D'ANNUNZIO.
CAPTURES ITALIAN GENERAL.
ANTI-BRITISH FEELING. JSy Telegraph.—Press Assn.—Copyright. Received Feb. 2, 7.20 p.m. Milan, Feb. 2. D'Annunzio kidnapped General Nigra, the commander of the Italian troops, on the < Armistice line outside Fiume. He is unpopular with D'Annunzio's trooos owing to his vigilance. D'Annunzio placed an ambush on the road where General Nigra was motoring towards Trieste. After his capture, General •fcrjsxa, was compelled to walk to Fiume, wnere ne was imprisoned in the Government Palace.
Italian newspapers angrily denounce D'Annunzio's impudence. The Corriere Delia Sera states D'Annunzio nourishes revolutionary ideas, and is championing every insurrection until a universal conflagration consumes the British Empire, after which, the poet says, Italy will be great and prosperous. The Corriere Delia Sera's is the first public hint of D'Annunzio's anti-British campaign.— Aus.-N.Z. Cable Assn.
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Taranaki Daily News, 3 February 1920, Page 5
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131D'ANNUNZIO. Taranaki Daily News, 3 February 1920, Page 5
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