SPLIT IN CABINET?
“UTTERLY RIDICULOUS STORY” CRUISER DISCUSSION (Australian and N.Z. Press Association) Reed. 9.5 a.m. LONDON, Sunday. The ‘‘Sunday Express’’ is informed oil the highest authority that the story from New York to the effect that a split has occurred in the British Cabinet, owing to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Mr. Winston Churchill, demanding the abandonment of tw r o out of the three new cruisers, and that the First Lord of the Admiralty, Mr. W. C. Bridgeman, is threatening to resign, is utterly ridiculous. Commander Kenworthy, M.P., writing in “Reynold’s News,” narrates the story circumstantially, and says that the Treasury will win, and that Mr. Bridgeman will be consoled with a peerage.
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume II, Issue 573, 28 January 1929, Page 9
Word Count
115SPLIT IN CABINET? Sun (Auckland), Volume II, Issue 573, 28 January 1929, Page 9
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