navy Daniels appeared before the senate subcommittee Investigating navy awards and replied vigorously to the charges made by Rear Admiral Sims and others. He read a prepared statement in which he took up point by point statements before the subcommittee by Admiral Sims and dwelt at considerable length on the two major disagreements voiced by the admiral—namely, the awarding of decorations to officers who lost their ships through submarine attacks or by mines, and the relative importance of shore and sea duty. On the latter Mr. Daniels said he had not and never would “approve a disparity between awards given men who ‘served on shore as compared with the men who went to sea.” Admiral Sims, he asserted, probably advocated high awards for many officers who served on staff duty ashore and few awards for officers who went to sea because “most of Admiral Sims’ duty in the navy has been on shore." Secretary Daniels declared there was nothing the matter with the morale of the navy except a shortage of enlisted men in many ratings and insufficient pay for officers and men left. The conference committee of the senate and house reached a full agreement on ; railroad legislation, and it seemed certain that the remodeled Esoh-Curamlns bill would soon be reported to both houses anfi passed before March 1. As it ilow stands the Cummins antistrike provision is omitted but the Esch arbitration plan is strengthened by the creation of a board of appeals of five members to be appointed by the president Public opinion will be relied on to prevent strikes. The Cummins section providing for an average return of 5% per cent remains but the Interstate commerce commission is given authority, after one and a half or two years, to change the percentage. Earnings above 6 per cent are to be divided equally between carriers and a fund to be administered by the commerce commission for the benefit of weaker railroads. The guaranteed standard return now in effect is to be continued for six months, the government paying the deficit. A revolving fund of $300,000,000 is established to make loans to the railroads. All week representatives of the railway administration and officials of the railway unions endeavored to reach an agreement on the wage demands of the brotherhoods, but at this writing the results were nil. On Thursday the executive committee of the maintenance of way employees and railway shop laborers met In Detroit to consider wage demands. The grand president of the union predicted a general strike on the railways if a satisfactory adjustment was not reached at Washington. Some of the railway ? labor leaders are seriously discussing the formation of a third big political party with government ownership and lowering of the cost ofliving as its platform, and with a showdown at the presidential election next fall.

governments should decide It to be wise that such a conference be held, the activities and discussions at such conference be kept within the limitations mentioned in the letter of the secretary of the treasury. “That the American representatives, if any be appointed, be informed that they are to act in an entirely informal capacity aDd their continued presence at the proposed conference is to depend upon such activities and discussions being kept within the limitations heretofore mentioned.”

PROBLEMS FACING STRICKEN WORLD Shall Chaos or Reconstruction in Europe Follow the Great World War? NEW, GREAT FORCES AT WORK Demand for New Order of Things I* Universal and Reactionaries Merely Swell the Rising Tide of Discontent. Article IV. By FRANK COMERFORD. The most obvious thing in Europe Is the changed attitude of the people, and yet there are many, particularly in the conservative, employing class, who refuse to see. There are none so blind as these. While they close their eyes and minds to the obvious, the change goes on. It is not idle rhetoric to say that new great forces are at work. Os course you see the forces any more than you can see the grass growing, but you can see the effects. You can measure the character of the forces. Everywhere I found people talking about a new Order. Men separated by hundreds of miles are thinking and talking the same ideas. It startled me to hear the same ideas up In the Balkans that I had heard In France and England. I did not meet any one who was able to give me a clear, complete meaning of the phrase, but it is on the lips of everyone. It has a meaning, and time will produce a plan. The people are forward looking—they are thinking, waiting for something to happen. They have faith that It will happen and that it will bring great good to the human race. Every one seems confident that some great compensation must and will come out of the siege of suffering through which they have passed. If they were not so earnest, so sane, so determined about it I should have interpreted their enthusiasm as fantasy. A meaningless minority of reactionaries scorn and scoff at all talk of a new Order. These are the backwardlooking men of big business, the standpatters in politics. They are out of touch with the times; they think the real world Is the little circle in which they live. They are the barnacles on big business. They smugly set down all talk of change as bolshevism. Fortunately the real leaders of business are breaking away from this point of view. Progressive, human and open minded, they see and know that unrest is a problem and that it must be solved. They are paying heed to the complaints of the workers. They admit that there is justice back of the complaints. Instead of arguing coercion, they are talking concession. They know a change has come, they want to meet It. New Order Must Come. A new Order will come. The one question that is bothering the minds of men who are awake to the change is, will it come through revolution or through evolution. The greatest friend of revolution is the stubborn employer who refuses to see the change, accepts things as they are, and insists upon the use of force as the only cure for unrest. Money is a gross thing when compared with human life. To mention Europe's financial losses in the same breath with her dead and wounded, seems sordid, but it is an everyday world and in It money has its logical place. Since the war some people are. thinking that money has had too important a place in the world. It has been charged with pushing man out of his place, but bills must be paid and Europe needs money. The war cost billions and billions of dollars. Millions of men had to be clad and shod, billions and billions of cartridges and shells, rifles, cannons, airplanes, ships, were made. Europe owes the money. How will she pay it; where will she get it? It is a question that even the wisest and most optimistic of men in Europe hesitate to answer. Some wonder, is there an answer? Europe has borrowed until her interest charge today is almost as large as her whole cost of governmental administration was a few years ago. 1 heard Lloyd George say that England faced a yearly interest charge of three hundred million pounds. Another official told me that this interest charge that England must pay each year is nearly one hundred million pounds a year larger than the cost of administration was at the time of the Boer war. Only the other day her interest was due on some loans from the United States and she was forced to default, and our government charged the Interest to the principal and passed the day of payment on. In the meantime the pound Is going down in value. When 1 was on the Continent it had reached $4.14. Today it is under $3.87, and steadily going down. France is in even a worse plight The banks are loaded with government paper. She has made no provision by taxation to pay her debt. I was told on every band that any effort to impose a tax would bring on a revolution. It is said that her debt has reached the startling figure of $640 for every man. woman and child in the country. When I 1 left Cherbourg to sail for America a regulation had been put into effect prohibiting any one leaving France from taking money

BCHEME TO FOIL ROBBERS. A famous detective ofice said that whenever an effort was made by a robber to ioot a bank. If any ot the employees had presence of mind enough to hurl an Inkstand through oae of the plate glass windows the robber would, nine chances to ten, take to his heels, “for,” > said Detective Burns. “I have found in my experience that robbers are mortally afraid of the sound of splintering glass. It gets on their nerves.”

with him. either metal or paper money, in excess of a thousand francs, and on that day yon could buy almost nine francs for an American dollar. Can France pay? The figures prove France insolvent. Her officials and her men of prominence say she cannot pay. Her war debt is enormous. Poverty on Every Side. Italy is as bankrupt as France. A forced loan temporarily held the lira from losing all of its value. Her war debt threatens the throne. In the new Balkan countries we find no gold reserve, little but poverty. In Czecho-Slovakia the government closed the borders for ten days, commanded the people to bring their money to the banks where stamps were put on the bills. When they brought their money they were given 50 per cent of It back and receipts for the balance, in this way the government cut down the volume of paper money 50 per cent Even after this was done in the city of Prague I bought kronens for less than two cents a piece. In Poland every kind and species of paper money Is in circulation. Her frontiers have not been fixed by the peace table, and the profiteers in money smuggling have dumped the worthless paper of Europe Into Poland. In October I was in Warsaw and my recollection is that the mark was worth about two cents ip Amer•can'money. Poland has no metal money. She hasn’t a gold reserve. Her struggle to get credit to keep her people from dying by the millions from hunger and cold is pitiful. Austria is penniless, proverty-striek-en. Vienna is a city of ghosts, listless. pepless. human beings. They drag their feet after them. Their heads are bent between their shoulders. The kronen was worth a cent when I was there in September, and even at that price there was practically nothing to buy. Austria in her extremity, her people starving, petitioned the peace table for the privilege of selling her art treasures and heirlooms. The plea was to exchange them for bread and coal. Necessity prompted the plea. The peace table refused the permission, holding that ttiese things of value might be the only collateral out of which the pi-, lies could collect the Indemnity. Europe’s debt is her crown of thorns, as her dead is her cross. Unrest is her Calvary. A new Order Is her hope —her resurrection. Facing Gigantic Task. Europe is not dying; she Is exhausted. tortured, confused. She Is trying to find herself. She is putting all of her remaining strength Into the effort. The task before her is stupendous. She must rebuild her house. She must nurse her wounded, care for her cripples. She has counted her losses, inventoried her possessions. The past must bury its dead. Tomorrow is for the living. Today she is planning for the tomorrow. She must repair her house, put it in order. To understand her work, to know her plans, to feel her problem. It is necessary to know her thoughts. Unrest is frightening her. Fear is keeping her from work. It is causing her to worry. With all her soul she Is pleading to the rich and powerful ‘ to become as little children again, her children. She is telling them that the fate of the family is at stake, that they must make concessions to their more unfortunate brothers. She is! trying to makie them understand that they are brothers. Many of them have forgotten the relationship. When she urges them to stop wrangling and quarreling she is pleading for their common good, the family welfare. Shi is warning against the danger of justice too long denied, of unrest too long pent up. She Is translating the ruutterings and mumblings of the dlsconj tented. She knows the complaint iri .their hearts, she sympathizes, she understands. This was Europe as I stw her in her black rags arising from the war. (Copyright. 1928. Western Newspaper Union) Greatest American Humorist. On the 30th of November. In 1835. Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain) was born at Florida. Monroe county. Mo. Mark Twain first was a pilot on the Mississippi river. At the age of twenty-seven he began his literary career as city editor of a newspaper, the Enterprise, In Virginia City, Nev. He is the best known of American humorists, and his works have been widely translated. During his life-time Mark Twain lectured a great deal in this country and In Europe. He had a great charm of personality and was beloved by all who knew him. He died at Redding, Conn., April 21, 1910. Shoemakers' Wax a Liquid. It Is not always possible to draw a very clear line of demarcation between a liquid and a solid. Shoemaker’s wax, which is so brittle that the fragmentation obtained when a sheet of It Is hit by a bullet resembles that in the case of the very brittle metal antimony, is actually a liquid. To show this place leaden bullets upon a sheet of shoemaker’s wax and then support the whole upon corks. At the end of a month the corks will be found floating upon the sheet of wax Instead of beneath it and the bullets will be at the bottom as in a liquid. Largest Movie House. New York has in building a moving picture theater with a seating capacity of 5.300, which may constitute It the largest of Its kind anywhere. Judging by the heavy patronage In other such places, the new house may be filled at the chief performances. The public is seeking professional entertainment as never before.

HOW TO BLUE COLD STEEL. Steel may be blued without beating. Polish the metal well and make sure that it Is absolutely clean. Then immerse it in the following solution: Sulphate of copper. 40 grams; nitric acid, 60 grams, 90 per cent alcohol, 150 cubic centimeters: water, 1.000 centimeters. Allow to dry thoroughly, then polish by rubbing briskly with a woolen clothe Another way to blue steel Is to heat it till cherry red and then aueneb in carbolic acid.

SOVIETS INVADE JAP TERRITORY Party of 200 Japanese Prospectors in Peril on Sakhalin island. RELIEF EXPEDITION IS SENT European Governments Realize That the Bolsheviki Have Come to Stay —France Ready to End War ' on the Reds. Tokyo, Feb. 9. —A party Os 200 Japanese prospectors on the island of Sakhalien are reported cut off by the bolshevik uprising and their massacre is feared. A Japanese relief expedition has been sent out. Important Japanese mining and petroleum pluuts have been attacked. Millerand to Go to London. Paris, Feb. 9. —Premier Millerand will go to London in a few days to meet Premier JLloyd George of Britain and Premier Nitti of Italy and present a radical change in the allied- policy toward Russia. Millerand will announce that France is prepared to recognize and is 4 ready to make peace with the bolsheviki. Gradually it is being realized everywhere that the bolsheviki have come to stay. One by one the big European nations realize that their people are tired out by five years of warfare and are in no mood to mix in another war. 4 Britain Saw Facts First. Lloyd George realized it first when the soldiers rioted in England a year ago and his demands for the Prinkipos conference followed, but that project was a fiasco. Then Italy swung and the chamber of deputies voted to recognize the soviets. France's hand had been tied by her uncompromising attitude toward the bolsheviki. Whenever either Lloyd George or Sonnino, Tittoni or Nitti wished to apply pressure to France lie had only to whisper to Clemenceau that the country was preparing to make peace with the reds. This was sufficient to make .France grant all concessions. Millerand realizes this weakness and since he also realizes bolshevism cannot be overthrown by the allies he plans to win independence immediately by coming out on the same footing with England and Italy. Even the reactionary newspaper and conservative publications are putting out feelers that Russia must be recognized, bolsheviki or not, in order to prepare the people for the announcement. Bolsheviki Enter Odessa. London, Feb, 9.—Bolsheviki troops have victoriously entered Odessa, according to a wireless message sent out by the soviet government, at Moscow. A dispatch to the Central News from Reval, Esthonia, says that Genera! Yudeniteh, former commander of the Russian northwest army, has been allowed to leave: Esthonia wjth several of his staff officers. Before being permitted to depart, however, he was obliged to hand over 250,000,000 marks to the commission formed to undertake liquidation of the northwest army. WILL BUILD 200 NEW HOmls Paterson, N. J., to Be Municipal Landlord as Quickly as Buildings Can Be Erected. Paterson, N. J., Feb. 9. —Paterson Will erect 200 nmv homes and will become a municipal landlord just as quickly as work can be started. A committee appointed by Mayor Frank J. Van Noort decided to spend approximately $1,500,000 in building homes in order to relieve congested conditions. The houses will be of frame, of the standard two family type, with five rooms and bath on each floor and two rooms in the attic. They will be rented at a fair rate, the rental charge to apply on the purchase price. The houses will cost about $6,000 each. TURKISH BAND KILLS 2 YANKS Representatives of Y. M. C. A. Are Ones Slain Recently Near Aintav, in Syria. Washington, Feb. 9.—James Perry and Frank L. J. Johnson, representatives of the Y. M. C. A., were the Americans killed in the recently reported attack by Turkish brigands on a convoy of American relief supplies near Aintav, in Syria, the state department was advised. Previous dispatches reported that three Americans were killed, but later messages Indicated that only the two named were victims of the brigands. The bodies have not been recovered. MAYNARD TO FLY ACROSS U. S. “Flying Parson” to Make Long Trip in Interests of Army Enlistments. New York, Feb. 9. —Lieut Belvin W. Maynard, the “flying parson,” winner of the transcontinental air derby, will leave Mlneola, N. Y., today on a 2,000mile flight across the country in the interests of army enlistments. He will drop army recruiting literature from the De Haviland 4 in which he won the air race.

Gas to Fight Blackbirds. Columbus, Ind.—As a method of ridding the city of blackbirds, which have became so numerous as to cause much damage, the police department has asked the city council for permission to use poisoned gas to make war on the birds. Public Kitchens In Spain. ' Madrid. —Queen Victoria opened the first of five public kitchens which ii is planned t* operate in this city.

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