Germany
THE STARVING POLICY.
GERMANY’S RETALIATION AND THE PRISONERS OF WAR.
United Press Association. (Received 8.25 a.m.) Amsterdam, February 9.
Tlig Cologne Gazette says: “Mr Jhurchill and his satellites have not •onsidered what the policy of starvng the Germans must lead to. A Ve have 600,000 prisoners of war. The rart of Belgian and Northern France .vhich is in our occupation contains a population of 11,000,000, and if it comes to starving, the subjects of the hostile countries will starve first.”
FLOUR AND BREAD IN CER-
MANY.
(Received 8.45 a.m.)
London, February 9
The German Federal Council adopted a regulation allowing municipalities to compel persons to divulge the amount of flour in their posse ision under one hundred kilogrammes, and the expropriation of any quantity exceeding twenty-five kilogrammes. Cards have been distributed to householders in Greater Berlin entitling them to purchase bread proportionate to their families.
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXV, Issue 33, 10 February 1915, Page 5
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146Germany Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXV, Issue 33, 10 February 1915, Page 5
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