. Review of reviews and world's work. d ; awake, at last,to the peril of his situation, to his own weak-ness, and to the fierce determination of his eightmillions of Moslems to defy foreign interven-tion, pacific or otherwise ; if he so much as dal-lies with France, revolution ; if he scout herproposals, war ; military occupation of everyseaport now, annexation later, and the inevitablecollapse of his dynasty. Nor is the task undertaken by France a lightone. If she requires an Algerian army of onehundred and fifty thousand men to overawe hernative subjects of that colony, in Morocco shehas to


. Review of reviews and world's work. d ; awake, at last,to the peril of his situation, to his own weak-ness, and to the fierce determination of his eightmillions of Moslems to defy foreign interven-tion, pacific or otherwise ; if he so much as dal-lies with France, revolution ; if he scout herproposals, war ; military occupation of everyseaport now, annexation later, and the inevitablecollapse of his dynasty. Nor is the task undertaken by France a lightone. If she requires an Algerian army of onehundred and fifty thousand men to overawe hernative subjects of that colony, in Morocco shehas to face this solid fact :. Half a million ofmen, of the plains and of the mountains, hardyand enduring, accustomed from early youth tocany arms, inured to long marches by nightand by day, and every man of them resolved tofight to the death for the land and the faith. Apeople which believes in its heart of hearts thatthere is an Almighty God battling for Islam,and that, should death come, to fall in the holywar is a passport to THE FLEET, LED BY THE U. S. S. ALABAMA, STEAMING TO POKT, SHOWING FORMATION, EACH SHIP 400 YARDS APART. THE MANEUVERS OF A WAR OF PEACE. FLEET IN TIME BY G. UPTON HARVEY. (Representative of the Anny a7id Navy Register at the Naval Maneuvers of 1905.) TOWARD the end of December, each year,we read in the public prints that the fleethas been reviewed by the Secretary of the Navyor some other officer high in command, and thatit has departed for the Caribbean for the wintermaneuvers. Usually, nothing more is heard ofthe fleet until about April 1, when it arrives offPensacola for target practice. It is not strange,then, that the public has but a hazy idea of therelation of these winter cruises to the prepared-ness and efficiency of our navy. The maneuvering of a ship is of an importanceon a par with accuracy of gun-fire. A ship thatcan make a hit with almost every shot but isbadly handled may be — nay, often is — moredangerous to its friends than to


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1890