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Show THINKS RUSSIA ' GRAVEPRDBLEM PARIS, Dec. 8. (Havas) Professor Thomas G. Masaryk, president of the Czecho-Slav republic, will make only a brief Btay in Paris, having received word by courier shortly after his arrival here asking him to proceed at once to Prague. Upon his arrival there, he Informed In-formed an Interviewer, he will convoke tho parliament and will address to it a message explaining the political situation and setting forth the grave problems confronting the republic In the present circumstances, notably those having to do with its relations with neighboring states. President Masaryk said that the republican repub-lican form of government adopted by his country seems likely to be the lasting form, snd, in fact, the only one possible. He declared the best of relations existed with the Jugo-Slavs and likewise with the Rumanians and the Galician Poles, the aspirations of all being dependent one upon the other." s to the Russian situation. President Masaryk said he considered it the most critical problem for Europe and humanity. human-ity. Without a strongly organized Russia, Rus-sia, he declared no stable peace would be possible. The Russia of tomorrow, he thought, must supply a counterbalance for Germany. |