CHINESE INSULTED.
(To the Editor v -“N.Z, Times.”) Sir, —Ten days' havVeitfpsed'' Afld no support has been' given my protest under the above heading, not even by the great corporations who have benefited so largely from their business relations with China. i Mr Beauchamp beckons art airy ‘ Unger, ' ' and ’ 'says, “Come here to Tom Tiddler’s ground,” but what if the Chinese were to say they would permit this only on payment of a deposit Equivalent to fTOO,' and that once out of the' Treaty ports all .New Zealanders would become amenable to Chinese lawp X do not know who wrote your loading article, “Tha. Moslem Menace,” of January 18th, bnt all thinking New Zealanders should read it very carefully; it is written either by someone who knows, or who has collected his material from a reliable source. I am sending copies of this correspondence to one of my B ritish-Chineee friends in Hongkong who long ago forecasted that the white man’s stupidity and arrogance would give the Japanese their opportunity. If the white man wishes to maintain his foothold in the East, now is the time to “ca’ canny.”—Yours, etc., MAJOR FARN KWAI. "Wellington, January 19th, 1923.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTIM19230120.2.90.1
Bibliographic details
New Zealand Times, Volume L, Issue 11423, 20 January 1923, Page 7
Word Count
197CHINESE INSULTED. New Zealand Times, Volume L, Issue 11423, 20 January 1923, Page 7
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