NOT MUCH EXPECTED TO EMERGE
'British Official Wirelesa.*
(Received 27 8.45 a.m.) RUGBY, Sept. 25. Various writers in the Press ugres® that not much is expected to emerge from the meeting between Signor Mussolini and Herr Hitler cxcept u clamant declaration of sol'idarity, although they exyress hope that the talks' , may be turned to the hdvantaire of general European collaboration. Tho Times compares the lavish and massive spectacle coutrived by the Germans in honour of the occasion with the famous Field of the Oloth oi Gold, ! adding, however: "Henry and Francis were unassistcd bv Ministers of Propaganda, uniformed populations, bulletproof trains and all else that may guide or stitmilate the imaginatifln of the modern Press." After welcomiug Ihe- hopoful turn of the conversations with Rome on the
Nyon arrangement alid the Italian assurance rcgarding reinforeemunts for Spain, it remarks: "Tlie asserticu that the authoritarian Powers are kindly operating against Bolshevism for the protection of vulnerable democracies will be prominent in the ritual of the next few days and can be tolerantly put aside as neceesary to the grand parade. It is more important, though, that the dictatorships confess themselves as beiit on xeshapittg Europe."
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Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Volume 81, Issue 3, 27 September 1937, Page 7
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194NOT MUCH EXPECTED TO EMERGE Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Volume 81, Issue 3, 27 September 1937, Page 7
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