7, -.-;.-*t 5;‘ ’* l?O[.I'l‘l€S Loon UP IN; TREATY- moi; BAUSANNE Few Questions Settled in l . Agreement While ' Many Are Left Unsolved. U. s. is :‘ Allies’ via}; 4.: Orient During War Have Been Lost in Bar- teringProoess. l v fly Puavuinialsul Priisn it:-pynght. M21» PARIS. July The treaty of lsuisanne or what is called the Irv-:il\ of laosnnne Will lie signed tuiiioiiuw It is hard l0(Jll it a real in-uty, for the number iifuuestitiiis it lt'.l\t"‘ unsolved is far greater than the Yl'_HllhlI'f’ it .~¢'ttl1'fi. tompared with the war aims of ill!‘ A llltns HI‘ witl. tilt‘ trill)’ Ul- .\‘evres. one might think that lit-~ tween August, ltrzo, and A ugust. I923. there-had been it new war he- rveen the Allies sad 'lurkey and that Turkey had emerged victorious. Yet there has lu-en no war. There has in» n only that play of lfuiropean politit-, which. in this field as in till Htht'l'~. has .'H‘1‘lIlt'tl bent on dc-n_v rm Il.e fruits‘ of the cummoii \ ll'tuf_\' lllttshq-(gang-g-. t‘ulltl’l(ll\'llY\I' and 4 - sltufltlfltl it-~¢nilile.~ ii quadrille wherein o-vi-ryl-mlj. s thntiged ]Il1ll't'.* .i'. ruiiduiii with 0-vq-r}l)4i(ly Plhr sci [hit the‘ Ttinlll l'4 filled with u ;n~tli'ig \‘UflfLl~!I!l‘. And w'or~ie_ t_l|.KUl‘tli l\ ‘t‘t'lll to loo pmmised for the future. During th --war the Allies uj{l‘w'¢l - on two « r three ~iniple l"ll't regard ing the tlrii-tit. I. That tloriiianiaed Turkey’. _\ dis laring war in 1914 without 'll)'nlt or reason. had seriously t'lIlflplI('Itt'Il n (lernmn_\'u irde. favored a lI|l\'h('\'ll\ eruption, pl-Dlllnnd the conflict ;i.-id aacrilit-ell the ll\'O'iI of thou.-inmix UV... Allied soldiers. 2. hat the Turk.-s had nguir shown t'lt'!|l'l)' how far they wv-r from modern tlV|llZItl0fl. 3. That an end of thc Balktm I--r rittirial «onilict must lie ‘.ichu-ve-‘ once and for all by ousting tlh T1110: from Europe. These ideas are found in the Al lied war uitns as stated liy former Premier liriand° of l-‘ram-e to th-- neutrals in ltllti and again in tilt‘ in the “fourteen points" of _l‘re.-.— deflt \\'il.~ton. nnd linally in the trea- ty of Sevres, which faithfully ex e Hctorif l‘t‘Ilt'l'Itt'tl \'N'\\‘~ about the remains of the tlttmnuii Flllpire. liut you will not find them in the treaty of Lausaiine. The play of I-lump.-an ptilItlt'.< h:i~ been the ~ame toward (;ormun_v n~ inward Turkey, lcut while the pro rev still is going on in Germany“ cuife it is finally finished in Turke_v°~ and oUl!‘iall_\' in-aled in It legul (l0l'tl m t. In 1919, England, "int.-ppiiig «nu tioualy,liegan to play the guine \\'hlt li led to this culmination. She sought to gain the favor of the Turin with an armistice. the weakness of \\’l'llt‘ll pointed out. Hot «ix later when Italitiii troops tinjustilahly intervened m-nr !~'-ir_vr- pa. England tncotirlged the tin-elt-: in disembark in that t‘lt_\' and placed er monevy on the other horn-, limit- ly assuming t‘he command of (‘on ntantinople in the spring of I920 and urging the (lreelts to push forward and crush the state of Angora lltlllt upon the ruins of the tlttoniun lint pare. Six months later. l-‘rant-e iidopted contrary tIl.‘tl(‘)-. and while the (in- co-Turhiah battle raged. she .sureii Mu.~'tapba Renal’: victory by sign 4 ing the Angora sgreement in Sep- tember. l9‘Zl. At that time and la ter in the ('hanalt aflair. American opinion seemed greatly disturbed on-r the pm-Turk -policy of France _and in New Yorlt crowds in the mov- ing picture theatres applauded the arrival of liritish cruisers in the llartlanello--4. Hardly a l"ranct- is on M1!‘ has passed and bad terms with commercial interests, and the l‘.-iited States. bitter iigain~t thi- Turhish harbarities. is iiniiably treating of expectation of (‘harsh-r oil land concessions, with substitu- tltll American coricossaries for Eu- _ 5?:-:~~~rs ‘pa-' ' V O lNVOLVED " ropedla the pflllc works of Ans- tolia. Nobody can say all 6b shows much f . on the part of the are bad a I moral heritage in 75 or great ‘powers. '9 3 Turkey. _ per of the debt. about the same proportion of European enterprises in the Levant. and had schools and boofltall. All that has been sacrificed by the treaty of laasanne part of western Thrace. Constan- I iinople becomes Turkish again with all the dangers that long experience has revealed which every day the is the (hanalt forts. But for how long? The future will tell. As for the-_ l'mted States, which -o eloquently urged the duty of pro- ('hrii-tian minorities. Itl droptx-d the Armenian catflc in I919 and instead of humanitarian matters it i~ Ilisi-tissing business with Ango- ra, which is as determined to treat "hrL.ll. iind .\'ndine Johnson. A group of .\undu_v school mem- bers of our conimunity met with Mrs. A ll l‘liillip.~ Tm-~dtt_\' evening. The pri.gr:ini opened with it song service which w'ii.~ followed ti)’ Bible readig and ii praver liy Mrs. Fage. Mn. Stull tulkul on “John the Baptist." Tlllx w:i~ f--llowed lay’ it tullt Mrs. ('’E(‘()M ‘ (u.,muti;,"s ‘'m' l'.;‘ - the war. the itrnctii tuft l was youth: e: -:..t- I ' (HUM whole diyi-no.» '\.f.'C1 go... t)\('f' tll|“' ‘u! l" " lilid .n' for me M2’ li.iii H .n he um .iftt*v' sq-t't1‘.K ft in . [W of '1’ -.-:irfni'-- on t '-M ~tv froiit.l lllUt'll ’.‘titl.'|V0"‘ in.-.s . 1 {en he that war ,‘ ".\'u\-' lhnt l l. - .i':_gind lo-gret‘ of l-iiclielw I" .'t"‘s_, | .1,-,rtjy~;' til't (rt ‘I vlc '."M- nf «if philo.-ophy \ xi . to ya,‘ govt cn'~.'t l'U|'V‘ H“ my .lw‘.A.'i ’' ’ S7.(.DE‘\..I. 4. W AFTER m;'r1/:Eu 8» ttlopy ri,~. BHRYIN. ~.lul. (3°'<»‘ I-’- ‘-Vi'.tc. as some trium- Tllfft‘ ft)?‘ 1' ~'.i' -' General Bamdmn. gld wlien lit‘ '5 9' ‘ii tit"‘fil1Illj.' lwt "v timer. lll2s‘ll.':I(l of l.'l FUl'tt.llI( (ll'l'.".lt"‘ t'.ltl)'ll.'_\_' xi-" .'~r' ' :i-~ ’;.. he \\tl\ n.:u‘~ ‘ l4, .,_ . — . .3 I \\ hen tin“ Into.-l\'.I We ‘ "luau. ‘I- 'l.'ll"r‘l '-utbg-g.‘ .4 said (it-tierul R'd‘~('.lH\\ i 1'! at lzuiulrt-l tliu.i .Al‘ll ‘.h 0'‘. ('3'. J ‘ o -' wll If you u.i.'it to l . --s-5--no-.._. Tom si (a ti chariot race :iiid test. Also “The HA LL THEA TR MOIDERN \'l'I.\"|'ll..\'l'|.\'t.' ‘ Tonight Only! In another i'iii-i~o:ii'iiii.-' co!ni~il}.'-«li-:iii::i “Romance Land” A regular Mix tlll iller \‘.'llll‘l-\\ lllt PATH ii At Al£S()l".\‘ TI’!-1.H‘l).-\Y()l\'l.\' With ('ullen Lsndis. '1 v Fl J. ’l 1 Mix- \‘.‘ltll “lii'«iiit-lio-lvi-tinc." l ~‘i. ct‘ <‘«-114'!‘ «wri- .\'lC\\'.\' t it l'‘.1\lil.lV..\' / Fog 0- r:::—1—:j- T _ O 0 Wanted- men Iofind the answer ms is written to the man who loves to seek the unknown quantity. Hols the kind of lnbort ' 30?}: Worker who ventures into untried fields oi'cx- fiflmcllt. rather than the man who tests materials. ‘WWW has need of both types, but of the former there is a more pressing d¢mmd_ C ollegc men may have been discouraged from Pufstllng pure research. In this highly pructit-at ‘Bf ll ml)’ seem there is little room for work which not have an immediate dollars and with application. But such is not the case. 1‘ if pun rescuvti man is the pathfinder. wim- oot him our fountain of knowledge would dry up. His findings in themselves may be tinconimercinl. ' a field for others to develop. ‘ 01!! Worked out the crude voltaic PQNIDC until other men improved and uppticd but they Ieaiuiiiisii it. And so with Papin in Lsvoisier in chemistry. Men ofthe last. In past win ‘]"y. uxn \ o l"‘l"l"l"8 slant of mind, stick to yotr lfldullc Study. on the faculty, in ii..- laboratory of some industrial organization, then- (0 bafle other men and coil ll” k’°"“‘ “‘°“IlIt Ofyoublasers of the trail. Electric Company - &s!flOntsosdd.",g..,_¢d‘_ . pile— unini- the field of steam, or is-is-Ii