AMERICAN ITEMS.
AUSTRALIAN AND N.Z. CABLE ASSOCIATION. THE WORLD AND DEMOCRAT. (ltoreircd this day at 8.30 a.m.) NEW YORK, July 26. A message from Boston states that All’ Woodrow Wilson, iu an article wiitteu for a magazine, arraigns capitalistic society, asking whether it lias not exploited tlm strength and brains of men for its own purposes. Mr Wilson adds:—“ The world has beon made safe for democracy, and there need now he no fear of any such mad design, such as was entertained by the insolvent and ignorant Jlolienzollerns. Their counsellors may prevail against it, hut democracy has not yet made the world safe against irrational revolution. That supreme task, which is nothing less than the salvation of civilisation, now faces democracy, insistent and imperative. There is no escaping it, unless everything we have built tit) is presently to fall into ruin about, us, and the United States, as the greatest of democracies, must undertake it.”
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Hokitika Guardian, 28 July 1923, Page 3
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156AMERICAN ITEMS. Hokitika Guardian, 28 July 1923, Page 3
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