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DEPOSED KAISER EMBARRASSING GUEST TO HOLLAND.

PROPOSAL FOR RETURN OB INTERNMENT AS SOLDIER. Australian and N-Z. Cable Association. LONDON. Nov. 12.

The Amsterdam correspondent of the Daily Telegraph states that the Kaiser's arrival caused great excitement in Holland and much uneasiness to the authorities and general public. Many think the Kaiser and the Crown Prince should be Bent back or interned as German soldiers. The motor-cars evidently chose the tortuous Limberg route, where the frontier guards are far apart, thus escaping being challenged. The Kaiser reached Holland at 11 o'clock on Sunday morning. Count Bentinck is a Dutch subject, and has not taken part in the war, though he is an honorary Prussian cavalry captain. He has long been a close friend of the Hohenzollern familj. LONDON. Nov. 13. . The Hague correspondent of the Times, telegraphing on Sunday, states that the Kaiser, with his suite of ten and two court carriages, passed the Dutch frontier for Maastrich on Sunday morning. The greatest secrecy was observed at Mednechten, a popular summer resort The Kaiser's seclusion is zealously safeguarded.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19181114.2.30.16

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LV, Issue 17007, 14 November 1918, Page 6

Word Count
177

DEPOSED KAISER EMBARRASSING GUEST TO HOLLAND. New Zealand Herald, Volume LV, Issue 17007, 14 November 1918, Page 6

DEPOSED KAISER EMBARRASSING GUEST TO HOLLAND. New Zealand Herald, Volume LV, Issue 17007, 14 November 1918, Page 6