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Where Australia and New Zealand Stand

LOOKING- FOB HELP PROM

UNITED STATES Received Wednesday, 9.20 p.m. NEW YORK, Sept, 24. Mr. Roy Howard, in an article in the Scripps-Howard newspapers following his New Zealand and Australian clipper trip, stressed that New Zealand and Australia would seek closer co-operation between the Empire and the United States in the Pacific. He said: “New Zealand and Ausstralla are interesting political phenomena. Politicians’ and businessmen’s statements might cause the mistaken belief that these independent commonwealths were prepared to climb into Uncle Sam’s lap. ‘ ’Par from indicating disloyalty to the Empire, for which they are pouring out blood and treasure even more generously than in 1914, their attitude merely expresses the determination that the English-speaking way of life shall not he snuffed out should the worst happen and England fall temporarily. "New Zealanders and Australians foresee a new significance in the United States-Canadlan pact, meantime they face the menace of totalitarianism and realise that their relationship with the United States does not differ greatly from that binding them to Canada.”

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MT19400926.2.67

Bibliographic details

Manawatu Times, Volume 65, Issue 228, 26 September 1940, Page 7

Word Count
175

Where Australia and New Zealand Stand Manawatu Times, Volume 65, Issue 228, 26 September 1940, Page 7

Where Australia and New Zealand Stand Manawatu Times, Volume 65, Issue 228, 26 September 1940, Page 7

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