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SIR GEORGE REID.

HOME AND COLONIAL RELA-

TIONS

Press Assn —By telegraph—Copyright LONDON, March 11.

Mr T. A. Coghlan, Agent-General for New South Wales, presided at the Australian banquet to Sir George Reid, Australian High Commissioner, at the Trocadcro.

There were 225 guests, who included Lords Brassey, Leamington, and Strathcona, Admiral Bridge, and many leading Australian representatives of banks and financial and shipping firms. Admiral Sir Harry Rawson, ex-Gov-ernor of New South Wales, replying to the toast of the Imperial Forces, said he hoped the Australian fleet would soon take its share in protecting the Empire's trade routes. Mr Henniker Heaton also replied, and said that the Australian Army was composed of highly intelligent men, but . the Australian military forces had not made the advance which Australia demands, because the Government had not utilised to the utmost the advantage of the British Army as regards qualified instructors. He urged Sir George Reid to try to induce Australia to ask the War Office for the assistance so urgently required. Mr T. A. Coghlan, proposing Sir George Reid's health, eulogised his work in Australia.. It was a strange and agreeable coincidence that a man who had made the Federation practicable should be its first representative at the head of the Empire. Sir George Reid, in reply, said the Australian type shows Australian development to be under the glorious hereditary environment of the British people. He was siire Australian finance had not been carried too far, and emphasised the fact that nearly the whole of the Australian debt spent on reproductive works. "Every pound spent wisely on immigration," said he, "is the best reproductive expenditure that Australia can make. All the great parties in Australia preserve the traditions of honesty, which are the honor and glory of the people from which the Australians spring." He accepted that night's reception as a compliment to the great Commonwealth.

"You may transplant people," he added, "but, as long as they are under the flag, all they produce is the very life blood of this country. Throughout Australia there is an instinct of fearless independence, a devoted loyalty to the Throne, and an affection for the people of this noble realm, which will serve to develop the ever increasing strength and power of the Imperial destiny."

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BA19100312.2.51

Bibliographic details

Bush Advocate, Volume XXII, Issue 60, 12 March 1910, Page 8

Word Count
379

SIR GEORGE REID. Bush Advocate, Volume XXII, Issue 60, 12 March 1910, Page 8

SIR GEORGE REID. Bush Advocate, Volume XXII, Issue 60, 12 March 1910, Page 8