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The United Powers. "Come cutside, young 'un, we've prepared a nice little demonstration for you

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Montenegro. "Oh, go away, you silly sailor men; can't you see I'm busy?"

the seacoast from the port of San Giovanni di Medua to the present Montenegrin border, and a feriile region close to Skutari itself.

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view of the old proverb with regard to invading forces which reflects the barren character of the country: "In Montenegro a large army starves to death, a small army is defeated." It is also the more notable in view of the fact that, no matter what governments may do, peoples will not always follow. On the very day when the Russian Government redeclared its adherence to the programme of the Powers, there was a great popular demonstration at St. Petersburg in celebration of the Montenegrin victory, including a Te Deum service at the Kazan Cathedral, which drew an immense crowd. Many offi cers were present. Several thousand persons afterwards formed a procession and

marched through the streets singing patriotic songs, and as the processions passed by the officers at the barracks saluted. Even more significant demonstrations occurred in Austria itself wherever the population was Slav. At Prague, the capital of Bohemia; at Cracow, formerly the capital of Poland; at Agram, the capital of Croatia; at Ragusa, the Dalmatian city, and at numerous other Slav centers, the demonstrators were brought into conflicts with the Poles, as the demonstrations often took the form of fierce antagonism to the Vienna Government's policies. Let Austria have a care, therefore. A Government which almost created a general European conflagration by mobilizing its army to uphold Teuton as against Slav interests, which threatened Servia in a series of flimsy pretexts, and which later actually "held up" the Powers by an arrogant ultimatum, may feel " 'forward," but cannot defy too much the sentiment of the whole Slav race. Slav admiration for Montenegro, their plucky protagonist, whose declaration of war began the Balkan crusade of liberation, remains unbounded. The Montenegrin spirit also commands the sympathy of liberty-loving people everywhere. "Even if forsaken by every one," says King Nicholas, Montenegro, conscious of her glorious past and her ideals, will continue the struggle. She may possibly yield to superior force, but never in the dishonorable way proposed by European diplomacy. Montenegro has not lived five hundred years in darkness by the will of Europe, but by the blood of her best sons. She will only yield now by the shedding of blood. She can die but once and die gloriously." Who with a drop of red blood in his body will refuse a tribute of admiration to this declaration?

The Belgian Strike

The Belgian strike has excited interest everywhere. It has been the largest attempt ever made, in proportion to population, to influence political action. Out of a population of about eight million, no less than four hundred thousand men relinquished work a fortnight ago as long as might be necessary to secure universal suffrage. Ten days later the Government capitulated and the Socialists voted to end the strike. The Government's capitulation was, of course, definite enough to lead the Socialists to feel that they could demobilize their forces and await the

course of events. The events should be favorable to the strikers, if we may judge from the Belgian Prime Minister's statement in Parliament of the Government's intentions, a statement promptly placed on record by a vote of the Chamber of Deputies. Thus the Belgian Constitution is to be finally readjusted so that actual conditions will be in greater harmony with its text. Article 6 of that Constitution reads: "All Belgians are equal before the law." This seems to have been interpreted to mean, not that all Belgians are to be equal in the exercise of the franchise, but that they must equally submit themselves to the law's requirements, and that they have the same right to claim the law's protection. Now, however, equality of suffrage is, we hope, to be assured. hope, to be assured. This is a sufficiently impressive result of the strike. But there is another result, in our estimation equally impressive, namely, the evidence of the strength, solidarity, and discipline of the Belgian strikers. Never, so far as we know, has a strike been more admirably managed. Its purpose was quickly attained because expressed with an absence of disorder and violence. Thus the strikers showed their

fitness for unrestricted suffrage. What a contrast to suffragette methods in England!

The Marconi Muddle in England

Two members of the British Cabinet and the chief Whip of the Liberal party are under fire for certain investments which they have made in the American Marconi Company. The criticism is that they have violated the sound rule of conduct that members of a Government shall not be investors in any concern with which the Government is involved in contractual relations. The facts, which are, we believe, admitted, are these: Sir Rufus Isaacs is the Attorney-General, Mr. Lloyd George the Chancellor of the Exchequer, the Master of Elibank the chief Government Whip. All three, therefore, are important members of the Administration. Last year the Government entered into a contract with the English Marconi Company for the use of the Marconi system of wireless telegraphy at stations in different parts of the British Empire. A brother of the Attorney-General, Mr. Godfrey Isaacs, was a director in both the English and the American Marconi companies. At a time subsequent to the signing of the contract, Sir Rufus Isaacs, through another

brother, Mr. Harry Isaacs, invested in shares of the American company. His colleagues, Mr. Lloyd George and the Master of Elibank, did the same. In October a question was raised in the House of Commons as to the action of the Attorney-General in sending a public telegram to be read at a banquet in New York, held apparently to further the promotion of the American company. Sir Rufus defended himself against any charge of impropriety in sending the telegram, but did not reveal the fact that he was in any way interested in the American company. His investment and those of his colleagues became known later, we believe, through an action for libel brought by them against the Paris Matin." Subsequently the whole matter was taken under investigation by a Parliamentary committee. The acts of the three members of the Administration have been the subject of severe criticism and heated controversy. The London "Spectator" is apparently the chief spokesman for the critics. That journal explicitly and repeatedly disclaims any suggestion of corruption on the part of the Ministers involved. It does, however, take them severely to task for what it describes as their lack of the discretion, the delicacy, and the carefulness of public interests with which they ought to have acted." This seems to be the gravamen of the charge against them. It raises an interesting question in regard to the acts of members of an administration in relation to their private financial affairs.

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One principle, we beThe Responsibilities of lieve, would be agreed Official Position to by every one. No member of an administration should be pecuniarily interested in any undertaking in which the value of his interest may be affected by an act done by him in his official capacity. Obviously, if Sir Rufus Isaacs had been a stockholder in the English Marconi Company at the time that the contract with the company was under consideration, he should have either disposed of his holdings or dissociated himself so definitely from the negotiations (if that were possible) as to make it crystal clear that he was not involved in a dual relationship to the company of owner and of negotiator on the public's behalf. Such, of course, was not the actual situation. His relation ship to the company began after the contract was executed, and it was the American company, not the British, in which he

invested. A second principle would, we presume, meet general acceptance. It was well set forth by one of the Law Lords, Lord Robson: "Nobody, indeed, can put himself above suspicion, but you can avoid putting yourself in circumstances to which suspicion would naturally attach." This is surely a sound principle of action for the individual, even if it is not admitted that it is a principle to which, under all circumstances, others have a right to demand that the individual adhere. Cæsar's wife ought, of course, to do everything she can to keep herself above suspicion; but the only way she can do it is by keeping out of situations in which suspicion would naturally attach to her. We believe that every member of the British Cabinet would agree to these two rules of conduct. There is not the slightest evidence that the two members and their associate outside the Cabinet have swerved from the first rule. Whether they have departed from the second is somewhat more open to debate. In view of the looseness of the connection between the two companies and the inherent improbability that anything the members of the Administration might do in their official capacities would have any influence on the value of their holdings, we do not believe that they have put themselves in circumstances to which, under the normal conditions of ordinary life, suspicion would naturally attach. But the conditions of political rivalry in England, or for that matter in any country, are very different from the conditions of ordinary life. Under circumstances involving a continued and heated contest it was well-nigh inevitable that suspicion should be directed at such acts as those of Sir Rufus Isaacs and Mr. Lloyd George, however far removed they might really be from any actual impropriety. The Chancellor of the Exchequer and the Attorney-General made a serious mistake in not recognizing this fact.

"Vorwärts," a Socialist paper of Berlin, publishes the text of instruction sent by the Deutsche Munitions und Waffenfabrik Company to its Paris agent, instructing him to leave no stone unturned" to persuade some popular French newspaper to publish a statement that France intended to double her orders for machine guns, the object being to persuade the German Govern

The German Armor Scandal: The Charges in "Vorwärts

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ment to give machine gun orders to the Deutsche Waffenfabrik. This is a serious charge; so serious as to be incredible. should not be accepted except on proof. But this is not all that is charged. "Vorwärts" continues :

The Minister of War has repeatedly emphasized in recent statements in the Reichstag the strict correctness of all the transactions of the War Ministry. We desire humbly to inquire whether he considers the editing of special advertising numbers of illustrated weeklies and the begging for advertisements by his department strictly correct.

The journal then announces that the War Ministry edited, assisted in the compilation of, and invited advertisements of, armaments firms for the Military Number of the "Leipziger Illustrierte Zeitung," produced on April 10, at sixty cents a copy, with the express object of stirring up public feeling on behalf of the Army Bill. "Vorwärts" publishes an official memorandum issued by the War Ministry to these firms urging them to advertise in the "Illustrierte Zeitung." The publishers' circular accompanying the War Office memorandum, says "Vorwärts," points out that the number would be sure to "make a deep impression in Germany and create an enormous sensation abroad."

The German Armor Scandal: Government

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Another Berlin paper, a very radical but not a Socialist sheet, the Morgen Post," also explains how army and navy societies spring up to preach war with the unconcealed financial assistance of the armor plate firms, how files of pensioned officials steadily perambulate through the country preaching war, how the armor firms subsidize German newspapers to conduct crazy campaigns of hatred against France and England, and how these same firms sell weapons to the German Government at higher prices than to the nations their press is paid to abuse. concludes: "The armaments factories pay thirty per cent dividends, but the German taxpayer is treacherously sold." In regard to the assertion that an article had been printed in the Paris" Figaro" in order to foment agitation in Germany for an increase of German armament, the "Figaro" indig nantly denies that any such suggestion was made to it. As the French press is for the most part significantly silent, it is assumed that other charges made in Germany may have overreached the mark. For

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an armor-plate maker to employ agents to stir up bad blood between any two nations so that he may sell more goods; for him to organize clubs for the cultivation of the war fever; for him to subsidize newspapers which shall preach war; or for him to sell his goods at reduced rates to hostile nations so that their warlike preparations may make his home Government indulge in similar purchases-and at higher rates— this is beyond anything that has ever been charged against army contractors in America! We are glad that the German Parliament has empowered a committee to investigate all armament contracts; and our confidence in the essential thoroughness and integrity of the German nation is such as to make us believe that this scandal will be sifted without fear or favor. We earnestly hope, for the sake of common humanity, that the accusations will be disproved.

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posed anti-alien land legislation in California are considered in an editorial elsewhere in this issue of The Outlook. No actual step in advance or in retreat was made at Sacramento last week. The bill which passed the Assembly is of a hybrid nature, in that in its main provisions the limitations as to ownership and leasing relate to aliens who have not declared their intention cording to law" to become citizens while the provision as to corporations forbids ownership when a majority of the stockholders are aliens "ineligible to become citizens of the United States under the naturalization laws thereof." The importance attached, whether rightly or not, to the distinction between these two definitions is indicated by the stress placed upon this point in President Wilson's telegraphic letters to Governor Johnson, and through him to the Legislature and people of California. In the first of these, sent in Mr. Bryan's name, the President " very respectfully, but most earnestly, advises against the use of the words ineligible to citizenship;' he even goes so far as to say that the Senate bill is greatly to be preferred. In the second letter, signed by the President personally, he says: "If they [that is, the California Legislature and people] deem it necessary to exclude all aliens who have not declared their intention to become citizens from the privileges of landownership, they can do so along

lines already followed in the laws of many of the other States, and of many foreign countries, including Japan herself." This accords with the two statements on the alien law question made public by Governor Johnson. In both he declares that California would not attempt to do more than has been done by other States, and points to laws against alien ownership in the District of Columbia and in the States of Illinois, Minnesota, Missouri, and Washington, in all of which the acquisition of land by aliens is made to depend upon the purpose of becoming citizens. The President's effort to indicate at this stage what may be done without contravening treaty rights seems to many to be a premature attempt to decide what can really be decided with authority only by the Supreme Court. It would have been wiser if the Administration at the very outset-not after excitement in Japan led to talk of a serious clash between the two nations-had openly suggested to California, first, that the California legislators, before passing laws dealing with international matters, should assure themselves by consultation with the Federal Government that the laws proposed were not incompatible with the treaty and the Constitution; and, second, that if laws doubtful in this respect should be passed, the Federal Government would instantly put the matter to the test in Federal courts, and until a final decision was obtained would prevent injustice and loss to individuals, whether Californians or Japanese, by injunction from Federal courts. Not to advise or to protest against the wording of laws, not merely to urge recognition of the international character of specific legislation, but to assert the right and power of the National Government to uphold its treaties and its Constitution, on the one hand, and the rights of the people of California, on the other, was what the case called for.

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National Government in the ultimate analysis must lead and not follow in whatever relates to National honor and National obligation. The telegraphic correspondence to which we have referred was followed by President Wilson's proposal that the Secretary of State, Mr. Bryan, should visit California, if agreeable to the Governor and Legislature, for the purpose of counseling and co-operating with its members in framing a law "which would meet the views of the people of the State and yet leave untouched the international obligations of the United States." Governor Johnson and the Legislature promptly indicated their pleasure in having the opportunity to consult with the Secretary of State, but (rather significantly, we think) made no reference to the proposal of "co-operation." One comment quite generally made upon the sending of Mr. Bryan to California is that when the State was agitated over Japanese exclusion from the schools, the Mayor of San Francisco went to Washington to get the Government's view, while now the Administration sends its representative to California to get the State's view--a reversal of procedure, it is argued, not altogether consonant with National dignity. It is improbable that the California Senate will take any action for some little time after Mr. Bryan's arrival this week.

Is There a Japanese Peril ?

Entirely apart from treaty obligations, or questions as to the relative rights and duties of State and Federal authorities, it is of high moral importance to ask whether California has ground for being seriously disturbed about Japanese landownership. However disguised the phraseology of the bills proposed may be, and whether or not they are technically correct, legally and constitutionally, American public sentiment throughout the country will deeply resent it if, without adequate reason or cause, one State shall take action which gives offense or seems humiliating to a nation with whom our relations are now friendly and are increasingly intimate. In point of fact, statisticians who have looked into the alleged dangerously large control of land in California by Japanese say that, including both ownership and leasing, the Japanese control less than one-third of one per cent of the State's total arable land, and that the amount has decreased instead of increased within the last two or three years. A Japanese who was formerly special agent

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