SWEDEN.
BROKEN ASSURANCES. LORD ROBERT CECIL'S VIEWS. [ Received Sept. 16, 5.5 p.ni ] London, Sept. 15. Lord Robert Cecil, interviewed, said Sweden'.-; real impropriety was sending cypher messages for Germany. Sweden hai broken her assurances .given to Britain in 1315. He hoped further revelations would not show that Germany had extensively used *Swedi^ 1 i diplomats in the same way as in the Argentine. THE LUXBURG SENSATION. GERMAN COMMENTS. HOW TO DEAL WITH THE CULPRIT. Received Sept. IG, 5.5 p.m. Amsterdam, Sept. 15. Genran newspapers have published Count Luxburg's telegrams, which have caused a sensation and some dissatisfaction, especially in Socialist circles. The Vossiche Zeitung says the best thing to do is to sink Luxburg "without a trace." A telegram from the Berlin Foreign Secretary has asked Argentina to grant a safe conduct to Count Luxburg to travel to <Berlin and explain the telegrams. DISMISSAL OF FOREIGN OFFICE SECRETARY. New York. Septi 14. It is announced that the first secretary of the Swedish Foreign Office has licen dismissed.
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Taranaki Daily News, 17 September 1917, Page 5
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167SWEDEN. Taranaki Daily News, 17 September 1917, Page 5
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