THE BALKAN WAR.
The news tliat we were enabled to publish in our issue of yesterday, to the eil'ect that Turkey had yielded to the pressure of the Powers, and had thus decided to abandon further. Ihos--1 tilities, must have been received 'with intense relief hy all sections of the community. Had the war been resumed, there is no knowing where it would have ended, for the relations I between certain of the larger Powers l were becoming painfully strained. Although peace has not yet been actually signed, there is reason to hope that, in the course of a few days, the cloud of war will have passed. I Turkey has been practically •subjugat - ed by th.c> Allies. She has been reduced almost to a condition of impotence. But the ultimate result '-f th'o war will he the progress'of'civilisation, -and a better recognition of the status of Christian nations.
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Wairarapa Age, Volume XXV, Issue 10713, 25 January 1913, Page 4
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149THE BALKAN WAR. Wairarapa Age, Volume XXV, Issue 10713, 25 January 1913, Page 4
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