HITLER’S PLANS
AGAINST ENGLAND GERMAN WAR MONGER PLANS INVASION OF ENGLAND. GREAT STEEL MERGER. ("Post" Special Correspondent.) •London, Saturday. First, occupation by German forces oL Norfolk, Suffolk, and Essex, while the British fleet was annibilated, or pccupied elsewhere.. Then a second invasion, using the Irish Free State as a base, of the Midland and Scottish industrial areas! Will Herr Hitler now ban th'e hook, published last year, in which Professor Banse propounds this plan, asks the News-Chronicle, emphasising that Professor Banse's "Child's Guide to Warfare" was banned because it was used to discourit Germany's peacefulness. "Professor Banse is a post-war Bernhardi," adds the News-Chronicle. "Like his pre-war prototype, he preaches war as xnoral and ennobling, but his former book is causing misgivings among the Dutch', Belgians, Danes, Swiss and French,, as his 'desirable military frontiers' either dissect or absorh those countries." Professor Banse declares that Germany xnust stretch froxn Memel to. Adige and The Rhone, froxn Flanders. to Gyor, in Hungary. Then, with the possession of Belgiiim and Holland and North France, and a fleet capable of coping with British' invaders, she could easily hold Norfolk, SufFolk and Essex while the British Fleet was annihilated or occupied elsewhere. A second invasion, using the Irish Free State as a base, could invade the Midland and Scottish industrial areas. Thus London and the wealthy southern area could be pinched out. Professor Banse declares that English workers are spoiled by too high livinig and would he unable to endure the hardship of a hloclcade, resulting in an immediate demand for peace at any price, by which England could be forced to surrender her overseas Empire, which, he says, is already decrepit. Reich Steps Down. Berlin, Saturday. — (The greatest fusion in heavy industries ever brought about in Germany was effected yesterday afternoon, when four pillars of the Germaxi steel industry, Gelsenkirchener Bergwerlcs, A.G., and Yereinigte Stahlwerke A.G., hitherto popul-arly known as the German Steel Trust, and Phoenix A.G. and Van der Zypen, decided to amalgamate. The principal aim prompting this action is to decentralise manufacture, allowing the works best fitted by natural conditions for special jobs to concentrate on these. Above all, this reorganisation, which is accompanied by a reduction of capital to 550,000,000 marks, will enable the industry to once again pay dividends. Hitherto the Reich has had the controlling voice over heavy industries, but it now voluntarily renounces this to allow private initiative full play. Great economies in purchase of iron ores and other mass raw ma: terials will 'be achieved, while the sale of mass products will be centralised. The trust will be named Yereingte Stahlwerke A.G., and have headquarters at Dusseldorf. The /War on Jews. Berlin, Saturday. — /The police chief (Herr Shneider) ascribes the remarkahle decrease in crime and the increase in morality" to the harshness of the Nazi administration. _ Jewish students are prohibited ( from attending the universities, which will re-open on Wednesday without special permits. Aryans' p.asses will be grey-cover-ed and non-Aryans' yellow, which colour was used in anciexit days to distinguish Jews. Several Jewish professors have heen removed from the Leipzig University. iRiga, - Saturday. — jGreyshirts demand a referendum to ,a.mend the constitution on the basis of Nazi ideas, excluding Jews from participating in trade or acquiring property, dissecting Christiaxx corpses or marrying Christians, and limiting the number of Jewish students.
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Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 3, Issue 688, 14 November 1933, Page 7
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552HITLER’S PLANS Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 3, Issue 688, 14 November 1933, Page 7
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