PEACE IN THE PACIFIC.
SIGNIFICANCE OF NEW ERA.
! THE CLASH OF INTERESTS. (Received 11.30 a.m.) WASHINGTON. August 22. According to a dispatch from Tokyo, the Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr Hanihar, in a speech, said it is high time for people on both sides of the Pacific to awaken to the significance of the new era and to ponder with deadly : earnestness things concerning them j jointly. Irritation on both sides, if | permitted to continue indefinitely, will create an atmosphere which may lead almost to anything. No vital interest either to Japan or the United States is necessarily iirvolved in the Japanese question in California. We must go straightway to the root of every antiJapanese and anti-American agitation with the axe of ruthless publicity and education, and if both parties are determined upon a square deal we may expect lasting peace and friendship on the Pacific—(A. and NX Cable.)"
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Auckland Star, Volume LI, Issue 201, 23 August 1920, Page 5
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149PEACE IN THE PACIFIC. Auckland Star, Volume LI, Issue 201, 23 August 1920, Page 5
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