The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 5, 1933, Page 4

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Page Four the Dally elephose ALgorgnin Worker, 58 et Porty USA New York Toilers: Meet England to Bar Soviet Imports, Impound Funds | Fears Possible Revelations in Trial of English Engineers Charged With Sabotage LONDON, April r John Simon Foreign introduced a Soviet Imports Bill in the House of Commons today, authorizing the rnment to prohibit the import of all goods from Russia. The bill will also ask powers to re: strict withdra Russian holdings of foreign exchange go ondon, and force the So genie aye in London, anc ree the Sc ae a viet Union to spend the money Naat on- British goods The ment remem ngland will tions of the tri of Donald is ru owed the cont- : general in one day w disclosures | E lations with | Republic to try to in- Soviet Government. new day in encom, is being pretext for endi Sir Esmond Ov sador to Moscow, Ww London, consulted w MacDonald today. After this conference it was announced that “Sir Esmond’s health is so bad that he will be unable to timidate the butter, will benefit the reactionary Bennett Government in Canada by giving it a larger share of the British market. Foreign Commissar Litvinov's sharp rebuff to Ambassador Ovey’s' en- as recailed to go back to Russia in the immediate deavor to intervene in a pending future.” criminal case by threats of economic * = pressure demonstrates that no eco- English cary st moves nomic boycott, thievery of Soviet against the S must be funds or organizing of interventionist looked at as part of the as the concerted anti-S adventures, will deflect the course of Soviet justice. FRANCE REJECTS OPEN REVISION. OF THE TREATY OF VERSAIL Mobilizes MacDonald-Mussolini-Hitler “4-Power Pact” PARIS, A The F inet tae pproved a memorandum on the proposed Four-Power Pact, : at Britain and Italy tomor- row. In the note for the territorial revision of y MacDonald ang Mussolini Poland and the Little EBntente, i the League Covenant to nullify Mys- solini’s appeal to A’ 1 ich provides for eventual treaty revision. Semi-official advices state that, if MacDonald, Mussolini and Hitler agree to no tampering with the teritorial clauses of the Versailles treaties, France would be ready to make concessioné in the direction of according Germany equal rights, — limits”, in armament. FRANCE BACKS JAPANESE INVASION AS BARRIER AGAINST COMMUNISM Indo-Chinese Revolutionary MovementWorries| French Imperialists; Fear Chinese Soviets France is throwing more or less open support to the Japanese in the | Far East war. One of the major factors in the French attitude to Far | Eastern events is France's fear of the spread of Communism in its Indo- Chimese possessions The Communist movement in Indo-China, though illegal, is very strong, WORKERS FIGHT and French colonial officials, includ- IMPERIALIST DICTATORSHIP comed the establishment of the pup- net state of Manchukuo as 3 “bulwark | gainst Sovietism Officers Laud Manchukno. rom the French viewpoint’, | ite Tve Officers Association, i joice to see a sane, — + rong stat stablished th Montevideo "C a ' led | formix enterp! will protect our Indo- Against Terra Rule BUENOS AIRES. from Uruguay sho’ tempting to s' covite poison.” Dr. Terr: o~ sete is taking the resump- SR together with its military outposts. into South China. are quietly establishing .a/{ neh protectorate over the border | province of Yunnan. Bribery of the rhnor and other provin- is another weapon in the enal Revolt Brews. ent history of French Indo- marked by naval mu-~ of colonial troops and atresting high army office: tidians~ 0 d to th the same time oppositior ftom. without and withir Unions have now dec! ‘Terra general ments from the wards Montevi The Ai: port Terra. university buil ousted after a si us battle pdlice. There have also beer demonstrations in ous clashes on the slr bety Tonkin and other big cities, demand live and. demonstrators ng complete freedom from, French . t rule The explanation of the French dominion in Indo-China is Secretary, | MacDonald's action, barring Russian | timber and oil from Britain, | | fascists came into power, they agit-|of the Prussian police force, assumed | | ated against Jews and all colored| office, his men arrested George Pad- By Me! eveerwhere: One yeer, $4; sfx months, $2.50; $ months, $7 ¥ mentd, Ws, excepting Borough of Manhatten snd Bronx, New York City. year, Foreigs and is ta 13] S| =| W i) = nM = x Fe © = e = = Se) ~ a is Fa German By A. WARD. | through Germany, the “Angriff,” the Secretary, Negro Workers Association, | central organ of the fascist party of London Berlin, demanded her expulsion and Most Negroes in America and the| expressed solidarity with the forces of colonies do not realize that fascism) reaction in Alabama that are trying is the greater danger which confronts | legally to lynch more Negro boys. | not only the working class but the Padmore Arrested | Negro race as well. The most glaring) The most recent attack of the fas- manifestation of this violent racial| cists upon Negroes in Germany oc- hostility is the campaign against Ne-| curred in February. Shortly after the groes and Jews in Germany by the| infamous Captain Goering, the right Hitler movement. Even before the| hand man of Hitler, and the dictator | races. However, since Hitler has be-| more, the Secretary of the Interna-| Fascism Is Creed of Violence Against Negro People |music, and therefore an insult to | come Chancellor, this agitation has| | ieiense against all colored peoples a as il as Jews. "The extent to which the fascists Poland ane atte Wntente Against) preach racial hetred, and advocate| mitted to see him. |lynch law, can be realized from the| ng army and navy officers, have wel- | viet China, as a.pre- | French } the organ of the French Re- | swered. “we must | Must be emphatically in the nega~ following quotation taken from an| British criminal police and deported| natives of the« former German-Af- | article published in the Nazi organ,| ‘Nazional-Socialtische Monatchefie.” “Tn each Negro, even in one of the kindest disposition, is the latent brute and the primitive man who can be tamed neither by centuries of slavery nor by external varnish of civilization. All assimiliation, all education is bound to fail on ac- count of the racial inborn features of the blood. One can, therefore, | understand why in the Southern | States of America, sheer necessity compels the white race to act in an | abhorrent, and perhaps éven cruel manner against the Negroes. And, of course, most of the Negroes that are Iynched do not merit any re- gret.” This is the philosophy of the new “saviours” of Germany. It is no won- der that on the occasion of Mrs. Ada | Wright's (the Scottsboro mother) tour | M. HOWARD fundamental factors in situation changed? Has real change in the jation?, Do.we face a stable currency redeem- By Haye the the banking there been financial ret to ® able in gold? «Now that the optimistic | ballyhoo siding, from Washington is sub- these questions must be an- The only correct answer Peaceful arid | tive! Through the disappearing clouds | which,| of illusion, the basic facts emerge a solid barrier to Bolshevik | absolutely unchanged in all their ess-'/ entials. ‘The conditions making cur- sions, menaced by the} rency inflation inevitable are develop- | ing irresistibly. Fre admi | inflation is all read, ‘he French colonial admi inietrstion | anes await to se tact, it Hae | Roosevelt's closest advisers, has pro- The machinery’ for In fact, it has relations between | be insistently hammered home again and again. No Gold Payments, But Inflated Paper Currency At first. the government established | | an internal and external embargo on. gold. No gold is being handed out at | the banks, No currency is redeem- | able in gold. |The Federal Justset up yrominent factor motivating im the econc nee's anti-Soviet activities. The | there. Until feature of the proposed Four- not as badly hit, by Power Pact, embracing France, Eng- most other South American countrie nd, Italy and Germany, that has But in the last two years, the valye of the Uruguayan currency has drop- 565 per cent and al- though~prices have not risen to this| extent, there has been a sharp drop im real wages. The railways, an En-| glish monopoly, have actually raised freight rates during the depression, approval of the French ruling ti-Soviet front in Europe. Madariaga Advises Spanish Government thus crippling the native industry, AJ beef export, which already has to Get Ready for War) meet fierce Australian competiti Beef export is twe ‘time: a large| MADRID, April 4. — Salvadorde ‘ag the next largest Uruguayan indus-| Madariaga, Spanish ambassador to | trp + > France, and well-known as an “ad- —: 2 ee, s) Rr vocate of disarmament” at Geneva, BO or the OS A Tans Vand | declared ‘on his return to Spain that savagely putting through i share- | EUropean relations were “extremely and that war could be avoided only with the “greatest care”. He advised Spain to fortify its front- \jers and increase its army and navy | as soon as possible, the-work” plan which has helped to depress further the conditions of the| working class, In addition, there has heen a huge increase in unemploy- ment, Out‘of a working population | of 000, it is estimated that from} 66,000 to 70,000 are jobless. ‘The dictatorship represents a mo- hibzing of the forces of foreign cap- ital, and of the home bourgeoisie, imorder to find a capitalist way ont of the crisis—that is, a way out at the expense of the working class, employees, placing the burden of “economy” on the backs af the workers Fly World's Highest Peak. planes of the Houston British expedi- highest mountain, Everest, sea. level from the level ground Air force ass is its role in reinforeing the an- | PURNEA, India, April”4—The two | tion flew yesterday over the world’s! drawals are no long which | Proportions, that, in fact, deposits are | rises to a height of 29,000 feet above|Jarger than withdrawals. This was the first major step toward an active inflation | of the currency. Now the second s! is being taken. Reserve notes, which represent claims on the gold hoard | in the ‘Treasury and bank vaults, are being retired from circulation, being displaced by the new. paper currency, which represents no claim on any gold. This. is a. decisive step along the, path of inflation. The most, significant, financial news in the Jast ten days has been the issuance of about r currency already in circulation. At the same time the government is retiring Federal Re- | serve Notes which ave redeemable in quiet byt steady gold. The latest report of the Federal Re- serve shows that $168,000,000 dollars of these gold-backed notes were re- tired in the past week. This issuance of the new: currency: cannot be ex- plained as being required by the de- mands of a rising circulation, since the total circulation of currency is temporarily declining. The new cur- rency is being slowly eased into cir- culation as a result of conscious gov- ernmental policy. ‘This clearly means that the recent Bank Act, rushed through under the cover of a “temporary emergency,” is now being deliberately used to transform the currency from one re- | deemable in gold to one backed by nothing more than government loans (bonds) ahd frozen bank assets. The capitalist press reports that the with- of emergency Yet. in} ‘The planes were 31,000 feet spite of the end of the “emergency,” “gence” curreney | tional Trade Union Committee of Ne- gro workers and editor of the “Negro | ” Padmore was imprisoned for | nearly two weeks, during which time} no one, not even a lawyer, was per-| He was after- wards turned over to an agent of the |to England. The fascists have closed} the office of the Negro organization, | | and expelled all those connected with) | it This action of the Naz r ng to keep the and the West In-| as politically ignorant as possible. | The fascists hope that by expelling| Negroes from Germany they will win the British capitalist France for the return of the former German colonies, Cameroon and Tog- | oland. | The German ambassador at Geneva has already raised-the question of} the “right” of Germany ‘to a part of! | Africa. Today, no Negro is’ safe in| |Germany. For fascist storm-troop men armed as auxiliary police openly assault not only Jews, but Negroes, especially if they are seen in the com- pany of white women. Michael Egalie, a West-African theatrical artist, was beaten up while in company with his German wife in Hamburg and afterwards given eight months by a Nazi judge... Since the recent elections, Hitler. has, ac- cording to @ dispatch in the London “Times” of March 6th, forbidden the broadcasting of jazz over the radio, which this Austrian political upstart and demagogue describes as “nigger” fascism. Negro musicians and artists will no longer be permitted to perform in Germany. The present regime of terror-and bleedshed let loose against the Ger- man working: class and Negroes living in that country, most of whom are rican colonies, should serve as a warn- ing to the colored peoples’ through- out’ the ‘world. The Negro masses must join in the united front struggle of the working class and all oppressed and persecyted national raraorities,| 4 egroes, Jews, ete, against the dark forces of fascist reaction. Polish Protest WARSAW, April 4.—Polish stu- dents in Kattowice confiscated and burned German neWspapers on S216 at the stands ag a protest against the Hitler regime. Boycott im Panama. COLON, Panama.—Fifteen Jewish business firms have decided to can- cel allorders for Gertnan goods as a protest: against the anti-Semitic outrages in Germany. {| barracks at Friedrichstrasse 234. Diserbatars of CoML Party Manifesto Defended By Workers Against Nazis Storm Troopers Break Arms of Girl Students Handing Out Commu- nist Leaflets; 100 Prisoners Tortured in Cellar by Brownshirts BERLIN, March 22 (By Mail)—The Nazi paper “Der Angriff” reports that. the Altona storm troops attacked numerous leaflet distributors of the Communist Party, whe were handing out the illegally printed manifesto of the Central Committee of the Ger- man C. P. (The manifesto is reprinted on Page 1 of the Daily Worker—Hditor.) The distributors resisted arrest. and were aided by the workers s living in nearby tenements. One storm trooper was killed, while a policeman} and another storm. trooper were seriously’ wounded. Two girl students, Communists, | were attacked by Nazi ayxiliary. po- Yeemen while distriputing Commiunist | aay leaflets in the streets of Bery | lin. The Nazi sedists broke the arms of both girls. e “Angriff” also reports that a| secret Communist printing plant was eR in the Epa dep: mt store in Wilmersd artme} orf, Berjin suburb. The Nazi paper states that more than 1,500 pounds of “anarchist and Com-~- munist literature was confiscated.” Four persons were arrested. Piss a 100 Tortured. VIENNA,. March 22 (By Mail).— The Vienna “Arbeiter-Zeitung” Fe: ports from Berlin that on March 9 the police took some 150 prisoners out of the cellar of the storm troop : CANADA BOYCOTT STARTS More'than 100 of the prisoners had to be taken to hospitals because of the torture they had been subjected POLICE ATTACK DETROIT PROTEST AGAINST GERMAN FASCIST TERROR Beat, Jail Workers; Canadian Labor Defense, Other Groups Score Hitler Terror to. The “Arbeiter-Zeltung” also reports that Russign emigres in Berlin have formed a White Guard detachment | commanded by the’ well-known mon- | archist® Fabricius. This detaehment is co-operating: with. the storm troop gangs. Another report states that seven corpses were removed during a single night frem the Friedrich- strasse barracks of the Ngzi storm troops. ‘The police refused ‘any in- fone om the identity of the lead. | Ruth Bianet, daughter of the revo- lutionary Premier of Bavaris, Kwt Eisner, whe was murdered by mon~- archist TOES in 1939 in Munich, has been her home. | eal Communists. BODENBA' Czechoslovakia (on the German frontier), March 21 (By | f Mail)—More than 500 functionaries of the German Communist Party have been arrested in Wuerttemberg, 200 being jailed in Stuttgart alone. The “Suedeutsche Zeitung” reports that the arrested Communists are to be interned in concentration camps. } It is obvious that the. inflationary | acts of the government have nothing o do with “temporary emergencies.” | They are t ults of deliberate pol- icy. 'The recent legislation permits the government to issue practically a lim~ itless asnount of currency backed by * this: machinery set up as 2 for “temporary -emer- Not only would it be naive |to think so, but the continued issu~ ance of the new paper currency points to the contrary. Inflation Proposals | Already we are witnessing propos- | als for inflation by way of govern- eae bond issues. Senator McAdoo, who. is one of a | posed that the government exchange its bonds for “frozen” mortgages of |the banks. It is proposed that these | bonds be guaranteed by the govern- ment. This would mean that the government is exchanging bonds for | currency, since the bonds would be | saleable in the open market, or use- able as a base for currency issuance. Senator Bankhead, Democrat from Alabama, has made an amendment to the relief bill asking’ for the issu- ance of $1,000,000,000 dollars in stamp | money, pure inflated currency. Forcing Price Rise, A report subnultted for the Banking | and Finance Committee of the United | States Senate states, “A necessary. ob- | jective’ in’ currency inflatjon ‘for the | purpose. of raising: prices is to: put | the country off the gold‘ bas{s: first. Prices could not rise so long as the exchangeability of currency for gold could be maintained.” Well, the government has taken the fundamental. step toward’ raising prices: It has abolished the exchange- ability. of currency for. gold.. The effect on prices has been ‘to cause a mixture of currents on the commodity exchanges, the net result, being a tendency towards rising prices.” It has been argued that the lack of any appreciable advance in prices proves that. there has been no ‘inflation... It proves nothing of the sort. Aside from. the fact that the be- ginnings of inflation do not at once | | 6,000 BA KS STILL CLOSED AS WOODIN AGAIN SPREADS ‘SAFETY’ LIES WASHING tary TON, ae 4 Secre- | of the Treasury Woodin. in’ a| dio address. last night. broadcasted | n appeal for a “further return of | hoarded money | ‘The talk was contradictory inas- | much as Woodin said the banking | situation had cleared up and then in | the next breath pleaded for return of money to the banks. Lies About Bank Operations. Tm his talks he repeated the current Roosevelt deception that some 12,000 banks are again doing “normal busi- ness”, when, as a matter of fact there |is not one bank in the United States | that has resumed “normal business”. Not one bank issues gold and even withdrawals of printed money are CLEVELAND, Ohio, April 4—Un- | der the leadership of the Small Home jand Land Owners Federation 500 | workers forced the Cleveland ‘Trust | Co. last week to revoke its eviction | notice given to an unemployed worker, Shimko, at. 2078 W. 59th St. | Within 24 hours the Federation mob- | \ilized ali its members at the scene of the eviction. ‘The sherlff who had All the pilots | the government is going tight ahead | learned of this action did not show are connected with the British Roval| with the jesyatice of so-called “emer up however with his dispossess and | ‘ater the ers action 92s reported, | FORCE BANK 10 STOP EVICTION | publicity Governor White is receiv- strietly limited. There still remain | 6,000 banks not opened at all. “Hoarders Fear Own Banks. Most of those’ hoarding gold are | the bankers themselves who realjze. the shaky position of their own vent- ures and’ anticipate a “further and more drastic crash at any moment. ‘That “they do not yeturn the ae they have withdrawn to protect them- selves is evidence of the bluff put” Up | en by Roosevelt that hoarders would exposed and punished and shows tise it was only to try to intimidate small depositors, who had heen wise enough to withdraw, thtir money fiom the crashing banks, to again, place their money at the mercy of the bank loot- ers. ‘The house is worth about $500 alto- gether. Shimko still owes the bank about $2490 even though he has prob- ably paid more than five times the actual value of the property.: - This situation arose despite . the ing in the capitalist vress:that he in- tends to call a two yor moratorium jon all mortgage payments “The pyr~ ad aft ip op pba 4 Fh payers and! homes ‘owners from orga~ nizing, and iS stall them off until ‘alt reflect. themiselyes. in rising prices, the present enormous, stocks of goods reqitires 2-far greater inflation than has yet been accomplished. ‘This guarantees that the govern~ ment will have to embark on real in- flation if it’ ts to succeed in raising prices. This is admitted by Walter Lippman in the Herald Tribune. , He writes: “Unless prices rise and’ in- comes increase, the new budget will soon be again off balance, and the re- duced mortgages of the farmers and scaled-down bonds of the railroads will soon. be intolerable. Lippman is here arguing the neces- sity for “controlled “inflation.” He is, of course, ,wholly wrong about the possibility of “controlled inflation.” But he is entirely correct when he argues (from the point of view.of the bourgeoisie) that the: present eco- ic situation requires more infia- tion’ if prités' ave to rise and the budget be balanced. That is, the continued decline ‘in production is’ forcinig the ‘capitalist class to broaden its ‘attack against the workers by adding indirect wage cuts by inflation to the policy. of di- rect wage cuts. The/Roosevelt Gov- ernment, at. the same time that it Officially sets.the daily, worker’s wage at $1, intensifies its attack by setting in motion machinery to cut the pur- chasing ‘power of the dollar. Pauperizing the Workers. The three years of the crisis have witnessed ruthless attacks upon ‘the Jiving’ standards of the working class. ‘The whole process of deflation, thru | wage cuts, ete., has been nothing but | fhe placing of the burden of the crisis ypor the workers. But these attacks are meeting with increasing resistance tins bg Motadie and ehapeae Fae ats peptone area tion. But at the same time it wishes to conceal the extent of the currency depreciation in order to prevent any alarm which’ might develop into further’ resistance.’ It is for this reason that the, pro- posal’ to issue scrip. was suddenly abandoned. That the resistance of the masses is the main factor deter- mining the. speed with which the fi- nancial ‘changes will be made, is clearly indicated in the aboye-men- tioned reports submitted to the Senate Committee on Banking and Finance. It states that “dt 1s danger- ous to pursue the program of liqui- dation to a point which develops such’ economic difficulties and arouses such sogial protests as to bring about a chaotic sitnation.” The process of inflation will not develop evenly or in a straight line, ‘The eft not become: sree Se aes soar towards esl taflatton, ped trom | Protest Hitler Film Brings Boos in London LONDON,. March 21 (By Mail).— The appearance of Chancellor Hitler on the screen in @ newsreel short at the Dominion movie theatre here was greeted by a storm of hisses and boos. The same demonstration of protest oecyrred in several other movie houses when the Nazi leader was flashed on the screen. The fijm correspondent of thé Lon- jon “Daily Worker” rightly points jout that this is a valuable form of mags protest, but chat the workers’ should not be limited ‘to hisses in movie theatres alone. “Dem~- thing is smashe so 8 TORONTO, April 4—Demonstra~ tions were held today in seven Can- adian cities against the German per- secution of Jews. Thousands of Can- adjans have joined in protests ad- dressed to reactionary Prime Minister, Bennett. PERSECUTION OF JEWS CONTINUES Fascists Drive Upon Professional Groups April 4 BERLIN, 4—Nazi storm troopers arrested Herr Drucker, prominent attorney and vice-presi- dent'of the Bar Association, while he was pleading a case in the courtroom in eae et 5 ‘ax “Reinhardt, famous- German sates ‘producer, was ousted from the Deutsches Theatre yesterday, as a Jew. . The order for his ousting was issued by the Prussian Ministry. The, State Opera o-chestra is not to play until the Jewish opera sing- ers are, dismissed. . Among the Jew- as Alexander Kipnis, and Frida Leid- er, both’ of whom haye sung with the Metropolitan Opera in New York. Bar Emigration. ‘The Hitler Cabinet announced that after m‘dnight no one could leave Germany without special police per- mission. This prohibition is aimed at the Jewish exodus from: Germany, thus forcing them to remain in the country and suffer persecution and economic destruction. | Hans Heymann, Jewish manager of ‘@ Tietz branch store in Gladbach~ | Rheydt, attempted to commit suicide | with his'wife yesterday because of | Nazi persecution. Jewish business houses were grad- ish, singers are such | famous . artists, DETROIT.—Mayor Murphy once more showed his real colors on Friday when he mobilized the entire police force to smash a protest meeting ea the taseist terror in Germany, held at the German consulate. Murphy, whe made a hypocritical speech against fascism just two days before, speaking at a large me meeting of J of Jewish people, demonstrated on Friday what his actual ~—--~-=-—® policy is in relation to the bloody re- gime in Germany. The protest” meetitig was called by the Communist Party.--'Phe-buitding was completely: surrounded by “hun- dreds of police, plainclothesmen, mounted police, and federal dicks. The workers’ committee which tried to present a protest resolution was refused entrance. Those workers who resisted were arrested and viciously beaten up. One worker who was ar<- rested was kicked in the groin by Johri Dohn, federal dick. ‘The Communist Party ts’ ‘organ- izing a series of mass meetings in the working-class sections for the fur- ¥her building up of a protest move- ment against the Hitler’ terror’ and its allies, the Murphy political ma- chine. © * 1. W. 0. Branch. DULUTH, Minn.—At an affair hele. th Forester’s Hall here to, celebrate the installation of red of the Moshe Nadir Branch of the Inter national Workers Order, & resolution was sent to the German embassy pro- testing against the Nest terror. Brainerd, aah n, Unemplere BRAINERD, meeting of the Brainerd | Ghemploved Council sent & telegram to the Ger- ™man embassy condemning the fas- cist terror against workers, Jews and intellectuals, and demanding the re- lesse of all anti-fascist prisoners. oe Le. Canadian Protest. ‘TORONTO, April 4—The National Executive of the Canadian Labor De- fense League has cabled President von Hindenburg as follows: “In the name of 40,000 organized workers of Canada we protest against the hor- rors of fascist terror in . We demand the release of Thael- mann, Torgler and the thousands of others imprisoned, tortured, and threatened with death by your gor- ernment.” 15 Negroes Want Join ¥. L. B. Attes Scottsboro Protest. NEW YORK.—Seventy-five Nogrose appHed for membership in the In- ternational Labor Defense following a Scottsboro-Mooney démonstration last Saturday in Harlem, ‘The Negroes constituted 6 per cent of the alitiience, most of Garvy- ites, Suffites and members of Harlem. Churches. | ually resuming activity today after the boycott, but the Jewish intellec- tual and professional. classes have been completely excluded from’ their former positions. Nearly 2,000 Jew- ish lawyers are disbarred in Berlin alone, ‘while Jewish physicians, musi~ cians, actors, and other professional groups haye been permanently ousted. : Sheen This confirms whet the “Daily Worker” has been pointing out con- sistently ever since anti-Semitic per~ secution began in Fascist Germany, The Jewish big business men, mem- pers of the ruling capitalist ‘class, are unmolested, but the Jewish middle-~ classes, «the intellectuals, profession~ al workers, and small shop-keepers, have been and still are subjected to barbarous violence and ostracism. cuss.| Machado, Ruling by of Cuba yesterday, by William Z. -Union Unity League: peleatity During their “trial” Dr. Andrade, head of the defense ¢oun- sel, was: inated, and e rest of the defense legal staff were forced Machado has refused to. publish th> re pul 2 Supreme Court. decision js taken to mean that he will ignore tt. * 6 we an * Secpietane, Birest'e. wee: drow, Ignore Decision for. Retrial BULLETIN. NEW YORK. —The following telegram was sent to President Machado Foster, genefal secretary of the Trade “The Trade Union Unity League demands you safeguard the lives of Vivo and Ordogui, with right to be visited by their attorney. mand release of all political prisoners.” HAVANA, Ciba, Apel he Supreme Coort ot Cube has oa ta court martial proceedings in the Artemisa bombing case, on the ground that - ey coal nee amend wore clvilians, Three pasted eiaatin te Hernandez, were convicted last November of trying’ nag ling oevngire tg spredicoandiplndhaetnn ist has been ruling Cuba by pete, -} working class must look Yor PROCEEDINGS OF MILITARY TRIAL VOIDED BY CUBAN SUPREME COURT Lawless Terror, Will: ‘We do young men, ror, for three years. He has himself to thank for provoking roristic acts against his life. But i” is to ae Cuban Communist moye- * ment, which is opposed to 4 acts of terrorism, that the vi Se ze ae ° tmperialist cot j | eat \ i] ae

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