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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (June 17, 1923)
Must Get Back to Work, Says Lloyd George If Reparations Ever to Be Paid, Allies Must Return to Business, Declares Ex-Premier. (Continued From Page One.) consideration of the capacity of Ger many to pay to an Impartial tribunal. It offpra to place at the disposal of this body all material which is neces sary to enable It to arrive at a just conclusion. It proceeds to suggest that all further discussion on the subjects at issue between the parties should take Place at a conference rather than by interchange of notes. How can any unprejudiced person refuse to recog nize the essential reasonableness of this part of the offer? It is common ground that the annuities Imposed upon Germany in May, 1921, demand modification. Even M. Poincare pro ceeds on that assumption. There is, therefore, a most important and high ly difficult figure to be ascertained. What annuity can Germany pay? And when will she be in a position to pay? France Silent. Is It unreasonable to propose that this question, W’hich Involves most searching examination Into German assets, should be referred to a tri bunal which would be capable of giv ing it calm and Judicial consideration? And what objection can there be to discussing the matter at a conference where Germany as well as all the lilies would be represented? If this were a business or trade dispute, these two proposals would be regard ed as eminently sensible and fair, and the party that rejected them would be condemned by public opinion. What are the objections to an ac ceptance formulated by the French press? Up to the date of writing this article the French government has not officially expressed its views on the German note. But one may safely assume from past experience that the Parisian journalists consult ed Quai d'Orsay before writing their :ritieal articles. The first Is that the French govern ment will discuss no proposals em mating from Germany until the lat :er withdraws its passive resistance V to the French and Belgian exploita tion of the Ruhr. What does this exactly Biean? If it imports—as a preliminary condition Jo a conference or consideration of terms—an acquies cence by Germany in the occupation and exploitation by France and Bel gium "f the Ruhr valley until repara tions are fully paid, then the position is hopeless. No Force to Resist. A t -rman government may submit to such an occupation because it has no force at its command to offer re si.-'ance. But no German government can give assent to such an invasion of its territories. A peace signed on such terms would be inevitably re pudiated at the first favorable op portunity. Meanwhile, there would oe constant friction and trouble tn the Ruhr I can hardly believe that this is what the French government mean to insist upon, in spite of an article in Le Temps, which bears that In terpretation. But they may only ask that whilst terms are being discussed, an armistice shall be concluded, the first condition of which will be that all obstacles now Interposed In the way of supplying France, Belgium and Italy with reparation coal and coke shall be withdrawn. An armistice on those terms ought not to be dif ficult to arrange, especially if the French and Belgian authorities with Irew the ban they have placed on •xport of Ruhr products to unoc cupied parts of Germany. Unless the terms are mutually ac commodating. I surmise that the Ger man government will experience In aurmountable difficulty In persuading the stubborn miners and railway op eratives of the Ruhr to assist in furnishing to France the products of their labor which are denied to their own fellow countrymen. It Is too readily taken for granted that the Ruhr workmen will obey any behest that comes from Berlin. Governments In Germany have ceased to receive that kind of obedience. Result of Disaster. It Is ons of the Indirect conse quences of great disaster that the de crees of Wilhelmstra.sss no longer commend the respect which was at tached to them In prewar days. Btill, a conference at which all the interests concerned were represented would ex perlence no difficulty In fixing up stipulations which would make 1t pos sible for France to enter a conference on reparations without any suspicion being attached to her ministers that they had lowered the national flag in entering the room. I trust that good sense w-ill prevail over temper and exaggerated pride—on both sides Should this preliminary point or honor b* disposed of, then what re mains? The fixation of annuities and guarantees for their payment. What are the objection* to accepting the method put forward in the German note for these two questions? It Is not the German method—it 1* the American method adopted hy the German government; a conference with an Impartial tribunal. If the conference falls, I know of no other way except to resort to blind force. It Is objected that the treaty of Versailles has already provided such a tribunal in the reparations com mission for the specific purpose of ldjudlc.itlng upon Germany'* llabll ty and Germany’s capacity, and that o set up another for exactly the same purpose would be to supersede that treaty. There are two answer* to this contention. Balance ('hanged. The first la that the reparations commission, as at present constituted. Is not the body to which Germany agreed to refer these questions so vital to her existence. It Is not the body which Britain and the other allies contemplated. The withdrawal of America from the commission—af ter Germany had already signed the treaty—has completely changed the balance, and therefore the character, of thl* tribunal. No man In his senses can pretent that In It* mutil ated form It I* either Impartial In It* composition or Judicial In It* methods. Mr. Poincare doe* not con ceal tha fact that the French gov qmment Issues order* to It* repre sentatives on that "Judicial" body. Th# chairman Is an eminent French Ceputjr Kbo bM *u4 *141 plays, a. conspicuous and Influential part In French politics, and is looking forward to pursuing his career as a politician, whithersoever It may lead. Ever since he has been chairman he has delivered speeches in public de nouncing the part of whose case he Is supposed to be the chief Judge. All hts colleagues represent powers who have a direct pecuniary Inter est In the result of their decisions. Moderate Proposal. The only disinterested power haa retired from the commission. The American proposal Is very moderate. It Implies restoration of the treaty by introducing America to the body that settles reparations. If France objects to the appointment of a separate commission, why should it noj be agreed between the allies that '.Heir representatives shall be the men who now constitute the repara tions commission? To thess the American government could add its nominee. Germany has the right under the treaty to present her case. The whole question of capacity could then be gone Into In the light of experience acquired during the last four years, and a settlement could thus be affected on a sound basis. Such a settlement would have a much better chance of being workable, and therefore more durable, than terms imposed by force on people who only accept under duress. But whatever the French view may be of the suggested annuities or guarantees, or of an impartial commls sion, It is inconceivable that they should reject a conference. It Is the surest road to reparation. At Spa the method of pelting a bewildered reich with demand notes was for a time abandoned and that of a con ference at the same table was sub stituted. The results were admirable. The process of disarmament made immediate strides towards satisfac tory completion, and coal deliveries became fuller and steadier. Conferee* Scattered. At Cannes last year the allies again started to confer with the German ministers. All those who were pres ent at those discussions—without ex ception—admit that satisfactory prog rcss was being made towards a com prehensive settlement when the con ferees were scattered by a bomb. It is too early yet to estimate the loss which enured to Europe through that explosion. Rut all idea of discussion between parties has since been loftily and petulantly dismissed as an ex hibttion of pernicious weakness. What has been substituted for it? For 12 months we had a rather ridiculous display of feather rattling about the farmyard to inspire terror. Threaten ing speeches full of ominous hints of impending action were delivered at intervals in different parts of France. These produced nothing but Increased confusion and incapacity to pay. Every speech rt»kFrance milliards in post poned reparations. French opinion not unnaturally Insisted on some ac tion being taken. Hence this rash Invasion. At Cannes a two year moratorium would have been accepted as settle ment. Already a year and a half of that period would by now have elapsed. German finances would, under strict allied supervision, which was conceded, by now have been re stored to soundness—the mark would have been stabilized and a loan could have been negotiated which would have provided the allies with sub stantial sums toward lightening the burden* they are all bearing. Con fidence would have been restored In Europe and for the first time there would have h«^n real peace. One can see what the alternative has pro duced. Germany Can’t Pay. Whatever the final terms may he. Germany is not In a position to psv what It was able to offer then. These IS months have been devoted to as siduously reducing German capacity to pay allied debts and the value of German security for such payment. At Cannes the mark stood st 770 to the pound sterling. It now stands at 400,000. Germany will need an ex tended moratorium to recover from the clumsy mishandling of the past year and a half. The mark has to be picked up out of the abyss Into which It has been thrown by those whose In terest It was to lift it out of the de pression wherein It lay. A debtor on whose restored health and nerve payment entirely depends has been violently pushed down sev eral flights of stairs. It will take him a long time to recover from the bruises, shake and los* of blood. What an achievement In scientific debt collecting! If reparations are ever to be paid, the allies must retrace their steps and get back to the conference. Once the parties—all of the parties—sit around a table. I feel assured that the common sense of most will In the end prevail. We shall never get hack what ha* been been lost during 1922 23, but we shall get something that will help. It will take s6me time to set up tackle for hoisting the mark out of the crevasse, and some to do winding. But the sooner a start Is made the less winding there will be to do. , So for everybody's sake stop the strutting and get back to business. SPECTACLES OR EYE GLASSES $6.00 Tha larta round ahall kind, tither for distance or naar work. BIFOCAL LENSES $7.00 Make your vluton juat aa food aa baferi you naadad flaaaas. I fuarantaa YOU ran wur BIFOCAI-S aa flttad by my ayatam or your monay will ha chaarfully rafundad Sama tarviea In our South Bids atora, 24th and N atraata. Talaphona M K rkat 0784 FLITTON OPTICAL CO. 13th Floor l.t Not'l Rink Rld». T»l. JA c It ton 1983 Rough-Hewn Dorothy Canfield \ (Continued From Paco One.) , rather than lose the sensation of sta bility, which means home. brittle Neale was quite unconscious of all this. To his 10-year-old thoughts "the Hill" wKs home, and where could you live except at home? It never occurred to him that there might be other or better homes—the Hill was where he lived. He accepted It as uncritically as he accepted life, school, his parents. Being, for that region where every one took quinine as a matter of course, rather a healthy boy, he accepted the initial facts of nature without criticism or much In terest, working off the surplus of his young energy in baseball, shinny and guerilla skirmishes with the boys from other localities. His unconcern with the world around him, except for the details of boy-life, was complete. Home was warm and secure; he did not inquire whether other homes might be less warm or more elegant. Food was good to eat, though meals with adult conversation between his father and mother were tedious and occupied far too much time that might have been spent in play. His father was kind and remote. Neale thought very little about his father. He went away in the moribng after breakfast and came in just before supper. He was in the lumber business, and when he went away, it was to the "office.” Neale never went to the office; but once in a while, on Saturdays, father took him walking down the long flight of wooden steps, down to the enemy's country where, thanks to the size or his father's protecting figure, never a Hnboken mlck dared to throw a mudball: across the railroad track and a long, long way on paved sidewalks till they came out on a wide, noisy, muddy street filled with trucks drawn by horses with gleaming round haunches. And on the other side of the street there wasn't any more land, but long sheds that stuck out into the oily, green Hudson river. These sheds had huge doors through which the big, dappled horses kept haulii)g trucks, in'" and out. Some of the wharves had ships tied beside them. Occasionally these were sailing ships with bow sprits slanting forward over the street, but more often steamers, black except for a band of red down near the water. As Neale walked along, although he never ventured to ask his busy father to stop and let him stare his fill, he could catch glimpses through the doorways of what went on inside the sheds. There were steep gangways, sloping from the plank floor of the pier to the ships, and up and down these, big men in blue Jumpers, wheeled hand carts, always moving on a dog trot. Through the other openings, bundles of boxes tied together with rope slid down sloping boards, and other men with sharp hooks were always loading them on trucks or unloading them from trucks: or huge bales descended from the air, dangling at the end of a clinking chain. This hustle and noise, the strange tarry smells and the clatter of steam winches exhil arated Neale; excited him, made something quiver and glow within him. He longed to go in and be part of it. But father never went Inside, and It never occurred to Neale to ex plain how he felt, and to ask father please to take him In. And yet, often before he fell asleep at night, Neale heard again the clanking clat ter of the great unloading cranes, smelled again the Intoxicating tarry salty ocean smells and felt again something quiver and glow within him. Heft to himself, Neale sat on the doorstep and watched the fascinating life on the docks. Once he slipped across the street and tried to follow a truck in, hut a big man with a red face yelled at him so loudly to "get out o£ there" that Neale ran back again, furiously angry but not knowing how to get around the big watchman. All he could do was to sit Just Inside the door, hating the watchman, and stare at the tuntal izing activity so far away, and wish with all his heart that father’s busl ness was more romantic. Mother meant more to Neale than father did. He knew her better . . . a little better. He had evpn some abstract ideas about her, that she was beautiful when she dressed up to go out In the afternoon. Mother fussed about his clothes more than was convenient, and insisted on baths, and washing hands before meals, but when he was sick, mother read him stories, and let him leave the gas turned on in his room when he went tp bed. Mother gave him pennies, too, and when father was away on » business trip, he and mother would eat alone together, and she would talk to him and ask him questions about school and play, and his boy friends. Neale didn’t mind telling her things . . . he liked mother . . . hut he couldn't seem to manage to think of a great deal to tell her. It sounded foolish to talk about games to grown ups. And games were really all that Neale eared about, almost all that he ever thought about. As to telling mother other things, the few other things he did occasionally think about, why. there didn't seem to be any where to start. He'd have to begin "way hack at the beginning" and now that Neale was 10 years old. the be ginning was too far back for him to lay hold of. CHAPTER III. Among the many things which Neale never thought of questioning was the fact that he did not go to a public school as his playmates did If he had asked, he would have found that his father and mother had an answer allready for h.m. the complete ness and thoroughness of which might have indicated that they had per haps silenced some questionings of their own with It. He would have heard that of course they approved of public schools, and that If they had continued to live In Massachu setts, even If they had gone to live in a nice part of New York city, they would certainly have sent their son to a public school. But here at l.'nion Hill, with the public schools so thickly populated by foreign chi! dren, the conditions were really dT ferent. What could a little American boy learn in a class room with 40 foreign children, whose consiant study must needs he English? There whs no flaw in the reason j^fTHAT BIND NEW ** GRANDS as Low as $425 But if you rather see how your child gets along in music— Select Your Piano from this special list of good and dependable instru ments. She will learn just as fast and just as well as though she had one costing 10 times as much. These 16 Pianos on Sale Monday $10.00 DOWN Balance $5, $8, $10 or $12 Monthly Foster E:**" . . $160 Hallet & Davis Piano . . $ 95 Wellington Piano .... $285 Cable $285 Kingsbury ET. •"d $268 Estey E" ,u’rt,“.$365 Mueller ET"' . . . $ 190 Sterling El"“ c‘“ $225 Hinze T°'"4.$150 Singer E:*“' .Up""’.,. .$210 Camp & Co. Er.c,“.$145 Hackley D-"dr.$175 Steinway K1* .°"*d..$285 Clarendon E."'*'1"T."",d $270 Aeolian Player Piano . . $495 Estey ElUpH'‘". $385 Haddorf Player Piano . . $475 ing they were prepared to present to their son when he should ask the nat ural question about his school. But Neale never asked It. By the time he was #old enough to think of it, habit had made hitn Incapable of con ceiving it. He no more wondered why he wentt every morning to the Taylors’ house on Bower street, in stead of to Public School No. 2, than why he had two eyes instead of one. That was the way things were. Neale was slow to question the way things were. I)r. Taylor was another transplant ed New Knglander like Neale's fath er. with another college graduate wife (rarer in those days than now), like Neale's mother. His ideas on chil dren and the public schools would have been exactly like those of thP Crittendens, even if they had not been fortified by the lameness of his otilv son. Jimmy's crutches made public school definitely out of the question, and since Jimmy must have Instructions at home, why, his two sisters, Klsle and Myrtle, might as well profit by it. Dr. Taylor was glad to have the expense of paying Miss Vanderwater shared by Mr. Crit tenden, ahd to let Neale share in the benefits of Miss Vanderwater's in struction. Hence it happened that every morn ing Neale rang at the Taylors' front door, and when the maid let him in, went upstairs to the hig front room on the top floor and there did what ever Miss Vanderwater told him to do. He was under her command from ft in the morning till noon, when he went home and had lunch with mother, who always asked how school had gone, to which question Neale always made the same truthful an swer that he guessed it was all right. At 1 he returned for two more hours with Miss Vanderwater. In this way he went through a series of Apple ton's Headers, filled copybooks with thin Hpeneerian script, copied maps In colored ink with the coast line shaded with scallops, did arithmetic on a slate and made very fair prog ress In learning German. German was much In the air in that locality. Of course, he did not spend all those years of his life, side by side with three other children without be. coming intimately acquainted with them. But one of the instinctive water tight compartments In Neale's Anglo-Saxon mind was the one in which he kept his school separate from his life. He studied with the Taylor children, but he never dreamed of staying after hours to play with them. And yet he knew them In finitely better than any of the in numerable chance street acquaint ances with whom he flew kites or played one-old-cat. He knew Instinc tively, knew without thinking of It. knew to the marrow of hts brutally normal liones that Jimmy Taylor was lame not only In h‘» legs, but In his character. JinWny's delicacy, the great care taken of him. the fact that he always played In the house or back yard with his sisters, made a sissy of him. That was the plain fact, and Neale was not one to refuse to admit plain facts. He was always kind to Jimmy, at least not unkind, but he was always secretly relieved when the front door shut liehtnd him, hiding front him Jimmy's too white hands, thin neck and querulous In valid's voice. Of the two girls. Elsie was only a little kid, so much younger than •Timmy and Neale that they were bare ly aware of her existence. Myrtle, on the contrary, was very much there, a little girl whose comments on things never failed to arouse in Neale the profoundest astonishmerft. How could anybody think of such dotty things to say? You never had the least idea how anything wag going to strike her, except that it was likely to strike her so hard that she made an awful fuss about it. Hut he didn’t allow himself to be bothered by her, and he escaped from her and from the whole genteel at mosphere of the Taylor household the moment 3 o'clock came. The instant Miss Vanderwater said, ’'dismissed,'' he hurried home, left his books and hurried out again to hang around No. 2 school till 4 o'clock sent all its mingled conglomeration, ranging from tattered ragamuffins to little boys in white sailor suit, yelling and whoop ing out to the vacant lots. Sundays had a special color of their own, not at all the traditional one. The Crittendens were Unitarians, not much given to churchgoing any where, and the nearest Unitarian church was across the river in New York. Mr. Crittenden had enough of New York on week days. So they never went. Kew of the Union Hill families did. Union Hill was any thing but a stronghold of Sabbata rianism. It considered Sunday rather as a heaven sent opportunity for much comfortable beer-drinking, at tendance on a Turn verein, and for enormous family gatherings around a big dinner. Por Neale, with no other children in the family, the day wag always solitary; not unpleasantly so. It was a day for long imaginings, stirring, warlike imaginings, realized through lead soWlers. Lead soldiers were a passion of his little boyhood. He had 210, counting the ones with legs brok en, that he had mounted on half corks. He did not move them around much. He did not knock them down When he got them set up In the order he wished, he fell into a trance, imagin ing stories and incidents. It took a long time to get them arranged to his satisfaction, with stifT marching col umns, at shoulder arms In the middle, some Indian sharpshooters prone or kneeling liehind painted lead shrub bery out In front,* a squadron of parade cavalry on one wing, a troop of galloping Arabs on the other. Al ways he had a pile of blocks behind which a coal-black charger was teth ered. and on top, leaning against a spool of thread, stood the general surveying his army. By uniform and whiskers the toymaker had intend^ the figure for Kaiser Wilhelm I. but to the boy's eves It was no Prussian king, but Neale—Neale commanding his victorious troojis It was all ar ranged with a careful hand and a lov ing heart, and It took a long, long time. Very often the dinner bell rang be fore he had even finished setting them up. At Sunday dinner there was gen erally ■‘company, '* men friends of father's mostly, but sometime^ hus bands and wives Neale knew all their names, and shook hands without seif c’onscionsness. H. grinned silently if they spoke to him. and retired to his shell, busying himself with his own thoughts, all concentrated on the im pending battle. He liked the things you had to eat on Sunday and had found that on Sunday he could eat the soft parts out of his bread and hide the crust* under his pla*e. Moth*' always caught him if he tried that on week days, hut on Sundays, with company there, *ne never said a word (Continued In The Morning Bee.l Youth Accused of Salt Lake Murder Taken After Escape Salt Rake City. June 16 — William A. Farr, the youth charged wi’h mur der, who escaped from authorities here yesterday, was taken Into cus tody this morning at Midvale. RTtah. a suburb of Salt Rake City. Farr and William Aylett. both under 21 year* old, are alleged to have *hot and fatally wounded Mis* Roylance Fit* gerald in an automobile holdup la*t December. Work Contracts for Immense, Reservoir at American Falls By AiMnUte*! **rt«. Washington, June 16.—Another big western Irrigation project was author ized by the government today when Secretary of the Interior Work exe ruted contract* for the construction of an immense reservoir at American Fails, Idaho, for the extension of thg irrigation of the Snake river valley. This action w as taken folk wing the raising of $2,700,000 by the water users of the American Falls irrigation district, and $2,500,000 b ythe Empire Irrigation district. The contract aa signed provides for actual building of the reservoir by the Interior depart ment. The American Fall* dl*'r!ct will pay $2,500,000 toward* the con struction while the Empire district has agreed to buy 105,000 acre feet of water to cover its share. Included in the contract was one with the Idaho Power company for the pur chase of its present site. Mu sic Meet to Portland. Asheville, N. C . June 15.—Portland, Ore , was selected at the concluding session today of the National Fed eration of Music Clubs aa the place for its next biennial convention. AnVF.RTISFMFNT. ApyKRTI-F'ir VT fl\ae j/v /tturravf The Secret of Having Beautiful Hair Beautiful hair—hair that is soft and silky—adds more than anything else to your attractiveness andcharm. 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