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ublished by the Comprodaily Publishing Uo., Ine., daily except Sunday, at 50 £ Pace Four th St, New York City, W. ¥. Telephone ALgonquin 4-7956, Cable “DAIWORE Address and mail checks to the Daily Worker, 58 E. 18th St., New York, N. ¥ GER MAN WORKER S FIGHT F SUBSORIFTION ting Borough of Manhattan am: Canada: One 6 BATEE: ‘Ons year, $6; slx months, $3.50; $ momthy, $2; 1 mente, Tee, d Bronx, New York City. months, 95; 7 Ferelgn and months, $5. R LIVES AGAINST TERROR; U. S. WORKERS! BUILD UNITED FRONT AGAINST NAZIS! Great Gain: in Soviet Economy 5 Per Cent Ris @0 to § More Food and B Refutes Slander (¢ Soviet industry has been fields of heavy industry durin to a dispatch from Wa Du the New York Times. An unp per cent, has been achieved in ition, steel, oil, locomotive, at parts, locomotive, and machir put has risen from 160,000 £95,000 tons toda Pig iron® has risen 30 percent and steel 32 percent. In Moscow prov- ite, the source of half the nation’s tractor parts, and in Leningrad province, which produces a quarter of the tractor parts, product far in advance of schedul also the case in the automo! of Gorki (formerly Nizhni-) ted), Kharkov and Moscow Costs Fall. Parallel with these tremendous ad- vances has gone a marked reduction in production cos The Soviet Union is liquidating inefficiency and labor turnover, and the machine in- | dustry is running on a far higher | plan of efficiency ran 5 Was plants | lovogo~ JAPANESE WORKERS e in Heavy Industr: etter Distribution; fampaign Abroad ma gigantic gains in all g the past onths, according ranty, published yesterday in recedented rise, from 20 to the crucial fields of coal, pig itomobile. tractor, automoti e tool production. Coal out- tons daily at Christmas to from the agricultural a is consider- in spite of un- ons S completely refute the slanders and lies of the enemies of the Soviet Union who saw in the dif- ficulties of food distribution the breakdown of the socialist planned economy. The advances in Soviet production indicate that the food dif- ficulties are being overcome. The |Tapid growth of Soviet production at a moment when the industry of the capitalist countries is sinking ever more deeply into the swamp of cri and depression, proves that the relation of world forces is rapidly shifting in favor of socialist economy. MEET IN SECRET DEFYING LAW, T0 HONOR KARL MARX 18 (By Mail).—T of Japan are TOKYO, March that the revolutiona Nichi Nichi” reports holding illegal Marx Memorial Meet- ings to commemor: 0th anniversary of Marx's death, as well as the anniversary of the ¢ Paris Commune of 1871 The Toyko polic itly arrested 17 revolutionaries, including prom- inent. membe tarian Writer participation in pre SHANGHAI, March 1 eluding more than 100 celebration of the 50th anniverse VIENNA, March 20 (By Mail). — Pitched battles have taken place in various towns in Styria, including Kapfenberg and Bruck-on-the-Mur, | between Communist and socialist workers on one side and Heimweht | troops and the gendarmes on the | other. | In Kapfenberg se rdred | workers drove off Heimwehr troops | that had been cencentrated there Worker By MOE BRAGIN Workers Win Pitche Heimwehr in Austria; Police Fire the and Union of Prole- paring for ese demonstrations. Prominent Chinese intellectuals, in- ‘, eminent scientists, took part in the of Karl Marx. | Madison Square Garden, New York, Wednesday night, with 22,000 assembied in united front protest against German Fascism. 22.000 at Madison (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) unlikely that Tom Mooney can be brought out of San Quentin prison to speak in the Garden in a few weeks, if—and the workers of Amer- ica must tur this “if” into a cer- tainty—ten. times the mass pre: effec' Mooney case u now by American | working-class. | Minor stated that | long way for that unity ass, organization workers.” “Those unity the which the re are who interfere must be branded with this strike breakers.” Minor reminded the work-| \, ers that “the m bourgeoisie | and the Sta re not| going be 2 fight to be fought ip with the fight cism in the United St: The gendarmerie arrested 7 “red guards”, as the Christian-Social gov- ernmental daily, the “Reichspost” calls them. workers then besieged the barracks where the seven workers were con- fined, and demanded their release. The gendarmes summoned re-inforce- ments from Leoben and Bruck, and only after opening rifle fire were they t e the workers off. go with us we must expose their rot- tenness.” se, a hotel workers’ repre- with a service button in ou couldn’t come to a ce to hear the truth about ing, “Down fi hoth abroad and here. I swarm out he f more strongly about this now handbills like flags jt did before.” He raises Eighth Ave. and 49th Be and points to the great of-the mounted and foo around him. ways ready to riot. The Crowd Outside Garden, eta ae sens rushes up to shout that MARS citong, to ‘kno mdreds of workers lis- into one 1 fas. | tenir tside’ to loud speakers, cism. The loud speakers sound cracked, Inside, the Garden is like a sque! as though a mouse were in drum. The Workers’ Relief band plays three viet marches. Now it Teyolutionary songs. ™ |the garden and not the aroused lion }of the workers of New York City. |“Every other time the amplifiers are ,| clear as crystal. But that don’t keep | us away!” most like a crows~ The drum booms. Carl Brodsky ship are a group of the F.S. U. gets up and stands be- neers. Strung around on Is|for the microphones. “In the name flame the banners and of the Communist Party T eall this dale Workers, Middle erg, Deutscher Arbeite ers Ex-Servicemen’s League Workers’ University, And as red ar ag iresh as the blood that pounds the mass fighting heart hang long streamers: For One United M Day Demonstration Against gism; Proletariat of All Countries| and Oppressed Peoples Unite; Pro- test Hitler Fascist Murder Terror. | ‘Workers Voice Determination. | Walker Freeman, Negro worker from Brooklyn, a former chauffeur, tt | | | ing-and me Scottsboro bo: r. my duty to give full sup) kinds of worker struggles.” A. Scotch seaman, unemployed, says: “I take part in/this fight to better my conditions. Organized We fight better against all horrible | wrongs.” A little Chinese worker, waitey: “I! am. here to fight against fascism, | Chinese fascism as well as Japanese fascism, and German fascism and | diseriminatien against foreign born.” A milliner belonging to the Needle | ‘Trades: “Only mass pressure g anywhere. The United Front, on all workers to fight for a definile | program. If the leadershin of an. | elalist and ofmer cwperrimettone wort | meeting to order hall this sentence Over the jammed sweeps like a great wind. The thunder of 50,000 hands breaks out Hathaway, district organizer of the Commux Party, takes the chair. Pifty thousand feet si Up rise . workers, intellectuals, in tribute to the fighting vanguard of the American working class, the Communist Party of America, Like one man twenty-five thousand jump to their feet to greet Erna Stams, leader of German workers of the Ruhr. Fifty thousand eyes. are riveted She stands on the p rm, fresh, her words flowing from her mouth, full, packed with fire. “The blood of revolutionary workers flows in the streets of Berlin. But the German workers shall not stop. We will smash Hitler, the club of German capitalism, With the Einheitsfront we are strong. Long live the German Communist Party!” ‘The workers thunder their approval as the Speakers help hammer out the united front and their words make the m catch fire like sparks. The workers, however, are not merely a mighty instrument with eys and strings which their leaders play on. ‘These twenty-five thousand workers and the hundreds of thous. anade, mo, miliiens acebtered afl aren d Battle With — The growing crowd of | the streets of Bruck-on-the-Mur”, de- s Rise Against Fascism, See A Need for Struggle Here The “Reichspost” admits that “a crowd of hundreds marched through fying the revolver fire of the police. On Sunday demonstrations occur- red in various parts of the city of Vienna, with stro ments charging the marct ses. pol detach- the country, are the mighty hearts, | muscles, brains, and mouths that make these men on the platform th | The resolutio: the Fascist terror and for freedom for the Sc boro Boys are passed It is midnight, but many of the] workers haven’s had enc They | seem. tireless and are ready to listen | until it is time to rush back to their work in the morning. The Interna- tional crashes i e union of all worl S move} the wot! have torn the} rotten masks off the hideous face of | capitalism. They are hammering out | the iron of a united front which will | finally smash the monster's face. unanimously gh. r Workers Try to Free Arrested Communists | from Santiago Jail! 0. SANTIAC attempt Chile made + An} ninety | April 2 was o free Communists imprisoned in the § } tiago city jail Sunda Workers en- tered the prison yard, and when the guards tried to shut the gate to pre vent more coming in, the crowd out- | side rushed the entrance. They were beaten off by the police, one of whom was injured, ‘Chinese Reds Gain a | Victories; Drive on to Nanchang { NANKING, April 8.—The Com- | munist armies of Sovict China | have inflicted crushing defeats on government troops. They are now | making a determined drive against | the e®y of Nanchang, Mhkang Kai- | | Shek, the Kuomintang generalis- simo who has been sabotaging the Chinese struggle against Japanese | | | imperialism, is said to be eoming at full speed to Nenchang by gun- boat, to try to save this important | ] | Yo nee eee eer di | ® | off. | until late in the night, and un- | erman Workers Strike and Fight Nazis in BERLIN, March 21 (Delayed Mail).—Thousands of work |March on Jail in Coblenz, Battle Police and Force Release of 200 |Conference of Berlin Alliance Against Fascism Repels Nazi Attack City Streets at once left the factories in Coblenz, marched with their wives and children to the jail and demanded the release of A prolonged battle ensued The demonstration lasted | der the mass pressure the Nazis | trol of it for several hours. | had to release most of those arrested during the early morning hours. Defeat Storm Troops. k A setret conference of the Berlin | | Fighting Alliance Against Fascism | | some hundreds of their number who had been arrested during a Nazi search | literature. with th Saxony, after the oceupied the trade union building and kept con- Hage Quantities of Leaflets, Reports from all over Germany state that illegally printed leaflets are being distributed by the Com- munists in huge quantities. Storm | and other organizations of the revo- | troops are constantly patrolling the | lutionary workers was held the day | streets of all big cities to prevent this | before yesterday in a workers’ colony | jeaflet distribution. | They arrest | outside the city. The conference was | yen those who take a leaflet from Square Garden freedom of the nine Scottsboro boys,| Jewish, branded the hypocrisy of the for the release of Mooney and Bill-| American Jewish Congress leaders, ing for united action against racial| mantling their un~.lingness to fight discrimination and terror in the| Hitlerism under the cloak of begging South, and for extensive unemploy-| Hitler tc « op persecutins jhe Jews. ment relief. | Noved Dramatist Speaks seis ine Workers Score War P| | Peretz Hihschbein, famous Jewish Mimine Workers, Hoare Wat Pisas) | i nahab speaking in PidAeH ince Roy Hudson, speaking for the! voice charged with pent-up emotion, | Marine Workers Industrial Unicn,| pictured the iron boot of fascism | pointed out that “Fascism means) trampling out the best in German war—war upon the workers, war be- culture, the best blood of the Ger-| imperialist powers, war against | man working class, and pointed to the | viet Union. And in these war| soviet Union as’ the only country | ans the bosses need the seam: where anti-Semitism has been mad d_ longshore and trans-/ a criminal offense, where the Jews nen to load material are really free. i Fascism Like K.K.K. | Richard B. Moore, speaking tor the | International Labor Defense, pointed | out that the fight against fascism ni ily involved the unrelenting | uggle for the release of the Scotts- | boro boys, that fascism is like the| Negro oppression in the South, in} Ku Klux Kilanism. Jack Stachel, acting head of the 5 | Trade Union Unity League, brought Socialist and Sec-| etings from Comrade William Z. ip of Reconcil-| Foster, and told the cheeri i a trenchant attack upon ence that Comrade Foster democracy | improving and would be back on the among the intelligentsia.! job very soon. is not a rejuvenated Na- and muni- y on a r, Industrial Union 1 severe s y with German n ports by the mil- forcing the re- eamen. arrested Nazi captains and Other speak rs included Roger rising from the ashes of| Baldwin of the American Civil Lib- feat. Essential Fas n erties Union, Moissaye J. Olgin, edi- ism turned nudist. Bour- tor of the Freiheit, and Edward Dahl- geois democracy, is a fig-leaf to hide| berg, American writer recently at- Pthe naked realities of the capitalist | tacked and beaten by Nazis thugs in system. But just as soon as revolu-| the streets of Berlin. tionary action is threatened from the| The mass meeting adopted a reso- working class the fig-leat is thrown | lution pledging to stand unitedly in aside, | the fight for the support of the hero- “In the strugy against Fascism, | ic German people against the bloody only a united working class, animated | fasi dictatorship, and protesting a@ revolutionary se and led} revolutionary 1c is adequate. si The dictatorship of the letariat is| Jewish leaders to shield the Hitler the ‘ox r to F 1! I greet | fascist regime. you, I ou as the hope of the| The resolution called upon ail wor world! workers, in the Socialist Party and n Tells of Heroic Struggle | in labor unions, to force through the Joseph Freeman, editor of the New| united front for struggle against fas- | 5% and Malcolm Cowley, of the | cism. board of the New Republic,| Another resolution, introduced by described the Fascist attack upon cul-| Comrade Wagenknecht of the Work- ture in Germany, the hounding and | ers International Relief, supported the of Germany’s greatest writers,|call for the organization of united artists and scientists for their radial| relief committees for the relief of views. Freeman brought tidings of | the victims of German fascist terror. the rising heroic and successful strug-} ‘The audience contributed the im- gle of the Communist Party pf Ger-| posing sum of $1304.21 in response to Many against the Nazi terror. the stirring appeal of Carl Brodsky Louis Hyman, of the Needle Trades} on behalf of the committee organ- Workers Industrial Union, speaking in izing the mass meeting, "ALL BIG: UNITED FRONT CONFERENCE APRIL 16 T0 PLAN ANTI-FASCIST FIGHT ral 4 Committee Invites Lower Socialist Bodies; Children’s Demonstration April 15 NEW YORK.—its offer for united action against the German fascist terror and anti-Semitism having been flatly rejected by the leaders of the Secialist Party and the right-wing labor organizations, the Provisional Committee for Struggle Against Fascism and Pogroms in Germ? «y has decided to appeal directly te the lower branches of the Socialist Party and its auxiliaries in preparation’ for a@——$$ _—$—_$—$_____ broad united front conference, ) floor, to work out plans for visiting iile-conterstide? salem <n. | locals and branches of the Socialist he conference willbe held) GUN-i rvty, the, right: wing’ erage unions, gainst the efforts of the American | according to the Nazi figures! te Department and the bourgeois} means that 64,000 more votes were discovered aud eenatls Sierra ‘the distributors. troopers. e workers Cefended | wide-spread house - to - house themselves so E vero ere | searches are being made by the police that the armed troopers in the Palatinate to unearth the il- to flee. Before the Nazis could sum- | ' x mon re-inforcements the conference [eget Commis a aah ac had moved to another, and unknown | location. | In Loerrach the entire storm troop During the night of March 18th, | division was mobilized Sunday night, some workers climbed to the flagpole | and, together with the detective on the Karl Liebknecht House and | force, they blocked off the entire cut out the Hakenkreuz from the | proletarian district, including the Nazi flag flying over the building, so| Barachenstrasse. The Basle “Na- that only the red background of the | tionalzeitung” reports that ‘several flag waved over the house. | "truckloads of printed matter were Protest strikes broke out in Plauen, | found.” DISCLOSE HOW FLAGRANT ELECTION FRAUDS SWELLED THE NAZI BALLOT But Kautsky Says ‘in Socialist International Bulletin That Nazi Dictatorship Got A Majority of Population’s Support Fascists Foreed to Admit Big Communist Vote, With Increase in Prussia REICHENBERG, Czechoslovakia, March 25 (By mail).—Details of the German Reichstag elections that have reached Keichenberg through the rigid Fascist censorship give statistical proof that the Nazis falsified the entire election. Not only did many Czechoslovakian Nazis vote as “foreign Germans”, but we now have full proof that the@ PAY ALLIES GOLD More Votes Than Voters, |Mark Falls 8 Points The conservative Strasbourg “Neu- este Nachrichten,” in Alsace, reports on Announcement that the whole registered electorate in Pomerania, for example, totalled 1,200,000 voters—but 1,264,000 voted BERLIN, April 6—The foreign ex- change market broke, the mark tum- | bling for an 8 point fall, on the an- This | nouncement that the Reichsbank will | pay the $70,000,000 balance of the short time loan negotiated from Eng- | land, America, and France in June, | 1981. Difficulty in paying the heavy interest charges on ie loan, plus the fact that it has been used as a lever for French political pressure on Ger- many each time it falls due, com- | pelied the Reichsbank to make a final | settlement. cast than all the voters in Pomera- nia together, even assuming that | every single Pomeranian went to the | polls! | In East Prussia, a huge province with @ sparsely settled rural popula- tion, where any election campaign is extremely difficult because of the scattered nature of the countryside, the percentage that voted is 13 per cent higher than the average for Germany, although East Prussia al- ways has been at least 5 per cent be- Jow the national average in all other elections, On March 5, however, the Nazis reported that 98.8 per cent of the voters in East Prussia went to the polls. Almost every man jack in East | Prussia is supposed to have voted, although all political experience states that the last 10 per cent of the electorate can never be brought to the polls. Likewise, in the Posen-West Prus- | sia Border Province (Election Dis- | xict 5, Frankfurt on the Oder),| where 1,011,000 out of a total elec- torate of 1,080,000 are reported to have cast their votes. Again an al- This means that the German gold | Foserve will drop further below the legal reserve minimum of 40 per cent to a figure of 15 per cent. Germany | is therefore already off the gold | standard, and with the 300 million | mark addition to the note circula- tion, inflation has already begun, The substitution of Hjalmar | Schacht for Dr, Luther as Reichs- bank head means embarkation on a | policy of inflation which will be used most 100 per cent vote in an area) that has always lagged behing the national average percentage. ‘These facts, smuggled through the Hitler censorship, are clear proof that the “majority” attained by the Hit- ler dictatorship in the March 5 elec- tions was swindled. The swindle was even greater in the ensuing municipal elections in Prussia on March 12, as a method of further exploitation of the German working class, as prices will rise rapidly while wages remain relatively fixed. for illegal he Nazi special police, who tried to drive the masses 3,000 IN BOSTON HIT NAZI TERROR Police Jail 4; 2 Chicago Parades Tomorrow BOSTON, April 8.—Despite attacks by the police, 3,000 workers staged a militant demonstration against the fascist terror in Germany at the German consulate here at noon on Tuesday. Four young workers were beaten, arrested and held in bail of $100 each on charges of inciting to riot and disturbing the peace. Bail for them was later supplied through the International Labor Defense, The case of the four workers will be tried in Municipal Court at 9 o'clock tomorrow morning. The workers ar~ rested are: Charles Bonum, Edward King, Boyd Webb and Peter Sache- ruck, i When the crowd appeared at the ; consulate building the cops were lined! | up along the street. A worker started to speak, but he was slugged and thrown into the Black Maria. As soon as one speaker was pulled down, another jumped up to take his place. Peter Sacharuck was pulled out of the crowd because he did not move fast enough to please the cops, Because of the militancy of the workers on the street, the cops did not dare beat up those arrested in public, but when the workers were inside the building, four or five cops jumped on each of them and beati them up. When Charles Ingram, an I. L. D. attorney, tried to see the boys at the police station, he was refused permission and thrown cut. ie ne | 300 In Dayton Protest DAYTON, Ohio—At a mass meet+ ing called under the auspices of the Communist Party in Library Park at 2 p.m., 300 workers, Negro and white, assembled to denounce the Hitler ter~ ror against workers and Jews in Ger~ many. A resolution was passed de-, nouncing the fascist terror. This resolution was sent to the German embassy in Washington and to the secretary of state of the U. S. goys, ernment. Per Chicago Demonstration Saturday CHICAGO. — The United Front Anti-Fascist Committee has called two parades and demonstrations against the German. fascist outrages for this Saturday at 3:30 p. m, The starting points will be Damen and Wicker Park Ave., and Roosevelt Re. and Albany Ave Michigan Co-Operative IRONWOOD, Mich.—At the semt» annual meeting of the National Co« operative Co., a workers’ and farms ers’ co-operative, a resolution was adopted and sent to the German em- bassy, demanding a halt to the fas~ cist terror against the German mass~ es and the release of all those im- prisoned. ee ae: Greek Workers CHICAGO.—At a meeting of the Greek workers Educational League a resolution was voted denouncing the terror against German workers an@ Jews ond demanding the release of the Communist leaders, Thaelmann, Torgler, Pieck and all victims of the}, Nazi regime. | a ce | Bulgarian, Macedonian Workers NEW YORK.—A resolution against the German fascist terror was sent to the German embassy by a mass meeting of Bulgarian and Macedo~ nian workers, Gay, April 16, at 10 a, m. in Trving | workmen's Circle, efc., in an effort Plaza, 16th St. and Itving Pl. OMe) to get them to send delegates to the | of the m questions that, will be where the vote was “corrected” even | more. | conference. bi ae eee cm i me oat | operation with the School Commit- or the conference is addr p 2't | tee of the International Workers Or- workers’ id peoples’ organizations ot New ¥ anti-fascist parade and demonstra- Tonight at 6 p. m. a meeting of the | tion for Saturday, April 15. leading members of militant work-|. All organizations meeting tonight ers’ organizations will be held in. the | are asked to elect delegates to the Workers Center, 12 E. 35th St., sixth | conference. MUSSOLINI DEMANDS NO CHANGE IN “PEACE” PLAN; POLAND OBJECTS New Plan Diplomatic Dynamite, Opens Sharp Antagonisms in Europe ROME, April 6,—Mussolini issued} Both the original pian and the today a take it or leave it statement| French revision of it are equally un- about his “peace plan.” ‘The state-| acceptable to Poland, judging by a ment, made through the Grand| leading article in the semi-official Council of Fascism, said that the|Pilsudski paper, Kurjer Poranny, fundamental provisions of his “peace” | which denounces them as a trap for plan must remain intact. The French | Poland. sovernment is busy drafting a revised | cays that frontier revicpn is a non- version of Mussolini's scheme. jexistent question for Poland, French Premier Daladier said {o-| criticizes the French version as much day in Paris that Mussolini’s scheme! as the Italian, is acceptable to Hrance “in principle,’| It is also announced that Goering but that “we will not find peace in the brusque Sesnaformation ot the former to see Mitesoléw! and Sine Iet~ Nazis Admit 5,000,000 Red Votes. ,_ J spite of the outrageous terror that dominated the election, the der, is also organizing a children’s | Nazi regime was forced to concede a total of 5,000,000 votes cast for the Communist Party, while the Commu- nist vote in the Prussian elections was recorded as even higher than the Reichstag vote. If the Nazi swindlers admitted 5,000,000 votes cast for the Communists, what must the true Communist vote have been? Kautsky’s Betrayal. In one of the latest Bulletins of the Second International, Karl Kaut- sky wrote: “As long as the dictator- Ship has behind it the majority of the population, all attempts to op- pose it with illegal, street action must end in defeat.” In view of the election forgeries disclosed above, this semi-official Socialist statement becomes little more than outright betrayal of the German proletariat by the self-styled “working-class party,” the German ‘The official Polish Gazette | Social Democracy, ‘The great majority of the German and} people did not vote for the Nazi regime. The Tron Heel of Fascism cannot stop the underground illegal activity of the working class, which, and von Papen are to vistt Thaly, the) under the lead of the Communist, Se att cee Ren Demonstrations a | BRUSSELS, Mar. 35 (By Mail | More than 1,000 workers surrounded a hall in Ghent, where a meeting of the “Verdenaso” (Union of German Na- tional Socialists) was scheduled to take place. ‘The fascists summoned reinforce- ments from neighboring villages, and the police tried to disperse the pro- testing workers. A free-for-all fight ensued, lasting for half.an hour. Two women and Comrade Minnaert, Com- munis( city councillor, were wounded | and several mounted policemen were pulled off their horses, But despite the police attacks the Fascist meeting had to be abandoned. ore MULHOUSE, Alsace, Mar. 26. (BY Mail.—One thousand workers ans- wered the appeal of the Communist Party and demonstrated against Fas- cist terror in Germany. Speeches were made by a German Communist, a Swiss worker, and a representative of the French Communist Party. CWE eee S BARCELONA, Mar. 24, (By Mail) — Several hundred workers stormed the Fascist school in Barcelona, where the Italian Fascists living in Baree- Jona bad planned to celebrate deh anniversary of ‘Wine teem gota af ihe mete ~—ANTINAZL FIGHT IS WORLD WIDE ni d Street Battles smashed, the windows broken, and several Fascists severely beaten bY the workers, PARIS, Mar. 28. (By Matl)—At the call of the Communist Party of France and other revolutionary ore ganizations protest meetings against the Fascist terror in Germany were held in Nice, Cannes, Lyons, Villee franche and Montauban, ee aa VIENNA, Mar. 26. (By Mail)—In spite of the White terror still raging in Hungary an initiating committee for the European Anti-Fascist Con- gress has been formed in Budapest. Among the labor groups joininz the committee are the Leather Workers* Union, the Bricklayers’ Union and the Metal Workers’ Union, se eae WARSAW, March 26. (By Mall)—~ The Polish workers preparations for the Anti-Fascist Congress are in full swing. Resolutions in support of the Congress have been adopted by nu- merous meetings of the striking Lode textile workers. The Glass Work and the Chemical Workers Unions, ‘well as many locals of other have ie Mos, Sas