NOT HOPEFUL
GERMANS DETERMINED TO RESIST.
BERLIN, 14th June. Delegates from all parties in the occupied territory met on the Ruhr border and decided against giving up passive resistance. Attacks on French soldiers and sabotage are increasing, and the French measures of surveillance are therefore stricter. Numerous arrests have been made of people found in the streets during the night. The French confiscated fifty thousand million marks in the Reichsbank at Dortmund. To-da-y has been a frantic day jjn the Bourse. Marks fell to 500,000 t<s the £, and 112,000 to the dollar. The only reason occurring to financial experts is the supposed disposition of the British Qoarerninent to compromise with France, rendering the situation more unfavourable to Germany. There is also a I ear that the Anglo-French discussion may continue for weeks, which would mean disaster, owing to Germany's economic condition.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CV, Issue 142, 16 June 1923, Page 7
Word Count
141NOT HOPEFUL Evening Post, Volume CV, Issue 142, 16 June 1923, Page 7
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