ing with Germany.
I have referred to some of the considerations which may induce the working men of the Saar—who are a quiet, reflective, and not excitable people—not to vote in favor of a return of the Saar to Germany.
The motives which may induce France, and perhaps, other members of the Council of the League, to hesitate before consenting to such a return and to insist upon certain guarantees if the return is made are a different matter. The great strategic importance of the territory cannot be neglected as a matter of policy. The right of the inhabitants to be consulted cannot be neglected as a matter of honesty. The protection of the safety of the minority cannot be neglected as a matter of justice.
Philip Schey, Baron von Koromla, was the first Jew in Hungary to be made an Austrian noble.
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The Archive of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency includes articles published from 1923 to 2008. Archive stories reflect the journalistic standards and practices of the time they were published.