1939-03-18 — Page 8

Hongkong Telegraph 港電新報 士蔑新聞 All

THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH, SATURDAY, MARCH 18, 1930.

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ACHI time a battleship glides into the water, £8,000,000 of British taxpayers' money is sunk into the 8e0. Before the end of 1943, Bri- tain will have launched six of these colossi, and her fleet of capital ships will be twenty-one-by far the largest in the world.

To build this new Navy and to mon it will cost Britain this year the record num of $149,800,000. Add to this the money that will be spent on the Army and the Air Foree and the total is over £500,-

"I HITLER

Q. During the September

crisis you announced

publicly that the Sudoton- land was your last ter- ritorial demand in Europe. Why did you change your mind?

A. "The Na-

:

tional So- ciallat move- ment... must. gather together our people und strength, with-..

out regard for tradition. and- prejudice, and advance along the road which leads from the present cramped living space into new land and territory." (p. 732.)

"The land on which German peasant familis can at some future date produce strong sons will allow the, sacrifice of the sons of to-day." (p. 739).

Q.

Now that you have Czecho- Slovakia, will you be con- tent in Europe?

A.

ASKED

QUESTIONS"

• First of a series of daily articles in which questions are put by an interpreter, the answers being taken from Hitler's best-seller

"MEIN KAMPF"

-in English, "My Struggle." An unex- purgated copy of the book an edition issued for Storm Troopers was used in the compilation of the answers. The page re- ferences quoted in the article refer to this special edition of the Nazi Bible, which should not be confused with the Edition published in England.

expansion of our people's living room in Europe." (p. 741.)

"Foreign policy cannot be directed from any other point of view than this: Does it help our people to-day or in the fu- ture, or will it be of harm to it? Party-political, religious, humane, all other considerations. are excluded." (p. 687.)

What methods would you use to put this policy into action?

A. "Just as our forefathers

received the land on which we live to-day not as a gift from heaven, but by risking their lives in battle, just so in the futuro.... only the might of a victorious sword will give us land." (p. 741.)

"The political testament of the German people is: Never permit the rise of two Continen- tal Powers in Europe. Sec-in every attempt to organise a second military Power on Ger-, many; and see in that not only the right, but the duty to pre- vent the formation of such a pro- State by all means, even by use-

to of arms, and to destroy such a State if already arisen." (p.

"The German Reich must, "This people which is

as a State, include all gressively falling a prey A "The frontiers of States Germans."

(p. 439.)

negroidisation represents are fashioned by men und "The German people has no a lurking danger for the whole 754.)

race of Europe."

mural

changed by men." (p. 740.)

right to take part in "Just as Germany's frontiers colonial policy as long as it can- are accidental and momentary not even embrace its own sons

the everlasting political in a common State." struggle, so are the frontiers of other peoples." (p. 740.)

in

"I must turn sharply on those national sob-writers who see a

violation of holy human rights' Italy in territorial acquisition,' (p. 740.)

(p. 704.)

Q. Que no such that you One more question. You Then do you mean to keep wanted peace and difficulties solved peacefully. Were you wincere!

Hour pact with France?

Would the 1914 frontier with France, Poland, and satisfy you?

A.

"The French menace

The

obliges Germany to.net A.

pacifist-humanist aside all sentimental considera- idea is perhaps all right if

"No people on this earth A. "The 1914 frontiers mean tions and offer the hand of the highest type of human being

holds so much as a square yard ture of land on a higher Will or ac- (p. 738.) cording to a higher Right." (p. 740.)

Q.

000,000, about half the sums the A.

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"Only when this is under- Ger- stood in

many so that the will of the German people

(p. 315.)

"He who wants to live must fight. He who does not want to fight in this world of eternal struggle does not deserve to live" (p. 817.)

"Anybody who really in his heart desired the victory of the pacifist idea in this world would have to do his utmost to bring about a German conquest of the world." (p. 315.)

to anybody who, has first conquered and sub- nothing at all for the fu- friendship of the German nation." threatened as we are, will not to dued the world so that he is its

sole master." lerate France's appetite for "Even if we

domination." (p. 705.) were successful in the drunkenness of Well, where will you turn such a shallow next for more land? success onc Such a territorial policy would give up can. be fulfilled only all further ambition be is no longer

cause 'national honour would stunted to mere passive reais- nation had to pour out each year to in Europe to-day." (p. 152.) prosecute the war between 1914

be restored and a few doors would be opened to commercial tance but braces itself for a expansion, at least until fur. final active struggle with Which direction in Europe, notice."

(p. 739.)

France H.M.S.-King - George-V.--has--al---20est or cast, do your ter: thermoce (0) were in be able-to-bring the term that the Treaty of Versailles only then shall we Q. "Everybody is now saying a mistake. What would reality neither complete with conflict between us and France H.M.S. Duke of York, will be A. "We

National - Socialists regard to the uniting together to a final conclusion. (p. 766.) you have done if you had been

a victor?" launched next month. The King A. stop the eternal German of all people of German nation-

*

A. "A. clever victor will al- George V was the first capital ship drive to the south and west, and ality, nor were they sensible for

Vory well. We know your' ways impose his demands

on the conquered in parts. "He can then reckon. last provinces, and Russia and that a people will feel no suf- France. What is the ultimate ficient cause in each of these end of your foreign policy?

single oppressions for selzing last year and sixty will be construci- particular, to out. You signed a non-aggree-

strongly we arms again." (p. 759.) ed this year. No wonder Berlin territory?

What do you think of the French of a struggle with France, it

sion pact with Franco. A. "However

recognise the necessity newspapers quote Britain's rearma-

must rest ineffective... if our

ready left the stocks and the second, ritorial ambitions take?

launched in Britain for 13-years-throw our eyes on the land to geographical and military pur-intentions towards your

the first symbol of our growing sea the east."

power.

Forty-six warships were laid down

(p. 742.)

In what part of Europe, in

poses.' (p. 739.).

ment expenditure na astronomical. A. "What we talk of new really?

territory in Europe to-day

of peace.

foreign political ambition were

100A

"What

ia the object

gle can be sensible only if it of of your aiding

ly enemy of the German exhausted in that. The strug-

fers the rear protection for the General Franco in the Spanish civil war?"

No wonder the Totalitarians look on we can think, in the first place, A. The inexorable and dead- with awe at the most colossal naval only of Russia and its surround people is and remains France." programme ever concelved in times ing States." (p. 742.)

one wanted land in (p. 699.) Europe, taking it by and large, You see in this re-armament not this could only come about at only Britain's answer to Auch the actions as have occurred in Central 163.) Europe this week but also a warn-

ing that the time is fast approaching, when no Power will dare oppose our Motherland.

If you read our extracts in the

expense of Russia." (p. GRIN AND BEAR IT

All right. And what about

in

the provinces Germany lost 1918—Alsace-Lorraino

to

|

France, South Tyrol to Italy,

"A Look Through the "Telegraph Upper Silesia to Poland, Eupen

and. Malmedy to Belgium? Do column on Page & to-day, you'll see you want thone back, too?

much that is similar between what

Mr. Geoffrey Shakespeare said in A. "One must

the House of Commons yesterday

be quite

and what Mr. Winston Churchill clear that lost sald 25 years ago, just before the territories are

THE WING ON CO., LTD. Great War.

Stationery Department

Count the

"TELEGRAPHS”

everywhere

Confidence

:

won back, not by means of ceremonial իս

DON'T Bay you have no confidence peals to God or through pious

in your powers. Don't make hopes in a League of Nations,| that an excuse for failing to open but solely through force of the door to opportunity when Itarms." (p. 708.)

knocke.

"Oppressed provinces will not

Once there was a nervous actor. return to the bosom of a com- He was a timorous that when he mon Reich by flaming proteats, first appeared on the stage he chose but by a hardamiting sword." a part in which he had to blacken (P. 699.) his face. He thought that, thus dis-

guined, he would be less at the Your followers cry, “One people, one Reich, ono

mercy of his nerves.

|Q.·

Ho became the greatest actor In Fuchrer." Does that, mean English history. When he died, that you wish to annex all Ger- exactly 160 years ago, he was fam-man-speaking people in Memel, ous and rich enough to leave Danzig, Switzerland, Poland, | £100,000. -

Franco, Belgium, Jugo-Slavia, Hungary, Italy, Denmark!

David Garrick.

By Lichty

Depr. 1868 by el valore drivdienas, kas

"That flour you cold me yesterday was too tough-my, husband simply ruined his bridge on the pie crust I made "out of it!".

A "Foreign policy cannot be

directed from any other point of view than this: Does it. help our people to-day or in the future, or will it be of harm to them?

Party-political, religious, humane and all other considerations are excluded. (p. 687.)

"The conviction that one has a right to use even the most brutal weapons is always allied to a fanatical belief in the nec essity for the victory of a re- volutionary new order on this earth.

"A moventent, which does not fight for such high ideals and aims will therefore nover resort to the last weapon."

A

(p. 597.)

"Do you want peace?· Áre

you prepared to co-operate":

live

in a policy of appeasement!"

"He who wants to must fight.. . It is cer tain that the hardest fate awaits.: the man who thinks he CRD evercome, nature and in realitý merely unapa hlá fingers at it. Misery, disaster and sickness ure then naturo's answer," 317.)

"

ON MONDAY Hitler and Britain

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