TH#.TEUTON BULLIBSi ijf "p ' ■ If there is any doubt about rank, let the humbled civilian salute a Ger- „ iitaji private-' rather ffetialce a mistake, which will be avenged on the spqt—ky /what methods,.we can guess.It 5 is thi/'spirit 'whien makes a Briton inclined to vow that he will have no peace' with this swarm l of - blustering, braggart tyrants. so long aa he can stand ans see. It is. the., spirit of the > Zabern outrages, arid of numberless other' iniquitous scenes, which have occurred' in Germany durihg peace time. In some of i them German unarmed civilians have been spitted, at .a, wrord by the sword of some swashbuckling, halfdruiikeri bully," whose toesT had been trodden on, or whose Sfiowl'had been tittered at. And the megolomaniac who reigns at Potsdam has .decreed no punishTnesnt for s,uch red murders, because, fdrsoptji, 'it was 'tese- majes.te not to pay obeifekneo to the Kaiser 'a' unifonn, no' 'blatter what cowardly ruffian it might - clothe.-—"Australasian*'? ;
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Christchurch), Volume I, Issue 250, 25 November 1914, Page 6
Word Count
161Untitled Sun (Christchurch), Volume I, Issue 250, 25 November 1914, Page 6
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Acknowledgements
This newspaper was digitised in partnership with Christchurch City Libraries.