JAPAN’S EYES ON NEW ZEALAND
AUTHOR’S PREMONITION (United Press Assn.—Telegraph Copyright.) London, June 9. “Japan naturally looks to New Zealand as an ideal colony,” declares Major S. E. G. Ponder in “Sun on the Summer Seas,” published by Stanley and Paul. “The future of the Dominion is pregnant with tragedy, and the mere thought of domination by the yellow races makes one shudder,” he adds. “What can be done? The answer is: ‘Nothing,’ written in letters of blood on a background of greyness made up by the distant misery of New Zealand, which is safe only as long as the Empire lasts. “America has not been beaten on the sea. Japan has already more than a sporting chance of winning a naval battle against America.”
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Southland Times, Issue 22913, 11 June 1936, Page 5
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125JAPAN’S EYES ON NEW ZEALAND Southland Times, Issue 22913, 11 June 1936, Page 5
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