FOE THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING - PEOPLES. “Complete agreement between Eng-lish-speaking peoples,” said Dr. E. Me lll’roy (Harmswor li Professor of American History at Oxford University), speaking at Oxford, “cou’d only pave the way for the solution .of those difficulties ’wbi h stood, not in the way of British and American unity, but in- Hie way of the larger tiling which all the nations were thinking of increasingly—-world-wide peace. • ' English-speaking peoples were likely to stand together when the floods descended, because they judged, great questions by ' th* same spiritual standards. It was also a very solemn fact that; standing together, they would fall together, unless they had a vision which was wider than themselves. Only by service did they merit leadership. For the present, for the immediate future and perlians for the long future, the Englishspeaking peoples must lead the World.”
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Hokitika Guardian, 21 August 1929, Page 4
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138Untitled Hokitika Guardian, 21 August 1929, Page 4
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