THE GREEK SURRENDER.
ALLEGATION OF TREASON. CHALLENGE TO A DUEL. Australian and N.Z. Cable Association. (Received 1 a.m.) ATHENS. September 17. George Melas, ex-secretary to King Constantine, in a letter challenging M. Streit, the King's adviser, to a duel, declares that the Kavala catastrophe is the natural consequence of treason due to the Germanophile policy of which, he asserts, M. Streit was the first apostle.
DUTCH PRESS OPINION. UNVEILED SCEPTICISM. (Received 12.5 a.m.) Renin. AMSTERDAM. September 16. The Dutch newspaper Handelsblad treats the reasons given by Germany for the surrender of the Greek troops _ at Kavala with unveiled scepticism. It says it is unlikely that the troops had much affection for the Bulgarians, and suggests that they have been interned in Germany because they constituted a danger to the Bulgarians. The Telegraaf takes a similar view.
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New Zealand Herald, Volume LIII, Issue 16337, 18 September 1916, Page 6
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136THE GREEK SURRENDER. New Zealand Herald, Volume LIII, Issue 16337, 18 September 1916, Page 6
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