NOT DEPOSED
AFRICAN CHIEF “A THOROUGHLY BAD BUSINESS” [United Pi'esa Association—By Electric Xb-icgtapn—(Jofyr'gtU/.j (Received at 11.-±5 p.m., Se.pt. ’loth.) LLOiMIUA, bop. id. Newspapers emphasise that Ouiel T.meiiecli nas not eon deposed, but suspoiiueu, (luring His Majesty's pleasure. iur Stanley, south Airman High Commissioner, is now in London and will have a consultation with Jlr J. H. Thomas regarding the matter. The “Daily Herald” describes the affair as “a. thoroughly bad business,” and further says that “doubtlessly Nazi minded Britishers will rejoice that Admiral Evans, of H.M.S. Broke, taught tin. nigger a h-sson,” but the decision will long be remembered by the people of Bechuamxlaud, who once had a- childlike faith in British justice.
The “News. Chronicle” says that the Bechuanalancl affair is a bad business. No Englishman would dispute the necessity of the white man’s prestige being maintained, but the remedy seems drastic.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HOG19330916.2.30
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Hokitika Guardian, 16 September 1933, Page 5
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143NOT DEPOSED Hokitika Guardian, 16 September 1933, Page 5
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