CHINESE REVOLT.
BRIGANDS HAVE THE CONTROL OF TAIYUAN. FOREIG NERS~In JEOPARDY. (Received 6, 8.5 a.m.) Pekin, January 5. Brigands control Taiyuan. Thirty Italian priests and two foreign residents are in jeopardy. The Italian vnd British Ministers persuaded Yuan-Shth-Kai to send troops. SUGGESTED PARTITION OF THE EMPIRE. THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE. (Received G, 9.55 a.m.) Pekin, January 5. The Government is . directing the elections to the national convention from the northern provinces, Turkestan, Thibet, and Mongolia. The repnhlicans are organising in the south. This arrangement suggests the possibility of the division of 1 lie Empire in the absence of an agreement by the Convention. Sun-Yat-Sen lias received a courteous letter from Yuan-Shih-Kai thanking him for his offer of the presidency, but declaring that the entire people will be permitted to decide on the form of Government. TWO EXECUTIONS. (Received G, 11.10 a.m.) Pekin, January 5. Advices from Irhnnking state that the revolutionaries have executed the Viceroy Chaocrfeng and the Imperialist. General Tien,
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXII, Issue 20, 6 January 1912, Page 5
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162CHINESE REVOLT. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXII, Issue 20, 6 January 1912, Page 5
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