INTERESTING SIDELIGHTS.
NO ESSENTIAL CHANGE. VERBAL DEADLOCK. Received August 1, 12.40 p.m. LONDON, July 31. The Australian Associated Press correspondent at Geneva says : —The League Council met in the Disarmament Conference chamber, the delegates passing the glass case containing millions of signatures from all parts of the world affirming the desire for peace presented at .the Disarmament Conference in 1932. A picturesque figure was the bearded and diminutive Dr. Tecla Hawarist, the Abyssinian Minister at Pans. Though Abyssinia is not a member of the Council, both Dr. Hawarist and Professor Jeze. Abyssinia’s legal adviser, were invited to attend. The fact that Professor Jeze is a Frenchman il lust rates the extent to which Abyssinia is obliged to rely on foreigners to present her case to the world. The meeting produced no essential change in the situation. As Professor Jeze and Baron Aloisi each reiterated the conviction that the other s country was responsible for the temporary breakdown of the Conciliation Commission’s work, some formula hunting is indicated among the Powers mainly concerned before the Council reassembles to-morrow.
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Manawatu Standard, Volume LV, Issue 208, 1 August 1935, Page 7
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177INTERESTING SIDELIGHTS. Manawatu Standard, Volume LV, Issue 208, 1 August 1935, Page 7
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