The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 14, 1933, Page 4

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@ublahsd by the Comprodally Publishing Ce. Tetophone ALgenqnin 6-7954 Page Four 1 ‘ ath St @dress and mail eboeks te the Drily New York City, N.Y Worker, Ins,, dally oxeem Sunday at 6 8 Cable “DATWORK™ New Tork, ¥. 7 Dail 36. imth ., The Soviet Government Does Not Conduct A Policy of Plunder and Oppression; Its Policy Is A Peace Policy, in the Interests of the International Proletariat. Summary Execution by Chiang Government— A Common Sight GERMAN WORKERS IN US. FORMING UN ANTI-FASCIST ACTION ITED FRONT Many Cities Still Missing in Roll-Call of Anti- Fascist United Front NEW YORK.—The German brane Brooklyn and Elizabeth, and the nati und Sterbe the Arbeiter-Turn- und Sport-Bund, have issued calls to action to all their many branches in citie: 8. P. LEADERS SPLIT CHICAGO UNITED FRO! Huge Demonstration Planned for Grant Park June 24th CHICAGO, Ill, June 13—The So- cialist leaders of Chicago have smash- ed the United Front Anti-Fascist Committee. The Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee of Thirty-Five in charge of the May 10th anti-fascist demon- Stration has refused to participate in any anti-fascist action,’ and when confronted with proposals for action advanced by the International Workers Order and Poale Zion, the Secretary of the Jewish Socialist Federation moved to liquidate the Committ: t liquid- Anti- on all in the to join 24th, National A: Fascist Day A large number of open-air meet- ings have been for June 24. The demonstration on Fune 24 will start Saturda: Pp. m. from California, Roosev Wentworth, Ogden, and North All columns are. to meet i Loop in the center of the city and maarch to Grant Park. All org: tfons are asked to prepare banners for the demonstration representatives of Icor, | day on June} arranged to prepare | at 1:30} hes of the Socialist Party in New York, idnal offices of the Arbeiter-Kranken- asse, which has 60,000 members, the Saengerbund of the U.S, U.S.A., and the Natur-Freunde, U.S.A. throughout e united prism and country to rgan: ® the call to action, sponsored by German Anti-Fascist United of New to which the are affiliated he German Bureau of Party is an active as its purpose the all German workers ns for the defense of n working class, for mili- truggle against the Hitler in this country who are es- ning Nazi groups in many Ger- man settlem and for the gather- ing of funds for Hitler victims. Millions of Germans Here | There workers are mil German in the United States and large and small cities an neighborhoods and or- ganizations. United Front committees protesting the fascist terror in Ger- many and for relief of Hitler victims | have been organized in New York City, Passaic, N. J., Milwaukee, New- ark, Trenton, N. J., Chicago, San Francisco, Plainfield, N. J. Cleveland and Detroit. This leaves hundreds cf small and large cities still to organized.! Establishing| anti-fascist action committees among the G man population has been inexcusably delayed due to the failure of Workers International! Relief, the International Labor Defen: and other organizations to help initiate conferences a t German Fascism in the cities. Worl S$ organizations yet in actior municate with the National Com- mittee to Aid Victims of German Fascism, 75 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. at once. in cities not the} are requested to coms | | | orker’ Porty USA Huang Ping, Union Leader, | Tortured in Nanking Jail Anti-Imperialist League Calls for Nation-W ide Protest to Save | Chinese Revolutionary Leader From Torture to Death | NEW YORK.—Huang Ping, head of All-China Trade Union Federa- tion, is still imprisoned in a Nan- king jail, with the threat of a sudden and violent death hanging over him, although the Chinese delegation to | the League of Nations declared on January 28 that he had been released and was now a free man. The Anti-Imperialist League of the United States has sent a letter of protest against his continued impris- 'U.S. Loan to China to Dr. Alfred Sze, Chines 1 i . ‘Ambassador in Washington, Mr. zin|LS to Fight Soviets, Sen, President of the Executive) Says Council, Nanking, China, and to ur, | Days Los Angeles Vet Koalian Yip, Chinese Consul General (By a Veteran Correspondent.) | 18 Astor Place, New York City. | Los ANGEEES. Cell. — ‘he Mme. Sun Yat Sen Confirms Huang | wounded war veterans here who come Ping’s Tortures under the monthly rationing system ‘The protest letter demands the im-| Of the Red Cross have been informed | mediate release of Huang Ping,| that hereafter they will be given only | stating that the Anti-Imperialist| One bag of flour monthly instead of League “will continue to agitate for| the usual two bags. The “snooper” | | his release until word has been re-|told the vets this was due to a| ceived to that effect from Mme Sun| “shortage of flour”. Is there any | Ya Sen. | connection between this shortage of | “Mme. Sun Yat Sen, honorary| flour and the recent American loan | | president of the League Against Im-|to the Chinese Government of $50,- | | perialism and a delegate from the | 000,000 to purchase our surplus wheat peated efforts. He was brought to a hotel with three guards, one of whom remained in the room and cynically | answered all questions put to Huang Ping, whose face and bent) form| showed the torture to which he had been subjected. “The Kuomintang, by holding and torturing Huang Ping, again reveals itself as a lackey of American Im- perialism, While the} Kuomintang takes no action against the imp rialist invaders of China who seek to partition China for their own} profit, it fights againsi, tortures and murders the real defenders of China. Nanking Held Responsible for Huang’s Safety “The Anti-Imperialist League of the United States holds the Nanking | Kuomintang Government responsible | for the safety of Huang Ping and again demands the immediate re-| lease of ‘Huang Ping, working class | leader and Anti-Imperialist fighter.” | The Anti-Imperialist League calls upon all workers’ mass organizations and all anti-imperialist organizations to send resolutions or telegrams to the| foregoing Chinese authorities, demanding the immediate release of Huang Ping, whom the Chinese! League of Nations delegation on Jan. 28 falsely reported as having been} released. | Always take a copy (or more) of By Mall overrwhare: One year, $6; six months, $5.50; 3 moths, $2, 1 menth, 74, exeopting Borough of Manhattan and Bronx, New York City. Canada: —From Resolutions of the Sixth World Congress of the Communist International. 5 PA RK SJENGLAND AND AMERICA IN BITTER CURRENCY FIGHT ~ AT LONDON CONFERENCE HE liberal weekly, tha Nation, has an editorial demaiding that the Morgan investigation go on. Does it make this demand so that | the real character of finance capital- ist monopoly will be made clear to the people? Does it wish to expose the grip which Wall Street has on the state? Does it wish to demonstrate the fraud of bourgeois “democracy”? Or coher) | Oh, no! Tt is sore because the “little investor” can’t share in some of the swag which the big sharks | swallow in such huge quantities, ae. & AYS the “Nation” complainingly, “the investor, an integra] part of | the profit system, has willy-milly be- come a gambler—with the dice loaded against him.” So that’s what hurts. If they could only turn a nice little speculative profit every now and then, ail would be bright for the liberals of the “Na- | tion”, | HE Wall Street Journal, newspaper | of the finance capitalists and stock | speculators, announces with un- ashamed joy, that Roosevelt will sign | the Bill which cancels the law re- | quiring the richest railroads to turn back to the government $300,000,000 of their excess profits. It was an “inconvenient” law the Wall Street Journal. | That's a nice modest way to put it. 'UPPOSE we were to y to the Wall Street Journal that clas’ vould the Wall Street Journal say | then? We pause for a reply. | (Ce Pee But we don’t intend to wait very! long for the answer. | New York comrade, K. M., writes us tha: the Tammany City gov- rnment, at the same moment that | it is cutting relief, is increasing its | notorious police force. | The tests are being made easier. | | K. M. writes thet it is planned to} | double the present force to 25,000. | The New York City government, a typical corrupt capitalist government, | is getting ready to meet the hungry people with brutality and terrorism. But the starving workers of New | “It is useless to go on here until SUBSCRIPTION BATES: One year, $9; 6 months, $5; 7 months, $3. Atter,is to Exclude Debts at London by U. 8 Are Unsuccessful ‘CONTINUED PROM PAGE ONE) | at the Co: is that of the| stabilization of currencies and the United Stat re engaged in| coun- | heir | r rival | to deprecia own money below that of thi in order to secure consequent | trade advantag markets of| the world. The ates wants| the ratio to be in the neighborhood | of $4.80 to the pound, while England | would prefer the figure to be nearer | $4. Negotiations yesierday, which| began at the Bank of England and vere later transferred to the Treas-| building, broke down on this and| other points. Yesterday's rapid fall| of the dollar was thought at London} to be due to extensive dollar selling) oy the Federal Reserve Banks. | War Between Pound and Doliar. | These Anglo-American hostilities | are referred to Finan Times in London says that “the Bri by even Manchester Guard udden depreciation of ‘the the beginning of th> Conf minds people of the American pension of the gold eve of talks.” French Press for Stable Money. the and force? an agreem “France cannot accept a tariff truce until America and England’ de-ice| to stabilize,” said Daladier yester?*v the British and Americans take th first ste that iff truce termin- | ated automatically ac the opening of| the Conference. The English hold) that the pound is steady already, and | thet it is only the dollar that needs} to be stabilized. Therefore they re-} ject the idea of a joint fund, shared in by England, France and the United States, and say that America alone Foretgn and England | ® manded treaty revision, thus bringing onto the conference floor one of the | tives"have come into violent conflict | major points of conflict between the European powers. A foretaste of Ger- ny’s use of the moratorium as @ weapon at the Conference was give! when the German Foreign Ministe} said that “an agreement on the pi lems of credit and finance must pré cede an accord on economic and come mercial questions.” Von Neurath also brought up the question of German and delivered an attack on the United States’ policy on gold and debts. FOR U. S. ANTI WAR CONGRESS ORK. June noted French nove the early part of August y on behalf of the gainst War. He 2 at the invitation of ood Andersen, Theodore Drei- and Upton Sinclair, joint signers the recent call issued for an Am: s inst War to be {r. Barbusss with Ro- and other European been in the fore- | front ef the fight against war. He delivered the opening address at the World Congress Against War held in Amsterdam last August. Forest Recruits will Be Used in War. Says Army Cantain at Meet NEW YORK.—‘We ct you boys to be the first to fall in line if a war is declared,” stated an army captain to a meeting of corvorals of the Civilian Conservation Corps at Gov- ernor’s Island. Dollfuss Assails Nazis in Bid for London Loan Hitlerite Bombings and Riots in Vienna Bring Threat to Dissolve Party! Nazis Murder Jewish Woman VIED ‘une 15,—The conflict for control of Austria between the Hitlerige Nazis, who want union with Germany, and the nationalist-Catholic Dolifies dictatorship, financed and supported by fascist Italy, France and | York will not meet the police meekly. | They are determined that their | children shall not starve. the Daily Worker with you when you x0 to! work. All-China League for Civil Rights,| for the Chinese Army to crush. the | was able to aee Huang Ping after re- Chinese Soviets? Hitler Germany --- From the Inside! This is the first of a series of ar- ticles on Fascist Germany by a special correspondent of the Lon- don “Daily Worker,” central organ of the Communist Party of Great Britain. Comrade James travelled all over Germany getting inside in- formation on the situation from|the answer is that the Nazi victory is { meetings and prohibits any legal ex-; One alternative remains—the phys- By no means complete. The Ger- | pression of its existence, but it has) ical extermination of these relentless | man revolutionary working class |nOt smashed the Party and cannot/|enemies of fascism, their utter ex-/| has suffered a severe blow, it would | Prevent it working. tinction before the first firework: | be folly to dezry it; but the victory | The “Rote Fahne” appears and is|of the fascist seizure of power peter of the fascists is by no means what | distributed at the factories in thou-| out and leave nothing but smoke and it appears to be on the surface. | sands of copies. disappointment behind, nothing but | | The big bloated organizations of | _ MWlegal leaflets are produced and| intensified misery, increased unem- | gation should have | debt question, were raised to ruffle | the superficial calm of the Economic should undertake stabilization. The French, in particular, expressed their | annoyance that the American dele- | ailed for Europe without the authority to enter into stabilization agreements. Treaty Revision Brought Up. Other excluded subjects, besides the Those selected as corporals were called to a special meeting, at which tl were informed of their rating to act as foremen and drivers of the rest of the young workers when arriving in the camps in Idaho and, Montana. Further militarization of the Corps’ [has been introduced at the Island. | Forest recruits have been armed with tin von Neurath, German represen-| ‘Shotguns and automatic pistols to tative, tied the economic problems|mount guard in regular military facing the Conference up with polit- | fashion at night. Just a selected few ical cwestions that do not appear on | are assigned to this task. Recruits the Conference agenda, but which all| who return after 11 p.m. from leaves the same will play a determining role | of absence are punished the next day at London. Without naming the|by being made to chip mortar off Conference today. Baron Constan- England, reached a new pitch of intensification today. Brown Houses ernment closed all the Austria, decreed the immediate ex- Pulsion of all Nazi soldiers from the | army, and threatened to dissolve the | Nazi party and proclaim martial law. The coincidence of these moves | yith Chancellor Dollfuss’s trip to the London Economic Conference, where | he is seeking a new international loan, | 4s no accident, but indicates clearly | Austria's dependence on interna- | tional finance capital. The diminu- | tive but ambitious Dollfuss know. that he can get the money he needs | fo maintain his oppressive dictator- ahip over the Austrian workers and Peasants only through currying favor with the ex-Allies by fighting his | German Nazi rivals. | On Saturday the Dolifuss Cabinet | barred from the mails for a year the | Principal German Nazi organ, “Voel-} kische Beobachter” of Munich, and| arrested 150 persons attending a se. The Dolifuss gov- headquarters) throughout standpoint of the revolutionary (Nazi workers.—Editorial Note. street, but it exploded in her hands, By EDWARD JAMES. | killing her and wounding eight) There are two Germanys today— others, one of whom died a few hours| to a greater extent than ever before. later. | ‘There is the boastful, straddling, bru- Another Nazi attempt to murder | tal Germany of Hitler, Goering, Goeb- Jews was frustrated when a 30-|bels and their brown-shirted swash- pound bomb with a time fuse was|bucklers, the Germany which domi- discovered in a large cafe in the Jew- | nates the surface life of the country, ish quarter. | which controls the police force, the Mobs organized by Nazi agitators | State apparatus, the Press, the w t the university were driven along | less, the church, the law courts, and ‘he Ringstrasse by mounted police | every legal method of public expres- with drawn sabers, followed by foot | sion, and which intimidates the rep- police wielding clubs. Many windows | resentatives of the foreign press. were broken by detonators exploded} This is the Germany which is on by Nazis. Minor riots occurred in the top, which organizes gigantic cir- Provinces. At Innsbruck, all Nazi|cuses because it can give neither leaders were arrested, and more than bread nor jobs. The Germany x hich 200 bombs were seized in a police raid | presents itself to the world as the on a bomb factory. It was reported | only Germany, which has delivered that all foreigners affiliated with the | ing f i Hitlerites would be expelled from | {washing blows at the organizations |the Social-Democracy, the Social- | Democratic Party, the A.D.G.B, (the reformist trade unions), the so-called | iron Front, which turned out to be | |of cardboard, the Reichshanner, and | all the rest of them haye been swept away. Mass Actions. They held the masses of the So- cial-Democratic workers back from | the decisive struggle, they did their | best to stifle the will of these masses to join with their Communist fellow | workers in a united front against fascism, and they smashed every be- ginning that was made to create this front. They deliberately widened the gap | in the ranks of the working class and | watched the enemy advance through |it. They rendered their last great | service to German capitalism and they have disappeared. | The Socialist Organizations Stifling | | Austria, and that a state of stege | °%,te, Woming class, which has im- ctet Nazi meeting here. On Sunday | would be proclaimed until the Nazi | attempts were made, obviously by| party had been suppressed, Nazis, to assassinate Dr. Richard| The Austro-German tension is due Steidie, leader of the Heimwehr | to a direct clash of economic inter- ‘Austrian Fascists) in the Tyrol, and | ests, as well as to Austria’s position Dr. Anton Rintelen, Governor of|as a pawn in the irreconciliable an- Styria. tagonisms existing between the Brit- Yesterday the Nazis continued | ish, French, Italian and German im- their campaign of violence by riots | Perialisms. For example, Germany’ and bombings. Wrapped in a silk | Policy of throttling agricultural im- stocking, a bomb was hurled from an automobile into the shop of a Jewish woman jeweler named Futterweit She tried to throw it back into the| ports has reduced her purchoses of butter from Austria. formerly 150 carloads anually, to 48 carloads, and | timber from 11,103,815 cwt.-meters in | Behind them they have left hun- prisoned tens of thousands, which is | dreds of thousands of those who be- las cut down her imports of Austrian | | digging itself in at all the vantage | | points of power, which claims to rep- | resent the whole German people, even | | the working class. | lieved in them too long, but whose eyes have now been opened effective- ly to their real character. Here are the second line troops of distributed in the districts. Heroic protest demonstrations have been or- ganized and carried out. The Com- munist Party is the fighting organiza- tion of the working class. It stands by the working class, it Places itself at the head of the mass- es in the teeth of the worst mass terror ever experienced in 2 Western | European country. It is alive and working, and it will remain alive and working and fight until German fascism is smashed. And here is the aim of the under- ground terror which began on the ac- cession of Hitler to power and has | continued ferociously ever since. The power of the State, the po- | lice, the law courts, the prisons and | the concentration camps are not | sufficient to destroy the Commu- | nist Party, not sufficient to break | the spearhead of the German work- ing class. The secret terror is intended to | complete the work begun by the legal |repressive apparatus of the German bourgeoisie. The Unshakable Basis of the Communist Party The basis of the Communist Party | It is the Germany which the naive | the proletarian revolution. It will not| is that magnificent phalanx of Ger- gation” in Berlin | many which claim to have utterly | destroyed its enemies in “a great | bloodless national revolution.” \ The Other Germany. | But there is another Germany. And | it is of this other Germany this ser- | ies of articles will speak. It is the Germany of the millions of workers the Communist Party. The Wiegal Communist Party The terrific pressure of the legal and illegal terror against the German | working class has driven the Commu-| their clear course. nist Party underground. The terror has closed down the le- gal headquarters of the Party thru- Anti-Fascist a oe en Conferences in Newark, Trenton Preparations for National Anti- Fascist Day, June 24, are going ahead in/all sections of the country. A very important German Anti-Fascist Con- ference will be held in Newark, N. J., Friday, June 16, at 8 p. m., at the Labor Lyceum, 704-708 South 14th St. The conference is to work out Plant for two tag days on June 23-24 to aid victims of German Fascism. A preliminary conference of all working class organizations is to take place June 15, at 8 p. m. at 7 Union St., in Trenton, N. J. The conference | will also mobilize the various organ- | izations for the anti-Fascist demon- stration on June 24. An aniti-Fascist | conference on a larger scale is to be| called after June 24 to consolidate | the‘impetus to the movement impart- ed by National Anti-Fascist Day. | both in the factories and at the La- out, Germany, suppressed all its pub- tempting to profit by German’s for- | eign-political isolation, which caused many firms in several countries to | shift their buying from Germany to other countries, | LONDON, June 13.— Chancellor | Engelbert Dollfuss told newspaper men at the Economic Conference to- day that he was “fighting for the | preservation of Austria as an ‘inde- | pendent political and economic body |in Central Europe,” 2nd that he ex- pected to achieve this “independence” by obtaining another international loan and by promoting Anglo-Amer- ican tourist traffic with’ Austria to offset the loss of German tourist trade through the Hitler embargo order. In striking contrast to the hos- tile reception which Alfred Rosen- berg, Hitler's personal representative, got when he visited London last month, Dolifuss noi only was ap- piauded by the newspaper men but found in his hotel room an elaborate gift of flowers with a card wishing lications, arrested hundreds of its leaders and thousands and thousands of its lower officials, prohibits all its bor Exchanges. The millions who have been rob- | bed of many of their best and bravest foreigner sees who spends a few|be Jong before they sweep into the | man workers who have developed into! working-class towns, is the organized | weeks on a “special tour of investi- | first line together with the advance | such proletarian revolutionaries, such This is the Ger- | 8¥ard of the German working class,|Communisis during the last 14 years! Fascists to exterminate the best ele- of class struggle in Germany, that | nothing can shake them, nothing can make them cease to be Communists. No horror can deter them from The fascist rulers (of Germany know that nothing they can do. can intimidate these revolu- tionary forces, tnat no sop can win more than a laugh from them, that no demagogy can cloud their under- standing of the class position, that no cireuses can confuse them. leaders, but who have not been cud- | gelled into submission, despite the terror, despite the wholesale murders in the cellars of the Nazi barracks, | despite the thousands and thousands of fearful beatings, despite the tens of thousands of arrests and the sys- tematized campaign of brutal repres- sion, despite the torrents of propa- ganda poured out daily by the con- trolled press of Hitler Germany, and despite the biggest sell-out in his- tory by the leaders of the German Social-Democratic Party and the re- formist trade unions. How and Why Did the Narts Win? How was it possible? How could the Nazis gain such a complete victory? | Why was there no effective resist- ance on a mass scale? What is the German Communist Party doing? All these are questions which have | Go to see every subseriber when hix subseription expires to get iis me. | him welcome and voicing ‘Three cheers for Austrian independence.” T looked as M he would get his pussled more than one worker. And | they have « right to know the an- | } ‘ ployment, heightened dissatisfaction and anger. These men and women, the flower of the German working class, must not be alive to guide the coming dis- | satisfaction of the huge masses of the | German workers and peasants into effective and revolutionary channels. They must not be there to lead) the struggle for the proletarian revo- | lution when the disappointed mil-| lions realize that they have been, fooled. And, above all, they must not be permitted to organize that struggle now in the factories, at the Labor Exchanges, in the working-class dis- tricts. “What does it matter if a-few hundred Marxists come to harm!” declared Frick. “Heads will roll,” again and again. “Let there be no mistake, we shall make good use of the public hang- man,” declared Strasser. What is now proceeding under- ground, and under cover of dark- hess in the working-class quarters of Berlin, Breslau, Hamburg, Leipzig, Halle and the other big German declared Hitler and mass attempt of the German | ments in the German working-class | with revolyer and knife, and, above all, with the pltcte steel club. These, efforts will not succeed, but | they are dealing heavy blows. It will be the aim of these articles to expose this terror, to give facts and concrete details of scores of cases which have become known. “ They will let the testimony of workers who have been in the cel- lars of the General Pape Strasse, the Hedemann Siasse, the Ulap and the other hel} holes of German Fascism speak. | And) they will give names of those workers who can no longer be tortured, wheze mutilated bodies have been buricd hestily or flung into the canals by the murderers. Many of the best and most devoted leaders of the German working-class are in the hands of men whose avowed aim is murder. The lives of Thaelmann, Torgler, Kaspar, to mention but three of tens of thousands, are in the hands of these men. ‘The American working-class must stend by its German comrades. It must raise its voice with el possible energy to demand their release, to | demand the end of the secret terror, the end of the nightly murder expe ditions of Hitlers bands at Hitler's orders. International proletarian solidarity has rescued many workers from the Versailles Treaty, von Neurath de- | old bricks. Anglo-U. S. tion is one of the first fruits of the a regional conference ended in Bu European wheat countries declared Costa Rica Deports 2 Workers’ Leaders COLON, Panama, May 25 (By Mail).—Adolfo Brana and Juan Jose Palacios, leaders of the Communist movement in Costa Rica, were browsbt here yesterday by airplane from San Jose and immediately ar- rested by the Panama police. They had been deported from Costa Rica by the government of President Ri- cardo Jimenez because of their par- ticipation in a workers’ demonstra- | tion early this week | Brana was shipped to Barcelon; Spain, on the Italian Liner Orazi third class, and Palacios, a native of Venezucla, is to be sent to some Cen- | tral American po Brana disdain. fully refused to accept $50 from the Costa Rican consul here, although he had been hustled out of the coun- try im such haste that he had no possessions except the clothes on his back. The Costa Rican government is re- ported taking drastic action against. revolutionary workers starting with the deportation of “undesirable ali- ens” such as Brana and Palacios. Roosevelt Orders A Caste System in Labor Camps) WASHINGTON, June 12— President Roosevelt's mew order on the labor camps is to give a wage increase to a small group and punishment for those who commit “offenses.” No more than 5 per cent in any company in tue camp will be paid an additional $15 a month. While 8 per cent of the men will be paid $6 moze a month. Otherwi rate remains at $30 math, or those who break any rules: 3 days pay are to be deducted. hsnds of the hangmen. It must res- ome our comrades, Me Be Senet wat Other penalties are suspension of or work. | ‘we get ready to sell more wheat we |are told to restrict.” Deadlock On Wheat Reduction LONDON, June 13.—Deadlock among the great wheat countries of the world on the question of international agreement to restrict wheat produc- London Conference. A few days age have at which the nine leading their unvvillingness to reduce output, ® saying that this should be done by the United States, and claiming the right of preferential treatment in the European markote for European “ty Fight U. 8. for Markets, } Yesterday members of the Cana-' dian and Australian delegations _ to the conference stated their positions. “We are a young country, and wheat is one of our great exports,” said one of the Australians. “We have been on the brink of financial disaster and ere making strenuous efforts to come back. The only way we can come back is to sell more goods, and that means to sell more wheat. Just as “We are in no hurry to take an at- Uitude om the question of restriction,” said members of the Canadian dele- gation. “Restriction may nob be rictly necessary since it is probable that American output may. soon cease tw exceed domestic requirements.” “he attitude of the British empire delegations on this question shows the further spread and development of the Anglo-American trade struggle at the London Conference, Ooo Oe aa e Oppose Tariff Cuts, | MEXICO CITY, June 13.—Oppost« tion to tariff revision was urged om Mexico's delegation to the World Eco= nomic Conference by Eucario Leon, secretary of the CROM (Mexican Federation of Labor) on the ground that the lowering of Mexican tariffa would be harmful to industry. A resolution was asked for to instruct the Mexican delegates to fight against tariff reductions at London, Bavarian Nazis Ban | All But Own Meetings — MUNICH, June 13.—As a sequel to — the Nazi attacks on Catholic workers — here Sunday and yesterday, the Hit- levite government headed by General _ Franz von Epp today prohibited: for an indefinite period all indoor and — outdoor meetings except those i the Peseta.

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