THOUGHTS FOR THE TIMES
Boundary Problems in Europe. Tlie frontiers of Central Europe were readjusted by the Powers professedly on nationalist principles, but the application of those principles was refused in the special ease of Austria and Germany. Of course, anyone can see that the addition of a large territory, with a population of several millions, would make Germany more powerful than she is, and would go a long way toward recompensing her for the loss of Alsace and Lorraine. But it seems that this possibility of danger is more than outweighed by the certainty of trouble in the future through the denial to the Austrians of those national rights granted freely to the Northern and Southern Slavs. —Auckland paper.
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Hokitika Guardian, 1 December 1927, Page 2
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120THOUGHTS FOR THE TIMES Hokitika Guardian, 1 December 1927, Page 2
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