YESTERDAY’S CABLE.
BRITISH AND FOREI6N. Per Electric Telegraph—Copyright. Per Press Association. THE WILDE CASE. London, May 3. : Bail has been allowed in Oscar Wilde’s case. Oscar Wilde was admitted to bail, himself in £2500 and two sureties in £1250 each. THE IMPERIAL CABINET. May 4. There is said to be strong friction in the Cabinet owing to the Chancellor of the Exchequer pressing his Local Veto Bill, and this is believed to explain Sir William Vernon Harcourt’s implied early retirement from office. The Daily News denies that Lord Rosebery retires from the Premiership. FATAL CYCLONE. Washington, May 3. By a cyclone at Sioux Falls fifty-two people were killed. In some instances children were carried half a mile by the force of the wind. COUNT KALNOKY. Vienna, May 5. Count Kalnoky has resigned owing to M. Banffya, the Hungarian Premier, having prematurely stated that the former had protested to the Italian Government against the action of the Papal Nuncio, in Vienna, in fostering clerical agitation against the Hungarian Government.
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Bibliographic details
South Canterbury Times, Issue 8208, 6 May 1895, Page 1
Word Count
168YESTERDAY’S CABLE. South Canterbury Times, Issue 8208, 6 May 1895, Page 1
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