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Show Declares Mis Father and Himself Are "Down and Out" I EX-KAISER B PAYING !:! Frederick William Quar-j ;( rded With Parent Re- gardiiig British I Attitude. ' I LONDON, Doc. 5. "You English Eng-lish clamor to get father and nic away from Holland. We are down -and out and my father is a broken fmnn. Isn't that enough punishment?" punish-ment?" the former German crown prince said In an Interview on the ' : island of Wleringen, where he is ; ', interned, with a correspondent of the Dally Mirror, i : Frederick William added that he always favored an agreement be. ' i ff tween Germany and Great Britain ! : ; and wished them to work together. A number of his best friends were In England and he only wished he ' could live there as a private citi-j citi-j zen. J J "I quarreled with my father in regard to Grca Britain," he con- tinued. "I told him the British M would be against us. He never f believed this and would not take I: 3 into account that possibility." 1 COPENHAGEN, Dec. 5. A dclcga-) dclcga-) j tion from the Berlin soldiers' and 15 workers' council has arrived at The Hague, a Berlin dispatch reports. The message indicates that its presence at The Netherlands capital has to do i with negotiations concerning former ! j. Emperor William in progress at the German legation in The Hague, the t nature of which is not stated. I ' PARIS, Dec. 5. Seven Germans, ; one of them a woman, who formerly : lived in Paris, have found means of f' returning here but have been discovered discov-ered and arrested. They had taken ji, advantage of the homeward movement ;. of prisoners and interned civilians! i . from Germany to smuggle themselves ' ;. Into France and make their way to , I- this city. Their plea was that they thought the existence of the armistice r, permitted their return. LONDON, Wedesnday, Dec. 4. , There will be no formal surrender of i German airplanes, as was at one time :.r expected, because it has been found Impracticable to assemble 2,000 alr-; alr-; planes at one place and it is doubt-i doubt-i ful whether Germany has a sufficient number of reliable pilots for that purpose. pur-pose. Hence the first surrender in ''. history of an air fleet is being affected affect-ed by piece meal. The Germans are ' shedding their wings in the course of retreat and the advancing Allies are . picking them up. i AMSTERDAM,. Wednesday, Dec. 4. 4 Kurt Eysner, the Bavarian premier, ; Is reported to have privately declared ; himself ready to resign when the na-,' na-,' tfonal assembly had regulated the ?' country's affairs, according to a Mu-: Mu-: nich didspatch. Addressing the soldiers' and work-men's work-men's council, Premier Eysner de- dared the Bavarian government was opposed to any idea of separation from Germany as a whole, the sccuri- : ty of which he regarded as obtainable I ' only by the creation of a federal I ' state. ;; PARIS, Dec. 5 (Havas) A number ; of former prominent leaders in Aus-1 Aus-1 trla-Hungary have arrived in Switzerland Switz-erland with large sums of money to . further a campaign of Bolshevism ; elsewhere than in Switzerland, the ,' Zurich correspondent of the Journal says he Iearn6 from a reliable source. '. Among the men are the former grand " admiral of the imperial fleet, a for- mer Austro-Hungarian foreign mln-: mln-: 'ster and a former member of the d Hungarian cabinet. The correspon-I correspon-I cent adds that other men are to be I sent to Alsace-Lorraine to spread it Bolshevism. |