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Show Tttfc SALT LAKE Thus all the appearance Of legitimacy belonged to the party faction which i he beaded. Moreover, white by no means a brilliant man. he had pre- clselv those qualities which recommend themselves normally to the! British and were tortKUlarly wekxpne after etx years of Lloyd George a peculiar brand of ginger. , Choice Popular, waa While And Bonar Law popular. he was the beneficiary of the revolt It, against George and had joined Iniu the be had not been conspicuous and had contributed nothing fighting to embitter the situation. He had tne respect and perhaps the afjection of both tactions and while he was premier It was certain that there would be no sharp dash of rivalries. Without Bonar Law the revolt against George could hardly have succeeded so soon, save for him it might have been Tovery difficult for the nes to have organized a srorotry at as of the a consequence party all, Now, when he lays down Us rein after seven months, what is the situation Bonar Law leaves behind him? In the first place, so far as the Tones are concerned, the breach has not been healed. The king has selected to succeed him precisely the man Who made the fight which. - - In destroying theooautlon divided Tory party. Balfour and ChamberBirkenhead,. lain remain on the outside of party councils, while Curzon, who supported .coaation for so long, has been passed over, a clear indication ef the temper of the majestty of the Tories with respect to, the .past and the future alike . Baldwin New Man., Baldwin, zfho' succeeds law, Is s new man, a business man hke nls predecessor and terribly new to the business of politics. He has no long experience in. party leadership or even m party organization. Men will not follow him as they dht Bonar law from a sense of loyalty going back to prewar times and baaed upon the fact that Law waa long, very long, leader, while the Tories were still a minority in the house of commons. Therefore it seem fair. tq.jjQnlud that Baldwin a leadership will be difficult in the extreme. Curzon. Chamberlain, Birkenhead, all must see with great bitterness a comparatively unknown man snatch the place all have striven for and each at. least had claims upon. Bqt If the Tories have not mended their fences neither have, the Liberals. The feeling between the Georgians ami the Asquithlans has accentuated not softened, and although many attempts have been made to bring about a reunion, all have failed miserably.' Jf by any combination of emeurostapeee the Georgians, should endeavor to make a common cagse with - the dissatisfied Tories, the Asqultiuahs 'would not improBaby support Baldwin and the Tory ministry. As far as one can see at the moment there la nothing save the .retirement of both Asquith and George which could promote, as nothing but their presence prevents, party reinv' , tegration. Tories Beaten Labor on Its part is growing stranger. A few weeks - ego there were three or four in rapid and the Tory candidates euqpescHoti .were beaten lguorruniov.'tdy..with a resulting loss of prestige to the ministry. And in the majority of cases a labor candidate was elected. Vet if a new election were held tomorrow It la hardly possible that Labor would sweep the country. What thaT-mvrsuld to form a have a majority and thatpaTy government it .would be necessary for the leaner of the largest single group, which would , unquestionably be Tory, to make a deal with one of the Liberal factions, or-fthe Labor party to enter s similar com oi nation with of these factions. Baldwin might ode make a deal with George or Asquith; Ramsay McDonald might accomplish the same result. But it must fee clear that this unmistakable drift to the continental bloc svitem. as contrasted with the traditional party system which stilt obtains with us, has bed and will have grave conssqueacssfor the British both at borne and abroad. Not only docs if paralyse action, but It permits an actual absence of action which Is. on the whole, contrary to what seenurto be the will of the country. Take, for example, the case of France nod thezBuhr. The majority party in the house of commons Is s minority party in the country, since at the last election no party (Obtained a Ciear majority of votes. Its dominant faction. Abe are friendly to France and favor tne policy of neutrality, which was Bonar Law's, while some. Indeed, wotlM have Britain march with France in the Ruhr. But many Tories, and meet, of the members of the two Liberal factions. together with ail the Laboa members of the house of commons, r hostile to Hie French policy lq the Euhr, Yet they have no means of expressing this hostility, no way of making what appears to be the "will of the country prevail in a more aggressive and active foreign policy. Foreign affair hare become w Ins. TRIBUr;. SUNDAY MOKNIN, UTnSTK 3, l'J23. . Chance of Success of New Premier Hinges on Solution of Problems. Spring Days Are Pleasant Days die-har- d' (Ctttiiutti from figs Om.) lratedth correctness of statement that bo.h their own thlr party and th" country were eicJt to heath of Lloyd George and the coalition. The Tory friends of George were left out on a limb; they could. If they choee. and they were urged, come Into camp but their judgment had- been. proved faulty and thetr personal prestige had been shattered. Liberal Camp Sptttsf Meantime, the situation in the Liberal camp was even worse. For If the Tory party had feeen split, yet despite refusal to take office share to parly councils, the coalition Tories continued to support their parly In parliament, giving their votes and thus insuring a safe majority, although their unrotstaxable lack of eiy thustasm led to more than one awk-- , ward moment. In the house. But the spilt In the liberal ranks Waa more i complete. This ept antedated the revolt of the Tories Following their old leader, a large number of the liberals had deserted Lloyd George and the coalition government long before. Mr. 'Asquith, like Bonar Law, had been the leader of his party before the war, he had been Ousted from the premiership by Georgs and had waived any aggressive Independence, during the conflict and the making of peace, but in due course of time he resumed his independence, and at least half of the old Liberal party followed him. Thus the Liberal party was divided Into the Asquithlans and- the National or coalition Liberals, who followed George and supported the ctaalution ministry. L. Lloyd George Falls, Deserted first by half of his own Liberal comrades, then repudiated by more than half, by a decisive majority, of the Tories, Lloyd George fell. But long i before he fell be bad how endeavored, things perceiving ' were going, to create a center party of his own. to take enough members ..from --the ..Tories the champions of coalition in both cases, to organise a party of his own, which should follow him, control a majority of the house of commons, and thus dominate. Turned out of office before he could approximately realise his program. George found himself in a pitiful position IBs friends in (he Tory party had been repudiated and were ."down and out His enemies in the. Liberal party possessed the party machine, together with the more party leaders, and were able at the general election which returned Bonar Law to obtain more seats than A rtbnsa. liberals-sh- J ! f V A followed e George.-'-- . 4 ' F'ANTELEVER Shoe help you w 1o enjoy the glorious days of Spring snd Summer because they ere so easy on your feet that you can give ypur undivided attention to work, play, study and social life. are made Cantilever Shoe with en arch which flexes freely In walking, giving the foot Wiuaclea the exercise . needed to keep them strong and supple and 'able to bold the houea of . the arch In place. 'They have trim,' yet ample toe. and a medium or low heel. . Cantilevers coma to a variety -- ' Law Given Power. Such was the situation when Bonar Taw and his associates took office He had with him Curzon, who had been coalition but had changed tru" time; Lord Derby, and, at the moment much less conspicuous, Stanley Sir George Baldwin, whjgr- with Touuger, hair borne the brunt of the fight aCi'nst Lloyd George and coalition And was now to harvest the rewards. It was recognized pops that Law, because of ill health, might prove His adhesion to the only a stop-gaat the famous Carlton club meeting which doomed Uoyii George had been the dectrive ttrterventlom He had been chief of the party before the wsr in wteceesten to Mr Balfeur- - die-ha- at p. Die-Har- A flexible shoe for your flexible foot -- Summer Rates - die-har- ds, 'lit CD - of the good of the choicest barley made into finest malt. Needs only the touch of the home cook to develop results that are in a class by AH , on Fur Repairing and Remodeling Now being offered, axe crowjling our to capacity. - Aelr Vfiifg flwilFpf V fr i i I I SUGAR SYRUP PLAIN EXTRACT WITH FRESH PRESSED HOPS 'Highest duality , PREFERENCE AT PRICES YOULL BE GLAD TO PAY. p , them remodeled to wear for jspring and' suipmer or repaired against next winters readiness. LUCERNE BATH TABLETS Large cake, assorted odors rose, elderflower, geranium, verfecna, 12 -- 6 Le sensitive Mays fine, pure tile eoap Cold Storage V aults are not to Injure will not the most delicate 11 OIL skin . wear them during . Colgates Sc,4for29c mingled with domestic and party quarrels that because of the lat-tnothing can be done as to the former. Nor? as the situation stands, does any one of the minorities desire an immediate overthrow of the Tory government. Labor could not get control, In all human probability, and la desperately anxiouato smd taking develop men and machinery. Neither Asquith ner George has much to make by a genera election, for the Liberals are still divided and more likely to lose votes to Labor than to regain them from the Tories. George cannot want an election at once, for he haa lost prestige since he retired and would probably lose rather than gain followers at any early voting. His heat game consists In waiting for a latar election following a possible Tory failure, which might give him a new basis for nls contention that he is the Indispensable man. You have to appreciate the fact that the majority Is In a danger! out position largely because I baa little cohesion, "patent dlvtslons, no leader who has personal Influence an affectionate respect, not, as ordinarily, because of outside attack. It is' possible, extremely possible, that any new and eudden turn of thing for the worse, particularly abroad, whether la Ruesla, Turkey or In the Franoo-Germmeat, might lead to a downfall of Baldwin, just as tba Turkish crisis wrecked Lloyd George, whose supports had already been undermined. But, on the bother hand, given freedom from such squalls, Baldwin may .continue In power for a eonalderable time, largely, perhaps, because no one want an election at the present stage of affairs. But anceess or failure will. In the end, be determined by the progress of events within tbe Tory party. If Baldwin cannot bring hack the old leaders. Balfour, Birkenhead, Chamberlain and Horne, or some of them; if the bitterness grows, If Curson ultimately goer out Into the wHderasuctoo. then, In the long run, not only is Baldwin doomed, but party government, as contrasted with bloc rule, seems likely to be eliminated to England for tba tlm at least. Ruhr Best Opportunity, The beat single chance that Baldwin has lies In the German situation. If he can contrive to bring France and Germany together. If he cap promote a business settlement of reparation nnd the Ruhr and he le a busine man. the man. he It recalled, who Depreciated the eettlement of the debt question then hit pathway ahould run smoothly for a long time. n Yet the settlement of the problem Is perhaps the most In difficult outstanding task the world today. And Baldwin's foreign Influence tdust hd handicapped by his do- roestio situation. In any settlement promoted by the British there will have to be very great British concessions, the largest of which relates to the abandonment by tbe British of the larger part of their share in reparations, based upon their expenditures for war pensions; the next to the scaling down ef the debts owned by the continental allies of the British. Any such concessions, however, ould offer a shining target for precisely the kind of attack tiovd George makes best. Be it remembered he criticised the debt settlement Baldwin made in Washington aa unfair, and alwavs clung to the notion that In the end the United States would cancel the British debt, that he was responsible for the Balfour note which enunciated the principle that Europe pay Britain as much ss Britain Imust America, and that finally It waa managed with Smuts to get or '- -f war pensions included in reparations at the Paris conference and thus the total to Impossible dimen- swelled sions. burdened Terribly with faced with domestic problemstaxation, of Unemployment, the. British- - people sr likely to give a hearing to ao adroit a speaker as George, if ne attacks any scheme which even appears to British burdenu and remove other nations, notsblv France Nevertheless. Baldwin must strive n for a settlement, on the whole, will prohably haveand, to take a more active epurae thin did Bonar Lap, as British opinion Is growing more restive dally at British quiescence. Tet British Influence to bring about a settlement Is handicapped exactly like American". At long aa w insist upon payment by Germany's creditors of what they owe us, or with enough only to pay us and let their costs of reconstruction go hang. We cannot advise It; all we can do is sit ttll and keep still Nor Is the British situation much different. Short of going to war on behalf of Germans, which to of course unthinkable, all they can do is to propose reduction In reparation accompanied by scaling down of what their allies owe tbtm In addition, there is the matter of- - security. On this score 'they can do nothing save a they are ready to give guarantees that in case Germs nr is evacusfpa and behaves badlv, British armies will join French and Bslgisn on the continent. And there le profound hostility to all such engagements to England at the ' - II Sped!.. RESTUSV. 21c COLGATES BIG BATH SOAP A national favorite.. .............. SAYMANt VEGETABLE WONDER SOAP...,.. DJER-KIS- 3 for 59c JERGENS VIOLET GLYCERINE SOAP 1 frtP O I0r SAVON LA SATIN EUSe TOILET SOAP. WILLIAMS JERSEY CREAM TOILET SOAP JAP ROSE 3for65c PELS NAPTHA Lifebuoy Health Soap SOAP... . SOAP 4711 WHITE ROSE GLYCERINE SOAP. SOAI . . - ......... 3 for 40c 6 for 39c 4 for 25c - l - IOT in. 4C ZT 10c of 3 for 25c 15c or 2 for 25c 10c for 25c 03 3 for 39c -- e M r . 21c GERMICIDAL PARKE-DAVI- S Or lVC 1 10c and 25c .... 18c 1 r10 4VC 1 S . TOILET SOAP HARRIET HUBBARD AYERS COUR OS VIOLETTE SOAP, MELBA VEGETABLE OIL SOAP, PACKER'S TAR SOAP In the new metal soap box. lOo GRANDPAS TAR SOAP. ....... 21c SOAP......... .Luxury Bar tbs- HARD WATER COCOA TOILET ....... Full cake.. COLGATES COLOSSAL C J,4Jor29c "Williams WHITE ROSE TRANSPARENT GLYCERINE TOILET SOAP Extra special ALMOND HARD WATER TOILET 1,tysf WyiiamE Barber Bar Franco-Germa- moment. FACIAL Cas- that Shaving trtcafcly :! '20c For the skin.......... WOODBURY'S Castile A SOAP 12 for 79c 3 for 25c or 12 for 79c 19c 8URGEONg'DG! CUTICURA in Our Scientifically Safe When you' intending the warmer months. lor 39c schramm-johnso- n ALMOND COCOA OIL SOAR Lathers Jreely in hard, water for79c 6 for 42c, 7; stc Store Your Furs Franco-Germa- HOP ' work-sho- if yon want Anglo-Americ- ap FLAVORED fur A SOAP POE EVERY INDIVIDUAL Bring Your Furs in at Once an themselves. N good-lookiof model In black, brown and white, for all occasions, whatever your taste or need, you wMl find a Cantilever model that will please you.' o Labor Party Grows. Meantime, an even worse thing had happened. While the Liberal party had been occupied with Its own troubles to the exclusion of foreign foes, had come from behind and In the new bouse not only counted more votes than either faction of the Liberals, but actually a larger representation in the house than the two combined. Thus Labor became the official opposition and Ramsay McDonald not either Mr. Asquith or Lloyd George was the leader of the minority, the official minority. Tat Labor itself, while more coherent than either of the other two parties, was far from solid. It contained on Its outer fringes a number of radicals, who advocated far more draslio measures than the majority of their party-wer- e willing to stand for and threatened to oompromlse the position of their party bytothe extreme to which they desired go. . Soap -- PEARS UNSCENTED SOAP PEARS SCENTED 3 for 59c SOAP... tlZK ESS-JAY- g CST! S cakes lit 15c or 2 for 25c BATH CASTILE pkg.......,.,l. ....29 c Wool Soap" 8c 7c, 4 for 25c , Committed to Policy,. Baldwin, like Bonar Law, is committed to the preservation of the h entente. Lloyd George or McDonald would break it at once by endeavoring to use It as a means ef coercion, but ae such tt no longer can be used and a return of Lloyd George to power would mean-- - If not an open with France, at least of aimose unequalled Anglo-Frena period rupture . bitterness.. . .. The new premier rrill have the support of the financial and business elements as dla his predecessor. These will unquestionably support any plans ha may make for settlement of reparations. for in England, aa In America, business and finance are far more alert to the true situation and the remedies than either the mate of the people or the politicians who exploit the popular credulity and ignorance Most of the international difficulties which fane Baldwin grow cut of mil take or worse, of Lloyd George, whose reeponeibllttv for the inflation of reparations by the inclusion of war pension to make good campaign pledges must never be forgotten, yet such la the Irony of politics bis ablest and moat effective critic will fee the seme Lloyd George ...Grsal. - Brltato Uke-- aft She ether great European countries, with the possible exception of Francs is undergoing an enormous transformation, the political consequences of which ars hard to forecast, but the evidences of which ars unmistakable. The problem of whether the old party system can be saved remains to be answered. A really great man might. In Baldwin's placs leave hie Impress on his country and upon Europe for many decades; so, for that matter, might be a conspicuous failure In an event. It is dear that w are getting away from the men of prewar davs. Trotxky, Mussolini. Baldwin and, for that matter, Cuuo, were practically unknown when, nin years ago this month the assassination to Sarajevo precipitated the delOnly the United States and uge. Franc remain so far faithful to the old men and, the old methods. Yet even in Washington It is far from unlikely that we shall see name thing Anglo-Frenc- approaching the bloc system within congress and what map happen at the next general election to France if the German matter is settled la beyond prophecy, while the bloc system is Itself the old method in Franc. (Copyright, 1913, oy the McClure Newspaper Syndicate) moBATt A vp euAkniAvsxir vorlcu. r Um rcspoctm a iUttsalt eauitr m far fvrthr tnfarrasflffeR T?rrnsmcTRrrrHo: bate diVtsion, in and for Salt Lake the residue of the estate to the persona entitled, eleo for the discharge -- and of administratrix release of bondsmen, has been sot for hearing en Friday, the ISth day ef June, A- - D. 1933, at t o'clock p. m., at the county courthouse, lit the courtroom of said court. In Sait Inks City. Salt Lake county, Utah. - , W lutes the clerk of said court, with th seal thereof affixed, this 2Sth day Of May, A. V. 1933. , CULRHNCB COW AH. Clerk. county, state of Utah, In the mat- (Seal) By L. P. Fslmer, Deputy Clerk. ter of the estate of Thomaa F. Edward for PeMcGurrto, Attorney Hanrahan. deceased. Node. titioner g73 The petition of Mrs. Mary Hanra-heNOTICE administratrix of the eetata of Stater of Utah, office of state road Thomas F. Hanrahan, deceased, prayLako City. Utah. ing for the eettlement of final account commission.bids Salt will bo received by the Sealed of Saul Mr Mary Hanrahan, had for the diatnfeuuoa of gtato road commission of Utah, state n. admin-iatratri- x. capttoi, Salt lake City, Utah, at S oclock p. ra.. Monday, June 18, 1933. and at that tlm publicly opened for grading and gravel surfacing a portion df the state highway between woodruff and th Wyoming state line, the same being described aa federal aid project No, 48, between a point about 300 feet south of present crossing of Ehleratus creek and . Wyoming line. Th length of road to be constructed or Improved Is 1393 miles, and the principal items of work are approximately ss follows; 449ft ou. yds.x common excavation. 53,700 cik yds of borrow and 15,004 cu. yds, of graval for surfacing. Flans and specifications- - are on file in the office of the state road commission, Balt Lake City, Utah, and the office of Gi bureau of pub lic roads, at Ogden, Utah. .The above plans and Specific Sen e may be obtained at th cut w of tne state road commission on depositing five (S5.00) dollars. "Any additional information mxv be secured from th state road engineer at Bait Lako City, Utah. Th right to reject any or all bids is reserved. Cash or certified check for two thousand dollar (33000.001 made pay- able To the Utah state road comm must accompany each hnl a evidence of good faith and as a guarantee that, if awarded th contract, the bidder will execute th contract and give bond as required u STATE ROAD COMMUNION:, By Preston O. Peterm, Chairman. Howard C. Jleans, Chief Mugine-- 1 7. X A f ! ... . ' |