THE TEMPTER IN GERMANY
PRIVATE life has almost ceased to exist to-day, when the nation is on the march. We are moving- onwards with aIT that we call our own. Whoever realises this clearly laughs at the complaint that we ought not to have started a fight with Russia. The voice of the tempter does not cease, however, and so we hear the questions: "Through this war on the eastern front have not England and America gained time to build up their own superior air power?" "Shall we not soon have to face a situation in which the enemy literally drops on our heads?" The enemy's air power must, somehow or other, compVtely be broken. We are now facing this task —one that may tax our strength to the most and lead to a point where the strength of desperation must be exerted. Even if the whole nation has to take the field this task must be accomplished.—Munich Neuoste Nachrichten.
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Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 6, Issue 70, 7 May 1943, Page 4
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160THE TEMPTER IN GERMANY Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 6, Issue 70, 7 May 1943, Page 4
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