Newspaper Page Text
The King Age Is Gone. §
Two Photographs from Russia, |
The News Is in Them.
Misinformation Abundant. :
e By Arthur Brisbane -
TRMARD SHAW'S latest ar-
B ticle on the war, its causes
and effects proves that this
Irtwh Britisher sees the world, In
efuMing his own corner of it, more
clearly than other men. With his
clear vision he combines a power
of expression that no living writer
equals. Compare his present pow
erful writings, for Instance, with
Rudyard Kipting's few feeble ef
forts, and you see what staying
power Bhaw possesses as compared
with other men,
For those who believe in govern
ernment by a republic there is deep
imterest m a few paragraphs by
Shaw making clear the fact that
this world, which was repobfican
only in spots when the war began,
and royafist almost evervwhere, is
now royolist only in spots, feeble
Wpots at that, and republican, or
rewotutionary almost evervwhere,
Two great facts shoutd be horne
I mind by those that would under
stand what bas happemed in the
Inst four years, and speculate wise-
Iy on %}mhfib eoming.
»OT ANY BUT PLU
TOCRACY LOST THIS WAR.
MONARCHIRS ARE DICAD, AS
GOVERNING FORCES,
M & worth while to reprint and
emphasize Shaw’s brief statement
Not to follow what he savs in his
present briMant series of articles
& to negleot opportunfty. Says
Simw: “The position of republican
fem ctmnged greatly in Burope m
the last years of the war. and even
in fts lst hours When the Tsar
dom fell! all the thrones rocked”
When The Hohenzollerns and
Hapsburgs fell Europe changed from
a continent in which one important
republic and a few tolerated toy
ones were struggling to maintain a
not highly respected existersee amid
A host of contemptnous kingdoms,
menaced by legitimist pretenders
within and hostile courts without,
to a continent in which & handfu!
of minor rovalties. mostty the poor
relatives of the deposed emperors,
held on timidly to a few outlying
little thrones, ditigently saving
money for the inevitable day when
they, too, must pack up and face
the world as common citizens. The
British throne alone held steady,
not without earnest professions
that it was only “a crowned re
public”™ after all, being able to sup
port that plea by pointimg to the
#tendy growth of all the worst fea
tures as Franeh and American res
publicanism M its national lfe
The change is so enormous and
the circumstances of it so catas
trophic that Europe has not assimi
lated it yot.
Our small boys read about the
Stone Age. Bronze Age, Iron Age,
and are told that it is impossible
0 say Just when one age ended
and the other hegan. They over
apped -some men evem ¥yet are
Niving In the Stone Age.
The men of today may say truly
thmt they saw the death of the
King Age
That this country, its setf-satis
fled newspaper writers and states
men may have seriously misunder
sood and underestimated the work
that is going on in Russia is indl
oated by two Russian photographs
published in The New York Times
Ome shows Russian fighters now
ruimg Russia and recently pursu
mg Allled troops, including owr
own. through the swamps in the
north. The Times puts this line
under the photograph:
"Mower of the Bolshevist army,
all well armed, many of them vel.
eran troops of the old Russian re.
gime. marching through the streets
of Moscow
T™he photograph s so different
from the usua! pictures of Russian
troops in old days that veu look at
it m wonder
U'nder the Czar. troop photo
graphs showed men marching sul.
lenly and obediently to be shot
not knowing why., The Times pho
tograph of Bolshevist troops showe
men alert, intelligent. Keenly in
terested
The fuves are those of men that
know why they are fighting, WANT
o fght, and mean to win You can
magine sueh faces in the Revoly
tionary Army of France that eap
ris vitery everyvwhere —and gave
Napoleon his peputation when he
got hold of them
1?7 the HBoish t have many
such troops as The Times photos
Hraph showe loos out for such an
Army It will not be beaten easlly
diven the right leaders it will not
Be bßeaten at all-as long as It stays
Al home and fAghts for home
Another photograph. puablished by
The Times carries this ine be
low it
Muscovite boys and Rirle are
MuEht by the Hoisheviki In free
Slasnes of instruction to Bandle the
tifle skillfuily as a requirement for
Eradustion
The photogrs two long
lines of boye and wirls of (he high
Shonl ae one sow Kneeling the
meand standing back of n Al
have rifles leseled and evidently
Ehow how 0 hold and use ‘hem
The faces are voncentrated leen
fuli of foree The voung women
eapecially hase 4 ook that seems to
If you have any difficulty In buy
ing Hearst's Sunday American any
where in the South, notify Circula
tion Manager Hearst's Sunday Amer
fcan, Atlanta, Ga.
VOL. V. NO. 45
IKng of Hejaz Wants to Rule All
Non-Turk Zone in Asia
Minor.
‘ ”
‘Merety Matter of Pleasantry,
Say Delegates After Hearing
> 1
l Prince’s Plan.
BY ROBERT J. PREW.
PARIS, Feb. 156.—The mythical
Arabian empire outlined to the big
five by Prince Feisal interjected the
first comic note that hitherto had
been lacking in the solemn delibera
tions of the world makers sitting in
conference here
Prince Feisal, backed by his trusty
henchman, Rustem Haidar, gravely
informed the conferees that the King
of the Hejaz would be titular ruler of
the whole non-Turkish territory in
Asia Minor
Excepting for the British posses |
sion at Aden, this new phantom em
pire would comprise, according !ni
Prince Feisal's grand scheme, all of
the land south of a line running from
the Gulf of Alexandretta to Diarbeker
and the Persian Gulf. It would in
chude Kurdestan, Mesopotamia, Syria,
Arabia proper, Yemen and soch cities
a= Aleppo, Damascus and Bagdad, as
well as Medina, capital of Hejaz
The diplomats who were asked
about Prince Feisal's plan said it w:n.-‘
“merely a little pleasantry,’ ltt(‘,\ll.\‘-i'
in any case the King of Hejaz could
not claim to rule this vast empire asl
a despot, but was ready to ailow it to)
be administered by Great Britain :m.l!
France under a mandate from the
league of nations
Unfortunately for these imperial
plans, the awkward fact piotrudes
that the Emir is only a paid vassal of
England, that country giving him a
salary during the war, 50 times.the
smount of money piaid to the Presi
dent of the ['nited Staies P,npzla.ld\l
co-operation with Hejaz cost ner §1
100,000 monthly, the money going to
the King and his son while $525,000
went into the purse of Prince Feisal
who led the desert army which cut
the communications of the retreating
Turke during General Allenby's final
advance in Palestine
The King's scrvices were pald for
with Pritish gold. but he apparently
feels that justice will not he done
everything in the world uniess the
conference united all of the Arabs un
der his one scepter, even tnough Brit
sh and Frenel administrators run
the territory they have occupisd
.s »
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* 4
League of Nations Must
Be More Than Merely
A Pledge, Says Shaw
Must Set Up a Common Legislature and Com
mon Tribunal for World.
BY G. BERNARD SHAW.
tCopyright, 1819, by Star Company.)
LONDON, Feb. 15.—There must be much more than
mere pledges between the constitoents of the League of
Natioms. They must form a super-national legislature,
and set up a super-national tribunal, exactly as the
United States had to set up a super-state legislature
and a super-state tribunal.
To put it in more intimate terms, they must have,
for affairs wider than their national affairs, a common
legislature and a common tribumal.
Now people can not have a eommon legislature and
a common court of justice unless they have common
ideas of right and wrong, law and justice. They must
have a common language, however its dialects may vary
from English to French and from German to Swedish.
CERTAIN NATIONS TO BE BARRED.
They may have half a dozen different words for
justice, or for wife, or for God, or for honor, or for hu
manity; but unless the different words mean pretty
nearly the same thing, no vommoA legislature or trib
unal is possible.
Attempts at common action between people who
believe in fifty gods, and make human sacrifices to
them, and people who believe in one god or in no god,
will not work.
People to whom women are mere breeding cattle,
to be bought by the dozen if a man can afford so many,
'will not get on with people to whom women are wives
and mothers, in the Western sense.
Nations on whose territory it is an offense punish
able by torture and death for a laborer to eriteise the
Government can have nothing in common politically
with nations in which every man has a vote, and may
vituperate his rulers with tongue and pen to his heart’s
content. Nations which can not intermarry without a
Fstrnng sense of miscegenation will bardly arrive at laws
‘ur verdiets by the same proeess of reasoning.
; The difficulty, then, in forming a League of Nations
i not to get every nation into it, but to keep the in
compatible nations out of it. Twelye vears ago the most
zealous elaimant for admission to a League of Nations
would have been the Czar of Russia, whose example
would immediately have been followed by the Kmpress
‘of China and possibly the Lama of Thibet.
Their admission would have produeed either com
plete paralysis of the League or else such a reduetion
to absurdity as oceurred in the Sonthern States of
America after the Civil War, when the American erank
was allowed to foree heterogencous white and black leg
islation and justiee on the emaneipated Slave States,
LABOR MUST BE DEVELOPED.
The moment it is recognized that the League must
he founded on a basis of common ideas, common insti-!
tutions, common level of eivilization, and. generally and |
roughly, a common philosophy of life, it becomes appar ‘
ent, first, that the materials for a League of which the
British Empire and the United States are to be con
stituents are to be found between the Carpathians and
the Rocky Mountains, and not further afield.
Its constituents must he either republies or consti
tutional monarchies in which the monarch has muech|
less personal power than an American President \\'uuhli
have if he were eleeted for life. !
It must have a well developed labor movement, So :
cralist movement, and scientific movement, And it
wottld have to he prepared for the formation of nlhvr?
Leagues of Nations in the vellow world, the Indian]
world, perhaps in the Slav world, and the Spanish-In i
dian world, l
Human political society is in solution; and it willl
not erystallize into one solid lamp for a long time ;\M,}
The possibility of putting an end to war lies not |
in waiting for the one solid lump, but in the first I,c-w.uu-'
being so fomidable, and set us hope, so well intentioned |
that no foreign League either dare or would :lHu-mM.f
stich a monstrous and perilous enterprise as a war on iti
wotld be,
LEAGUE NECESSARY TO PEACE. l
With the ground of speculation thus cleared, we!
can see quite plainly where we must begin, |
Without a League between the United States|
Continued on Paae 2. Column ! |
~ SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1919,
Famous British Writer Explains
~ His Aims in Articles Written
! for The Sunday American.
’ AN O ETTER
“War Over, but Mr. Hearst Ap
pears To Be the Only Editor
"
Who Knows It.
(By Universal Service.)
LONDON, Feb. 11.—The Daily
News prints the following open let
ter from Bernard Shaw: ‘
The London correspondent of
The New York Tribune writes to
me as follows:
“l have received the following
cable from the managing editor of
The New York Tribune:
“*Hearst's papers heavily display
a series of George Bernard Shaw
articles as unmasking English plot
to destroy Germany. Does Shaw
know this stuff is being used as
anti-English and pro-German prop
aganda? Please ask him.’ ‘
“I shall be glad to hear from you |
if there are any observations vou
would care to make on the mat- |
ter.” 1
I bave replied to The New York i
Tribune as follows: |
“My articles were written to sup- |
port President Wilson and show the
urgent need for a league of na
tions and the limits within which it |
is practicable, |
“They were anxiously scanned by ‘
the British censorship and passed
by it. Mr. Hearst got them because
he was intelligent enough to ask for
them.”
There is no “unmasking” in the
matter. In 1914 | told the truth
about the war, as far as it was ad
visable in view of the need for re- !
cruiting, in the columns of The |
New York Times ‘
I was hysterically contradicted
by all the dupes and ignoramuses
who were hampering their own side
by their boyish romances. and I
was overwhelmingly confirmed. first
by Mr. Winston Churchill on be
half of the British navy, and by
Lord Haldane on behalf of the
British army, both forces having
been accused of unpreparedness |
fwhich meant treachery to France) i
by the rpmancers, then by the |
Harmsworth press and the National |
Review printing their anti-Ger- ;
man articles with a triumphant |
shout of “we told you so.” later on ‘
by the publication of official docu
ments brought to light by the war
in Brussels, again by the crash of
the (Czarist regime in Russia and
finally by the election speeches of
Mr. Asquith and the complete dis
closure by lord Haldane on the
morrow of the polling day
Had 1 never written a word, the
truth would still he naked to all
Furope. The truth is not discredit
able, What was done was inevitable
under the circumstances, If it were
otherwise, there would be no need
for a league of nations to alter the
elreumstances and President Wil
son would be in Europe on a fool's
errand
The popular romantie fictions
ahout the war are now not only une.
necessary and ridienlous, hut highly
mischievous, for nothing solid ean
he achieved at Versallles until all
the ecarde are on the table and all
idle recrimination is dropped
I do not understand the alusions
to anti-Englisl ind pro-German
propaganda The war iz over, the
Allles have won German Kaiserism
and German militarism are over
thrown and the German people are
starving and helpless
“1 assumed that the news had
reached Ameriea Am [ to believe
that it has reached Mr. Hearst only
and that all the ther newspaper
magnutes are still dreading Ger
man victory?
But even If 1 414 bhelleve It (and
nobody knows betetr than I that
Rip Van Winkle has left many de.
scendants n the United States)
I should not bhase my article on he
lated popular delvglons instead of
on my own corefully verified know!
AR I did ot gain the ear of
Ameriea by that cany method and
I have no intention of changing my
habite I " time of ) rv'
T may add that | am not respon
sible for Mr. Hearst's headlines (if
they archis), but if they are more
ensational than my own T shall
be surprised
M artiele ire meant ta be read
When there x trouhle comens al
wuve from people who do not read
them
v, » v
Silent Police Force
y ’
Suceeeds in Kansas
A IS ' KAN Feh 15 ™ha
! wr * hnd h ont e . foros
Mavor rEe Kroek v hin LT i
drens ta ty comn nn Fhe mavor
saidd he ha amn oned some twenty
preminent fiaens 1o do welfare work
BRIMONE Young people, And, as # pesult
much good has been aceomplished e
aalied the comminsioner to approve the
plan and stend its seape
POG DILEVES OFF jRESCEER
P W i TEXA e 16 ™
Vit f her pet dog Buster, cost the
o Al ' Ginehes 11 years old
L ] d na ght fire from A h
¢ 6 B atid when she ran sereaming
s ¢ 3 Huster, thinking he was pro
tecting h et r e it and drove off a
neinhbor who -43 ome 1o aasist her
A 0 ter frgm the hurns
HENRY FORD
The famous manufacturer and sociologist has
Just given a remarkable interview at his California
winter home.
(Photographs by International.)
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Saint Brice Points OQut
The Value of Ukrainia
By SAINT BRJiSE..
PARIS, Feb. 8.-Bhall we abandon
the Ukraine to the Germans?
In taking up the Polish question,
the council of the great powers sus
pended the Czecho-Polish litigation
over Upper Silesia before sending &
commission of inquiry into Poland,
Likewise in the case of Roumania, the
dispateh of a commission was preced
ed by a debate of the Serbo- Rouma
nlan quarrel over the Banat of Te
mesvar.
But ecomplete silence has been
maintained in the conversations re
garding the disputes between Rou
mania, Polund and the Ukraine. Pos.
sibly these differences are regarded as
negligible. But the Ukraine disputes
with the Banat mounarchy, the whole
of th eßukowina for centuries of wars
have been fought with Poland over
territories equal to one-haif of France,
comprising & goodly portion of Gall.
cla, Volhynia and the provinces of
Grodno and Viina,
If a frontier is not drawn In these
reglons —though it may be highly ar.
titictal--At means wur without end and
an admirable opportunity for Ger
many's hopes of revenge
This question must be settled, and
settled quickly. It will be asserted
undoubtedly that the Ukraine is part
of Russia and us such shogld be rep.
resented at the conference on Princes
Island, Here wore perceived a fun.
darental error In an arrangement
which sacrifices tangible realition toa
chimerienl hope of reconstituting by »
single move anclent Russia. os it 1t
were possible to revive a corpse, It
would be possible to understand the
abandonment of the Ukraine if that
country were merged in the immense
Russian chaos. But such is not the
cane. The Ukraine has organisation,
an army and a government, and what
It more, a democratic government,
which is imploring Allled help. Why
do these nppeals for our ald remain
unanswered ?
The prosent government of the k.
raine Is composed of leaders of the
anclent Rada, presided over by M
Rienevitehuko. The body of men con.
ducted Ukrainia's affairs even as far
buck ax the somber days of o sum-.
mer of 1917, when Kerensky's weak.
ndss prepared the Russian collapse,
The Kiev government in ihose days
enjoyod %cfl favor of the Pntente
powers, ped to suve Russla
Unfortunately. things happened
(Copyrignt, 1913, by the
Gao! an Company.)
otherwise. The Russian army seat
tered, deserted and retreated in dis
order. The Ukraine was caught be
tween, the Germans and the Bol
sheviki, Vinitchenko asked German
help. Could he have done otherwise?
What could he expect from the Fn
tente? He is the less to blame be
cause when Eichhorn's troops entered
the Rada he fought back, but was
Ewept out and replaced by the auto
cratic power of SBkorpadski,
When Germany's star waned, the
Ukrainian patriotis began to lift their
heads. They recommenced the strug
gle which resulted in the overthrow
of Skorpudski and in the restoration
of the Rada directornte. The commis
slons favored a reconcillation hetween
the Ukraine and the Entente, but the
affalr was complicated by a elash bhe
tween Ukrainian and Allied troops at
Odessa last Christmas,
The commissioners of that event
are still veiled in mystery. It i per
fectly clear, however, that deplorable
Intrigus s were used to exaggerate the
| affair
The Ukrainian government is ac
cused of playving the Holshevist game
and opposing the regeneration of
Russin. The truth les elsewhere. The
Ukrainians are democrats, desiring to
be rid of the large lunded lords, They
are wuspicious of men like Donikin,
Kolohak and Drassnov, whom the Bn
tente ix vainly teying to galvanse into
re-establishing the old regime,
So little are the Ukrainlans the
friends of the Bolsheviki that they re.
contly recaptured Kharkov and then
Ekaterinsiny
Meanwhile, the Poles invaded the
western districts of the Ukraine and,
caupht between the Holsheviki and
the Poles, the Ukrainians must throw
themaelves Into Germany's arms un
lewn the Allles come to their rescus,
Nhall we thus abandon a nation of
40,000,000 mhabitants, a nation con
stituting the granary of Hurope?
Asks $1,500 a Finger
In an Odd Lawsuit
(By International News Bervies.)
UNIONTOWN, PFA., Fob 15 D"lrm
hundred dollars a finger in ask ..’
Gsorge W, Mitehell in & damage suit
against William and George Barton, who
he alleges compelled him o 'ld”n n A
Tored the Jems of Bemmre of bots henks
an n result, a@m t
men held his &tfi-‘%
culution and oausing
freves 3
THIS EDITION CONSISTS OPF
The Following Sections:
t—Late Nows, s—-Magazine.
2-~Editorial, City Life, 4—Comies.
Soclety, Sports, Want
Ads.
BE SURE YOU GET THEM ALL.
PRICE SEVEN CENTS.
Great Manufacturer Tells Youth
l That Money Is Only a Means
* .
~ for Beneficial Creation,
‘.
Next Thing to Do Here 1s B
Equalize 3 Arts, Agricufture,
Transportation, Manufactumg,
- By OTHEMAN STEVENS.
(Copyright, 1919, by The Los Angeled
Examiner)
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 15— Henmg
Ford, one of the richest men of the
nation, and one of the most sincersly
and widely democratic, was asked as
his winter home at Altadena if he des
sired to be President, and what he dW
with his constantly increasing tre
mendous income
Mr. Ford in about fifteen years has
changed his station from that of a
good, devoted mechanic to not only an
immensely wealthy man, bat a pro
foundly ethical! thinker. He has done
|
some idealistic things which may have
caused a smile of kindly derision by
the superficial, but which has created
deep confidence In his sanctity of pure
pose
He has done other things of world
import, notably in his social economie
fdeas as applied to laber, which in
many minds places him on the apex
of value to a vexed world, and poses
his method as a possible solution te
the most intricate problem which
faces humanityt —he future relations
of the top, middle and lower strata
of soclety
. Lately Arthur Brishane in a para
graph sald a “political dreamer” had
announced that Mr. Ford was proba
bly President Wilson's cholce for
President.
Never Thought of Presidency.
. "The presidency” 1 give you 1
word | never thought of it Thia
the first time such an idea has been
presented to me
“And it is a subject on which ne
man could or should exvress himsei
unles it assume some definite phase.
“It is not for any American to sag
he wants to he President; it is entire
ly for other~
“T'll do any blooming thing n e
world that will give me an opportan.
ty to be good
“Everyone should have ambithon,
bat no one should ever seek for fame:
that is rminous
No man who fastens his eves o
fame or the dollar ever arrives any
where
Youth Should Spend Resources.
“1 can say truthfully that [ never
have sought fame, nor dollars.
“1 have never tried to save
and 1 do not believe in \mnm
BAVINE Mmoney
*Youth should spend its refiOurcss
In carrying out its ideas, in efuee
tion. in character formation
“Money? Yes 1 make a grent deafl,
I have a very !arge Income,
“Tut 1 spend no more on myssit
than any man in my employ
“I'm not throwing stones at thows
who live diffarently ;. that's thelr basl.
1 eas
Tut my ideas are different, snd §
have to live them
Money with me merely means &
wny to do something more
Tve just put §7.000.000 in & trastor
fartory. that will employ 4000 man
and turm out 210 tractors a dap®
“Put 17.000 208 {sn't much for Yo
Mr. Ford,” said the reporter. "“Whet
else have vou in mind for your swr
plus that is growing so rapldiy™
Another tractor factory on T
Hudson: another 'n Ontario, Conada,
and we are figuring on building
other plant and transporting R hz
Iy to Mexieo and ostablishing & fase
tory there
These will take say something
like twenty-odd milflons more; and
then wherever 1 ean find a suitable
wWaler powes we shall put In more
tractor factories
When that tracter dea = com
pletely established, we shall bhave
others: ro matter how many mis
: s a man has coming In he A 0
always find a place for them that
will develop tustry. oreate somes
thing and give employment
Fverything of this nature, bear
in mind, must not he on the old
time basi of exploitation of eapl
ta! and labsor and the public, but oan
that of oint serviees and mutosl ads
vantage
Decrease Prices and Increase Pay,
You may call this dea of ul":
money my fad Perhaps It s, bat
s all vitally » cusity W me o &
what 1 am deing
My mones mes in st and B
goes out fast nto new forms of e
Auntires
That's my reason for extabiiving
A Daper
That will contain plans and e
iflcation ' "t Ry One ln--
sure-shot busine s tivition,
| Nut my ? cus policy may e
[ Bit at varliance with the ;M
Al view
L "My hellef = te decrease prild
proportion as business grows, sl
inerense the pavesi
\ While no BORing = A *
my e ! that the worvd b
’n.n ning * he partnersivip z
| It is like that in thme ook
o cn will disappenr and what
I\., moemplover and employes Wil
e exist as saoh, bt will son
i part ners
Cirganisation " 2 ‘\""M’.’.
) ntimiad wm Pang 1, Colomhs,