IN PASSING
The last thing the army exists for is war. It exists in order to prevent war.—Lord Hailsham. I show a white handkerchief when walking at night so that motorists can see it.—-Bishop of Exeter. The teacher throws his bread upon the waters and occasionally it comes back cake.—The Bishop of St. Albans. Tho fact that evil perplexes even atheists is evidence of the deep tendency of men to believe in God. —The Archbishop of Canterbury. Modern novelists have driven some of the most respectable of us to detective stories where, if one is not on the side of the angels, one is at least on tho side of the police.—Dean Alington. It may bo safely asserted that ninetenths of those now writing and speaking so glibly about tho necessity for scrapping or reforming tho League of Nations have never read the Covenant, let alone possess any knowledge of how and why its provisions were framed, or the way in which they have been interpreted and applied.—Mr. Arthur Henderson.
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New Zealand Herald, Volume LXXI, Issue 21716, 3 February 1934, Page 8 (Supplement)
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170IN PASSING New Zealand Herald, Volume LXXI, Issue 21716, 3 February 1934, Page 8 (Supplement)
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