The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, October 22, 1937, Image 6
THE SUN, NEWBERRY, S. C„ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1937
IVewa Review of Current Events
JAPAN THE AGGRESSOR
Condemned by Roosevelt and The League, Tokio
Is Defiant . . . England and France Prod Mussolini
US. I^ulLsJlI
V M RTIMMARIZES THE WORIiD
SUMMARIZES THE WORLD’S WEEK
• Wcaura Mtmpapac Union.
D 1
America Backs Up League
|ENOUNCING Japan as the ag
gressor In the conflict in China
and accusing Tokyo of violating
both the nine-power treaty and the
Kellogg-Briand pact, the United
States government lined-up with the
League of Nations.
Secretary of State Hull issued a
Statement to this effect, asserting
that Japan’s action in China was
inconsistent with the principles
that should govern the relationships
between nations and was contrary
to the provisions of the two treaties.
It was indicated that the United
States would participate in a con
ference of the powers signatory to
the nine-power pact, which was
called for by the league.
Fifty member nations of the
league voted for the resolution
branding Japan as an invader and
treaty violator and warning of more
drastic action if Tokyo does not
mend its ways. China was assured
icf the moral support of these pow
ders, which agreed to take no action
that would weaken China’s power of
•resistance. Poland and Siam re
trained from voting.
The Aga Khan, Indian prince who
Is president of the league assembly,
sent messages to the signers of the
nine-power treaty and to Germany
and Russia, asking them to convene
Immediately.
These events followed closely
upon President Roosevelt’s startling
address at the dedication of a boule-
ivard bridge in Chicago, which
turned out to be perhaps the most
important speech he ever has made.
Reiterating his determination to
keep America out of war, he said:
“The peace, the freedom, and the
security of 90 per cent of the popu
lation of the world is being jeopard
ized by the remaining 10 per cent
who are threatening a breakdown of
all international order and law.”
He continued: "The peace-loving
nations must make a concerted ef
fort in opposition to those violations
of treaties and those ignorings of
humane instincts which today are
creating a state of international an
archy from which there is no escape
through mere isolation or neutrality.
. . . We are determined to keep
out of war, yet we cannot insure
ourselves against the disastrous ef
fects of war and the dangers of in
volvement.”
—*—
Japan Still Defiant
TN THE face of these warnings and
threats Japan was defiant. An
emergency meeting of the cabinet
was called, and spokesmen for the
foreign office and the navy declared
Tokyo’s present “pacification” pol
icy in China would be continued.
“We cannot stay our hands out of
respect for a world opinion formed
on the basis of dispatches rewritten
i>y Chinese government officials,”
said a high naval official.
Great Britain’s cabinet, studying
President Roosevelt’s speech, was
anxious to learn just how far the
United States would go in support
of action taken against aggressor
nations. The British statesmen re
membered how they themselves left
' Secretary Stimson out on a limb
when he tried to stop Japan’s sei
zure of Manchuria; and they sus
pect that the American people are
dead set against being drawn again
into foreign intrigues and quarrels.
Germany and Italy both felt that
Mr. Roosevelt’s remarks were di
rected against them as well as Ja
pan, and were rather resentful and
skeptical. The Nazis recalled Pres
ident Wilson’s failure to pacify the
world, and Mussolini’s newspaper
^declared “We fully understand and
justify Japanese efforts at expan
sion.” France and loyalist Spain
warmly approved Mr. Roosevelt’s
speech and Mr. Hull’s announce
ment.
—*_
Chinese Check Invaders
T> EPORTS from neutral observers
indicated that the stubborn re
sistance of the Chinese had brought
the Japanese advance to a virtual
standstill both in the Shanghai area
and on the northern front. Where
the Chinese troops have withdrawn
they have occupied new and strong
systems of defenses. The progress
of the Japanese in North China has
been rapid but is now slowed up,
and the Chinese are ready to meet
them on the Yellow river.
Japan’s plan to set up an autono
mous republic comprising the five
northern provinces is revealed in the
Tokyo press. The capital is to be
Peiping under its old name of
Peking.
Britain Prods Italy
G REAT BRITAIN was deter
mined that Italy should decide
promptly whether it would meet
with her and France to discuss the
withdrawal of volunteers from the
civil war in Spain. Mussolini was
so informed after Prime Minister
Chamberlain and Foreign Minister
Eden had conferred with Charles
Corbin, French ambassador to Lon
don. The Anglo-French attitude
was stiffened by President Roose
velt’s address and the league action
in the case of Japan, and England
F. D. R. DENOUNCES JAPAN
President Roosevelt delivering the
Chicago speech in which he branded
Japan as a treaty violator and lined
America up with the League of
Nations.
felt freer to concentrate on the Span
ish question. There were hints of
“decisive action” unless Mussolini
responded satisfactorily.
—*—
Special Session Likely
pONGRESS probably will be
called into special session be
tween November 8 and November
16. This was revealed by President
Roosevelt just after his return to
his Hyde Park home. He indicated
that the lawmakers would be
asked to legislate for crop control,
wage and hour standards, govern
mental reorganization, and the cre
ation of eight regional boards to
plan a program for national re
sources.
Mr. Roosevelt also made it clear
he has not abandoned his plans to
“reform” the federal courts, includ
ing the Supreme court.
As for agricultural legislation, it
appears the administration will fa
vor compulsory production control
for wheat, corn, cotton, rice and to
bacco. This was inferred from a
speech in which Secretary of Agri
culture Wallace expounded his
ever normal granary scheme to
New Yorkers. The plan, he said,
which would “give the maximum in
come to farmers at the least cost
to the federal treasury, is one which
involves high loan values and fre
quent use of compulsory controL”
—*—
Black Joined Klan; Quit
“ T DID join the Ku Klux Klan. I
later resigned. I never re
joined.”
Thus Hugo L. Black, now Asso
ciate Justice Black
of the Supreme
court, admitted to
an immense radio
audience that the
charges against him
were true.
Black asserted that
since he quit the
Klan he has had noth
ing whatever to do
with it.
He cited his rec
ord in the senate
and in private life to back up his
assertion that he was entirely free
from religious or race prejudices.
While he apparently repudiated the
principles of the Klan, he did not
explain why, on receiving a life
pass card after his election to the
senate, he said to a gathering of
Klansmen:
“I realize that I was elected by
men who believe in the principles
that I have sought to advocate and
which are the principles of this or
ganization.”
Black emphatically declared his
devotion to the principles of the
Constitution and the Bill of Rights.
“When this statement is ended,”
he concluded, "my discussion of the
question is closed.”
There was a definite note of de
fiance in Black’s address, but it is
fair to assume that the American
public was not satisfied with his ex
planation. From all parts of the
country came renewed protests
against his presence on the Supreme
court bench, and various large asso
ciations “resoluted” about it. Many
of the senators who voted to con
firm his appointment because they
accepted the assertion of his friends
that he was not a Kluxer are re
sentful at the deception practiced
on them—but what can they do
about it now?
When Justice Black took his seat,
the chamber of the Supreme court
was crowded to capacity. Albert
Levitt, an attorney, was on hand to
ask permission to file a suit seeking
to force Justice Black to show cause
why he should not be declared in
eligible to sit. The court deferred
action on the request. Another mo
tion to the same effect was filed by
Patrick H. Kelly, a Boston lawyer.
Hugo Black
Favor for Anarchists
VfERCER G. JOHNSTON, of the
Rural Electrification adminis
tration, led a delegation that ap
peared before Secretary of Labor
Perkins and received her promise
to consider a petition to cancel the
deportation warrant of two anarch
ists, Domenick Sallito and Vincent
Ferrero of Oakland, Calif. Madame
Perkins already has held up the
deportation of more than 3,000 alien
criminals and radicals on the
ground that separation from their
families would work undue hard
ships.
—*—
Blow to the C.I.O.
LpNTRY of the C. I. O. into in-
dustry in the province of On
tario, Canada, was decidedly nega
tived when the voters returned to
power the administration of Pre
mier Mitchell F. Hepburn, increas
ing its already decisive majority in
the legislature. Hepburn, head of
the Liberals, is determined to keep
Lewis’ organization and its organiz
ers out of the province if he can do
so legally. The defeated Conserva
tives, led by W. Earl Rowe, stood
for free and open labor affiliation.
Rail Strike Averted
'T'HERE will not be a nationwide
strike of railway workers. Such
a disaster was averted when the
five operating railroad brotherhoods
accepted an offer of the companies
of a fiat raise of 44 cents a day.
They and the fifteen “non-operat
ing” unions had demanded a 20 per
cent wage increase. The latter aL
ready had agreed to a raise of 40
cents a day.
For five weeks Dr. William M.
Leiserson, member of the national
mediation board, had been holding
daily conferences with representa
tives of both sides.
In announcing the terms of the
agreement, Leiserson praised the
co-operation of both parties, saying
the manner in which they receded
from their original positions was the
biggest factor in the settlement.
H. A. Enochs of Philadelphia,
chairman of the carriers’ confer
ence committee, estimated the in
crease would mean an average raise
of 6.6 per cent for the 75,000 work
ers.
A. F. of L. May Expel C.I.O.
HEN President William Green
’ ' opened the annual convention
of the American Federation of La
bor in Denver, he was not able to
present an optimis
tic picture of the fu
ture of unified labor.
The battle with John
L. Lewis and his C.
I. O. continues un
abated, and there
are “dogfights”
among the unions
all over the country,
generally concern
ing jurisdiction dis
putes or shifting of
affiliation. WUliamGreen
If the report of the federation’s ex
ecutive council is adopted, the C. L
O. unions will be finally ousted. The
council said in part: ,
“For two years we have pursued a
policy of toleration . . . All of this
has failed . . . Now the executive
council feels that the time has ar
rived when the American Federa
tion of Labor must meet the issue
in a clear-cut and positive way . . .
The issue which created the division
in the ranks of labor must be made
clear.
“In order to accomplish this pur
pose the executive council recom
mends that the convention confer
upon the executive council author
ity and power to revoke the charters
of the international unions holding
membership in the Committee for
Industrial Organization.”
Windsor Coming to U. S.
H IS honeymoon being ended, the
duke of Windsor intends to take
up the really serious things of life,
and before long he will come to the
United States for the purpose of
studying housing and working con
ditions in this country. This was
announced in Paris by U.- duke’s
secretary, who said Edward and
his duchess would first go to Ger
many for a similar survey there.
The duke’s interest in such mat
ters is no new development, for as
Prince of Wales and during his brief
reign as king-emperor Edward was
notably concerned with the social
welfare of his subjects. On many
occasions he assailed housing con
ditions of British workers.
In London it was said the gov
ernment had given reluctant per
mission for the duke’s American
trip in order to avoid an open rup
ture with him. He resented the
close restrictions placed on his
movements and, it was rumored,
had threatened to return to Eng
land.
American friends of the Windsors
think they may make their tempo
rary home at "Wakefield manor,"
near Front Royal, Va., possibly ar
riving there in November. The
manor is the estate of Mrs. Georgs
Barnett, cousin of the duchess.
Ed Howe Dies
XX/'ITH the passing of Ed Howe
’ ' of Atchison, Kan., the country
loses one of its best-known and best-
liked philosophical commentators
on current events. He was eighty-
four years old and died as he had
wished, in his sleep after a day’s
work. The “Sage of Potato Hill”
founded the Atchison Globe in 1887
and retired 37 years later. There
after he busied himself with the
publication of “Howe’s Monthly,”
which he called a “Journal of In
dignation and Education.”
Irvin S. Cobb
nn
>u>
3hlnk^about
Minding Your Business.
S ANTA MONICA, CALIF.—A
society is forming in Eng
land for the defense of the
former Edward VIII, now the
duke of Windsor and honorary
citizen of all places in this coun
try named for the Simpson fam
ily.
This society does not hope to re
store the duke to the throne. That
would not only an
noy the archbishop
of Canterbury, he al
ready having things
to annoy him, such
as Americans, but
would seriously up
set Mr. Stanley
Baldwin, who upsets
so easily that it
seems strange ihe
British never have
thought of calling
him Reversible Stan.
Besides, the throne
would be quite crowded if the duke
tried to snuggle in there along with
the present occupants.
What some of us over here think—
and that goes for many Canadians,
too—is that England has a crying
need for a society dedicated to the
broad general principle of minding
its own business and suffering the
duke and his wife to mind theirs.
We have a rough idea that both of
them can better endure long-dis
tance snubs than officious meddling
ir their private affairs. Just being
an ex-king is a hard enough job-
even if you can get it to do.
• • •
Political Afterthoughts.
M ASTER HOLLO, aged seven,
and city raised, was visiting
relatives in the country. On his
first morning he came in wearing a
worried cast of countenance.
“Mother,” he said, “I’ve been out
under the mulberry trees."
“Yes.”
“Mother, do mulberries have hard
backs and six legs and crawl around
on the ground?”
“Why, certainly not.”
‘Then, Mother," said Rollo in
stricken tones, “I feel I have made
a dreadful mistake.”
What’s the point? Oh nothing, onlj
I got to imagining what the brood
ing regrets of some members of
the administration and a majority of
the members of the ienate must be
when they recall the alacrity with
which they moved to fill a certain
recent vacancy in a certain very
high court—in fact, the highest one
we’ve got.
• • •
Hirsute ViriUty.
DARISIAN boulevardiers believe a
*■ dense arboreal effect of whiskers
is proof that the wearer is indeed
a man, without, in all cases, being
absolutely convincing about it.
We haven’t gone that far yet, but
I would like to know whence comes
this notion of appraising masculine
vigor by the amount of hair along
the breast-bone? Morbid, I calls it.
Two distinguished authors battle
when one intimates the other is
scantily adorned in that regard, for
getting that, in the immature sum
mer peltage of his kind, an author
has but a scanty growth as com
pared with the richer winter coat.
And then prying reporters ask the
new glamor prince of the movies
whether he has any fleece at all
upon his chest, their tone indicating
they rather expected to find trailing
arbutus there, or at least some shy
anemone.
Years ago in the hospital, when I
was being shorn for an operation
I remember remarking to myself
that here was the only barber who’d
ever worked on me without trying to
sell me a bottle of hair tonic.
• • •
Miss America—1937.
A T LAST some rational excuse-
in moral values, anyhow—has
been found for a so-called nations’
beauty contest.
The seventeen-year-old New Jer
sey girl chosen as “Miss America ol
1937” is not going into vaudeville,
is not going to make any persona:
appearances, is not coming to Holly
wood for a screen test, is not going
to accept a radio contract, is no
even going to write her life stor;
for publication. She will return to
school and to the normal home life
of a well-raised normal girl—that is
unless she changes her mind abou
it all.
If she shouldn’t change her mind
she stands out as probably the san
est young person of her age at pres
ent residing on this continent, or
should we say, this planet.
If she should change her mind-
well, the American populace ha
been fooled many a time and oft be
fore. Our grandfathers didn’t be
lieve human beings ever could flj
Our fathers didn’t believe anybod.'
would ever lick John L. Sullivan
Only the other day our United State
senators didn’t believe their fellow
statesman, Mr. Black of Alabama
could be a Klansman. They though
that low but persistent sound o
“Ku-Klux, Ku-Klux” was but th
voice of a modest hen.
IRVIN S. COBB
#—WNU S«rvlc«.
Floyd @£6&om£
ADVENTURERS* CLUB
HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES
OF PEOPLE LIKE YOURSELFI
“Through a Tropic Holocaust"
By FLOYD GIBBONS
Famous Headline Hunter
H ello everybody:
Well, sir, fellow adventurers, people have all kinds of
troubles in this bothersome old world of ours. You have your
troubles and I have mine. Maybe the old spinning ball would be
just TOO nice a place to live on if we didn’t have our share of
adversity to make the sweet seem sweeter and the bright seem
brighter still. Anyhow, I have a letter here from Alberta L.
Hitchins of New York City, who has had hir troubles—plenty of
' em —but who doesn’t let them bother her very much. No, sir.
Because every time she begins to think b jr troubles are too much
for her, she looks back on that horrible day in Kingston, Jamaica,
in January, 1907, and realizes that what looks like troubles to her
now don’t really deserve the name of trouble at all.
On that fateful day Mrs. Hitchins was sitting in the office of J.
Eustace Burke & Brothers, the firm for which she worked. She wasn’t
Mrs. Hitchins then—just Alberta, the assistant cashier. With her in the
office was her boss, her sister—one or two other women who worked
there, too. Outside, it was a clear, tropical, sunshiny day. From over
head came the rumble of machinery in a bottling plant on the floor above.
When the Earthquake Struck.
At 3:38 in the afternoon, a distant, ominous, rumbling sound
startled all Kingston. In the office where Alberta worked, how
ever, nobody paid any attention to these sounds. The bottling
p?ant on the floor above was always noisy. Rumblings were
nothing new to the employees of Burke & Brothers. The first
intimation that Alberta had that anything was wrong was when
she happened to look up from her work and saw that the wall in
front of her desk SEEMED TO BE BENDING OVER!
At the same time, she felt herself suddenly—inexplicably—slipping
from her chair. She jumped to her feet. From overhead a shower of
plaster fell, littering her desk. All at once, things seemed to be flying
in all directions. Then, in a moment, all was quiet again.
In the office, there was a moment of tense silence. Then Alberta
hoard the voice of her boss saying: “My God! An earthquake! San
Francisco all over again!” Alberta took a quick look around the of-
A Tottering Wall Fell With a Crash.
flee. There were five people in it. Miraculously, not one of them was
injured. Alberta heaved a sigh of relief—too soon. At that moment the
trembling started all over again.
From outside came the sound of a piercing shriek. A woman
in the next building! Alberta started toward the door—felt some
one grab her by the arm. It was her sister. “Don’t go out
there,” her sister cried. A tottering wall fell with a crash. The
woman’s voice was stilled.
Terrible Scenes in the Streets.
The boss started to gather up the company’s books and put them
in the safe. The girls turned to and helped. When that was finished,
Alberta and her sister made their way out to the street and started to
head for home, down by the waterfront.
The town was a shambles. Buildings were down everywhere. Walls
were down—streets a mass of wreckage—debris strewn everywhere.
Men, women, children—even animals—were stretched out on the pave
ment, dead or frightfully injured. Everywhere, cries for help. People
pinned under falling buildings—half buried in the wreckage—shouted
pathetic appeals for aid that almost drove Alberta and her sister mad
with pity.
And to add to the horror, fire broke out—everywhere—and many who
could otherwise have been saved had to be abandoned by the rescuers
to a living death in the flames.
It was the most harrowing sight two girls had ever seen. They
struggled home to find their mother and younger sister alive, but
frightfully Injured. They had just been dug out from under the
wreckage of what had been their home.
Earthquake shocks were still coming at intervals. Alberta and
her sister cast about for medical aid for their mother and the little
girl. The hospital was miles away—and in ruins. The only safe place
left was the sea. They took them aboard a vessel anchored in the har
bor and put them in care of the ship’s doctor.
There were hundreds of other people on that boat—hundreds of
refugees from the stricken city. All afternoon they straggled aboard.
Doctors—volunteer nurses came from the town. They turned that boat
into a hospital ship for the care of the injured.
Tragedies in a Night of Horrors.
Night came—a night that transformed the city into a red inferno
rimmed by the cosmic blackness. Fire flamed up anew in a hundred
different quarters. Buildings tottered. Walls crumbled. The shrieks
of the victims continued all thrdbgh the night. Dogs howled in the streets.
Fanatics sang wildly. People went insane for no other reason than that
which they had seen—and heard.
Terrible scenes were enacted in those grim hours. A father
and son were trapped between two walls of a fallen building.
Rescuers were striving to get to them. They were almost free,
when flame shot through the building, driving the rescuers back.
The trapped man’s business partner had just time to pass his
hand through a hole in the wall—give his friend a last handshake
before the flames were upon him and he had to dash back, the
cries of his associate and the boy still ringing in his ears.
In the heartrending scenes that went on through that terrible night,
Alberta almost lost her mind. Long before it was over, she was a wom
an moving in a daze. Somehow she lived through it—somehow kept
her sanity. And now—
Now Alberta is married. As the mother of three children she has
responsibilities—sometimes troubles. But when she has troubles, she
looks back at that awful January day in Kingston and wonders what
the people who bled and died in that holocaust would think of her
feeble little woes.
©—WNU Service.
Monument to the Sea Gull
In Salt Lake City a granite col
umn about sixteen feet high stands
on a granite pedestal in a basin
thirty feet in diameter. The column
supports a granite ball upon which
two bronze-gilt gulls are represent
ed as alighting gently. The monu
ment commemorates the saving by
gulls of the pioneers of Utah, in
1B48, from hordes of grasshoppers
that threatened to devour every leaf
and blade of their fields. The mon
ument bears the inscription: “Sea
Gull Monument. Erected in Grate
ful Remembrance of the Mercy of
God to the Mormon Pioneers.”
Why It Is a “Bridewell”
Long ago a hospital was built in
London on the site of a former royal
palace over a medicinal spring
known as St. Bride’s Water. This
was contracted to Bridewell. After
the Reformation, according to Lon
don Answers Magazine, King Ed
ward VI chartered the London hos
pitals to different work. Christ’s
hospital was devoted to the educa
tion of the young, St. Thomas’ to the
cure of the sick, and Bridewell was
turned into a penitentiary for un
ruly apprentices and vagrants. Thus
“Bridewell" gradually slipped into
use as a general name for prisons
1
Apple Butter and Ice Cream.—
Try a scoop of vanilla ice cream,
topped with a spoonful of rich,
brown apple butter.
• • •
Lattice-Topped Fies.—Fruit and'
berry pies with lattice-style tops:
require less baking time than the'
regular full-crust toppers.
* • •
A Delight for the Children.—!
Next time your children want a
party, cook a cornstarch custard
and fill cones. Alternate every
spoonful or so with currant jelly
and finish with jelly on top.
• • •
Orange Fritters.—Separate two
large navel oranges into sections.
Dip sections in batter and fry in
deep fat. Serve as accompaniment
to roast lamb or braised pork
chops.
• • •
To Wash Curtains.—Lace cur
tains before being washed for the
first time should be soaked for an
hour or two in cold water to which
two tablespoons of table salt havo
been added. This removes dress
ing in curtains and makes them
much easier to launder.
WNU Service.
Beware Coughs
from common colds
That Hang On
Ho matter how many medicines
you have tried for your cough, chest
cold, or bronchial irritation, you can
get relief now with Creomulskm.
Serious trouble may be brewing and
you cannot afford to take a chance
with any remedy less potent than
Creomulsion, which goes right to
the seat of the trouble and aids na
ture to soothe and heal the Inflamed
mucous membranes and to loosen
and expel the germ-laden phlegm.
Even if other remedies have failed,
don’t be discouraged, try Creomul
sion. Your druggist Is authorized to
refund your money if you are not
thoroughly satisfied with the bene
fits obtained from the very first
bottle. Creomulsion Is one word—sot
two, and It has no hyphen in it.
Ask for It plainly, see that the name
on the bottle Is Creomulston. and
Ton’ll get the genuine product and
the relief you want. (AdvJ
HOW OFTEN
CAN YOU KISS AND
MAKE UP?
■J7®W 1
JP why a wife should turn from a
pleasant unmpanlon Into a shrew
Cor one whole week In •very month.
Yon can say “I’m sort” and
marriace than after. If you’re wise
and if you want to hold your hue-
band, you won't be a three-quarter
For three generations one woman
has told another how to go “smlV-
ins through" with Lydia E. Fink-
ham's Vegetable Compound. It
helps Nature tone up the system.
frhua Utaw^nlng fWtm
the functional disorders which
' women must endure In the three
ordeals of life: L Turning from
girlhood to womanhood. X Pre
paring ftar motherhood. 3. Ap
proaching "middle age.”
Don’t be a three-quarter wife;
take LYDIA E. PINKHAM8
VEGETABLE COMPOUND and
Oo ‘‘Smiling Through."
Others’ Excellences
We should allow others’ ex
cellences, to preserve a modest
opinion of our own.
rr's “ fLUbe/i- Fina* LARGEST
MOROLINE “s"
SHOW-WHITE PETROLEUM JELLY
Laugh Each Day
No day is more wasted than one
in which we have not laughed.—
Chamfort.
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