ALIEN IMMIGRATION.
JAPANESE SWARMING SOUTH. A NEW ZEALANDER'S FEARS. By Cable—Press Association—Copyright. FremantJe, May 14. Mr. Ci, Totton, a New Zealand merchant, who has returned by the steamer Orvietto, after six years' residence in Japan, declares there is a distinct inclination among the Japanese to come south. Already they are swarming in the South Sea Tslands, and boast they can take the Philippines from the United States. Three Government emigration agencies are in existence, and send emigrants south because the cold is pitiless in the north, and for the rest the Japanese are not friendly to Australia. Asked if there was danger of aggressive action, he said the Anglo-Japanese treaty was a great deterrent. It was hard to prophesy what would occur if the agreement terminated. The Japanese were proud and haughty, and might even become arrogant in time. It hurt them to think they could find very little outlet for their growing millions.
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Taranaki Daily News, Volume LV, Issue 302, 15 May 1913, Page 5
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154ALIEN IMMIGRATION. Taranaki Daily News, Volume LV, Issue 302, 15 May 1913, Page 5
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