GERMAN NEWS.
lUSTHALIAN AND N'.Z. CAULE ASSOCIATION. ./ EBERT’S .LAST RESOURCE. LONDON, Nov. 25. '! iio Berlin correspondent of the •‘Times” states Herr Jorros failed to feint a cabinet. President Ebeit lias thereby been convinced that a Coalition Government in Germany is at present impossible, and lie sees only one possibility, the formation of a Government of experts in business, resolved to subjugate personal and political consideration. and [nit their whole strength into satisfying the needs of the country. He has again appealed to Doctor Albert. w ho has accepted the task of forming such a Government. GERMANY’S RKALISATION. LONDON. November 20. The ‘‘Morning Post’s" Berlin correspondent says: Herr Stiesematm luade a significant admission in his last speech in the Reichstag. He said that sii • lost the v.ar. "We have for years,” he said, ‘deceived ourselves regarding the ei.nsequen.es of the last war. We now see these consequences in all their tf vi ihleness before lis.” HELP FOR GERMAN TRADE UNIONS. NEW, YORK. November 25. Mi Samuel Gompers, the Piesidont. has approved a plan of the American Federation of Labour members requestin'-' that three million shall contribute ten pel* cent ol a. day’s pay ill supI ort of the German Trade Unions. It is estimated that probably three million dollar', can he secured in this manner. being sufficient to oiler material aid to the German bodies, which have sent appeals to American unions. Mr Comics says he feels the contribution would be mu only a liumauita; ian act. commendable in itself, but will prove a distinctive aid in the cause et deli 10cracv in Germany, since tin? Gorman unions are to he considered hanier against both Monarchism in that country.
STR ESE MA NN’ S R EICURTA(I ATTITUDE. LONDON, November 24. The Berlin correspondent of tho “Daily Telegraph” states that ex-Cltan-edlor Stresemann, after expressing the hope that the foreign loan could yet be availed of. informed journalists that his Cabinet without the support of an unambiguous majority in the Reichstag, would be prejudiced in negotiations with foreign powers. Ho had, there* lore sought the open fight. The Chancellor dealt at length with the return of the Crown Prince, who. lie said, had been greatly maligned abroad. "He was really a man of mature intelligence, and with a strong sense of responsibility.”
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Hokitika Guardian, 27 November 1923, Page 2
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379GERMAN NEWS. Hokitika Guardian, 27 November 1923, Page 2
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