AUSTRO-GERMANY.
GERMANY FEELING THE PINCH A BOASTFUL NAVAL OFFICER. I . London, Jan. ]. Baron Kaiserling, former naval aftache at the German Embassy and an old friend of the ex-Csar, who is attached to the Naval Mission to Petrograd, interviewed, admitted freely that Germany was feeling the pinch, but matters were not as bad as they were painted. There was a certain war weariness in Germany, but she could hold out a long time if necessary. America might be dangerous, but the U-boats would settle her. German merchant vessels had now free access to Russian waters, the People's Commissaires taking precautions to guarantee them against British submarines. The ' first German commercial squadron was expected in time for the Russian Christmas. THE KAISER'S NEW YEAR , _ ORDER. FORWARD TO FRESH VICTORIES. ENEMY WILL NOT SUCCEED. Eeuter Service. *; Jj£. s Received Jan. 2, 8.55 p.m. ""' / Amsterdam, Jan. 1. The Kaiser's new year army order 1 says: 'Germans on land, and sea achieved great deeds in 1017. The enemy still hopes, with the help of new allies, to beat you, and then to destroy for ever the world power we have so hardly won. They will not succeed; therefore, forward, with God, to fresh victories."
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Taranaki Daily News, 3 January 1918, Page 5
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199AUSTRO-GERMANY. Taranaki Daily News, 3 January 1918, Page 5
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