OAYTL 



iienbonrg <' 

 notion. M. l'ha . ury 



many. Thr hn 



. -1 the, aaaump- 



' ra ttii.l . iiih/atf-ii ftlt<! 

 lawn ami customs of thr ..tmtry 

 .^11 reideiit rr apt to brtr* 



?.. tin- f.-4 ulaiioii* ..f tMHikrrn ami 



fttlOMlfjBtl ward 



.'h. at<-d rrvnal of 



.M* tn 

 fimi;ii political bttHm H :.<%'. . If.-:- MM 



pected a husinsss interr irw, else he would not hare 

 graiiird the audience, and aaid that he coul. 



M a: ssjtf ' ' ' - 



-. ,r pSf ,..".- - . " 



fair* wrot. werin. offering to dumss 



luiedrr* and to pro- 

 ale audience . 

 if he desired. To this comnmnic*' 



a formal a< kr 



a. a defl. 





Seentorri 



hu drfrtmrnt. Thu attitude be 

 10 be one offering no nrospe* 



, - ' ' ; ' . ' 



ie and immunities usually accord- 



in law a < 



nseribed as one at the German 



^r wan a G.-niinn. and he had elected that tin- 

 nd senred in the German an. 



:.a%ini; 



Lueders got into a more seriou* 

 I. ml before 



t.% rfM-t.n.; their rntrj InU) bb liable t.. am N bifl 

 negro coachman for MUII* .nine or misdemeanor. 

 a doju-n of thf m n mil l\ forced a passage 

 and took the coachman : 



:iin of a viola- 

 laced 



irge of a. ! attempt - 



officers in tin- discharge of 

 I! A .. ;,(.! iv condemned to pay a 

 fine of * ; 



ml. 11. 



r.-trial of thf case, 

 ' was not Kufli. 



had a aii :>. li and that. 



of Ihf - 



*n- that he was mi - pay a fine of 



500 . --ar'- iin: 



in fhttrgr 



w'n Affair* in reference to the 

 i-wer. he 



an Audience with President Sam. to whom 

 idressed v. , that as>t. 



f an ultimatum, ch . >>c verdict 



' itix.ih'l. and dfin.'tnditii; tin- liU-i 



In th 

 who had received tflftfniph instriMtlons fn 



'ifinand the release f lender*, a 



1 thf punishment of the 1 

 officer* and judce* < thf anv-t an-i 



1 an indfinnitv of $1 INNI m 

 that 



"iiflned. ami added that for 

 I hut In- wn- Upt a pr 

 exact an ind- 

 old him that hf ha 



grantfil nn mt. r\ i. \v for the purpose of discussing 

 and that (in renrc*enta- 



I'ldrfvt hit cominuni. ntioii4 to tne Secre- 

 'ijjn Affnir*, In a cinMilar addn^- 



I'lic pire an account f thf intf r\ K-W. --f 

 ragular manner hi hi.-h it had l>een obtained, 



the loTiimn reprv- 

 but of which he h. fur- 



nWle iinclbnt he hud n-pli.il 



nn within th. 



ad of an h -t minded 



foreign |>owerwhat- 

 crer. ;t had intimated that he had n 



of SUI 



promise and entirely devoid of justification. Mr 



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



u he cunsidered it desirable that they 

 should adrlse their foreran* > 



- i .vi lsj wrought into a 

 HirraUof 



in..!,!.,.,!; f,.r,, k .,,r- ai,.| h 



alludel to the national 



Ih.- f. :.:.-!, .:;.-:> i. r. |,f,-^ i,f at . .-. that the Re- 



ha<l beenVetabliehed at the cost of 



jrn-at Nirrificeo. whi< h hi- 



/ in order to 



he majesty of their legal 

 trati 



people and boastful of thrir national stririt and 

 militanr prowess and of having poaveesed the only 

 army (fiat was not beaten by Napoleon I. 



- interview with the 

 an rkaryi if a fair** hauled 

 fln: of thf legation and sent the ar- 

 i to thf If pit ion of thf I' niied States, thus 

 breaking off all relations with the llaytian G. 

 inent. The German colony, consisting of ?0per- 

 is placed under American protection. Three 



in training hi|* that were in West Indian 

 waters were or telegraph from Bcr 



rvpn nial circles in 



my mid the advocate* of the Kaber's plan for 



an increase in the navy made much of the Lueders 



lie negro and mulatto remiblics 



as a piece < A frica, a Mtire on the idea of 



the ,: 



national agreement as hostile to rmlixation, 



and saying that if Germany had the fleet that she 



here would be an ad m i rablc opaor- 



I in tbeur waters such aa 



,- obtain^ I for others. The v clamored for the 



dispatch of a cruiser or a battle ship to Hayti. 



The ntered upon a 



\\ I I' .-; interposed 



with a letter addr. -.i to the llavtian Foreign 

 irv aikin; f.-r the release of Laeders. 



latire be bad 

 _ with the native laws nor 

 ilt complications to which 

 of Hayti and thai 



ntim to 



imp! nment in the affair. His only 



ii:jt- the present difficulties and 

 ,1 all bl.mdshed ai f diturl- 



ance such as would damage the intrrr>t* of Aroeri- 

 mg on the inland and engagnl m 

 a ulequent letter be gave Has his 

 u that the llavtian Government could set 

 lierr I.ucder* at lil- ,t preindtcal conse- 



The Government of the United States 



i regard this pnwetling a* an aH of eoni 

 H.- further ivawured the Foreign Secretary that if 

 Lueilem were liberate*! ho wnuld leare the bland 

 < n a mrr that milel the next day for 



xprewd the hone that th- 

 mediate liberation of Lneder? would mitigate the 



