The Creek situation remains exceedingly complicated. In the first place,
the Greeks have obligingly cleared the greater part of their troops out of Salonika, an area which is left for us to • deal with as we like. But though the Greek Government have aett]ed this difficulty in a satisfactory way, they have further trouble ahead of them. What are they to say to the Germans, Austrians, and Bulgarians if they cross the Greek frontier, and attack either in the front or on the flanks of the Allies, and so carry the actual fighting into Greece t Strict logic might compel them to say that what was sauce for, the goose was sauce for the gander ; but, if we are to judge from the words of the nimes correspondent, the Greeks do not mean to endure the /presence of Bulgarians within their territory.