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Show PARIS. Dec. 8. (Ha vas) Professor) Thomas G. Masaryk. president of the' O.echo-Slovak republic, will makol only a brief stay in Paris, having received re-ceived word by courier shortly after! his arrival here asking him to proceed I at once to Prague. Upon his arrival there, he informed an interviewer, he will convoke the parliament and will address to it a message explaining tho1 political .situation and setting forth the grave problems confronting the republic in tho present circumstances,! notably those having to do with its relations re-lations with neighboring states. President Masaryk said that the republican re-publican form of government adopted by his country seems likely to bo the lasting form and in fact tho only one possible. He declared the best of relations re-lations existed with the Jugo-Slavs and likewise "with the Rumanians and Galiclan Poles, the aspirations of all being dopendont one upon tho other. As to the Russian situation, President Presi-dent Masaryk said he considered it the most critical problem for Europe and humanity. Without a strongly organized Russia, he declared, no stable sta-ble peace would be possible. The Russia Rus-sia of tomorrow, he thought, must supply sup-ply a counter-balance for Germany. |