Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Page Fo Published by the Comprodaily Publishing Co. th St., New York City, N. ¥. =o Inec., daily exeept Sunday, at 50 8. Telephone ALgonquin 4-7956. Cable “DATWORK.” Adress and mall checks to the Daily Worker, 50 E 18th St., New York, N. ¥ ALL COMMUNIST PARTIES CALLED 10 SUPPORT THE. . ANTI-FASCIST CONGRESS § Secretariat of Commun ist International Urges Wide Publication of Call by Unions Communist Press Must by Socialist and Following quickly after the tions of Italy, Poland and Germany and Political Secretariat of the Executive Committee of the Communist | International made the following stat “After havin union organization and the Le many, the General Confederat revolutionary trade union move of a congress of European work nvitat of the local Commu gress and on the March for the continu basis of its ation of the strus an intensification of the united front movement, the Executive | Make Up for Sabotage Catholie Press call of the militant trade union organiza- ali fascist countries, the Presidium ement: read the decision of the revolutionary trade | gue Against Fascism of Ger- ion of Labor of Italy and the sment of Poland for the calling er m and for the ations to this con- decision published on the 5th nst fascism by e ag Committee of the Communist International decides: “1,—To recommend to all Communist Parties in the Euro- pean countries to give their local organizations instructions to| support the calling of t he anti-fascist workers’ conference and | to take an active part in this work together with workers of other shades of opinion; “ay by the Socialist, Executive Committee of the siders it necessary that the Communist press in all countries | should pay great attention to the preparatory work for the} conference and make it known to the broadest possible masses | of the wor In this we sha local Socialist, Catholic and really prepared to fight agains 0 the decision to call the conference is being ignored | Catholic and reformist trade union press, the} Communist International con- ll act in the interests of those ther t fascism and in the interests organizations which are} of those local non-party proletarian mass organizations behind | these parties who are prepared to stand shoulder to shoulder with the revolutionary workers in the struggle against fas- MOSCOW By N. BUCHWALD Daily Worker Correspondent USS.R., March 27. Hysteria Over Arrest of Wreckers Based on Fear of Revelations | wholesale enrolment of young | leader. of the present position of Europe jing worse, and the less calm heads jand not of Europe alone, and every-| among the British imperialists are | body knows that the object of these | trying to win back the former world threats is to give an impulse to forces! position at our expense. €ism. It is the task of the Com date the united front movement before, during and after the| anti-fascist conference.” munists to extend and consoli- HITLER SMELLS OF KU KLUX KLANISM By J. W. FORD. Three years ago I sat in the Reich-} sav stag building én Berlin (recently burnt by fa i ) and heard | Thaelmann ng speech to Germa; S leaders gathered there from all parts of Ger- Many. Although he spoke German, dis thunderous words resound almost distinctly in my ears tode How he aroused these German workers to ac- tion! I still recall his words in which He dealt with and described the] growth and development of the Cl mese revolution and pledged the s darity of the German workers to C! ese brothers—against fascism terror in China Hohenzollern princes courtie generals, officers of the former perial army, grabbers of African col- onies, landlords and money chang: States Senators, Fre lish lords, police Stand behind Hitle: Tesponsible with him for and torture of Imann “Holy Crusade to Save ‘Germ: ture,” by the murder of Je ple. T A Wild Orgy A wild orgy and dan ancient | German gods in the nami “Ger- man civilization” is made in 1933. fn the words of the none-too-sympa- thetic “New York Times” of March 20: “There longer any doubt that either ot Jewish origi G @ crime against “G “Neither professio eminence, public service or private virtue” helps @ Jew in Germany today, continues | the New York Times. “Professors are being driven from their class rooms, | music conductors from their concert ~ | were s| many, ” must be “protected’—to list property! The bank- ers are in danger. “Death to Jews!” Wall Street investments are in dan- ger, “Death to Jews!” Racial persec- ution is a cloak to defend capital. My sojourn in Germany for one year gave me a close-up knowledge of Hitlerism. Long before the pres- ent rise of Hitlerism to power, their slogan was: “Negroes, Chinese and Je must be driven out of Ger- many.” My friends told be that women who associated with Negroes or Chinese ostracized and intimidated. Campaign Against Negroes A year ago Hitlerites carried on a wide campaign to drive Negro actors and musicians off the stage in Ger- | many. African Negroes brought to Germany from German African col- onies under the old regime and who had served in the German army were mistreated, intimidated and howled at by Hitlerites. Hitlerites demanded that African seamen be driven out of German ships. Only the vigilance of German Com- munists and revolutionary German seamen defended and protected, from fascist attacks, the International Trade Union Committee of Negroes, while I was there in 1931. Today our Negro comrade who ds the International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers has been and driven out of Ger- y ist bandits, in an at- tempt to destroy the efforts made by | the Committee to develop organiza- ion among Negroes for the freedom of Africa. Hitler arouses the most elemental passions and hatreds of backward masses against Jews and the labor Only a fear of what full publicity will} reveal accounts for the furious slan- derous campaign being carried on in} the British imperialist press against | @ public trial of the British engineers, accused, together with Russian engi- neers, of trying to wreck Soviet | plants. | This is the statement made in a| {recent article published in Pravda. | “It is no coincidence,” says the Pravda article, “that the British die~ hards failed to exercise sufficient re-| |straint to await the official results| |of an inquest and a trial. Evidently | that would be given to this whole} matter, which is for them so delicate. | Only this can explain the furious on- |slaught of the diehard press against | the U.S.S.R.” Further on, the Pravda article quotes brazen blackmailing excerpts from the British Black Hundred | press, and continues: | All Answerabie to Laws. “Evidently these attacks gave the |diehards hope that they might suc- | ceed in avoiding a public trial. They | forgot that the U.S.S.R. is an inde-| pendent great country, and that all) | residing in the territory of the U. S. |S. R. are answerable to its laws, ir-| |Tespective of citizenship.” | | Recalling the provocative raids in England on Arcos, Ltd, in 1927, Pravda continues, “Why does the die- hard press defend with such fury] those accused of wrecking plants, ; and hushes up the fact of the arrest | by the fascists in Germany of such | British subjects as Nembey and Naidu? Or are these subjects in a/ | different category? “The diehards are afraid of a trial, and are endeavoring now to preju- dice the Soviet court.” Recalls Murder by English Captain. | Pravda goes on to recall the shoot- ing, in 1918, of 26 Bolsheviks in Baku |by the English captain, Reginald] | Jones, without any inquest or trial.) “Were they very indignant then,| | these “civilized” English scribblers, at| this exceptional crime?” asks Pravda. | |“On what basis do they now slander | the only just and honest court, the Soviet Court? Who gave them the right to speak now on humaneness and justice? Who gave them the right to doubt the justice of the that are not directed at the preserva- | tion of peace. “The cats’ concert of the English imperialist press sounds interesting notes attempting to prevent the res- toration of relations between the United States and the U.S.S.R. Could it be imagined that these gentlemen are afraid of Soviet-American diplo- matic relations as a means of strengthening peace in the Far East? And what is to be thought of those imperialist circles in England specu- lating that the aggravation in Brit- ish-Soviet relations will add courage many? “Where is the source of all these hysterics? As a matter of fact, the world position of England is grow-' tric | “The Soviet Union will not permit itself to be frightened. It values highly the economic and political re- lations with Great Britain, but it will never permit threats to coerce it into actions that it considers wrong. “Because we value relations be- tween the two countries, we tell the English imperialist press, ‘More cool- ness. There is no use in hysterics. With good will by both parties—and the Soviet Union has proved the ex- istence of good will on its part from | the very beginning—the guilt or in- they are most fearful of the publicity| to some “friends of peace” in Ger-| nocence of several engineers, who are kept in humane confinement, should not influence either the trade or po- litical relations of two large coun- es?” WORKERS AND INTELLECTUALS OF BOSTON PROTEST NAZI MURDERS Organizations Shower German Ambassador BOSTON, March 26—A delegation from workers’ and sympathetic or- ganizations went to the German consulate to present a protest against the fascist terror against workers, Jews and intellectuals in Germany. Among the organizations represented were the Unemployed Council, Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, National Student League, John Reed Club and New England Committee for the Defense of Political Prison- ers. The consul refused to see them and finally ordered a gang of detec- tives to throw the delegation out. age Page Bronx Open-Air Meeting. NEW YORK.—An open-air meet- ing of 250 workers at Wilkins and Intervale Aves., the Bronx, sent a telegram to the German embassy de- manding a halt to the Nazi terror and the immediate release of all working class leaders and other po- litical prisoners in Germany. Scandinavian Workers, MOUNT VERNON, N. Y¥., March 26—The Scandinavian Workers’ Club, at a meeting in Pythian Hall here, adopted a resolution of sharp protest against the Hitler terror. The resolution was sent to the Ger- man embassy in Washington and the consulate in New York. Miners. PORTAGE, Pa., March 26.—At a “We know the majority of foreign| meeting in Hungarian Hall, called by halls and actors from the stage” for| movement. Backward young men, not| Judicial organs of ae USSR? being Jews. yet steeped in the traditions of the} 3 i The foremost scientist of the v labor movement, are organized to| 1 an article devoted to the same) Einstein, has his science “nul! out deeds of terror, murder | SUbject, Izvestia writes : in the name of “Ge n cult against the labor movement in order ‘The British imperialist press puts | Being a Jew to defend capitalism. | forward the demand for a rupture in ‘Men are driven through the But Herr Hitler, money changers,| ade relations and also in diplo-| + upon and ridiculed; stripy f | ban! defunct generals, princes,| Matic relations. Only the demand) thing, thrown upon the ground and| kings rds, have forgotten his- | for war is lacking, and all this about Walked upon by Hitler troops with’ tory y iS on the side of the| the prosecution of six pious engi- hobnailed spikes in their shoes—for| workers and the oppressed | Beers: vein; Negro People, forwe e strug: | Rhee voonle a great lemon! “Wor | gio cenist feet he OR | engtnncas en gagedeiti workin tHagg)| RUMANIA ARRESTS SKODA AGENT FOR BRIBING GF STAFF OFFICERS Aristocratic British Officer Tried for Selling é Military Secrets; Pre-War Spying BUCHAREST, March 26. — The Rumanian secret police yesterday ar- rested the sales agent of the Czechoslovakian Skoda munitions works on charges of bribing officers of the Roumanian Gencral Staff to buy inereased quantities of arms It is also charged that the Skoda Papers to print alarmist war sc te drum up sentiment for hig’ arms appropriations. agent subsidized Roumanian news- SO her martial of Lieutenant Baillie-St art, young Scotch officer of the Sea- forth Highlanders, indicates that the British Spy in Japan lieutenant sold plans of the latest TOKYO, Mar. 11, (By Mail).—| pots war tanks to a German staff “Kokumin,” aper of the ultra-| Colonel. reports that the Tokyo po-| Baillie-Stewart claims that the arrested Crowe, Third Secretary | Young German girl, “Mary Louise,” of the British Consulate, who was ac-| Wn0 acted as intermediary, was only cused of espionage in photographing | his sweetheart, and the money sent the military fortifications near Yoko- him was “for love services rendered.” | 5. S. R. are trying to fulfill their) | duties honestly. Some among them! are enthusiasts in the art of engi-| neering. But there are also wreck-| ers, and probably a certain percent: age of secret agents. We never re- nounced the right to exercise vigi- lance over the latter. Lockhart’s Disclosures Cited. | “Wailings that Englishmen are in- capable of committing crimes contra- dict comon sense. Anti-Soviet crimes are committed not only by individ- ual British subjects but even by dip- lomatic agents of Great Britain. Bruce Lockhart, the English diplo- | matic agent in Moscow in 1918, tells | about it in detail in his book. | “Every Englishman signing a con- | tract for work in the U.S. S. R. takes |the same risk as when he is in his |9wn country if he commits unlav/tul acts. If the judicial authorities will find the guilt not proved. the ac- cused will be set free. If they are found guilty, sentence will be passed in accordance with the laws--of the USSR. notwithstanding all the savage pranks of the British imperial- ist press, “The Saviet government cannot be frightened by threats. Threats of Resolutions Upon the! ; Movement Growing | | the National Miners’ Union and the International Labor Defense, the miners present adopted resolutions denouncing the fascist terror in Ger- many and demanding the immediate release of the Communist leaders, Thaelmann and Torgler, and all other victims of Nazi terror. Oy heros Labor Sports Union. NEW YORK.—The Labor Sports Union has issued an appeal to Amer- ican sportsmen and all sports-lovers to protest against the bestial Hitler terror which has attacked the Ger- man labor sports organizations. The appeal urges the Amateur Atheltic Union to boycott the 1936 Olympic games, scheduled to be held in Berlin. 6 48 ie Force Action In Chicago. | CHICAGO, March 26.—Under pres- sure of the delegates. from the In- ternational Workers’ Order, Icor and other militant organizations, a con- ference of representatives of Jewish organizations here rejected the pro- posal of the American Jewish Com- mittee not to organize a mass pro- test movement against the Hitler| anti-Semitic outrages. ‘The. confer-| ence adopted the standpoint of the| militant delegates that fascism is the instigator of anti-Semitism, and elected an executive committee which |includes representatives of the Jew- ish synagogues, American Jewish Committee and of Zionist, socialist and revolutionary organizations. Torture Workers In Spandau Fort es Knocked Out; Hands Burned, Teeth Broken PARIS, Mar. 14 (By Mail). — A Vienna dispatch to the conservative “Petit Journal” gives details of the torture and maltreatment of prison- ers interned in the Spandau fortress, A German who was interned in the fortress for two weeks by the Nazis states that he himself saw persons who had been beaten almost to death, with their eyes gouged out. Most of the prisoners had their teeth knock- ed out by brass-knuckle blows; their hands were scarred by burns, and bra a of many had been muti- ate ‘The Jews interned at Spandan had been forced to lie down on the ground SPAIN STUDENTS ~ HIT NAZI TERROR March In Madrid; Vigo | Consulate Stoned MADRID, Spain, March 15 (By Mail) —Singing the “International” and shouting, “Long Live Marxism”, 1,000 students held a demonstration against German fascism. ‘They were attacked by fascist students, and e fight started in which the fascists got the worst of it. ‘The students then marched to the German embassy. The fascists again tried to break up the demonstration, but the students continued march- ing, shouting: “Down with fascism! Down with Hitler!” A large number of workers’ orga- nizations have sent protest telegrams and resolutions to the German em- bassy here class. men from 17 to 19 years of age to work in agriculture refor- estation, clearing waste land, and drainage. The next step is the “reorganiza- tion of the trade unions,” putting them completely under Nazi control and expelling the Socialist and Com-! munist leadership. This is intended to block the possibility of a giant! @eneral strike, such as broke the| monarchist Kapp putsch in 1920. 30 Per Cent Wage Cut | German sailors report that the Nazi Ministry has already ordered a 30 per cent wage cut on all German ships. This is the second 30 per cent cut in two years, reducing sea- men’s wages to one-third of what they were in 1931. | The Hitler Cabinet also plans to} force new elections to the factory councils in all the big German in-| dustrial concerns to obtain Nazi con- trol of the vitally important factory councils. 1 Socialist Quits “Like Whipped Puppy” _ 4 beginning has already been made in the Council of the Berlin Munici- pal Traffic Enterprises, where the Socialist Fleiger, chairman of the council resigned without a word when ordered to do so by the Nazi factory “Fleiger went off with a) package under his arm like a whip-| ped puppy,” according to the “Voel-| kische Beobachter” report. An essential part of the Hitler pro- | gram are the eight concentration | |camps established throughout the Reich for thousands of political pris- | oners. They haye to do hard labor and are drilled in military formations. ‘They are compelled to pray half an hour mornings and evenings. No Pretense of Socialism The Hitler economic plan has de- finitely abandoned all pretense of the socialization of trusts, banks and de- partment stores, promised in the Nazi program for years. Hitler's Reich- stag speech proclaimed: | “The government wiil carry on the revival of business not by the round- about route of state economic bureau- cracy, but through the mosi vigorous Stimulation of private initiative in conjunction with the recognition of private property.” ‘The official business statistics lend but little encouragement to Hitler- ism’s economic plans. February, which was the first month of Hitler rule, shows no change in the depress- ed condition of German industry and agriculture. Industrial production was stagnant with some branches with January, which was a very poor month. As @ part of the nationalist cam- paign for regaining Germany's for- mer status as a first-rank imperial- ist power, Hitler demands the scaling down of the interest payments on Germany’s foreign debts, most of which are owed American capitalists. ‘The Hitler regime is prescribing the old Kaiser formula for German wo- men: “Kueche, Kinder, Kirche.” Wo- men are barred henceforth from pub- lic office; no Nazi deputy may be a woman. This marks the practical abolition of woman sufferage in Ger- many. siogie Hitler's long-awaited economic program is nothing else than what the Communist Party of Germany has always called it—the most brutal offensive against the German working class, supplemented by political ter- ror against all workers’ organizations. Hitler’s fascism is carrying out the Policy of the German capitalist class, whose leaders Hugenberg and Von Papen still control the cabinet’s majority, and the strongholds of German industry. The forcible incorporation of the trade unions into the Nazi scheme of things abetted by the Socialist lead- ers’ inactivity and betrayal in the face of Hitler aggression against labor union organizations and the whole labor movement; the crushing of the workers’ shop councils; de- creed wage cuts in one branch of in- dustry after another—these are Hit~ Jer’s blood-transfusions for the cri- tical illness of German capitalism. And truly enough, it is the workers’ blood which is to furnish the trans- fusions. The d Fascist offensive against the workers’ standard of liv- ing will open the eyes of those mis- led workers whe have believed in Nazi promises of “Better times to come.” U.S. Fleet Practises War in the Pacific; Expense No Object SAN PEDRO, Calif, March 27— The whole United States fleet steamed out of Los Angeles and San Diego harbors yeeterday for battle force practice. showing even further losses compared | BUBSORIPTION RATES: By Mail everywhere: One year, $6; six months, $3.50; 3 moxiths, $2; 1 month, We, n and Bronx, New York City. excepting Borough of Manha Canada: One y “Socialist” Pledges Foreign and 6 months, $5; 7 months, $8. HITLER ANNOUNCES ECONOMIC PLAN WHICH IS OPEN ATTACK ON WORKERS) Compulsory Labor Camps for Youtl 1 Thirty Per Cent Wage Cut Already on Sea; Abandons His ; Seizure of Trade Unions; BERLIN, March 27.—The Hitler government is announcing its economic plans for the consolidation of capitalist rule in Germany. Its economic program is a naked capital- ist offensive against the living standards and the organizations of the German working First on the program is the establishment of compulsory labor camps, with the Capitalist, Jew and Ge of retaliation” against German Jews paganda” in foreign countries, Goebbels, Nazi propaganda minister. The anti-Semitic outrages in Ger- many are being legalized. Jewish persecution is given official govern- mental approval; the {fiction j|that anti-Semitic atrocities were the work of “irresponsible bands” is abandoned. Tt is an undisputed fact that all the outrages in German, both against Jews and, to a much greater degree, against the working class, were not the acts of mobs, “the enraged popu- lace”, but were planned and executed by bands of uniformed storm troop- ers acting under the orders of their superiors. Putting On Damper. Yet the organization of bourgeois German Jewry continues to deny the blood-guilt of the fascist Nazi regime, the Centralverband der deutschen Juden cables the rich Jews of America as follows: “We earnestly urge you to do all in your power to have Monday’s mass meeting (in Madison Square Garden) called off. We can assure you that the German government is perma- nently and successfully engaged in assuring peace and order to @l citi- zens without discrimination.” The cable continues: We earnestly request you to aid us in preventing any action which is liable to encroach upon the prestige of our country and thereby seriously affect our most vital interests.” Secretary of State Hull officially states that there is no more terror in Germany. He claims that the NAZIS LEGALIZE ATROCITIES AS HULL WHITEWASHES HITLER ntile Alike, Policy Is te Be Silent About Murder of Workers BERLIN, March 27.—The fascist government announces a “campaign because of what it calls “atroeity pro- The retaliation campaign was decided on in conversations over the week-end in the Bavarian Alps between Chancellor Hitler and Dr. Paul | bloody Hitler regime has opposed the atrocities, although the truth is that it is the Nazis who committed all the outrages in Germany. Significantly enough, none of the American newspapers nor Secretary Hull ever |mentions the campaign of murder and |terror against |the German working class. They do not raise their voices in protest against | the slaughter of Communist and So- cialist workers. As representatives of the capitalist class, they find the reign of terror | against the workers quite in order. | This is emphasized by the Nazi Hanf- staengel’s statement to the foreign press that “those Jews who have suf- fered because of their radical affili- ations.” Both the American government and world bourgeois Jewry are pre- pared to recognize the Hitler regime. its hands dripping with the blood of thousands of German workers. No government need fear an interna- tional protest of the “better people” when it confines its terror {to the revolutionary working class. This is the meaning of the new policy announced by the Hitler gov- ernment — continued, intensified persecution of the German working class, and a |check upon excessive | anti-Semitic outrages. Then the Jew- | ish and Gentile gentlemen of |the capitalist class will see eye to eye and unite in the job of exploiting the entire working class. POLAND CHARGES 300,000 French Jews German government an official note | today. French Jews Boycott. PARIS, March 27.—Jewish organi- zations representing nearly 300,000 | Jews in France voted today to boy~ cott; German goods in protest against | Nazi anti-Semitism in Germany. They state they have full proof of Nazi atrocities, including the names of murdered Jews. The boycott will include German | films, while doctors will boycott Ger- man medical preparations, and or- ders for German chemical products, radio and electrical supplies are being cancelled. The movement is being supported by powerful Jewish bank~- ing interests. ° Here the racial |interests of the! 101 CASES OF JEWS BEING BEATEN IN GERMANY Organize Boycott of German Products; Fits French Policy WARSAW, March 27—The Polish Minister in Berlin has handed the listing 101 instances of beatings and maltreatment of Polish Jews in Germany, the Foreign Ministry announced | bourgeois French Jews run parallel |to the interests of French imperial- ism. A blow struck against Hitler~ ism by the Jews of France is a blow ciruck for the maintenance of French domination in Europe. This explains the widespread capitalist support the French boycott movement is getting. And we have the spectacle of the Polish pogrom government hypo- critically protesting to Hitler against anti-Semitic outrages in Germany against the very Polish Jews who are beaten and tortured daily all over Poland. This again is a diplomatic demarche to strengthen the Franco- | Polish bloc and weaken the Anglo- Italian-Germen campaign to break French hegemony. Colombian Capture of Guepi Begins a War of Invasion BOGOTA, Colombia, Mar. 27.—The War Ministry announces that Col- ombian forees have captured Guepi, River in the Leticia sector. Airplanes, warships and artillery participated in the battle. This is the first move in a Colom- bian drive for the capture of Iquitos, headquarters of the Peruvian armies defending Leticia in the Upper Ama- zon area. Colombia has Wall Street backing, and endorsement ot the League of Nations. PRINTERS’ STRIKE BROKEN | BY USE OF TROOPS VIENNA, March 26.—The strike of printers against the censorship of the press was broken by bringing in troops. The troops were paraded be- fore the newspaper offices where the strike was in progress. ae Rei Vienna is the city which the so- cialists here ac well as the Second International edvertise as a model example of a “socialist city.” April 1 for Prague and Be) POLAND DRAWS CLOSER T0 FRANCE: TWO ARMED BLOCS TAKING FORM WARSAW, March 27.—The Polish Fore\gn Minister, is leaving on ‘Igrade to cement s closer alliance between a Peruvian town on the Putumayo/ CHINA SEES NEW ~ INVASION READY Discover Japan Plan | to Take Peiping BULLETIN TOKYO, Mar. 27—The Japanese Government today formally am- nounced its withdrawal from the League of Nations. In the same breath, the Cabinet’s proclamation. declared that Japan’s policy aims at “insuring peace in the Orient.” Peace imposed by bayonets, air- | plane bombs, and heavy. artillery—a Japanese peace of colonial oppres- | sion, resting lixe the air of a tomb over the Far East. Pte | PEIPING, Mar. 27—Gen. Ho-Ying- Ching, Chinese War Minister and commander of the armies in North China, issued a communique today, charging that Gen. Nobuyoshi Muto, Japanese Commander in Chief in Manchuria, plans to seize Peiping and Tientsin to break Chinese resist- ance at the Great Wall. The communique reported that se- vere fighting has been going on at Lengkow for the past five days, with over 300 Chinese soldiers killed, and Japanese losses of 1,000. The Chinese commander claimed that his forces had “attacked and re- occupied a town to the east of Leng- kow, after which they threw up trenches between ‘Isaichiakow and Hsichuanse, outside the Great Wall.” It is also reported that Chinese ca¥- —_ Poland and the states of the Little Entente: Czechoslovakia, Jugoslavia, | alry Teoccupied Panpishan. suka. He was released a few hours) ,y. | breaking off trade relations are not| while Nazi storm troopers marched) Sane and Rumania. ek ius igs a inter. i two espionage and bribery | serious, for trade with England is no oyer them with hobnalled boots until! Stone German Consulate. | This trip is officially admitted to be a counier-moye at the initi- j JAPANESE PARLIAMENT ENDS: Sk dainlaes cevartiettint tne ca 10w how close to war Europe! more essary for us than trade| they fainted VIGO, Spain, March 26—A demon- ative of Poland against the Mussolini-MacDonald-Hitler bloc forged TOKIO, March 26—The Japanese Be no cipeoaiee neti ae art {i e recent arrest and conyic-| with us is for the Enelish bourgeoisie. aOR o8 * | sation protesting the fascist attacks | in Rome. Forcign Minister Benes of Czechoslovakia is hurrying home | Diet Which was. in sessi n for the Osaka authorities have instituted tion in Rome of a noted French pro- England Needs ‘Crade. DRESDEN, Mar, 15 (By Mail).—A|o the German masses was held at| from Geneva to meet Colonel Beck. | past two months, has c ne) cl ‘4 investigation of the efforts of the fessor of the Ecole Polytechnique in| “As regards the rupture of diplo-| Nazi storm trooper shot and killed| the German consulate here, ‘The con | The London Titaes editorially now comes out tor revision of the |'The main teak of the Diet tas nue American Consul in Osaka to get in-| Paris on the charge of military | matic relations, we recall to the die-| his father in a little town of Saxony | sulate was stoned, A similar demon- peace treaties without delay, saying “revision is the biggest and most ‘i Rabo de to formation on several large Japanese) espionage also revealed the counter-| hards that these relations Rave al- passing of the tremendously large during @ political dispute. ‘The father immediate proh*:m” in world diplomacy. machinations of the European Gen- be 2 including mostly apy 4 budget, i industrial concerns, ready been broken once, but only| Was an organised worker and disap-| sulate a few days anni- This closer rapproachment between Poland and the Little carry ee Of ers] Staffs for the imnending Baro. | England sustained » lous, proved of his son’s Hitlerite parwece- | versary of, Sounnn ete fee. Ma anoter ink ip Prances campaign again he. Anglo-Tellan-German Selene By My LAO, Meret ative once. | pean wer, SRverybody knows the ‘netabitiy | toms of the working teh vente oficch to revke the Treaty of Then. ‘ againet the ree