Show Jt I i 1 Japan the Loser I JAPANESE NESE statesmen are depicted as gaining a victory at the thet K t t j JL pads Pr's ris Peace conference in m the Sha Shantung tung matter but as as a I maU r of fact the greed of Japan promises to make that nation nahon t t greatest sufferer of all aU nations involved i m in the war Comm Commer- rii r- r ci uY she stands to lose tose more mOIe than Germany Diplomatically she ii his is s riding to a fall faU that will rob her of the position of leading wex w of of the Far East I fr Japan an for commercial expansion must rely chiefly upon two JQ ions China and the United States Her insistence upon the of the Shantung robbery has brought her the t Chinese people Throughout China today there therea 4 a boycott against all an things Japanese In the United States a ling of distrust heretofore felt feU for Japan is rapidly being into a distinct feeling of f enmity And this feeling will wille wille e e just so long tong as Japan continues the imperialistic and mili- mili ti tiC policy so well illustrated by the Shantung seizure Still more menacing to the the power of Japan is the awakening J now apparent in in China an awakening that has been brought a J. J chiefly by Japanese statecraft as shown at the Paris peace China Ghina is angry and anger is offsetting the sleepy self- self tEnt fent that has characterized the nation for centuries When is f fully lly awake Japan will need all the friends she can muster old these U these ese friends she is now alienating Shantung is today Japans Japan's greatest peril |