1937
Generalissimo and Madame Chiang Kai-Shek
FROM THE TIME ARCHIVE
Jan. 3, 1938

Man of two years (1932 & 1934) was Franklin Delano Roosevelt, but
certainly he has not been Man of 1937. For 1937 is the first year since he
became President of the U.S. that Franklin Roosevelt has not clearly been the
dominant figure in U.S. public life: In his one big political battle of the
year, over the Supreme Court, he was worsted. Had any one man been primarily
responsible for that defeat, he would be a towering figure of politics, but in
factwhile many figures, including Senators Wheeler of Montana, Borah of
Idaho, Burke of Nebraska and Vice President Garner, contributed in one way and
anotherFranklin Roosevelt largely wrought his own defeat by antagonizing
opinion in Congress and out.
Moved PermanentlyMoved Permanently
Certainly if there is a U.S. Man of 1937 he is John Llewellyn Lewis who
made his C.I.O. a primary force in the affairs of the nation, fought two great
automobile strikes, unionized the greater part of the U.S. steel industry for
the first time in history and in a twelvemonth built a labor organization the
equal of the old A.F. of L. in size and power, its superior in leadership. The
measure of his achievement is that his two runners-up were his two vis-a-vis:
1) Chairman Myron Charles Taylor who without a blow being struck negotiated for
the unionization of great U.S. Steel Corp. and 2) President Tom Mercer Girdler
of Republic Steel who battled John L. Lewis to the last ditch and largely
prevented the complete unionization of the steel industry.
But there are good reasons why no U.S. citizen is the Man of 1937. In the
last five months of the twelve the U.S. led the world not forward toward
prosperity but backward toward depression. However great was John L. Lewis'
accomplishment, by year end he was in the position of every labor leader and
every industrialist when business is receding: battening down hatches to ride
out a storm.
Wallis Warfield Spencer Simpson was Woman of 1936, but the Duke &
Duchess of Windsor, with the assistance of Herr Hitler and Mr. Bedaux,
eliminated themselves as completely as possible from an important place in the
history of 1937. Their names would scarcely have been mentioned in print at
year end, had not London's blatant Daily Express been filled by a story of how
the Duchess sent a doll last week to the Miners' Federation of South Wales
where King Edward VIII once popularized himself, declaring "Something must be
done for Wales!". The doll, instructed the Duchess, is not too be raffled off
for charity but given to the child of an unemployed Welsh miner. "Will the
little mother of this doll," wrote Last Year's Woman, "kindly name it Wallis?"
During 1937 the $1,350,000 yacht Nahlin on which King Edward and Mrs. Simpson
cruised was bought by King Carol of Rumania for his henna-haired Mme Magda
Lupescu, who many a Rumanian feels is perennially That Woman of the Year.
Meantime England has a new King & Queen, but in 1937 it was Mary, the
Queen Mother, who discreetly used her immense popularity and prestige to win
public sympathy and kindle warmth for her second son and his wife. But while
George VI ripened as a ruler and Elizabeth every day became less "The Smiling
Duchess" and more Queen of England, Mary remained still superbly The Queen.
King of the Year, if any, was certainly Leopold III of the Belgians, dynamic
maker of international treaties, wise maker of Belgian cabinets, and a
handsome, eligible young widower not to be overlooked by any lady of royal
blood.
In statecraft few Europeans shone in 1937. In the struggle for mastery of
Spain, no man, in Spain or out, could claim to have distinguished himself, much
less to have won victory. In Germany statecraft & business came under the
control of Four-Year Plan Economic Dictator Hermann Wilhelm Goring, but he has
not yet finished disposing of Dr. Hjalmar Schacht. In the United Kingdom a new
Prime Minister, Mr. Neville Chamberlain, won no laurelsalthough the
middle-class policies for which he stands (like his predecessor Stanley
Baldwin) made perceptible headway in Europe during 1937. In France, where
Socialist Leon Blum was Man of 1936, new Premier Camille Chautemps carried
forward his middle- class policy, "The Pause." In Russia Joseph Stalin helped
his country to "come of age" with universal suffrage, but morally and
politically he shrank in stature because he found it necessary to make a bloody
routine of the execution of his oldest supporters.
Ranking certainly with any of these stood Getulio Vargas, President of the
vast United States of Brazil, (Larger than the continental U.S.A. exclusive of
Alaska.) who ruthlessly tightened up his dictatorship along lines which
superficially resembled Fascism and remained typically Latin American.
In other fields there were greater figures than these.
In Sport the unquestioned Man of 1937 was John Donald Budgethe only man
ever to win Wimbledon's three titles (men's singles, men's doubles, mixed
doubles) and directly responsible for the Davis Cup returning to the U.S.
No less outstanding as Man of the Year in Science & Medicine was Dr.
Thomas Parran Jr., Surgeon General of the U.S. Public Health Service, whose
significant accomplishment was to carry on against venereal disease the first
U.S. drive comparable to those with which other human plagues have been
worsted.
Foremost U.S. Books of the Year were certainly Dale Carnegis's How to Win
Friends and Influence People, which sold 750,000 copies, and Kenneth Roberts'
Northwest Passage, which sold 308,000.
Cinema's box-office-tested Actor of the Year was Clark Gable, its Actress
of the Year, Shirley Temple, but Deanna Durbin, 15, who rose to stardom in
1937, reputedly sang Universal Pictures out of impending bankruptcy as their
Girl of the Year.
Beyond humanity two great distinctions reaming: 1) Radio's Man of the year
Charlie McCarthy, the greatest ventriloquist's dummy in 3,000 years of human
history; and 2) Animal of the Year, Congo, the rare okapi (resembling a cross
between an antelope and a giraffe), sent to the New York Zoological Society by
the Antwerp Zoo "as a gesture of friendship and gratitude" for 325 birds &
animals sent by the Society to Antwerp to restock the zoo which Kaiser
Wilhelm's troops ravaged. With his 14-in. tongue, the Animal of the Year is
adept at washing his long furry ears. Not in the Americas, however, not in
Europe, not in Africa, not in Australia, but in Asia are to be found 1937's
outstanding public characters.
In 1937 the world's most populous nationChinawas engaged on land, sea
and in the air by the only non-white people who have ever shown aptitude for
conquest by machine-age methodsthe Japanese. Last week, in remote and neutral
Stockholm the great Swedish explorer of Asia, Dr. Sven Hedin, said in a lecture
before the Swedish Academy: "Recent events in China constitute not only a
warning but a final signal that the white man's burden soon will be taken over
by a very willing Japan. The reign of the white race in the Far East is coming
to an end."
If in 1937 any Japanese had been responsible for creating the situation
which Sweden's Dr. Hedin thinks has been created, then that Japanese would
assuredly be Man of the Year. There is no such Man. No one Japanese leads or
even controls the avalanche which Japanese ambition has in motion. Much as a
hill of ants are driven by their impulses to conquer another ant hill, the
Japanese have gone forth to war. No Napoleon and no Bismarck guides them. The
Japanese Emperor & Elder Statesmen, the Army & Navy chiefs in Japan,
the Cabinet, the Japanese Army & Navy chiefs in China, are all mutually
rival groups.
But while Japan launched her great adventure without outstanding
leadership, China, the victim of the adventure, has had the ablest of
leadership. Through 1937 the Chinese have been lednot without gloryby one
supreme leader and his remarkable wife. Under this Man & Wife the
traditionally disunited Chinese peoplemillions of whom seldom used the word
"China" in the pasthave slowly been given national consciousness.
He is a salt seller's son, she a Bible salesman's daughter. No woman in
the West holds so great a position as Mme Chiang Kai- shek holds in China. Her
rise and that of her husband, the Geralissimo, in less than a generation to
moral and material leadership of the ancient Chinese people cover a great page
of history. (On January 25, Houghton Mifflin will publish the first really good
biography of China's Chiang: Strong Man of the East, by Robert Berkov, longtime
United Press bureau manager at Shanghai.)
Every headline reader knows that in 1937 the Japanese War Machine was
halted at Shanghai for 13 long weeks, its timetable shattered by the first
Chinese War Machine worthy of the name which the modern world had ever seen. No
fault of Generalissimo Chiang was it that he was forced to use his War Machine
at least two years before it was finished. His hand was forced by overzealous
Chinese patriots, by canny Japanese who believed that unless they beat China in
1937 they might never do so. Today Generalissimo & Mme Chiang have not
conceded China's defeat, they long ago announced that their program for as many
years as necessary will be to harass, exhaust and eventually ruin Japan by
guerrilla warfare. If Generalissimo Chiang can achieve it, he may emerge Asia's
Man of the Century. Such success is highly problematical. Meantime, he and Mme
Chiang have made themselves Man & Wife of 1937.
Miss Mao. Thirty-six years ago in the village of Chikow lived an
indomitable woman. She had a 15-year-old son, Chiang Kai-shek, who had the
reputation of a wastrel and under her thumb, according to custom, she had
Chiang's bride, a Fenghua maiden named Miss Mao. The bride lived to see her
husband become great, to be discarded as his wife, to go back to her village
and live on a pension of $3,000 Mex per month. His mother lived to contrive, by
dint of much scrimping, to stake young Chiang to four years of military
schooling in Japan. She died prosperous in 1921, thanks to her dutiful son, who
bought her a fine funeral, later built a Buddhist monastery in her memory.
Greatest of all was the reward of the village, to which the General has long
sent a gift of $40,000 Mex each month.
When Student Chiang arrived in Tokyo, it was, as Moscow later became, a
centre of Chinese revolutionary activity. Thus when Chiang Kai-shek returned to
China he drifted gradually into the military entourage of Dr. Sun Yat-sen,
"Father of the Chinese Republic." The young officer was about as close to Sun
at the time as Stalin was to Lenina loyal subordinate but one of many. From
Moscow there arrived in Canton in 1924 the great Propagandist Michael Borodin
and the able Soviet General Galen. These men in the closing years of Dr. Sun's
life assisted and directed his disciples, and the greatest of these in the
military sphere became General Chiang Kai-shek.
Conqueror. When the revolutionary army of the Kuomintang ("National
People's Party"), founded by Dr. Sun, sallied forth under General Chiang from
Canton, the capital of the weak Chinese Republic was Peking in the north, but
middle China was then dominated by famed "Scholar War Lord" Marshal Wu Pei-fu.
Ahead of Chiang's army marched a horde of Borodin-coached Chinese, preaching
Communist-style propaganda in the name of the Kuo- mintang. With him marched
competent Soviet military advisers and in his ammunition train he carried,
beside cartridges, many "silver bullets" with which he bought off local
officials who opposed him.
Seen today, now that all this is known, the conquering advance of General
Chiangfirst 600 miles from Canton inland to Hankow ("The Chicago of China");
then 600 miles down the Yangtze River to Shanghai ("The New York of China") and
Nankingwas not primarily a great feat of arms. General Chiang had not yet
developed many of his great qualities. he was almost an out-&-out puppet of
the Soviet Union, but, as both Japan and Russia have found to their cost, no
Chinese ever fully sells himself or China.
Conqueror Chiang immediately made friends with the Chinese businessmen of
Shanghai, turned violently anti-Communist, massacred some 3,500 unimportant
Shanghai Reds, permitted Propagandist Borodin and General Galen to "escape" to
the Soviet Union. He later made Communism a capital crime. General Chiang's
only son by his No. 1 wife, Chiang Ching-kuo, had by this time moved to Moscow,
busied himself denouncing his father from Soviet platforms, became a Communist.
Old Charlie's Daughters. Until recently any prominent Chinese obliged to
be much away from home usually had one or more concubines (with the knowledge
& consent of his wife), and successful General Chiang at this time was no
exception. The swankier of the Conqueror's concubines found her social doings
recorded even in the British press of Shanghai, which referred to her as "Mme
Chiang."
General Chiang was now master of South and Central China but many
Kuo-mintang politicians denounced him as a Fascist or worse. With a
characteristic gesture he resigned all his offices and went to Japan. There
Chiang, the shrewd, hard-headed, hard- living, callous soldier who had made his
way to power, proceeded to court pretty, educated, high-minded Soong Mei-ling.
Her brother, Mr. T.V. Soong, today China's greatest financier, informed General
Chiang as courteously as possible that a husband with concubines was scarcely
acceptable as a suitor in the Chinese Christian family of Soong. Mei-ling's
father, famed "Old Charlie" Soong, had made his fortune as a pioneer in
printing and selling Bibles to Chinese as fast as the missionaries created a
demand. Investing his profits at about 40% Chinese interest, he died a merchant
prince. Old Mrs. Soong had not forgotten that her late husband had tumbled
another of her daughters unceremoniously into the arms of old Dr. Sun Yat-sen
(who also had another wife at the time) and that the marriage had been a master
stroke for the House of Soong.
Venerable Mother Soong therefore told General Chiang that if he would
become a Christian he could marry her attractive, Wellesley-graduated Mei-ling.
The Conqueror replied that he would not adopt a new religion merely to win a
bride, but that if Miss Soong would marry him he would agree to study
Christianity, and then do as he saw fit. No ordained Christian pastor could be
found who thought General Chiang free to marry Miss Soong, so a lay Y.M.C.A.
secretary united them in holy matrimony. From the day General Chiang thus took
his No. 2 wife, both his character and his fortunes rapidly commenced to take
on a certain grandeur. Eventually he also became a Christian.
Chiang Conquers All. The marriage of General Chiang was important because
it made him the post-mortem brother-in-law of the Kuomintang's late sainted
Sun; brother-in-law of Big Banker T.V. Soong; and brother-in-law of Dr. H.H.
Kung, famed descendant of China's greatest sage Confucius, who also married a
Soong girl. Chiang returned to China to head the Kuomintang Government at
Nanking. He was soon styled the Generalissimo, and headed a campaign to conquer
northern China. In this war there was by normal Chinese standards some fairly
heavy fighting. Most fortunate for the Generalissimo, however, was the
assassination at Mukden of the doughtiest fighter among China's War Lords, the
great Marshal Chang Tsolin, famed bibber of tiger's blood and keeper of a harem
of white women.
The Marshal's son & heir, Chang Hsuehliang, "The Young Marshal,"
blamed the Japanese for his father's somewhat mysterious assassination, and
allied himself with Chiang. Six years ago the Japanese drove The Young Marshal
out of Manchuria and reorganized it as their puppet state Manchukuo, but the
rest of China had been brought under the flag of the Nanking Government, that
is, of Generalissimo Chiang.
Progress. From then until this year's Japanese invasion the material
progress of Chiang's China has been phenomenal. He called in Professor Edwin
Walter Kemmerer of Princeton to give China the plan for its first sound
currency, and the first ever accepted on a nation-wide basis. Roads and busses
to run on them were sent stabbing far into China from her ports, and the more
busses the fewer bandits. Flood control and famine-fighting agencies which had
functioned piecemeal in China were given co- ordination. In a land which has
existed for centuries in a state of complete disorganization such elementary
progress was revolutionary. The armies or bandit hordes of Chinese Communists
who tried to harass Nanking from the hinterland were turned by Generalissimo
Chiang into an excuse for not fighting the Japanese. He used them as a football
coach uses a scrub team to train the regular army of New Chinathe first
Chinese War Machine, complete with European artillery, German military
advisers, U.S. and Italian war planes.
New Life. In China no great moral stigma had commonly attached to graft.
It was the custom of nearly every official who could to collect it. For the
colossal purchases Chiang had to make, he could not afford the normal luxury of
graft. To find someone he could trust to purchase war planes the Generalissimo
turned at last in desperation to his own wife. She it was who pored over
aircraft catalogs, dickered with hard-boiled white salesmen, and is reputed to
have had several Chinese officials of her Air Ministry shot to reduce thieving.
What Chinese officialdom needed, the Generalissimo & Mme Chiang had
decided, was a big dose of the castor oil of Puritanism. The tablespoon with
which they dished this out they called the New Life Movement, and with every
ounce of Nanking's authority they dosed all China. Batch after batch of local
mayors and magistrates were ordered to Nanking, drilled and exhorted there in
the primary decenciesto stop wiping noses on sleeves, to stop taking bribes
from litigants. They were warned that he who did not practice the new
Puritanism might expect the worstand this was no empty threat.
One unique wastrel against whom the new Life Movement struggled in vain
was Chiang Wei-kuo. He is the son of a Japanese waitress & a Chinese
official whom Generalissimo Chiang obliged by adopting the lad as his own son.
In vain Chiang Wei-kuo was put under the direct control of Mme Chiang. She
could do nothing with him. He was sent to Germany, last year suddenly appeared
in London and forced the Chinese Delegation to the Coronation of King George VI
to get him in on it and on all the best parties.
Despite non-success with Chiang Wei-kuo, the New Life Movement otherwise
was successfully enforced. The Geralissimo & Mme Chiang had individuals
whom they trusted planted unobtrusively in all branches of the Government.
These spies for Puritanism reported direct, and in Nanking not a few errant
officials' careers were mysteriously broken.
Kidnapping. Year ago the Generalissimo was suddenly kidnapped and held
prisoner at Sian. It was The Young Marshal Chang whose troops seized Chiang
Kai-shek. This kidnapping was promptly hijacked by Chinese forces allied with
the Communists. At Nanking an extremely grave suspicion was abroad that
Brother-in-Law T.V. Soong, disappointed in an ambition to become Premier of
China, had put The Young Marshal, a "cured" ex-dope addict, up to seizing the
Generalissimo. What followed proved that Chiang had remade China. It also gave
the lie to generations of Chinese history. Instead of rushing to seize Chiang's
power Chinese soldiers and officials from all parts of the country began a
bombardment of telegrams demanding the release, rescue or ransoming of Chiang
Kai-shek at any cost. It was the ultimate testimony that after centuries the
Chinese people had at last found a Leader. It is too early to give credence to
rumors that Banker Soong was obliged to unsnarl the kidnapping mistake with
millions of dollars in bribes. The more popular, official version is that The
Young Marshal Chang and the Communists were "greatly touched" by the contents
of the Generalissimo's diarywhich convinced them that he was not at heart
pro-Japanese. At all events the sequel to Sian was that Chiang's armies ceased
to fight the Reds, and joyfully returned from Moscow Son Chiang Ching-kuo with
a Russian Communist wife.
"Welcome, my son!" cried the Generalissimo, then indicating Mei-ling he
added "and now you must meet your new mother."
"That is not my mother," retorted Chiang Ching-kuo, "and having paid my
respects to you, father, I am going to my mother and your wife!"
"This week Red Son Chiang was probably still with his mother, Miss Mao,
but proverbially unreliable Chinese newspapers had him suddenly appearing in
Suiyuan at the head of 100,000 Soviet Mongol troops.
Long Pull. During 1937 the beginning of the Japanese invasion found the
Generalissimo then "the only man in China who did not think it best to fight."
In his shrewd head Chiang Kai-shek knew better than anyone else that the New
China was not yet ready to use her War Machine; that to fight would be to incur
the catastrophic losses China has now suffered; that his Government would
inevitably be driven from Nanking; that the hand of the Chinese Communists
would be immensely strengthenedunless Japan's triumph should indeed be utter
& complete. Knowing all this, Chiang Kai-shek up to the last possible
moment counseled, as he had counseled for years, "any sacrifice should not be
regarded as too costly!" providing it averted war with Japan.
The Generalissimo was overwhelmed and overruled by Chinese public opinion.
He was obliged to lead China to certain defeat. Most amazing was the outward
confidence of every public act and word of the Man & Wife of the
Yearparticularly the tone of her cables from Nanking to the U.S. press. Until
the evacuation of Nanking, Mme Chiang was writing about how "my air force" was
going to bomb Tokyo, carefully sparing "the women and children."
The spot to which Generalissimo & Mme Chiang have fled was a military
secret this week. Their job is now to wage against Japan such guerrilla warfare
as General Sandino hurled from his Nicaraguan mountains against the forces of
Calvin Coolidge. To such a resourceful man as Chiang the fight is not
necessarily hopeless. Japan is not the U.S. Her resources have already been
badly strained and it is conceivable that if the fight is sufficiently long and
costly, it may break her economically. Nor is China Nicaragua. She is so large
that any invader inevitably has long lines open to attack, and so populous that
her resources of man power cannot soon be exhausted. Her greatest weakness has
always been in will power. If Chiang Kai-shek and Mei-ling can maintain their
will as China's willthe same will which said that "any sacrifice should not
be regarded as too costly"Chinese prospects are good. China's prospects now
as they have been for 20 centuries are, however, only for the long pull.
This week an Associated Press correspondent "somewhere in the Yangtze
Valley" with Generalissimo & Mme Chiang was permitted to flash that
influenza had bedded the Wife of the Year, quoted the Man of the Year as
saying: "Tell America to have complete confidence in us. The tide of battle is
turning and victory eventually will be ours!"
WAR IN CHINA Death and Conquest
Of China's 4,480,992 square miles Japanese forces took: 2,075 in the last week
10,465 in the last month 145,787 in the last year 645,787 since 1931
Some 100,000 Chinese troops deployed under orders to defend Hangchow, 100
miles southwest of Shanghai, scattered in headlong flight last week and that
great city fell to the Japanesethe sixth Chinese provincial capital taken
since the present war began last July.
Japan's new puppet Chinese Government at Peking paid $116,000 to the
Imperial Japanese Government last week, described this as the first installment
of $348,000 which Tokyo is collecting as "indemnity" for the killing of some
200 Japanese by Chinese at Tung-chow.
On the same scale of indemnity Japan would owe the U.S. $5,220 for the three
men killed in the sinking of the Panay, but the U.S. settled for an apology,
promise of indemnity and guarantee against future attack. No Japanese newspaper
printed the text of the apology, and the divine Emperor Hirohitowho did not
feel that politeness required him to reply to President Roosevelt's personal
protestopened the Imperial Diet with a Speech from the Throne which omitted
mention of the Panay. "We feel greatly gratified to see relations between Japan
and her treaty powers growing in friendship and cordiality" read His Imperial
Majesty. "Our officers and men, winning every battle, are enhancing their
military prestige, both at home and abroad."
Although the Chinese authorities had executed 240 Chinese looters, Chinese
mobs had destroyed $100,000,000 of Japanese property in Tsingtao by last week
when Japanese forces finally crossed the Yellow River, besieged Tsinan, the
capital of Shantung.
In Japan a schoolhouse at Nishimuro was packjammed with villagers watching a
film of Japanese troops advancing in China when the building caught fire last
week. Killed were 21 children and 51 adults.
At Shanghai veteran correspondents reported scenes of "filth, disease,
hunger and madness" among the 1,000,000 Chinese refugees from battle areas. In
a single theatre 14,000 have been living like vermin for weeks. Biological
processes continued: among the 1,000,000 refugees a child was born every
minute, there was a death every three minutes, and twelve mothers died in
childbirth every hour.
Dr. Sun Fo, son of China's late sainted Dr. Sun Yat-sen, nephew by marriage
to the Man & Wife of the Year, became last week the first prominent Chinese
Government official to attempt to leave China since the Japanese captured
Nanking. Boarding an airplane at Hankow, Son Sun gave out that he was flying to
Hong Kong, would thence speed to Europe on a trip including Moscow. Meanwhile
Communist leaders in China were loudly demanding the resignation of various
prominent members of the Government which has had to flee Nanking and disperse
itself in various Chinese cities. The Reds had not yet asked that the Man of
the Year resign, and presumably Son Sun wants to see Joseph Stalin about
China's crucial future.
Japanese claimed to have destroyed 14 Soviet-built planes in a Chinese
airdrome last week but Tokyo and Moscow remained on conciliatory diplomatic
terms. Dictator Stalin renewed for one year the agreement under which Japanese
trawlers are permitted for a fee to fish in Soviet waters.
COVERS GALLERY: Click here to see the cover image from 1937
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