24 AUGUST 1907, Page 1

M. Clemenceau, who has been staying at Carlsbad, motored over

to Marienbad on Wednesday to lunch with King Edward. Coming so soon after the King's meetings with the Emperor of Austria and the German Emperor, the interview has naturally excited a good deal of attention. M. Clemencean very properly declined to make any detailed public communi- cation as to the interview, but it may be safely inferred that King Edward was in a position to assure the French Premier that the crisis in Morocco had neither affected the cordiality of the entente with Britain, nor disquieted Germany. That, at least, is a legitimate deduction from M. Clemenceau's statement that he carried away from the interview " the impression that there are the brightest possible prospects of undisturbed peace."