TURKEY AND EGYPT.
THE ALBANIAN RISING. LIKELIHOOD OF INTERVENTION. A LORD KITCHENER'S APPOINT. ' MENT. DOES NOT IMPLY REACTION. 6* Teteflf»ph.~- Vttti Association. --Copyrisbt. (Received July 29, 9.45 a.m.) LONDON, 28th July. Sir Edward Grey, Foreign Secretary, in the course of a debate in the House, said the Albanian insurrection was a source of anxiety,- and he would not be surprised if the adjoining Powers look steps to limit the area of disturbance. He deplored the effects of the outbreak on the stability of tho ne\v Turkey. The Millistef paid a high tribute lo ths lnte Sir Eldon Gorst, British Envoy in Egypt. Before further reforms were effected in Egypt, he continued, the of the men on tho spot must be ascertained. Lord Kitchener would be given time to survey the situation. His appointment did not imply ths adoption of a leactionary policy. AN INVITATION TO MR, STEAD! CONSTANTINOPLE. 28th July. Abdullah Pasha, the new Generalissimoof the Ottoman forces in Albania., lias asked Mr. Stead., editor of tha Reviewof Reviews, to accompany him to Albania as the guest of the Headquarters Staff, and to telegraph his despatches from Constantinople.
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Evening Post, Volume LXXXII, Issue 25, 29 July 1911, Page 5
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188TURKEY AND EGYPT. Evening Post, Volume LXXXII, Issue 25, 29 July 1911, Page 5
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