Krim Surrenders To French After Freeing Captives

Anti-colonial insurgent Abd el-Krim boarding a Fez-Tangier train in 1926 on his way to exile to the Indian Ocean island of Réunion. Contemporary postcard.

Chief Puts Himself, Family and Property Under Their Protection.

WILL BE TAKEN TO TAZA TO AWAIT INSTRUCTIONS

Capitulation Follows Setbacks on All Sides and Desertions by His Followers.

By the Associated Press.

FEZ. French Morocco. May 26.—It was officially announced this afternoon that Abd-el-Krim. the Riffian chief, was coming into the French lines.

Krlm will be taken to Taza, where the instructions of the French resident general, Jules Steeg, are awaited. Krim, it is announced, puts himself, his family and property under the protection of France.

The Overland Route From India (Part 2)

Figures 1 and 2, the ports of Boulak and Atfeh.

In our last we left the homeward bound travellers at the Grand Hotel upon the Desert of Suez, from whence we are now to trace their progress to Marseilles, which port they will, in all probability, have reached simultaneously with the publication of this article.

Continuing the route across the Desert, as indicated by the stations established by Mr. Waghorn, we arrive at the close of the second day from Suez, at Cairo, the modern capital of Egypt. At this celebrated city, and in its immediate vicinity, there is so much to arrest attention that the traveller will, in all probability, feel disposed to delay his further progress homewards while he visits the Pyramids of Gizeh, about 10 miles to the south-west; the citadel, situated to the east of the town, and remarkable as having been the scene of the slaughter of the Mamelukes—completely commands the city, but is itself covered by a high range of mountains in the rear, where & square fort, erected by the Pacha, is garrisoned by 400 men; the obelisk at Matarea (the site of the ancient Heliopolis); the tombs of the Mamelukes; the forests of agate in the rocky hollows of the Desert; and the summer palace of the Pacha. Within the walls of the citadel the chief objects of interest are the new palace of the Pacha, the mint, Joseph’s well, and the magnificent view from the ramparts, extending over the whole city, the land of Goshen, the Pyramids, &c., and bounded only by the eternal Desert. Hill’s family hotel at Cairo, will afford the traveller every possible comfort during his sojourn, and nothing requisite to his enjoyment or further convenience on the route, will be asked for there in vain. Houses, furnished or unfurnished, may also be had by those who prefer such accommodation; and for the satisfaction of invalids, there are English medical men in regular practice to be met with.