SOUTH AFRICA'S TROUBLES.
' - -—— ' v " HEItTZOQ AND THE NATIVES. I .. CAPETOWN, June 25. s'j i : l! General Hertzog, loader, of the. Nationallist's; speaking at Carolina, after reiterating iS .. his warning against violence, declared that Pft'all' that the Nationalists were seeking ; could and would be achioved by constituv. tional means alone. South Africa had had quite enough of armed protests and unarmed rebellions. Nothing need bo till feared in - the Free State, and ho hoped $ that the Transvaal was imbued by the same spirit. ■«. / 'v„ , A Johannesburg message states that dis- ■' quieting rumours had v been circulated recently > regarding industrial . unrest. among $' m i natives. ■* An indubitable authority ' on native masters, interviewed by Renter, eaid that 'there, was no need for hysterical feeling among the whites on the subject. $V He felt that the leaders of the movement ■'j who' were supposed to be fomenting ; • troubles would not act detrimentally to '-I ' native invests, and he did not doubt the ill inherent- loyalty of the natives throughout _ South Africa. - • 'iT ' * ■
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New Zealand Herald, Volume LV, Issue 16894, 5 July 1918, Page 6
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168SOUTH AFRICA'S TROUBLES. New Zealand Herald, Volume LV, Issue 16894, 5 July 1918, Page 6
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