. urn 



Repeated torties 



the as- 



\,-r. aifi-u'h dying f itai * - '- 

 K proved 



taalicvf '. f r- ..--.,,-.; r.i-- tl,.- -i.^'r. 



,mved in Can. 



measures, in the first place, t. 



. ; .-.-.......... M 



and . 



' ?k agitators Mattered all over the country. A 



fans proportion ottb hMUfwx f.-r., ....... . : 



1 ; v , ' ' 1 1 \ ' . M i . . i . V : 1 1 . ' V 



tan l.-ad.-r-. while the Grseks had no wish t 



i-axoukt was much greater, and the 



.ountAl.l. 



Altogether t anil 



r |*rt of their fort-.-*. Kv.-ry man and 

 I. arms. The 



liars awtsted Mid directed the insure 

 r military otje rat ion *, both with advice 



Allii l.-ailrt it n.. thin; 



be accomplish. -d towurd restoring 

 tratuiuillitr on the inland until the Gr 



reek force* 



were withdrawn. \Vhii.- thry remained it was im- 



I ii-:. r,, ;, : UM . if--.... :.:.. .- off* n-.l to the 



h,- knowledge of thena- 



'..!..:. The admirals on 



Kb, -N ,..,.! ;| ,.,.., ia. nation dei laring th< ir pur- 

 pose to oppose any hostile acts by Greeks. Turk-. ..r 

 Cretans by having war ships at any point where dis- 

 turlttitcee might occur. War - 



the beleaguered garrisons at Selino and to 

 off the refugees. The insurgents in Mar. h 



village of 



i'adan nn..>. Th.- carri^.n ani 



numU-r.-.| ui.l tliexe would all 



massacred had not ('..I. Yu in.iu.,-,1 ti,,- insur- 

 gents to allow their de|artinv. 



I HIM .tiniu o| II, -.The admira 



form. -pective goxrrnmrnt* that an, 



was increasing, and t ould not answ. 



. . . '' :'.-..--:. \ u . . .1 . : 



ami 



unless the powers olt nine* 1 from <.!-.,. th.- 

 of her troops and fleet, Col. Yaw** with* in 

 troops from IMatania ami man h.-.l into th. 



.i^M th. 



r. interprettngPan- 

 iti'l omnioii. rxpressea. n 

 half of the saOTed right.n >f fnvdoin and ll<*lleniam 



' at th.- in.' 

 MI. -lit of tin- \aliai. 1 



* r. :. l>\ tin* '-I'lul-iM. .1 ll. .- 1 of ( hristian 



dressed a message to the army saying ''at in tl.. 

 present rritiral < inumstanoes he relied on the aid 

 nation, the officers, aid th<> Army in p-n.-n%l. 

 and on no f..n-ijm power. 



,i> left the Pirruswith another band ' 



r.,|*with 



and ammunition had already landed at < 

 aonesus, in th* f (>andia. .inn* 



a statement in th. fhan saTsol that. 



whether the Porte were pn-vmt.-! l.v th. , 

 fr.-m x>n.lini: ^-enforcements or persisted in send* 



;t had fully .Icdded 



on the measures to and won 



them promptly and decisively. On the departure 



. torpedo boau the Greek 



a note to the powers deeUring that Greece 

 could not remain a met epeeuior of ereat* in 

 not only from a tenee of her duty towanl 



tie island, boi also bj rami of 



the Moiiments she entertains for people of the same 



ra . -. .:...' 



M .-.,,.. r- .. . . .. 







almwly arrival t the !*irus, many of them in a 

 a* to a <*>: 



1 ' ' ; ' 



' . .- :.'..'. . . ' : .- -! 



. ,.'.. ' .- .. .. 



was nifMsary to the termination of it 

 trrnalional occupation of the Wand ; thai, subject 



^rm of aul'ifMiniy. <'ret oogbt 



n of the Turkish Empire; that the 



ments of Gnce and Turkey ought to be 



of this ^solution; and that, ifdibrr Turkrr or 



Greece pendsted in a refusal when rvguind to 



h.Tna^aland > 

 I m,|- - 



to withdraw at 

 Mies as soon as the i 



lineil SaUsbnrr was a plan that had jbeen 



pcopooded torn Urn More by < , M .-. I 



Foreign Affairs, to 



:my l.iomj; A k 'r.-..l to it at onoe without rr- 

 senre, and Austria and France baring bean thr next 

 toa<. i--al. KingUeoniofMdhb< 



n- -laiim-d their resolre to main tan 



. l^laring that it was impossible for then 

 to recall their troops from Crete. The popular 

 int: in Greece waa so strong in faror of reaisti 



allcosts the demand 



. te that the King could not ran niiMtsf 

 to it without loxin^ hi* throne. The Greek popu- 

 lace looked up.. M Crete as already Greek territory. 



and would not h.-Ar of withdrawing the army in 



!iat. if th.- |-..-p. w 



mouslv hi earnest in making such a 

 had tnemeaneol bringing al^.t . 



gration by makini; war on the 

 which would rvMill in the adrancemrnt of the Ilel- 

 draand the enlargement of the area and power 

 of th.- kn he insurgents M Aknxiri sent 



an an*wer to the admirals* note, declaring that union 

 was the .11 that would 



d. that autonomy would 



Mtiafv neither side, and thai Turkish rule wea now 

 utter! >f question. Thev also made an ap- 



|N-al .tian nation* of V.urofw, pmtesAing 



againut the degrading s| 



:>. :--_ ' .. ' ' . 



at hole matter could be 

 settled in les than a werk by t 

 The M//I MO/MM of the ccmcer 



! ungarian. 

 man. Italian. *: 



- I ha\. :n y GoTernmr- 



inform your Kx^ellency that the pr hare 



agreed upon a common course of action with the 



c an end to a situation which it did 

 *t with them to nn 



AlcuUtc.1 to compromise serf- 



Wstl Ink rie the ^ivernment* of Germany. 

 Anstria-Uungary. France. Great Britain. Italy, and 



