THOUGHT ON THE WAR.
Brave men do not boast, of success before achieving it —they hope. —General .lollre.
1 do not believe that .Militarism has made permanent inroads upon our liberties. —A. Clutton-Broek. On all fronts the wings of (inn 1 victory are beginning to rustle in our ears.- —Viscount Chinda (Japanese Ambassador). Tilt* Hohenzollern spawn have learned no lesson, and their arrogance 1 , pride, and presumption are still unabated. —J. Cathcart. W’ason, M.P.
it is a strange l irony, but no small compensation, that tin l making of weapons of destrnelion should afford the occasion to humanise industry.—lß. Hon. D. Lloyd-George, M.P. 1
Tim most dangerous and expensive economy, even under war conditions, is that which arresls the efficient administration of the public health service.—Mrs Banister Fletcher.
Ibe wild beast is at large. There is rm good reasoning with it ; there m no good appealing to (he civilised woj Id about it; there is only one thing to he done, and we shall do it. That is Hhoot it.—lit. Hon. Bonar Law, M.P.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19161116.2.28
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Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 1638, 16 November 1916, Page 4
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174THOUGHT ON THE WAR. Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 1638, 16 November 1916, Page 4
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