OCR Text |
Show ? ICE UNWILLING I jfl PROPOSE PEACE nCAire says fight will pNTlNUE UNTIL GERMANS h SUE FOR PEACE. xt. 5 ar That France Does Not Want i ctrmany to Tender Peace, But it jnts Her Adversary to Ask for Peace. "t NjI1(.y President Poincaire, in an :vss' here Sunday, responded to '-uuiy'fi declaration regarding peace 01 -ineJ i ,ne German reply to the 8S" ;rifan note. iY.ince does not want Germany to ifr peace," said the president, "but jjher adversary to ask for peace." -je president then made known ,-lv tli e only kind of peace accept-j accept-j to France. The address was de-rfi de-rfi at the Moltitor garrison be- i large number of Lorraine refu- ;.; to whom the president, after ex-It ex-It .XS:nj his sympathies and renewing ,r - ises of solicitude and protection, di- I ' France will not expose her sons to ; driers of new aggressions. The -.m! empires, haunted by remorse Laving brought on the war, are !iy the indignation and hatred -v have siirred up in mankind, are today to make the world he-!c' he-!c' .;e that the entente allies alone are be ;;ons'Uiie for the prolongation of 06 Cities a dull irony which will de- -.,( none. 30 Neither directly nor indirectly have .: enemies offered us peace. But wo not want them to offer it to us; want them to ask it of us. We do . want to submit to their condi-we condi-we want to impose ours on them. :do not want a peace which would 'e ;:e imperial Germany with the ' r to recommence the war and v? Europe eternally menaced. We ,:t peace which receives from re--ed rights serious guarantees of ..iijrium and stability. p So long as that peace is not as-:-i to us; so long as our enemies cot recognize themselves as van-.jjeJ, van-.jjeJ, we will not cease to fight." |