r? f y ' V rT W-V SECOND MAIN NEWS SECTION TWO SIX PAGES ' EDITORIAL, SPORTS i i i 77 . PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 16, 1922. aWBWUBBWMilllUlilira Giants for ConProl 0 Peace Conference at Paris By RAY STAN NARD BAKER ... : ; (chapter 17 ) r.. v i i i CSUI03!il!MIIH!U!SmmiS Tha flawte Joartial tanwtth prwnta Um i!xtnU tnUDmcnt ef Bar Staanaid Biker1, "Tb ri," nhU-h It aa anliiorUaUfa oinitln of how Um peaejf Paria wu concluded. Woadmv WUm sat air. Baser acears to all of aia prrsonal nnpubliihod pipn, wbieh ara lb aaly nliabla aad ImoontrowrtbU report of the facta, and wblcb heretofore bar itm bn i pamia. im tpocnai mmrt wui r pnbBsbad to Tha Journal aerially throotlKHit tb Tear. (Coprrisht, 1B22, by Lxrabladay, Pit, Co. FublUhed by Special Amnccmcitt vitb - j ' . th UeClur Nrwipaper Syndicate) : TT IS COINO to bm a rdugh. and turnbl affair, this peace conference." Mr. Balfour had propheled two monthf before it began. - , , It wu a aKaciou prophecy. . The force pt the old order went to Paris, ae hae been shown, quite confident of making a peace of their own kind. They were in the stronger tactical position. They had with them ' .tradition, experience, .trained diplomatic leadership and, above ' all. consummate organization. No. parts of the governmental fabrics of Europe, sensi tive to their own security, were so perfectly developed as the diplomatic and military ystems.'.i.;v'V:'i;::i ' On the other hand, the forces of the new order, as shown In previous chapters, were also gathered at Paris, not without vigorous organization and leadership, and, if wanting in tradition, full of enthusiasm and aspira tion : and confident" (however Justly) that if they , did not have the support' of the leaders of the European Ray Stannard governments, at least they had with them the people of Baker -the-world. --.These) two forces now came, strongly Into '. . conflict, and in the first .place, naturally enough, over tactical problems of organization and procedure. Who should control this vital world conference? Should it be the military men who bad been con trolling Europe for four years, or should the civil authorities again assert their dominance? Few people realise what a struggle went on at Paris throughout the con ferencebetween the military group and heads ef states. This effort within the sworet conferences to escape from mili tary dominance and the military spirit will be treated In the present chapter. After that came the not less vital strug- a-U aa tai what Mri should control the conference, what procedure should be followed' and , what language language Is always a symbol of power should be regarded ss official. In the eagerness to know what wae done at Paris too little attention has been given to these enormously Import ant Initial tnaltara ff orianliatlon. In any political congestion, any trade union, any business organisation. It Is the A B C of the proceedings to make sure nf controlling organization and proce dure. 80 it was, pre-eminently, at rarta A Urge proportion of the . settlements were either of decided or profoundly In fluenced before they were even dis cussed. ! .-. . . I remember well my first sight of Marshal Forh. at. a curiously oramatlc mo.int. which I shall think of always i aa kind of syitibol of the entire peace . r-nfarenre. It was lt the ante-room or M. ' T'ehon's cabinet at Ihe KraQcn, forelsra ut1.ee In the-tjual d'Oreay. tbat high celled room with Its old tapestries and rich carpets and upholstery and liveried rvants, who were always going nolse lemly In sad out. '- In the room beyond were meeting the chiefs of the four great powers with their various advisers and secretarlea The president of the United States was there and the prime minister of Great Britain, the premier of Italy and the orealdent ef the council ox Ftanee. One entered M. Fiction's cabinet of state through double doors fitted with steel rods so that they closed ; together ana made the room. within quite sound proof. I found out later that this se crecy was only one of the fine cere monials of diplomacy and that the pro ceedings within trickled out through channels closed by no double doors ; but as a ceremonial It was highly impressive. une morning this was In January not long after the beginning of the confer enceI saw these doors burst suddenly open as though vigor,. -:s!y pushed from within, and out strode a short, stocky, gray-haired man, very erect, who looked like some old and studious college pro fessor, but who wore the uniform of a marshal of Franca Behind Mm came flying the little, agile Pichon. pleading with him td return. , - '. "Jamais, jamais !" said Marshal Focn angrily. . i , r - i Ho, he would never return. He was through with' the peace conference. He would never go back. But in a moment he was ' suddenly persuaded ; and ne did go back, ' and the secret doors closed again behind him, I never J saw -i Mm - afterward without having ' the Impression that he looked mors like a contemplatice , old scholar than like a great general. And h had amiability and charm, of manner. -' . "I want to shake your hand. Marshal Focn," said an American who met him. . "Shake both of them," he replied heartily, holding them out. .. I have sometimes thought of the Inci dent I have described as a symbol of the peace . conference, for., throughout those troubled months at Paris the gen erals and the admirals. It seemed, were forever being thrust out of the councils by the frock coat and forever being called .back again, .tor coming back of their own accord,. It -must never j be forgotten that they had until that hour, for more than four .years, been supreme in the .world. They had at Paris in the supreme war council, with its powerful economic satellites a World government, a super-state, a League of Nations, by the side of which the league later cov enated at Paris, so far - as immediate power, was concerned, was a pale rem iniscence. - They w ere strong men, these generals, accustomed to tin trammeled power and they let go reluctantly. This is no mere allegory of what happened at Paris ;. it was : actually the way the peace conference began. At the head of the first page of the secret minutes of thet peace conference on Jan uary 11. 1919, the first day of the ses sion, will be found this caption. '"Notea of a meeting of the supreme war coun clU" ' .. k . . - ' FOCH'S TOICK FOR HOSE JVAE B '-Kot only the peacemakers' were there, but the generals, too; Foch and Wey gand of France,- Sir . Henry Wflson for Great Britain, General Bliss for Amer ica. : And Marshal Foch, the hero ,; Of France, was present wid great 'new military puna He was Still for fight ing ! ' He recommended sending Immedi ately art allied army (chiefly of Amer icans and commanded by an American) to Poland ; he was for- crushing,; In stantly,- the' Bolshevik! . of i Russia r he was for sorting out all the Vast numbers of Russian prisoners of . war in Germany and sending home those who were op-1 posed to the Bolshevik! ; he was for keeping military possession of the Rhine permanently for : France. Tpus it was that the American peace makers coming to Europe to attend a pease conference found themselves first of all. in a supreme council of war con. ceraed with renewal, of the armistice and, the immediate military problems of Europe, The initial problems that; pre sented itself was ho mere: struggle to apply" accepted principles to . a. static situation, no mere ?. grappling of the new diplomacy,, .the; new order, with the . old ; no great 'and noble endeavor to establish a world orEraniiation. but. In very truth, a driven effort to put out the still . obstinately blazing embers of war. Peace had. Indeed, been : aarreed upon in November, but peace had not arrived. i . - -, r On page 7 of these historic records of the first day's session (January 12 one will find these- words : - y -, , ' i . ' He then CM. Pichon. the " chair) ' man) decided (that the meeting should ' continue without the mili tary .men, ' who thereupon - with- '. drew. - ' "There, follows,, dojubla jspaclng upon toe rage ana.nen tnese,- woras-.- v M. Pichon thonsht that it was In f 'rtler for the meeting ' -to consider ; .the orocedure of the conference. ( la'thhj infortnak yet somehow studied way,' the peace conference began, slip ping from a supreme war council into a supreme peace council as It again and again so easily slipped back. The Americans "who came to Paris - thus Btepped Into a moving machine,' well oiled, and operated by men who had long been working together : and work insr for. destructive?, not fan reconstruc tive, purposes.' Moreover, ,- the military men had , In ' reality , . In making . such sweeping armistice- terms gone: far rto ward. predetermining and shaping 'the peace settlements. - The French rot the line of the Rhlnev the Italians that of the London treaty and TOssession Is nine points. . ' - : . , O-itics , after the .event forget that peace had to foe made in aa atmosphere still reeking with the fumes of war and still more or. less dominated by the mili tary: spirit It could not I have ; been otherwise. For four .years the nations had been committed -to the use of .every agency via ; building up r. a : war psychol ogy i to giving men the. martial " spirit, Instilling hatred as an antidote for fear, driving nations .into an artificial 'unity of purpose by the. force of sheer -neces sity. - As a monument , to, this passion and bitterness there yere 7,500.000 men lying dead in Europe and 20,000,000 had been wounded, there . were devastated cities, ruined mines and factories, stu pendous debts. Build, up such a psy chology - for : four years, innoculate the entire publte opinion of Ine world with it, and then ask "four men at Paris or one man at Paris to change It all in threa months! It was not merely a world peace that had to be made but world psychology that had to be changed., r : . No inconsiderable part of the atten tion of the conference was directed, all the 'way through, to extinguishing the little remaining fires left over from the great conflagration in Russia, in Hun gary, ; Asia : and elsewhere," - Once - we counted no fewer than 14 such small wars going on in various parts of Eu rope., -t The military - men "who there upon withdrew on January 12 kept returning all through the conference. with- their military methods, their mill tary suggestions, their military ambi tionsas they have been returning ever since ; or 'i they confused its ' purposes and balked its activities by i summary action on? their own account.- They were always breaking out in Poland, Russia, Germany. Hungary. Jugoslavia and else where,, trying to: take things into their own. hands, and, too . often, as J shall show later,, they were, secretly encour aged by leaders within; the very councils of the t powers sthemselveav 'j We find French . generals encouraging "a revolu tion in the . Rhine provinces ; a British reneral Betting up a , whlte" govern ment in Western Russia ; Italian officers acting on their own account on the Adriatic and in Asia Minor, and even an American officer leading the Czechs into the Teschen coal, basin r 1 v WILSOJT CLASHES. WITH FOCH u Literally the first clashes- In th e con ference ,. arose directly' out of . the at tempt ito substitute . civil for - military methods. Thus when Marshal Foch sug gested that, an allied armjv- made up ohieflv -ot. Atnerlcaor troops, be sent . to Poland immediately, tor the, purpose bf fighting the- BolahevlkW Presides t Wil son strongly opposed the plan; He said "there was great' doubt in - his mind - as to whether Bolshevism could be checked by " arms,- and therefore it , seemed to him unwise to take action In a military form before, the powers : were agreed upon a course o action for checking Bolshevism v as ; a: social and political danger." - " Military -leaders had been-all-powerful for so long it was difficult for them to owaManmBiiiaiiamBaiw stop functioning :They . sought not only military control, but desired to dominate in political and-economy matters' as welL.- -When , our treasury representa tiye, .,' Mr Davis, arrived in Paris he was -informed by M. Klotx, French fi nance minister, that he would simply be an adviser to Marshal Foch, to. which be immediately and strenuously objected. When It was proposed that civil experts be attached to General Focn in ms deal ings with the Germans, at Spa, be in dignantly spurned , the suggestion and for a time refused to carry out -the or ders of his own . government: unless ; he was allowed io retain full power. - Cle menceaa bad actually to plead with him tsecret mlnuteaj March ZIK: :": , v ; - : ' M. Clemenceau said that. -putting i aside ' altogether his - own personal . opinions, he would allow himself to . ask Marshal Foch whether he would not " subordinate - bis own personal ' feelings and inclination in order to " remain the mouthpiece of the allies. It was essential that no dis-'-sentions should appear , among the ' allies -on the eve of taking a do- J clsion which might lead tovvery " t. serious consequences; even , to a re- newai pf hosturaeay i; ,: ;; But Foch rejected the' idea of having any authority above him,"' He- would not go to Spa "merely to deliver a letter, He was not "merely a letterbox. ," , It- took- a . private :- session with the heads of the governments (on March 21) finally to persuade him. . - , Thus the struggle to keefp down , or abate the military spirit arose often to the sharpest "controversies.- - Once Cle menceau . (February -7) burst out With the remark that "Marshal Foch was not a military pope 1 he was sometimes mis taken. He was a great general and all were prepared to do him honor as such,' but:there was other work here to dot In a later session." when Marshal Foch practically, demanded that the, peace terms be ready, by April 1, Mr. Balfour observed ; that the "military delegates "wished to force the council to settle peace ! by that date under .pain-f of not being able to enforce their will upon the enemy." This was equivalent to holding a pistol af the head of the council. Lloyd George had of ten , to defy the generala' -: "No "general's opinion win shake my decision," he says on March 7. x Constantly ' the remedies , suggested were 'those of force. Here were great armies still undemobilised ; why not use them? That army " of 2,000,000 ? young Americans in superb: condition v was vast temptation to the generals ; expedi tion over half the world, were planned for it in the six months after the arm- WILSOJf lGAISST WAB .SKI KIT : Tfo 'man fought harder than "President Wilson to prewent' extensions of war,' to get j away ifrom - the mtlit&ry?, spirit, -to set up again- normal -agencies and civil processes. I remember once taking .up to. him some: excellent , reports by the experts on the situation' irr Central Eu rope. He read them carefully and said ,H"They are like most of the reports we get i good enough la presenting) the facts. EwaasBTOBiiiii but they do i not tell us what to do. They all ask us to. make more war." It. was. the-Prussian idea of force, of military sanctions ' and military . methods that he was seeking to get at way from that had to.be got away from before peace could ' be made. . "This was a part of the "old order" that had caused the war i he was there to establish a "new order.!' They had hewn away, with stu pendous effort, the head of the Prussian hydra, and here had grown new hydra heads all over Europe. The old forces were even here In the peace conference, trying to'' dictate or at least influence the settlements. In an eloauent argu ment in the Council of. Four, while the Italian question was , under . discussion and Sonnlno was arguing on the basis of the secret treaty of London for the control of the 'Adriatic by Italy, ' for military, reasons, the president said: v - Military men. with their strategic. , military, economic arguments, - were- responsible for tat treaty, or . 1816. , , Similarly, military map were responds stDie lor .Alsace-Lorraine. unitary . men have led. Europe to one blunder t after another. 1 , We are now t, ' engaged in setting up an interna- . tional' association. --If -this . does not suffice, then two orders r will exist the. old and the new. -We cannot drive, two- horses ." at once. s The people -of the United - " States of America will repudiate it . ' They are: disgusted with the eld ' order, t Not only the American peo pie. - but " the people of the whole ' world, are' tired of the old system ; and they will not put up with gov- ernments that support it:' '. ,, .But the French desired a strong, hard peace, and-if they had suffered terribly by military force they still clung des perately to it. They were ' still afraid, and not without reason, of Germany. It was they who had suffered most; borne. the brunt of the- war; it was they who would-- be most likely to suffer again," should Germany rise to power and prove revengeful. ?. They were well aware what, terms . the .Germans would have imposed : upon, them if, they had been the victors. , They were, therefore. fearful f a too swift demobilisation of -the allied armies, a too rapid sub eidence of lie martial spirit. '.'They wished to maintain large armies for pos sible use against Germany or Russia. It waa plain that the more vigorous the maintenance: of the - war - feeling, the severer the peace terms could be made. 5t,Was bne of the great criticisms of the president by the French that he de layed' mo. long In. Visiting the. devastated rtgions They apparently - wished to steel-him t. severity by., giving him a visual demonstration of how France had suffered how France felt,' imparting to him- some measure of their own sorrow and bitterness. On February 10 M. Klotz, French minister of finance, was brought into the council and began read ing a pamphlet regarding" the frightful destruction of French 'industries by the Germans in the-occupied regions.. But President Wilson said that -'this evW dence may no doubt affect, our frame of mind, but what effect , will It have on our plans T" . He felt with all bis strength that the peace must no be approached in a spirit of ' passion or hatred or fear, but wrth all the calm nessw the reason, the patience, that could be commanded. - It waa peace that they wanted, not the spirit of revenge. This be worked for, early and late. , v OPPOSED HAkSHEQ TEB3IS ' : , ;T - At each renewal of the already severe armistice terms Marshal Foch endeav ored to impose more and harder Con ditions upon the enemy and even to an ticipate by armistice extensions which could be finally enforced by military action, 'settlements which properly be longed in the peace treaty. -..,."- President Wilson -set down his foot firmly against these extensions, argu ing that the Germans had ceased fight ing upon certain agreed tonus and that it was not Just or right to force them to accept hew terms in advance of the treaty. The allies had endorsed . his plan of settlement ; and the' Germans bad ceased fighting upon a clear under standing of its provisional He saw in such methods only a revival of the ha treds and bitterness of the war, which he waa seeking to allay. . "What . I villi to avoid." he said to the council, "because of mistakes Nnade In the original terms of the armistice, is to seem to add - new coaditlona"- - In thia he was strongly supported by General Bliss, who had made' his fight previously In the military section of the supreme war council, and even sent to the 10 a minority report embodying his objection. -. The introduction of . such demands into the renewed armistice ac companied by threat to use . force, m dishonorable It Is -not neces sary, and i - ' it may mean the re sumption of the-war." Mr. Lloyd George, and more especially Mr. Balfour, supported the Americans In this contention - ' - .,r' . But throughout the conference Mar shal Foch stubbornly fought for the ex treme French demands. The whole peace conference .must have been a hateful ex perience for the grizzled old general who had won the war. All his life long he had been , trained to no other end than to: make war; he knew only military ways and military methods, and through out the .conference tie worked passion ately for the welfare of France, as h saw it, and in the only way he knew, which was the warlike way. One had often - the -impression that, though he was the .most acclaimed man .-in; all France, walking . always In glory," yet that he -was full of bitterness of spirit. If he bad had bl way ho . would no doubt - have plunged Europe into more war, not only Immediate war, but more fearful future war, but he .nevertheless thought himself , absolutely right In his contentiona JHt could kneel humbly at mass each morning, as was his Invaria ble custom, and ask the blessing of God noon what he did. Finally.' so unrelent ing was his opposition that they made the treaty without even' allowing him to see a copy '.ef-its provislons-before.lt was presented to the sixth plenary ses sion. - " '- ;"--:..''- . "I should - have, certain remarks to make, he said in a powerful speech on rwaaaMaawitjaaaiiaiiii wissiiiiiiiwi aaBraaaiBaiiijiiiiiiaiiiiiiBi arasSSfSWSWISIWMMWSallt JH T1X t ... - . - i -. : . , , ,. . -. . -. .'; '.. .1 :Z . , ' ' . . ." ". ' - ' : ' that occasion, "if I had the text f the treaty draft, but I must, admit It is not yet la my possession." " Nevertheless, be stood up there, a bold, obstinate, brave. short-slgRed old sol dier, to fight te the last a treaty be thought not severe ou-h. That be bad with him a large following of French puuiic opinion is certain a public pin ion that deposed Clemenceau as soon as the peace conference was at an end. As en vnescapable corollarr of this war spirit, as a result of the overwhelm ing Victory of the alliea the im Dulse everywhere among both the great and small nations of Europe the small na tions were as unrestrained as the great was to seize Instantly upon the material truita of victory to grab.' There had been vast 1 oases, losses la man and Property; these must be recouped and recouped at once. And this was by ro means the spirit alone of the leader a. who wanted islands, coal minea, cities or ships; every peasant who had lost a cow wanted his cow or two cows 1 instantly returned to him. This aspect of the situation, after the peace confer ence began, became so bitter, so menac ing, that on January 24 President WU son drew- up the following communica tion to the nations of the world, read It to his associates in the conference, and with their approval it was issued. This warning against the world-wide spirit of grab was thus his first Important public utterance. at the peace conference. . The governmenu new associated In conference to affect a lasting peace among the nations are deeply disturbed by the news which comes . to them of the many instances in , which armed force is being made use' of, in many parts of Europe and the East, to gain possession of territory, the rightful claim to w hich - the peace conference Is to be askvd to determine. They deem It thir duty to utter a solemn warning that . possession gained by force win seri ously prejudice th claims of those who use such mean a It wrill create - the presumption that those who em ploy force doubt the justice and vaU . idity of. their claim and propose to s substitute possession for proof of right, and set up soTereipnty by ' coercion rather than by racial aaso . elation. They thus put a cloud upon . every evidence of title they may af terward "allege, and indicate their . distrust ( of the - conference Itself. - Nothing but the most unfortunate : results can ensue.-- If they expect - Justice they must refrain from force ' and place their claims la unclouded - good faith In the hands of the con . ference of peace But his words at this time, as I shall show later, were words In the wind. The peace conference.' .therefore, must not be considered apari-ircflu eft ting; not aa a separate and -detached body,' calmly considering what was best' for ths world, but as a stormy transi tion period between war and war psy chology, and the best arrangement for. peace that could be made at a moment still dominated by the spirit ef war. It was a time when men "wandered - be tween two -wor Ida one dead,, the other powerless to be born." . t Copyrtcht, 1 22. by Doabbday. Par Co. ' , as b-chu n art. . . .. . - ' Te, be eaaunocd ant Bandar, . . . Robert Lansing r. I Anonymous 4K - n"sitvimwm BBS I x ! i a.aJ (PatlialMd sad CutryrtaM by 0. P. Pauaata'i i AH ItlsHta Ramd by t'oiud Pasters HTSuieaua - iBrprndootlPe rrobdbttad) H K WHO bolleves in luck should study the career of f.ohert Lansing. Mr. leasing probably thinks that the god dess of chance played him a scurvy trick after hslng admitted him to the Olym pian' heights, to break him as suddenly sa she made him. : - - . , ' Robert Lansing's real misfortune was not knowing how to ptay his luck. It is curious the fear men have of death. The former, secretary of state's only hope of . Immortality was to commit political sui cide, and he lacked the courage or the "vision to fall upon his sword. - Whn Wooerow TTTlson ws elected president for the first lime he appointed Mr. Kryan secretary of state. The opin ion Mr. Wilson i ntertalned Of Mr. Bryan we ell know, Mr. Wilson waa not given to letting his thoughts run wild, but on one occasion, with pen In band, be per mitted hlmaif the luxnry of saying what he thought and expressed the pious Hope' that somebody wouhi knock the llstlngulahed Kebraakan- Into a cocked bat and thus dispose of the perpetual candidate who waa the Old Man of the Bea to the ImocraUc party. ' Circumstances alter cssea Mr. Wil son, ss a private citizen, could ssy and think what be pleased ; as president he wae compelled to make Mr. Bryan sec retary of state. As Mr. Bryan knew nothing of history and l-ss of European politics and had a superb disdain of dl plomacy diplomacy according to the tenets ef Bryanlsm being an unholy and Immoral ' game in which the foreign players were always trying - to out maneuver the vlrtuooa and. Innoeent American he was provided with a po litical nurse, mentor and guardian in the person of John Bassett Moore, -who had a long and brilliant career as aa In ternational lawyer, and diplomatist. Mr. Pryan busted himself with finding soft fobs for deserving Pernor rats, preach ing and Inculcating the virtue of grape '" Juice to the diplomatic corps, and con cocting plans whereby the sword was to be beaten Into a typewriter and war be come a loet art. Meanwhile Mr. Moore waa doing the serioua work of the de partment. No two men are more unlike than Mr. Bryan and Mr. Moore.. Mr. Bryan bundle ef looawly tied emotions to whom a catchy phrase or an unsound theory Is more precious than a natural law or the wisdom of the philosopher Mr, Moore an InUIJert who has subordi nated hi amotions, and to whom facts are ss Important aa mathematics to an engineer. It was an Incompatible union; , It rouM not last Mr. Moore became ' nwpattent ef his chiefs vagaries, and about a yr Liter, returned to the d'.g i Hit julft ef Columbia university, random way In which: chance weaves her skein. Mr. Moore went out of . the department and left the office of coun Sellor'vacant, an office, up to that time. so little known that the -public, if it gave I the matter any thought, believed Its occupant was the, legal adviser of the department, while, as s matter of fact, he is the under secretary, which Is now the official designation. At this stage ef -hls career Mr. 'Lan sing was connected with the department as an adviser on international affairs ntnd had represented, the United States In many international arbitrations. He was known to a smalt -and select circle of lawyers specialising in international law, but to the public his name meant nothing. He; had' always been a good Democrat, although he was married to the. daughter of the late John W. Fos ter.' who wound up a long and brilliant diplomatic life as secretary of state in President Harrison's cabinet after Mr. Blalne'g resignations " r. ',; ,- . - ., '':Hi : : 'I.' TR. LANSING had made Washington 1Y1 his home for many years, and when the new Democratic administration came Into - power he believed his services to the party entitled: him to recognition ana he soueht the appointment of third as sistant secretary of state. The third as sistant secretary Is ' the of flclal social secretary Of the government. -When roy alty or other distinguished persons come to this country as the guests of We na tlon the third assistant -secretary is the master of ceremonies. He has to see that all the forms are properly complied w-lth and nothing happens to mar the visitors1 enjoyment' He sends out invi tatkms. In the name of the state depart ment, to the funerals of ambassadors or the inauguration of the president, But for some reason Mr. Lansing's praise worthy ambition was defeated. v - Mr.' Moore had knowledge, learning. and experience, but he was denied the gift of divination. Had he known .that a few months later a half erased youth in an unheard of place was to be the unconscious agent to set the whole world aflame, undoubtedly he would have put up with Mr. Bryan's carious ideas and peculiar methods and stuck to his desk at the state department, and Mr. Lansing would never, have been heard of. But at the turning point Jn Mr. Moore's career his luck deserted him and Mr. Lansing became the bene ficiary. Mr. Lansing, Who would have been satisfied with the appointment of third assistant secretary of state. minor place in the hierarchy, was ap rotnted by Mr. Wilson counsellor of the department of state. , A FEW months later the situation changed. The state department be came not only the center about which the whole, machinery of the government revolved hut on '.I was fnruwvl th at. This was early In I9H. Now tor the tentloa Of the country and the thoughts of Europe. , ' Tha counselor of the depart ment was lifted out of his obscurity; despatches to the belligerents signed 'Lansing" were published ;.. he received papers, statements were Issued by him, he was Interviewed; he received ambas sadors, and when aft ambassador visited the state department the nerve" centers of the whole world were affected. -Again. a few. months later. In 'June, 1915, Mr. Bryan kindly accommodated Mr. Wilson by knocking himself into a cocked hat and Mr. Lansing w-as appointed sec retary of state. Pew men had. risen so rapidly. He bad no reason to complain of his luck. A . ' Mr. Wilson made some extraordinary appointments a close observer has said he could read motives but not men and hia appointment of - Mr. ,; Lansing at a time of crisis .would have .been , inex plicable were It not logical as Mr. Wilson reasoned. Mr. Wilson did not' invite as his associates his Intellectual equals or those who dared to oppose him; it was necessary that the-' state- department should have a , titular head, but Mr. Wilson was resolved to be .his own sec retary of state and' take Into his own hands the control of foreign policy. No great man, no man great enough to .be secretary, of state when the world was in upheaval, would have -consented to that Indignity ;. no man Jealous of his Own self-respect could have ; remained Mr. Wilson's secretary of state for long. :. Perhaps Mr; Wilson reads men better than ' his critics, believed ; perhaps Mr. Wilson had fully taken the measure of Mr. Lansing and knew how far he could go. . , - s ' ' Nature never Intended Mr. Lansing to be a leader of men, to fight for a great cause, or to engage In physical or intel lectual combat. His life has' been too soft for that, and be is naturally indo lent, He is fond : of and with more than the amateur's appreciation for mu sic, painting, -poetry and the classics of literature. He has dabbled Inverse and be has written, but without brilliancy. Accident made' him a - lawyer, but he was really intended to be an artist; he would . have produced - no masterpieces. for genius- Is not in him, but; he would have been happy in his work and. per haps have given Inspiration to men of greater taient. . , . - j. T TNTIL Mr. Lansing Wama secretary kj or state ne naa never known respon sibility. Practically hla" entire life had been spent . as a subordinate, carrying out with seal and intelligence -the tasks assigned to him, but always In obedience to a stronger mind, Nothing more weak ens character or intellect , than for a man habitually: to turn to another, for direction of inspiration ; a; w ays to play the part of aa Inferior to a mental superior. For years Mr. Lansing had been connected with many international arbitrations which, -theoretically, was a -. '-. . BiiWrt T.Ktiatna- - Ex-Secretary of state ; borti at Watertown, K.,T.. October 17, 1864 ; education, AJ- B., Amherst, 1886: (LL.D Amherst, ,1915. Colgate. 1915, . Princeton. 1917. Columbia, 1S18,' Onion 1918. University State of New York 1919) : admitted to bar, 1889 ; associate counsel ; for United States; in Behring Sea arbitration, 1892-3 ; counsel for Behrlng Sea claims commiesion, 1896-7; solicitor and counsel for the United States under the. Alaskan boundary tribunal, 1908 r "Counsel North Atlantic coast fisheries -arbitration at The Hague. 1909-1:- agent, of United States, American and British 'claims arbitration, 1912-14 ; Counselor for department of state, March 20. 1914-June 23, 1915 ; secretary of state in cabinet of President Wilson, June 23, llS-February,-1920 f member .American commission, to negotiate peace,' Paris, 1918-lS.v j'w-"-r:5fe-t f H --Vi-:::, ?v.'--.' ,.o '""":.:,. t.-V magnificent training for a future sec- tkinal relations ; there ; Is nothing more re tary of state, and actually would have destroyed the ' creative S. administrative usefulness ef a much stronger man than Robert 'Lansing. ' -t ' ' In - the. whole . mummery ; . of lnterna- farclcal than an International arbitra tion. It is always jrecedod by great popular excitement,' A ship Is seized, a boundary is run" a few degrees" north or south of the conventional line,' some- ; The N ational Capital Will Bonus Bill Be Shelved in Congressional, Archives Rivers . -: and Harbors Appropriation t Increased Former ; ;; V Portlander Continues Fight on Army System. v. Congress Shelters." . - " "Sleeping Beauties", 4 ' TVTASHINGTON. April 15. (WASH VV INQTON BUREAU OF THE JOUR NAL) One of the main subjects or spec ulation where politicians meet In Washt Ington Is whether the soldier bonus bill wili Join the list of sleeping beauUes.' A "sleeping beauty is a biU which trav els along with a fan-fare of trumpets for a time, is passed by one house or the other. : end then is tenderly - placed ou a shelf to sleep. "' " 1 .The fate of the bonus bUl in the sen ate is uncertain. It has Jt greater pro portion of resolute opposition. In the sen ate than it bad In the house, and a still larger, number ot senators, knowing the f eeUng of rfhe president , and Secretary Mellon, is disposed to complain that the house did not "play fair, - The "senators think the house was too anxious to get the bill oft Its doorstep, without regard to the consequences for senators. -The champions of the bonus" bill in clude Senator Lodge, -the Republican leader, and . Senator McCumber, chair-, man of the finance committee, which hae the measure In charge. -.vBat Its out spoken opponents make' Up a list ol prominence - and Influencei Included; In the opposition are Underwood, the Demo cratic leader; Warren, chairman of the appropriations committee Nelson, chairs man of judiciary ; Wadsworta, chairman of military affairs; Glass and Wmiama prominent among the minority members; Borah, and the new senator- from Penn sylvanla. Pepper. Warren and Nelson are the sole senatorial survivors of the Civil war. , - Prominent among the "sleeping beau- tlee' or the present congress- is - the Borah "free. . tolls bill, .-which :-. went through ,the senate last ;fa3L ' It came to an ad nipt halt in the house, and still slumbers i in , committee. Freedom - of American ; shipping .. from , tolls - at the Panama canal : was one of the- pledges of the Chicago platform. 'After the bUl passed In the senate it was given out that action would be postponed until after the ama conference, so" there might be no International .discussions about It while the conference was- en. ; s - The .house spent several weeks passing an anti-lynchlng bill, for which consid ers ble pressure was exerted by South ern Republicans of color. K It adopted such' extreme penalties - upon communi ties where lynching take place - that it was .conceded the senate would ' rewrite the bill, .if it is ever seriously considered. So far It has received no consideration m the sjenate. . .- - ; : . '"i--?,.v-;-' r. - One ' measure over which the house f oughtt. three sanguinary s battles has gone to; permanent rest, so far as the present session is concerned. ' This Is the reapportionment bill, to adjust the house membership to the changes hi population made by-the last census. The house has given it up as a too-difficult jobi . ' Ship subsidy hearings, beginning April 4, do not seen likely to bring any result except in volumes of test Jnony. The veterans of senate' "and -. house ;do " not see any chance for it at, such a- fate date, and;,, they: doubt - the wisdom, of ormging sucti a .controversial, subject on for debate on the eve of another-eleetion. No report may be made until the joext serfiion, despite the damage certain to be done to the merchant marine by con (CenehsJed os Pass Pita. Coteata I1tc) thing else "etjually trivial fires' the pa trtoUc hearts The-flag has been Insulted, 1 the offending nation is a land grabber. national honor must be, vindicated. Sec-: retaries of state write no tea, ambassa dors ' are instructed,' the -' press becomes rabid, speeches- are .made; the public. Is advised to 'remain calm, but it is also assured there will be no surrender. .After a few weeks the public forgets about the insult or the way in which it has been robbed ; but the responsible officials who have never allowed themselves to become excited, ; continue, the . pleasing pastime of Writing no tea. i " ' ? y ; ". Month,' sometimes - years. " drag on. then a new secretary of state or a for eign minister, to clean the slate, proposes that, the childish business be 'ended by an International arbitration. More Weeks. more often months, are.spent in agreeing upon the terms of reference, .and finally the dispute goes before an 1m partial arbitral tribunaL. Both sides appoint agents and secretaries, an imposing ar ray of counsel. ' technical experts ; . and as the' counsel are always well paid they have a conscientious .obligation to earn their feea."' , - ,.-r.-'.' 5Vc ' c ' : . More, months are required to prepare the " case,- which f cequently - runs - into many, printed volumes ; and the more volumes the better pleased everybody la, as size denotes Importance. The arbitra tors,, although they are-'- governed by principles of law, . knew what is ex pected of them, and - they rarely dis appoint, Almost invariably their de cision Is a compromise, so nicely shaded that while neither side can claim victory, neither side suffers, the humiliation of defeat: 1 - .. ' .. ". :l. - - v:? ' ' IF Mr, Lansing had been a man of more robust fiber, he would have returned his portfolio to Mr. Wilson as early aa 19 H. for the president was writing notea to the-belligerents and did, not. even as a perfunctory courtesy, consult sec retary of sUte ; ; he made it only too patent he did . not consider his advice worth asking. .Mr. .Lansing was . too fond ot his official prominence . to .sur render It easily, .and this Is another curious thing about the man. Somewhat vain, - holding himself in much higher estimation than the world did. few. men have so thoroughly enjoyed .of flee as he. Put he remained the quiet and unas suming gentleman be had always been; and he certainly -could not have deluded himself Into believing that there was a still higher office for him to occupy. ? Mr. Lansing could not screw up his courage to resign In 1S16. The follow ing year the United States was at war, and he naturally Coaild not desert bis post : but in 1919, Mr. Lansing was given another opportunity and still. he was obdurate.;- He has told us in his public confession fiat he tried to persuade the president . not to go to Paris. . Mr. Wil son, as usual, remained unpersuaded. and Mr. Lansing humbly followed in his train. . - :- Then, of ' course, Mr. Lansing could not resign," but in -Paris he was even more grossly, humiliated ; be was com pletely shut out from the president's confidence ; he wrote letters to Mr, Wil son which the president did not deign to answer ; -so little did Mr. : Lansing know -what : was . being done - that ' be sought " information, from the Chinese delegates 1 It sounds incredible, it seems even more Incredible that a secretary of state should put himself in such an undignified position,, and having done so, should invite the world to share his Ignominy." But he has set it down In his book as if he believed It was ample defense. Instead of realising that it is condemnation. ' v ; .. , , -; ' -. -Curious contradictiona . One might ex pect a sensitive man. a man who has never cdnrted publicity, who has none of the genius of the aeir advertiser, te crave- forgetful nesa for the Paris epi sode., to shrink, from publicly exposing himself and his humiliations, but Mr. Lansing seemingly revels in his self dis section. -The president ' slaps his face; in his pride he summons all the world to look upon the marks left by the ex ecutive's palm, , He feels the sting, and he enters upon an elaborate defense to show It as the stigmata ot martyrdom. A -treaty was framed of which-he dis approved, yet he could sign itv without wrench of conscience. Unreconciled to resignation in Paris. ' he returned ' to Washington as if nothing had happened, again . to resume- hla subservient rela tions to the president, ' . . " -' - , - . Opportunity, we are told, knocks only once at a man's dopr." But while opportunity- thundered at Mr. .Lansing's por tals, "his ear was closed with the cotton of negligence. . . "-. - - . Early in 1920. Mr. Wilson dismissed him. brutally, abruptly, '.with the petu lance of an invalid too tired to be fair i for a reason so obviously disingenuous that Mr.. Larumg had the sympathy of the country-' He should either have told the truth then and there or -forever have held his ' peace ; and had he re mained mute out of the mystery would have grown a myth., The fictitious Lan sing would have become an historical character.' But he must needs write a book, . It does not make pleasant read ing. it does not make its author a hero. . v " - .-... , '. --- -. . It does, however, answer the question the curious asked at the time of his appointment ; "Why did the president make Mr. Lansing secretary of state T Says Guatemalan : ; Regime Recognized Washington, April la. (U. P.) Presi dent Harding hss recognised the new government of Guatemala. Secretary of State Hughes . announced today. High Cost of Toor -Living Is Problem For Berlin Public ;" BrlGeorre Wltle X . - Spacial Wirl to .Th Joarnal aad Cluear . . . CoprrajM. 122. - ' -Berlin. -AprU li. In BerUn the h'rh cost of poor Xtvlng has become a prob lem. - according to the Neue Berliner Zeltung. , The statistics for March show that wholesale prices of Important food--stuffs.. such as butter and meat, have gone up 6,25 per cent as compared with ' pre-war quotaUona And the poor con sumer has to pay aa additional 2009 per cent when he buys at. retail prices at the corner rrocery- store or meat mar ket.. ' . , . - i .-7 . i' " - - "Our dally bread and butter," says the paper, "are far higher than they are In Chicago. New Tcrk and ether American eitlea The only advantage we Germans have over .the Americans is . that here we can have a stein of beer with our costly, but frugal, meals. However, the price of beer has been raised 40 ner' cent over what It was In February. - Swiss Hotel Trade ' Awaiting Tourists Geneva.' April IS. U P. At last there Is a rift in the dark clouds which have been obscuring the financial hori zon of Switzerland and threatening dis aster te her favorite industry that of the hotel and boarding house. Prom I across the Atlantic comes the welcome news that the - former summer migra tion of tourists Is not only going to resume 4 lav former proportions, but even bids fair to break all records and that the Swiss mountain resorts are one more to come Into tnelr own,'- ' - -4 BaBBBBMaaaHaaeaaaw'aBsaaBa.iaaa a k S Russian-Prof essors Get 2 Cents a Month London, April 15. (C. -P. Russ'aa univerrity professors look upon ihe-.r American conferee as bloated plulo-r-ts. The average salary of the-professor in Russia is 10,000 roubles ' a monSy something less than z cents rr.jfror An-hlbald Cory Coolidge of Harvard, said - In a message received at head quarters of the American Rel.ef asso ciation. - - - , -