Show WILL FRANCE AND GERMANY CLASH Addressing the chamber r 01 ot of deputies ties on Friday Premier PoIncare declared France Franc would accept no reduction In the German reparatIons reparations tiona and Poincare was a as supported b a vote ote ote ot or confidence of ot to Then Ib n what Is left leCt for th the Dawes commission If It there Is to be M no noI noi I In reparations reparation how bow Is IsI I the German to be answered vho ho declares he lie has baa reached the th limIt of Ms lila hi ability to pay was as as stirred to his dee dec dec b a 0 member of ot the cham- cham chain her ot of deputies Edouard who who Iwho referred to the occupation of otho the as a a mistaken mif taken policy and Urged ot or the th reparations through agreement rather than co- co cor co- co co r Dack Back of the tbt French are ar tao t t o out- out purposes purpose One On Is to make feel eel the tb full burden of t tho ruin Inflicted on northern France durIng the war the rhe other is to toi I IMO o retard Germanys Germany's recovery from effect of the tb conflict as to pro pre vent the th Germans German from gaining a aHery over er France Franc The Thi French fear a time tim in the future t when ben the tho freed treed from their lIons and untrammeled will renew the blows s of 1171 1871 and lilt 1914 and completely crush tho French na nation tion and people That I is why Poincare Is S slow alow In moving out of be he Ruhr Kuhr and careful in his hi utter as a to the th treatment of the tho of reparation and lie he b has him tho the people of France Brigadier General John Morgan of the th British army who spent pent four years yeaT In Germany as asIt an It 1 British representative on the th In Inter tEr allied shied military commIssion of control engaged enlaced in carryIng out the ho h disarmament provisions of the th Ver Vr ailles treaty Is I not s to the tho f future He lie li G German standards of ot con con- conduct conduct conduct duct are not ours You may thInk them better ou QU may roay thin think them worse the wor e the Is that they are ar different Ger- Ger Germany Ger Germany many is a land Jand of philosophers and for Cor or centuries German meta meta- meta have 1111 been asking the question What ja Is 1 But Dut that doe does not nol mean that Germ Germans D alwa tell teH It U Is an element clement of chicane In the tho German mind which ou have hye got gt to take Into Inlo account The Themo most t profitable thing thine for us u is 11 IsI I I submit tInt not to confine our search to fo o what Is I evil vl In the German character but to ex cx ex- ex tend It t to ebat at Is I good tood and to decide hat 1 hat degree di of o responsibility Tests rests upon us for or giving vine just juat that tu to the th one or other which may determine the tho whole future futuro of her nation nation- national al LI de d nt aud and with jt It the future of ot the tho world Ono One 1 e s ent cot In the last t cl eh e Ins has affect affect- affected ed Jd the temper of or o Get Gel S 1 many It Is the of otho the tho Ruhr I will not not discuss Its It wisdom but among amont the many thIngs of ot which I am doubtful of one thing I 1 am sin sure surer ure and that Is I the th sooner the th French occupation of the thO Ruhr fluhr be becomes becomes becomes comes ad a It IllS as originally intended to be the better for Cor the th assuagement of the tho universal J which It has aroused TIle The Th occupation occupation occupation tion of o the th Ruhr has affected the hinterland of ol Germany with the same sam gangrene liS as at ascribed to the tb influence ot of the tho English palo pale pale on n the rest of or like Ireland Ireland like a spear spear- spear point I point Imbedded In the tho th bodY It has bas Inflamed all round around It Prior to that occupation an Inter allied commission on the council of ot 1 bleh I have been lne beensen-lne serving as a B British represents represents- Ur live tive had bad been engaged for tor three years In the th task tuk of o disarming Germany We had met I ft every kind of resistance rl that Ge German In la geniI could devIse and every kind of that German could InTent Invent but hut so far CAr as It is possIble to disarm a country with n a strong mill S Stary tl tary tradition and a great treat en- en engineerIng engineering en and chemical indus indus- industry Indus Industry try I we e were within mea abl sur able ble distance of success A generation would have been necessary So o Insure an any degree degroe Tco ot of permanence for or our ork There were too man many lif interests interest in Involved oh ed There Ther lVer too man many m ni general officers on the th retired list suffering from the tho most Incurable and malady of ot lost PO er Thero Is the tho corps ot of German officers the strongest casto capto In Inthe the world orld and the th most proud and now as highly organized oven eTen down to Its regImental messes and Courts court of o honor as a ever vr It was there ther Is the cadre or of N C Os O's 0 noncommissioned officers the th regimental r also asso associations numberIng millions of omen men all organized on the basis of ot mobilization And on the outer periphery there thero were those highly articulated secret secretor secretor or secret sent ecret societies I are arc one of the tb most moet disquIet disquIet- disquIetIng Ine Ing features of public life lit In Germany today todar Tim and the of might have havo oper aled to those theao life lit In Interests and to liquidate these free freo masonries But Dut the tb occupation occupation occupation pation of the th Huh Ruh- hu has ha changed all that They have havo taken on ona ona ona a new le leas of life Ufa Never were those these extra constitutional forces forced so strong never was the con con- con constitution so 1 weak neak eak It If they once gain the tho upper hand any moral disarmament disarmament and and It ItIs itis ItIs Is the only disarmament that In the th long lone run can he be b effective which tive-which tive which may have attend attend attended ed id d our work ork will bo be e In summing up his study of German problem General Morgan offers this thi advice It If you want peace ou must begin 1 with aith an act ot or oblivion and Indemnity which abich will wUl blot out from both sides the th bit bitter ter memories of transgressions and Waiting on us as the head of ot a deputation of man n trade unionists unionist to protest against dismantling a state slate arsenal which they feared fare a throw men out of ot em a German workman said If one ono admits that it Is necessary to seize every ma machIne machine machine chIne It would be b necessary to seize every I German Grman mother isho ho bore bor a son to sen 0 In the war at for tor It Is man who made mado the war aar ar not machinery That remark Is III almost most as astrue astrue astro true at s it Is impressive e I en If you destro destroyed ed the th ou could not destroy the th man But Dut can you do one on any moro more than you can do the th oth other rever be-rever a country has reach reached ed a high bleh degree of o engineering and mechanical and chemical development there In spite ot of all the programs of International al at Idealists the tho race rac In the tho event of ot a sudden resumption of bo hostilities will aill always j bo ho to the tho Industrially swift and the battle to the strong The Tha peace of or the world Is inot not nol to be assured by an Ireni con con from The Tb Hague Heu or an en- en en en-c en cyclical l from Geneva nor will any International i or standardization of military ea es- es el It it Noth Noth tog Ing but what the th old PurItans called a IL a change chance of ol heart lean In inthe the 1110 ton aon or of o men can ensure It Material l torl l dI disarmament will never ever bt g e certain or until moral disarmament baa made It unnecessary |