AMERICANS INDIGNANT.
INDISCRIMINATE ATTACKS. LONDON, Sept. 12. Agency messages from New York reveal great indignation throughout the United States at the indiscriminate bombing by the Germans over London. Hardly any event in the war, it is stated, 'has shocked Americans so much as the bombing of Buckingham Palace. The opinion on Mr Churchill’s speecn is summed up by one newspaper -‘■comment. which describes it as revealing the highest form of democracy mth the Prime Minister taking the people in a frank manner into his confidence.. Another newspaper commenting on the German spokesman s statement that 10 000 plane loads of bombs were about to ’-=1 rained on attention to- the ■ spokesman » remark that the British are bcaten already but do not know it Many of the finest pages in British history are those wbich record how the British were beaten but did not know it, and fought on to victory, says the newspapei.
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Manawatu Standard, Volume LX, Issue 245, 13 September 1940, Page 7
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153AMERICANS INDIGNANT. Manawatu Standard, Volume LX, Issue 245, 13 September 1940, Page 7
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