Show iT mm HAS DIG FOR U S ABOUT TURKEY Were We're Talking Business Not Humanity With Ottoman He Says By Dr ANDRE ronnel French n high h to the United States Copy COI ight HU 1923 1 2 by The Standard Standard- Standard Examiner Examiner PARIS The 21 21 The treaty ot of orl on what is called the tho treaty ot of o Lau will Lausanne Lausanne will be bo signed i nt Tuesday It Is hard Is-hard hard hard to te cali It a II real treaty for tor the num num- number number ber of ot questions it leaves leates unsolved Is far iUt greater than tho the number It Compared with the war alms of the allies or with the treaty of evres one might think that be- be tw be-tw n August 1920 and August 1 3 there hid been a now new new Bar ar ar be- be n bc tn t the tho allies and Turkey and hat Turkey hid hd emerged victori- victori ois Yet there has s been been no sar Tl Tere rc has been only that play ot of J European politics which In this as In n all others has seemed n on destro destroying Ing the fruits ot of the common by incoherence incoherence rence contradicting and selfish mediocrity The rhe whole holc situation resembles L huge quadrille wherein every every- everybOdy everybody everybody body has changed places at ran ran- ran random dom durn with everybody else so that time ballroom is filled with a jost jost- jostling lump ling confusIon contusion And worse dis disorders orders seem to be promised for th tb tut future ure TIME Alt IDEAS During the tho war the allies agreed on regarding two or thre simple ideas regard regard- ing the Orient Orient- That J-That 1 That Turkey by declaring war ar in 1914 without rhyme or reason had seriously c the task of ot the west west- west tin In em power determined the entry ot of Bulgaria on Germanys side fa- fa fared fa red red a Bolshevik lh eruption lon pro pro- pro longed prolonged the and sacrificed the lives of ot thousands of allied ed soldiers That 2 2 That the Turks lad had again n clearly how far tar they were from modern ch illation atlon 3 1 3 3 that hat an end ot of the Balkan t territorial conflicts must be achieved once and for all by oust oust- ing log ousting the Turks from Europe The These e ideas are found in the at- at ii al med d war ar alms as stated by former formel Premier Briand ot of to the neutrals in 1916 and again In In 1 1518 q 18 In President the fourteen points of Fred Prel dent Wilson and finally In the treaty of which faithfully th the reiterated vie vies s the r remains of the Ottoman empire But sou ou will not find them in the tho treaty of Lausanne LCD SULED me lime 1 he play of European politics h s been the same toward Ger Ger- Germany many as toward but while the process still sUIl Is going on In case it Is finally finish finish- finished finished ed d in Turkeys Turkey's cys cy's case and officially s In a n I n Tn 1919 England stepping cau- cau cau I cautiously b began gan to play the game camo 1 I lich fed red to this culmination She o ht to gain the favor ot of the Turks with Ith an armistice the weak weak- weak lies lies mies of which has been pointed jut But sit sh months later when Italian troops unjustifiably Intervened near nearS S IT rna n-rna England encouraged the tho Greeks Greek to disembark In that city and ard placed her money on the other hore finall the corn com com ot of o Constantinople in the spring of ot 1 1320 1220 20 and urging the Greeks to push forward and crush tha state of Angora built up on the ruins of the Ottoman empire S CO CO S I h months later France Iranee adopted tactics Pieties and while hill hiie the tho Turkish sheIn battle raged she In red Mustapha Komal's Kemal's t affair American seemed greatly disturbed 0 oer cr r the Turk pro policy of ot alj 3rd In New York crowds ds in the ther I eying oving I picture 1 ture theatres applauded 1 the he arrival al of ot British cruisers In tl Li Dardanelles Hardly a Y year lr has passed and lr nce Is on bad terms with the Tu k while England tak takes s ad- ad ad of 01 I this his break to protect h he cr commercial Interests and the 1 States one once so bitter against the I barbarities is amia amIa- bly amiably treating for execution of ot the tho Chester Oil Land concessions whIch substitution American con con- ios for Europe in the public works of ot Anatolia can say ay all this shows much farsightedness or consistency on In the tho part of ot the great groat powers tranco had bad a i great groat material and moral heritage in Turkey She Sho had 75 71 per cent of ot the tho Turkish debt bout out the time same proportion of ot Eu- Eu Curo Euro En ro Jean ean enterprises on the tho Levant had schools and hospitals Alt All t ti Altti Allt t has s been sacrificed by the treaty of Lausanne RII CE Cp IS G The British were betting on n a nt Greece whose patron they woul would 1 J e be Greece has been beaten and driven from eastern Thrace and a part of western e Constantinople becomes 1 h again with all the dangers that lOne lon experience has hM IC pal d while tie tween lIe eiery ery day hy the agreement ag lie lie- tween the Turks Russians and Germans gets closer and closer eloer All ti hl has I left ft Is the Chanak forts But for tor how long The Tho future muro will tellAs tellAs tell tellAs As for tor the United States which so 50 eloquently urged the dut duty ot of protecting Christian mi It dropped the tho Armenian cause In 1919 and Instead of matters lcm busl It Is now Y discussing bus busl- CR 1 with An Angora ora which Is as to tr treat lt Christians Ike lito heep at the slaughter tomorrow tomorrows S as it was as yesterday There Thero Is neither logic nor In this My lIy words maY mav offend sone but the tho truth has Its rights nd ad id the truth troth In this matter Is that all th the great powers on the tho l ha have te lost much of their and some of ot their honor bonor |