ALLIES’ TERMS.
ECONOMIC STRANGULATION. GERMAN MINISTER’S VIEW. By Telegraph.—Press Assn. —Copyright. Amsterdam, Feb. 3. The , German Minister of Home Affairs,’ addressing Majority Socialists at Cologne, declared that the economic and financial demands of. the Allies meant the economic strangulation of Germany. They should/ not decline them all in a mad fit, but should try to convince the Allies that they were doing what they could. FIRMNESS DEMANDED. VIEW OF FRENCH NEWSPAPER. Paris, Feb. 3. Le Temps, insisting on firm measures witih Germany, suggests that the Allies should immediately take possession of the German customs in respect of the zones on the left bank of the Rhine, and establish customs cordons separating the occupied from the unoccupied territories. Le Temps adds: “Germany proposes to talk; we propose to act.” INDEMNITY TOO SMALL. FEDERAL PREMIER’S VIEW. Sydiv-y. Feb. 4. •Mr. Hughes, referring to the Allies’ demands, says Germany complained similarly when the amount was fixed at £5,000.000,000. The only fault was that Germany was asked to pay too little
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Taranaki Daily News, 5 February 1921, Page 5
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167ALLIES’ TERMS. Taranaki Daily News, 5 February 1921, Page 5
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