BRITAIN AND GERMANY.
"BRITAIN'S BEST EMEND." KAISER WILHELM'S PACIFIC INTENTIONS. / GERMAN PRESS EXERCISED. By O.blf^—Press Association—Copyright. Received 8, 10.10 p.m. Berlin, January 8. The press is exercised by the Daily News' interview with Lord Lonsdale, who represented the Kaiser as Britain's warm friend and a great upholder of peace, having a horror of war. He added that in the Kaiser Britain had no greater ally and no one more devoted to England. The pan-German newspapers declare that Lord Lonsdale has insulted both the German nation and the Kaiser. The Radical Morgen Post assumes the Kaiser used Lord Lonsdale as an unofficial medium for a pacific utterance after the dangerous Morocco episode, and adds that Germans had disagreeable results from such utterances. What was really needed was a strong and silent policy, without speeches. DISSATISFACTION IN GERMANY. Received 8, 10 p.m. Paris, January 8. The Berlin correspondent of the Debats says Lord Lonsdale's statements have given anything but satisfaction in Germany, being at variance with public opinion.
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Taranaki Daily News, Volume LIV, Issue 183, 9 January 1912, Page 5
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166BRITAIN AND GERMANY. Taranaki Daily News, Volume LIV, Issue 183, 9 January 1912, Page 5
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