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PEACE TALK.

"AN HONORABLE PEACE." DELUDING THE AUSTRIAN'S. | Received Sept. 10, 9.35 p.m. London, Sept. 9. Tha Daily Telegraph's Milan correspondent states that Hussarek, the Austrian Premier, at a recent conference with the Governor \)f Tyrol, assured him that Austria-Hungary would soon be able to conclude an honorable peace. The Governor invited details, and Hussarek cryptically replied that he could not say more than that great events would soon happen which would end the war. The correspondent adds that probably the statement is nothing more than a move in the peace offensive, designed to delude the people of Austro-Hungary and to throw dust in the Entente's eyes. A CUNNING MOVE. UPSET BY. LLOYD GEORGE. Received Sept. 10, 9.35 p.m. Copenhagen, Sept. 10. The Vorwaerts discloses that in the spring of 1918 the Germans in Switzerland attempted to arrange negotiations between German and British members of Parliament. Representatives of Conservatives, Liberals, and Laborites were 1 to meet delegates from the Centre Party, the German Liberals, and the Majorit Socialists, the Germans being represent ed by Ehrenbach, Hussman, and Eb"i t. The Germans proposed to make the Reichstag peace resolution and 14 paragraphs of President Wilson's manifesto the basis of negotiations, but suddenly they came to nothing through Mr. Lloyd George's personal intervention. — Aus.-'N.Z. Cable Assoc. A CARDINAL'S VIEWS. London, Sept. 9. Cardinal Bourne, when unveiling a. shrine, said: "We are fighting for Christian principles against Pagan and antiChristian principles. Do not be misled by some of the pernicious things occagionaly said and written about peace. Do not be carried away by the formula of 'no indemnities nor annexations,' because justice may demand both, and peace without justice is not worth having."—Aus. N.Z. Cable Assoc.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19180911.2.23.5

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Taranaki Daily News, 11 September 1918, Page 5

Word count
Tapeke kupu
283

PEACE TALK. Taranaki Daily News, 11 September 1918, Page 5

PEACE TALK. Taranaki Daily News, 11 September 1918, Page 5

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