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Show THE LAKE TIUBUKE, SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE Woman FaceTremendous Task of Filling , Political Party Chests LITTLE ENTENTE Republicans Pass Up Wives in Collecting Funds, Democrats, It Is Argued, Will Accept tit Contributions From. Theirs. VANCE. BY CAROLYN 1922, by Salt Lake Tribune.) Jygo-Slav- ia (Copyright, Rising WASHINGTON, June 2. Stubbornly refusing to ask th aid of their women, th Republicans are setting doggedly about replenishing tha party cheat. The Be Democrat on the other hand, are not so shy, and soon a committee of 109 women will be announced which will be known aa the national woman's finance Blocked committee of the Democratic party. Policies The woman within the Republican is In the posit. on of the pampered New Al- party and petted wife of a reputedly wealthy msn who keeps hj financial worries to himself. The Democrat woman Is like of the man who Is poor and Europe. th wife proud of it and who asks his wife to be a helpmeet as well as a help-sa- t. The Republican party Is not lamenting In public that It le in need of funds, beBY FRANK H. BIMONOS. cause It has the traditional pose td i Special ie Tto Tribes maintain that It Is the opulent party. WA SHINOT ON, - Jon It. Th recent The Democrats have always featured the state fact that they are poor and have not marriage of th king of even minded the aptiellatlonthej'great of th feert. Croatian and Slovene. unwashed hosTTof democracy.'" a, in common everyday daughter of the kttif ofTlu-man- Money Needed. serves to call attention once more The fact remains that both parties to the situation In the southeast of Eu- emerged from the last presidential election aith hugs defeits, and with taa rope, where the world war had Its occaalready upon campaign sion and ' where,, unless all signs fail, congressional them financial aid from women could aeil mans more wars will find their origin tn be used by both parties. Ths experience first gained by women years to come. In profitable church suppers Since th unification of Italy in th laat and conducting fairs will stand them In good stead century there Is, perhaps, no more roman- In politics, where hug sums of money tic story than that of th rise of th are needed in the modern political camsouthern Slavs. Exactly ten years ago, paign. are good at falsing money, on th eve of th First Balkan war, Ser- sayswomen Mrs. Harriet Taylor Upton, leader bia was a state having an area about of tha Republican women, and they can equal to that of New Hampshire and make it go twice a far. Vermont combined, and a population I am not "However, she continued. about equal to that of Massachusetts, lying nighta thinking of ways to It was, in a word, one of those Inslgnlfl-- ' tease awake 'em me Into that respongiving cant principalities width were dismissed sibility under the contemptuous title of Balkan. The Democrats fullv realize the capabilities of women, and none of them but Rise Is Rapid. believes that women are far more adept at raising money than men. An observer fahis Today King Alexander, following the laat meeting of tue Democrat c nather, the gallant and picturesque Peter, at rules over a country with an area equal tional committee was struck with th to that of New York! New Jersey and mental activity the committeewomen exPennsylvania and a population half that hibited along financial lines. of these three states combined. In term WomAi Are Hustlers., of Europe, th new southern SlaV klng-t- r dora la as large a the mainland of Italy The women seemed to be able to preor as th island which holds England, sent more plans for raising money than Wales tfhd Sootland. A single decade ha ths men, and in more detail. They were seen the complete transformation, one of very ingenious about it, but the r plans the most impressive In Eutop. were not always practical. For some of Looking backward for a moment at the the the machinery to carry them steps one may recall much of interest. out plans have been very cumbersome. In 1912 Serbia, Bulgaria, Qreece and Mon- Otherwould financial plans proposed by the tenegro fell upon Turkey and, by a series women a ere extremely clever and were of victories, destroyed the Ottoman adopted by , ths coni mi t tee a who,. armies and confined the fragments with- Most of the committeewomen aswere cockin the Constantinople peninsula. Whtls sure that they could raise the quota from the partition of the TurktBh lands was still incomplete, Bulgaria suddenly and treacherously attacked her allies and was with all their neighbors. Italy- - demanded To complete Bulgar not only Gorlzia, but the hinterland of totally defeated. ruin, Rumania Intervened In the north, Trieste, which sheltered half a million of and Turkey returned to Adrlanople. The Slovene and at the same moment in, frsae of Bucharest In 112 assigned voked her treaties with her allies which Macedonia In large part to Serbia, doubled gave her first claim to Dalmatia, where her area, Increased her population to the population was, save for an Insig.000,000, and gave her a common frontier nificant fraction, wholly Serb. In addiwith the other Serb state of Montenegro. tion, she denied to the Slava th right to take Flume, the one available port on the Adriatic. jAustrfa Makes Mistake. Yet thl second war, like the first, failed to give Serbia the one thing the Italy Becomes Enemy. most needed and desired, an outlet on the the Italy thus came at once to take emsea. Her armies, haul reached Duraxxo place vacated by the late Hapsburg and. With the Montenegrins, taken Scu- pire. She became the- - bitter enemy of tari and the sea coaet at the moutn of the new Slav state and she has remained tha Drin, but, Austria intervening, the the foe ever since. The state of Albania was ersatsd, thus block- long uncompromising dispute over flume, with It D'Aning Serbian sxpansion to the sea. For nunzio episode, led finally to the creation weeks the peace of Europe turned upon of the state of Flume, with Italian inthe success of Sir Edward Grey In recon- fluence plainly dominant. Meanwhile ciling Austrian and Russian policies, for Italy successfully maintained her claim to Russia backed the southern Slavs. all the regions back of When the conferenoe of London and tha Trieste to the crest of the mountains and, had restored by the treaty of Rapallo, which put a assemblage of Bucharest peso In the Balkans Serbian had taken, temporary check upon th quarrels, acwith respect of the southern Slavs, the quired title to Zara, while surrendering position held ,by the Savoy kingdom her clafnta to th rest, of Dalmatia. toward northern Italy In the nineteenth At the same time the Italians supportHenceforth It was plain that ed the Albanians about Scutari and thus century. dibe Serbs of would the succesfullv blocked Serbian approach to very 'effort rected toward rescuing their brothers the Adriatic by the Drin valley. Finally, from the Austrian and Magyar yokes and the Montenegrin dynasty, which had been completing the reintegration of the south- disloyal to the allied causa, haying been In blocking Serb ap- expelled, and Montenegro having been ern Slav tribe proach to th sea, In backing Bulgaria united with Serbia, the Italians began an In her wanton assault upon Serbia and agitation In favor of a free 'Montenegro, Greece, Austria had only Insured her which continues and can be discovered own ruin. in .Rom dispatches almost every, day. Prominence of Makes Her Power Considered That Must Englands by Formation of liance in Eastern thnw ' Jugo-Slavl- ia w . Germany Sees Danger. A few months after the signing of the treaty of Bucharest, the crime of Sora-jev- o launched the world war, the first step In which was the Austrian declaration of war upon Serbia. For Austria, the problem was simple. Unless Serbia could be crushed, nothing was more certain than that In a few years history would repeat Itself and the Hapsburgs would be expelled from the Balkans as they had bees driven out of northern Italy. Not only this but the success of the southern Slavs had served to reanimate the raelal aspirations of the Czechs and the Hole and ths whole Hapsburg edifice was In peril. Germany, too, saw her one certain ally threatened with complete ruin, with the 'lose of provinces and power, and the ruin of Austria woBd le&vs Germany alone In a hostile Europe, faced on one side by ths power of Russia and jsn: tha other by the Implacable hostility of a Francs which had been mutilated by German violence in 1171. -- part Unappreciated. In th grsa.truggl which followed, a larger part than has been i Serbia played. r appreciated generally. Twice her veteran rmy Touted vast Austrian and hordes and sent them In wild hack across, the Dameb and the i Light rav. - A third invasion, this time 'ltd I by German generals, succeeded only because of German artillery, to which ths .Serbs had no answer. Th folly of, ths British and th French In failing to open th Balontkt road to Serbia and hold it agalnst'the Bulgarian attack, which oame .surely, sealed th fat of the Serbs, and of this remnants of King Jn th retreat army over the snowclad Albanian mountains Is one of the most fantastic and terrible stories of ths whole world ; Hun--garta- n. t A iBa, SxVLT Ps-'e- JEVswar. ' Completely exhausted by this terrible experience the Serbs were transported. i first to Corfu and then to SaJonlkl, and .presently, newly equipped, took their -place in the battle line of the army of the Orient, where they were from th outset ihe finest soldiers and In ths end had ths -- honor of str king the blow which settled 'the fate of the fighting In ths Balkan IBut for ths moment Berbia was overrun wtth tha enemy, by the Germans, tbs Bulgarians and the .the country waa ravaged -- and pillaged, -- and King Peter and his son, . the present , king, wets exiles. Austro-Hungarian- s, jYictory Phenomenal. Not until late in the campa'gn of 1911 did ths tide turn, but then, at a single Abound, th Serbian army ewept forward, and In a few brief weeks reached the Danube. regained the wrecked capital at JBelgiails and began to flow over Into the '.southern Slav regions of Hungary. The rool.apse of the Hapsourg empire, which followed closely upon the deeertlon of th "Bulgarians and the surrender of the clear for the re.Turks, left the pathway g dreams of the alisation of the f southern Biavs, dreams which bad been moment In a realised for large par un- der Stephen Dushan and then upon the fatal field of Kossovo. i. At Part th southern Slavs, dominated by the Serbians, sought to include within frontiers all of ths region peopled , tbelrsouthern Slavs from Gorilla, on ths 'by Italian frontier, to Monastlr, near ths Rr . Hellenlo boundaries. Immediately, they I found themselves Involved la disputes -- , age-lon- -- extin--giknh- ed I their states and In many Instances they raised more money than the committee-meThe Republicans are Overlooking a good thing when they do not utll.se th financial capability of Mrs. Harriet Taylor Upton. Bhe was the treasurer of th American Women' Suffrage association and carried the greater part of th burden of financing the cause during tha lean years when suffrage waa not the popular movement among women that ita became later. She tells this character-talo story of herself. A long time ago ths American Womens Suflrage assoc.atlon" planned to hold a big meeting hers In Washington, where we hoped to raise a lot of money. I made all arrangements and paid one thousand do liars for the use of the Columbia theater. n. -- ; ' . 1 Mrs. Blair Bannister, slater of Senator Carter Glass of Virginia, who Is making arrangements at the Democratic headquarters for the women's financial com line-tha- "tfi y aJibJ yfcltlivJ tributor. "There Is novelty for women In being a campaign contributor. We do not get the same wearisome response from them we do men. from For men that the within the party It la no novelty tenbs asked for money to carry on the wotk. As a rule it means much more sacrifice for a woman to give to th party than Jt does for men, because they must take ft out of their own tiank account or allowances. In some instances, Republican husbands whose wives are Democratic will not allow them to g.ve, we have learned. Most of the money earned by the wemena committee' will be used to promote organization work among Democratic women." of Flume and access to the eea, but lY.s also torn from them all of their Croat an regions and large areas north of the Danube, both fa Banal and in Syrmia. Magyar policy looks confidently forward to a better time whan all the lost provinces will be reclaimed by arms, and among these lost provinces the territory assigned to the Serb bos particular value. As to the Austrian, he has become so utterly negligible that for ths moment the southern Slav may disregard him; yet It Is clear that if ever the Austrian fragment should be united with Germany, then the Slav, like the Italian, would have to face the certiflntv of a Teutonic puBh toward the - Adriatic, with both Flume and Triesteas objectives. Moreover, since the Sloven lands now added to onoe Austrian, the were Jugo-tjlahave to fear an ultimate challenge to their title based upon this fact, Jugo-Slav- t There is solid comfort in Karpen furniture the comfort of luxurious fit every curve of your body, and of thick soft cushioning into which sink Hundred of tiny, wonderfully flexiblu you deep and rest fully. springs hidden in softest cotton snd down give that velvety buoyancY of complete reatfulncsa. This suite shown above uphol- IF tered in rich velour. June Clearance Sole. high-qualit- y for year have Deen famous for offering the unusual in values during their June Sale. Suite consist of nine pieces, exceptionally well made and carefully finished in American walnut. Large, roomy buffet, china table and six chair upholstered in cabinet, Qfa I ft JJf genuine leather. June Clearance Sale mlttee, has made some Interesting observations on the woman campaign con- A DAINTY SUITE IN AMERICAN WALNUT This suite was picked at random from the many other equally attractive bargains that will be found in our enormous bedroom display. The suit consists of good sized dresser, conveniently arranged, enifforobe, triple mirror dressing table and full sized bed. lfH June Clearance Sole ; ylUvstfaJ la is ft n la - ' glovensSr-tbe-Croore-and- Jugo-Slav- n GLACIER SANITARY REFRIGERATORS WELL-MAD- conAre scientifically structed snd have ten wall! between the cold sir inside snd the warm sir outside. Cali in and let us explain the many advantages of the Glacier. The This bnffet is well made of quartered oak, conveniently arranged and nicely finished. June Clearance Sale. vAAtCv above 51-- 57 BUFFET 99' EA one shown EAST FIRST SOUTH ST. 7fle home s' Life-Tim- e seder's Rumanian bride Is the huMmnd of Constantines daughter, Helene. Having thus rapidly reviewed the recent history and Immediate problems of It remains now to look at the relation of this state to th general European problem. At th outset it is essential to emphasize that la a member of the petit entente. It Is Jugo-Sluxl- COLONIAL E a, Jugo-Slav- la FAMOUS F. A. WHITNEY BABY CARRIAGES ODD ROCKERS AT PRICES THAT MEAN A GREAT. Our line of these popular SAVING TO YOU - wicker carriages is now complete in all "During this sale aft odd ehair and styles and colors and for just five days ' rockers will be-- ' told at balf price. band-mad- e Yon will find .a good selection, in HH more we are going to give 25 per cent oak, leather, cans, mahogany , and overstuffed. discount. 'istoibutaa and ef Poland aa well: French military idea and French Influence have thus real importance. But this quite naturally has its resetion In Roms, where the Italians see French support daily helping s the to consolidate their position and become more and more menacing on the Adriatic. Jugo-Slav- He has to play not lnconsld-srabrol In European council where hr will usually be found on th side of the French, who have been hie constant fr.end and in whoae army hla father. Peter. fought Germany In 1S70. The lltU entente le bound to stand with Franc tn the maintenance of the treatise made at Parts and thus to oppose all revision, even that which is promoted by Lloyd Georg. It was the association of th little entente, and Belgium and Poland aa well, with France at Genoa, which wrecked he conference and brought ruin to all at Lloyd George's fondest hope- - It I th little entente which blocks Italian ambition to play a controlling part in ths Balkans, and back of the little entente, the Italians, not unnaturally, see France. Despite Its present poverty, as a result of the world war. and despite the absence of railway Jugo-SlavIs a counwith magnificent try rlip In mineral Given orderly agricultural resource government and external peace for agen-eratloIts population will double, and It will become, if not a great power, at lenaa a stare which must be reckoned Alwith In oil European combination lied with Greece and Rumania, it will stand solidly against Italian aspirations on ths Adriatic and the Aegean; allied with it will restrain hopes of restoring ths Magyar Hungarian In state. And war Us armv must be reckoned with ss a factor of no mean Importable tlltty. ls Czech and Rumanian Italians Threatened. united with th states in a common resistance to the Her la on of th chief causes of Hungarian menace, and with Rumania onIt Frsnoo-Italla- n bitterns. at th moment. shares a Bulgarian danger. Moreover, Italian policy, shortsighted and Austrian hosthe Austrian side. It share Csech in its spirit, has blocked the Jugo-Bla- v of Austria with tility to sny union reason development at every turn. But French for obvious is Insuring the support of equipment and training of th Jugo-Bla- v Naural Ally Is France. army, already exceedingly formldab's. If These three partners of ths little "en- war should ultimately come, then Italian tente represent pollectlvely a population danger would be greatly increased as a of more than 40.900,909, that larger result of French policy. Nor are the Italians leas angry over than that of FYance, and can put at 000 In for trained 2,090 least troops (he field French support for v on mobilization. They are not only In ths back of ths Italian mind the threat rema.ns. Thus you have Italy united by common dangers, but they sr also hound together in a common deter- tending steadily toward membership In a made up of Italy, Germination to preserve Intact those treaties counter-alliancmade at Paris In 1919, to which they owe many, Hungary and Bulgaria.- - Austria either independence or their present for the moment hoe passed under Csech Her frontier they have common influence. Here again Italy has a partial ground with France, which is determined responsibility, for R was Italian support to preserve th treaty of Versailles aa of Hurgartan claims to Burgeniand which a guarantee of economic and political se- deprived Austria of portion of the ter curity. Here, too, they hay a common rttory originally all assigned to her. And ground with Poland, ally of Franc and Italy was actuatsd by ths fear that this dominated by the same concern. Here, Burgeniand strip would be transformed corridor connecting Cseoho-Slova- k measurably.- - they have common ground Into la with with Belgium, also an ally of France and Moreover, It I decision dlff cult to believe that Greece will, Influence Undoubted. not of the Paris champion Thra Franc la the first friend of all too. in time, gravitate to the little enIn th past three year the American the slate of th little entente, end they, tente. bonds W.th. tn turn, have Two great problem concenthen, dominate public' ha far to completely st Poland. It Is French officers who are the Immediate future for King Alexan- trated Us attention ppon of Eutraining the armies of all three mates, der. He has always to foe Italian boa- rope and upon event in London, Paris Car-man- y, -- Jugo-Slav- la 1 la Csecho-Slovaki- a, Pan-Sla- n, e, Csecho-Sldvakl- Jugo-Slav- la, tf An article yon cannot afford to bo without. It gives yon a comfortable settee by day and, with one simple operation, is converted In to a com-- . EAST FIRST SOUTH Furniture t GENUINE LEATHER DAVENETTE Bulgaria Losing Power. la 'U ) KARPEN SUITE t)E LUXE ELEGANT DINING ROOM SUITE IN AMERICAN WALNUT Seldom is furniture offered at so low a price, but Madsen Women Contribute. Jugo-Slav- , Only five days left to take advantage of the greatest furniture buying opportunity in the history of this store. During the past week we have received a shipment of living room suites from the famous Karpen factory that will be included in this greatest of sflles at 30 reduction; also a shipment of dining and bedroom furniture that will be included, making the selections1 ' at this time most attractive, and all will be offered at 30 discount. These offerings, together with the 20 to 50 reductions throughout our store, will make this "the banner week of this 1 great sale. Dont fail to take advantage of this great sale it will mean money to you. waa-unt- oonse-queno- es I 6th On th day planned, the Maine blew up and. In the excitement, the crowd failed lo come to our meeting. We were o left- - very much in the hole It me to borrow the thousand to pay Tor the theater, but os a person Who moke Poor seldom has success In borrowing money, I took Mrs. Ca(t along, who looks rich. In going to see a wealthy woman knew who might advance the funds. She lent us the money. But it was a long, terrible struggle for us to pay It back. When we finally managed to do It, Mrs. Catt sent me a letter with the canceled note, stating: Dear Harriet: Btlck this In your mlr. ror to remind you that It is always easier to borrow money than it Is to pay It back,' If I had really carried out Mr Catta suggestion and stuck all of my canceled notea. In my mirror, there would not be room enough 'for me to powder my nose." Pan-Blav- io Jugo-Siavi- LAST WEEK Day Is Disastrous. There remains th Bulgarian, and his animosity con never be extinguished. A quarter of a century ago he seemed to have the chance to emerge as the dominant Balkan state. Hie claim to Macedonia, to Salonlkl as well as Monastrl, seemed to insure ultimate possession. From Lake Ochrida to tile Biack sea and from the Aegean to the old southern frontier of Serbia, Bulgarian Influence was, next to Turkish, supreme, and the Austrians backed the Bulgar. Yet, widh the exception of a email frag ment In the Rhodoplans, all this prospective heritage has escaped the BulWorse than this, not only has garian. he lost Monastlr, Kavalla, Salonlkl and Warning Unheeded. Adrlanople, but he has been compelled to lands to tbs Rumanian and ths There were not lacking Italians who, cede Serb which have been hie for remembering the words of Maxalnl, ad- the southern Dobrudja and the decades, strategic vised against such a course of hostility from which he launched his attack to the southern Slave. But the makers points the Belgrade-Salontrailway In of Italian public opinion and policy were upon To obtain Monastlr and Salonlkl, unable to lay aside 'the old fear of an 1916. and thus the reversion of Macedonia, ultimate Russian advance to the AdriBulgaria has fought three wore tn th atic as a detail In the general decade; today she Is worse off than movement which would unite all the Eu- last she started, but her aspirations reropean Slavs In a lngle state. Thus ths when main unchanged. seeds were sown for a permanent hostiland Slav along the Races Intermixed. ity between Adriatic, which may have evil in th future when the southern has to face, then, the perSlava have recovered their strength and manent hostility of Italy, of Hungary, Ths of Bulgaria. She must look with appreachieved complete racial solidarity. refusal of the Hapsburgs te permit the hension toward any eventual absorption Serb te have a free road to the Adriof Austria by Germany. Now aa to Ruatic led ineluctably to the conflict la mania, recently become a friend as a conwhich th Hapsburg empire was de- sequents of ths royal marriage and of the sttuatlon la a little stroyed and even before that time Aus- common danger trian intrigue kept the Balkans In an up- complicated by rivalries In the Banal. roar tor a quarter of a eentury-ia "vain Here there Is one of the most bewildereffort to block the rise of the Serb ing racial complications In Europe. In Italy has followed the same pathway. thl narrow district, about the size of In addition to her effort to check Slav Massachusetts and Rhode Inland, Ruexpansion to the sea and to control the manians, Magyars, Serbs and Germans ports by which th commero of the new live In hopeless ethnio confusion. state would reach the outer world, Italy After the Haosburg rellap" Hungary, has steadily intrigued against the Jugo- the owner, together with Serbia and Ruslav stake, both In middle d5urop a fwl mania, put In claims for the province. Itself. The Serbia only claimed the district within the frontiers of Thus, she has steadily backed the Hun- north of the Danube and east of the garians against th Serb and the Czechs, Thoiss facing their capital. Belgrade. and supported the separatists within the The Rumanians, whose racial representanew southern Slay state. tion was largest, claimed the whole provthat It ince, alleging not unreasonably Faces Internal Trouble. waa an economic unit. ' The Magyar was racial whose smallest, representation All things considered, the greatest danclaimed the province as a matter of right ger for the new king, Alexander, Is from within. His whole people are united In a based on a thousand ysorz of possession. common hatred of the Italian Indeed, thl la th strongest bond of union that Neither la Satisfied. at ths moment can be discovered. In the In ths end. one more wretched com proof the mise left the whole dispute unsettled. nw state Berbia has something ' received most of the position of Prussia In Germany. Fifty The Rumanian years ego it was Serb fighting and Serb province, but the Serbs obtained a slice liberaIn resulted between the Danube and the Thelsa; railthe persistence which tion of the southern Slave; they have th way Knee were disregarded, frontier army, the tradition of fighting, and have ware drawn without regard to anything aaroeth ethnographic map. As for the developed soldiers of no mean ability. On the other hand, both tho Croats and Hungarian they were lopped off with a the Blevenes have reached a far higher corner near Szegedm, just a minor fragstate of education under Hapsburg rule ment of what was once all theira. Neither the Rumanians nor ths Serbs than the Serbs, only relatively recently liberated from Turkish rule. They resent were satisfied, and there were high words the Serb spirit and military methods exchanged, and even threats of war. quite as much a the Bavarian and Saxon Yet In the end, the common menace, resented the Prussian Immediately after both from Hungary and from Bulgaria, the unification of Germany. Today there led to calmer relations, and now the reare active efforts both In the Slovene cent marriage perhaps make for th reand th Croatian regions to bring about moval of the bitterness, although It la autonomy, and there have been reports hard to see how ths present settlement of the proclamation of a free Croatia. con endure,' so utterly does It fly In ths face of all considerations of geography Reconciliation Possible. and of bommeree alike. Yet If there are greater differences beBelongs to Little EntenteJ tween ths Serbs than between the Prussian, the BaOf Jugoslavia's relations with Greece, varian and the Saxon, Vt Is still true that It I difficult to speak with any degree these differences are hardly greater than of accuracy. Greece and Serbia were althose whtoh separated the Sicilian from lies in the wars with Turkey and w.th the Lombard sixty years ago and, what- Bulgaria. In 1911, however. Constantine ever may be the differences as between overthrew Venizelos and repudiated the tribe ad face a common peril from with- treaty which bound Greece to support out For tho new Jugoslavia is ringed Serbia in caa of a now Bulgarian atround with enemies, onlv Greece and now tack. This desertion doomed Serbia to Rumania, by the recent marriage, are per- Bulgar occupation. la Greece and are natural allies, because they haps tmnMtirmed Into frlenua, and the Banat dispute still subsists. have common enemies. Italy, which Wi.l'- Rattan policy alms always at blocks Helenle aa well as Slav aspiraa promoting disunion wlth.n tions In Albania; Bulgaria, which claims and blocking Slow aspirations for a real Salonlki and Adrlanopsa as actively as It outlet to the sea, Hungarians look with does Monastlr and Spokll.' Moreover, Indignation upon the situa- the recent marriage unites ths Greek and tion which has not only deprive them Blar dynasties, for th brother of Alex Jugo-Slav- 11 23, 1922. a, ever-growi- ths-we- y ST.- - fllfhitney Baby Carriages and Berlin. In the new Europe which Is slowly taking the succession form, states which compos ths little entente are destined to play an Increasingly imrole, and their influence at Oenog portant waa decisive. And if the French have to persuade faded either th totally United State or Britain to hccept their to views ss European affairs, they hav In part at least, compensated for thig failure by their suocese In finding common ground for cooperation with the llttla entente and Poland, and this success gives them an influence on the continent today which has hardly been adequately appraised either In London or Washington. Other Alliance Threatened. On tha other hand, this very success la tending to raise an opposing system of alliance with Italy as the center at th moment and Germany a the eventual senior partner. Contrary to American expectations and British hope the continent- - of Europe la reverting to its' old order of alliance and recent event have disclosed the extent to which th process ha gone. Moreover, unless ad signs fall, we shall have even more impressive evidence of this evolution In th next few months Meantime, it la Internatural polit cal esting to perceive by dvnnetic stathe German branch f th nce. Whiletrengthnd Hohenzollerns continue In eclipse, the Rumanian he extended its infiuenc t Belgrade and Athens. 11 1922. by th McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) Commercial club crystal pool and Turkish bath now open. TeL Wa IS.-- , hir. (A Jr.) Leonard, director in charge. (Copyright, |