e SO OSES SP es. This pic ture is reproduced from the August 27, 1951 issue of 2h the Sudbury Star. It shows a cere- See “mony at Villa Marla, on Lake Richard, at which the brown-skirted Ukrainian Youth Association, a nationalist organization, was presented with an official flag by Peter Kolesnyk, of Toronto, who came to Canada as a DP. Headquarters of several groups, organized for the purpose of carrying out terror and, sabotage against the People’s Democracies, are in Canada. Mexicans aroused by report 2,000 _ FBI in country MEXICO CITY Mexican authorities are ‘investigating charges that foreign police agents are operating here, according to an announcement by the foreign ministry. This appears to be a direct result of wide-spread protests at the seizure last month of Gus Hall, national secretary of the United States Communist party, by Mexican secret police acting under FBI instruc- tions. However, that this investiga- tion is only an empty gesture is ‘evident from ithe fact that with- out waiting for results of the in- vestigations, the ministry’s state. ment categorically denies that foreign police agents are acting on Mexican territory under a tacit agreement permitting such actions. The statement admits that such activity would be in conflict with international law and sovereignty.” sm, ® . The foreign ministry’s state- ment is an obvious attempt to cover up a scandalous situation which for years has been a com- mon topic of conversation among both Mexicans and foreigners. On November 16, Ultimas Noticias, afternoon edition of the ultra-reactionary daily Ex- celsicr which is the unofficial organ of the U.S. embassy, de- clared that “the Communist danger to Mexico is considered so real in the United States that it merited nothing less than the dispatch of several thousand agents.” According to Ultimas Noticias, The FBI has succeeded in com- piling in Mexico a very complete dossier of persons active in vari- ous fields in Mexico, from writ- ers, artists, politicians, and journ- “would | constitute a violation of our, month alists, to labor leaders and mili- tary men. Further evidence of the char- acter of the foreign ministry’s denials is the fact that on March 18 this year General Marcelino Inurraba, chief of the Mexican Federal Security Agency, stated publicly that 2,000 FBI agents were operating in Mexico’ with the Mexican government’s auth- orization. The daily El Popular points out editorially that this activi- ty constitutes “armed North American intervention in Mexi- co” and asks whether “(United States) Ambassador (William) O'Dwyer wants us to believe that the thousands of police agents in Mexican life wear carnations and orchids in place of guns and other weapons of greatest efficiency.” November 23 issue of El Popu- lar runs a front page headline “Disposition of Government FBI operating in Mexico.” The story says that the foreign ministry’s statement aroused wide comment and evoked the demand that the “authorities should investigate the intervention of FBI agents in kidnapping and illegal deporta- tion of North American citizen Gus Hall carried out in the past in -flagrant violation of our constitution and the right of asylum consecrated by law and Mexican tradition.” 589 BUY A SUB NOW! XMAS GIFT: at a Extend your picture of Canada. youth in Champion. CHAMPION Room 1 - 48 Duncan Street, Toronto, Ontario Ra a RRO ORIOEOERO —>, Champion (The fighting voice of young Canada) Read the truth about the Champion is THE Xmas- gift for your friends. — } (Xmas cards sent with first issue) Coffon imported from U.S. cuts Canadian jobs _ MONTREAL From the ‘Canadian office of the United Textile Workers of America, R. Kent Rowley, Can- adian director, has (called on Prime Minister St. Laurent to take immediate steps to cancel government’s orders of U.S. cot- ton in order that employment be given to Canadian textile work- ers. Rowley also asked an interview with the prime minister for a textile delegation in order to lay the union’s program before the cabinet. In his telegram Rowley charges that: the government itself had bought one million: and a half: yards of U.S. cotton to be finished in Canadian mills and that the same quality of cotton could readily be-manu- factured in mills in Canada. Text of the telegram follows: Regret your inability to meet textile delegation on December 17 as situation urgently requires government attention. The man- aging director of Montreal Cot- tons, Valleyfield testified under oath before an arbitration board that your government has im- ported hundreds of thotsands of yards American cotton from the U.S. to be finished in Canadian mills. We understand over a million and a half yards involved. This cotton can) be made in Canadian mills. We cannot understand why taxpayers’ money is expended to import American cotton while thousands of Canadian workers on short time and completely un- employed in Canadian cotton in- dustry. Request government can- cel U.S. orders and give them to Canadian mills. This and other matters make clear the urgency of meeting with committee of cabinet in order to clear up the grave situation in Canadian tex- tile industry. Employers and un- ion equally interested in action on import situation. NEW SOVIET FILMS Sunday, December 16 8 p.m. TATRA HALL New Westminster Ferenc Farkas and Major-Gen- eral Andras Zako, who was chief of the counter-espionage service of the Szalasi puppet-government of Hungary in 1944, under the Hitler regime. It is clear that the purpose of the meeting in Toronto was to gain more recruits for the one or two divisions the organiza- tion hopes to place at the dis- posal of General Eisenhower's NATO army. It is assumed the organization will also qualify for financial aid from President Truman’s $100,000,000 Mutual Security Act which provides aid for terrorist organizations. ; At the Toronto meeting the “Comradeship” was represented by the Rev. Csendes, a preacher at the Hungarian United Church, Church on Queen Street, near Spadina Avenue. Rev. Csendes, who came to Toronto a few years ago from Otthon, Sask., and who of Gustav Nemes, editor of the Winnipeg Hungarian News and a Horthyite guards officer in 1919-1920, introduced ‘the leader of the Canadian “head group” of the terrorist organization as Gen- eral Jenoe Toemoery. Toemoery Toronto, part of the All-People’s | ° was for many years a colleague| Hungarians being recruited in East for fascist army “ By STEVE SZOKE Editor, Hungarian-Canadian weekly, Munkas TORONTO The Canadian branch of a Hungarian fascist-military organiza- tion held a meeting in Toronto last week in Hungarian House, 245 College Street. The organization, known as the “Comradeship of Hungarian Fighters,” is a military organization with armed de- * | tachment and headquarters in Western Germany and Austria. It ‘| is led by the fascist ‘General fought for the Nazis on the Rus- sian front. He made the outlandish state- | ment that “35 divisions” have been organized in the West, two of them Canadian. He invited all but Communists to join these “divisions” and those who wished to join, could report at Hungar- ian House. ‘Farkas and Zako are ' on the official list. of Hungarian war criminals. The official journal of the or- ganization, edited and published in the U.S. zone of Germany, is widely distributed in Canada. Mimeographed fascist DP sheets are published in Montreal and Toronto. The official journal, called “On Route of Armies,” in its May 1950 issue, summarized the program of the organization: “1.—To the repatriation of homeless Hungarians, only armed force can open the way. “2.—The power of the Hun- garians is not enough as we can count only on the armed _ might of the United States. “3.—We have the right to ‘hope that with anticipated de- velopment of world events, the military might of the U.S. will open the route to our repatria- tion.” a ar PACIFIC BIRR NIST DDDSDDIA DIAN AS RRND NE A GIFT OF LASTING VALUE } BY 4 GIVE SUBSCRIPTIONS THIS CHRISTMAS: | PLEASE ENTER GIFT SUBSCRIPTIONS ? TRIBUNE | © MEME ME NEUEN ENE URINE UE NEN LENE NEI NEUE TE TENE RTE UE NEUE UE Nee Ie IIe Ieee ee ieee PACIFIC 6-426 Main Street . PRUE UE NE NE NE RENE UE NEN NN Ue ae Nez he tet ee penetra heehee 1 & f Rates: Y2 Year $1.35 CME MPN EES NV NE UE VERN MEHR HUME RNY LEC HEME VERE HEHE eae a ni kc ee Nee te Ny ate oe \, ee Ey PENS sais oa Nees 2 eee lien man MN secee eae Ga eee 1 year [J pL CERCA SRC Pre oie renee Yo year [] ZANE GPP gs SOE Taye A ORO Sg 1 year [] aT 0 FE See os ee a Sate La ee Wear ae | RTA Verwa he ar ate eae pa Sa sires tes LS years(q ne i AS Pe UNE ada e bag ea hes aie renee es HAVE THE GIFT CARD READ ‘FROM: Name egaren ei tis Saes Py ata ete Batis 1 Year $2.50 TRIBUNE | : Vancouver 4, B.C. DBR MBM MDP DDD Bi Dawe Bi Bs BMD Bey BRU we MDE By aye Be Bi Deh BiB Raa BEE PACIFIC TRIBUNE — DECEMBER 14, 1951 — PAGE 2. Pie ool