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GERMANY ANNOYED

' WITH BRITISH LEAFLETS A special correspondent in Germany of the Danish newspaper National Tidende, in a long article in his newspaper, emphasises the effect that the 'dropping of leaflets by the R.A.i . was having on the Nazis. “No bombs,” he states, “could bo more ■hated by Germany’s Nazi priesthood than these white sheets fluttering earthwards nightly. There is nothing to discuss in the German papers, but howmust it feel in the long run to hear a radio announcer begin iwith the words, “There is no punishment for listening to this station,’ knowing that a mistake in tuning in many mean hard labour? 1 “Everywhere hang Hitler’s pictures, some exhibited voluntarily and some because people are afraid not to exhibit them.” The correspondent also says that when Nazis were asked to explain the Russo-German pact, they repbed: “Russia is no longer Communist.

The last Reds have now been ejected or shot. ”

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PATM19391113.2.18

Bibliographic details

Patea Mail, 13 November 1939, Page 3

Word Count
152

GERMANY ANNOYED Patea Mail, 13 November 1939, Page 3

GERMANY ANNOYED Patea Mail, 13 November 1939, Page 3