"VOICE OF GUNS OURĮ
ANOTHER
-
THE CHINA MAIL, JANUARY 19, 1938.
ONLY LANGUAGE" SOVIET MANCHUKUO STOP PRESS
(Continued from Page 1)
MILITARY OPERATIONS
INCIDENT
Moscow, To-day.
According to a Russian news agency despatch from Khaborovsk, another incident has occurred on the Manchurian frontier.
Tokyo, To-day. "The Japanese Government henceforth will not deal with the The pilot of a Soviet aeroplane Central Government in talks for which had set out from Vladivos- adjustment of Sino-Japanese rela-tok lost his way and landed in tions, but will
pursue military Manchurian territory where he and operations for overthrow of that his companion were arrested, charg- regime, in the expectation that aled with espionage and conveyed to new. Chinese regime will grow up Harbin.
and become a party to such talks," The Soviet Government has made said Prince Konoye.
representations demanding release The new Chinese regime might of the two airmen together with the possibly go through similar organ-mail which the machine was carry- isation and process as Manchukuo. | ing.-Trans-Ocean.
state:
Sino-Japanese hostilities, in the near future.
The Premier declined to whether the new regime was being established in the first half of the year, but declared that Japan must Britain, however, was so realistic accelerate its organisation. He had that she was able to grasp the ac- heard nothing of Manchukuo re-tual situation very well, and there cognition of the new regime.
was no necessity for taking the matter too seriously.
FOREIGN, RIGHTS
A certain degree of state control of economic development of North China was inevitable, but the guiding principle should be mutual Sino-Japanese existence and pros- perity with the spirit of enterprise unhampered.
:
Third-party capital should be welcomed while the vested rights and interests of foreign powers would be respected.
he stated,
The same argument, applied to the Soviet Union.
"WAIT AND SEE”. Japan had no alternative but to adopt a "wait and see" policy in connection with British, Soviet and
expansion of the United States
navies.
He had no intention of reform÷ ing the Japanese Cabinet system or reconstructing the present Min- istry, but admitted the necessity of ANGLO-JAPANESE TALKS rforming the parliamentary sys- Prince Konoye failed to see tem. At present, however, reforms the possibility of resuming the necessary for attainment of the Anglo - Japanese conversations, war objectives should be given which were interrupted by the preference.-Reuter.
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