THE EUROPEAN SITUATION
FRANCE AND GERMANY. By Electric Telegraph.—Copyright. United Press Association. Paris, September 12. Tho importance of the German proposals centres in Morocco. Tho other issues previously raised are placed in tho background. “The Temps” states that Europe is weary of Having Gorman pretensions dinned in its cars. France has made naval, military, and financial advances since'l9os, and is now ready to say “No” to any attempt to extract intolerable concessions. Berlin, September 12. The Bourse panic has subsided. The president of the Pan-Gorman League, at a moating at Dusseldorf, made a vehement address, denouncing tho political surrender of Morocco to. France. He said that the so-called compensation in the Congo corresponds neither with the wishes of the Gorman people nor the necessities of the German Government. , ! i.r The “Lokal Anzeiger” professes to have special ground for stating that Germany’s proposals are not a demand for special rights ol any kind in Morocco. The main question is security against Franco monopolising' public works, mining, and trade interests. The Social Democrat Congress at Jena urgently protested at the attempt to provoke a man-murdering war. The o'niy persons interested are colonial pirate’s, Chauvinists, and the manufacturers of war materials. Many delegates accused the leaders of the party of hesitating to join the proletariat. Other countries wore, protesting at the Moroccan adventure.
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXI, Issue 24, 13 September 1911, Page 5
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220THE EUROPEAN SITUATION Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXI, Issue 24, 13 September 1911, Page 5
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