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About Tägliche Omaha Tribüne. (Omaha, Nebr.) 1912-1926 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 12, 1919)
W- , ys--f -w y. . ' '..W.. f w. - - - - 1 . ,. Much About Villa and Cärranza: Liltle About the Mexican People. By Manuel Carplo No one has so much at stake in the present Mexican crisis as the Mexican pcople. Jseverthc lcss, when a well-mcaninff ob server looks over the records of public discussion about past and present crises in Mexico, he fmds that, more rom outside than from insjdc, most of the debates centcr around the con epicuoua sicures at the Moment. For this the press in the United States more than the press in Mexico is responsible. As repards the Mexican pcople thernselves, that is to say, not the imaginary cut-throats that support Miss Farrar or Mr. Wil liam S. Hart in so many photo dramas, but the millions of human beings that have had no chance for the fulsillment of their just aspirations -the men, women, and childrcn who are as valuable an asset to humanity as any other on tbc face of the carth, but have been the victims of a rotten system of jrovern mental, ccohomic, and religious politics those millions of people, I say, are hardly mentioned at all in the discussion of Mexican affairs. The concem of jour nalists and other publicists is for the men of the day. Today it is Villa and Carranza. Or is it Felix Diaz and Angeles? Ycstcr day it was Madero and Huerta. Or was it Orozco and Zapata? Columns upon columns of clever reading watter have been served to the American readers giving descriptions of the vices, brutal ities, inabilities, treacheries, and weaknesses of . those men and nothing about the people. For it is to bc remembered that Mexico, as it is today in its better aspects, in its innate poetry, in its singular bcauties, both spiritually and materially, is the result of a great and wearying human experiment car ried on by a patient, intelligent, self-denying people. The pecul iarly beautiful arelütecture, the native arts, the native music, the astounding genius of the poets some of thera among tbe greatest in the Spanish-speaking world of all times the really patrieiän sensibility and dignity in taste of the niiddle classes, the never equaled hospitality of the lowcr working dass, these are not the charactcristics of peoples that are savage or half-savage. They are tlie charactcristics of a people of the first dass. Kow it is for its to inquirc vvhether a people of a high order can live through and survive a Untr anA nefarious System of political, economic, and religious oooression. It is to be answered ppresdl. w ia iv 7, . f , . directlv that there are no indis-ten, thousands of protests are J . . tl1. .- r- C am 1 rl- - nnbM pvirlences that any or all first-class peoples are today or were yesterday wholly frec from tyrannical oppr-'sion. v The Mexican people is a first class people, not on aecount of . - . 1 rtmriliclim'isnt. Kilt 113 Illiliciiai aw".j-""-"-, r on aecount of its Spiritual d lg- ,ttl ni'tv . &t tx'rt t.n V'nnrlitrtf i x 'fm ri ul umiut k. t . 1 1 1 V, t J wv. " " " and bad leadership, and personal feuds, and economte üistress, vyu are looking upon the worst aspects of Mexican sociological facts; you are looKing upon ) faults accumulated by centuries j of defective rulc and deriving from the traditions of colonial life. Mexico's real strugglcs are i those of a people ghting its ) way from the violent ,one-sided methods of ancestral conquest 1 toward the new. ideals of human Association. ( trA..ir.ris D'Amicis rave an Hll .rminftf the oolitical Situation f vvwm " V f i f in Spain, enumerating thirty-two different parties, all of them itruggling for power and all of them ready for revolutioru .The Carlist agitations and the many regional disorders in Spain, ever since the Bourbons came into power, give us a fair Illustration jf the Spanish people's short romings in methods of govern ment. This, however, does not r.rarilv fTord a conclusive I I'. judgment that the Spanisn people is not a first-class one. ?nanUVi art. Snanish oirituality, i ' Spanish Conception of the home i ti anfl the familv. and the Spanish icnse of poettc worship are un ixcelled. And those Spanish conceptions, welded into a new r.liHaritv with the native people of Mexico, through one of the tro&t admirable efforts of cx ploration and colonization known in ViUt-irv. are today a livinz i.cmti it faulte, it oer- jl Ullllfi. , ' ' ii r.t-vi and its üaraooxes. its cter sr.rr cf instinct ani lt$ (The Public)", . i . , marks of superiority are current in the great mass that constitutes the Mexican people. This great mass is truggling at present against its many inherited handi caps, and is highly representative of the. Latin-American entity. It is mainly chivalrous rather than treacherous. It has endured pain, want, incompeteney, exploi tation, war, and calamity. It has found itself always at a distress- ing disaavantage tn nieasunng its Standards with- those of peoples whose careers have been longer a.nd more uniform', thanks to Material devclopment and scientisic usc " of natural re sourtes. The mors advanced ocoolcs whose leaders have brought them in contact with the Mexican people, through war or through enterpnse, are not tree in tneir social strata of the very blcm ishes which. thanks -to an in sistent campaign qf biased Pub licity, are prociaimcü as Dcing smnrur the fundamental char- acteristics of Mexican sociology. It is not necessary to bc an ex ceptional observer jil order to find that all of these advanced nations are aülictcd with not an insienificant number of bad men. bandits, nasty politicians, tyran- nicai proiiteers, ana a wiae variety of criminals. But this scum docs not constitutc a dorn inating organized clement, be cause there are with in strongly organized forces to check them, and because without there are not strongly organized forces to encouraee them in their infam ous work; The case with Mexico is quite difl'erent. Can it bc supposed, for instance to cite a living cxamplc hat Villa has been lest alone in his exploits without assistance front without? Can it be imagincd that arms and amm'unition go to him .by acrial route from England or France or Cochin China? Can it be entertaincd that most, if in deed not all of the elcmentä with which Villa counts for his trouble making, do not reach him from sourecs establishcd on this sidc of the border, in tttter viola tion of all wfftten and unwrittelt laws of the United States? Can anybody blamc Carranza or any other head of the Mexican Gov ernment for the support given to such a type of agitator through a criminal trastic that exists. bc yond any form of doubt, outside Mexican territory? Still, when complications come, when the cjuestioris of in ternational friction .arise, when damages are inllicted by the wrongdoers, resulting in the loss of innocent life and property. thousands of editorials are writ- heard from the pens of men yvh'o bcheve theV are votcincr the clairns of justice against a wholo nation, whose libcrties and whose destinies are put in jeopardy. Hardly a voicc is heard indi cating the real sources of mis chief. 'The men engaged in the unholy traßlc grin in satisfaction and keep on in the dark engi- neenng frcSh activities to per netuate the source of irritation. And the campaign of misrepre- sentation against a weii-mean-ing people goes on, availing it self of press and screenv The whole bulk of actual and'imag mary miscries looms into prom- mence. It astounds readers ana spectators with an interminable reel of horror, degradation, and mud. It rings in the accents of indignant Senators and Congrcss- men. . - Thrri comes to the ear and eye of the people the aecount of Mexicos deficient leaaersnip. Granhic recitals are forthcommc of govcrnmental blunders, the ineffectiveness of administrative control aftcr five years of fever- tsh upheaval, together wun mc bluntness 6f attcrapted refornts that hurt or may possibly hurt the vested interests. In the thick of this rush of heatcd opin- lon the actual enueavors ot the Mexican people are never men tioned, No one speaks of the things looking to social better mcnt that have been evolved. It is the men at the head of move ments that occupy attention, as if they really were the main and abiding factor, and not the people. Carranza m'ay 'be good, medi oere, or poor as a statesman. The present Mexican Govern ment .befides its mistakes, has been able to hold things to gether in tlte largest part of the national territory, in one of the most difiicult periods of Mexican Seite 7-Tägttcha Omalja TrWüne-TicnZtag, " i T . . ,, ij.,4....m.ii ,!'.," history and without sinanciai; hclp from abroad. It has been, able to maintain some of the icforms introduced in the coun try's lcgislation with private in terests. Ambassador Flctcher has demonstratcd to the Mexican people that he is a genuine repre sentative of Am'crican good will and' American sanity. Mr. Flctcher isjenough of a psych ologist to understand that Mexi-can-American relatious must be founded in humane understand ing of, differences and not in forc ible Submission of the idiosyn .crasies of one people to - the idiosyncrasics of another. Those who advocate inlerven tion are willing to kill the child because of its mumps and ade noids, without really knowing the child or knowing only its aflliction. But to kill that child is a matter of ßerious responsibil ity before the world, 'for it is nqt Mexico; it is Latin America. It is not Villa, or Carranza, or even the Mexican people itself? it is the national personality of nearly nineteen million people who inhabit half of tue American Contincnt. It is a side of Span ish-Roman civilization grafted in the heart of America with blöod and hone, with thoucht and ideals. It is the human blossom- ii THE AMERIOANS IN PARIS. Saturday Revicw Says America Has Eecomc A Grievous Bürden In Paris. The June 28th issue of the "Saturday Review" of London contains an article under the title "Tbe Americans in Paris." The "Review" speaks, arnong other things, of the dislike with which the French in Taris are said to regard the Americans. The frivolous criticäl tone, fre quently noted in that wcekly, must be taken into aecount some what in judging its expression. Ät the same time, however, one feels. instinctivcly that the com iug of peace is partly responsible for the m'ore than frank expres sion of sympathy for the alleged French coldness or even hatred; the war is over, therefore, thinks the Review, one can speak one's mind frcely, because the associate-fighter is no longer immediatdy needed. On the other band, we dare say, that the feeling between French and Americans is entirely reciprocal. The American boys from the Wes appear to have as little love or admiration for the French as the latter are said to have for us. The Saturday Review says in part : The nation which a year ago was the most populär nation in Europe has become, in Paris, a bürden slmost too grievous to be borne. The other evening we heard a lady whose profession brings her into rather dose con tact with the American soldiers and minor diplomatists in Paris proclajm amid general assent that the Ameficans are at the best children and that at the worst they are brutes. We are not sübscribing to this opinion; we are merely recording that it was passed, and suggesting that the passing of such an opinion is at the present Moment deplor able, and might with the exercise of tact, forbearance and under standing on both sides have been avoided. It may be of interest to the Englishman who stays at home ' to know that French pcople cannot teil the difference between 'an American and an Englishman by his speech. To the French ear the languages are identical. But the French dis tinguish the two nations at a glance by their general appear ance and bchaviour, and . they find very little resemblance in their ideas, sentiments and gen eral educational background. Tbe comparisons at present passed upon the two great Eng- lish-speaking communities (as our press loves to desenbe Great B ritain and the L'nited States) are for the moment extremcly flattering to öurselves. But if we a: wise, we hall not ailow öurselves to be thereby pufled up. The Americans could not avoid being unpopulär in Paris. The mere fact that they came late into the war and that the im portance of their share in the neace nesrotiation is out of all Proportion to thfir jacrisices h in any event a difficult fact to ing of the greatest enterprisc in history, lmaia wim wonaertw spirituatism', magnisicent efforts, and admirable endurance amid the stornis' of life. Mexico must be discussed more intellicsently. Icss commer- ciallv: more from the ourcly human standpoint, lcss from the stdc of proht, tor prosit aftcr all is not a thing eternal. It passes and crumbles at the blow of time. Mighty cmhzations are distinguished by their Spiritual mark , more than by anything elsc. Their understanding of beauty, their uplift by human contact carries more to posterity than their Material accumula tions, their wealth, and their arrogance. The Mexican people has a des tiny. Its way to understand Christianity and disinterested ness goes farther than its poor record in Management and econ omic dexterity. But it is cap able of learning and is willing to learn. It . has a keen sense of honor, , it loves its name, 'its in dependence, its traditions, and its heroisms. It has proved to be an honest iighter and an hon est debtor, since it does not re pudiate its obligations and is not dogmatic about its errors. Give Mexico a chance. ii discount or to obscure, especially as the French are as notoriottsly sensitive and impatient in re spect of their obligations as M. Perrichon. x Difficult Social Status. Socially the Americans in Paris are in the Position of a man staying in the house of a friend and forced to behave nmch as thongh the liouse were his own. It is even worse than that. We have to consider that the man. who thus stays in the house of his friend and behaves as though it were bis-own has, in eft'ect, a mortgage on the house. We are most of us the debtors of Amer ica, and France not least of all. The American army in Paris may almost'bi described as the man in possessioti, and there is no possibility of avoidmg him'. Tt was an nlucky decision to make Paris an American Mili tary headquarters. The Wild West sprawls in the caft and patrols the grand boulevards, with, the reult that a French nobleman may run out of his house one sine evening and sincl an unoffending French citizen on the pavement, "baigni5 lans sor sang." The American army could no more be populär in Paris than the Canadians couhl be populär in Epsom. When, on the top of the military Invasion of Paris, there came an American Delegation, fourteen hundred strong, filling the air with prin ciples and viewpoints, and amus ing itself loudly and continuous ly, not the most civilized Presi dent in the history of the world cjld quite cover with his Pro fessional mantle the nakedness of his countryrnen. The Ameri cans were everywhcre, and they could not be ignored. Looking Into the Future. All this would be of merely passing interest were it not for the peculiar position ' which America will occupy for the next thir'jy years. What is happen ing in Paris will happen on a large scale in Europe as soon as peace is signed. During the war America has become the creditor of the civilized world. Her chief probiern will be how to spend the - rroney she has made. She is so rieh that she has begun to be alarmed for her for eign trade, for it is impossible for Dives to trade with Lazarus, unless Lazarus can be induced to borrow the necessary Capital to set himself up in busines. Whatcvcr ultimate arrangements are macke, it is fairly clear that America will have more money than she knows what to do with, and that Europe will be, to an extent unknown before, an Am'cr ican playground. Only bV the greatest tact and wisdom can America secure in Europe the liking and regard indispensable to a great international power. Perhaps America does not desire to be ' a great international power. Perhaps the Senators who desire to keep America within her set bounds and tradi tions are wiser than the Presi dent who apircs to rank hi? rountry with t hc older ciiliza den 12. August 1910. GOING TOO FAß. From The New If it is true'th'ät co'nscrvative prohibitionists in tlie House are becoming alarmed ovcr the im? placable and intolerant spirit dis played by the majority of their ftllows, and fear it will breed a greav'' revulsion of feeling tbroughout tlie .eduntry, they have warrant for their fears. Tlie cause of prohibition will be nced lessly endangered if the radicals contiuue to outdo eadi other . in their mad rush to make the; en forceptent bill a rneasure öf sudi tyrarmy as has never before been litinwn in this nation. Htre. for instance, is Representative Mor-, gan, Republican, of. Oklahoma, proposing to treat as a criminal a man who keeps licjuor in his own home for his own use. Here ars other radicals propos ing to make it illegal for the man to "use" it if he has it. Even under the bill as it Stands ac cording to a mernber . of the House Judiciary Cornrnittee, a man is in danger if, ha v ing liquor in his house,. he gives a glass of it to a visiting friend. Senator Sterling proposes to pen alize the purchaser as well as the seil er of liquor. ; ! But the füll rneasure of the tyranny which the, Tadical , pro bibitiortists seek to set up is to bc learned from the Statements of Wayne B. Wheeler, counsel for the Anti-Saloon League, be fore tlie sub-committee of the Senate Judiciary Comtnittce, It is true that Mr.. Wheeler is riot a mernber of Congress, but he speaks with the authörjty of the Anti-Saloon League, - which has been directing all this legislation and to the authority of which all the radical prohibitionists bow. Therefore it ' will not be surprising if, having heard this clear exposition of the desires of the Anti-Saloon League; the pro hibitionists in Congress should grant them and amend the en fslrcement bill accbrdinely. Mr .Wheeler. thus gives a fore- taste of what is to be expected if tlii radicals in Concress' and out. for whom he speaks, have their way. Jie demands vtsit and search without. the issuance ofa warrant, , although he is willin?. if that can not be enacted. ta aceeot a Provision authorizing the issuance of warrants without reqniring that those asking for the warrants shall produce any testimony. . In other wyrds, all Dr. Abraham Jacobi, whose dcath was reported last week, was not only a great physician, but. he was a great and many zided Americdrt. Ger many, after the Revolution of 1848, would have none of him; ä he was one of the many worth-while men v.horn she cast out and too late regretted and tried to coax back. It was the Chair of. Pediatrics at the University of Berlin that was the lure in his case. But he refused it, saying that hc was an American. . ,. . . So far as public work and duties were concerned, so far as his work as a physician. was con cerned, he never grew ölder In 1S92, when he resigned after thirty-two years' active work as Professor of Diseases of Children at the College of. Physicians. and Surgeons, a newspäper report was headed "Dr. Jacobi's Work days Now Ended." In 1911 he was elected President" of the American Medical Association; and all the time between those years he was constantly reeeiv ing new honors and taking on new duties. He never ceased doing either. He was, too. a warrior for whatever he belicved in. He had no hesitation in taking up las sword for unpopulär causes, such as that of birth control. Ile was a formidable Opponent of prohibition ; and his style was idashing and raey, without being in the least undignified. . He had luimor in plcnty, a sly and gentle humor which could not fall to bc eiTective without leaving scars. He always spoke bis mind, and cared not whether his auditors disagreed . or not. In vitcd to address a womcn's club, he delivered a philippic against their methods of dressing. It was as the friend of the babies tlvpt Dr. Jacobi was best known, and it is said that -east ndc babies whom be tended sixtj-sive years ago ucd to bring their grandchildren to.bim. "There is no pa?e of medicine in "this city on which the name of York Times. that' fs" he'cessary' to obtain a warrant, under the mildest of Mr. Wheeler's proposals, is that any individual make application for it as against any other individ ual, even though he may not have the shghtest evidence. It is ob vious that such a Provision, or even a Provision like that now in the enforcement bill, lays every citizen open to private malice or police oppression, and the. bill as it Stands therefore contains a Provision penalizing a search mstigated by mahee or "withouts probable cause", Mr. Wheeler" demands that . this dause be eliminated. , .The effect would .. be to install the most sweeping tyranny that cpuld be imagmed, with unlimited ppor tunities for grast besidfs. It is a welcome siga that some of the prohibitionists are beconY- mg appaued at the lengths of madness to . which their sso ciates are )?oing; but their num her may not be great, and it is by no means certain that even worse provisions than these may not; become : law ü the Anti-Saloon- League insists upon them. Besides, the number of the consenrative prohibitionists may be quickly -redueed if the Anti-Saloon League should turn a threatening face toward them. It must be remembered that in electing public officials the league has been Just as hostile to tem porizers as it has been to open "Wets.". It has acted cm the principle that he who is "not for it is against it. If it really de-rires- that these despotic rules shall be embodied in legislation it is quite capable of turnrng its guns on.the so-callcd conserva tives. How many of them could withstand such a threat? What would it prosit such a prohibi t ionist to have voted for the pro hibition amendment and then to find that the league was. can vassing his district against him? If the enforcement bill is passed in such shape as to in clüde these engnies ,of tyranny the questiqn will, bc. no longet one of Prohibition or anti-prohi-bition, for total abstainers would be as mudi at .thc. merey of m'aUcej oppression,. and grast as the -hardest öf .drinkers could be. It would become a;question of the right of the American citizen to protectioit not by, but from, the law. ' ... .'', .... "Dr. Jacobi is not inscribcd," said another physician, but it was the babies who interested him most. He was, in fact, the real founder in this country of the treatment Of diseases of ehil dren. Yet nothing was out. of bis province. In the cholera scare of 1892 he declared his views with such effect that for the first time the Health Depart ment worked in co-operation with, the medical profession, a cornrnittee being regularly ap pointed for the purpose by the latter. When tulerculosis be came a national menace, al though he was in Europe, his views were soücited, and he sent back a letter of instructions which was treated as authori tative. In fact, the simplest word - from - Dr. Jacobi was enough to do the work which f peeches and " writings without rn,d failed to do. .. When the United States declared war against Germany, for instance, medical students were ' not ex empted rom the draft. Dr. Jacobi wrote a letter to. The New 'York Times protesting against using up the doctors. He concluded with the stirring words: "Where is Gorgas? I "have been waitm'g all the time "to hear bis voice." Gorgas was not to blamc legislation was needed; and the legislation was fortheoming. He worked and fought to the last, tirelessly and with enjoy ment Perhaps that was what kept him young. Even in his last years his hair was not White, but only gray; and bis energy and interest in life and work was the thing that most impresFed those who met bim. One, so meeting him for the first time and setting down his im pressions, wrote: "Enthusiasm, "scarcely dimmed, burns in the "decp eyes under the , shaggy "brows, and the spare, compact "figure betokens energy and cn "durance. He is more than vp "to date. He can 1e deüghtfully "reminisernt, but bis face is set "toward the future." -mmm.mmmm,mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm i in""' PlilLWH Cccrc Ulctnfaner 50 Gallonon-Msscr ' $2,50 das Sti'ick Midwest Ckrch GccJs Cc. 1218 Sfarnam Straft' , Omaha, Nrbr. . 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