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ME. EDEN'S WARNING.

Received Sunday, 7 p.m. LONDON, July 31. The .sfnndards of international good faitli were at stake in Berlin; There would be 7io lasting world peace unless the great. Powers were prepared to ob-mm-vh those standards, said Mr. Anthonv Kden in a speech at Taunton. ' ' We niav be sure that wheri we defend them we are de feilding civilisation itself," he said. The Berlin situaton was the rahui nation of long drawn out pressure on the West to settle the problem of Germanv entirely at Russia's dictation. To renounce our valid rights in Berlin would be to give wav to such dictation. The unbounded adniiration for Russia's wartime feats had unhappily been dissipated by the Russian leaders t hemselves, in pursuit of their postwar jiolicv.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHRONL19480802.2.18.2

Bibliographic details

Chronicle (Levin), 2 August 1948, Page 5

Word Count
127

ME. EDEN'S WARNING. Chronicle (Levin), 2 August 1948, Page 5

ME. EDEN'S WARNING. Chronicle (Levin), 2 August 1948, Page 5

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