Abstract

Finance

February 18, 1915 issue

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A moderate decline in prices on the stock exchange, was ascribed by every one to the situation raised by the U.S. government's note to Germany. The tenor of that note even its intimations of what might be involved if the recent threat of the Berlin Admiralty were to be carried out, and neutral passengers and crew sunk in the war zone, was unquestionably approved. But the soberness of over-the-holiday comments by the foreign offices, and some of the German newspapers, gave a not unnatural color of hesitation to the markets.

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STOCK exchanges; SECURITIES -- Prices; GOVERNMENT publications; GOVERNMENT & the press; GERMANY; UNITED States
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