GERMANY AT WORK.
AN AUSTRALIAN'S OBSERVATIONS. Mr. George Crowley, of the City Mutual Life Assurance Society, Sydney, has received a letter from Mr. Redmond Barry, who gives his address as the "Eden Hotel, Berlin," in which" Mr. Barry saye:— "I don't know if you visited this city on your travels. I think it is the loveliest place in the world. "'There is no shortage of food-or anything else here, and the war does not seem to have hurt them in any way. Naturally the whole country is intact. They are working like niggers to rebuild their Commercial hold on the world. They seem to be going the risht way about everything. Wlint a hospitable crowd they are here—they seem to revel in having the Britisii about them, "The Exchange here is still bad for them, but it will coon come down, and believe mc it will be normal before the franc. The French won't work like these fellowe. "I suppose everyone -fe working hard in Australia now to help pay the enormous debt created by the war?"
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Auckland Star, Volume LI, Issue 241, 8 October 1920, Page 2
Word Count
177GERMANY AT WORK. Auckland Star, Volume LI, Issue 241, 8 October 1920, Page 2
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