[2] Contemporary Review, February 1920.
[3] Afterwards Yugoslav Minister at Madrid and then at Washington.
[4] Fortnightly Review, June 1919.
[5] Cf. Manchester Guardian, December 13, 1918.
[6] Land and Water, May 29, 1919.
[7] Nineteenth Century and After, November 1920.
[8] Au Secours des Enfants Serbes. Paris, 1916.
[9] Several old wooden warships, such as the Aurora, the Schwartzenberg and the Vulcan, were lying for years in Šibenik harbour, where they were used as repair-ships, store-ships, etc. When the Italians evacuated Dalmatia they took these vessels with them, but whether on account of their contents or their history we do not know.
[10] Cf. Die Handelsstrassen und Bergwerke von Serbien und Bosnien wahrend des Mittelalters, by Dr. Constantin Jireček. Prague, 1879.
[11] It is instructive to examine the attendance figures at the schools of this the only Italian town of Dalmatia, as the Italians call it. The figures are those of the school year 1918-1919, and refer both to elementary and secondary schools: