| THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES NEWS , June 25th 
		1934   
		Third series of articles written in 
		the Western Mail 
		FEAR OF AN ECONOMIC STORM IN GERMANY --- By GARETH JONES  Ten days 
		ago I sat In a German train opposite a Storm Troop leader, and as we 
		sped towards the south I asked him: "What of the future?"  
		 He drew 
		himself up, pointed to his black, white and red swastika armband and 
		shouted:   "That swastika is going to be the 
		symbol of Socialism as well as of nationalism.  The future lies 
		with us people of the Left, and the day will come when we shall sweep 
		away the accursed remnants of the capitalists who are still ruling 
		Germany.  The revolution is not yet at an end.  The 
		money-makers, the big bankers, the manufacturers who live by crushing 
		the poor have to be mercilessly crushed.  And we shall do it!" 
		 GOAL STILL DISTANT   This Storm 
		Troop leader was typical of many hundreds of thousands of Nazis 
		throughout the country who see that, although Germany has been immersed 
		in a bath of the most thoroughgoing nationalism, the goal of Socialism 
		is as distant as ever.  They note that Dr. Schacht is still 
		President of the Reichsbank, that a Right Wing Nationalist- Dr. 
		Schmidt-is still Economic Minister, and that the finances of the land 
		are controlled by a representative of the old ruling class-Count 
		Schwerin von Krosigk.   They see 
		that the large department stores of Berlin and the provincial cities, 
		against which they directed their most savage attacks, are still open 
		and underselling the little man in his little shop.  They grumble 
		when they hear that their enemy, the aristocratic Prussian landowner, 
		has not lost a single yard of territory and is as firmly entrenched in 
		the Reichswehr as ever.   STILL COMMUNISTS   Indignant 
		at the capitalist domination in Germany, these Nazis of the Left Wing-or 
		National Bolsheviks, as they are sometimes called-are revolting against 
		the Right Wing.  Among them are many men who have about as little 
		sympathy for National Socialism as a Berlin rabbi has; they are men who 
		are purely Communist in their outlook and who have merely joined the 
		Storm Troops for the sake of personal safety and advancement.  
		Rumour has it that many troops are mainly composed of Communists, and a 
		recent joke tells of two former Red Front fighters who met in a street.  
		Each wore a brand new Nazi uniform.   "How do you like it in your 
		Storm Troop?" asked one.  "Fine," 
		replied the other. "All the men are just people after our heart.  
		There’s only one fellow I don’t like, and he’s the storm troop-leader.  
		As matter of fact, I believe he is a Nazi!"   MODERATES FEAR   If there is 
		discontent among the left wing Germans there is fear among the 
		moderates.  This fear is mainly economic, and during my visit this 
		month I was surprised at the frankness with which people expressed their 
		forebodings of evil days to come.   In Berlin I 
		learned that numbers of people were now buying clothes and boots and 
		other goods for two reasons.  The first was that they believed the 
		mark would fall and prices soar; the second that Germany might be cut 
		oft economically from the rest of the world, as a result of which it 
		would be difficult to import wool and other raw materials.  
		 If this 
		happened, the argument ran, the quality of German goods would decline 
		and consumers would have to be content with the substitute wares of War 
		days.   The gravity 
		of the export situation was realised by everybody.  How often did I 
		hear in Hamburg the words: "This great port is dead!"   Everywhere the drying up of foreign 
		currency resources was accepted as the proof that a grave economic storm 
		was threatening and might break very soon.   WHAT HITLER HAS DONE   The German 
		crisis is grave, and popular disillusion is considerable. Nevertheless, 
		Hitler has recognized many factors on his side.  It is recognized 
		that he has restored order to public life and that he has put an end to 
		the political murders which were a stain on German life.  He has in 
		the view of millions of Germans – banished the spectre of Bolshevism.  
		He has, through the German Youth, the Labour Camps, and the storm troops 
		contributed to the health, sturdiness, and discipline of the nation.  
		He has gained the respect of many by his person loyalty to friends.  
		He has abolished the petty differences between Saxons and Bavarians, 
		Württembergers and Prussians.   Moreover, 
		even the discontented Germans realise that the only alternatives to 
		Hitlerism are a dictatorship based upon the bayonets of Reichswehr or a 
		civil war.   Therefore, 
		in the present German crisis the factors on Hitler’s side should not be 
		under-estimated.   ******   THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES NEWS, July 2nd 1934 
		BEHIND THE DRAMA OF GERMANY --- By GARETH JONES   The 
		intricacies of German politics and Hitler’s ruthless revenge against 
		revolters are to most people a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and 
		fury.   Who are 
		these Storm Troopers who rise against their leader?  What is the 
		Reichswehr?  Who is this General Schleicher who suddenly looms out 
		of the mists of the past to flit for one tragic moment across the stage 
		and to returns to an obscurity which will be eternal?   The Storm 
		Troopers are the three and a half million army of Hitler’s supporters 
		who were clothed in a brown uniform and were primarily political.  
		They were led by Capt. Roehm until Hitler entered Roehm’s house early on 
		Saturday morning and arrested the startled plotter.  Roehm was a 
		military adventurer of low moral standard, but a brilliant organiser. 
		 Brownshirts’ Discontent   These Storm 
		Troopers (Brownshirts), known also as the "S.A." men (not for their "Sex 
		Appeal," but because S.A. stood for "Storm Department") were composed of 
		the lower middle-class and unemployed supporters of Hitler.  
		 Recently 
		there has been a wave of discontent among their ranks because the 
		Socialist era to which they had looked forward has seemed further away 
		than ever, and because the big capitalists, the financiers, the 
		proprietors of the large stores, and the aristocratic landowners are as 
		firmly in the saddle as they were before Hitler came.  The 
		Communistically inclined Brownshirts well deserved their nickname of 
		"Beefsteaks") brown outside but red within).   Among the 
		leaders of the Brownshirts were thousands of military swash-bucklers who 
		since the War had wandered in search of adventure, had crushed the 
		workers in 1919, had marched upon Berlin in 1920 had volunteered to 
		slaughter Poles in 1921, and had blown up bridges with bombs when the 
		French marched into the Ruhr.   These men, 
		it appears, cast longing eyes at the Reichswehr, the regular army of 
		100,000 men, and, led by Roehm, longed to amalgamate the Brownshirts 
		with that magnificently trained body.   If the 
		Brownshirts could be absorbed into a great army, what jobs there would 
		be for these officers!  What power there would be for Roehm!  
		But Hitler rejected their plan and took the advice of his War Minister. 
		 A worse 
		blow for Roehm was to come, for Hitler was contemplating a reduction of 
		the Brownshirts, the cost of which was causing much nodding of heads at 
		the Treasury.   "Will I 
		lose my job?  Will I lose my power?"  Such are probably the 
		questions which Roehm and his Brownshirt leaders asked themselves. 
		 This fear that the Brownshirt Army 
		would be thrown aside led Roehm to ally himself with the other 
		discontented element-namely, the left wing-and probably led him to 
		associate himself with General Schleicher.   Ambitions Baulked   Why 
		Schleicher?  This general was not the reactionary he is sometimes 
		reputed to have been.  He was definitely a Left Wing man who during 
		his Chancellorship flirted with the trade unions, had a vision of a 
		"socially ruled" empire, and was preparing to deal a smashing blow at 
		the big landowners when he was cast out of power.   Such were 
		probably the three ingredients in the plot which has failed-the baulked 
		ambitions of Storm Troop leaders, the bitter disillusion of the 
		"National Bolsheviks" and the Left Wing intrigue of the "Socialist 
		General."   The 
		plotters are dead.  Roehm’s place has been taken by a man with whom 
		I lunched a year ago in the train between Berlin and Hanover - Victor 
		Lutze.  I have rarely met a man who impressed me so much by his 
		ruthlessness, grim-ness, lack of humour and fanaticism.  
		 He told me 
		how he had started.  Storm Troop in the Ruhr 10 years earlier and 
		how he had a religious faith the ultimate triumph of Hitler.  He 
		had a profound contempt for anything intellectual, a characteristic 
		which was also obvious from the unacademic tone of his language and the 
		naiveté of his ideas.   He will 
		certainly help Hitler in the effort to crush the opposition which will 
		one day again raise its head in Germany.    *******   THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES NEWS,August 2nd 1934 
		THREE CATASTROPHES IN A MONTH   From GARETH JONES   BERLIN, Wednesday.  "The 
		President, Field-marshal von Hindenburg is gravely ill.  Herr 
		Hitler is on his way to the President’s estate in Neudeck, East Prussia, 
		and we are fearing the worst."   The German 
		diplomat who ponderously announced this news to me looked anxious and 
		wan, and wherever men and women heard that all hope for the President’s 
		life had been abandoned there was a glint of fear in their eyes. 
		 To them it 
		was the latest of three catastrophes which have shaken Germany within 
		the short space of a month.   Out of the 
		blue on June 30 had come the ruthless stamping out of the Roehm revolt, 
		which destroyed not only the bodies of men but the soul of a movement, 
		and which has left rancor in the hearts of thousands of storm troopers. 
		 A Crushing Defeat   On July 25, 
		the greatest ambition of the National Socialists in foreign affairs to 
		regain the soil of Austria, sacred to them not only for the Germanic 
		race of its countrymen, but for having brought to the world the Leader, 
		Hitler-was dashed to the ground and converted into a crushing defeat 
		which has humiliated them before the world [Assassination of Dolfuss in 
		failed Austrian Putsch]  
		 Now comes 
		the third catastrophe, the fear of the disappearance of the strongest 
		link with the German past and of the most reasonable and restraining 
		force in German politics-Hindenburg.   For many 
		Germans it is a terrifying prospect because it will be a break with some 
		of the most glorious days of German history; with the solid bourgeois 
		virtues of pre-War days, and with the old Prussian conceptions of 
		honour, military justice, and duty.   Many 
		reflect that Hindenburg was a young lieutenant at the time of the 
		founding of the German Empire in 1871, and feel that with his death 
		there will pass an era which, in spite of its militarism, has had 
		admirable qualities.   With 
		Hindenburg’s death there will probably be a renewed struggle for power, 
		more bitter, I believe, than before in the history of National Socialism 
		in Germany.  It was due to Hindenburg’s personal influence that 
		many posts in certain Ministries, such as the Foreign Office and the War 
		Ministry, were in the hands of Nationalists-conservative men who have 
		been revolted by the excesses of the revolutionaries in the national 
		Socialist party.   It has been 
		largely due to Hindenburg’s influence that many of the Ministers have 
		not been National Socialists, although they have paid lip service to its 
		ideals and to its leaders.  With 
		Hindenburg’s passing the fight for these posts will begin.  Young 
		Nazis, feeling themselves deprived of power and pay by the continuance 
		of the Conservatives in privileged places, will seek to capture those 
		prizes of authoritative posts which are now withheld from them. 
		 Banner of Monarchy   The Right 
		Wing will probably make a vigorous fight, and perhaps will win, because 
		they have the Army and the Steel Helmets on their side. They will, 
		perhaps, wave the banner of Monarchy, and will greet the return of the 
		Kaiser or of another of the Hohenzollerns.  These are only suppositions and no one 
		can foretell future events here.  But of the two elements, 
		revolutionary Nazis seeking power, and the Conservatives, it is probable 
		that the Conservatives will win.  Upon the struggle the publication 
		of Hindenburg’s political testament will have a great influence. 
		 Mutual Hatred   In the 
		struggles between Left and Right the S.S. men (black uniformed elite of 
		the Storm Troopers) will range’ themselves with the Army and the Steel 
		Helmets. These S.S. men have won the enmity of thousands of the 
		Brownshirts, and I believe that the mutual hatred will grow. What of 
		Hindenburg’s successor? It is possible that the great old man has been 
		the last President; that there will not again be a Presidential 
		election, and that Hitler will make himself "Leader."  ******   THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES NEWS, August 3rd 
		1934   
		FRANCE DOES NOT EXPECT WAR AT PRESENT  Looking to the Friendship of Italy   NAZI-FASCIST HONEYMOON ENDS By GARETH JONES              
		(By Mail)  "THE murder 
		of Dollfuss is the most tense moment in European history since the shot 
		rang out at Sarajevo in July 1914.   As the  
		night express speeds along on that fateful stretch from Paris to Berlin 
		I reflect upon these words of a French friend of mine.   The scene 
		for these reflections is the most suitable in all Europe, for looking 
		out of the window I have watched the wheat stacks of Northern France 
		just as they were in the July days which shook the world.  
		 Names of 
		towns and places which once had little paper flags stuck into them in 
		thousands of maps in Britain flashed past as we sped by: "Saint Quentin!  
		Le Cateau!  Compiège!"    The train 
		has now stopped in a city which, 20 years ago, was destined to enjoy 
		only three or four days of calm before hearing the thud of shell-Liege. 
		 TWO DECADES AGO   The lights 
		of Liege and the name of the next station-Namur-bring vividly to mind my 
		boyhood impressions of shock and excitement at the events which occurred 
		exactly two decades ago, and I seek to sum up my thoughts in Paris 
		during the last few days of diplomatic activity.   By a grim 
		coincidence the streets of Paris have heard again the same whispers of "C’est 
		la guerre!" the same dread of the future has been visible as people have 
		read the news, and the rumblings of the approaching storm have resounded 
		from the same easterly direction as they did in 1914.   There is 
		one fundamental difference, however, between the Paris of 1914 and the 
		Paris of 1934.  Whereas in 1914 the terror of the near future 
		struck the rulers of France as deeply as the people, to day the people 
		are alarmed, but the soldiers and the politicians are calm.  
		 "There will 
		be war," say the waiters and the barbers and the shopkeepers. 
		 "There will 
		be no War soon," say the officia1s and the diplomats. And I am convinced 
		that the latter are right.   Why will there be no war 
		soon?   HITLER’S ISOLATION   The French, 
		with their usual logic and reason reply that Hitler is in too weak, a 
		position internationally.  He is isolated and has the armed forces 
		of France, Poland, and Czechoslovakia encasing him like a steel 
		strait-jacket.   The French 
		rubbing their hands with glee see that Hitler’s foreign policy has been 
		a whirlwind of blunders, retreats, cajoleries, threats, flirtations, 
		embraces and gestures, culminating in catastrophe.  They feel 
		malicious pleasure in the discomfiture of the little man with the 
		Austrian accent, whose one dream-to unite his humorous, lackadaisical, 
		and lovable fellow-countrymen with the more disciplined millions of the 
		German Reich - has by the failure of the Vienna coup been converted into 
		a nightmare of the most terrifying order.   How can 
		Hitler make war, the French argue, when he is faced by millions of 
		workers crying for bread-by even potatoes going on strike and the wheat 
		stalks refusing to obey Goering’s orders?   And their 
		eyes twinkle at the idea that, however much the Nazi Brown-shirts may 
		shout their commands, and however much the Ministry of Propaganda may 
		broadcast inspiring orations, Mother Earth will be as recalcitrant this 
		harvest as any Communist, and refuse to Germany the gifts she is 
		accustomed to bring.   If in a 
		moment of argumentative obstinacy one still pursues the question and 
		asks: "Will not Hitler declare war to rally the nation around him?" the 
		intelligent Frenchman will nod his head in negation and say, "knows that 
		a war means the end of his régime.  He remembers that war brought 
		Bolshevism to Russia and that it destroyed the Austro-Hungarian Empire.  
		He is fully aware of the strength of Communism in his own country.  
		Thus we French who are in the know are calm."   This 
		calmness is re-assuring, but it is only the calmness of the man who 
		fears no storm to-morrow, but dreads an earthquake in a few years’ time.  
		The independence of Belgium, the lights of whose towns I can see from 
		the train window as we leave Liege, has given way as the main cause of 
		war to the independence of another little land - Austria.  
		 WOULD FRANCE MARCH   Perhaps the 
		violation of the Belgian frontier was a dangerous forerunner of a 
		European war fought for the independence of Austria.  Will we ever 
		hear the familiar strain of "Gallant Little Austria?"  And if 
		Germany got control of Austria by external force or internal revolution, 
		would France march?   Upon this 
		question depends largely the peace of Europe.  All countries have 
		been lavish in their declarations to defend the integrity of Austria, 
		but these have sounded very much like the promises of candidates for 
		Parliament.   Would 
		France really fight if Austria became united with Germany? I asked 
		that question of many friends in Paris, and their replies reminded me of 
		Bismarck’s statement that the Balkans were not worth the bones of single 
		Pomeranian soldier.   "Spill my 
		blood for some hundreds of thousands of Viennese waltzers?  
		Certainly not!" cried one Parisian, almost spilling his coffee with 
		indignation.   "We will fight to the death if we are 
		attacked," said another, "but we will not go to war for the independence 
		of Austria, even though it be one of the main columns of our foreign 
		policy."   LET MUSSOLINI DO IT!   And the 
		third touched the crux of the matter when he said: "Let Mussolini do the 
		business. We’ll stay out."   This last 
		remark, I believe, hints at the main reason for the calm of the French
		 Foreign 
		Office.  With what delight the French read the vituperative attacks 
		which the Italians are making upon the Nazis!  How they chuckle 
		when they repeat aloud an article in the Rome "Messagero," said to be 
		inspired by Mussolini, which states: "You cannot deal twice on terms of 
		moral, equality with someone who has broken with such cynicism the laws 
		of honour!"   They see 
		that the spectre of a German-Italian alliance has fleeted away and that 
		the Nazi-Fascist honeymoon has in a short time led to separation after 
		scenes of violence and hate.   WILL MELT LIKE SNOW   They 
		realise that Italy will be forced to seek the friendship of France and 
		that, hey presto! those quarrels about battleships in the Mediterranean; 
		those sharp words about Italians in Tunisia, and those suspicious 
		glances at troops massing on the Italo-French frontier will all melt 
		like the snow on the Alpes Maritimes.  Soft compliments between 
		Rome and Paris will fall deep as the leaves in Vallambrosa.  
		 Thus, grave 
		as are the events of Austria, they have their compensations to 
		politically-minded Frenchmen.  But these compensations-such as the 
		friendship of Italy-are still not enough, and France will not rest until 
		she has built up a collective system based on armed force which will 
		secure her against war.    *******  THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES NEWS,  August 8th  
		1934    
		THE FORCES THAT ARE MENACING HITLER  GERMANY ASKING "CAN HE LAST?" The Fear of Hunger  Heavy Hand of Tyranny  AUSTRIA ACCEPTS VON PAPEN 
		 ALL 
		Germany is asking the question, "Can Hitler Last?" writes Mr. Gareth 
		Jones, the special "Western Mail and South Wales News" correspondent, 
		from Berlin.  "Some of the most ancient 
		and powerful forces in the world" are menacing Hitler, including the 
		Fear of hunger; Revolt against tyranny; Opposition of the Roman Catholic 
		Church; Communist and Socialist underground propaganda  On Hitler’s side is the 
		Army.  This is his trump card, but he can play it only so long as 
		the real power rests with the Army - that is, General von Blomberg, the 
		Minister of Defence.             
		The appointment of Herr von Papen as German Minister to Austria was 
		agreed to at an Austrian Cabinet meeting last night, the Cabinet having 
		received satisfactory assurances from Hitler.  GRAIN HARVEST 25 PER CENT. DOWN  By GARETH JONES   BERLIN, Tuesday.  The beating 
		of the drums and the strains of the funeral band around Hindenburg’s 
		grave have died away.  Millions of Germans will to day look at 
		their pictures of Hitler, with his fanatical eyes and that strange 
		unbalanced glance, and ask, "Can he last?"   The same 
		question will be asked throughout the world by diplomats and 
		politicians, many of whom have recently, in Paris or London, been 
		prophesying Hitler’s downfall before October.  Can Hitler 
		last? When he stands as the Leader of Germany, with more power than any 
		other ruler in the world, will the storm-winds which are now howling in 
		Europe send him crashing to the ground or will those forces which are on 
		his side maintain him on his throne of omnipotence?   Enemy No. 1   Against him 
		there are fighting some of the most ancient and most powerful forces in 
		the world.  His first enemy is the enemy which has damaged so 
		gravely bread.   When I 
		looked out of the train on the journey through Prussia I noticed how 
		sparse the crops were.  Students of agriculture estimate that 
		Germany’s harvest of grain this year is nearly 25 per cent. less than 
		last year.  The potato fields have yielded little, and potatoes are 
		the staple food of masses of the population.  Hence the fear that 
		rationing cards will soon be introduced.   Prices are 
		soaring, and housewives return from the market with less food in their 
		baskets and no change from the little housekeeping money their husbands 
		can give them   Adverse 
		food conditions, therefore, will be Hitler’s first enemy.  
		 Spiritual Forces   But he has 
		against him, also, forces which derive from the spirit.  The 
		intellectuals are voicing their criticisms of the régime’s tyranny.  
		They are in agreement with Von Papen’s plea for liberty of thought and 
		of expression in his Marburg speech.  They are ashamed of the 
		excesses of the Nazi régime and of the shame of Germany before the 
		world.   But, alas!  the German cultured citizens have 
		not the courage and the independence of their counterparts in Britain, 
		and their voices will not carry far.   More powerful will be the opposition 
		of the Roman Catholic Church, to which belongs more than one-third of 
		the German population. Revolted by the murder of leading Catholics and 
		priests, and by the betrayal by Hitler of his agreement with Rome, the 
		Catholics will be a force of more than passive resistance against 
		Hitler.   The Protestants  The 
		Protestants are as antagonised as the Catholics.  Their voices are 
		hushed, for no newspaper is allowed to publish the views of the 
		Protestant opposition, but beneath the surface they are fighting for 
		their rights.  What of the 
		working class?  Among its ranks are the most embittered enemies of 
		Hitler, and the Communists and Socialists are carrying on a courageous 
		underground battle against the régime.  In spite of 
		the vigilence of the secret police, many Communist and Socialist 
		newspapers are published or smuggled in across the frontier and passed 
		quietly from hand to hand.   When Hitler 
		looks out beyond his own frontier he sees the catastrophic effects of 
		his foreign policy-the hatred of Italy, the murder of Dollfuss, the 
		strengthening of Soviet Russia’s diplomatic position, and the alienation 
		of the sympathies of all civilised peoples because of the barbarities of 
		National-Socialism.   Discipline and Unity  Such are 
		the forces fighting against Hitler.  Powerful as they are, I do not 
		think them strong enough to lead in the near future to Hitler’s 
		downfall.  They are scattered, unorganised forces.  They are 
		unarmed and nave not the discipline or the spirit of revolution nor the 
		unity to make war on Hitler.  All the discipline and the unity and 
		the ruthlessness are on Hitler’s" side, and it is these three 
		characteristics which count in Germany to-day.    The Army is 
		now Hitler’s trump card and the oath of a German soldier of the Regular 
		Army is not to be lightly esteemed.  General von Blomberg, the real 
		master of his country, finds it in his interest to maintain Hitler as a 
		symbol of unity, and I see no reason why the Army should throw Hitler 
		overboard, for Hitler is now carrying out precisely the Right-Wing 
		policy favoured by the soldiers, the industrialists, and the landowners. 
		 As long as 
		Hitler carries out this conservative policy, General von Blomberg will, 
		I believe, do all he can to keep the Army on Hitler’s side.  If 
		Hitler tries revolutionary experiments, however, a sharp word of warning 
		that the Army is against him wilt soon make him realise the Army, rather 
		than the real leader of Germany.   The Firebrand  "In six 
		months’ time," said a German to me, "Hitler may only have 10 per cent.of 
		the power and Blomberg may be the real dictator behind the scenes.  
		But it will be Hitler who will remain as But revolutionary elements are 
		certain to raise their heads again among the Storm Troopers, and 
		Goebbels, the firebrand, may fight for an extreme policy.  In such 
		a case I believe that Hitler will purge the Nazi party ruthlessly of 
		Left-Wing elements, and that perhaps will bring about Goebbels’s 
		downfall.   A 
		repetition of the June 30 massacre is quite possible if the 
		revolutionaries of the Storm Troopers regard Hitler as a traitor to the 
		Socialistic side of the party programme.   With the 
		Army behind him Hitler seems politically strong.  Even his economic 
		difficulties have been exaggerated.  The coming winter will be 
		terrible, it is true, but reports that the shortage of foreign currency 
		and the inability to import raw materials will bring about an economic 
		collapse are, it seems, false.  Germany has imported such large 
		amounts of raw materials this year that she has stocks which can last 
		for many months.  "Even if I do not import a single pound’s worth 
		of raw materials my factory can go on working for a long time with the 
		supplies I have stored up," said one industrialist to me.  
		 What, then, 
		of the future?  It seems that the forces fighting for Hitler are 
		more powerful, more united, and better armed than the forces against 
		Hitler.    Unless he 
		falls a victim to the mediæval wave of political assassinations which 
		has swept across Europe, he will probably be the figurehead of a 
		military dictatorship.   a symbol of nationalism." 
		 That German may be right. 
		   ******* 
			
				| 
					
						| 
						 THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES NEWS, August 10thd 1934  
						  
						 
						
						--- 
						By Gareth Jones 
						 
						VIENNA August 8th.
						Three soldiers in steel helmets standing 
						near a machine-gun, a lorry full of police with rifles 
						rushing past; armed men on every corner, and a grim grey 
						building from whose windows a few prisoners looked 
						out-such was the scene that confronted me this morning 
						when I penetrated the forbidden zone of Vienna. 
						  
						“You must not stand still here,” shouted 
						a soldier to me as I inquisitively stared at the muzzle 
						of the machine gun and I moved away out of the 
						barricaded area to a quieter part of the city. 
						  
						In this forbidden zone is the prison 
						where the Nazis who entered the Chancellery and took 
						part in the murder of Dollfuss are now being carefully 
						guarded. It was only my British passport which enabled 
						me to stroll through those empty watched streets.  Had I 
						been an Austrian the police and the soldiers would have 
						turned me away, for they fear two things-a raid by the 
						anti-Nazi Heimwehr (Austrian Fascist Army under Prince 
						Starbemberg) who might attempt to take revenge upon the 
						murderers of Dollfuss, or an attack by fanatical Nazis 
						who might try to rescue their captured comrades. 
						  Crowded With Armed Men  
						
						A few streets further on I passed the 
						German Embassy and again I saw police with rifles.  
						Indeed, Vienna is crowded with armed men, for the city 
						is still under martial law.  Troops march past the hotel 
						window; Heimwehr lads, with bunches of feathers in their 
						grey-green caps, parade before the Opera House; and the 
						purple shirts of the Catholic troops (Ostmärkische 
						Sturmscharen) add colour to the Viennese streets. 
						  
						These troops gave a superficial 
						impression of strength and loyalty to the Dollfuss 
						régime, but beneath the surface there is no land so 
						tragically torn by dissension and so flaming with hatred 
						and with the longing for revenge as Austria today. 
						 
 Dollfuss  
						The assassination of Dollfuss has moved 
						the Viennese as no other event.  Their sympathy has, 
						however, been for a man who had many admirable and 
						lovable traits, and not for his policy.  They remember 
						his simplicity and his kindness, and several people have 
						wept before me when talking of his death. 
						  
						One working man told me how he had talked 
						to Dollfuss a week before Ins death, when they were 
						strolling in a park.  The worker had forbidden his child 
						to play with the Dollfuss children.  But the Chancellor 
						had said, “Why should they not play together?  I am only 
						a peasant’s son, and I shall die just like any other 
						man.”    
						In spite of the deep human feeling which 
						has been felt for Dollfuss, there is strong opposition 
						within the country to the policy which his Government 
						has pursued and which Herr Schuschnigg, the new 
						Chancellor, is pursuing. 
						  Socialist Grievances  
						
						The Socialists, who once ruled over all 
						Vienna and built the magnificent workers’ flats of that 
						city, have not forgiven the Government for the brutal 
						bombardment of the Karl Marxhof in February; for the 
						torture of many prisoners; for the breaking of promises 
						to some of those captured; for the imprisonment of men 
						without trial, and for the introduction of a dictatorial 
						régime.    
						Some of the Socialists have gone over to 
						the National-Socialists, and few will forgive the 
						brutality of the present régime or the imprisonment of 
						thousands of workers in concentration camps throughout 
						the country.   
						 
						The Nazis are strong throughout the 
						country, although the savagery of the murder of Dollfuss 
						and the failure of the secret Storm Troopers to rise 
						through the country have caused a set-back, but, I 
						believe, a temporary set-back.  They can rally to their 
						side all those thousands who hate the influence of 
						Mussolini.   
						 
						“I fought against the Italians during the 
						War.  They are our enemies.  Why should they dictate to 
						Austria?”  asked a Viennese.  “They are just using us 
						Austrians for their own purpose.  I hate Mussolini and 
						his schemes.”   
						 Flight of South Tyrolese  
						
						They can win the support of those who 
						boil at the ill-treatment of the South Tyrolese by the 
						Italians.  In spite of Mussolini’s promises, the plight 
						of this South Tyrol minority under Fascist rule is 
						tragic.    
						The Nazis have the support of the 
						university men, professors, and students, and have many 
						intellectuals in their ranks.  Thousands of peasants in 
						Carinthia and Styria are said to be on the side of the 
						Nazis, and to be longing for a closer union with 
						Germany.    
						Therefore, I do not find among the 
						population such a passion for Austrian independence as 
						is claimed by many Italian and French writers.  The 
						racial and economic magnetism of Germans cannot be 
						destroyed even by such a dastardly crime as the killing 
						of Dollfuss.  
						Army’s Jealousy  
						The strength of the Nazis and of the 
						Socialists has undermined confidence in the police and 
						the army, which has not been wholly restored by the 
						loyalty of these forces during the events following the 
						Dollfuss murder.  The army is jealous of the Heimwehr, 
						and the relations between the Heimwehr and the Catholic 
						troops are sometimes strained. 
						  
						Although Dollfuss died for his country, 
						Austria still presents a picture of bitterness, 
						conflict, and brotherly strife.  Few foresee a period of 
						calm.  Some believe that the Socialists, who are working 
						underground, will again rise against the dictatorship.  
						Others believe that the present Government will have a 
						rapprochement with Germany. 
						The Government has one trump card, 
						however, and that is the dread that Italian troops will 
						march and occupy Austria if the Nazis come into power. 
						  
						“Mussolini will march.  It is no bluff.”  
						Those are phrases one hears from well-informed people.  
						Fear of Italian invasion may keep the present régime in 
						power.   
 If World-War Comes 
						
						“It a world-war comes it will begin by 
						Italian troops marching into Austria to prevent the 
						union of Austria and Germany,” stated one expert.  “If 
						the Italians march the Yugoslavs will send their troops 
						into Austria to prevent themselves being cut off from 
						the north by Italian troops and prevent the Italians 
						joining hands with the Hungarians and blocking 
						Yugoslavia from all contact with Austria or with 
						Germany.”  Austria has therefore become the storm-centre 
						of Europe and its most dangerous part is the region 
						where Italy, Austria, and Yugoslavia almost meet.  That 
						province, Carinthia, is regarded as the first 
						battlefield of a European war, if another breaks out. 
						  
						I shall investigate on the spot 
						conditions in the zone which Austrians regard as 
						the fighting ground of the future. |  |    ******   THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES NEWS, August 14th  
		1934    
		"SACRED CRUSADE" TO UNITE  AUSTRIA WITH GERMANY" ---  Carinthians Talk of Noble Nazi Rising   By Gareth Jones   KLAGENFURT, Carinthia.  " IF you 
		wish to see how strong the Nazis are in Austria," said a politician to 
		me in a Viennese café, "go to Carinthia in the south and walk in the 
		districts where there was bloodshed a few days ago."   Some hours 
		later I entered the night Rome express in the south station of Vienna, 
		which is now guarded by soldiers with bayonets fixed, and was soon 
		speeding towards the valleys and mountains of south Austria. 
		 When dawn 
		came after I had spent a sleepless night on hard third-class benches, I 
		looked out to see dark blue mountains rising out of whitish mists, rows 
		of vine upon slopes facing the sun and ancient castles standing like 
		Carreg Cennen on abrupt cliffs overlooking the river.           Towns whose 
		names were familiar to me because severe fighting had taken place there 
		after the murder of Dollfuss looked tranquil in the morning sun, as if 
		never a shot had ever disturbed their peace.  I saw Saint Veit, 
		into which within the past fortnight 500 Nazis marched, occupied the 
		Town hall, hoisted the swastika flag, and tore down from the church the 
		banners of mourning for Dollfuss.  They had held the town until 
		next morning, when they were bombarded by artillery and had to escape, 
		leaving behind them between 40 and 50 dead.   In the 
		morning grey we passed the town which, by a curious coincidence, bears 
		the name of the Welsh castle Saint Donat.  Not long ago brother had 
		shot against brother in its old-fashioned streets.   AN IMPORTANT QUESTION   At half 
		past five in the morning I left the train and descended in the capital 
		of Carinthia, Klagenfurt.   "How strong 
		are the Nazis in this province?"  I asked myself. It is an 
		important question for the Government of Austria and for the future of 
		Europe, because if the Nazis are really strong they may overthrow the 
		present Government, which stands for the independence of Austria, and 
		unite their country with Germany, with grave consequences for the 
		world’s peace.   To try to 
		answer this question I made for the countryside, and by 10 o’clock I was 
		swinging along a road lined by vast sunflowers nine feet high, near 
		fields sprinkled blue with cornflowers and purple with vetch, and 
		beneath lofty mountains, the tops of which were hidden in clouds.  
		I passed the grayish-brown River Drave, which rushes into Yugoslavia, 
		joins the Danube, and then enters the Black Sea.  Through a stretch 
		of pine trees and firs I walked and came out into the open again, where 
		maize and sunflowers grew.   An old 
		peasant was working by the roadside.  "Ay, what a time we have had 
		here," he moaned.  "On this very road by my house the Nazis came.  
		Their shots whizzed past our house, and we just stayed inside, terrified 
		to move.  They marched from that village over there towards the 
		station."   PRISONS FULL OF NAZIS   "And are there many Nazis 
		here?" I asked.   "Many 
		Nazis, indeed!" he grunted. "They’re nearly all Nazis, but now the 
		prisons are full of them.  Why, there’s one village I know just 
		near where there are only three men left.  All the others have been 
		taken or have fled across the border into Yugoslavia.  Fools, I 
		call them, to rise when the harvest is on.  What are politicians, 
		anyway, compared with the harvest?  If they’d only give us back our 
		Emperor Franz Joseph again we’d all be happy,"   A quarter 
		of a mile further on the village began.  Everywhere were notices 
		printed in large black letters:   Declaration 
		of Martial Law, From July 26 all houses must be closed at eight o’clock.  
		The soldiers and police have been instructed to make immediate use of 
		their rifles, when necessary.   I made my 
		way past old-fashioned houses, painted yellow, pink, and light green, 
		with red flowers in masses in each windowsill, until I came to the house 
		of the Mayor.  Here, I thought, I will find a man bitterly opposed 
		to the Nazis, a man who will treat them as rebels.  My astonishment 
		was great when I was taken into a room where the Mayor, a tall but bent 
		man who looked like a gentleman farmer, was. talking with the old 
		headmaster of the village school.   When I heard 
		the remark, "The Nazis who rose here were not rebels or terrorists.  
		It was a noble rising of the people," I was bewildered.  Here was 
		the chief representative of authority supporting the rebels. 
		 SPIRIT NOT CRUSHED   "Ninety per 
		cent. of the young people are Nazis here," said the Mayor.  
		 
		"Ninety-nine per cent." interrupted the headmaster, "if they could vote.  
		I wish you could talk with my son, but he is in prison.  He has 
		been found innocent of bloodshed and yet he is still there without 
		trial."   "If I 
		cannot talk with your son, I should like to talk with some young 
		people," I said.   "Young 
		people!"  The Mayor laughed ironically.  "They’re all in 
		prison because they are Nazis.  But I’ll tell you what the young 
		people want and what they will fight for again - union with Germany.  
		We are determined to have it.   "The murder of Dollfuss, much as we 
		deplore it, has not crushed the: spirit of our young men.  There 
		will be more revolts, more fighting, more bloodshed, for Austria will 
		not have rest until we have joined with our German brothers to the 
		north."   WHY REVOLT FAILED   At this 
		point I asked an indiscreet question: "If the Nazis are so strong as you 
		state, why did the rising fail so miserably?"   "Machine 
		guns!" snapped out the Mayor. "They sent in troops and Heimwehr men from 
		outside, but one day they will not be able to crush the Nazis so 
		easily."   The Mayor 
		revealed to me the desires of the peasants, who are nearly all in favour 
		of the union (Anschluss) with Germany.  They know that prices for 
		agricultural products and for timber are higher in Germany than in 
		Italy.  Their suffering has been so great in Austria that they look 
		upon distant Germany as a kind of paradise where all peasants prosper. 
		 Propaganda 
		has been smuggled in across the frontiers and the peasants are ready to 
		believe all the stories of happiness and wealth which they read of in 
		Germany.   When I left 
		the Mayor and the schoolmaster they said, "Tell the world that Austria 
		wants to be united with Germany and does not want to be the prisoner of 
		Italy."   ONE NATION   I made my 
		way to the village inn to enjoy in the open-air that famous Austrian 
		dish "Wiener Schnitzel" and the coffee which is delicious in even the 
		most remote valleys.  At the next table sat two Viennese boys about 
		11 years of age.  We talked of aeroplanes and skyscrapers, of 
		kings, emperors, and of soldiers.   "What do 
		you think of the Germans?" I asked.   One of them 
		replied boldly: "The Germans and the Austrians have the same tongue and 
		are one nation!"   A few 
		moments later the waitress came.  "Hitler is one of the greatest 
		men that ever lived.  Only he can save Austria! she said. 
		 As I was 
		sipping my coffee a fair-haired young man came to me and said: 
		 "The Mayor 
		sent me to you.  I am almost the only young man in this village who 
		is not in prison, because I was away when the rising took place.  I 
		tell you that we young men will never be crushed.  We will fight to 
		the death for union with Germany.   "I have 
		been in Styria, in the Tyrol, and here in Carinthia, and the same spirit 
		is inspiring the young men today as inspired William Tell in Switzerland 
		and Adreas Hofer, our hero from the Tyrol.  The machine-guns of the 
		present dictatorship will not keep us down."   THE FANATIC   His serious 
		blue eyes revealed the earnestness, the intolerance, and the courage of 
		the fanatic.  But Europe today is full of such fanatics, In spite of 
		his views, would not the strength of Roman Catholicism keep the 
		Government in power?  I reflected.  Surely a régime supported 
		by the Pope, such as the present Austrian régime, would be upheld by a 
		pious Roman Catholic people like the’ Austrians?  I asked him these 
		questions.   His reply 
		was one I had been surprised to hear from a number of people in Austria: 
		"I am a Roman Catholic, but, like thousands of those of my faith, I hate 
		the way the Vatican is carrying out the policy of Italy.  
		 "The Vatican has lost everywhere 
		during the past few years - in Russia, in Spain, in Germany, and 
		elsewhere, and now it wants to maintain power in at least one Roman 
		Catholic State, and that is Austria.  The Vatican is Italian in 
		spirit and Italian in its foreign aims."  Nothing he believe-not 
		even the Church - could keep Germany and Austria apart for ever, and 
		there were hundreds of thousands of men like himself who would die to 
		bring about the union.   REFLECTIONS   As I had 
		said good-bye to him, wondering as we parted whether he would be killed 
		in another Nazi rising or whether he would, indeed, play a part in a 
		Nazi Austria, I reflected on the conversations I had had.  
		 I talked to 
		more peasants and workers.  Everywhere I found that in this part of 
		Austria the desire for union with Germany had become a kind of sacred 
		crusade, and that even the murder of Dollfuss had not discredited 
		National-Socialism for long.   And as the 
		evening haze fell over the mountains I asked myself: "If Austria becomes 
		united with Germany, will not the Italians march into this very region, 
		and will that not lead to a European War?"   That question I shall seek 
		to answer in my next article.   ******  THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES 
		NEWS, August 15th 1934.
		
		
		
		WHERE WAR MAY COME FROM Austro-Yugoslavian-Italian Frontier  SITUATION SIMILAR TO THAT OF 1914   By GARETH JONES KLAGENFURT (By Air Mail).
		 I HAVE just 
		motored across the Italian border and it is packed with troops." 
		 An excited 
		motorcyclist shouted this to the clerks on the other side of the counter 
		at the travel agency in this Austro-Yugoslavian frontier town, where I 
		was buying my ticket to Italy.   "I was 
		stopped by soldiers every few minutes," he exclaimed.  "I saw tanks 
		and big guns and regiments with armoured cars.  There are thousands 
		of men there."  "Will they 
		march if there is trouble?"  I asked, joining in the 
		conversation. "March! They’re ready to march at any moment.  It’s 
		no bluff he replied.   The head of 
		the travel agency, a calm, elderly man, broke in and said slowly: "Then 
		Carinthia will be seat of war and Klagenfurt will be the battleground. 
		For the Yugoslavs will send their troops here.  If the Italians 
		march it means another European war."   I inquired 
		where the Yugoslavs would be likely to enter Austria should the Italians 
		march, and being told that this was the strategic point came here by 
		train. And I sit in Yugoslav territory.  Soldiers from Serbia in 
		grey uniforms are washing themselves in the stream nearby.  A few 
		yards away is a railway on which 20 years ago thousands of Austrian 
		troops were being transported to crush the Serbs.  The high 
		mountains, which form the border on Yugoslavia and Austria, except at 
		low-lying point, stand to the south, and I am talking to the Austrian 
		frontier guard, the Yugoslav Customs official, and an Austrian Nazi. 
		 "At Their Mercy"   This 
		peaceful frontier is the very point where Yugoslav (Serbs, Croats and 
		Slovenes) soldiers might pour into Austria if the Italian troops crossed 
		the border.   "But why 
		should you Yugoslavs wish to march into Austria?" I asked the Yugoslav 
		Customs official.   "You have a 
		map there," he says, "let me show you.  If Austria decides to join 
		Germany, then Italy will send in troops to prevent it.  They will 
		cross by the pass near Tarvis and will take the military road, known as 
		the Packroad which passes through Carinthia and Styria and unites the 
		Italians with their allies, the Hungarians.    "Along that 
		route the Italians will march through Villach, Klagenfurt, and Graz.  
		What then?  If they do that, we Yugoslavs are at their mercy.  
		We shall be cut off from the North of Europe, cut off from Germany, 
		Czechoslovakia, and Poland, and we shall be like a nut in the nutcracker 
		of our enemy, Italy.  That we shall never allow.  That is why 
		there are several regiments stationed now within two or three miles of 
		where you are sitting."  Thus if the 
		Italians occupy Austria these quiet meadows filled with flowers and the 
		pinewoods around will echo to the tramp of soldiers’ feet, and those 
		Yugoslav soldiers who are now singing their folk-songs a few yards away 
		will be loading their rifles in real warfare.   Hatred of Italy  What will 
		the Austrians do?  I do not think that they will remain quiet.  
		Although the present Government relies upon the friendship and help of 
		Italy and is closely bound with Mussolini, there is among the population 
		bitter hatred of Italy and a fear Italian domination.  They 
		remember that Italy was their ally in 1914 yet came into the war against 
		them. They know that in the South Tyrol Italians are mishandling their 
		fellow Austrians.  The consequences of the Italians entering 
		Austria might, therefore, be grave.   It is not 
		certain that the Yugoslavs would enter Austria.  It is possible 
		that their internal troubles, the severe dictatorship and the rumblings 
		of discontent among the Croats would keep their troops away from 
		Austria.   It is 
		possible that the French would use pressure upon their ally, the 
		Yugoslavs, to prevent them from marching into Carinthia.  
		Nevertheless, most people on this border believe they would march. 
		 In some 
		respects the situation is similar to that of 1914 in that the 
		independence of a small country is the issue, and the crisis is in the 
		same region. If Austria succeeds in maintaining her independence, 
		however, no crisis will arise and the Italian troops will remain at 
		home.   What of 
		Italy?  I shall cross the Austro-Italian frontier at the strategic 
		point of Tarvis and shall report on my findings.   *******    THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES 
		NEWS, August 16th  1934 
		ITALY’S BIG GUNS POINT TOWARDS AUSTRIA  Hatred of Germany Bordering on Hysteria  ---  By GARETH JONES  TRIESTE, Italy.  Flashes of lightning streak 
		across the Adriatic. Vague outlines of sailing craft glide through the 
		darkness of the bay, while to the north a searchlight reveals every few 
		seconds the red, white, and green funnel of a giant Italian liner. 
		 Here where I sit, in the 
		principal square, rival orchestras clash with each other to allure the 
		hundreds of Italians who stroll towards the quays.   Such is Trieste, the port 
		which makes Italy the Mistress of the Adriatic.  It is here that I 
		wish to sum up my threefold impressions since my arrival in Italy from 
		the Austrian province of Carinthia.   My first impression is 
		troops, troops, troops.  As soon as the train had crossed the pass 
		from Austria and had arrived at the frontier station of Tarvis (a name 
		which may well be important in the future, for Tarvis and the Brenner 
		Pass are the two main entries from Italy into Austria) I saw in the pine 
		forests for miles along the railway track hundreds upon hundreds of 
		camouflaged tents of curious square shape like bathing tents painted 
		grey, green, a dirty orange, and a smudged red.  The smoke of many 
		camp fires hovered over the woods and Italian soldiers looked up at the 
		passing express and waved.  In fields numerous powerful military 
		lorries stood, as it ready at any moment to plunge into the foreign land 
		a few miles away, while big guns waited near, pointing towards Austria. 
		 From village inns the men 
		in their green-grey uniforms would come out in laughing groups of three 
		or four and watch the workers who were rapidly constructing a new road 
		leading directly to the frontier.   As the train descended the 
		valley was bordered by fortresses which showed signs of activity. 
		 About two hours later we 
		were in the plain, and the region filled with troops lay to the east, an 
		idyllic range of mountains shining in the evening sun.   HATRED OF GERMANY   A dark, excitable Italian - 
		an important Fascist of the district - entered my compartment, and when 
		I talked with him I gathered vividly my second impression of Italy 
		to-day, an impression of a way of hatred of Germany which borders on 
		hysteria, and which is leading to a revolution in Italian foreign 
		policy.   What gestures of passion!  
		How vehemently his eyes flashed at the very mention of Germany!  
		Like a Machine-gun spitting out fire he exclaimed: "Germany! The Germans 
		are savages. Hitler is a barbarian.  Mussolini will never forgive 
		him, because he has broken all his promises.  The murder of 
		Dollfuss has ended for ever and ever my friendship, we had for the 
		Germans."   I described to him the 
		Italian troops I had seen on the frontier.  His face gleamed with 
		pride.  "They will march, too," he declared, "the very moment 
		Austria becomes Nazi and joins with Germany.  We have 40,000 
		soldiers ready.  The way they were mobilised was wonderful.  
		The men were working everywhere at the harvest, but Mussolini had only 
		to give the word, and, presto! in a couple of hours they were travelling 
		full speed towards Tarvis!"   WAR FEARS SCORNED   Fears of a future European 
		war which might arise out of a union of Austria with Germany and out of 
		the entry of Italian troops into Austria troubled me again.  Would 
		not Germany send troops or aeroplanes into Austria to stop the Italians?  
		Would not the Yugoslavs do the same?  Surely the Italian policy 
		would be the height of criminal madness, precipitating a European war?  
		I expressed my doubts to the Fascist.   With that omniscience which 
		characterises Nazis, Bolsheviks, and Fascists, he dismissed my 
		objections with scorn.  "European war!" he laughed. "We’ll just 
		walk in, that’s all.  The Germans will not prevent us; they are too 
		weak.  We could crush them.  They have a hostile France on one 
		side and a hostile Poland at their back."   "But the Yugoslavs?" I 
		rejoined.  "They are too weak and 
		uncivilised.  France will settle with them, and our way into 
		Austria will be clear."   This optimism is certainly 
		dangerous on the Italian side, but it is perhaps warranted by the new 
		friendship between the Italians and the French.   "France must be our ally," 
		declared the Fascist.  "It would settle everything to have an 
		alliance with France.  She is a great nation, she is powerful; our 
		differences could be easily settled.  We would then not need to 
		quarrel about our navies in the Mediterranean; but France should give us 
		land in Africa to colonise."   M. Barthou, the French 
		Foreign Minister, is coming to see Mussolini in September and I have the 
		impression that the result of their talks will be a cementing of 
		Italo-French, friendship and another blow at Hitler.   TRIESTE THE CLUE   At this point of our 
		conversation the brilliant lights along the Trieste shore appeared and 
		we were approaching what was once the great port of the Austro-Hungarian 
		Empire and the link between Central Europe and the East.  After the 
		War Trieste became Italian and now it plays a vital part in Italian 
		policy.   My final impression is that 
		Trieste is a clue to Italy’s policy of maintaining the Independence of 
		Austria.  The Italians fear that if Austria joins with Germany the 
		Germans will cast longing eyes at the port of Trieste, in the same way 
		as the Russians coveted Constantinople before the War.   An independent little 
		Austria is no danger to Trieste.  Therefore, the Italians by recent 
		agreement have allowed Austria a free harbour in Trieste, where the 
		Austrians pay no customs duties and have extra-territorial rights. 
		 Italy’s fight for the 
		independence of Austria is, therefore, Italy’s fight for Trieste. And 
		because Trieste means Italy’s spearhead for expansion throughout Africa 
		there are, for example, four Italian lines from Trieste which sail round 
		Africa - and because Trieste means Italy’s mastery of the Adriatic, 
		Mussolini is not likely, without a grim struggle, to allow Austria to 
		join with Germany.      ******* THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES NEWS, August 17th 
		1934  
		VATICAN versus MUSSOLINI    
		 
 War That May Rend Italy   CONTROL OF THE CHILDREN --- By GARETH JONES   TRIESTE, Italy.  The traveller who 
		approaches Trieste from the north looks out on one side upon the deep 
		blue, crystal clear Adriatic, and on the other upon a rocky region, 
		where a few scattered shrubs grow and where scarcely a drop of running 
		water is to be seen.   In this almost pathless 
		district, the Austro-Hungarian and Italian armies battled against each 
		other for two years over such positions as Gorizia, Montfalcone, Monte 
		san Michele, Doberdo, and Timavo (the river whose praises, Virgil sang). 
		 Today only the War 
		cemeteries remain as a memorial to the strife of nearly 20 years ago.  
		But a new war is brewing in this region, a war which may spread 
		throughout Italy.  It is not a war for trenches or hills or towns, 
		but for the souls of the Italian children, a war between the Roman 
		Catholic Church and the Fascist State.   I have good authority for 
		stating that there may soon be a break between the Vatican and 
		Mussolini.  On the horizon there is a fierce struggle between 
		Church and State.   In this war, a few shots have already been fired in 
		Trieste, where the fight between Church and State is twofold.  In 
		other parts of Italy the bone of contention is one only sway over the 
		child; but here a second cause of strife enters that is of particular 
		interest to Wales, namely, the language question.   CRUSHING LANGUAGE   The region 
		around Trieste, which borders on Yugoslavia, is to Italy what Wales is 
		to Britain.  There live in the countryside here about 1,000,000 
		Slovenes, who speak a Slav language and to whom Italian is foreign.  
		The Italians are doing all they can to crush the Slovene language. 
		 The Bishop 
		of Trieste is combating the Italianising influence.  He believes 
		that all peoples have a right to worship in their own language, and he 
		is fighting for the Slovene minority.  He has, however, been 
		forbidden to publish a Prayer Book in the Slovene language.  
		 Imagine the 
		revolt which would spread through Wales if Welsh Prayer Books were 
		abolished!  Priests have already been imprisoned here for upholding 
		the Slovene language.   PRIESTS ACCUSE FASCISTS   Roman Catholics are 
		exceedingly bitter because the Slovene language is being persecuted.  
		But throughout Italy the Church is beginning to revolt against Fascist 
		domination over the minds of the children.   In private priests are 
		accusing the Fascists of breaking the Concordat, the agreement reached 
		between the Pope and Mussolini.  They are regretting that the 
		Vatican is not bolder in upholding the rights of Roman Catholics.  
		They are beginning to demand a new Concordat.    "What is the use of 
		Mussolini standing up for the rights of Catholics in Austria if he 
		tramples upon them in Italy?" they ask.   PARADES INSTEAD OF MASS   The Fascists are accused of 
		purposely alienating children from the church by making them parade at 
		the very hours when they should be at Mass.   There is also among priests 
		a fear that Mussolini is not properly informed about the religious 
		situation in the country; that the local Fascist authorities, who are 
		notorious in some towns for their corruption and swindling, are sending 
		false reports to their leader on the sentiment of the people, and that 
		the Vatican is over-timid in hesitating to press their point of view. 
		 The Church will not remain 
		hesitant for long, however, and a new war between the Vatican and 
		Mussolini may soon rend Italy.   *******    THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES NEWS, August 18th 
		1934  
		THE HYSTERIA OF GOERING "Priest surrounded by Greek Chorus"   People’s Weakening Faith    By Gareth Jones  MUNICH. Friday  A CRUEL, 
		fleshy fist, ever moving, ever threatening fascinates me and I can 
		hardly take my eyes away from it.  Sometimes 
		clenched with the strength of a powerful man it shakes back and fro in a 
		gesture of warning, sometimes it crashes down as if ascending ruthlessly 
		upon a victim. It is a fist with personality, but a brutal, a nailed 
		fist.  It is the fist of Goering.   He stands 
		elevated on a stage a few yards away from me before a mass of 
		Brownshirts, of Hitler youths, and of German middle-class citizens.  
		He is the centre of the most magnificently staged drama I have seen. 
		 Behind him 
		rise the lofty pillars of a classic temple, from which the red, black 
		and white swastika banners are flowing.  Illuminated so that the 
		red brilliance of the Nazi colour may stand out against the blackness of 
		the sky and crowned with a dazzling swastika electric sign, this temple 
		looks over a grassy square now filled with National-Socialists, who read 
		between the centre pillars the slogan, "With Adolf Hitler for Germany."        
		 Missing Faces   Not long 
		ago this crowd was waiting for Goering in the darkness.  Then, with 
		a suddenness which made one’s eyes blink, searchlights flashed, a 
		military band blared out a Nazi march and hundreds upon hundreds of 
		banners were seen approaching from the distance down the avenue towards 
		the temple.  The Storm 
		Troopers, with their leaders, marched past.   Thinking of 
		the shootings of Roehm and his associates, I whispered to my neighbour: 
		"There are some faces missing since your last Munich meeting."  He 
		replied: "They are unwept, unhonoured, and unsung."   There was 
		silence for a few minutes while the crowd waited.  Then a faint 
		cheer came, and rapidly down the avenue drove a car, with a fat man in a 
		brown uniform standing up and giving the Fascist salute.  Goering 
		had arrived to speak in the campaign for Hitler’s election on Sunday. 
		 Grim Expression   The crowd 
		stood with outstretched arms—I must have been the only one in that vast 
		multitude whose right arm remained obstinately unraised.  
		 Like a 
		priest surrounded by the chorus in Greek play, Goering stood motionless 
		beneath the Ionic columns of the temple, while the Storm Troop flag 
		bearers carried their brilliant banners with the silver crests 
		glittering beneath the searchlights.   His 
		features, rendered hard by his high cheekbones and by the grim 
		expression of his mouth, were deepened by the light which shone down 
		upon him.   His musical 
		voice boomed out a greeting to the German people.  It had a touch 
		of rich harmony about it, but soon I felt a note of hardness. He had not 
		spoken long before there rang out in those clipped tones of the German 
		officer a jarring sound of, cruelty, impatience, and intolerance, which 
		contrasted with the studied harmony and pleasing volume of the opening 
		sentences.   Hitler’s Influence   The 
		influence of Hitler upon his manner of speaking was striking, and my 
		thoughts went to those Welsh members of Parliament whose voice and 
		gestures are modeled upon, Mr. Lloyd George.   There was 
		in some high points of Goering’s speech the same note of hysteria and 
		unbridled passion which I had heard in Hitler’s speeches, a note which 
		inspires one with fear that the speaker will suddenly break down or lose 
		absolute control of his mental powers.   But that 
		Goering is a tragic actor of the first rank there can be no doubt. 
		 Beyond the studied acquirements of a 
		crystal-clear enunciation he has an instinctive knowledge of the place 
		of light and shade in oratory and of the need of irony to follow a 
		tragic or emotional passage.   "Ghosts of Vanished Leaders"   Ironic 
		scorn about the lies of the world press followed a crescendo movement, 
		which culminated in the shrieking claim: The German people have become 
		the freest people of the world.  That freedom has come through 
		Adolf Hitler.   "Adolf 
		Hitler" filled the speech, which was one long panegyric of the Leader, 
		and one long demand that every man and woman should vote on August 19. 
		 But with 
		all his gifts of oratory, with all the passion which had filled his 
		purple patches, and with all his triumphs of stage management, Goering 
		must have left the meeting a slightly saddened man.   Where was 
		the enthusiasm which filled the assembly 18 months ago?  Where was 
		the spirit of religious fervour which once sent a shiver through the 
		limbs and hearts of Germans.  And those dark shadows in the trees 
		yonder.  Were they, perhaps, the ghosts of vanished Storm Troop 
		leaders who not long ago had stood on that same temple, side by side 
		with Goering, but whose ashes are now in some nearby graveyard. 
		 Forced to Listen-in   Yes, they 
		were lacking the old keenness which had impressed me so deeply in the 
		first fine careless raptures of Hitler’s revolution.   They are 
		lacking in this whole election campaign by which Hitler will on Sunday 
		be elected Leader, of the German people.   
		Indifference is the keynote of the week.   Families 
		are forced to listen in to the speeches which are pouring through the 
		wireless like an unceasing flood.  In many houses the caretaker 
		visits each flat to inquire who listened in and who was out, and whether 
		the person, who was out listened in or not!   What the 
		fate of the caretaker would be in a British house if he so dared to 
		trespass upon the freedom of the citizen I hardly like to imagine. 
		 Damped Enthusiasm   "Why waste 
		the money on an election when there can be no other result than a 
		victory for the one and only candidate?" critical men are asking, but in 
		spite of their criticisms they will all go to the ballot-box on Sunday, 
		for to vote is obligatory.  Many millions will go with enthusiasm, 
		it is true, but it is a damped enthusiasm.   I myself 
		will on Sunday and on many days in the future be thinking not so much of 
		the ballot-box and of the vote to be counted by 100 per cent. National 
		Socialists but of something far more powerful—that iron fist of Goering 
		which I saw clenched and threatening as the lights shone down upon it in 
		temple at Munich.   ******* THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES NEWS, August 21st 
		1934  **** 
		WHO ARE THE "Yeses" and "No" IN THE GERMAN PLEBISCITE    By Gareth Jones   Who were 
		the 38,000,000 who voted for Hitler arid who were the 4.000,000 who had 
		the courage to say "No"?   Among those 
		who placed their cross in the circle representing "Yes’s there were 
		millions who sincerely believed that Hitler should be their leader, but 
		who hated the methods which his dictatorship had introduced. 
		 They voted "Yes" because they saw no 
		alternative to him except Communism and chaos.  They voted "Yes" 
		because they longed for an end to civil strife and some stable régime 
		however objectionable they might find many of its features.  They 
		voted "Yes" above all because they felt that Hitler was a representative 
		of that national unity towards which Germany had always striven. 
		 SERFDOM IN THE BLOOD   Other 
		millions voted for Hitler, the Man.  They are the millions who 
		crave for someone to lead them, who lack initiative and long for an 
		order from above, who have in their blood the former serfdom of East 
		Prussia or the traditions of those petty little States where, only a 
		century-and-a-half ago, the princelings sold their subjects to foreign 
		generals for gold.    This type 
		of man worships a strong hand.  Many 
		vigorously, shouted "Ja" for Hitler because they believed that he had 
		rescued them from Bolshevism and from massacre.  They looked upon 
		him as the bulwark against Communism.   Others-the 
		Industrialists-voted for him because he had smashed the trade unions and 
		put an end to strikes.   Others 
		voted out of fear that they should be discovered and lose their posts. 
		 That their 
		manner of voting could be found out through the voting slips I do not 
		believe, because I am convinced that the ballot was secret.  I 
		visited a polling booth in the most Communistic area of Berlin.  
		There was no number or mark or my voting slip by which the voter could 
		be identified.   THE "NOES"   What of 
		those who said "No"?  They comprise men of such scattered opinions 
		that they could hardly organise to overthrow Hitler.  Among them 
		were Communists and Socialists, more bitter than ever against the régime. 
		Numbers of Catholics considered their "No" as a protest against National 
		Socialism’s claim to the souls of the children and to the belief of 
		young Nazis that "we have a new religion and that religion is Germany"!   
		 Protestants 
		must have been among those who voted against Hitler, and they must have 
		thought of the simple but  stirring protest of the philosopher and 
		divine, Karl Barth, when he exclaimed "Ich sage Nein!" ("I say No!"). 
		 
		Intellectuals must have been amongst the dissidents.  They grieve 
		at the garrotting of the German press and the ruining of the stage and 
		of the films.  "No!" This must have been the reaction of some when 
		they thought of the killings of June 30.   HITLER’S CONFIDENCE   It would be 
		a mistake, however, to see in four million anti-Hitler votes the end of 
		the Hitler régime.  There was a look of quiet confidence on 
		Hitler’s face when I saw him on Sunday saluting the enthusiastic crowd 
		outside the Chancellery.  That confidence will be shaken far more 
		by the economic tasks of the winter than by the votes of four million 
		men.   What are 
		votes, after all, to men of strong will who have energy, ruthlessness, 
		the determination to stay in power - and machine-guns?   ******   THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES NEWS, 
		August 22nd 1934 
		 
		Hitler’s Trump Card - Fear That Germany May Fall to Pieces  By GARETH JONES  "Deutschland Uber Alles!" Germany above Everything!
		 I watched 
		thousands of bareheaded Germans last Sunday singing these words with 
		passionate religious fervour, and repeating the last lines like the 
		congregation at a Welsh chapel.  Hitler 
		stood at the window of the Chancellery saluting his worshippers who 
		crowded the street before the Palace.  The 
		awe-filled eyes of the children were fixed upon their leader as upon 
		some bright comet flashing through the sky.  I saw their lips move 
		as if they were chanting, not a national anthem, but a fervent prayer, 
		an exhortation to Heaven - "Germany above Everything!"   The British do not sing, "God Save the 
		King" in that spirit. They sing their National Anthem with a confidence 
		almost bordering on indifference, because Britain’s political 
		foundations have endured for centuries, and there is belief in Britain’s 
		unity which makes the people take their country for granted.  NOT A REAL NATION   But Germany 
		is a child among nations.  She was unborn when Britain had been 
		mighty for almost a thousand years.  She is a creation of the last 
		century a hundred years ago "Germany" meant as little emotionally or 
		politically to the world as the "Atlantic Ocean", she was a mere 
		geographical expression.  She has 
		never been a real nation, but a collection of States loosely knit 
		together and loathing each other.  In fact, Bavarian hated 
		Prussians and Prussians sniffed when they talked of Saxons.  Such a 
		hotch-potch of peoples could easily fall to pieces and Germany could 
		disappear.  That is the present fear of loyal Germans.  Thus 
		when the roar "Deutschland Uber Alles," while "God Save the King" on our 
		lips is only mumbled, it is not arrogance, not boastfulness that urges 
		them, but lack of confidence in their future, the ever-present fear that 
		the congeries of States and peoples may not hold together.  
		 "Germany 
		above all" means "Germany before Saxony, before Prussia, before 
		Württemberg."  It is an invocation: "Oh God, give us unity." 
		 THE BREATH OF LIFE   Unity!  
		That idea does not enter into England’s political thought because it 
		already operates in her national life. The sea cuts Britain off from the 
		world.  Unity means more to the Welsh because the divisions between 
		North and South Wales.  It means something to the Frenchman, 
		because France has been united only since the French Revolution of 1789. 
		 But to the 
		Germans, who have only recently become a nation, unity means the very 
		breath of life.   It was as 
		late as 1871 that Bismarck created the German Empire, but it was Empire 
		in which there were many Kings and Princes with great power in their own 
		dominions.  Even in 1914 Bavaria and other States had their own 
		stage stamps, railways, uniforms, and up to 1933 they had their own 
		Parliaments.   Even today 
		Germany is not united.  She is a discordant country in religion for 
		two-thirds of the popu1ation are Protestant and one-third is Roman 
		Catholic.   She is 
		discordant in politics.  The Rhineland’s history is shot through 
		with Roman influences, democratic experiments, and French justice while 
		in Eastern Germany the acquiescence of the serf has never been exorcised 
		from the soul of the people.   She is 
		discordant in race.  The Prussians are half Slavs, while the 
		Rhineland is peopled by a partly Celtic stock.   She is 
		discordant in her geography.  In the north one travels hundreds of 
		miles over a flat sandy plain.  In the south the magnificent peaks 
		of the Alps soar above flower-covered valleys where quick-witted musical 
		people, charming and altogether in love with life and their fellows. 
		 And Germany has no natural frontiers 
		except the sea to the north.  She straddles out to the west beyond 
		the Rhine.  In the east she merges almost imperceptibly into 
		Poland.   STRUGGLE FOR SUPREMACY   What a 
		stupendous task it is to make a nation out of this medley of different 
		races, lands, traditions, and creeds!  Goethe’s Faust exclaims, 
		"There dwell, alas! Two souls within this breast!"  But within the 
		breast of Germany there dwell thousands of souls struggling for 
		supremacy.   No wonder, 
		therefore, that last week the Hitler election poster which drew most 
		attention was this: "We Germans, placed in the centre of Europe, must 
		hold together more than other nations.  We must be united if we are 
		not to perish - Bismarck. Hitler has fulfilled these prophetic words of 
		Bismarck. Vote for him on August 19".  This 
		longing for unity is the subconscious cause of Hitler’s fanatical desire 
		to mould the country into one single form.  It explains his 
		ruthlessness in stamping out differences of opinion, differences of 
		uniforms, differences in political parties, and differences in religious 
		beliefs.  Hitler’s revolution is a violent swing of the pendulum 
		away from the ramshackle discordant medley which was Germany to a 
		super-regimented, forcefully cemented people who are to speak with one 
		voice, think with one brain, and march at a single command.  
		 The fear 
		that Germany might crumble to pieces is Hitler’s trump card, and he will 
		use it skillfully.  He will, when bread and potatoes and fats run 
		short, paint a picture of the world threatening Germany.  He will 
		implore his fellow-countrymen to tighten their belts for the sake of 
		German unity.  He will depict himself as the keystone of the 
		structure of a united nation.    And men who 
		hate his methods will rally to his side because they fear that if he 
		falls chaos and conflict will rend the country and there will be 
		farewell to the dream and prayer of  "Deutschland Uber Alles!"   ******* 
		THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES NEWS, August 23rd 1934
		 
		AUSTRIANS 
		"ENSLAVED" BY ITALY  
		Fanning Flames of Nazi Revolt 
		---  
		OPPRESSION IN SOUTH TYROL 
		 ---   By 
		GARETH JONES Imagine a 
		land where you would not be allowed to carve a word of your native 
		language upon the tombstones of your dead relatives where you might be 
		fined £25 for teaching your tongue to schoolchildren; where you would be 
		persecuted by the police if you formed a choir.   To British 
		people this would be a kind of Never-Never-Land visited in imagination 
		by an eighteenth century satirist.  But such a land does exist, and 
		I have just visited it.  It is the South Tyrol, which was taken 
		away from Austria after the Great War and placed under the rule of 
		Italy.   The peaks 
		of this region which in the setting sun g1ow a with a fairy orange red, 
		look down on a grayish-white torrent, the Adige, which clatters down 
		past vineyards and pine forests and through steep gorges topped by 
		ancient castles and modern military fortresses.   These 
		mountains have bred a sturdy Germanic people who have not forgotten the 
		traditions of the Tyrolese patriot Andreas Hofer.   It is these 
		people that the Italian Government is trying to convert into thorough 
		Italians by the method which has failed almost everywhere - the forceful 
		uprooting of the national language and customs.   In this 
		area there are no German schools, German societies are forbidden, and 
		the German theatre has been abolished.  Recently 
		some children acted a German playlet, "Snow Witch," in a barn, and the 
		governess who looked after them was summoned before a court of law for 
		encouraging them to do so.   TEACHING CHILDREN  The stones 
		which the Tyrolese collected to build a war memorial to the fallen 
		Austrian soldiers have been used as steps upon which folk tread up to 
		the Italian war memorial.   It is the 
		crushing of the mother tongue which hurts the Tyrolese most.  As a 
		man of religion told me: "It is only through the mother tongue that 
		children can learn moral teachings, and only it he mother tongue can 
		they truly understand the lessons of the Bible." Dollfuss insisted that 
		Mussolini should treat the Tyrolese Austrians better; but the resulting 
		Italian decree by which children are now allowed to learn German for 
		four hours a week, has been worded in such a way that the Tyrolese have 
		no faith in its efficiency.  There is no 
		doubt that the Austrian Chancellor, Herr Schuschnigg, raised the problem 
		on Tuesday in his talk with Mussolini; but in spite of the Duce’s zeal 
		for friendship with Austria there seems little hope that the Italians 
		will introduce a régime of freedom into the South Tyrol.  BECOMING NAZI  Why is this 
		question important for Europe?  It plays a 
		part because the South Tyrolese are growing violently Nazi and will be a 
		source of internal weakness for Italy should Italian troops ever decide 
		to cross the Brenner Pass into Austria.   It has a 
		profound influence on Mussolini’s relations with Austria.  
		Austrians state: "If Mussolini is sincere in his friendship for us, why 
		is he acting as a tyrant towards our fellow-countrymen in the South 
		Tyrol who are under his sway?"   These 
		Austrians are growing to hate Italy more bitterly than ever and to 
		despise Schuschnigg, their Chancellor, for being the minion of 
		Mussolini.   The feeling 
		that fellow-Austrians are being enslaved by the Italians will fan the 
		flames of another Nazi rebellion in Austria.   
		 The South Tyrol is the dotted portion 
		south of the Italian-Austrian frontier. 
		   ****** 
		
		  THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES NEWS, August 1934  
		10,000 PLANES ON GERMAN FRONTIERS Air-Minded Nation in the Making  By GARETH JONES   Germany Must Become a Nation of Aviators!  
		  As I 
		stepped out of Berlin’s main station some days ago I saw stretched high 
		across the street a brilliantly blue banner with these words written 
		large upon it.  It was a declaration of Germany’s greatest ambition 
		of the moment - to lead the world in civil and military aviation. 
		 The Germans are air-mad; their passion 
		for flying is being fostered by the leaders of the National Socialist 
		Party.  Hitler, when he visits a town, swoops down upon it from the 
		air.  The first glimpse I ever had of the Chancellor was as he 
		approached his vast aeroplane, the Baron von Richthofen, standing the 
		snow-covered Berlin aerodrome on a February day in 1933.  
		 THE POWER BEHIND  The real 
		force behind the German air plans is not Hitler, however, but Goering, 
		who probably cares nought about the economic visions of the National 
		Socialist Party as long as he has power to blacken the European sky with 
		a host of German squadrons.   Goering was 
		the inspirer of the air display which I visited in Berlin, and which not 
		only impressed but startled me.  Through the Berlin aerodrome 
		ground marched thousands upon thousands of strapping young men clad in 
		the new grey-blue uniform of the German aviators.  As I watched 
		their keen, determined faces, their fine physique, and the perfection of 
		their marching, I thought that Germany had in them the germ of a 
		magnificent air force.  And there 
		were young women, too, clad in that grey-blue uniform which is becoming 
		as much the darling of the Prussian crowd as was the most resplendent of 
		Guards’ uniforms in 1914.  Will it be as ominous for Europe? I 
		wonder.   AMBITION AND FEAR   It is not 
		only ambition but fear which is leading to the training of these 
		thousands of young men.   "More than 
		10,000 aeroplanes are now standing on the German frontiers ready to 
		start."  This is one of the slogans driven into the minds of the 
		German people by pamphlet, cinema, and radio.   "In one 
		hour every German city can be attacked by foreign bombers."  Here is 
		another statement which strikes millions of Germans in the eye as they 
		look at the posters.   Thus 
		Goering is driving his lesson daily, hourly into the consciousness of 
		the German people.  Goering has spoken, and as a result of his 
		commands air defence is taught in every school, gas-mask demonstrations 
		are carried out in the most remote parts of the country, and every house 
		of size appoints a special "air guardian" in case of attack. 
		 It was more 
		than a coincidence that when I sailed from Cuxhaven the last words I saw 
		as the liner slowly heaved away from the quay were:   
		 Germany Must Become a 
		Nation of Aviators!     ******   THE WESTERN MAIL & SOUTH WALES NEWS, October 26th 
		1934   
		Will France Withhold Lorraine Iron Ore  from the Saar?  By GARETH JONES     Hermann 
		Röchling is the iron and steel king of the Saar.  He rules over a 
		vast works employing over 4,000 workers, and is the outstanding figure 
		in the campaign to secure the return of the Saar to Germany.  In 
		this he has the support of the large majority of his fellow-Saarlanders. 
		 I went to 
		see him in Völklingen, the Llanelly of the Saar territory, and talked to 
		him in his plainly furnished office beneath the shadow of his blast 
		furnaces.   "What will 
		be the economic consequences of the return of the Saar to Germany?"  
		I asked this ironmaster, who had once been sentenced to imprisonment by 
		the French.    He replied 
		that if the French made difficulties and refused to send iron ore from 
		Lorraine into the Saar Germany would be able to obtain ore from 
		Donau-Eschlngen, where scientists were making investigations.  
		"They will not get me on my knees," he declared.   Economic Link   He thought, 
		however, it was most unlikely that an economic war would break out 
		between France and Germany when the Saar returned to the homeland.  
		Lorraine had 1,250,000,000 tons of iron ore lying in the earth and they 
		would certainly deliver the ore to the Saar.   The Saar 
		and Lorraine were economically bound together. Lorraine needed Saar coal 
		and the Saar needed Lorraine ore.  The French would be practically 
		obliged to import coal from the Saar, because that was the most suitable 
		coal for their coke-ovens.   The Saar 
		would have many economic advantages when it returned to Germany.  
		Germany already bought over half the steel, half the glass, and half the 
		pottery produced in the Saar.  A gas conduit was to be built to 
		South Germany.  The increase of the electricity supply would be 
		very great indeed.  The Saar would benefit from the improving 
		business conditions so marked in the Germany of Hitler.  
		 I brought up the question 
		of German payment for the mines now held by the French.  
		 Security For Mines   Herr 
		Röchling stated that Germany could give security for the mines.  
		The mines had declined enormously In value, he stated.  According 
		to the report of M.Guillaume (Director of the Saar Mines) there had been 
		a loss of 19,075,728 gold marks (£950,000 at par) in 1931 and of 
		21,813.043 marks (nearly £1,100,000) in 1932.  M. Guillmehad 
		stated:    "If the 
		financial results of the working of the mines do not show a marked 
		improvement in the years 1933 and 1934, one can imagine how the 
		conversations which may begin in 1935 on the question of the re-purchase 
		of the Saar mines will be influenced to the detriment of the interests 
		of the French State."   In 
		conclusion, Herr Röchling stated that Germany would have to spend 
		£5,000,000 to repair and improve the mines after the French departure.   *******   |