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POST-WAR PROBLEMS.

OBLIGATIONS OF ANGLO-SAXONS.

•I. C. lIERBSMAN SAYS "CARRY ON;'

ic W° ! i- J- C. Ilcrbsman delivered a powerful and inspiring address in the Chautauqua tent to a large audience on Saturday night, i» the course of which hp made a line appeal for a combat of the influences of Bolshevism bv the Anirlo-Saxon peoples. Mr. Herbsman reviewed the lessons of the war, and dwelt, on the closer union that had resulted between Britain and America. He referred to the menace of Bolshevism and the prospects of earlv and universal peace. The speaker paid a great tribute to the war effort of New Zealand and urged that it was the duty to I" r° Un /7 t0 those who had gone to tlu front to reinstate them in their corner positions, not as a matter of chanty, but as simple justice. re ( ferrin g tp the great work of the Allies he paid a warm eulogy to the part of the British Navy, which was sometimes lost sight of. The AtneriS™^°Tw Uid i 110t have been to , ut for tJ ie British Navy. He contradicted a conception that had gainthßt America I,ad chalged England s naval supremacy. If Arnenca completed her shipbuilding L-f f } tu ® e U P to the end of 1920, the Ji * vy Would be equal to those of nny two other Powere. The Ameuuan people recognised Britain's naval supremacy, firstly because her empire extended round the whole world protected, and secindfy !e ' ' J supremacy had been the best bad the H bec ause never once fered with hfn retarded or intertion tht P lo^B any other na-

of T tt B ° ught t0 remove nanv them with the which wjlr ihn * of Bolshevism, aft, A ,r rica < Awtrelia M stiS'u.i'jsn, l 3a«fffari SSL" must be paid unT ♦ !i. indemnitles farthini? >m,„' , 0 uttermost see snlvpd t 6 R roWelns he hoped toSed anrf a f Lea^ue of Nations ,rtaJ,. tration sot ET ° f era of worM Would dawn a new perity when thov' s f eurit 7> and proawould become t^T don ? 9 of this worM was • domain of Hin » who n », of kln ?s and Lord of lords Anthem ha,! >'' the *«««"» Anzats, and for New Zealand * Thi> SS&S&r 5

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19190317.2.23

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Taranaki Daily News, 17 March 1919, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
375

POST-WAR PROBLEMS. Taranaki Daily News, 17 March 1919, Page 4

POST-WAR PROBLEMS. Taranaki Daily News, 17 March 1919, Page 4

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