Rensselaer Union, Volume 9, Number 2, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 September 1876 — FOREING INTELLIGENCE. [ARTICLE]

FOREING INTELLIGENCE.

IT reported from Berlin and Vlennaen the IRh that GeHßany will not alt Russta's demands upon Tirkey, and, ik the erent of war between the two powers, will remain entirely neutral. A Lonoom telegram says Tweed and Ate Secretary, Hunt, left the San Simons quarantine depot for El Contillo de Ban Sebastian, and passed through Vigo on foot at noon on thc,l4th. Both were looking well, particular! y T weed; During the passage of the steamer Cambria, which arrived at Plymouth, England, from Near York, on the 17th, J. T. Maison, the Danish Vice-Consul at Porto Rico, who was a passenger, was killed by being thrown from the deck-house against the bulwarks by a sudden lurch of the vessel. A LondOn telegram of the 16th says the Porte’s answer to the demands of the Powers for peace requires that Bcrvia shall send back all persons who emigrated to that country from the neighboring Turkish Provinces; that the etatu gw untei helium In respect to Montenegro be maintained, and that a war indemnity be paid. A later dis patch says an agreement had been signed to suspend hostilities for ten days. It was reported that the Porte bad confidentially notified the Powers that It would redress the grievances of her Christian subjects. 1 According to a Madrid telegram of the 16th, Tweed and his Secretary would embark for Cuba on the 21st A Bblgjladx telegram of the 18th announces that Gen. Tehernayeff’s army had proclaimed Prince Milan King of Servin. Berlin dispatches of the same date say that the Turkish conditions of peace had been disapproved by the Powers. It was apprehended that Russia would carry out her threat of direct interference. The general opinion in Belgrade was that peace was further off than ever. On the evening of the 18th a large meeting was held in London at which resolutions were adapted denouncing the, course of the Government on the Eastern question. The report of the British agent in relation to Turkish outrages in Bulgaria, fully confirming the report of the American agent, had been published and caused Intense excitement throughout Great Britain. According to Paris dispatches of the 19th, the Czar of Russia had given Prince Milan 3,000,Q00 roubles and stationed a large body of Cossacks on the Roumanian frontier ready to enter Servia at a mpment’s notice. Capetown (Africa) advices received in London on the 19lh state that the Transvaal Republic was utterly disorganized and sought British annexation. Thb Earl of Beaconsfield (late Mr. Disraeli) delivered an elaborate address qt Aylesbury, England, on the 20th, in which he fully explained the policy of the Government iu respect to Turkish affairs. A Belgrade telegram to the London Times, published on the 20th, says the proclamation of Prince Milan as King was regarded as purely a Russian movement, and avpwedly Intended as a defiance to Turkey. It was reported in London on the 20th that the Abyssinians had captured the Egyptian City Massowah and two Egyptian steamers.