THE WAR GAME.
Unless tlve enthusiasm with which rulers 'and statesmen build navies and maintain armies finds a parallel in the ardor with which the democracies of the world shall seek for peace, it will be a iust verdict on contemporary thought to say that has flown to brutish' beasts, and men have, lost their reason.” The humblest citizen of common seiise is beginning to realise that the sooner he and those like him take a hand .in the game, the sooner wall a stupid and arrogant tradition be swept away, and international relations rest upon a basis that can be recognised as honest among • civilised men.-—Wel-lington “Times.” ■
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Gisborne Times, Volume XXVII, Issue 2474, 13 April 1909, Page 2
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108THE WAR GAME. Gisborne Times, Volume XXVII, Issue 2474, 13 April 1909, Page 2
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