FIGURE IN PARIS PLAY
ENGLAND AND HIS DEATH SHAMEFUL CHARGES United Press Association—By Electric Telegraph—Copyright. Australian Truss Association. PARIS; 17th September. A diplomatic sequel is expected to the production of Maurice Rostand's new play, "Napoleon Die Fourth," in which it is suggested that Nape Icon's third son, brought up in England and killed while serving with the British army in the Zulu campaign, was really assassinated by England, and that Queen Victoria was privy to the conspiracy to have him put away. The author asserts that when the Prince's party was ambushed his fellow officers mounted, rode off and left him to his fate. Critics strongly condemn the intolerible audacity of these accusations against an allied nation.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CVI, Issue 58, 18 September 1928, Page 11
Word Count
117FIGURE IN PARIS PLAY Evening Post, Volume CVI, Issue 58, 18 September 1928, Page 11
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