. Review of reviews and world's work. ted States gave a sigh of reliefwhen they read, on the morning of October 18, inthe newspaper headlines that the operators hadyielded, that the strikers had won, and that therewas no prospect of further trouble in the Pennsyl-vania coal regions. Incidentally, it had been feltthat the prolongation of the strike would lead to akind of military interference that would hurt theRepublican party and would help the termination of the strike would appear toha\-e no political bearing one way or the other. ^, ^ Theie has been a change in the Chancellor
. Review of reviews and world's work. ted States gave a sigh of reliefwhen they read, on the morning of October 18, inthe newspaper headlines that the operators hadyielded, that the strikers had won, and that therewas no prospect of further trouble in the Pennsyl-vania coal regions. Incidentally, it had been feltthat the prolongation of the strike would lead to akind of military interference that would hurt theRepublican party and would help the termination of the strike would appear toha\-e no political bearing one way or the other. ^, ^ Theie has been a change in the Chancellor- chancellorship of the German em-ship. pii>e. The retirement of Prince Ho-henlohe was announced at Berlin on October17. He had been in ill health since the deathof his wife a year or more ago ; and he is, more-over, well past eighty years of age. He hadsucceeded to the imperial chancellorship on theresignation of Count Caprivi in October, twenty years previous he had renderedtactful and valuable service to Germany, first. VON BULOW, OF GERMANY. as ambassador at Paris, and then as governorof Alsace-Lorraine. As chancellor he lias beenesteemed and respected, but has not shown him-self a man of iron. The Emperor himself has,in fact, been his own chancellor. It was naturaland proper that Count von Biilow should beimmediately named as Prince Hohenlohes suc-cessor. Bernhard von Biilow was born in1849, and is, therefore, fifty-one years he enteied the German foreign office in1873, his own father was secretary of Germanforeign affairs under Chancellor Bismarck. Theyoung Biilow was secretary of embassy at Rome,St. Petersbuig, and Vienna ; served in Athensat the time of the Russo-Turkish War, andwas afterwards at St. Petersburg, Paris, Bu-charest, and Rome. Biilow is a man of greatinfluence and popularity in Germany, and hasbeen a highly successful minister of foreignaffairs. It is undoubtedly a part of his policy tocultivate good relations with the Un
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