FRENCH GOVERNMENT URGED TO TAKE DECISIVE ACTION. DANGER OF DEATH.
BRITISH RESIDENTS IN FEZ. PARIS, 22nd April. Tho French newspapers are- urging the Government to tnke decisive measures to cope with the dangerous situation, without paying any heed to the carpings of the German and Spanish press. The Temps declares that "Frenchmen are in danger of death through the Govornment's ineptitude, and they must be saved. The Powers should be told outright what we intend to do." There are a dozen British residents in .Fez, including Mr. James M'Leod and family, Dr. Verdon, his wife, and two children, two English lady missionaries, and two American missionaries. There are also forty-five Frenchmen and five Germans in the city.
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Evening Post, Volume LXXXI, Issue 95, 24 April 1911, Page 7
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117FRENCH GOVERNMENT URGED TO TAKE DECISIVE ACTION. DANGER OF DEATH. Evening Post, Volume LXXXI, Issue 95, 24 April 1911, Page 7
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