ISOLATING GERMANY
LONDON, May 22. ' - The Geneva correspondent of the "Express" saya that interesting developments are possible following Herr Bci'hbcim's petition, which the League Secretary, Sir Eric Druminond, has decided requires urgent procedure. The petition will bo considered by the League Counci on Tuesday in order to decide whether anti-Jewish measures' are a breach of the German-Polish convention of 1922. The French, assisted by the Poles and Chechoslovakians, may seek to utilise- the petition to isolate Germany on the question of the Nazi treatment of Jews. Herr Franz Eernhcini, lato of Gleiwitz, Upper Silesia, who states that ho was dismissed his employment in a German emporium because he was a Jew, arrived at Geneva with a petition to the League of Nations. Herr Bernheim stressed the point that Germany, when she secured special treatment for her minorities in Poland, Czechoslovakia, and elsewhere, undertook to. extend the samo treatment to "foreign minorities established in Germany.
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Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 119, 23 May 1933, Page 7
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154ISOLATING GERMANY Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 119, 23 May 1933, Page 7
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