Rioting still continues in Prague. The troops are patrolling the street, and special guards have been stationed at the places where outbreaks are feared.
Numbers of arrests have been made, and it is said that the prisons are so full that it has been found necessary to take no note of the smaller offenders, and only hold those persons who are accused of serious crimes.
In Vienna there has been a demonstration, unfriendly to both Hungarians and Bohemians.
One morning the inhabitants of the city awoke to find the town covered with flaming red placards.
Some of them read, "No new compact between Austria and Hungary"; and others, "No language laws. German is the national language."
These placards naturally aroused a great deal of angry feeling between the opposing parties. The police tore them down, and made every effort to find the persons who had posted them, but without any result.
The Treaty of Peace between Turkey and Greece has been finally signed by the Powers interested.
Little notice has, however, been taken of the fact; matters in Europe are looking so threatening that the affair of Greece is almost forgotten.