Papers and Documents relating to the Foreign Relations of Hungary, Volume 1, 1919–1920 (Budapest, 1939)

Documents

79Ç 1920 my salary, withheld since January i, 1919; that I claim com­pensation for my private property taken from me by Czech soldiers ; that I claim permission to take my chatte's which still may be found at my residence; that my faithful employees for whom I myself have created a pension fund should receive the pension to which they are entitled. In the course of one and a half years I have received no reply to these statements, 'neither have I received a com­mand to resign. Consequently, I do not consider that I have resigned my position". No. 854. 8363/pol. The Minister for Foreign Affairs, Count Emeric Csáky, to the Repre­sentative of the Hungarian Government in Paris, Mr. Praznovszky. [TRANSLATION] Code telegram No. 560. BUDAPEST, December 7, 1920. According to the December 4th issue of the Neue Freie Presse, the Conference of Ambassadors ordered frontier recti­fications in favour of Austria in the Abstall valley and in the Thaya triangle. You are requested to find out, if possible, the circumstances of this decision. No. 855. 8366/pol. The Minister for Foreign Affairs, Count Emeric Csáky, to the Repre­sentative of the Hungarian Government in Paris, Mr. Praznovszky. [TRANSLATION] Code telegram No. 562. BUDAPEST, December 7, 1920. Discussion of the Trianon Treaty in French Chamber of Deputies should be used to repeat with emphasis everywhere, including the press, and at every opportunity that Count Tisza opposed the war. For documentary evidence, you may refer to Diplomatishe Aktenstücke, Vorgeschichte des Krieges 1914 t Ergänzungen, Rotbuch, Pt. I, published by the Austrian Foreign

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