HUNGARY AND PEACE
EXCHANGE OF THOUGHTS WITH AMERICA (Rec. January 26, 11.20 p.m.) Amsterdam, January 25. Count Tisza, alluding in the Hungarian Chamber of Deputies to President Wilson's speech, said the Central Powers sympathised with any effort to reestablish peace, therefore- he was inclined to continue "to exchange peace thoughts with the American Government. The Entente aimed at dividing' Austria and Turkey, proving that the Entente was the real obstacle to peace. ■The Entente's avowed war aims showed that the Entente wanted peace- with conquest, making an unbridgable gulf between the Central Powers' and the Entente's viewpoint, and-added that the existence of the Austro-Hungarian Government offered the- best guarantee of free development on the principle of nationality in South-Eastern Europe.— Aus.-N.Z. Cable Assn.
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Dominion, Volume 10, Issue 2988, 27 January 1917, Page 9
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123HUNGARY AND PEACE Dominion, Volume 10, Issue 2988, 27 January 1917, Page 9
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