Small and Big Facts of the Week
Lord Curzon dies in London.
On the edge of the Bois de Vincennes, a bank employee is attacked by prowlers.
A delegation of 400 doctors is coming to France.
The Chinese town of Ta-Li-Fou has been destroyed by an earthquake.
The Queen of Italy inherits four million.
The coffin of an Englishman thrown into the sea four months earlier is found 1,600 kilometers from where it had been abandoned.
A direct cable between Italy and the United States is inaugurated.
In Zanzibar, during a clash between Somalis and Arabs, three people were killed and many injured.
In Tokyo, more than a thousand houses are destroyed by fire.
A seaplane from the Karouba aeronautical center, near Bizerte, crashes and the pilots are killed.
In the woods of Sèvres, a safe stolen in 1924 is discovered.
The Austrian government prohibits the entry of the German poet Erich Muchsam, invited by the communists, into Vienna.
The King and Queen of England take a cruise in the Mediterranean.
To seek treatment, two tuberculosis patients steal 75,000 francs from a cooperative in Melun.
Edgard Quinet's fiftieth birthday is celebrated in Bourg-en-Bresse.
Belgian Lieutenant Thieffry travels from Brussels to the Congo by airplane.
Three young scoundrels attack the post office in Cormeilles-en-Parisis and kill a postman with a revolver.
Soviet army cadets go to Berlin to study military art.
Near Vitry, four workers are hit by a train.
The Faubourg Saint-Martin neighborhood inaugurates its Free Commune.
A 13-year-old boy commits suicide on Rue de Turin.
The Herbalists' Union celebrated its fiftieth anniversary.
Cannes police arrest an individual from Billancourt who was involved in white slavery.
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