THE CHINA MAIL, DECEMBER 31, 1998.

NEW NAZI LAW

WILL BREAK UP

JEWISH HOMES

BERLIN, DECEMBER 9. TENS OF THOUSANDS OF MEN AND WOMEN IN GER- MANY ARE FACED WITH A HEART-RENDING DILEMMA AS A RESULT OF A NEW ORDER BY THE NAZI GOVERNMENT. THEY MUST EITHER BREAK OFF THEIR MARRIAGES WITH THOSE THEY LOVE OR SHARE WITH THEM THE FATE OF OUTCASTS WORKLESS, HOMELESS, PENNILESS, AND DOOMED EITHER TO PERISH OR TO GO DESTITUTE INTO EXILE.

According to this order, Aryan || men and women married to Jews must dissolve their marriages once or be regarded as full-blooded Jews.

APPEAL TO ROOSEVELT

at

In the latter case their property 'will suffer all the confiscatory mea- sures to which Jewish property is subjected, and they will be sub- jected to indignities and ill-treat- ment.

The Jews of Germany are pre- paring a last-hour despairing ap- peal to be sent to President Roose- velt and Mr. Chami „rlain, begging for temporary sanctuary for at least 100,000 of their people until more permanent homes can be found.

They are informed that before December 31 the German Govern- ment will issue a complete new anti-Jew law, which will not only codify and make completely water- tight the present regulations against Jews, but will include se- veral new orders.

FORCED LABOUR

;

use

BOMB RAID TO CELEBRATE CHRISTMAS

Madrid, December 25.

The little city of Ponzoblanco, in Cordoba province, celebrated Christmas in complete ruins this year.

Only this morning was it possi- ble to draw up the full list of casualties and damage inflicted on the town on December 23, when six nationalist Savoia-Marchetti bombing planes dropped more than 100 missiles over the city.

Eight people were killed and 25 wounded, most of them seriously. Material damage proved to be ap. pallingly high: in the popular dis- trict of La Feri, out of 160 houses, only three were standing to-day,— Havas.

BLINDNESS

REVERSED

Temporarily blinded by mustard

gas, Lt.-Col F. H. Wallis Com-

Jews will be forbidden to public vehicles, unless they are provided with special compartments marked and reserved for Jews, manding the 1st Battalion London, similar to the cars for Negroes in Rifle Brigade, stood in a captured America. Before they will be al-

lowed to travel by train, they will German dugout in the Hinden- have to go to the police, write a petition, and secure a special per- mit.

burg Line.

A dispatch runner arrived from

Brigade Headquarters with a mes-

All Jewish men who are, by January 1, workless or homeless, and who cannot get permits to go sage brought through enemy fire abroad, will be rounded up into

special huge forced labour camps,'

"and muddy "trenches. which will be organised throughout the country at places where there is a large demand for heavy labour sage.

near quarries, cement factories and brickworks.

The officer could not see the mes-

"Read it to me," he asked. It

was a telegram from England.

"David born 27th. Both doing well," it announced.

There will be about 15,000 men in each camp, and it is estimated that soon there will be 10 of these camps. It has not yet been decided what will be done with the Jewish women and children, but they will "coming of age" party was held at

be kept separate from their

folk.

That was 21 years ago. David's

and - the

men-the Wallis home at. Pinner, guest 'of honour The rule that Jews shall wear a was Mr. R. Cowley, the runner. As yellow arm band, introduced in he proposed David's health the Vienna, will be made gcneral.

"NIKS"

M

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actual telegram which the Colonel had been unable to read was shown to the 60 guests.

But this time: Cowley couldn't read it.

When Colonel Wallis met Cowley at a regimental reunion dinner last January, the runner

* had "reintroduced himself by

saying: "Don't you

remember

how blind you were, Sir?” As the colonel looked up he realised that Cowley himself was

blind,

now

Page

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