AMERICA AND THE LEAGUE.
ATTITUDE OF NEW CABINET. j . OPPOSITION DEVELOPING: ' I By Talagraph.—Trm Awn—Copyrlfhu Received March 10, 9.55 p.m. Ne*w York, March 9. The New York Times’ Washington correspondent says that while Senator Knox, President Harding, and the entire Senate are marking time on the questions of ? peace with Germany and the a.-ibociation of nations, due to a desire not to embarrass the Allies in their present undertakings in Germany, a noticeable change has come over Republican Senators with respect to the League of Nations issue. There is distinct evidence of more general hostility toward the League principle. Senator Lodge seems to have graduated from a reservationist to an irreconcilable, and those hitherto classed as mild reservationists-are now showing signs of willingness to throw over the League standard completely. There is discernible a traditional attitude of “go slow” re-asserting itself among Republicans. The quick peace and quick action in relation to the association of nations promised during the campaign seem to have been forgotten. —-Aus.-N.Z. Cable Assn.
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Taranaki Daily News, 11 March 1921, Page 5
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168AMERICA AND THE LEAGUE. Taranaki Daily News, 11 March 1921, Page 5
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