PEACE PACT
SOVIET WANTS TO SIGN.
BUT NO INVITATION. ■SOVIET'S FEELINGS HURT. ■ Cnitt’cl Bress Association —By Electric Telegrnjih ttopyi-ight.) (Australian Dress Association.) MOiSC’OiW, -A rig. 5. lilt© Government is hurt at not being asked to sign the Kellogg pact outlawing war. In a lengthy communication ty- the Press duel term intimateu that though he personally was convinced the pact was directed against .Russia, the Soviet 'Government was most anxious to sign. “Litvinoff proved brilliantly in December that the condemnation of Avar as an instrument of national policy is a figure of rhetoric, hiding the preparation of war as an instrument of coun-ter-revolution,” adds Oiiicherin. “Our Government wishes to eliminate the possibility of war of all kinds and considers it profoundly abnormal that these negotiations were carried out without its participation. ”
REPRESENTATIVE OF JAPAN
TOKIO, Aug. 5. Count Uchida, formerly Foreign AJiuister, has been appointed delegate for the signature of the anti-war pact at Paris.
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Bibliographic details
Hawera Star, Volume XLVII, 7 August 1928, Page 5
Word Count
154PEACE PACT Hawera Star, Volume XLVII, 7 August 1928, Page 5
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