The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 12, Number 53, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 29 April 1920 — Page 2
— _ —— s3ll 1 til i jflh Twl . i/ IBh g Q 8 ft ' I I—Fighting"l—Fighting" u Disastrous rue <.n the Cargo carrier naiiiried in New York harbor. - —Couiereuce of New Railroad Labor Board With Representatives of the Brotherhoods. 3 —Representative W. D. Upshaw of Georgia, Organizer of the Congressional, Overalls Club.
NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Allied Premiers Slice Pieces Off Turkey, But Do Not Know What to Do With Them. DISAGREE ABOUT GERMANY French Don’t Like Lloyd George's “Economic Pressure” Ideas—Admin- \ istration Gets Two Slaps in State Primaries—Senator Johnson Wins in Nebraska. By EDWARD W. PICKARD With President Wilson, and consequently the United States, represented only by an “observer” in the person of Ambassador Johnson, the allied supreme council in session at San Remo decided that Turkey should be sliced up to a considerable extent, and that Germany must observe the treaty terms. As general propositions that sounded ail right, but when it came to the necessary details there was woeful vagueness, so far as the correspondents could learn. Take the case of Turkey. The treaty with that country was substantially . completed and the Turkish representatives notified > to be in Paris on May 10 to accept it. The “big three” decided that seven big pieces should be severed from the sultan's empire—Armenia, Mesopotamia, Cilicia, Syria, Palestine, Georgia and Azerbeidjan—but the future of these territories is left for the future to determine. No one of the nations of Europe so far has signified a willingness to accept a mandate for any part of Asia .Minor, though several of them are determined to cling to ports and zones of influence. The League of Nations declined to take charge of Armenia because it . has neither the money nor the means of action. The ■United States, on which the Armenians relied and which they still hope will ■ come to their rescue, can do nothing at present. When Great Britain, France and Italy are able to act as a unit, or when the league of nations is able to function, the destiny of the small nations freed from the Turk may be settled. Meanwhile Turkey is merely required to relinquish' sovereignty over them, as was the case with Austria and the regions along the Adriatic. The supreme council, it is said, will ask Sweden and Norway to help the Armenians to establish a free state, and from Amsterdam comes the news that the Dutch would be willing to take over that job. If necessary, Canada is willing to accept the mandate, Lord Curzon says. Politely disregarding President Wilson’s protest, the allied premiers have decided that the sujtan shall be permitted to retain Constantinople, though the Dardanelles are to be internationalized and other precautions ■will be taken to render him harmless there. His territory will not extend far into Europe, for Adrianople and Kirk-Kilise are given to Greece, as is Gallipoli though it will be controlled by allied forces. The only outlet to the Aegean for Bulgaria will be Dedeagatch, which will be governed by an international commission. There are now in Turkey some 200,000 allied troops and Greece is in a position to' send heavy reinforcements, so it is believed the Turks will do whatever the allies require. In the matter of enforcing the treaty with Germany the discord among the allied premiers is especially marked. They all agree that the Germans must observe the terms, of the pact, and have so notified Berlin. But what steps shall be taken in case the ■Germans are disobedient? There’s the rub. Lloyd George insists that economic pressure, in the form of cutting off supplies of food and materials, will be sufficient, and in this he has had the support of Nitti. Millerand, on the other hafid, asserts that military action. such as the French took recently in the matter of the Ruhr region, Is the proper method and indeed the only (method that, will make die Germans
HAD ODD TIME MEASURERS Various Ways by Which the Ancients Kept Some Track of the FastFleeting Hours. Sacred history furnishes the earliest reference to anything like a fixed and pennameijt time measurer. Isaiah speaks of the dial of Ahaz which went ten degrees backward, and this dial, it has been conjectured, was a tall and slender column, which cast a shadow a series of steps with which it was
behave. Backed by the political, press and public opinions of France, he says Germany must to carry out her pledges to mV limit, and he does not believe she will do this unless she knows the penalty for evasion will be the military occupation of more German territory. At this distance one is inclined to sympathize with the French view. Since it is perfectly easy for Germany to get food from the neighboring neutral countries with the enthusiastic cooperation of their merchants, and raw materials from the same and other sources, Lloyd George’s pressure probably would be farcical in a measure. The Germans have.not carried out the terms of disarmament, and now they are formally asking that they be permitted to retain an army of 200,000 with the entire general staff and corps of officers. They assert that this force is necessary to maintain order in the interior, and that, anyway, the army will not accept an order for its dissolution. The French, like many others, probably look with skepticism on the frequently recurring “revolutions” in Germany, and certainly they feel that the Germans are not to be trusted for a minute. The British view of the treaty of Versailles differs radically from that of the French, and if the Lloyd George government has Its way that pact will before long be greatly modified in favor of the beaten foe. France is neither so forgiving nor so eager for trade that she wishes to restore Germany speedily to her old commercial status! Despite existing differences and the hopes of Berlin, it is probable the' allied premiers will come to an amicable understanding before long. Indeed that result may have been reached before this review reaches the reader. It is impossible to guess what will be the influence of President Wilson’s views in the settlement of the pending problems. The proclamation of an independent republic in Siberia, east of Lake Baikal may serve to simplify conditions there, and it is believed it will be recognized by the soviet government at Moscow. In that case there would be left little excuse for further occupation of Siberian territory by the Japanese or any other foreign nation. Since President Wilson has made the peace treaty a main issue of the campaign, it must be admitted that he suffered two rather severe set-backs in the state primaries of last week. In Nebraska, William Jennings Bryan, advocate of reservations, was elected a delegate to the convention in San Francisco, despite the utmost endeavors of Senator Hitchcock and the administration forces to keep him at home. The prohibition question entered largely into the fight, for Bryan had declared his intention of putting a bone-dry plank in the Democratic platform and of routing the faction, led by Governor Edwards, which favors the modification of the prohibition legislation so that the use of mildly alcoholic drinks may be restored. Hitchcock had openly sided with the Edwards view. The Peerless One does not intend that his party shall sidestep the matter. The result in Nebraska was affected by the action of vas’ numbers of women who, though no formerly active members of the Democratic party,’ registered as Democrats so as to vote for Bryan and dryness. Senator Hitchcock was" given the state’s preferential vote for the presidency, whatever that may be worth. The other blow to the administration forces was delivered by the Democrats of Georgia, where support of the president and his peace treaty policy was the main issue. To be sure Attorney General Palmer, leading the Wilson contingent and standing for unconditional acceptance* of the treaty, was victorious; but Senator Hoke Smith, supporter of ratification with reservations, and Tom Watson, opponent of the .treaty and league; covenant, together received a vote nearly twice that given Palmer. Watson led Palmer in the popular vote by several thousand. It seems the treaty as it stands is not really popular in Georgia, and the same is true in-other parts of the south. Senator Hiram Johnson, whose preconvention campaign is making the other Republican aspirants sit up and
encircled. The Egyptians, too, are credited with having used their monoliths, such as Cleopatra’s needle, as time measurers. However, the Chaldeans had other methods of measuring time, for they, as well as the contemporary Hindoos, and very likely the Egyptians, were acquainted with the water clock, or clepsydra, which measured time after the fashion of the hour glass, water taking the place of sand. Indeed, it is believed that the Egyptians actually had hour glasses, for
THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL
take notice, followed up his Michigan victory by capturing Nebraska. General Wood ran second for the state’s preference and General Pershing was a rather poor third. It is said the Germans, who in the past have <lways Supported Hitchcock, went into the Republican primaries almost solidly for Johnson, and that he also was given the Irish vote. The Democratic national executive committee, in session in Chicago, selected Homer S. Cummings, chairman of the national committee, as temporary chairman and keynote sounder of the San Francisco convention. He was the choice of the administration and was chosen unanimously. E. G. Hoffman of Indiana, national vice chairman, will call the convention to order, and, of course, old Colonel Martin will be sergeant-at-arms, as usual. The Republican national committee will not name the temporary officers of the Chicago convention until next month, but already there is a strong movement to make former Senator Albert J. Beveridge temporary chairman and keynoter. It is believed Senators Lodge and Borah would withdraw in favor of the Indiana man. The new national board of railway labor at its first session adopted a rule of procedure that put the finishing touches to the '“outlaw" strike of switchmen and that will serve to discourage similar demonstrations in the future. In effect, this rule is that the board will not consider complaints from any persons who at the time are impeding transportation. At once the bottom fell out of the strike, which was on the point of collapsing, anyhow. During the week the leaders of the switchmen tried to have the strike called off, but the men accused them of selling them out. Many of the latter quietly sought their old places. The others must now obtain re-em-ployment as new hands, having forfeited their seniority rights. Traffic conditions in Chicago, New York and other centers were improved, but not yet entirely restored. Along the Jersey City water front 700 freight handlers who had been on strike returned to work, their demand for $5 a day having been granted. A serious fight took place at Butte, Mont., between striking I. W. W. miners and a sheriff’s posse, in which one man was killed and 14 wounded. Governor Stewart was so alarmed by this and resulting disturbances*that he asked General Liggett, commanding the western department, for federal troops. A detachment of the Twentyfirst infantry was sent from Fort Wright, Wash. About a dozenof the states of Mexico are now declared to have joined in the revolt against Carranza which started with the secession of Sonora. The, bewhiskered president is not idle, however, and his forces under General Pina were reported to be massing for an attack on the Sonora troops on the Chihuahua boundary. There has been fighting close to Mexico City. At the close of the week there were hopes that an agreement would be reached by the Sonora officials land a peace mission that was on its way from the capital, but the revolt has spread over so much territory that it seems likely only the retirement of Carranza will put an end to hostilities. The government at Washington is watching developments closely but has given no indication that it would take sides in the quarrel. The overall craze that is sweeping over the United States, though it can have little direct economic value, is an interesting expression of popular anger against the clothing profiteers. In isolated cases it already has caused some reduction of prices, but in general it inust be regarded as a worthy demonstration that is likely to be taken up by faddists and distorted out of all reason. We are still waiting to be told, authentically, how the cost of living can be lowered. The experts have been saying that increased production is the solution of the matter, but when one reads that American production is now on a basis of 40 per cent above domestic needs, and then looks at the prices demanded for all the necessities of life, one doesn’t know what to think.
upon one of the bas-reliefs which have come to light after their long interment of 3,000 years or more is an object which those learned to such matters assure us can be nothing else than a sand glass. In principle the clepsydra was nothing but a rod floating upon water, which was slowly dropping from an orifice in the vessel in which it was contained. Certain divisions were marked upon the rod, and a fixed pointer served the purpose of a clock hand.
PROBLEMS FACING STRICKEN WORLD Shall Chaos or Reconstruction in Europe Follow the Great World War? RUSSIA’S LONG, BLACK NIGHT Little Wonder People of That Unhappy Land Are Blinded by Freedom’s Light After Four Centuries of Suffering. Article XV By FRANK COMERFORD. For nearly four hundred years Russia waited for morniug. It was a terrible night. Brutal dreams tortured her. She writhed In despair. Time moved slowly. The clock ticked agonies. The air was ahtck with groans. Motherhood bore slaves. The cradle was a coffin. Feast days were celebrated by massacres. Czars from Ivan the Terrible. 1544, to Nicholas, the last of the Romanoffs, executed in 1918, used the bodies and souls of human beings as manure to fertilize the soil in which the rank weed of imperialism grew. History calls them emperors, truth labels them brutes, torturers, murderers. They bore the brand of Cain. It was a lightless day, a hopeless night, for Russia, which began with the curses of Ivan and ended with the execution of Nicholas. During this night of three hundred and seventyfive years they marched the treadmill. The world heard the endless tramp of feet? In the dark, great bodies swayed with weariness. Heavy shoulders were bent forward. Strong legs marked time on ‘the treadmill steps. They kept time to the lash of the whip. It laid bare their backs, the backs of young and old, of women and children as well as men. Sweat formed Into red froth as it mingled with their blood. They grew blind in the dungeon darkness. They stumbled and halted, only to be called back to the monotony and drudgery of the tramp by the lash and the bludgeon. Their legs rose and fell—they marched, but forward. It was left, right, left, right; tramp, tramp, and always on the treadmill steps in the hopeless dark. They mumbled prayers, but God couldn’t hear, the curses of their masters drowned out their petitionlngs. It was so dark in the treadmill that even God could not see, and so God forgot Russia. Forgotten, abandoned, they bent their great weary backs toward the sod, the grave offered rest — it was kind. The only 7 thing they owned was their pains. They lived a communism of suffering, a socialism of slavery. ' The revolution! of 1917 pattered down the door of the treadmill. Seized with wild joy, they madly rushed toward the light. When they got out in the open, saw the sky and sun, they were bewildered. In the fury of a new delight they rushed on. It isn’t strange, it is pathetic, that eyes blinded by ages of darkness blinked in the light. It isn’t surprising that they tried to reach the center of the sun. Suffering in the light is different from suffering in the black the Russians knew. When their eyes became accustomed to the light they looked around them to see where they were —to learn what had been happening in the strange, beautiful world. Tremendous Task Before Them. They had a task before them, the building of a free man’s house, a house in the light, a house without a dark corner. They knew little about freedom, except that they wanted it with all their hearts. Their experience had been with slavery. They knew little about the practical work of building a house in which freedom might live pure and secure. They saw civilization with the eyes of a surgeon. They gasped when they saw that its body was covered with a malignant sore. It was an ugly, festering, running, growing sore. They learned its name. It was written in the loudest of chronicles—it was the incurable, horrible leprosy of the world. It was cancer —POVERTY. They were told that it was the cause of the nasty thing religiod labeled sin, that poverty had transformed Christ images struck in clay into' hunchbacked souls, that the sickening matter running from sores caused the red blotches on the world’s body known as red-light districts; that other effects were the swollen blackish blue boils, the tenements and slums. They shuddered. Even the darkness of the treadmill had not produced worse. They learned about poverty. They read its autobiography. In it they read how it had robbed children of their childhood, erased faith from the minds of men, mobilized women in dreadful traffic. They learned that much of the thing called crime was poverty’s work, that normality and morality are matters of education. That to be good requires knowledge of right and wrong. They read that statesmen called poverty THE PROBLEM. Reformers called it,a curse and became unpopular because of their persistent attacks upon it. In the verdict of a thoughtless world those who fought poverty were called longhaired men and short-haired women. People did not stop to remember that these long-hairfd men and short-haired women gave of their time and strength
Acorns as Human Food The Indians of the Pacific coast region, from northern California to Mexico, eat acorns in considerable quantities. Dried and pounded they are made into a sort of mush, and also into bread. Acorn meal is usually bleached to free it from tannin and whatever other bitter principles it contains. In certain parts of Italy acorn meal, with the addition of two-thirds ground pain, is made into bread.
to the poor. These who were maligned for following in the footsteps of the first Lover of the Poor were those wh<i cried out against the tenements, demanding for human bdtngs the sunshine and air cattlemen give their stock. These unpopular ones were'the same who brought ice to keep mjlk cool in the hot summer for the children of the slums; these were the .crusaders against child labor, the protestants against compelling the women who bear the children of the race to wdrk so many hours each day that exhaustion marred and marked the physical and mental strength of children. So it ' was that these redeemed, freed children \of Russia learned of the cancer and feared it as much as the thing they had escaped. None Able to Check Disease. They beheld old-school politicians acting as doctors to sick civilization. These doctors, miscalled statesmen, were agreed as to the cause of the disease and that the symptoms threatened death. Many prescriptions have been given the patient, but none seem to check the disease. These prescriptions had been various formulas of government, the constitutional monarchy, a democracy, a republic. The giving of these various treatments failed to effect a cure. Civilization continued to suffer. At times pain became unendurable and the doctors gave local anesthetics. These were the laws, included under the general designation “Social Welfare Legislation.” They made the patient temporarily more easy. They allayed pain that might otherwise have produced convulsions — Revolution. And then these Russian people, studying the new ' world into which they had so recently come, discovered that many of these political doctors were quacks, they were unreliable and dishonest. They were more interested in their own fortunes than the flfte of the patient. They imposed upon the people who hired and trusted them. Their time and thought was taken up in holding their jobs, rather than in doing their work. That the schools of political medicine, called political parties, responsible for these doctors, were diploma mills, graft rings. That some of the people suspected these physicians of being interested in keeping the patient sick and were not making an honest effort to cure. It had even been rumored that, there are people in the world who make profit outof poverty: that special privilege is the powerful profiteer of our day. Turned to Old Theory. Plato had spoken about remedy way back in the fourth century before Christ So had Marx. An untried remedy—a theory. Its object was to cure poverty. The Russians, seeing that the remedies in common use had failed, turned their thoughts to this old remedy which had never been tried. At least it had not failed; this was in its favor. It was an experiment, to be sure, but “Nothing ventured. nothing gained.” Many argued that it could not more completely fail than the prescriptions at present in use. And with the fall of imperialism there came into Russia one who had been exiled. For many years he had been a teacher and preacher of the untried remedy. Russia saw in him a savior. He. came with a message. He said that communism would keep them free, make them happy. They listened, they believed. They were as little children, so great was their faith. To them a promise was a truth fulfilled, the word a covenant; and the promise was that peasants would have their own land, that working men would be their own bosses. It was the word they had waited for. the realization of the dreams they had dreamed in the dark treadmill. The Prophet had come. The new day awaited them. They rejoiced and cried, “Long live the new Messiah.” No one sacrilegiously questioned the practicability of the dream. Every one forgot the common, controlling instinct of man selfishness. Maybe in the Intense general selfishness individual selfishness could not be seen. The man was Lenine —the message Communism. (Copyright, 1920. Western Newspaper Union) Food Smuggling in Germany. Illicit trade in food, with its attendant evils of smuggling and usury, is on the Increase throughout Germany, according to newspaper accounts. The rationing system has never been abandoned even in the occupied areas of the Rhineland, and some of the newspapers contend that the average individual can not subsist on the amount of food issued. The authorities are making every effort to check the illegal traffic in foods of all kinds, and the courts are crowded day after day. Smuggling of potatoes is being carried on this winter in all parts of Germany on a scale greater than in war time. Germany produced an excellent potato crop this year, and the authorities are trying to save it from falling into the hands of the speculators. „ Industrial Italy Awakening. One great stride toward freeing industrial Italy from its dependence upon its supplies of Iron ore and steel is announced. This consists in the acquisition of the rights of a big Austrian mining company hitherto knovra as the Alpine Montan Gesellschaft. These rights comprise control of one of the largest steel-producing districts in Europe. From its foundries at Erzberg in Styria alone the annual prewar output exceeded 1,000,000 tons of finest quality steel. Experts estimate that the mine there can'be worked advantageously for at least 200 years to come. **
Derivation of ‘Flannel* Some of the earlier philologists claim that the word “flannel” was originally written and pronounced “flannen,” and that It was essentially of Welsh origin, being derived from the Welsh “gwlanan,” wool, but this derivation Is considered doubtful by more modern lexicographers, who regard Its derivation from the Danish “flanel,” old' French “flanelle,” or the Italian “flanella,” as more probable. j..' . ' .
A. ® ® FEW® LITTLE W ASSURED OF SOLITUDE. do you think of this rich man providing himself with a handsome tomb to slbep in after b es dead?” “He might have put the money into a hospital, a public park or a library.” “Yes?” “People would naturally visit those places. It’s a cinch they’ll never resort to his tomb in large numbers.” Family Matters. “I shall complain to the floorwalker about you,” said the irate shopper. “I have no doubt he will agree with everything you say,” answered the saleslady, wearily. “Ah! Then he is acquainted with your shortcomings?" “He thinks he is. He’s my husband.” A Sin of Omission. “When I enlisted.” explained the doughboy with an injured air. “I read the posters that said, ‘Join the army and see the world.’ ” “Yes ” said the recruiting officer. “But after I was in,” the soldier continued, “I found that two words had been omitted on the poster.” “And what were they?’’ “ ‘On foot.’ ” —Home Sector. They Bought Variety. “What caused the Gadspurs to break off their friendly relations with the Grabcoins?” “Incompatible ancestors.” “What do you mean?” “The Gadspurs’ ancestors are the real thing, but the Grabcoin outfit was purchased in the open market.Birmingham Age-Herald. T.M. A SMALL MATTER. “Ouch! Didn’t y6u take off a piece of my. ear that time?” “Don’t be alarmed, sir; not enough to affect the hearing.” Unstability. Ambition goes a restless way, As history doth prove. When any gets where he would stay, Fate still says, “It’s your move!” Seeds and Berries. “People have various names for money. One man will speak of 50 seeds, another 'Of ,50 berries.” “Yes, and some make money produce, while others merely consume it” One Exception. “Talk Is cheap.” “Just you wait until congress begins to argue about spending the people’s money.” Might Be a Mote. Youth (eager to gain a place on the sofa)—Permit me to remove the mote, won’t you? Maiden —Thank you, I would, onlyonly Youth —Only what? Maiden —Only I see such a beam in your eye!—Cartoons. Tit for Tat. Mabel —Here comes Charlie Dubb up the walk. That boy gives me the shivers. Marie —Why don’t you give him the shake? So It Goes. “Do you remember the old fashioned triangular shawls?” “They’d look funny now.” “But the girls have ’em in a different shape, and they look nifty. Nothing Left judge—Have you anything to offer the court before sentence is passed on you? Prisoner —No, your honor; my lawyer took my last dollar. x The Result “Somebody played a joke on Jim. Sent him a barrel of what he thought were fine oysters.” “Where was the joke?” “When he went to shuck them, there weren’t any oysters there.” “Then he must have been shellshocked.” > Oh, Fudge. “I see no objection to a slush fund.” “Eh?" “If it is used to clean up the streets.” A Compliment “You used to pay me many pretty confpliments before we were married,” said Mrs. Dibbs, with a pout. “You women are certainly hard to please,” growled Mr. Dibbs. “Didn’t I just now tell you these pork chops were done to a turn?” Catty Advice. Belle —My hair is so long and thick I have the greatest difficulty in arranging it on my head. Neil —Then why don’t you take it off and fix it?
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