TRUMAN’S HOPES OF SETTLEMENT
(Received September 3, at 10.30 p.m.) WASHINGTON, September 2. He was still hopeful of eventual permanent peace, President Truman said to-day, speaking on the third anniversary of thg Japanese surrender. He had hoped that there would have been a final -peace settlement by now. The United States was still working for that peace, and eventually would get it. Asked whether anything had developed in the Moscow talks, on which he based his optimism about peace, President Truman replied that he could not comment on those talks, but, at a later date, he believed that the press would realise that he knew what he was talking about.
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Bibliographic details
Grey River Argus, 4 September 1948, Page 5
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110TRUMAN’S HOPES OF SETTLEMENT Grey River Argus, 4 September 1948, Page 5
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