Internal disturbances are again on the increase throughout Russia.

It is announced that King Alfonso of Spain is to marry the Princess Patricia of England.

March 27.—Warehouses and shops at Yalta, Russia, are pillaged and burned by rioting mujiks.

March 29.—The Swiss Bundesrath rejects the commercial treaty with the United States owing to amendments made to that instrument by the United States Senate.

March 30.—President Castro of Venezuela turns on his accusers and states that he has documentary evidence that both the French Cable Company and the American Asphalt Company are in league with the revolutionists.

Emperor William of Germany sails for Morocco.

Several prominent “terrorists” are arrested in St. Petersburg, among them being two women.

Peasant outbreaks continue in Russia and the Kharkoff district is laid waste.

Another meeting of the Zemstvo representatives is called at St. Petersburg for the end of April.

The Italian Ambassador states that Italy would have taken drastic measures to collect her debt from Santo Domingo, had President Roosevelt not taken the matter in hand.