RELEASE OF DREYFUS.
ADDRESS OF SYMFATHY.
[UNITED PRESS ASSOCIATION.] (by elkctiuc telegraph. copyßiairr). Paris, September 21. DREYFUS was quietly released. Accompanied by his brother he prooeeded to Nautes.
He intends to settle somewhere in the South of France.
L'Aurore has published a declara* tion bj- Dreyfus that freedom without honour counts for nothing. " I will strive," proceeds Dreyfus, " after a leparation of this judicial error until the whole of France admits my innocence."
Revisionul journals are glad at the release, while anti-Dreyfusard journals denounce it as weakness. President Loubet declares that the liberation is an act of humanifcy.
• Some of the Ministry consider it an act of justice.
London, September 21. The Daily Chronicle's address of sympathy to Madame Dreyfus has been signed by 112,130 persons, including paers, officers, artists, and all olasses of the community and members of the Gladstone family. The Exhibition boycott is collapse ing-
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Bibliographic details
Waikato Argus, Volume VII, Issue 491, 23 September 1899, Page 2
Word Count
148RELEASE OF DREYFUS. Waikato Argus, Volume VII, Issue 491, 23 September 1899, Page 2
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