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Show IIL'.NS IN REVOLT. ' . a i . : ... d r. ; . i a . ..-: i a:.i V. . . : i . i V) I'.t , r.,i - .u' . j:: I'-.r. : r . :.t-iuj :.t-iuj ti." l"j . r rn :..-!! t on ei u: t:.c J oii-t." it.i.g a .-.I. A ct.ihb.,ra f.t.t ; l.iig t...". ;h',ut ti..; n. It.-.a all 1 ti.e g-i . it nn. .-. t, in aii.ti'jn to :.-. nii-t nii-t . id i iu ..1 i h.'ii..; and f it.m'u tr.bubi-ti.iu.-, n fa'-iri.; f n .'i-".;e i-r.is in tae .'.jiuiiig v.vi-'t g.itiii-riiig. The eongrcv-, i.ni.l.,. t i. fir-t i.,..ly v.idcli n..-t in i;.-r-jlm in I ii c.-in r, will c,ju.ii;t lari'ely of j r.-pr, .-.'iitativi;s of the v, urkers ' cuiincil-., 'ii,; s"iii;,-r (-l-'inelit haeing gradually diap; care !. 1 " n 1 , s the ri.ajority So-riuhi-.tH and the Iemocrati..' dcic-L'ates have u working majority, which now .-.','iii-f unlik.'ly, the proletarian element will predominate. The majority Socialists So-cialists and the Democrats comprise the moderates in political affairs in Germany, Ger-many, as against the workers' councils. Then; appears to be a well-defined movement among the radicals to overturn over-turn the .resent government of Wuert-t Wuert-t o in 1,0 rig in tho expectation that the national na-tional government will become involved in ruin as we'll. Agitators of the Spar-tacido Spar-tacido and Bolshevist groups are supporting sup-porting the movement in YVuerttemberg and other German states. Tho Berlin government is acting energetically, but its ability to completely restore order throughout the troubled country is still to bo demonstrated. Tho wholo of Hnn-dom Hnn-dom is seething with rebellion, discontent discon-tent and plottings at a moment when solidarity is imperative, if Germany is to face the future with any assurance of successfully meeting domestic and international obligations. In Hungary, for the moment, at least, there is ptore tranquillity, although an exodus of citizens who refuse to appreciate appre-ciate the benison of soviet misgovern-ment misgovern-ment continues in larcro numbers from Budapest and other centers. The Bol- J shevist government is less inclined to test the patienco of tho allied powers, and from Budapest come tints of a willingness will-ingness to open negotiations. As in tho ease of Russia, these tenders are regarded regard-ed as indicating the weakness of the Bolshevist structure, which must collapse col-lapse when its fatuity is brought home to tho Hungarian people. The once puissant central powers, now in chaos and turbulence, are contributing contribut-ing a chapter to history which will convey its lesson to posterity., Having plunged the world into war and misery, they are reaping the fruits of their madness. It is no consolation to a civilisation civi-lisation saved from the threat of Teuton domination that German weapons are now employed against Germans, or that Austria is divided by civil wars. The most implacable of their foes, secure iu a triumph won on the battlefields, cannot can-not wish for a continuance of the spectacles spec-tacles daily presenting themselves in middle Europe. |