CHINA AND JAPAN.
ADVOCATE OF UNION. CHINESE GENERAL'S SPEECH. Australian and N.Z. Cable Association. (Reed. 10.30 p.m.) NEW YORK. Dec. 3The correspondent of the New York Sun at Pekin . ates that the commander of the Chinese army in in a speech declared that the refusal of China to sign the Versailles Treaty was damaging to China, and the boycott of Japanese goods was ruining Japan. China and Japan were adjacent countries, and if they united they would be sufficiently powerful to overthrow the Western nations. LANDING AT FOOCHOW. APOLOGY DEMANDED. A. and N.Z. NEW YORK. Dec. 3. The Pekin correspondent of the New York Times states that the landing of Japanese troops at Foochow caused great excitement among the Chinese, who demand the recall of the Japanese Consul and a public apology. There is also a great deal of dissatisfaction at the action of the [Japanese Consul at Tientsin, who j demanded the removal of the chairman of the Chinese Chamber of Commerce because of the boycott of the Japanese.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume LVI, Issue 17337, 8 December 1919, Page 7
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170CHINA AND JAPAN. New Zealand Herald, Volume LVI, Issue 17337, 8 December 1919, Page 7
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