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AID TO WORLD PEACE

BRITAIN AND AMERICA ('O-OPKRATION SOUGHT AUSTINALIAN MOVEMENT (Per Press Association.) AUCKLAND, this day. An advocate of the British-Ameri-can co-operation movement for world peace, General IT.. W. Lloyd, a member of the Legislative Assembly of Now South Wales, arrived by the Montere.y to-day to spend three weeks in the North Island. Tie said that the movement had taken an extraordinary active form in Australia, where it; was realised that both Australia and New Zealand would bo very vulnerable in ease of complications in Europe. He believed that an alliance of the Englishspeaking nations would prevent war for the next 50 vears.

The British-American co-operation movement started quietly in Australia about a year ago on serious, cold, and logical lines, but it had become electrical in its effect. Rven America in an unsuspected manner had realised that; such an alliance was the only solution to the most difficult problem that had faced the world since 1918. The movement was supported by the Federal Prime Minister, Mr. J. A. Lyons, ami the .State Premiers, said General Lloyd.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PBH19370504.2.173

Bibliographic details

Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LXIV, Issue 19315, 4 May 1937, Page 13

Word Count
178

AID TO WORLD PEACE Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LXIV, Issue 19315, 4 May 1937, Page 13

AID TO WORLD PEACE Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LXIV, Issue 19315, 4 May 1937, Page 13