BAVARIAN UNREST.
A REVOLUTION FEARED SOCIALIST PARTY’S THREAT By Telegraph.—Press Assn. —Copyright. Berlin, July 22. The Council of the Reich approved the laws recently adopted by the Reichstag, except the Defence of the Republic Act, to which the Bavarian representative objected. The Boersen Courier says this means the passive resistance of Bavaria against! the application of the Act. It confirms the report that Bavarian troops were telegraphically recalled from the manoeuvres, and mentions rumors that the extremists are about to proclaim the ex-Crown Prince Rupprecht King of Bavaria. New York, July The Berlin correspondent of the Chicago Tribune learns that the Bavarian Republic lie declines to accept the new national law for the protection of the Republican form of Government. There are fears of revolutionary uprisings when the rejection foimally operates. The Labor and Socialist parties declare they will meet the objection by a general strike, crippling railways and industries and preventing the distribution of food and the importation of Ruhr coal. The Bavarian Republic therefore is concentrating its army within the frontiers to deal with the situation as it arises.
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Taranaki Daily News, 26 July 1922, Page 7
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181BAVARIAN UNREST. Taranaki Daily News, 26 July 1922, Page 7
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