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Show JS. - t THE SALT LAKE TOIBUNE, SUM) AT MOEXTSTi, MAT coctsfrnetad another form of reinsurance thev have made elTttncw with other nations which are equally deeply concerned with the matter of German menace, namely, Boland and And the basis of i this agreement thy common deof not frontiers sa western ths fense, bv the treaty of Nersa'llee, rases, by eMHirtaring her case with he cases of Roland and efetseeho-Binvak- l. ohtaine the support of forty of people, who would ho able ' In th, French fear of a millions today H , i mobilise and to between 1 fc'X) 90 -Alsace-Lorrain- e VJc- im tin. of chaiien, (MX oo troops on the day Germany nblrh the Germans 2attacked or France do not have anv Idea of uttering, and . rr rim ferrna fer of pemraTiBnToci CUpibd 1 emtory ration of German lands by the glum. Pol ml does not car about Almrs, French, lands which the French have no desire to occupy provided their tir KVattf-whiUabout ths polish Corridor, ths annexation of Aus-tri- g s, own security could be adequately inby Germany is by no means as sured ntherwjseJlera. then, to ths to or Poland as to Francs Important common-sens- e mind of the , Englishwhich thus would man is s chance to negotiate CorIs the Point b snctrclcd almost by German terBreaking tUARANTEES WANTED. ritory. Rut air thres powers, and If Germany were to give a guar- 'Belgium also, ars concerned vitally Any Struggle antee of breach and Belgian fron- In ths malnlsnanco of portions of ths tiers. a guarantee which might even treaty whbh fixed all thess frontiers be underwritten Therrfors, Francs has mads k cmif--mby the British, with Must Drag In All Europe German assent, that causs. a drfcnsis alliancs with la, a guarantee d of a sort which could not be thrss nations with Bslgium la ths In Germany as- - am alliance wst and with Behind and In ths east, ths basis nf against Germany, and If France, in y FftANK H. StMONDS. on aJl four sidss return for this measure Of security, which Is ths prom! a WUh to II WASHINGTON, May should evacuate the Rhineland and dfndhavshs treaty of Vsrsaillss. In time They ths sdvlcs of Ruhr accordance the the with adopted th Hindenburg duly Inducted Into fixed by the treaty of Ver- .Bra Frsnklln and agreed to hang toGerman presidency and the Painleve limits sailles. then two fears real and po- gether to avoid being hanged sepacabinet similarly established but In tent, which peraijte Europe on re- rately Gorman Therefore, to th proposal and ths British sense fortified ,by the recant urging. adjustment could be exercised W are Francs to replies. pleased elections In 'France, rnhhh la reudv to guarthat Germany Now are work forced to British the have resulted In rains for the comantee to her and thus western accept for some solution of this bination of parties which make up Fra nro Oertnpurh ti situation because if frontiers, hut why not her eastern real road to pesos In ' war Britain can as well?is aThs ths majority in the chambertt la It leads to another German Agreement-t- a no more remain- than t Europe plain that ths moment Is at hand could before. Fh weutral her present boundaries ' never tolerate cept cn when there will be new discussion the preaence-.Q- f GERM ANV WANTS CORRIDOR. a victorious --German - the French and Belgian urmv-- ee of ths main pending business In Eu"And here,'ofcoura,-i- a ths mh TJie develotwwenT. of air and Germany la not willing to accept ths rope, namely, ths Gefmarv proposal roestif . has submarine warfare of loss ths Danxig GntTiilnr. of Dan-s- g totally fbr a security pact between the all the old British state pf or of lrpper Sifeaia. Nor Is she western nations and isolation. immunity willing to acept that portion jof ths This security pact proposal, whlh alof Versailles In which treaty permaTherefore, England .fact, was made by the German foreign though not in formal action. Is al- nently prohibits Austrian union with minister. Dr fitreaemann, last wln-- f ready committed 2 No whom German with to defend the status Germany. ter. had its Incept inn in- - British, qua created by the talked was wining even to consider In the west rather than German, diplomacy. It of . Europe, HoHand,warBelgium of matter ths and accepting thefoMh various Franc are eepreseitted Vhefritvst In which Britain Is Corridor, ths question of Austria is British efforts to reestablish peace onlv a little areas less Interested than the less scuts, but even Marx, ths ReIn Europe bv satisfying French ftp- of the countries themselves publican candidate for president. Inof Germany, people It Is perhaps true that Britain would sisted upon this union. ?rehenslons with respect reality, the substitute not ba At this Juncturt ths British coma concerned If Germany only which the British government offered retook A tea but to do this forward with a pretty bit of expedienwbeo it rejected the Geneva protocol, bv force re Lorraine, Germany would have to cy. They urge, as Germany has sugalthough on the surface it was Gerruah France, and then she would gested. thst the eastern phasebe put many. and not Britain, whhh mads be a& free to make frontiers where aside for ths moment; that German, the proposal she chnss as was Napoleon in his pe- to be sure, shall give pledges, as aha To understand the history of th she will not seek riod of triumph. has that proposed, heat few months, ths diplomatic hisby arms to change her eastern bounLOOKING EELVES. - daries tory of Europe, It Is essential to Theas pledges art to bs duly keep In mind the origin and the So far, then, British. French and accepted and the western bargain Is purpose of this German offer, made German Interests ars not essentially to go throughAs to ths eastern with British inspiration, beyond The Germane do recog- matters, even ths British perceive much debate. We are again in the conflicting. nise that they would have to fight clearly that there Is no present presence of two different theses. as England again If they Invaded Bel- chance of a peaceful modification of usual, a British and a French thesis, gium or assailed France, They be- - ths Polish state; that ths Poles would member of the league, Germany does although It would perhaps be more Have that the aupreme blunder of fight to the last man and the last pltxige herself not to altack any' accurate to speak of an insular and their kaiser was his challenge to ditch, and this would mean war. member nation, not France, not a continental point cf view, for the Greet Britain In the msTter of naval and aii But ths -- Poles and the fHechs,- - at i'uland- - not French point of view is not pecu- rlvalrv that this challenge was the this point, reason with deadly accu-rac- y member nations are pledged to attack her tf she does, akhough the pledge root of the German ruin In the world liarly French. thxt if a different form of comwar. they believe that It was Britain. mitment Is given by Germany for Is vague and of no great value BRITISH VIEW, In this situathm the deadlock beand British eastern and western frontiers this tween Broadly speaking, the British view British statesmanship and Germany la not !s thia: Europe Is la dkhger, not diplomacy, not British arms or French establishes the principle that there broken France by the guarantee proposals i w'hlrh In a arms, their of defeat difference the engineered permanency of Immediate, but of eventual, war, relines In a word. It estab- inle bytoGermany and exclusivelyRelaand of contemporary disturbance by Therefore It Is wholly pntbable that the western frontiers. lating Germany would be prepared, on lishes the basis for a future German tions treason of the present end ths his- lorlavbasis Vnd France between Germany of asmiuance that the Ruhr, claim that these frontiers in ths east ths n relatoric state of and the From the point remain what they were, be remade tions. France te. justly- - ansioun for the Rhineland and ths ftaar Towould b should to are remain ifeaGi likely troops or evacuated view of dates,-and Elv Warsaw this Prague, the future, naturally and legitimately staged Rhine Indefinitely, as supply- prettv specific pledges to accept sr allows ths Germans to thrust In an on the fearful of a new German attack, a final of real ths frontier-makin- g guarantee lug single last the ean between entering wedge which they later rnch German war of revenge, which would security Hut the British are use. St one time wipe out the memory of herself and her western neighbors when that So argue they etfecUy right much being possible. the British FRANCE CANT GET OUT. the resent defeat and reconquer the the continuation of this situation sav, ''"let ns do this much; It Is perwe corns to the breakHers, provinces of Alsace and terrains. present disturbance and ultiBut does Germany desire a war haps 90 per cent of the whols Euro- ing point between the British and means for Britain the old mate war And In pean the prohlem of revenge and will she Insist upon practice And there. Is a certain r YU returns Thus French. the in a new form. How Is British did encourage the Germane comic side to H all. The British reopening the historic dispute over to v out of the be to Frame got a mAke It such and when proposal Ths British are prepared todnslst upon the mainthe border lands ares? vf Rot oly-nri-ed .4v tenance In the yss made they. quo the ptatns created yf as cannot It a to France sincere and honest be persuaded go German mind of today a very clear accepted of ersailbs on th but also urged upon the bv the treaty strength of aoy German pruw-iwillingness to accept the loss of ths proposal, Rhine, although they are not them- on the to regard the western frontiers as final, to accept the French acceptance of this German selves tangent to the Rhine because Keichsland And. as I havs said, thev the Rhine, ths eternal Bhe cannot fmntler with FrancO'and even with proposal present frontiers of as they exist as Indlr.t.d that th.r w.r. prepared to France persuaded to go .even If this Gerand Belgium, are in reality be Brllum, Oeaplt, Hth Iom of Malmedy underwrite U man with the kind of British antna has iwr.nn.1 strategic frontiers of Britain, once was Uld down In and Eupen as promise ths treaty of Versailles as" defini- commlttnent, frenied o Avoid giving inside of which Germany could men- .Indorsement soHefur offered. Rut GerGermany any grievance. brought to give the many cannot tive and give formal and free-wiace British security. wLh respect of the Th French standpoint. however, 1, statement of that fact They believe. But the French regard the Vistula same commitment eaAfc as the west or La resign her In other words, that the German Is materially different. The French are. as the British the Rhine; regard they to within her include Austria ready to give a guarantee of the to ho cure, only concerned with their do not touch It, but they feel that ovs n boundaries. western frontiers of France and BelNo dif- their eafetv depends upon the mainaecurlty, aa are the Ftrltlnh ference exist, at bottom, elnoe both tenance .of Poland, Just as Britain ONE WAV OUT. gium, So faf, too, the BrttWh View corre- nation, are legitimately and naturalfeels her security rests upon ' the Therl remains only on obvious sponds with every statement I could ly working for their own Intercut. maintenance-o- f French and Belgian avenue of escape. la it Possible that own eecurtty. collect In Berllti from men of all nd thetr Put th. frontiers with. Dutch FrttQrt if she Were offered some together and men outside of political Pryneh do not believe the German France does not waaV-tdefend the parties arid unconditional guarlife altogether. But the British also guarantee, even with eome ort of Vistula any more than Britain wants categorhwl antee of her own security, see what Is equally unmistakable pi British hie. Inf, I. sufficient Thev to defend But both safetv. and that of Integrity, Belgium, provided Germany, namely, the conviction that point out that .uch a guarantee did are caught by their own necessities the British off? were made uncondiFrance has no Intention of quitting exist so f.r es Belgium we. concerned Franc did tional, Suppose, for accept the British the occupied area, that she means to In 1914 and the kaleers armies abandon Polandexample. Then Germany thesis tomight the extent of walktd through It Into France; more- might trr by peaceful negotiation Stay on ths left bank of to Germany to give different permitting in permanently. And such occupation, over. although the British had un. obtain the Polish Corridor, but shs the west and In the east? pledges There, of such annexation, real If not formal, derwrltten the guarantee end did take would have no more chance than would eastern Issue rest the course, no German can or will accept, even' up erms to defend. It, all the north France would have had If she had for the present, for Germany, on her if refusing to accept means a new of France was occupied for four undertaken to regain e own statement, can do nothing about war Veers. de .stated abominably and by negotiation at any time between It now. At least one may say that From the British point of view, Barts Just brink captured RTl and 191 S Falling thia, Germany only such a British guarantee would on their side, havs might make out then, the chief difficulty In Eurtvpe Thus a case for using have any value In Influencing France, force, but once force wag Invoked and Briand. who is now foreign minnot onlv would there be war. but, ister. has always worked and argued since Germany, to crush Poland, for a straight British guarantee jand would have to mobilise and equip had one st ths point of acceptance half a dosen times as many men as in hie Cannes conference with Lloyd shs Is allowed under the treaty of George at the precise moment PoinVersailles. France would be bound care end MUIerand turned him out of to take alarm German promise or power la 1922. not, France could not sit still and But would Great Britain consent sep Germany at one bound regain her to such a guarantee and would ths old military stature and at the same or rathe the dominions, colonies, time crush an ally of France. their emphatic vote? It The question of Austria is no more withdraw be doubted when one recalls that simple. If - Germany got Austria, she may Chamberlain wanted to give wonid not- only practically enelrcle Austen such a guarantee at the mobut she would come France he started for Geneva to reject Into contact with Hungary, which ment the protocol, and was overruled by has steadfastly refused to accept the the Events seem to BrUteli Paris settlements which gave her have Justifiedcabinet. hie contention that this alien populations to Rumania, was the sole means of satisfying and Jugoslavia No, no, Francedoes It lie within the never,' is written over most Magyar power of but to British government any And beyond Hungary homesteada France this irreducible mlninura lies Bulgaria also eager to regain give of security? her lost lands, lost to Greece, RuOf course, if the Pole would only mania and Jugoslavia. For German consent to a retrocession of th CorIn these Issuea, support Hungary would readUy merge her policy with ridor and on nr two cities In Upper solution would be simple, the Milesta, would so Bulgaria. Germany; so simple that It la not surprising to THE DANUBE THREAT. find ths British press, a portion of It, But here Is Mltteleuropa agrin and the Poles and telling them here are Rumania. Jugoslavia and scolding It la their duty, as well as ths part For all of of wisdom, to yield now and graceGreece Instantly Involved them a German advance dowtr Rnt so far as there Is any a German alliance with fully irxat right, and I hesitate to drag would and be In any question of morale In what Bulgaria ' Hungary fatal Nor can one believe that Italv, Is a question of national Interests. It although she hides her cards, would belong to thee polei. The Corridor rare to sowGermanv at Vienna, In- strip eaa Polish for centuries before heriting Hapehurg claims to Trieste Frederick the Great took It as and threatening to- become master rf of ths first partition a century jart nd the Balkans This would In reality a half ago, a rape which has always he to substitute a Strong Germany been regarded ss one of the meet to de- for a weak in history, and Rllesia st my which Italv fought on the allied Iniquitous came by a similar crime, although war In world the not fid Poland, wag despoiled, Austria, FYance, then In Insisting upon the Poland having already lost this terintegral observance of the peace ritory The 'population ofc the Corritreaties, has instantly the support dor Is and slwas has been overof Poland and of th Httle entente, whelmingly ftlav. although the GerRumania and Jugoslavia, av well ss mans seek to establish a distinction Dont buy any refrigerator until you have seen bound to her by dl-- 1 between the Ksouhs and the Poles.1 rect alliance She would have, too, Only panstg Is German, but It is the wonderful display of the newest refrigerators the support of Oreees, If the Bui purely German "were to be menbeing shown here. - garian settlement POLAND'S RIGHTS. In the last acedanalysis, too, Poland surrenwould France have derWhy then, shouldof A. There are some excellent new ideas in refrigeraunquestionably million Slavs Italian support In the matter of Aus-- - to Teuton which eras domination, tors in this year that prove, their efficiency in fria, for, although Italy hates France. never ecceae to all up give gentle, the issue of the uV northern Tvrol, the sea. saving footk in keeping it fresh,"" clean and sweet; for a nation a serious, thing it German Inhabitants annexed after and you ought to know these points before you the war. Is a good and sufficient of nearly thirty millions; give up ths of lower reaches the Vistula, which Is reason for not wanting a German make your selection, for you only buy a refrigto all Poland what the Mississippi neighbor on this frontier is to the portion of the United States -France, then, thmugh-Brian- d, erator ones in a lifetime. between the Alleghanies and the .flies to Germane represented by RpcJGcs Jb Utle of Jttresemann. voa 'What are featuring th. PfNWOOPET SANITARY refrlfereter. propose Poland restsMoreover,. not alone upon history V W. want shout the west Is alt right: now make you to In.peet Its gh.temng whit porcelain Int.rlor. as but well upon legal anErraca, game to the the east and promise as that la ao aaolly cleaned du. to th. rounded tnsld. corners and right affirmed by Europe and will "be well But 'no German moralworld tba famous rounded in rid. front cornar. Coma I today. In the of the Versailles -treaty government could survive each As to the Germans If their moral There is no difference bePledge. claims are at least shadtween monarchists and republicans and legal owy, It fe true that the Corridqy on this point. And that la the preseparates tw millions, of Germans cise point at which discussions have fmm other sixty, while the lodgMoreover now arrived one must ment ths of Dansig In a Joint league of : remember that the etectlon of ESTABLISHED 1851 Polish control alisnates end nations has gravgNr compromised the nearly IN) no Germans "from their negotiations themselves j? natural and eageriv desired MUST fOm LIAOUR. Geographically, strategically. t Tn ddltlnn. Franc, d.manda practically, the Corridor Is the most possible thing tn th world s car Germany that .he Jnln the Iwm. of nation, without condition. Ru, f tography. But It H there.gnd the German. Jolna the leacua of nation, world Is faced jrlth 4hetwo facts "GOOD FURNITURE ! aha euhaerhe to a .whole lot of new that the Po)e will not part with it promt-- , br ni.rriV .room tmr the and the Germans wllb not accept It J covenant. In rt&lUy, In becoming n as permanent. And only force could 21, 1925.' England Seeks' Way to: Dissipate Twin Bugaboos Charge on Our Free Credit Plan VcurChoice-of-Thi- s rmanyjt 9tm ana Alrare-Iytrram- Wonderful Opportune Purchase of mr e, V ft j .ft pr I'sscho-blovakl- a. ridor; DM Inter-prete- Csscho-Blnvak- la Amazing New Purchase al -- GRADUATION and SUMMER i .95 2.95 HATS 1 5.00 AU 00T0 Begular EzU halt orr - Lsecho-biovaii- -- ia to Franco-Germa- thr Rhine-fcuHi- ll ' -- the-fth- Alaace-Liorraln- e. ine Alsace-Lorrain- nil-s- 1 i Csecbo-Rlovakl- a, Csscho-Blovak- ia - -- See the New rators Austria-Hungar- y, at This Store t ('xechft-Slovskl- r-- iT "rr j three-quarte- rs ' i" ii iru a 11 Priced $13.50 to $400.00 rg xi Dinwoodeys alfe-rlan- -- I make the Germans accept or the poles abandon the status quo. You have, then, the present and perhaps- - the future f European history centering In a narrow area which does not exceed in size Massachusetts or New Hampshire On this barrier hay shipwrecked all the plans so 'far made to bring about, if not a reconciliation, at least a viable arbetween Germany and rangement France. And the root of the evil does not lie. as one might Imagine, to judge from many comment, ki any sinfulness or wickedness but In the awkward, .but undeniable, fact that the Polish Corridor Is an ethnic and that for long centuries reality this narrow tongue of land, stretching north along ths feft bank of the Vistula to the sea, west of Dansig has been Inhabited by a mass of who havs resisted all the rigSlas, orous efforts at Germanising in ths laatceniury and BRITISH MUST AID FRANCE. Today British Immunity Is locked up with French security; England cannot enjoy Isolation if France does , not have Belgium and But Holland, to speak exactly. her believes that France security is not adequate unless she ha the assistance of 40,000.000 Slavs on the Vistula and the upper Elbe, who have securities of their pw'n to consider If Germany attacked Poland, France would go to the assistance of the Poles tn defense of her own security, but. If France were beaten, Britain could not sit Idly by and see a victorious Germany eome smashing back to Cute is and Ostend. The British believe that they could remEln unconcerned direetlv In new Kuropean conflagrations if these took They want place east of the Rhine to reinforce the channel barrier, no all width of the by longer adequate, France. Belgium and- Holland. But on contiwho live the the French, nent, know that always In the past which has anv continental nation krown overwhelmingly strong has attacked Its neighbors, and they believe that if Germany la allowed to break out in the east and south she will Ultimately come west again In my humble Judgment, If Chamberlain had had his wav and Britain had given France and Belgium a straight-ou- t guarantee. Ffance would have accepted the German proposal, despite Its equivocations In the east If Marx had been elected Instead of Hlndenburg, France might even have accepted the German proposal with the degree of British backing for ths future that would have been included. New France will certainly not take without a the German proposal guarantee such as Chamberlain proposed With such a guarantee however. I believe It Is still possible to n arrive at a arrangement, without the German pledge to the with compliance equal regard PoliMh and th FYench frontier I sav this because no one can have have been recently in Paris and felt the overwhelming desire of the French for peace with security The evacuation of tbs Ruhr and th Cologne sons would follow In turn, for the French have no other purpose than that of security In mind In their Rhine occupation. And all Frenchmen know that to stay on the Rhine would mean eventual war; what they do not know is whether future 4kar Is not Inevitable, and only a British guarantee would give them hope. What remains to be seen Is whether the German nationalists, after their recent victory, will even consent o a renewal of the Stresemanri pledge wot to seek by force to modify eastern frontiers Without this the whole negotiation falls to- the ground, for French honor !? involved at least to this extent, eo fiar as her Polish and Csech allies ars concerned. KEY LIES IN LONDON. Meantime the real ker to the situation lies neither In Berlin nor In Paris. If there la a her? It Is In London:. If there la a solution It must be found In some new British proposal In th matter of guaranteeing French security. The true bs1s for optimism Bes in the unmistakable fart that all three major countries France, GerBritainhav an equal demany and sire for peace and an equal necessity for a long period of tranquillity In which to reorganise thetr twn economic and financial Hves. shattered bv the. wr. What has so far prevented any arrangement baa been the double play of the French and German fears the French fear of a new aggrclon. the German fear of permanent French stay on the middle Rhine. If, In nointpf fact either fear were founded on anv discoverable reality the situation would then b hopeless, but In wv Judgment It Is not. And all British diplomacy is based upon the conviction that both French and German fears are ImagTo satisfy French deair for inary security, to get French armies of occupation out of Germ on territory, those are the two problems which Brltti diplomacy has to dispose of to obtain re at results. aafety-France- CHURCH EDIFICE STILL LOCKED F. G. Hilling, Baptiat Paa-to- r, to Hold Servicea in Firat Congregational. ws are ierved wtth "Mandatory notice to open the church, we are 'a abiding citizens and will open the church,' said Attorney H! J. chairman of th board of trustees of Immanuel Baptist church, But thus far wt have yesterday. received no such notice -- Fitx-feral- The church side and" front doors bear this notice, posted after ths church membership notice last week: Thia church dosed' until further notice. We win bold no services any- H where, until the members ao decide, added Attorney Fitzgerald yesterday. Th Rev Franklin G Hullrg. M of the church, announced yesterday that he would bold services at the First Congregational -- ehttrch, Ftrst South and Fourth East streets, just on block north of Jrr manual Baptist church, at II 29 oclock this evening morning and 7 2 o'clock-thi-s with Sunday school at 19 30 and young people at 2 30. The church, which has been closed as a result of a controversy between and modernist the fundamentalist groups of its membership, is the largest Baptist church in-- the state Only recently the mew pipe organ was Installed tn the edifice and dedicated Shortly afterward, th controversy arose which resulted in dosing the building to all services. F. M. Orem, appointed houseman for the church by the bfard of trustee rf Immanuel church, Inst night v. authorised the statement that no services would be held at that edifice today. ' DR, BR0ADDU8 TO LECTURE. 4Trees and Flower of Utah Is the title of the stereopticon lecture to be delivered by Dr J. E Broaddus at the Centenary Methodist church, 1740 Fifth East street, at 7.43 o'clock this evening. Jesse B Richards, secretary of th Ogden chamber of commerce, was yesterday appointed director of the Utah Stats Fair association, by Governor George H Dem. He succeeds John T. Caine III. who resigned to take a responsible position In the Unifed .States department of agricultures Livestock men of the northern part of th state recommended to the governor appointment of th Ogden man. IHDC (From the Boise Capital Newt) Mrs Young (wife of an old man) Doctor, tell me the worst about my husband. I will be brae ard bear It Doctor Weil, then, nerve yourself for a terrible shock. Your husband will get well - Franco-Germa- nt - CopyrirbL t2V bv tbs McClure Newspaper Syndicate If you are out of work a Tribune MaAt Ad will help you find A Job. Champagne Style, Extra Dry, Quality Supreme Dellciona, Diitinctlre ITaror. 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