NO CAUSE FOR PANIC.
MR. LYONS REASSURED,
Received March 20. 11.20 a.m. SYDNEY, March 20.
The Prime Minister (Mr J. A. Lyons), who spoke on the radio telephone to Mr Chamberlain, said there was no cause for panic iu the developments in Europe. The Federal Cabinet will probably meet in Melbourne on Tuesday to discuss the international situation. The German occupation of Czechoslovakia was condemned by Mr W. M. Hughes (Minister for External Affairs), in a broadcast address. He said that the poliov of the democratic nations must be '“Thus far and no further.” There would be neither peace nor security until the aggressor nations had been halted in their career of conquest.
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Bibliographic details
Manawatu Standard, Volume LIX, Issue 92, 20 March 1939, Page 7
Word Count
113NO CAUSE FOR PANIC. Manawatu Standard, Volume LIX, Issue 92, 20 March 1939, Page 7
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