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Further Details.

Telegraph Press Association Copyright Received Sept 5, 7.46 a m. Washington, September 4. The Mikado thanked President Roosevelt for the distinguished share he took in the establishment of peace, based on principles essential in the permanent welfare and tranquihty of the Far East. St. Petersbubg, September 4. The clergy m Odessa are not al lowed to refer to the peace, and the citizens were compelled to remove the decorations. London, September 4. The Times' Bt. Petersburg correspondent reports that the Czar, and not M. de Witte, was the real negotiator of peace. De Witte and Count Lamsdorff would have preferred the repurchase of Saghalien, but the Czar's will prevailed, hence the meaning of de Witte's and Count Lamsdorff s telegrams to the Czar,

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/FS19050905.2.10.2

Bibliographic details

Feilding Star, Volume XXVII, Issue 36, 5 September 1905, Page 2

Word Count
125

Further Details. Feilding Star, Volume XXVII, Issue 36, 5 September 1905, Page 2

Further Details. Feilding Star, Volume XXVII, Issue 36, 5 September 1905, Page 2

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