< Page:The New Europe - Volume 3.djvu
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THE NEW EUROPE
| No. 31. | The Baltic Races. | |
| The Greatest Danger By Take Ionescu. | ||
| The Non-German Peoples of Prussia: (I) The Old Prussians. By G. de Wesselitsky. | ||
| Prussian Rule in North Slesvig. By A Dane. | ||
| The Salvage of Austria: An Italian View. | ||
| “Western Europe”; Mr. H. J. Mackinder’s Sorbonne Speech. | ||
| Austria through Swedish Eyes | ||
| The New Europe Maps (IV):—Racial Map of the Baltic Littoral | ||
| “The victory of Germany would not be less fatal to herself than to the rest of the world.”—G. de Wesselitsky. | ||
| No. 32. | Russia’s New Formula. | |
| “No Annexation” and “La Victoire Intégrale.” | ||
| Britain and Italy: the Beam in Our Own Eye. By J. C. Powell. | ||
| Dark Forces in Spain By S. de Madariaga. | ||
| What Bulgaria means by “Peace.” By Belisarius. | ||
| Signor Labriola on “Necessary Revisions.” | ||
| Italian “Nationalism.” | ||
| Supplement (16 pp.):—The “No Annexation” Debate. By . | ||
| ““Formula and Reality, wrestle it out!”—Carlyle. | ||
| No. 33. | Russia and the West. | |
| The Western Welcome to Russia. | ||
| The Second Phase of the Russian Revolution. By Rurik. | ||
| German and Prussian Constitutional Reform. By George Saunders. | ||
| The Fall of Count Tisza. | ||
| Tsar Ferdinand: A French Silhouette. | ||
| “We shall go hand-in-hand with Russia, who has remained faithful.”—M. Ribot (22 May, 1917). | ||
| No. 34. | The Western Slavs. | |
| Poles, Czechs and Jugoslavs. By Panther. | ||
| A Montenegrin Manifesto. | ||
| Bohemia’s Demand for Independence. | ||
| The Opening of the Austrian Reichsrat. By Rubicon. | ||
| Our Partnership with Italy. By A. F. Whyte, M.P. | ||
| A Viennese View of the Russian Revolution. | ||
| France and the Russian Revolution. | ||
| The New Europe Maps (V):—Poland: Racial Distribution. | ||
| “All History must be re-written from the point of view of the People”—Prince Kropotkin (1882). | ||
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