GERMAN MEMORIES
Rec. Nov. 26, 7.20 p.m. Rugby, Nov. 25. In a further speech last nig'ht, Sir John Simon, said that France was most deeply devoted to peace. What made her hesitate to reduce her armaments was the memory of the repeated invasion of her eastern oorders. AcrqsS the frontier was another great people also nursing a memory ^ memory of humiliation, defeat and disarmament imposed on them by a treaty which did not need tP make that disarmament conditionai upon the disarmament of others, but certainly recorded the intention ox the victors to follow with a disarmament of their own. Sutton of Germans cherished these bitter memories and tRey had a_ leadei, who whatever one might _ thmk m his methods, embodied their claim to dignity and a'status pf equality.
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Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 3, Issue 699, 27 November 1933, Page 5
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129GERMAN MEMORIES Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 3, Issue 699, 27 November 1933, Page 5
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