New York Times 100 years ago today, November 15, 1912:
Special Cable to The New York Times.
Dispatch to The London Daily Mail.
SOFIA, Friday, Nov. 15.— The Tchatalja lines have been broken and six forts have been taken by the Bulgarian troops.
The Bulgarian Council of Ministers is considering the conditions of an armistice which, it is stated, will include the capitulation of the army of Tchatalja, the entry of the Bulgarian troops into Constantinople and the surrender of garrisons at Adrianople, Monastir, Janina and Scutari. Among the conditions of peace are included the cession of the territories occupied by the troops of the allied states, the internationalization of Constantinople, free passage of the Dardanelles, Salonika to be a free port, and a war indemnity. The arrival of King Ferdinand is awaited before a definite decision is taken.
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