THOUGHTS FOR THE TIMES.
“A Nkw SrilKitK Foa Tin: Bi mnkshMan .Mind.” “Diplomacy—tlie last s* ronghoh! ol a privileged class—is passing out ol their hands into those ol men who have been trained in business rat her than diplomacy. It is perhaps not mere coincidence that at the present time in Washington the British, German, aim Dalian Ambassadors and tlie Swiss and Swedish Ministers are tilling their diplomatic appointments, performing 1 benduties with success and to the saUslaetion alike of their own and the American Government. The war was to" great test of diplomacy, and under that test diplomacy broke. It iieitliet toiesnw war nor was able in prevent war; il was stricken with paralysis during the war. The peopl" dimly recognised that modern diplomacy wa - an archaic institution; liter could not scran but they could break the tradition as the first step towards reform.” Sir A. Maurice l,e>v. in lire “New York Time-.”
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Hokitika Guardian, 6 October 1923, Page 2
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154THOUGHTS FOR THE TIMES. Hokitika Guardian, 6 October 1923, Page 2
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