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CHIEF CONTENTS OF VOL. III


No. 27. Japan’s Stake.
Japan’s Stake in the War. By Tokiwo Yokoi.
Great Britain, Palestine, and the Jews. By Ibri.
The Russian Revolution and the Balkans. By Belisaurius.
“The Case of Archbishop Szeptycki”
The Prime Minister and America.

If England and France fail to destroy German militarism, their prestige as leaders in liberal civilization is at an end.”—Marquis Saionji (1916).
No. 28. The Transition.
The Transition from Old to New Europe.
Free Russia, Greece, the Southern Slavs—and Italy? By Sir Athur Evans.
The Emancipation of Italy.
The Austrian Enigma.
The Last Moments of Tsardom. By An Eye-Witness.

Et, peuples, je compris que j’entendais chanter
L’espoir dans ce qui fut le désespoir naguère,
Et la paix dans la gueule horrible de la guerre

Victor Hugo (1871).
No. 29. Diplomacy.
A Note on Diplomacy. By A. F. Whyte, M.P.
The Russian Peasants and Socialism. By Rurik.
Austria Infelix. By Thomas G. Masaryk.
Bulgaria and Prussia—A Comparison and a Hope. By Belisarius.
Sidelights on Italy.

I found that the British lion was, in his knowledge of Europe, a mere child.”—Srgjan Tucić (1916).
No. 30. Russia Liberatrix.
The Emancipation of Finland. By Mrs. H. M. Hyndman.
The Letts under Germans and Russians.
Three Weeks at Athens. By John Mavrogordato.
The New Europe through Russian Eyes. By Rurik.
Prince Yusupov and Rasputin.
How the Revolution came to the Caucasus.
The Italian Front in Winter.

To compare Russia of to-day with the Russia that is to come is to compare Chaos to the Universe.”—Sir Charies Dilke (1878).

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