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Show POET TO FLEE ! CITf WITH HIS WOMAN FRIEND Captain Says He wiil Marry Girl as Soon as He Obtains Ob-tains Divorce D ANNUNZI0 DISGUSTED BY ITALY'S ATTITUDE "Thought More ol Eating Than Our Lives." Funic Rfjlei Asserts j TRIESTE Dec 30.- i By the Asso-; Asso-; elated Press.) Hostilities at Fiume between Palian regular troops and the ! d'Annunzlan legionaries ended tonight. I The agreement for the capitulation of Flume will be signed tomorrow-morning. tomorrow-morning. Orders for a cessation of fighting at Plume apparently followed a report to General Caviglla, commander of j i Italian regulars in Daimatla, thai the council of Flume, to which Captain : Gabriel d'Annun::io had I irned over l.'s povv.'is .-; h'-ad of i hi "regency ' of tjuarnero." had accepted the terms; ' of the Italian government. At a conference held a Abba.nJ yesterday ti'.o council gave Qontpletej re, ..j., . : , , liiai&gfcv-ut Ran i nunzlo ami his men were fighting WILL l I l i Willi l it l The last new from d'Annur.zio stated that he had resolved to b a Fiume b airplane and it li p sum, 1 he planned to take with him Signorlta 1 Lulsolla Baccara, who has been lit . Flume for several tnonlhn and to r.-hom he" has de-lared be w ill b married mar-ried as soon as he is given a divorce from his present wife. Signoiita Baccara Bac-cara refused to leav e the poet-soldier when an attack on the ciiy was Unral-I nen:. declaring she would rather be j Jellied than to quit the city. roKr is lHM.i sn i.i LONDON, Dec. 29. A dispatch to, Ihe London Times from Miian quotes Gabrlele d'Annunzlo in a manifesto, as saying: "I am still alive. Although I prepared pre-pared myself yesterday for sacrifices and already had comforted my soul, I feel today disposed to defend my life i.v nil means. "I offered it hundreds of limes Smilingly In my war. but It is not wprth wMle to throw, it away in the i ervicc of a people who could not !. distracted even for a moment from ! their Christmas greediness while wo I were assassinated by their govern-, ment." M V BADL1 I P I MID ROME, Dsc. 29. According to the MHsagero. many Influential persons in 1'iunic were badly treated, or severely reprimanded by d'Annunzlo because of their efforts to induce blftl to abandon aban-don his seemingly Irreconcilable atti-, tude. The result of these attempts to change the minds of d'Annunzlo and j his legionaries says the Mcs-agcm, has been that many persons have been , imprisoned or foiced lo fleo the city The nswspaper asserts that nothing, even approximately, is known . of the casualties among the legionaries. Captain Pinl. who was wounded In the head, describing recent events ........1 L'liir.An tiil .ri 11... l. -s u-i rii "Kor five days our troops advanced unprotected by artillery, the officers I and men having no arms except ntius-i ntius-i The regulars approached the le-glonaries le-glonaries In a spirit of fraternal cor- ' dlality, the best means of Inducing them to surrender." BBIDG1 S Pi OW I 1 ROME, Deo- An officer of d'Annunzlo' legionaries arrived ini" from Flume today and gives an Interesting In-teresting account Of events there. Tho officer of the regulars a few days ago i apnted himself on the bridge connecting con-necting Plume and Susak and "Mkcd what the lgtonarlex would do if the regular, attempt, d lo enter the city. The officer of the legionaries answered: answer-ed: "Try. and von will see." At 1 1 o'clock that night Ihe bridges over the Knco river were blown up, the explosions wrecking many nouses. Several persons were Injured. |