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ASSURING PROSPECTS

PRESIDENT HARDING' S HOPES,

NEW YORK, 4th Jiily. President Harding, referring in, ft speech at Marion to foreign relations, said : "All is well with our international relations. They are secured to-day i»ith more assuring prospects of peace than ever before in the. history of the. Republic. New guarantees have recently been added by the very process of exchanging viewpoints and bringing the spokesmen of the great nations to the conference table, where they resolved to do together those finer and nobler thinge which no one nation could do alone. We cannot be aloof from the world, but we can impress the world with American ideals. Even' Russia, towards whom we piaintain an attitude ofv aloofness, aave in sjTn.ipia.thy,, looks upon America as ;„» friend and exemplar."-

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19220706.2.48.3

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CIV, Issue 5, 6 July 1922, Page 7

Word Count
127

ASSURING PROSPECTS Evening Post, Volume CIV, Issue 5, 6 July 1922, Page 7

ASSURING PROSPECTS Evening Post, Volume CIV, Issue 5, 6 July 1922, Page 7

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