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GREAT UPHOLDER OF PEACE.

RELATIONS BETWEEN BRITAIN AND GERMANY. PRESS EXERCISED OVER AN INTERVIEW. ! By Telegraph.— Preßi Association.— Copyright. - BERLIN, Bth January. Ihe press is exercised by an interview which has appeared in the London Daily News with Lord Lonedale, who represented tha Kaiser as Britain's warm friend and a great upholder of peace, having a horror of war. Lord Lonsdale added : "We havo no greater ally, and no one is more devoted to England." The Pan-German newspapers declare that Lord Lonsdale has insulted both the German nation and the Kaiser. The Radical newspaper Morgenpost assumes that the Kaiser used Lord Lonsdale as an unofficial ni«dium for a pacific utterance after the dangerous Morocco episode. The paper adds : — "Germans have experienced the disagreeable results of such utterances. What is really needed is a strong silent policy without speeches." PARIS, Bth January. j The Berlin correspondent of the Debats says Lord Lonsdale'6 statements have given anything but satisfaction in Germany, where there is variance in public opinion.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19120109.2.26.1

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume LXXXIII, Issue 7, 9 January 1912, Page 3

Word Count
166

GREAT UPHOLDER OF PEACE. Evening Post, Volume LXXXIII, Issue 7, 9 January 1912, Page 3

GREAT UPHOLDER OF PEACE. Evening Post, Volume LXXXIII, Issue 7, 9 January 1912, Page 3