GREECE'S DUPLICITY.
ALLIES BECOMING IMPATIENT. FRANCE AND RUSSIA SPEAK OUT. LONDON, November 15. The Daily Telegraph's Paris correspondent says that the Entente will soon be talcing important decisions regarding Greece. France is now determined net to tolerate further temporising from King Constantine, and the slightest anti-neutral proceedings by Greece at Salonika will be met with severe measures. PETROGRAD, November 15. The , newspapers prominently discuss Greece's attitude. , There is a consensus of opinion that if Constantine's advisers contemplate fresh manoeuvres against Serbia the only course is for the Quadruple Entente to remind M. Skouloudis that Athens is not beyond the reach of the Allies' iEgean fleet. WATCHING THE LANDING. GERMAN OFFICERS ESCORTED. SPECIAL MISSION TO GREECE. (Times and Sydney Sun Services.) LONDON, November 15. Four German officers, including Baron Falkenhausen and Prince von Bulow's son, arrived at Salonika and observed the work of the Ariglo-French forces. They motored to Zetenlik, where the allied troops were encamped. High Greek officers gave them every attention. They subsequently departed for Athens in a Greek torpedoboat. They constitute the special German mission for the immediate establishment, under German tutelage, of active relations between the Cabinets of Constantinople, Sofia,- Bucharest, and Athens, and are bearing King Ferdinand's explicit declaration to King Constantine of the friendly intentions of the Bulgars, guaranteed by Germany, and another stating that Rumania, is remaining neutral. The Allies' landing of troops at Salonika has been carried on since November 1 with feverish haste. Enormous quantities of war material and troops have been landed , .
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Otago Daily Times, Issue 16543, 17 November 1915, Page 5
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251GREECE'S DUPLICITY. Otago Daily Times, Issue 16543, 17 November 1915, Page 5
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