New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 8, 1924, Page 1

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¢ . ews of the World By Associated Press MDO WILL APPEAR. BEFORE OIL COMMITTEE MONDAY; PUBLISHER TALKS st Newsoaver. REPUBLIGANS MOST CLEAN HOUSE; JOANSON If the Party Does Not the People Will Says Aspirant for Nomination Denver Post Newspaper- man Tells Story Of Ex- pose Begun By That Paper — Will Continue Tomorrow Washington, Feb. 8.—The republ- can party must clean house or the people will do it for them, Senator Hiram W. Johnson, candidate for the republican nomination for preside declared in a statement’ issued today The senator characterized as “ridi- culous and absurd” recent “myster- fous and anonvmoun" assertions by | PJo) T managers t the president | 0 s, 11 d of i’q"’l e Jdaq “pV ally ‘assured of more ivention votcs to nom- S 0o, PN2ainy 8.—After members over Debate Resumed on Senate Floor Concerning Resolu- tion Demanding Menby’s Resignation. G Washington, Feb, agreement among its the trend taken by the oil inquiry, the senate oil committee decided today to defer until Monday its examina-| tion of William G. McAdoo, Previously it had been decided to permit the former treasury secretary Lo appear tomorrow in response to his request that he be given an op- portunity to explain his connections with E. L, Doheny. This decision was reversed after a long committee session at which Frederick G, Bonfils, publisher of the Denver Post, related how “his paper had begun an expose of “the Teapot Dome situation imonths ago and then bhad stopped, and how representatives of a group of which he was a mem- ber had made an agrfement under which Harry I, Sinclair was to make | considerable financial concessions provided the claims of others to rights within the Teapot reserve were dropped. The same witness will con- Berlin, Feb, The foreign office tinue his testimony tomorrow. In fuscs to discuss reports of Ambas- AL the samne time the Walsh resolu-| sador Wiedfeldt's possible resignation tion directing I fdent Coolidge to|as a result of the Washington flag iu provecd to the courts for cancellation | cident, but it seems to be clearly t of the Doheny nd Sinclaiv leases | government's intention to shift the ro- reached the White House and Mr, | sponsibility to the ambassador, Coolidge prepured a statement tak-| As Dr. Wiedfeldt is known to desire g exception to certain language in{to return and resume his post at the preamble, which doelaves the con-| Krupp plant, from which thd govern- tracts were made in violation of the| ment dreafted him. for the ambassa- law. dorship, it would cause no surprise if he took this oceasion to abandon his| diplomatic duties, which he took up enate flgor debate w po d . senate fdor debate wak re-| iy p stmed on the resolution requesting | the resignation of Secretary Donby | whh Senator Walsh, democrat, Mon- | tuna, leading in the attack on the Nuvy secrotany, At the butset of mu‘ speech the Montane senntor also as-{ o o (oo proe salled Chaleroan Lenroot of the ofl] "y ondon, 1% S.-~A note from Ruse committes Mr. MeAdoo's| yig replying to the British notification | name had been brought into the in ,“,.,t recognition De jure had been a qniry {eorded the Soviet government was Asserting he himself had made 10| panded Promior Machonald foday by effort to conduct the fnvestigation onla. Rakovsky, who has | ofnt- partisan lines, Senator Walsh contin-| o0 aeting as Russian trade commise ved | sloner he and is now named churge “It was reserved to the chatrman | goqrraires, of the commitice at the instigation of | The note states that the the senator from Missour! (8enator! e nient agrees to a conferenc Reed) to travel ontside the realm of [aarly date n London to take examination into the leases of the na-|pending between the two val ofl reserves, to which it 1s, by the | go rolution the senate restricted to fnquire into the employment by Mr, Doheny of ecounsel in matters unre- lated thereto, for the perfectly obvi-| ous purpose of ruining the prospects| of the leading candidate for the| democratic nomination for prestdent.” Bonfil To Contin Before the tenate convened, the committee had listencd for, nearly two | hours to Mr. Bonfils' story and it was | becanse of decision 1o 1ot hi: ron- ” " . & “ 1 Fe et S etdoes apmeaen: |'Twenty Lives Endangered in Accident—Five Float was delayed Bonfils’' story was cut short Lefore On Cake Until Near Shore, a bou. ipaign—to claim while way of frec expression or fair con. test,” he continued. “If there were any such feeling of security such certainty of success it would not be necessary to steal delegates in the |south or deny primaries in the north, like in Minnesota, “These Bourbon republicans control the republican machir a rude awakening before them and they may just as well make up thel minds now, as next June, that the re- publican party must clean house, and if the republicans themselves do not clean their oughly, the them, who people will do it for Berlin Foreign Office On Resignation of Denby. On the Russia Will Confer With British Soon | beewuse Soviet gove agn up governs of fis completion by adjournment of the cominittee, whese members hurried to the chamber to take part in the de- Late on the Denby resolution. In his opening statement Scnator Walsh A he expected to “show beyond stion the unfitness of Edwin Den to continue as secretary of the 8.—All of the 20 per cred of Quebee, Feb, sons whose lives were end yesterday by the breaking up |mile long ice bridg Lawrenee river escaped tles sald today. Five persons {floated for hours on the drifting and who were bulieved to have been |tost, made shore in 1y v The five—three women ar his own mouth is he con- said Henator Walsh. “He opportunity before the to defend, explain, excus: his acts, of his fallure demned b " the auth had every committee or extenuate to act “A great crime has been commit ted. The very structure of our gov ernment rocks upon its foundation in |Men—were not definitcly consequence of the revelations made for by the searchers until In conneetion with it. There is but [o'clock today. A peculiar obe way to restore to it that confl- |wWas responsible for their dence which is indispensable to its | The incoming tide senmt the stability and perpetuity namely, to |block of ice on which they visit upon the pefpetrators the ox vnnmn footing up-strean tremest rigor of the law and to st from the republic service everyone through whose connivance or supine- ness it became possible. “Are you willing, my collcagues turn back these great properties info |on their bobbing ice the keeping of Edwin Denby? 1 am reach of help. vot. Arc you willing to eondone the | Some % the spectators, more co flugrant faithiessness which has chur- |headed than others, shoutcd advice acterized bis administration of his [the five not to attempl the jump to great office, an revealed by bis own |safety, but to wait until the tide hud testimony before you? 1 am nel. Are [carried the drift dce further you content 1o let him down ecasy, |stre test sensibilitics be offended or poli-| And " prospecis be affected? 1 am not 1 want to see him driven from of fica with all the oditm that possibly aftaches to his going. that his fate may serve for all time as & warning 10 those who might otherwise faf the repnbii has failed.” Lewis Protests James O. Lewis, one of the geolo- gists employed by the commitiee in Investigating conditions at Teapot | Dome, protested in a memorandum read to the commitiee against sug gestions which he sald had been made by Senator Walsh, democrat. Mon tans. He insisted that wheh he cepted employment by the committes a account after re tie Lawrence nart h- spanned by the Queboe bridg For hours their plight had seine desperate 1o the awe-stricken cro whore wiho watched the fle pan. ond 1 drive to |on m ot ed tom for agat year th 0 they 1 1o the thelr narrew |carrent cagea {viocks that w slon inshor bloek to block, they gaine bank Rearchers | the missing Wi’ saved and had not § ed tor® They in the darks the portion they #ood at the time o At teast 14 men and w saved, making their over the crumbiling v Hng were in a party (Continued on Twenty-Fifth Lage) |the shore, and Immediately i " island of the pa ote piled in Then, r ping d th as he were e on of ridg th ac was Thos farthest of any | house and clean it thor- | Silent on Resignation | appoint- | Hospital May Buy Rockwell Mansion Bristol, Feb, ‘-—-A movement was started {h town today to purchase the property of Albert ¥. Rockwell, which is known as “Ridgewood,” as a site for the new hospital, instead of using the present location on Stearns street. : The property was advertised || in the New York papers Sunday I|| as being for sale and the price quoted was $250,000. The man- ston is now closed and Mr, and Mrs. Rockwell are living at the “armington .Country club. | | '1 PRINCE GETS BROKEN - GOLLAR BONE IN FALL, Horse Comes a Cropper While Attempting a Jump | With Royal Rider | the regular course of | . all | puttfug every obstacle in the By The | »ndon, Wi Associated Press. IPeb, 8.—The Prince of broke his collarbone while ex- sing' one of his hunters at Billing- ton Manor, near Ascot this morning. The prince was putting his mount |over a sUIf fence when the horse fell | | throwing his rider heavily on his ]nhuuld-‘r. The prince got up and was sry have | rtemounting with difficulty when his (but would return later, cquerry said: “I believe bone “Yes, 1 have,” Wales replied, The ‘prince was taken to the sur- gery at Leighton Buzzard where he | received treatment, and was lnwk to Mentmore mansion. He wore o collar when he emerged from the | surgery and his shoulder was in band- | f:Agn-i but he was still smiling. Wales hus 18 hunters at Lelghton | Buzzard and was expecting to do {much hunting with the Waddon Chase hounds. He had gone overnight to | Mentmore Mansion with Lord Dal- | meny, prior o the meet of the Wad- don Chase this morning at Ascot, 1¥e "\uu astir carly, takjpg several hung- ors to BN i Manor, the {property of Sir Richard Coopef, to give them a preliminary gallop. It _{was while pulting his meunt over a s fepee that the aceident happoned, The prince probably will return te London at ahout mvon today. | figlg) statement s the collarbone b« Twokn W 2 oh Mghtly liwh ,'nw.lu. you've broken your col- over The Prince of Wales Is a great love of horse flesh und has frequently n thrown, but has always escaped | ‘4»||vr|l~ injury In addition to foilow. [Ing the hounds the heir to the Brit. ish throne is keen on racing, both the Nat wund the jumps, and has ken part in o actoal competition |i.nv¢n.<l professional jockeys, although with Indifferent suecoss, | A London dispateh on Tuesday of this week told of his rising at an ear- 1y hour and motoring to lpsom Downs, the historic British race course where he looked over 'h’ { horses entered for the meet and engaged in impromptu races with the joekeys, | \‘,. over 'All Are Saved After Spectacular Crash of Ice Bridge At Quebec point where the glittering broke The adventurers were curiosity which lured them to incau- | tious inspection of the fragile span which had forinad itself across the breasting tides of the river earlier in ! the day. The unusual structure ! spanned the swollen river between Quebee and the little village of Lovis on the opposite Pormation « curious idle laughing as they adventurcd on frame, had procecded, sin ral hundred feet from sho when without warn formation gave way explosive roar of grinding jce Over the ominous crash was heard the frightened shrieks of the trapped per- On the shore the anxious ad- monitions of friends turned into anguished women and children, motivated by the same compelling force, dropped to their knees in the snow and prayed. From the excited and of the witnessos it was difficult ascertain the exact number of who had ventured on the The most conservative es. however, placed the number vietims of a | shore, s Away and the The shouting, slender ice gle file, the Levis ing, th sons, and wails,. Men, bridg: thinates, the The carried up stream said that all remained on the f the bridge connect- the shore and made thelr v or fleated off into the precarious ico-crafts. Four of these floes were taken wp stream by a ferryboat had gone to the rescue The plintered incoming tide floes ounts either ice arch ac Austrians Considering Ru -lan ngnilm wmna, Feb, strian recogni- of the Soviet ,., erfment is un- condderation. Chancellor Seipel at Budapest according to a de pateh 1o the Newe Frefe Presse We walting the decision of the great powers on this subject,” 11 the Chancellor who recalied the 1sian Iready were eloped by the two commereisl treaties tated a Anstro-§ o de and transportation some time ago. rélations driven | An of- | forthcoming \ bridges | with an | relatives | conflicting ! on ! signed | | * DEPEW BIRTHDAY PARTY s New York, Feb. 8.—~When Chauncey M. Depew came to his New York office from his Peek- skill home today he found that his list of visitors included a committee of Westchester coun- ty residents who were calling to invite him to his own 90th birthday party on April 23, The invitation, engraved on parchment, bears the signatures of many of the former senator's fellow townsmen as well as county officials. Where the party will be held has not yet been decjded. BY FARM COUNCIL Secretary of Agriculture Too Busy to Answer Qmuons MARKETING CAUSES DISPUTE| House Has Four Hour Debate mi Question of Prohibiting Issuance of | "™ NOVIE AGTRESS BOUND From Both Sides. Washington, Feb. 8.—After an ad-| !dress by Secretary Wallace, the na-! |tional council of Farmers Co-opera- |tive Marketing associations here to- | ay was asked by Aaron Sapiro,, |prominent in organizing such asso-, |clations, to draw up a “bill of partic-| |ulars,” criticising the Agricuture's de- | partment's policy toward co-operative marketing. | | 8 | Body of Louise Lawson Found—Police Dog Also Tied Up—No Noise The Secretary had pledged support| 2 ke ‘to the co-operative marketlitlg move-! New York, Feb., §,—Bound to the »ment “within its . legitimate scope,”| posts of her bed, and with her mouth and had declared that criticism of | gagged, Miss Louise Lawson, a 24 year the department was due to "lacd of'old motion picture actress today was knowledge of legal and moral limita:|found dead in her rooms in a fash: tions™ that surround it. He said the!ionable apartment house in West 77th 'department could not support “any!strect. specific form of contract, but could| The actress’ hands had been pass on the to the farmer the infor-| “spread-cagled and tied to the bed- |mation it had compiled.” ‘ponw with a dog lash. Miss Lawson's At the close of the address, Mr, Sa-|large Belglan police dog was found piro asked if the Secretary would an- | lashed to a chair in another room of |swer a few questions there and then|her apartment. Other tenants told |Mr. Wallace replied that he was in | the police they had heard no noise in {a hurry to get to a cabinet meeting,|the girl's apartment during the night, After he had|@lthough her dog ordinarily raised left, Mr, Sapiro called an executive|®&n uproar at the presence of strang- committee meeting to consider a “bill| €ré. lof particulars.” | The body was discovered by a ne- | The executive committee voted to 8ro maid who went to the apartment {present to Secretary Wallace the “'Mll of particulars.” Debate on Tax-Exempt Securities, The house today faced four more |hours of debate on the constitutional amendment to prohibit the issuance ’ol' lux-exempt securities preparatory ot coisideration of the new revenue | bint ordered reported yesterday by |the ways and means committee. The bill will be formally reported to the | house next Monday. Four hours of the eight allotted lunder a special rule: for debate on |man. Ithe amendment refolution were come 8nt sald, pleted yesterday with wmembers of | entered. |botl parties vigorously attacking the measure on the grounds that It was “" an invesion of states righis resolution pussed the Hovse I 'xuw ’-“ byt dvas not votéd upor 1 the sen.|ned arc{and yesterday's ack eft its| |adhesive j;vv o sbmte appretinency of fie adops | dp’:!.;:‘ Ten minutes after the maid had raised the alarm an automobile load of de- tectives were at the house with a physiclan who pronounced the girl dead. Police sald the murder must have ing as the tenant of an adjoining | Larson's bell rung several time: that hour. To the girl's que The door was opened, the ten- and the caller apparently Nothing more was heard. o alfer ) heer 'L ohee strangled to Deen attacked, She had her bowe in o apertment ' ' house facing the park surrounding the (Continued on Page 20). 'WOUNDED WAR VETERAN, 'SUES FOR ALENIATION |dence of a determined | were found, they said. | The young woman's feet were with silk stockings; her hands, stretehed over her head were to bed posts and a towel had stouffed into her mouth. The (Continued on Page Twenty-five) lapartment districts. Later, the polic apparently had sadid been the wvietim of after a desperate stroggle, resistance {Nicholas Rich Wants $10,- | 000 Damages From David Monglllo | fine T0 BED AND KILLED to prepare breakfast for the actress. | oceurred after 8:30 o'clock this morn- | apartment said she had heard Miss | caller replied that he was an express | The body was attired only in & night 2 A portion of the towel about | was found Iying ngar the Devil's Gar- head had been stuffe uth and it had been |z #dy s of her head with |through his head, Mise Yawson (8700 in money, burglars who had subdued her only | bert Morgan, Furniture | the | had been overturned and othep evi- |man, his attention being attracted by tied | lashed | heen | Taft has recovered from his recent at MRS, I CORMIGK SUED BY HER ACCOUNTANT Latter Claims $10,000—Says| He Helped Form Tax | { Free Organization Chicago, Feb, 8.—Mrs, Edith Rock- | feller MeCormack, daugh of John D. Rockefeller, fr., with Edwin Krenn and Edward A. Dato, her partners in a real estate firm, are made. defen- | dants In a suit for $10,000 damages | filed by Samuel Broker, consulting | engineer and wccountant, according to the Chicago Herald and Examiner. According to the newspaper, the | declaration states that last Septem ber Broker was employed by the de- fendants to devise a method to form a tax free organization in which Mrs, McCormick might invest $15,000,000 in stocks and Londs. Broker con- ceived the iden of forming a *com- mon daw trust,” which would obviate the necessity of paying federal taxe and Mrs., McCormick contributed 232,000 and Krenn and Date $1,500 each to the trust, the declaration al- leges, | Broker cluims he was to receive | $100 & day for his services and in ad- | dition a sum commensurate with lhn’ amount of the tax saved. He re- ceived $100 u day and $1,250, he says, but contends he should have been DESPONDENT OVER ROBBERY | SHOOTS SELF, CUTS THROA Ansonia Man, Relieved of $700, Tries Double Means of Ending His Lifte | Nzkod- onta, | Norwalk, wki, of feb, S ~Stanisiaw 21 Maple street, A den rond in Rownyton Mhortly before n.oun toduy, with a ° bullet wound | jugged !his throat and a new 32 calibre re pair of scissors was brought to the volver tiearby ind a He hos- | ' umendment providos tn oftect | 86 ording 1o/ e ehang: physiclan, !pital here in a serfous condition, Po- exumination who a hasty that who xprossed made belief lice the mun | American Museum of Natural History, | was the victim of a robbery on the | jone of Manbuttan's high priced studio | Wilton road carly last Tuesday, when | relieved of had become despond ent and attempted his own life, Al u negro, walking along discovered the wounded (he claimed to have been road, a rustiing of the leaves | | TAIT AT DESK Washington, Feb, §.-Chief Justice his ding 1o tack of indigestion and was at desk In his home today utten corregpondence. (Bpecial to The Herald), Southington, Feb. 8.—Nicholas Itich | of North Main street through Lawyer {Lambert J. Degnan of Meriden, has |brought suit against David Mongilio | of High street, Southington, for §10,- 000 damages for alleged allenation of | |the affections of Rich's wife. Prop- | erty of the defendant in Southington has been attached and the writ is re. {turnable In the superfor court in Hartford, the first Tuesday in March. Rich is a war veteran and a mem- ber of the National Guard. He was wounded in action in France and has | {spent some time in government hos- pitals in this country recovering from {their effects. Mongillo is a truck contractor in Bouthington | PETROLEUN COMPANY WITHDRAWS STOCK : Flivver King Intimates That | Oil Magnates May Have Policy. Detroit, Feb. 8.—The com mittee investigating the Teapot Dome oil leases “might do well to into the possibility connection b tween oll interests and our attitude ard the Mexican difficulty.” Henry rd said today in a statement | Mr. Ford's statement, issued in an Action Means Virtual Dis-' Gver 0 4 toymest that e join hun eds of other Michigan citizens solution of b“hldill’y to ‘umnx a fair deal lnrg’;'rh\w"l:‘ ~~y,l\r Develop Oil Lease Land secretary of the navy and a Detroiter New York, Feb Directors of the Pan-American Petroleum and Transport company today voted to withdraw the recent offer to stock- holders to subscribe to the capital #lock of the Pan-American Western Petroleum company which was re. cently organized to develop the Call fornta naval ofl leases, Action of the directors means vir- {tual dissolution of the western subsi- dia which was formed in November with a capital of 1,500,000 shares, in which Pan-American Petroleum held @ 59 per coent interest. The remain- ing shares were offered to stockholders of the parcat company at $20 Through senate ook of a been asked to join other citizens of Michigan in securing a fair deal for Edwin Denby, secretary the navy. It is grd hete that be cause he has less pelitical influence than other members of the go ment, a pretext may be sought make him a scapegoat. My reply | been that 1 that we pose full confiden Coolidge's sense of not permit him to condemn without just cause nor man’s reputation without good reusng The also, without accord every m a opportunity for self-defense in Michigan, who knows M has ever believed him ¢ sonal dishonesty public or private affairs “Nothing in should be in any way to investigation now the investigation pr sona! or partisan {all the facts are disclosed. 1t is not enough to know who are the immedi ate persons concerne et the probe g0 deeper untll the international banking houses and to am sure ar e in Presid any # ustice injure senate ful the sale of this stock Pan-American Petroleym planred to fulse $10,000,000 to add to the pro- wedls from the sale of $12,000.000 in bonds to finance improveméht of the California properties. this how desiring the Let per unti statement construed as timit in ever or weaken progress eed without - fear faver WEATHER —pn Hartfornd., Feb. S—Forroast New Hritain and vicinit financed the deal Fair tonight and Saturday. the last analysis ! | of the eorruption in which other men i |are caught. 1f the investigation is | | pushed beyond facts more THE conceited are expose hey are the who - | mittee # than our rights in the naval ol leases cabinet today 'Henry Ford Calls For An lnqmry Into Our Relations With Mexico recovered; of what office will be a knowledge ness in public The dangerous « matter not we may also gain inspires weak ement is alone the g Something to Do Withi weakness of individuais, th the » ™ well 1t readiness to weake count, v fenses by giving to private exploitation might possibility oll interests Mexica com also do ook | into the of a connectio betweer toward the MELLON ANSWERS | CHARGES 0F BREWER Ivm:-r. and our attitude | 1ifficuity Secrctary of Treasury Says ence in Numbers on Bonds Was | Pue 10 New Machinery Washington ries of Charle Feb. & ring anot charges made dupli B answe Bre WoR o W the burean Juring tk Wher T altered war equip type and siste characters carried ted asury ¢fai with numerals and by | the old machines JAPANESE ELECTION 3 Tokio, Veb. §—The tion necessitated by the tion of the house the imperial diet wi it was amnounced b grnera recemt dissolr of representatives o d May 10, ) by the| officially | lethal gas execution in the wounds in | | that it | fitted Average Daily Clrculation Week Ending 10’258 Feb. 2nd . ... | FIRST EXECUTIOIV BYGAS TAKES PLACE IN PRISON AT CARSON CITY, NEVADA Gee Jon Is Dead Within Six Minutes Of Enter- ing Chamber — Death Was Painless Say Wit- nesses Thomas R@ Eondemned To Die With Him, Is Given Life Sentence at La#t Minute, Carson City, Nev.,, Feb, 8.—Gee Jon, Chinese tong slayer, was put to death here this morning in the history of the United States. Official physicians cbserving through a of the stone death chamber said that death first window | ensued within six minutes and that it During the execution the witnesses could smell the poisonous gas, but it did not appear to have any harmful results or even bother anyone, After the execution chemists ordered that 30 mniutes elapse before the cham- ber was emptied of gas, but an hour passed before the physicians were permitted to enter. While the gas was being pumped out, its odor permeated the prison. was painless, Gee Jon entered the death chamber supported by two guards; and was immediately strapped in the chair, As the gas was turned on it made a slight hissing sound which was audible to wilnesses outside the chamber, The condemned man look~ led in the direction of the sound and then gasped for breath, His head | bobbed up and down several times. Two men had been doomed to die in this execution, but the state board of pardons voted last night to come maute to Mfe imprisonment the sen- tence of the other condemned man, Thomas Russell, an American Horn Mexican, convicted of kitog hie |swecthoart, an Indian girl, lying | of had made P. A, MeCarran, u former justioe the Nevada supreme court an impassioned plea on behalf of Rus- ontending that the record in ruse falled to lv'ul out the state's case, The mother of Indian girl hind testified that she saw Russell kil her daughter but Russell has insisted all along that he it and was the who was the mother inne slayer, The district judge who presided at Russell's trial telegraphed Governor Serugham yesterday expressing doubt whether it was a case of . premedi- tuted murder. The governor con- curred in this doubt while voleing the bellef that Russell killed the gi The execution of Gea Jon will be in a Itle stone bullding In the prison yard in which a cell has been for the condemned man The deadly gas which will be porized from a liquid solution of drocyanic acid, was in another aire tight compartment. The wit- nesses will view the execution through two windows vae hye “tone A rehe day afte of t seconds inetantly an It another of the execution yesters snuffed out the lives cats in a time estimated at 15 The cats died apparently 4 without pain rnoon vas ¢l that Gee Jon and serving a life san Franciseo Tom Quon rival Tong fight to stave off execution, two appeals were made to the supreme court of the United the ground that lethal gas and inhuman” form utior The court rged term were Tong to member of the long leg Kee Ir States on was an “unusua sed supreme pet POINCARE AND GABINET ANGRY, LEAVE CHAMBER Premier and Ministers Go On Strike ret to hear the tions. Becavse of Attacks From Opposition v deputies them French un- pvarticularly I8 artillery, pret he matter of b

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