NEWS BRIEFLY TOLO INTELLIGENCE HERE GATHERED COVERS WIDE AREA. GREATER OR LESSER IMPORT Includes What Is Going On at Wash ington and In Other Sections of the Country. WAR NEWS. British casualties in all the war areas published during the month of February showed a total of 739 of ficers and 17,847 men. * • • It was announced in the British House of Commons that the Italian government had requisitioned thirty four of the thirty-seven German steamers interned in Italian ports. * * • One hundred and fifty-one persons, including fifty-five passengers and ninety-six of the crew, lost their lives when the Peninsular and Oriental liner Maloja struck a mine and sank off Dover, England. • * * The entente allies have massed 500,000 to 1,000,000 fresh troops at Bordeaux, France, to be ready for emergencies, according to passengers who arrived in New York from aboard the steamship, Rochambeau • * * Owing to the great demand for al cohol for technical purposes. Dr. von Bethmann-Holweg, the German im perial chancellor, has issued an order prohibiting temporarily the exercising of raw alcohol for drii.king purposes. * * > Iowa university. announced the reg istrar at Iowa City, has broken all records for attendance. The registra tion has reached 3,207. passing the 1915 mark nearly 300, and all other totals at Iowa by greater -numbers * * * Great Britain's national expendi ture for the current year will reach the gigantic total of £1,509,000,000 ($7,545,000,000), according to a state ment by Reginald McKenna, chancel lor of the exchequer, addressing a meeting in London. * * * Two hundred and thirty-five Turk ish officers. 12,753 men, .323 cannon, ■nine standards and large stores of munitions, arms and provisions were captured when the Russian army took Erzerum fortress, the Russian war of fice announces. * * * For the first February without sa loons, Fort Dodge. Ia., has the record of only twenty-one arrests, while in February last year there were 153. Of the twenty-one this year but twelve were for drunkenness. One white slave was among the balance. • » • London newspapers are of tfc" opin ion that the new German subsea campaign will mark the entrance in to the war of several of the newer and extended types of submarines, probab ly with enlarged radius of action and more powerful offensive power. * * * Australia at the request of the Brit ish government, has put a prohibition on the sale of typewriters manufactur ed by the Remington Typewriter com pany of the United States on the ground that the corporation 1s sus pected of spiting to enemies of the allies. * * * The military pensions that the Brit ish government is now paying amount to £1,500,000 annually. This an nouncement was made in the House of Lords by Baron Newton, who said it was calculated that the amount could easily rise to £7,500,000, if the war lasted until the end of March, 1917. GENERAL. Five townships in Christian county, Illinois, now constitute the only terri tory in the United States in closed federal quarantine on account of the live stock foot and mouth disease. • • * Henry James, American-horn novel ist, who last July took the oath of al legiance to the British crown, died in London. Mr. James work was never as popular in America as it was in England, but he had many admirers in his native country and even his critics ranked him as one of the most masterful writers of the past genera tion. * • • A new corporation with an author ized capital of $450,000,000 will be formed to take over the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad company, ac cording to official announcement made in San Francisco. • • • The first filings under South Dako ta's new president prefernce primary law were made at Pierre when the names of Woodrow Wilson and Thom as R. Marshall were filed for the democratic nomination for president and vice president. May 22 is the primary day. * • • For the first time in a year, hogs on foot reached the $9 a hun dred mark on the Toledo, Ohio mar ket a few days ago. Packing inter est demands are given as the cause of the high figure. • • • St. Louis negro segregation meas are carried in a special election held recently by a majority of 34,000 in a total of slightly more than 70,000 The measure will prevent eithei whites or blacks becoming residents of blocks in which a majority of res idents are of opposite color. * * * The Kansas democratic state cen tral committee at Topeka decided to hold the state convention, at which four delegates-at-large to the national convention will be chosen, in Hutch inson, April 11. El Norto, a Mexican newspaper at El Paso, Texas, favorable to Felix Diax, published what purports to be the pi An under which the nephew of Porfirio Diaz expects to inaugurate a newr revolution as soon as he reaches Mexico. « * • Ohio school teachers won a victory in their campaign for organization of unions when the state supreme court at Columbus declined to dismiss a Clevelaml case involving the question of their* legal right to affiliate with labor bodies. • • • Within twenty-four years Mrs. David Hughes, wife of a farmer living W'est of Knoxville, Iowa, has made a clear profit of nearly $21*,000 by sell ing more than 60,000 pounds of butter. Mrs. Hughes has marketed a w-eekly average of sixtv-six pounds of butter. * * * Tire Iowa anti-tipping law was held to be unconstitutional by Judge George Jepson. in the district court at Sioux City. The court held the law was class legislation. The decision was rendered in the case of a barber arrested for taking a 25-cent tip. » * • A verdict of not guilty wns returned by a jury at Castle Rock, Colo., in the ease of four former striking coal min ers, charged w'ith murder in connec tion with the killing April 29, 1914, of Major P. P. Lester, during coal strike disorders near WalsenbuTg, Colo. Announcement was made at "Dos Moines that an insurance company of that city has just written a policy for $in,8on,ono for the protection in transportation of 72,000 horses from Los Angeles to New York for the French government. This is said to be the largest livestock insurance policy ever issued. • * * Steps to relieve the car shortage on western railroads have been taken by the American Railway association, according to announcement by that organization in ^Chicago. The car service commission has found that there is a general shortage of box cars for the movement of grain in the territory west of Chicago. * * * Three persons were killed and many injured, seven of them serious ly. when five cases of dvnamite, stor ed at Mapelewood for sewer construc tion work, exploded. Maplewood is a suburb of St. Louis of about 5,000 persons. Approximately thirty houses were demolished by the explosion and many other "houses were damaged. SPORTING. The Wisconsin boxing commission ruled that Battling Nelson was “too far gone” to box Ad Wolgast, to whom he lost the world's championship. They had been matched to box at Appleton April 12. • • • Teams numbering more than 600 will take part in the American Bowl i ing Congress tournament in Toledo this month. Toledo leads with 200 teams. Chicago is next with ninety and Detroit has fifty. * * * John Franklin Baker, former star third-baseman of the Philadelphia American league base ball team, has been bought by the New York Ameri cans, according to announcement made by Manager William E. Dono van of the Yankees. * * • The world’s record price for an un developed yearling troiter was estab lished at the mid-winter sale in New York, when St. Frusquin, sired by San Fran, was sold to AV. R. Cox, vet eran tramer of Dover, N. TT., for $5,600 after spirited bidding. Jess Willard, world’s heavyweight champion, was examined by a physi cian for the New A'ork State Athletic ■ commission and pronounced in per fect physical condition. Fully dres sed, he topped the scales at 272'A pounds. Willard is matched to fight Moran at Madison Square Darden March 25. WASHINGTON. The senate, forty-nine to .sixteen, confirmed the nomination of Henry 1*. Fletcher as ambassador to Mexico, after Senators Smith and Borah had scored the government’s Mexican policy and its recognition of Car ranza. » * * Congressman Sloan has introduced a bill to reimburse tlie state of Ne braska for $42,000 spent in the pros ecution of the campaign against the Sioux Indians in 1861 and giving the survivors of that Indian campaign a pensionable status. * * * Fromotion of naval officers by selec tion Instead of by seniority, an in crease of 50 per cent in officers of all grades, creation of a war reserve list and restoration of the popular old rank of commodore are proposed in a bill drafted by the navy personnel board and transmitted to congress by Secretary Daniels. • * • Harvard university authorities were notified by the War department that 1,050 rifles and 40,000 rounds of am munition had been shipped for the use of the newly formed regiment of un dergraduates. * • * National banks collecting more than the legally authorized rate of in terest would be liable to fines equal to the amount of loans involved un der a bill introduced by Chairman Glasgow of the house banking com mittee. The minimum penalty will be $250. * * • Secretary Lansing indicated that the United States was prepared under certain circumstances to discuss with the German government what may properly be regarded as defensive ar mament for merchant ships. * • * A survey of the present congress has convinced suffrage advocates that there is no hope of obtaining from tt action favorable to national woman suffrage, Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, resident of the national American woman suffrage association, said at a conference of suffrage workers. CONVICTS TEACHING AT PENI TENTIARY ALLOWED SPE CIAL CLOTHES THIRD IN PERCAPITA WEALTH Items of General Interest Gathered from Reliable Sources Around the State House. Western Newspaper Cnlon News Pervica. Prisoners at the state penitentiary who serve as instructors in the school for convicts are furnished by the state with white shirts and trousers to wear when they are tutoring classes. Each one is also provided by the state with a collar and necktie. There are eleven teachers at the penitentiary. The state supplies prisoners at their daily tasks with gray uniforms, and it was felt by the prison officials that | the teachers should have something to distinguish them and to impress upon their pupils, by virtue of exam ple, the desirability of neatness and tidiness in dress. The clothing fur nished for this purpose is inexpensive. An item in the January expenditures reported to the governor, shows that 75 cents was paid for a shirt, a collar and a tie for White, one of the in structors. A banner containing the words "Lan caster School" was purchased at the price of $4. It occupies a place in the schoolroom, which is the old base ment dining hall. According to the warden’s report, the institution contained 35S convicts end 42 officers and employes on Feb ruary 1. a decrease of eleven convicts during January. The number paroled, furloughed or remanded in January was 23. Altogether, there are now on parole 178; under furlough, 38; re manded to county authorities, 5; to tal. 221. The state furniture factory turned $1,757 into the penitentiary cash fund in January, and the further sum of $691 was collected from the Lee Broom & Duster company for convict labor used In Its factory. Nebraska Third in Per Capita Wealth Only two states stand above Nebras ka in their per capita agricultural wealth to rural population, according to a table of federal statistics just issued in bulletin form by the pub licity department of the state board of agriculture. North Dakota, with $632 per capita, and South Dakota, with $612, are at the top, while Ne braska comes third, with $573. Iowa, the next state in the list, has $472, and Kansas, $423. Next in the order of their agricultural per capita wealth are these states; Minnesota. $318; Illinois, $308; Wisconsin, $270; In diana, $251; Missouri, $234; Texas. $222; Oklahoma. $213; Ohio, $201; Michigan, $195; Kentucky. $117: Geor gia. $110; Pennsylvania, $103; Missis sippi. $98; North Carolina, $92; Ala bama. $91. In figuring the agricul tural wealth per capita, the values of all live stock- and the four leading crops in each 6tate were taken Policy Holders Are Liable. It has been reported to the state Insurance department that members of mutual hail insurance companies in Nebraska are not paying assessments levied upon them for losses incurred by their companies. One of the companies, organized at Hastings, is under investigation. It paid only 25 cents on the dollar last year and some of Its expenditures are questioned by the state board. Com missioner Eastham of the state board has issued the following statement as serting that policy holders of mutual companies are hound under the law to pay assessments; “Commissioner Eastham of the state insurance board has been informed that many policy holders of mutual hail insurance companies in the state are refusing to pay their assessments to the companies. The commissioner states that in a mutual assessment as sociation of this kind each policy holder 1s legally liable for the full amount of his assessment levied rgainst him and should pay this as sessment promptly and without com pelling his company to resort to the courts in order that the company may thereby be enabled to pay its losses promptly and that when a membeF re fuses to pav his assessment he wrongs each of his associate members in the company." Rock Island Road Files Bond. The Rock Island railroad has filed a bond of $50,000 in federal court, or dered by three federal judges last week in the decision giving the rail road the permission to charge 3 cents per mile passenger rates in Nebraska and a temporary injunction against the state railway commission from in terfering with the increase in rates. The American Surety company of New York is the surety for the company. Ttje bond has been approved by Fed eral Judge Munger. Dates for N. N. G. Encampment. Dates for holding the annual en campment of the national guard of the state and selection of a' place for this affair as well, are expected to be an nounced by General Phil Hall upon his return from a trip to Chicago. General Hall will confer with the officers of the central division of the war department. He expects to be able to prepare for a joint camp this year with one or more adjoining states, perhaps on a larger scale than that. The importance of the adequate de fense issue and the likely decision of congress to give the national guard organization a distinct boost may re sult in plans for maneuvers of ex traordinary size and of longer dura tion than usual, according to intima tions at General Hall’s office before he left. Ross L. Hammond of Fremont, in a statement just made public, admits that he has been tempted to enter the race for the United States senator ship, but says that he has decided not to stand for the place. URGES 8TATE CONTROL. Favors the Regulation of “Security” Companies.” State Auditor W. H. Smith is in re ceipt of many letters of inquiry in re gard to the standing of several com panies organized in Nebraska as mort gage and loan companies. security companies and one realty company which, according to its name, is a bankers realty company. Auditor Smith says the writers of the letters appear to be under the impression that such companies are under state supervision. He says they are not. They are not under the supervision of the state banking board, the blue sky law or the state auditor who examines trust companies. One writer supposed he had bought bank stock from a company which uses the word “banker” in its corpor ate name. The writer said he had paid $300 for the stock and the company would give him but $150 for it. He desired to know how he could get a settlement and what the company is making. Mr. Smith believes the state law should be changed so as to control and regulate such companies. Secretary Royse of the state hank ing board says some companies of this kind complained of do not come under the installment investment law. and the blue sky law exempts them as stock selling companies because they were organized before the blue sky law went into effect. Some companies complained of make loans, and take mortgages and then issue bonds against the mortgages and sell the bonds. Others sell stock and build and sell houses. Mr. Royse does not favor taking control of all such com panies because if this is commenced it will be hard to tell where to stop and the state would soon be control ling every kind of business, including department stores and the state would he charged with being a general guardian of the people to prevent them from making poor bargains. Auditor Smith believes the state should at least prevent such com panies from using corporate names that are misleading and which cause patrons to believe they are doing a hanking business when they are not. Saw Them After Explosion. The story of Morton Freeman, the boy who said he saw two men in the basement of the state house with pieces of brass tubing in their hands, one of the men being armed with a revolver, has turned.out to be true and the men have been identified as the night watchman who carries a re volver on duty and the other as Gale Harlan, janitor, who narrowly escaped getting the effects of a charge of powder in the pipes. At least Secre tary of State Pool says it is true, that the two men admit the boy saw them with the piping in their possession, but it turns out that time is a mater ial factor in the case. It develops that the boy saw all he said he saw, but it was after and not before the explosion. The two men had picked up the pipes and were examining them when the boy came into the state bouse basement during the ex citement. _ 3, Dr. Guttery Denies Allegntions. Denials of all alleged questionable acts and explanation of all incidents reflecting on his character while sup erintendent of the state hospital at Norfolk featured the first hearing held by the board of control with Dr. W. D. Guttery on the stand in his own be half. The hearing is a continuation of the Investigation started at Norfolk sev eral weeks ago following the filing of charges of Editor Use of the News of that place. The “laying on of hands,” which witnesses testified the doctor persist ed with pretty nurses, the doctor ex plained was common with him. “Unconsciously while commending anybody in my employ or while talk ing earnestly to people I put my hands upon them,” he told the board. “1 have done that for years and years." The doctor said that repeatedly tales brought to him of discretions committed by male and female at tendants had been sifted to the bot tom and been found to be only gos sip. Whenever talebearers substan tiated their stories with evidence, he said, the offending parties had been dismissed from the state’s employ. _ Tournament to Be Biggest Ever. From tentative entries of 143 Ne braska high schools in the sixth an nual Nebraska high school basketball tournament, conducted under the aus pices of the athletic department of the state university, the list finally nar rowed down to eighty-nine contest ants. After a careful checking of all completed entries. Athletic Manager Guy E. Reed announced there w'ould be only eleven less than a hundred teams competing in the big floor event which Is booked to begin Wednesday, March 11. Even at that the tourna ment will shatter all Nebraska rec ords, as the list includes nineteen more high schools entered than ever participated before. With sixty-nine schools participating last spring, the Nebraska tournament was by far the biggest interscholastic event ever held in the country, and Reed ex pects the new record to stand for some time for other states to shoot at. Teams from eighty-nine high schools from over the state are now listed for competition at the basketball tournament opening at Lincoln on March 11. Arrangements were eompleted last week in six Nebraska cities for the “university week” productions to be given during the regular spring vaca tion period early in April. In each of these towns, the names of which have not been made public, six university organisations will appear for as many consecutive nights. The Glee club will will give a program one night, the cadet band another night. The Dra matic club, the debating teams, Dr. George Condra with his'moving pic tures of Nebraska, and the German Dramatic club will follow in turn. WORST SEA HORROR OVER 3,000 PERISH WHEN FRENCH CRUISER GOES DOWN. SENATE STANDS BY WILSON Upper House of Congress Table Pro posal to Warn Americans to Keep Off Armed Ships. Paris,—It was announced at the French ministry of marine Just recent ly that there were nearly 4,000 men on board the French auxiliary cruis er Provence when it was sunk in the Mediterranean Sea on February 2G. It was stated that on board the Provence were the staff of the Third Colonial infantry regiment, the Third battalion, the Second company of the first battalion, the Second Ma chine Gun company, and one extra company, in all, nearly 4.000 men. As the ministry of marine on Feb ruary 29 announced that the number of survivors of itlie Provence disaster was estimated at 879, it is indicated by the foregoing dispatch that up ward of 3,130 lives were lost. The loss of more than 3,000 lives in the sinking of the French auxil iary cruiser Provence is the greatest ocean disaster of modern times. Up to the present, the largest number of lives ever lost in one wreck was when the White Star Liner Titanic struck an iceberg off the Newfound land banks on April 14, 1912, and sank with a death loss of 1,595. The rescued numbered 743. The French ministry of marine had previously issued no statement as to the number of persons on the Prov ence when it went down. The vessel, however, when in the Trans-Atlantic service, could carry 1.950 persons, in cluding the crew, and it has been pre sumed that as it was transporting troops between ports not far apart, it was carrying a number of meu larger than its normal capacity. Official Announcement. The official statement announcing the sinking of tiie Provence said: “The French auxiliary cruiser Provence II, so designated to distin guish it from the French battleship Provence, engaged in transporting troops to Saloniki, was sunk in the Mediterranean on February 2G. Two hundred and ninety-six survivors have been brought to Malta, and about 400 to Melos by French and British patrol vessels summoned by wireless. No signs of a submarine were no ticed either before or after the sink ing. Senate Stands By President. Washington.—By a vote of sixty right to fourteen the senate carried out President Wilson's wish and kill’ed Senator Gore’s resolution to warn Americans off armed belligerent ships, and thereby finally quelled in the senate an agitation which has em barrassed President Wilson in the submarine negotiations with Ger many. The scene was such as is seldom witnessed in the senate, voting pro ceeded on the resolution with sen ators shouting objections. At one time so many senators were shouting for the vice president’s recognition that the sergeant-at-arms was called to restore quiet. After having maneuvered for two days to get the resolution in such par liamentary position that it was dis | posed of without debate, the senate then proceeded to a general discus sion of the subject, which continued tor several1 hours to the dismay of administration supporters. It was said at the White House j that the result in the senate was sat t isfactory and met the wishes of Presi i dent Wilson. Surgeons Will Cure Baby. ; lies Moines, la.—Little Dorothy j Cleveland will not be killed by I physicians to put her out of iter suf i fering, as her parents asked recently. ! Neither will she be permitted to ' liie. Instead, the best surgeons in ! Des Moines have taken charge of the | mite, and they announce that within a few days they will perform an oper ation which will save tlie baby’s life and leave her normal except as to j scars. Little Dorothy has a facial deform ity with which she has suffered in such agony that the father, Charles Cleveland, requested that Chief of Po lice Crawford give the baby some thing that would put her to sleep and “never let her wake up.” Burkett Files at Des Moines Des Moines, la.—E. J. Burkett of Lincoln, Neb., former senator, filed with the Iowa secretary of state his affidavit of candidacy for the repub lican nomination for vice president. Adopts Six Children. Clticago.—Six homeless boys of less than 6 years of age and of varying na tionalities, are to be adopted by Mrs. Bessie Fuller of South Porcupine, Ontario, Canada, as a sociological ex periment. She plans to rear the six, regardless of color, race or creed. Ford Asks Name Withdrawn. Lansing, Mich.—Henry Ford asked Secretary of State Vauhn to withdraw his name from the Michigan republi can primary ballot on which Ford is a candidate for president Teddy Has Name Withdrawn New. York.—Theodore Roosevelt’s determination not to allow the use of his name as a candidate for the presidential nomination in the spring primary elections was emphasized when he directed the withdrawal of his name from the Illinois primaries. Avalanches Kill Twenty. London.—A dispatch to the Cen tral News from Amsterdam says that twenty persons have been killed and many injured by avalanches In the southern Tyrol. X>tcfc 2lbteilung tft fiir bte ■; ^cirmltengltebcr, am j 1 liebftcn Deutfd? lefcn. $mn Sd)fluulo$t be*} curobiiiWieii $olferfrtcge& Tns 'Jjraljlen foftct nidjts. viu SBaftjington merben bie (3e riidjte eiueS ©eparatfriebenS Tcutfdj lanbs mit Sclgien, ^apatx unb 'idon* tcnegro ini allgemeineu als Don Teutfdjlanb ausgetjenbe gnebens „giit)ler“ angefetjen, abcr es liiftt fid) uidjt leugnen, baft in alien biplomati fd)en ftreifen, aufter ben eitgliftben, Dollftdnbige XJefeiifdjaft fiir bte ©is fuffion Don ©eparatfrieben befteljt Tie 23 cam ten ber britifdjen Sfotjdjaii meigerten fid), iiber bie Sadje irgenb mie 311 fpreajen; aber Don autoritatr ocr Cuelle, bie natiirltd) uidjt ge nannt feiu mill, Deriautete, baft Gng lanb feine Ufolitif tuie folgt fejlge legt babe, gait,} glcidj, mao irgenC cincm ober alien feineit Sunbesgettop fen pafficren mag: 1. Gnglaitb mirb bcu Sfricg fort feben, trie lange er and) battcrn mag, tint cinett ©icg iiber Teutfdjlanb 30 gctritmen, ber cs fiir bie itadjften IOC ^abrc baran Dcrbiubert, fe-ncu idai; als erftflaffige ilampfmadjt roteber cin3uuel)mcu. ti. Guglaub trirb bicfe i'olitif beS ffampfes bis 311m bittercn Gnbe burdifiibrcn, felbft menn cs Tciitfd) lanb gclingt, Separalfricben mil je bent cinjeltten feiiter Serbiinbeteu 311 fdjlieftcu. ;i. Ter ?lbfall 23elgicn§ non ber 2ad)e ber 1'crbiinbeten ift fiir Gng lanb gleidjgiiltig, benn cS trirb ben .Slornpf tDciterfiibren, bis ade ,dtcle, ircldje in ber Wuilbljall - tllcbc bcS premier - 'JltiniftcrS Slsquitb rot mcfjr alS einem ^aljre aufge3atjlt tDurbett, erreidit finb. 4. Taft jvriebe fiir Teutfdjlanb menigftens fotreit Gnglaitb in 23c tradit fonnnt, mtr fommcn mirb. menn Teutfdjlanb cntmeber milieus' ift, fid) ben britifdjen 23ebingungen 311 unterracrfen, ober menu eS fa fdjlimm gcfdjlagcn ift, baft eS fid) tin* tcrmerfen mttft. Tic alte Okfdjidjte, menn e-5 ben Gnglaitberu am fdilcdjteftcn geiit, praljlett fie am meijten. .ijuqlcid; aber and) ber 5kmeiS bafitr, baft fie moljl miffett, baft cS fidj in btefent Jtampfe fiir bas ftolsc Sllbton unt ©ein ober 3Jidjtfeiit fjanbclt. 2Iuf bem Saltan bat fid) bie Cage auper in 21lbanicn mdjt ccrdnbert. Tie 2Innafinte, bap bie 3cutralmdd)te erft bie ganjlicbe Untermcrfung 211* baniend erlebigen molten, ebc man 3ur ‘Cffenfiue auf Salonifi- oorgebt, geminnt burd) bad ftete, menu aud) naturgemdp Imtgfamc Sorriicfeu in 2llbanien ait SSabrfdjeinlidjfeit. Tie gatt3e ndrblicbe $dlfte 2(Ibatiiend be* finbet fid) in ben ^dnben ber bent* fdjett Serbiinbcten. Tic fefte Stabt Tirana fiel ncir einigen Tagctt miber* ftanbdlcd unb Turrajjo, auper 21 d* Iona, ber midjtigfte .'pafeit 2llba* niend, ift ebcnfalls genotnmen mor* ben. Tie iotalicner uitb bie Truppcn Gffab SafdjaS baben redjtjcirig er* fauttl, bap Turaj30 nidjt 311 baltcn mar unb baben fid) nad) Siibeu cer30* gen, tint Slnlcita 311 Dcrtcibigcn. Tied bringt ben Crieg mieberunt an bie ©reii3e ©riedjenlanbd, biedmal im Seften. Son bort au§ liepc fid) cin gemaltiger Tract auf ©riedjenlanb audiiben, menu bie 3entralmadjte non ibrer miiitdrifdjen SteHung We* brand) ntadjeu moQteit. Sidjerlidj ift nidjt mcljt 511 ermarten, bap ©ric* djettlanb feine Seutralitat 311 ©mt* ften ber 21fiiicrten aufgibt. Tic 21u> martfebaft auf Siibalbanien ftebt ben ©riedjen bdber aid bie rccbi jmeifel* fjaftc ^rcmtbfdjaft ber Gntentegrnp* pe, bie bidber lebiglidj im 9?efjmen, aber nidjt im ©cben beftanb. Tie Cnmpfe an ber 21 bria baben gemaltigcn Ginbrucf in vdalien ge madjt. Sic iraren bie birefte Scran* laffung sum Sefudjc frattsofifdjcr Staatdmdmter in 9iom. Srianb, ber 2lupenminifter, mar unter ibneit. Tie bie5be3itglid)cn Seridjte in ber 211* liicrtenpreffe, bap bie meitefRcife Don Saris nad) Som lebiglidj aud bem ©runbe gemadjt tourbe, um cin ein* beillidjcred 3ufannueumirfcn ber 211= liierten 311 erutdglidjen, barf man nidjt ernft nebmeu. Son einent 3u= famntenmirfen italienifdicr mtb fran* 3bfifd)cr Strcitfrdfte bat man nodi ttie gebort, unb feitbem Oeftcrreidi* Ungarn feine Saittter an ber 21bria entfaltct unb ^stalien notgebrnugen auf bie Sorberrfdjaft bort Dcrjidjtet, ift and) ber Iepte ©rmtb fiir militii* rifdjc Cooperation ber beiben ronta* nifdjen Solfer abgetan morben. Tie Sebcn bed Sremierminifterd Salait* bra in Serona unb Turin, biej ailed anbere aber nidjt [)off * ttungdfrcubig toarett, fdieinen bcti mabren ©runb 311 ber Stiniftcrreife 311 Dcrratcn. ydalicit ift fricgdmiibe. Tie Pier gropcit Afonso * Sdjladjtcn baben entfefclidjc Opfer in @ut unb! Slut gefoftet, oljitc and) uur eittiger* mapeit biefe Opfer 311 redjtfertigeit. Salanbra meip bied. Gr meip aud), baf; fpbterc Semiiljungen nidjt itur ebeufo frudjtlod fein roerben, fonbern mbglidjerrneife fogar 3ttr Calaftropbe merbett fbunett. SSeitn ed nidjt fiir bie Tatfadjc mdre, baf; ^stalien burd) ben Slnfdjlup an ben Treincrbaub bad freicSelPftbeftimmuugdredjt ocr* loreit, triire piefleidjt beute fdjon ein Separatfricben 3iifiaube gefommeu, aber norldufig tnufe Station fid) nod) betu SSillen Gnglanbd bcugen. 3u fpdt erfettnt fein Solf, meld)Cit 3cb ter ed beging, aid ed fid) non ©e fdjdTtdpolitileru nub bem ©efdjrci ber Strape in bad 21benteuer bed Criegcd gegen feine cbcntalignt Sun* bedgenoffen ftiir^cn tiefj, beren Gr laubniS ed feiiten eiit3igcn T'anbge* minn ber Icbteu ;]cit, bie Grmcrbmtg non Tripolitanieu, nerbanfte, ber jetjt aufd bbdjfte bebrobt ift. Tic rufjo-britifdieu Sereinigungd* trdume an ber Sfeftgrn^e Serfieno finb iii3mifd)ett and) 311 Sdjaubeit ge* morben, unb ed ift 3meifelbaft, bapj man in itonbon ernftlidj an eiitenj Gntfafe ber Cut*el*2tmara*2trmce burd) bie Pont Urmia * See, Soften, Dorriictenbeu Stiffen geglaubt bat. Um foidje Gntfernungen (350 Stei* ten) fiegreidj suriidflcgcn 311 Ionium, mie bied notig mdre. mnp man mit attberen Truppcn aid nut ruffifdjen redjnen fonnen. 3ubcm mirb ed im* met flarer, bap bie Scrfer fid) ettb* giiltig auf bie Seite ber Tiirfen ge* roorfen. Ter tjeilige Cricg, non ber Gntente fo oft Derladjt, Ijat fcfjon mei* tc Creife gejogen. Tad ijaben bie Gngldubcr and) in 21cgt;pten 3U {pit* ren befontmen, mo bie Scnufft im Sorbmeften 3U fortmdljrenber Scun* ruljigung Seranlaffuitg geben. Truntcn in fDJcjifo. Tic Sage in ilRerifo ift nod) fci* nesroeg* gcfldrt, unb mirb fid] and) uid)t gldtten, fclbft menu eS gelingen follte, SBilla un fdidblid) 311 madjen. Gs fcblt itdmlid) Garran3a an bem 9tot mcnbigcit — bem unentbebrlidjen Ganrgelb. Tie 9feto ^orfer Gau tiers, bie angegangen toorben, iljm aus ber SBerlcgcnbeit 311 bclfcn, men geru fid), es 3U tun, tucil fie eiut mcrifanifdie Jlnleibe fiir cin fcblcdj tes @cfd)dft batten. Ticfe ablcb* nenbe J^altung ift cine golge ber Don SBilfon bei Gcginn feincr Slbmi* niftration erlaffetien Grfldrung, atnerifanifebe ginanjicrS, bie im 2tu3lanbe ibr @elb anlegen teoUteu, miifjteit bas anf ibr cigeneS ffiififo tun. Ter SJfarftmert bc§ ante* rifanifdjrn TollarS ift auf fiinf Gents gefunfen. &ann man cS ba ben gi Hampers oerbenfeit, menu fie ibr @elb nid)t- risficrcn molten? Gcfommt aber Garrair,a fein (Mb, barnt mirb cS fd)on balb genug mieber cine ncue SRcDoIntitm in 'JWerifo geben, benn menn bort cine tRcgienmg fein (Mb bar, be* bait fie ibre ftttbdtiger nid)t Iange. Ter gnrbftoffinangcl. 38 a f b i n g ton. 93on 30 \Saii* bels * SBerbdnocn murbe ba» Staats amt crfudit, fo rafd) alS rndglid) et* mas aiir prleiditemug ber garbftoff* lage ,’u tun. gtn SIBiberfpmd) 511 ben funiidien '.Hngaben bed* .§anbels iUiimftcriunis, bap, bie sBereinigten Staatc'n beute bereitd bie ,§dlfte ber Dor bent ftriegc Derbtaudjten garb* ftoffmengen im eigenen Sanbe pro biisieren, erflaten bie beteiligten gabrifanten, bag nur brei girmen fid) mit ber garbftoff * ffJrobuftion befaffen, bie faum 4500 Tonncn pro gabr betragt, mabrenb man 2000 Tonnett pro 2Ronat braudjt. Ticfe Sfkobuftion bcfdirdnft fid) iiberbieS auf toenige garben; in ber $auptfad)e fd)tDar3. ^rafibrnt bon ©natrmala frit 1898 im 3lmtr. ©fabtSuatemala. SWanuel Gftraba ©abcra tourbe aid ^Srafibent ber SHepublif fiir einett toeiteren £er min, welder im SKcira 1917 begimtt unb fed)d S°brc bauert, fiir toiebct crtodblt erflart. Gnt Gnbe feined jefcigen iermind wirb 'prafibetit Gabera auf eine 19 jdbrigc 3)ienft3eit aid iPrafibcnt au riicfbiidfen fonnett. £eit bet Gr morbung bed i|3rafibeiitcn SReinti 93ar riod am 8. gebruar 189S ift Gabera im Shut. fvlotte angcfanft. 31 m ft e r b a nt. $£ie §oHaitb« 3Imerifa - Sittie bat nadb eitter 9JieI bung bed „!£elegraaf" bie ganae 9?bcinfIottc ber girma 3- 2- Hontgd felb gefauft. Sie toirb SSertoenbung fittbeu fiir aBarenbeforberunfl boa Xeutfdjlanb nacb $oHanb. \ 3rIonb nidjt uou aUgcnteiner 35Jcfjr pj(id)t bcriilirt. S o n b o n. 9?ad) bem in S?raft getrcienen ©efctje allgemeiner 23ebr* bflidjt, fonnett aUe $iunggefellen unb SBittkicr im 3lltcr con 18 bis 40 ^abren 3toang3tDeife ber 51rntee cin* gereibt toerben. 2lui>gefcf)Iojfen finb Perbciratetc, Scute bcren ©etoiffen ifitten uerbietct ffiaffen 3U gebraudjen, ©eiftlidie, ferner foldje bic Don Pegierungsar beiten unabfommlid) finb obcr per fonen bie al§ §aubterndf)rer gelteit.