Who Is the Enemy— China or the White Man? By JOSEPH W. LaBINE Japanese naval underlings were allegedly slain by the Chinese. In retaliation a whole fleet of stern-nosed Nipponese battle- and began shelling Shanghai. That was the start of Japan's current ‘“‘war of defense’ in China. If some of us scratch our heads over the “‘war of de- fense’ idea, it may as well be explained that the Sino-Jap sit- uation is full of paradoxes and puzzles. For example: Japan fears foreign criticism but invites it by shelling Ameri- can and British ships. She claims to be helping China while bombing cities, slaughtering innocent natives and destroying everything in sight. She dislikes Westerners, makes a Fascist pact Germany and Italy. She signed the nine-power treaty guaranteeing China’s in- with country. Such, perhaps, all nations that go to war, tablished governmental tenets. If Japan's unusual attitude seems more hysterical than that of the average nation at war, it's either because the Japs are naive or ex- tremely clever. Probably they're clever, so clever that Western pow- ers are just beginning to under- stand this Chinese invasion, Japan, some observers say, is warring not on China, but on West- ern domination in the Orient! The “divine destiny’ she pursues is a union of all Asiatic nations under Japanese domination. The net re- suit will be expulsion of British, French, American and Portuguese commercial interests. Apologies Come Fast, Diplomatic files of both America and Great Britain are choked with so-called ‘‘apologies’’ for hostile acts such as the Panay incident, bombing of H. M. S. Ladybird and the aerial attack on Britain's am- bassador to China. But despite these apologies the incidents continue, And, amazingly, many recent Ori- ental attacks on Western powers have come from the Chinese! President Hoover. Later a Chinese anti-aircraft shell killed a sailor on the U. 8S. S. Augusta. In fairness that both these attacks may have been accidental. ish, American and other traders ac- cepted these insulting terms be- cause their ships sailed homeward laden with richer tribute than they | had brought. Opium Restrictions Lifted. | China's opium curse, for they be- gan smuggling it from India late in the Eighteenth century despite gov- ernmental edicts to the contrary. In 1839 when China confiscated British opium the English sent ships and soldiers, destroyed half of Canton and forced China to sign her first humiliating treaty in 1842. Grudgingly, she later made pacts with other Occidental powers and permitted establishment of the in- ternational settlement in Shanghai. of the white men more bloodshed in 1856, after which Britain won trading rights at five additional ports restrictions were also relaxed to Britain's glee and poor China's mis- ery. In 1859 British and French ships were attacked at Taku. years the allies had taken Peking and forced still another treaty down China's throat. Some time later came establishment of the Euro- pean controlled imperial customs service at Shanghai. Western con- quest of China was growing rapidly. Shanghai and other cities became Occidental, featured by skyscrap- ers, European dress and the white man's customs. China, proud of her ancient culture, kept the resent- ment of this intrusion rankling in | her breast. The American Indian probably felt the same way, | both have been justified. Japan entered the picture promi- nently during the World war she seized German possessions in { Shan and gained broad com- mercial and mining privileges with her notorious 21 demands. At the tung Using every conceivable type of seige were in more danger of harm from enraged Chinese troops than from the attacking Japs. Japan's habit of attaching an apology to the tail of every bomb she drops on Westerners in China is, to say the least, beginning to reek of insincerity. The Panay at- tack and several others have been established as deliberate. We can take little solace from the fact that Japanese civilians are opposed to such tactics, because only the army and navy count in Nippon. The em- peror, the premier and the people are puppets. Occidentals have never been pop- ular in the Orient. Three centuries ago they invaded China like they in- vaded America 200 years earlier, selfish in their interests, despised and suspected. They were tribute bearers, later to become tribute tak- ers. Canton was designated by the emperor as their sole trading and residence area, and only a few Chi- nese merchants were permitted to have dealings with them. But Brit. Washington conference she was forced to relinquish many of these gains, but the die had been cast. She showed little hesitation about breaking treaties when Manchuria began to look tempting. Her na- tional self-esteem has grown tre. mendously until Japan now feels a patriotic duty in uniting the Orient under her domination. Thus the Occidentals have two forces driving them out of China: first, the Chinaman's natural hos- tility and, second, Japan's ‘“‘divine destiny” in the Orient. Our “Word of Honor.” White men are “losing face” in the Far East. They have encour- aged Japun $5 brcak 1eaties bY Sel. ting a precedent in the matter, thereby parading their weaknesses before the yellow man. The Orient can no longer rely on the white man’s “word of honor.” Occidentals traveling in China are warned not to be friendly with the natives, a precaution against the outpost wears a gas Chinese authorities have | danger of ‘losing face.” To be { blunt, we depend not on power but | on prestige to maintain our posi- | tion in the Far East. It is a colos- sal bluff which is being called today by the clever Japanese. For Nip- pon has discovered that our lofty idealism and morality are hypocriti- eal and has decided to beat us at our own game. Instead of prestige, Japan is using power to conquer China. Great Britain will be the greatest loser in this inevitable trade argu- ment with Japan. In addition to | being the largest foreign investor in China, she is Nippon's favorite target by virtue of her belief in the open door policy for China. English colonists are so prominent and well- established in the Far East as to be synonymous (in the Japanese mind) with all that is wrong with Occiden- tals. America's loss cannot be as large. A 1933 survey showed that United | States citizens have about $150,000,- { 000 invested in China, representing {1.3 of all investments beyond our frontiers. American money amounts | to about 7 per cent of all foreign capital in China. In order of in- vestments, Great Britain is first, Ja- pan second, Russia third and the United States fourth. Almost two- thirds of the American investment is centered in Shanghai. The Question: Japan's Policy. What will happen to Occidental investments in China must remain a matter of conjecture, dependent, first, on what policy the victorious Japanese may wish to adopt, and | whether they wish to abide by the “open door’ doctrine to which they | subscribed at the Washington naval | conference. It is doubtful if they | will, | Quite obviously, e 3 will be accorded Japanese chants. Already the imperial cus- toms service at Shanghai has been removed from European hands and placed under Nipponese domination. This means that Japanese goods may enter China duty-free while American and British goods will be assessed heavily. But does Japan dare close China's door to Britain and America? And do Britain and America—in turn— dare risk incurring Japan's enmity by protesting too loudly against the invasion of China? The truth of the matter is that Britain and America buy 53 per cent of Japan's exports, whereas the same two countries account for 65 per &ent of Japan's imports. In terms of trade, the three nations are mutually depend- ent. Last year 23 per cent of America's cotton crop landed on Japan's shores, in addition to $30,000,000 worth of oil, $8,000,000 in lumber, $6,000,090 in wood pulp, $10,000,000 in machinery and $9,000,000 in mis- cellaneous purchases. In all, very advantage mer- pan each year. Hands-Off Policy. In the light of the Occidental na- to understand why Britain and America are forsaking the mailed dents. China is not yet beaten. tegic retreat, pulling the enemy far- ther away from home and thus mak- ing guerilla warfare more success- ful. Meanwhile Japan finds her war expense mounting rapidly and the folks back home may eventually get tired of paying the bills. It is generally conceded that Ja- pan must hold out two years to win a complete victory. If she does, she will control China and can hold the Western nations at her mercy. If China wins, Japan will be driven back to her island empire but the Occidentals will not necessarily profit. On the contrary China's years of grief will have welded its peoples into a strong, purposeful na- tion, ready to trample on the for. eigners who now hold sway in her rich cities. or ut het way Jo Sure figure it, the Yel- Peril has the white man's eri estern Newspaper Union. ADVENTURERS’ CLUB HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES OF PEOPLE LIKE YOURSELF! “Death Fog” By FLOYD GIBBONS Famous Headline Hunter I ELLO EVERYBODY: Well, sir, the Vikings of old used to sail the seas in oared galleys that were hardly bigger than the motor cruisers in which we plough through our lakes and rivers today. I'll give them a lot of credit for their nerve. But they had oars to row with and sails to carry them along. They knew where they were going and they had a pretty good chance of getting there. I'm betting a lot that there wasn’t a Viking in any age who would have put himself in the spot Pete Gear of Sunnyside, L. I., found himself in. Not for any amount of money. It happened in September, 1027—and here's how. Pete got a job en a coal barge. And one of the first trips that barge was sent on after Pete joined the crew, was a tow out to sea with a load of coal for a ship that was to meet them a hundred and ninety-five miles out in the Atlantic. The rendezvous at which they were to meet was southeast of Block island. A tug was to take the barge out. Five men com- posed the barge’s crew. Four of those fellows—Pete included had never been out to sea before, The fifth man was a regular sea-going bargeman. They Couldn't Find the Boat. On the afternoon of the day appointed, the tug came along and the barge was hooked on behind it. Pete says the trip up Long Island sound was like a moonlight excursion. But after they passed Montauk point, the sea was mighty rough. The four landlubbers immediately got seasick. It was a hard night for those lads—but it was going to be a lot harder before they got back. The next day, when they arrived at the appointed spot, there was no sign of the boat they had come to meet. The tugboat captain told the bargeman to drop anchor and he would circle ® ound and see if he could find the other boat. He cast off the tow line and the tug steamed away. Soon it was out of sight. There was nothing in sight, as a matter of fact, but water and more water. They were nearly two hundred miles from the nearest land. Then, half an hour later, a thick fog settled down over the anchored barge. Anchored in the Shipping Lane. Says Pete: “We were lying in our bunks, too sick to move, when the regular bargeman came in and told us about the fog. He explained that we were anchored in the shipping lane, and that was a dangerous posi- Pete Yanked Away On That Bell tion. We would have to keep the fog bell ringing as long as the fog lasted. Otherwise we would most likely be run down by one of the liners which were continually passing through that part of the ocean.” And that was only the beginning. The troubles crowded thick and fast after that. It was night now, and the bargeman went aloft to hang a riding light. He was hardly up there when he fell to the deck and lay still, his leg broken. “Then,” says Pete, “the nightmare began.” Pete picked him up and carried him to his bunk. The other three were still lying in their bur the ghastly pallor of seasickness on When little he could for the injured man, men ks, their faces Pete went he had done what | out and started ringing the fog bell The night wore on, and the fog showed no sign of lifting. Pete yanked away rhythmically on that bell, tolling a monotonous dirge., His arm was getting tired. His hand was chafing from its constant contact with the bell rope. Every minute he expected to see the bow of an ocean liner looming over the barge. Every minute he expected to hear a thud and a crash of splintering timbers as some huge craft cut them in two. Pete Had to Keep Ringing the Bell. Pete began to feel that he couldn't hold his arm up to pull that bell rope any longer. He went into the cabin and tried to souse one of the seasick men. Not one of them would get up. Pete was seasick himself, but these fellows felt a lot worse. In vain he told them of the dangers of leaving that bell unmanned. They didn't care whether the barge went down or not. In fact, one or two of them hoped it would. Pete dragged himself back to the bell. But he couldn't quit. His life depended on it. And so did the lives of those other four men in their bunks. Dawn came, and still he was jerking away on that rope. Still the fog hadn't lifted. All morning long—all after- noon-—-he stuck to his post. Both his hands were so raw now that he had to hook his elbow through the bell rope and pull it with his arm. Night came—and still Pete was at it. His whole body was stiff now. He ached in every muscle and joint and bone. His arm was working mechanically now. He scarcely realized that he was pulling that cord. And for TWO NIGHTS AND A DAY Peter rang that bell. Never will he forget the nightmare of that experience. On the morning of the third day he couldn’t take it any longer. He didn't quit. He just fell asleep—right where he was—from sheer exhaustion. Found by an Airplane. When Pete awoke again the sun was just disappearing over the western horizon. But the fog had lifted. There was no sign of the tug. When the fog came down it had been unable to find the barge—and it still hadn't found it. All that third night they waited. On the fourth day Pete sighted a plane. It circled around in the skies and then headed back toward land again. “When it turned around,” says Pete, “I thought that pilot hadn't seen ug.” But the plane had spotted the barge. It had been sent out from New London for that very purpose. And on the fifth day the tug boat came out and reclaimed its lost tow. It didn’t take Pete long to get over the effects of his adventure. Now he looks back un it as quite an exciting experience. There's one though, that mukes Pete mad. He worked himself to exhaustion, to keep some vessel from sending that barge to the bottom. “But in all that time,” he says, “I didn’t see a single one of those big liners that I was in such fear of.” He was sick—sleepy—aching. ©-WNU Service. Where Yale Is Buried All around the Welsh village of Bryn-Eglwys, writes H. V. Morion in “In Search of Wales,” lies nrop- erty which once belonged to the Yale family, one of whom, Elihu, did so much toward founding Yale university. Elihu lies buried, Fow- ever, not in the Yale chape: at tached to the church of Bryn-Egl wys, but at Wrexham, ten miles away. Both places are much vis. fted by Americans traveling in Wales Gather Yarn Scraps for Flower Afghan Rows and rows of flowers in all colors of the rainbow-—that's the feature of this striking afghan which is the gayest, easiest thing out! 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