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Show 4 ' THE SALT HAKE TRIBUNE. MONDAY I SKI of the south of will ,ct liHinrs ag.vln. At the same ttm Italy pursued a camt her old allies, the French paign sgaln-Hiitlsh. and particularly again! and two nations the hremli bccauae the Inaccepted Pres dent Wilsons polh y stead of anuntlng to the Italian claim. porMany French soldiers. occup tug tions of (he Adriatic cosst under orders Irom the Purl conference, were actually murdered and a pres campaign of carried on alleled bitterness wa against France Per Britain, a tor America, this Italian bitterness had no real threat, but for France It wae quite different. In case of another war with Germany, France would Iwt menaced by an Italian attack Italian along (he Alps, and it wa only by neutrality which saved France In 191k, all enabling the French to concentrate ws this their trotp In the north. It wrecked German detail which totallv combinations and led directly to the defeat of the first Marne. which pvgn 'irtn 111 11 in 1 111.- ai un-p- Negotiation Portend Alliance Against Continental Europe. Ang'.o-America- n (Continued from Page OM ) Frances Condition Precarious. the latrtan peninsula, the northern belt of Dalmatia end certain other thing i,d rould tffotd to utand with Brit nJ th I niied State nfutnat Italian I'Uirnff If t wr clear that Britain and th limed State would stand with Fiance In case of a new Herman attack. Bui. when the jreidnt returned to that there Washington it became wae no real chanc that America would undertake to defend France againat German attack, while Britain declined to undertake the tank without American cooperation, Frame thus found hereelf estranged from Latin atatea. Italy and Rumania, of Vt llaou beeftuee of her a ceptanc leadership. Hut without any commenof Itf the way gecurity. surate reward tonfceuuently there developed a strong French sentiment in favor of changing aides and standing with the Italians, while both In Britain and in Franco thero was a general demand that thero be wmi settlement of a situation which threatened to be the occasion of a new war actual and while unsettled prevented peace In all of southern Europe. FYhih alii nd Asia Minor. tn Alhwiia Italy Fulfills Bargain. was done long before the fourteen point aera et en horn. Italy and the promise, entered the war " bhe ttm part of toTlalrw performed her entitled her refeel, purely a a contrac gard and, looked atneither triral obligation, -- arrant to d Britain naa tho .mallest of 19U. Qhne to carqy out tho agreement aaa raised at matter Hut, a hen tha firmly Fsrts, President Wilson by Britain and frame the His opposition contract their h baaed upon the aolld fon1atlmi many hundreds of thou meant pia-isand of Slavs under Latin rule, deprtc o.n Vvifnd hnt them of then: Mav of also depriving the sea. more A flagrant to the of break' with the fourteen point a a not coitich able. All till clr h--.fa .1 I peno.-manc- fT to e lht ng i.t Agreement Reached. New Demands Formulated. At first a notation satisfactory to President Wilson and to Italy waa sought, bul the proposal accepted by Mr. Polk for tho president was rejected by Italy, thereafter Mr. Polk left Europe and tho president became ill In this situation Britain and Fiance, acting without tho Inited Htateo, acproposed a settlement which Italynotice cepted. Then v botn states served acmust Jugo-Klathat they upon tho cept this or submit to teeing tho old Treaty of London Imposed, which meant of all of Dalmatia -theThelosscompromise was far more favors than any previous able to th all of Dalmatia them It gave proposal and most of the islands with certain reIt placed Fium to as but Zara, strictions under the league of nations and in addition gave the Italians a strip of Slav ooafltland. thus enabling the Italians to have access over their own territory to the Flume district As a compromisecrit-it was not unreasonable, but the main icism was that Great Britain and France s to Accept it or ordered the accept the Treaty of London as ths al- ld . Meantime the Italian on their j!d formulated other demand. In t'ii r remit the and Ith the British ment claims to Flume tey had left Jugo-Sla- v But this concession had unquestioned. Itai an Quarcertain soused protest In politic ter and for reaaon of domestic it became necessary for the ministry ot to Hum claim the hour to advance C r w , Tlies claim were based upon the fourteen point, upon the right of In Pari, therefor, the claimed latrla and Dalmatia, the of Trleate. on the basis of hinterland blav h bargain, the Treaty of tit 1313. But they claimed Flume Igmdon of n the basis of Ba-tu- Jugo-blav- Anglo-Frenc- Cleared for Compromise. Way ' opened a way for compromise and Great Britain had no naa no they appose jprealdent WUaon: lfish interest in an'ncinx anxate or und Kalian claims. They sere merelyrenewed by a targain: If tnev could 13 welcome i om the bargain, they would to escape. But If they could not refuse they could turd by the Treaty of Londonwhole treat honorary Insist that the Dalmatia was be enforced ami that, while aligned to Italy, Flume should be turned m or to the Juieo-SlaTo this the Italians at Paris could rot consent, because it merely convictedthethem fall Insured St home of weakness and this debate was of the ministry. While appealed to sill in progress. Mr,overWilson the? head of Or tuc Italian people Italian the people lando, expecting that would see the injustice of the Italian posianandon tion and compel the ministry to Its stand. Instead, the country rallied to the Italian claims, and the ministry fel. precisely because It had not made good Italian demands. This franr Jugo-Slav- ternative. Americas Right Asserted. But President Wilson had expressly refused to recognize the Treaty of London, he had not been consulted as to the compromise and he was free. If he chose, took, to follow exactly me course he comnamel), to warn Europe againstof a which In manufacture the promise America was ignored but In the future resuitv of whkh Mr. Wilson conceived America would be concerned, under its league of nations duties. ike result waa an International crisis. The British from the outset had no Intention of sacrificing American associaThe French tion for Italian demands. preferred American to Italian assurance other and or the one to have but had were beginning to conclude that only the I Italian The Italians were was obtainable. DAnnunzio Steps In. defiant, furious and angrily naturaly Slars, reinforced by this , Itglv then withdraw from the pe e while the Amertcan support, naturally igconference, but presently resumed particinored the ultimatum. (volution w pation, while the Adriatic Before it could be settled. postponed. f ' Annunxio. scenting weakne In certain Situation Chaotic. encourageto ehaos. revert situation' o'fieigJ quarters and receiving the Thu upon ment in others, madgy hi descent renew demands which cn to hold It. of President defiance in Flume, wired It and drfntimiea be Ignored ilnst only He Is thus. In theorv. a rebel Wilson and with the obvlou probability Italian auihorltv. but tho government does that such defiance will lead to the recall not dare interfere, because th army and the president of both the Treaty of navy sympathise with him. Vereoll.e ana the t This Flume adventure, however, brought treaty. But Britain and France promthe pence of Europe lino Immediate dan- ised Italy certain things under the Treaty Slovthe the Croats, of Ioimon and recently pledged themger. The Serhs, enian, with strong military forces were selves to abide by the term of the latest to from actually opposing compromise sod compel the Jugo-Slaonlv deterred Dalian aggression by military operation accept U. Italy now stand violently Inro4 ie proml-- e of the great power thst sisting that her recent allle make ny accompanied by their solemn promise to her, promises they enould haveIf Justice,resorted to arm, wh'ch she had been compelled already to that they warning would notmng. reduce to an almost unrecognizable shape. get they But It Britain and Franc concede all To. Resorted tlut the president demands, If theyto agree Many Schemes yield to tt use their force to compel Italy 'Meantime the Italian had' recourse UP an Impossible concession, they have still the United pianv devices. They .ought to break and assurance that smallest not the me solidarity of the Serbs, the Croats States will accept the Treaty of Versatile the Slovenians by Intrigue, thev endeav- or Mr. Wilson treaty ofofInsurance. ored to prevent the union of Montenegro ha tho the executive branch tho with Heibta, using the old King Nicholas of the power to use American government hen the plebiscite in Monas a tool. has choose, bat he against them.overIf he Meantenegro on the union wasa taking place the not legislative. power to send to endeavored regiment s so are the) encouraged time the the Montenegrin capital and were onlv by tho president that- they may resist prevented by a daring intervention of an any new Italian aggression, and suen agAmerican naval officer. gression become dally men likely. At the same time they made a common cause with the Rumanians, who opAlliance Probable, posed the cession of part of the Banat Triple Moreover, for the British the situation to tho Serbs, a cession ordered by th Paris conference. Italian influence was becomes more scute, for It is clear that also everted to Btlr up both Bulgar and the popular sentiment in France a growan ing more and more favorable to recog. Hungarian hostility to the will easy thing, because the Pane conference nitlou of the probability that America and accept European responsibilities, had assigned both Bulgar and Hungarian not a conas more insistent more and that, Jugo-Slasituaa Thus th lands to sequence, Europe proceed to settle her tion was created and survives. In which own questions. This means that ths Britand the a clash between the Jugo-SlaFrench and Italians form en Italian may have, as a consequence, at- ish, alliance and thus united enforce their bv both the tack upon French at the and the Bulgarians and a cam- - several demands, th v. pow-erf- JuFO-Slav- ia Jugo-Slav- - 1 Jugo-Slav- s, vs ut Jueo-Blav- ia Dad speaks one word for me and two for . himself when he tells Mother to order more l 'FjKviF !v, In 4k iawbwwh Superior Com Flaxes M. at Mint Cana tugsr and Salt Pcsrtum Cereal Company, a CM wm (Hi & tie likes them.same as Ido j'.aiehy- - Pc turn Cereal Co, Battle Creeh. , Mich. ui . Rhine, th Italian along the Adriatic And I thre in Asia Minor. e The BrlUah have not the tmwlUet new European ailmme. Thry for uf eort cloneat denire the if potHihi h n aaKX tation, an Alliance will not follow Frame or ituy In Tby et the they bue president rnUiini( made promleea to both, amt their situaawkward if, untion will be extreme y tnev break Ihelr der American engagement to the continent onlv to find that thle aecrifh e ha not contributed In the leaat to increasing Anvrlfin to enter European affair or to make en A ahianc. MOKNINO, MARCH 1. 1020. jn7? a ne-!r- Analo-Anierl- r v 0 pinre, e 3 nlo-Americ- Solution Based on Force. Of eour. if Europe were eatl&fled that America waa done with their affaire, for Europe would aeek It own solutionwould The ruiiKton pending queitione. neceenarlly be baaed upon force. France, having renounced the occupation of the Rhine barrier, in deference to Pranndent M'Uaon objection and in return Hr his promised guarantee, would reaaert her claim to the barrier security, baaed upon the nonfulfilment by America of the president's pledge. Nor could the British effectively oppose this. But, in the eamd order of Idea. Italy would retain Flume and there would be of a swift elimination of thoae portion we the eeveral peace treaties which Fane their egiatence to the president adventuie. The aeveral league of nawould disappear, Danzing tions area to the would go to the Poles, hum The lot Italians, the Barre to become would Germane necessarily of the harder and the chances of any economic recovery even more alender. No Wrinkles Gt Try ' American Support Needed. Heres to teeth, A I He trtlv tio th rkit ed 4r. to iHet tb evll(k in ofU) v r JL Her U appetite dice 7a Jart el 30 O tOe Your dealer baa ELCAYA nml baa sold It lor years. Ak bim. and the electrically- - Feet Drag? sealed package brines When It is aa 'effort to'drag one foot after the other, when you are alwayn1 tired and seem lacking la strength and endurance, when aches and pain rack the body, It Is well to look for symptoms of kidney trouble. , VRIGIEY5 to you banish effect of kidney and bladder trouble by removing the cause. They are healing and curative. They tone up and atrenghtea the weakened or diseased organs. They relieve backache, rbtu malic pain, atiff joiats, sore muscle. W. W. Wen. Toncuin. Mich., writ,: T perfectly preserved. ' V - tslitf tram tskiaS Fo.f r Kidney Fill. meat of tha tims and (at tired Alter taking Foley Kidney Pills. tbeyw.Ie . auk I racaounaad tb.ei le M feat like a sew seas. ary cuatomer eod neeer h.ve be.rd at aay caaa wb.re they did not give ootnUctioa. I SIB Tt an mv fut Set Sealed Tteht-K- ept Rheumatic Pains Right Eaaad By Penetrating Quickly ' Hamlin's Wizard Oil A safe and harmless preparation to relieve the pains of Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lame Back and Lumbago is Hamlin's Wizard OiL It penetrates-quicklydrives out soreness, snd timbers up stiff aching joints and muscles. You will find almost daily uses for it in cases of sudden mishaps or aC- cidents such as sprains, bruises, cut burns, bites and stings. Just as reliable, too, for earache, toothache, nt L.I L.i ii in in' hi in iu-- J Colonies Dissatisfied. Nor Is It less worthy of note, tl.t th British desire to make every concession to America has once more Involved the United Kingdom In dispute with a rot. ony. A11 through tha Parts conference tha deference ahowed by the British delegation to the president aroused the prote.t of Australia through Ita prime minister. Hughes, an outspoken critic of tha president. Now lecount Greys suggestion to Increase th United States voting power In the league of nations to connter-balan- c the votes conceded to British colonies has stirred Canadian dissatisfaction. Indeed, It Is almost Impossible to make which a census of the number of mix-u- p have followed our first European advenl disave colonlea and her ture. Britain agreed, Britain and France are atMoecer-headFrance ao are Britain and Italy. and Italy have almost come to blows, France and Rumania are mutually resentful. Our Ins'stence upon Serb claims m the Banat has compelled Britain and France to break their word to Rumania, foud. it has led to a T3r72K& ni'jrfH f Ta E& CHEWING dUM 7ftZ&LEY5t Serbo-Rumanl- an Hold Out. With no teal power to resist and without anv assurance of aid from us. the Jugo-Staare holding out against the demands of Italy, which have been supported until recently by Franco and Britain. AVe have refused Greece her aspirations In Thrace and about Koritia. Our ultimate decision tn Asia Minor, where settlements have also been outlined without regard to us, may precipitate another Flume crisis. Or the president may reject the proposal to leave the Turk in which certainly has . a Constantinople, debatable aspect. If J?urope could determine Obviously a hat American policy wav to be for the future the situation would be different. But ever since the Parts conference, ever since the president came home, Europe haa had to operate on two mutually exclusive assumptions, the assumption that the presidents tdeas would be adopted by th United States and the assumption that thev would Rs rejected. If President Wilsons Ideas were destined to prevail Europe would reluctantly make the necessary concessions, but tnev would have to be paid for by American loans and American 'pledges of military amt But If the president s naval aupport. tdeas were destined to fall, then Europe would have to aettle Its own problems In ita own way. Italian Demand Preposterous. Today, yesterday, tomorrow, aa far as It Is possible to see, neither course can be followed and chaoa persists as a result. In the case of Flume, it sehma to me that the president is dead right on the merits of the case. The Italian demands are preposterous, thev quarrel with every consideration of moral right. But case. Just as It Is. forthe Jugo-Sla- v tified aa It ta bv all regard for principle. Is still untenable If there tie not force behind It and that force can only come from the use of American money and perhaps arms. The moment the Italians are satisfied thnt we shall do nothing, thev will declare their purpose to stay where they are and then, who can put them out? Certainly he French will not even think of tt. ratherpthey will feel compelled to aasent, because American decision to stay out of Europe reopens for them the old danger of an attack on the Alps and th Rhine. As for the Rrltlsh, thev may protest but they certainly will not go beyond this. What then will be th position of the Blava, resentful but helpless and threatened henceforth on all sides Threatened because of American pone) In the Banat a well as along the endure as a peace of jus-ti- e automatically ' In Europe ho discovered that during the war the nations involved had been compelled to make agreements, to promise Japan, Italy and Rumania certain rewards for 'participation. Promised these reward, Japan. ItaW and Rumania had entered the war to the very great profit Reward. - Dilemma Remains. Grk.tk vb. tattiin m Anglo-Americ- Smith Eecelvc MELBOURNE, Feb. 23. Captain Ross Smith, winner of the commonwealth prize 10. you for an airplane flight from of England to Australia, today received a chei k for that sum at the parliament house. of France and Britain, who otherwise would hae been defeated. These agreesecret treaties. ments. the famou manifetMlv conflicted with the Bmrten nor Britain points, hut neither France could' safely go back on these agreements. if the nation who held their performance. In pledges insisted upon President Wilson the case of Japan, agreed in the end to u!J, and. with forevacuation, of mal prwoijse Shantung Japan acquired what had been promised her. of Italy the president reIn thd ca fused to Ieid and the Itahns iuuisted Britain and France Ufioit performance. aero thus called upon to decide whetherof scrap their pledge to Italy was toa follow Mr. paper' or their decision iisoft necessarily abolished. For many and months, for a whole ear, British French statesmen hae been temporising, whu seeking to keep In with Wilson Meannot actually breaking with Italy. more inand more have French time tha clined to stand wtth the Italians and the British with Wilson. remains unchanged. Today the solItaly demands the performance of emn pledges embodied in the Treaty of that one London, and points to the fact of the war aaa the of the great lean Interim-liona- l maintenance of the sanctity of obligations to artried having ami Fiance, Britain I rive at a compromise and having merely aroused the presidents indignation, are still faced with the dilemma. The gravity of the problem lies in the fact that evena complete acceptance of the president and the consequent alienation leaoerst.tp m.xv not Insure American supof Italy the future, while yielding to Italy port for and estranging the president may Had asto the loss of all chance of American sistance or American parti, :pn Mon. Ail of which is another way of saying that Europe In the hone of enlisting American aid in European reconstruction and rear a president maintenance, ha placed In the Crisis Approaches. hands aheoiute veto power, ao far a th!r to disare only own policies unsetBut if tHe ttution continue that tnc have not acquired any tled Italy may be faced vuth a domestic cover assurance of American participation. political crUi. nhe cannot demobiiix, her army ( ratitx her ternbly, her w,t America Holds Key. government may xink as a result of th tvo pressures, that coming frm th Now th Ernch and fh Italian, Ifk nd th nationalists and that from the 8oia!1t deir to th Rjmarilaii s hli r no better off, The away fueclom of action and regain feH ail are whit th repercueaion througn th prfci(int powr ot frat fi I mat Britain Europe upon piaeftitng th til) It will b perceived, then, how HtU of hocaws J.riLjfh dent, I Fiume nueaMmi jr8 the actually comcling to th Wa that Aroer.c, if not cum back Into prehended in a dUcvis:on of the case of d 'gtiid. i'll! itself and how mn iitonialir it the Korojuvm xftdira of thq a hoi Euttpe&ti network of probknvthmg. tnat To. hi an, ii t truM and th lem. lb outienlf Drain, no!ta iant thn, will, at Fundamentally the Situation turn upon 9malr ta? Mi of control m to be repuri'at prndcn RriMh fact, which has onh iww larun Free-deaff.i ra, wt.ri opposition sppreolsted in the Fnited btate com to will a ad Wilson believed, when he went to to auuh krpuiiMlon Britain and th conupon pict brc Europe, that he had onlv to n will an Then Mo quc-inthe fourteen points and he would be sup- tinent M I mud States will rwtrd ported b ths mass of the proof of ail twhthr bv in an ctmr Rnt'wh Ipatinn shed fMju thus nations etab H would pR Haling on this basis. hSas Ang.oAn.,ruan uUistnie. U it does; Brit- that Juxo-S.av- lh policy at Pari and since will be vindicated: if it does not, that policy will every prose a very costly blunder. But recent indication from London serves to confirm the Paris Impression that the British mean to run every risk in the alhope of realizing the liance. - Without Drugs Without Surgery Without Glasses That does not mean EVERY case of cross eyes, for some are Incumethod of treatment, some may require surgical aid, and some will require glasses, at least temporarily, BUT IT DOES MEAX that many eases of eros eyes have been straightened so that vision was normal and the defect overcome SOLELY AND ENTIRELY BY THE SYSTEM OF MUSCLE EXERCISES MADE rOSSIBIiE-WITTHE DEARDEN MUSCLE METER. Some of these patients were about to submit to Deration The Deardea System madd it unnecessary. Others were wearing strong glasses The Deardcn System took them off and produced result. you will be interested If you have a friend or relative Ho is cross-eyed- , in examining tho' records, and photographs of sume of these patients, which may bo aeen at my office. AND PLEASE REMEMBER, people desiring consultation should, phone Wasatch 2723 for earliest open date and hour. Positively no examlna. 3 tions without an appointment. ' . EXAMINATION. INCLUDING MUSCLE TESTS, S2.00 rable' under any H DR. M: H. DEARDEN ymtouuAut y CONSOLIDATED v 3 I ' Eye-Strai- n Specialist i Suite 207 Kearns hldg. snnisiiisi i -i- - -- , . , croup and colic. Get It from druggists for 30 cents. If not satisfied return the bottle and get your money back. Ever constipated or have sick head- - ' ache? Just try Wizard Liver Whips,' pleasant little pink pills, 30 ceuti, Guaranteed. , a. Sugo-Slav- s , with all its goodness Anglo-Americ- entt-me- ti l.nl roux ever th Hke befor cm I quu dm eJ Deference to U. S. Assured, Nevertheless, as long as there Is the remotest chance of an American return to Europe, Great Britain will not run the smallest risk either of offending the lalbing an impaeaahle president or of Britain and the presibarrier between dent' opponent in America. The course of Lord Urey demonstrated the latter. Inevitably a policy based upon the pur? suit of America cooperation involves British estrangement wuth the French, the Itsliahs, with the continent. What Is not cieer is whether It can In the end lead to any compensatingly closer relations. The difficulty here lies in the paralysis American The president of machinery. cannot do anything affirmatively, hi opexponent wiii do nothing through the nanamely, the league of isting medium, of the the dispute while protraction tion, over this is having for an unmistakable effect an expansion of American in favor of avoiding all European entanglements, continental and British,. IMaCRFMH FI CAVA rubbed pomdu - British policy Still clings to the notion thst America end Britain In association cannot merely preserve th chief elements !n the existing settlement, but can also bring about a modification of certain of the treaty provision, which seem to insure permanent German ruin. great But this policy, which demand the French and apparent eacriflce fromcannot none from the British, prevail utiles It is eupported by America and enforced by American financial power. Th British conceive that If America Is allowed to redraft the term of the as Treaty of Versailles In such fashion nd the to sate Germany economically balance of Europe, as well. It will agree to vast new loans, and not Impossibly to the cancellstion of $l0,000,000.0u0 of existing loan. They believe this because tt fall in with what the president and those associated with him ln Paris declared was the real character of AmeriBut they know all such can idealism. etrenuous will encounter amendments continental opposition and recognise that and prestige can only American power put them through. til Forty simple formula Phone Was. 2725 k t MUSIC COMDIUY - Hi - t -- t 1 Mi. , |