GERMANY AND FRANCE.
THE MOROCCAN QUESTION. LONDON, June 26. The Berlin correspondent of The Time* says that the fact that M. Rouvier communicated to the other Powers his note to Prince Bulow on Moroccan affairs created uneasiness in Berlin. Prince Bulow wouUJ prefer that his statements alone should be available for the information of the Powers. June 27. There is a prospect of an early FrancoGerman agreement on the Moroccan question. PARIS, June 26. M. Berteaux, Minister of War, speaking at the General Hoche anniversary at Versailles, declared that the army would be equal to any task imposed on it, whatever might happen. BERLIN, June 26. The organ of the Prussian Junkers (the Prussian aristocratic party) claims, even if the/German colonies and foreign trads were lost in the event of war with Great Britain and France, that France would be completely conquered and exposed to ruinous conditions, unless England restored everything she had gained, and more, in order to secure France as an ally.
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Otago Witness, Issue 2677, 5 July 1905, Page 49
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164GERMANY AND FRANCE. Otago Witness, Issue 2677, 5 July 1905, Page 49
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