OUR COLORED BRETHREN.
To the Editor. ■Sir, —In common with very many of your readers, I wish to thank you for your leading article on the above topic in Saturday's Daily News. I waited for someone else to write you, because in the estimation of some who know me slightly I have no ideas except on one topic, and that must not be even mentioned in your columns until after the 10th of December. Nevertheless, I do much rejoice that we have one newspaper at least that is not so self-centred as to see no good anywhere outside our own borders. The war will teach us, f-ii UR ht us > t,lat there is something still higher than mere nationalism. There is a world-brotherhood, could we but see it, and a solidarity of humanity that nmst triumph in the end. Perhaps when this war is over we may still remember that even under a dark skin there is a and !,° r ; a Ti' ile bfi "Rnorant and uncouth m our estimation, we have a duty to perform to him other than Tarn o X resion ° r ll!U,S ' lty Pannage— GEO. H. MAUNDER.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19141125.2.6.1
Bibliographic details
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Taranaki Daily News, Volume LVII, Issue 154, 25 November 1914, Page 2
Word count
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191OUR COLORED BRETHREN. Taranaki Daily News, Volume LVII, Issue 154, 25 November 1914, Page 2
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