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FEELING IN GERMANY

151TTERNESS REMA INS

Australian l'rcss Association.

(Received 22nd March, 11 a.m.)

BERLIN, 21st March.

The newspapers iv their, obituary reference:} to tho lato Marshal Foch, insist on his hostility to Germany after the Armistice, though they commend his ability and devotion to duty.

The "Allogmoine Zeitung" says: "Thanks to his personal energy, he warded oft' German successes more than once, and saved the situation for tho Allies."

The "Lokal Anzeiger" says: "Much as the German people would like to do justice to Foch's greatness, they can only look on the dead soldier with bitterness of heart."

The "Tageblatt" says that after the peaco Foch continued to wage war on a defenceless people.

"No historian will ever bo ablo to say whether tho hundred days of Foch's command signified tho Allies' victory, or tho futo which Germany wns no longer ablo to resist," says tho "Boersen Courier." "The fa<it that ho gathered tho fruits of a decision already irrevocable when he became Com-rnandor-ia-Chief does not minimise his ability."

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19290322.2.77.8

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 67, 22 March 1929, Page 11

Word Count
170

FEELING IN GERMANY Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 67, 22 March 1929, Page 11

FEELING IN GERMANY Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 67, 22 March 1929, Page 11

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