“INTELLIGENCE ON THE MARCH.”
“ In terms of the long perspectives of history the ten years since the World War are more significant than those of the war itself; for in this.decade the world has come to grips at last with a problem much more vita 1 than the readjustment of European empires,” says Professor James T. Shotwoll. of Columbia University, in the “ New York Herald Tribune.” “ The way is slowly opening before us by which tlie field of international affairs will be opened up to tlie same kind of political action as is useo within the State to ensure both progress and the maintenance of rights. It will not open all at once! It will open first when nations’ interests run together; but the thing which makes these interests develop is the very tiling which has changed the nature of war. Science, in its control of the forces of nature, is breaking down the world-old harriers of time and space and making us interested in the'maintenance of peace between other nations.” —W—" 11 ■— l
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Hokitika Guardian, 7 February 1929, Page 8
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174“INTELLIGENCE ON THE MARCH.” Hokitika Guardian, 7 February 1929, Page 8
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