PACT OF PARIS.
“The Pact of Paris opens wide the gate to international peace. To outer at that gate and to travel the path to peace there are several things which the responsible loaders of civilisation should quickly do. These oonsitute a veritable Programme of Pence:— “To maintain (amongst oilier tliiugA to multiply those contracts, intellectual. moral and spiritual, which so greatly promote international sympathy and understanding, and which at tin l same time advance national pride an dsatisfaction. Science, literature, the tine arts, together with visits by representative and guidnig personalities, are the most potent instruments with which to develop and to safeguard the International Mind All this the Pact of Paris suggests and makes possible. ft is a Programme of Peace for the constructive statesmanship of to-day and to-mor-row."—Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler President of Columbia University, in a statement issued hv the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
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Hokitika Guardian, 3 January 1929, Page 1
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149PACT OF PARIS. Hokitika Guardian, 3 January 1929, Page 1
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