THE ENEMY'S COUNTRY FROM WITHIN
AN 'AMERICAN JOURNALIST'S IMPRESSIONS. ... (Rec. April 23, ; 6 ; p.m.) London, April 22. .An American journalist who has returned from Germany, says that food is plentiful, and Berlin was never more tranquil and gay. "Upon,the.surface, there is no war. Plainly,, the purpose of tho Government is that this condition shall continue. — • •
"I saw husky young chaps keeping tho railroads at the highest standard of efficiency,_ and strong young men felling trees in the forests. There are enough of such men'to carry on sixty per cent, of Germany's ordinary trade with the adjoining neutral countries— which Germany is doing.
"I saw the Kaiser twice. He was sitting erect in his seat) . his eyes straight ahead, his hands resting with a firm'grip 011; his sword. . Grey , hair showed beneath his helmet, but there Was no white hair. In his face there was none of the pallor of a man bearing an overwhelming responsibility. • "Germany believes that she is fighting a war which has been thrust upon her 1 to exterminate her, not a war of the Kaiser's making.
"There is a growing demand in France that the peace terms must include the exile of the Kaiser."— ("Times'- and Sydnoy "Sun" Services.)
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Dominion, Volume 8, Issue 2444, 24 April 1915, Page 7
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203THE ENEMY'S COUNTRY FROM WITHIN Dominion, Volume 8, Issue 2444, 24 April 1915, Page 7
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