NATIONAL DEFENCE.
OUR MOST URGENT DUTY. ANOTHER ADDRESS' BY MR F. HARRISON. (.UNITED PEESS ASSOCIATION—COPYRIGHT] LONDON, Jan. 2. Mr Frederick Harrison, who last week made a sensational address on “Tile Peril of 1913,” in an address to the Positivist Society, of which he is President, said that the greatest illusion of the time was the prospect of Imperial defence by an all-England joint stock company of unlimited liability with an Imperial Budget wherein colonials fixed the cost of British workmen’s food. National defence was the most urgent duty, but compulsory service would cause civil war.
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Bibliographic details
Gisborne Times, Volume XXXIII, Issue 3720, 4 January 1913, Page 7
Word Count
95NATIONAL DEFENCE. Gisborne Times, Volume XXXIII, Issue 3720, 4 January 1913, Page 7
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