GERMANY .
DEMONSTRATIONS AGAINST AMERICANS. MILITARY DISPERSE MOB. Received May 26, 1.10 a.m. New York, May 24. According to the United Press' Paris correspondent, a crowd of 15,000, the majority Socialists, gathered in front of the Hotel Adlon, Berlin,' where the Americans are staying, and shouted: "Down with the Americans! Down with Wilson!" The tumult grew to such proportions that the military were called out, and dispersed the crowd, who then gathered in front of the Reichstag building, where Richard Fischer delivered a speech, in which he said that Germany would not sign the Peace Treaty. The demonstrators then returned to the front of the Adlon Hotel, jeering, hooting, and shouting: "Americans are robbers!" The demonstrations against the peace terms continued in other parts of the city.— Aus.-N.Z. Cable Assn.
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Taranaki Daily News, 26 May 1919, Page 5
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129GERMANY. Taranaki Daily News, 26 May 1919, Page 5
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