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Show Spy Stuff One of the most bitter ironies oi modern history is the fact that British Brit-ish Intelligence had evidence proving prov-ing that Hitler intended to start a war in Europe. But Chamberlain refused to believe it. Instead of believing be-lieving his own Intelligence Chamberlain Cham-berlain took Hitler's word when he (aid that he wanted peace . . . When the war is over the story will be told: It will reveal how an American Amer-ican newspaper man gathered the evidence that resulted in America kicking out Nazi diplomats because they were working as Nazi espionage gents . . . Each Nazi chief has private spy ring that he uses to keep tabs on other Nazi biggies. That's why Goebbels has a switchboard which is used to listen in on every conversation in his building. Glamorous Mata Haris are seldom used these days. The Nazis train ordinary looking people for spy work so that they won't stand out in a crowd and excite suspicion ... In Argentina the Nazis control more .than a dozen widely circulated daily newspapers and distribute over 300,-000 300,-000 pamphlets weekly . . . Each Nazi spy gets certain tricks t use. As soon as he is nabbed those tricks go on a blacklist to make certain another agent won't use the same act. Germans in America who refuseo to work for the Bund were kidnaped shipped back to Germany and shot. Yet we still have many Bund supporters in this country who aren't in cells! . . . The Nazi espionage network is a tremendous organization: organiza-tion: The British discovered that there were 14,000 Nazi agents in Britain who were posing as servants . . . Five years ago the Nazis spent more money on espionage activities than we spent for our army and navy. The Jap system is to educate every ev-ery Jap with the idea of being sneak. When a Jap returned from a visit to another nation he promptly went to the Jap foreign office anc told them everything he saw and heard . . . Even the most innocent type of information is vital to spies, Something that may seem unimportant unimpor-tant to you cnuld supply the missing miss-ing link to a I secret for a trained spy . . . One' uf the duties of Nazi agents in this country was to jot down overheard conversations. 11 6erved as a guide to our morale. I they heard many Americans in one part of the country spouting racial hatred that's where the Nazis concentrated con-centrated their hate propaganda. Nazi agents run many schools in Argentina where Argentine children chil-dren of German descent are given I military training. They used to run similar schools in California until ' this reporter exposed the recently j indicted Nazi agent behind that plol j F. K. Ferenz . . . Mata Hari was as great a spy as legends assert. I Espionage a la Hollywood thrillers Is old hat. The best weapon oi i Japanazi agents is propaganda. Tht Nazis have discovered that destroy- tag a nation's will to fight, by n spreading confusion and disunity, helps them more than destroying war plants ... A Nazi outfit named World Service draws up the propaganda propa-ganda blueprints to be used by their supporters in democratic nations Many American rabble-rousers wet on its mailing list. Some Americai. cers are still making use of thi propaganda lessons they learned from the Nazis ... As far back as 1936, Congress was given evidence of Jap espionage in America, but h was ignored . . . When American newspapers and mags arrive in neutral neu-tral countries, everything written about Naziism is clipped by Nazi .agents and sent to Goebbels. The international spy exchange does a thriving business inside neutral neu-tral nations. It is composed of espionage espi-onage agents who gather information informa-tion about any country and sell it tc the highest bidder ... A skunk disguised as a dove isn't anything new. When Franz Von Papen directed di-rected German sabotage and espionage espi-onage activities (in America before the last war) the outfit he used as a front was labeled: The National Nation-al Peace Council. One of the unknown home-from heroes is Walter Morrissey. He was the superintendent at the Nazis' New York consulate. When the Nazis gave him documents to burn in the furnace he turned them ovei to the FBI. Evidence from those documents helped the G-Men crack one of the biggest spy rings in America. This is how Nazis trust each other: oth-er: The Gestapo spies on the German Ger-man Army, and the German Army has spies in the Gestapo . . . Himm-ler Himm-ler has every newsreel that depict! an assassination. He runs them ofl hi. reds of times in order to observe ob-serve how best to guard Hitler against a similar attempt . . . V" German militarists try to ; themselves by getting rid of Hiiiui they will discredit him in the eyes of the German people by offering evidence proving that in 1919 Hitler was a spy. |