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Published by tne Vomproanity Publishing Lo, 13th St., New York City, N. ¥. Telephone ALgonqsin 4-7956. Cable “DAIWORK." ge Kour ine daily exe Address and mail checks to the Daily Worker, 5 E. 18th St., New York, N. ¥. 8,000 French Auto | Strikers Support Anti-Fascist Meet we Workers All Over Eur Anti-Fascist Congress; Prague Offi Place Obstacles, P’ PARIS, April 8 (By Mail). ope Uniting for World sials reparations Go On -At a strike meeting of Citroen} workers, where eight thousand strikers were present, it was | decided to send two delegates gress to be held soon. More than 70,000 workers to Bagnolet protesting against to the World Anti-Fascist Con- from Paris's “red belt”” marched | the fascist terror in Germany. | SPARKS HE teachers of Chicago have been working for the last three years without a cent of pay. The bankers had to collect their interest first, you know, This has had terrible effects upon the Four hundred teachers are ned to sanitariums for nervous Twenty have gone insane y have fainted their class- rooms from hunger Now they have decided to lister soothing syrup excuses no longer They are marching in thousands together with their pupils demanding their back wages. Their three years of pleading got them nowhere. Two days of street demonstrations got them $1,500,000 at once. And prom- ises of more. But they'll be fooled again, if they let the city officials take the leader- ship of their movement. The bankers are their main enemy. to | | | | \ | } | THE GOLD STANDARD GOES DOWN AND PRICES GO UP! SUBSCRIPTION BATES: wey Mall everywhere: One year, $6; six excepting Boron: of Manhattan ané Bronx, months, $8.50; $ months, 9; 1 menth, Wy, New York City. Foreign end ca _ Spies’ Main Aim to i Open USSR for thel > Expected Invaders Moscow Press in Detailed Analysis Shows How British Engineers Centered Their Wrecking Activity on W ‘By N. BUCHWALD. MOSCOW, April 20 (By Radio- gram).~—Today’s papers give the full text o€ the explanatory part of the sentences imposed in the case of the | Metropolitan-Vickers engineers who | tTansformers, for which Zivert were carrying-on wrecking activities against electric stations. r Industries ceived from Nordwall a bribe of 5,008 roubles, Thornton, and the state employ Zivert retarded the installation Crew of Wreckers. | ceived from Thornton a bribe of | rubles. About 2,000 of the Citroen strikers marched in a solid group | And the city officials are nothing but to the demonstration. The meeting was addressed by Vaillant- | the office boys of the bankers. Couturier and Marcel Cachin for the Communist Party of . | e France, by Barbusse on behalf of the intellectuals, and by sev- | TAYLOR, of the steel trust, and| - © cal gicakacne : LT deeyah, sesitie seatnusnent cess oe democrats. Company have announced their) At the electric power stations of he Moscow District, wrecking carried out by Sukhoruchkin, head the Operation Department of the + | First Moscow Power Station; byil/ | Zorin, Chief of the Repair and In~; | | | The preliminary investigation and | | the trial before the special session of | the Supreme Court of the Union of | | Socialist Soviet Republics established | | that for a number of years in the | biggest electric stations of the Soviet JAPANESE FORCE Swiss Watchmakers Support 4 Power Station, and by Engineer | velt government. Why shouldn't tors, turbines, generators, etc., putting | xy, j t i y i | % 5 4t9 8, y shh) asheninnikoy, “ SWEEPS FOR ARI and Watchmakers Union have un- ae Shorter periods and reducing the | Thornton, between 1928 and 1932, lee 4 ‘ ; # ; | 'HING is more ludicrous than animously decided to demand that the Reformist, Trade Unions and thi Red Unions conduct joint demonstr; tions against fascism. They further TO STORM PEIPING = : Preparing Excuses for | aeat of ther sroup as deiesee ty) Intervention of the Anti-Fascist Congress. i Delegates from Austria | theory of Dr. L. | “Food Industries.” whole-hearted approyal of the Roose- i the spectacle of bourgeois “sc ence” before the storm of the ec nomic The capitalist profes- sors have simply gone insane trying to explain how it all happened. The latest howling lunacy is the| . Burton, editor of The Doctor's | Unicn there were systematically or- ganized breakdowns of boilers, mo- power of electric stations. Reveal Organized Sabotage The special commission of experts formed during the preliminary in- vestigations and called to the trial | came to the conclusion that all cases | of breakdowns: were due either to criminal carelessness or direct sabot- | systematically | cause a breakdown stallation Department of the same concealed defects in equipment supplied by the Metros Vickers firm, and also concealed dee fects in installation which caused » series of breakdowns, and reduced the efficiency of the station. At the end of 1931 he personally tried to in the power station, which was only U. 8. Forces SHANGHAI, April 20—The Jap- anese advance continues. The resist- ance of the Chinese soldiers is un- availing against the combination of Japanese generals and politicians. The War Minister, Ho Ying Ching, who has recently taken control in the North, is unpopular, and not trusted. Many troops, commanded to| hold the front lines aganist the Jap- anese, are retiring on Peiping and Tientsin, Hig’: Chinese officials are reported as saying that the early arrival of a conquering Japanese army in the old capital is inevitable. They ought to | VIENNA, April 7 (By Mail)— Many delegates from the factories | and revolutionary cultural organiza- | tions are coming from Austria to the Anti-Fascist Congress. The Zeilinger Boot Factory in Vienna has elected a | | delegate to go to the Congress. The! Cliax Motor Works and Wharves Co., | | at Linz, have also decided to send | | delegates to the Anti-Fascist Con- gress. The Union of Revolutionary | Freethinkers will send two delegates. The factory council of the boot fac- tory, Mondschein and Speyer, in Vienna, decided to send delegates to | the Anti-Fascist Congress. Striking Seamen | | “science.” theory is that the changes in the temperature of the sun have some- thing to do with the world crisis. He has prepared charts to show how when the sun’s heat is above normal, business is good, and when the sun cools off a bit, business drops in sym- pathy. And he presented this theory before a solemn gathering of the New York Electrical Society. And why do you think the workers are so miserable and worried? The Doctor has the answer. There are not enough ultra-violet rays in the atmosphere this year. Such is the state of bourgeois A scientist has to be on the side of the Workers’ Revolution By JACK STACHEL Assistant Secretary of the T. U. U. L. The Roosevelt new deal is now un- folding itself in all its nakedness. The first stages of the Roosevelt pro- gram have already been dealt with on numerous occasions. Briefly stated the first acts of the Roosevelt administration robbed billions of dol- Jars from small depositors, cut the veterans’ allowances by more than clearly a program which has in ming regular labor would be replaced by) | the quickest poss! mobilization | forced labor of unemployed at a wage} | for war. The intended powers to the| similar to that given to the forest President under this measure and|camp workers, who are being enrolled the powers already given to the) under the war department. The Roo- | President establishes a dictatorial! sevelt public works program would power for the rapid carrying through | therefore not do anything more than of the wishes of finance capital. But| carry through the war preparations| we shall here limit ourselves to the program and at the same time set consideration of these measures only | the wages for all workers at a lower| | with regard to the internal effects. | level. | |The Plan for Controlling Production. | age by the technical staff working in these stations. On the basis of material produced by the investigation preceeding these trials the court established that the cause of these breakdowns was the wrecking activity of a counter-revolu- tionary group consisting of state em- ployees of the power stations, mostly the highest technical personnel, act~ ing in collaboration with some em- ployees of the private British firm of Metropolitan-Vickers working in the U.S.S.R. by agreement. with the Peoples’ Commisariat of Heavy In- dustry to afford technical aid. Many Electric Plants Involved averted by | the vigilance of the workers. He met; | Thornton frequently during 1930 and | 1931 to discuss methods of destroy- jing the effectiveness of the power | station in case of war against the |U. 8. 8S. R. Conceal Defects. Zorin, together with Thornton, in 1931 and 1932, carried out a series of wrecking activities in Moscow City Electric Power Station and in the Orekhoy Steam Electric Station, concealing organic defects in the ers, and reducing the efficiency of | the station. Krasheninnikoy, during 1928 an@ | up to'1932, committea acts of sabo~ ‘ ie eee ing | $50,000,000, cut the wages of the low ic Hours and Wage Boards to Facts revealed showed wrecking and tage in the First Moscow City Sta- Know. They have been consistently | COPENHAGEN, April 7 (By Mail).| ining’ avsck: Sit MShe miserable | Dald government employees by 16 per| Pitst as to control of production| Outlaw Strikes. counter-revolutionary activity of the | tion, concealing defects in the ma- aiding the Japanese by their sabotage | The organization work for the Scan- | clown, Doctor Burton, . |cent, introduced forced labor camps|®24 Planning. This has been spoken} Many elec- of the Chinese defense Prepare Looting of Peiping. It is feared that tne next stage in the Japanese vandalism includes the bombing of Peiping and Teintsin to be followed by the looting of these dinavian Preparatory Congress| | against fascism shows that the Com- munist. Parties of the Scandinavian | countries have succeeded in awaken- | ing & mass movement against the fas- | cist Terror in Germany. | strike in | ‘APITALIST justice is not blind. It only seems blind because it winks so often. . 'HE FIRST NATIONAL BANK has ee |at a dollar a day wage, while at the |same time it consisted of strength- ;ening the position of the big bank- Jers through additional subsidies al- ready handed out during the Hoover administration through the Recon- P “i a ; Conscious of the fact that the jabout and tried in other ee masses would resist such attacks, and Pevanteccey eee eee aoe the| this would result in strikes and un- [Soviet ‘Union under capitalism, Tt|€™Ploved struggles, | the | Roosevelt} | also aims to create illusions that the} HS tate Golo ne aca | mel ‘ (izing large sections of the unem-| accused state employees. tric stations were targets for these counter-revolutionaries, the electric stations Zlatoust (Urals); Zuevka (Donbass); Inanovo (Textile center of USSR) and Moscow Prov- ince. particularly | terials supplied by the Metro-Vickers | Company, For the above indicated criminal } acts, Sukhoruchkin, Zorin and Krash~ enninikovy received from Thornton bribes of up to 2,000 rubles. These wrecking activities, as is ob- bay ciite is also expressed the | SWedish sailors now on | struction Finance Corporation | S ; Soviet | rement arbitration boards that) At the chief Zlatoust station the | vious from the facts given, were di- oie 53 5 ere oy “ Stockholm and Goeteberg have sent | © Geclared its regular dividend of| Ali of these acts were Cleadty class | they Be geen ld hes oe aol would regulate w and hours of | government employee, Gusev, vi- | Tectly connected with the Ret aed eet ct ab Walt diathenmare gates to the Preparatory Con- | $25.00 a share 1s the | Measures in the interests of the rich} Pnion. But this it has proved ima|12or. ‘This is the most vicious anti- | Ously a volunteer in Kolchak’s army. Heda ee me individual employees Pee uatdte! Gircilar &> iat of Arann. | res | John Wansmeker, Jr., bewails the |and against the toiling masses. The | oasible: itr ochier Gattehlice. eaticiax | Working-class. legislation ever intro-| set himself the aim of dealing a blow of Metro-Vickers. kuo, which was established after the| In Oslo, Hedmark, Bergen, and a | fact that his income has dropped} Roosevelt plans for “relief” to the| iP 4 murder campaign started in churia a year ago last October. United States missionaries are play- ing their usual role in trying to for- ward the interests of American im- perialist banditry, which is taking an increasingly hostile position against the Japanese activities. Every day re- ports come in through American mis- sion sources of some of these people Man- being threatened. or kidnapped and | in some cases they are reported killed. The latest report of this sort is that whole series of other Norwegian | towns, restricted conferences were or- | ganized, and delegates elected. The | chemical workers’ union has been especially active. In Denmark, Anti- | Fascist Committees have been set up in_most of the provincial towns. | This successful campaign has been | carried through in spite of difficulties | created by the Social democratic gov- ernment in Denmark. Copenhagen | police have visited the printing es- | | tablishment where the Anti-Fascist from $600 to $200 a day. R the last fifteen years, the geol- ogists of the State of California warned the officials that an earth- quake was coming. They urged that quake-proof buildings be required by law. For fifteen years the earth- quake was humming “California, Here I Come.” The real-estate interests kept the matter secret, so that the business of selling bungalows could continue. | farmers and the small home owners |are of the same character. Under | the guise of helping the farmer and the small owner he is in reality plan- ning to hand over billions to the bankers, the insurance companies, | the mortgage sharks, to compensate | them for valueless paper in their possession, and to disrupt the grow- ling struggles against foreclosures | which have assumed a very militant | character. | Roosevelt’s “Humanitarian” Program. anarchy in production. It is produc-| oa duivodecs ccmptlsory . arkitre< | ton for profit. Tt is the quest for!tion, 1 is a direct act in the inter- | profits which: is the driving force| oo." t t He not service to the masses which | &ts of the capitalists and against 45 the ‘underlying principle in the) “Wg tolling masses Soviet Union. The growth of mon-|;,7 us Progtam of attack on the liv opolies under capitalism and the| 9S Standards of the masses, the de- drivin of th IL italists | StTuction of the workers’ organiza- does Fs oa pte ey pices tition | tions, would not solve the crisis of | with anarchy in y nantion Wee n the; caPitalism. The whole program of} | contr: it introduces it in new ang| the 30-hour week and inflation, of sharper fe ‘The bij italists, | Pubic works, would not add more | being Thoes HOyeEAT au oe the workers to the factories. The 30-hour at state industry and the defenses o she USSR together with his as- sistant, Sokoloy, and other persons to be tried separately. They system- atically put out of action in 1931 and 1932 a fourteen hundred horsepower motor operating heavy presses at the rolling shop of the metallurgical plant to stop the production of shells and shell cases. Stopped Production Many Times As the result of one such break- Thornton Chief Spy. The Court established that, among the employees of that firm, the lead= ling role in the perpetration of coune | ter-revolutionary crimes was played | by Thornton, the chief installation engineer of Metro-Vickers, under | whose directions the acts of sabo~ |tage at various electric stations in , the U.S.S.R were committed. |_ Through the British engineers, MacDonald, Cushny, Nordwall, ad | Well as directly, Thornton established ; down the production of shell¢ was {contacts with counter-revolutionary equipment supplied by Metro-Vick- } ea ‘ ras Here we wish to deal primarily with “ | Week wili be used as a means to| stopped for one and a half months. |Sroups of Soviet state employees at a certain Rev. Mark Brown, described | Bulletin is printed, and warned the | The PN? Obicinis “ KHOWINEIY. PEE} tis Roosevelt program remedy the | competition with more deadly et-) speed up the workers and lower the| At the end of 1991 boiler No. 8 was |the électric stations making agree. | as the secretary of the North China | Proprietor not to print this paper any | mitted this. state | Te@ulation of production, wages, | fects. And internationally this cul) proguction costs. ‘The actual wages,| frozen to weaken the boiler section |Ments with them for breakdowns, conference of the Methodist Episcopal | More. The Home Secretary, and the} The state and the real-estate| iours of labor, etc. ‘These plans are| Minates in imperialist wars. What Church, announced that his mission was struck repeatedly by bombs and many buildings damaged and an Ani- erican flag was fired upon. It was also reported that an American mis- sionary had been killed when Jap- | anese airplanes bombed Miyun These people, like all other agents of American imperialism, have no business there, any more than have the Japanese. They are all equally deadly enemies of the Chinese people and with the continued rise of the anti-imperialist movement demands will be made that all of them get out or be driven out. Can ‘Get’ Moscow on Low-Wave Set, Worker Reports That it is possible for American Chief of Police in Copenhagen, are | socialists. Here again we see the So- | cialist Prime Minister Stauning | | crawling on his belly before Hitler. Sey Sia Preparations in Prague PRAGUE, April 6 (By Mail).—The Prague Preparatory Committee for the Anti-Fascist Congress, have ap- | plied for permission to hold the Con- | gress in that city. On the Committee | are such well-known persons as Prof Nejedly, F. X. Salda, and Egon Kisch, who was arrested by the Nazis on the morning after the provocative Reich- | stag burning, who personally witness- ed and felt the Nazi tortures at work, and who has now succeeded in get- ting away to Prague, to carry on the fight against the Brown Terror. The Czechoslovak authorities have not given permission for the Con- | gress to be held there, but prepara- | tions for the meet ww continue, | whether it be held at Prague or else- where. sharks are directly responsible for the death of the quake victims. Capital- ism will murder without a qualm if its profits are at stake. eariee se ‘HE HERALD-TRIBUNE 3s hurt by the fact that the British sp wreckers were put on trial. Why, “they were only taking an intelligent interest in their surroundings,” says the Tribune. Isn't that rich, Deliberately sabo- taging and wrecking Soviet plants. Planning to wreck Soviet electric plants in time of war. This is tak- not yet completed and in some de- |tails there may yet be certain | changes. But the outline of the pro- | gram is already clear. This pro- | gram is presented in the form of a | “revolutionary” departure from the former practices of capitalism and | Wholly in the interests of the masses. | In reality, it is wholly in the inter- | ests of the capitalists. This program | is put forward as a means to get ‘out | of the present crisis. | The truth of the matter is. that | the Roosevelt administration and the capitalist class as a whole are quite which have already declined for all of the power station. At the same |for concealing defects in equipment, will result from all this will be state Subsidies to the big capitalists, who| will be able to compete with the} smaller capitalists, and who will also attempt to sell their products in| markets now occupied by their com-| petitors in other imperialist coun-| tries. This will not solve the prob-| lems of capitalism. It will only mean | greater profits to the big capitalists, |to be paid for by the masses, and) an accentuation of the danger of a/ new world imperialist war. | | ‘The 30-Hour Week and the | | Minimum Wage. | workers of the U. S. to 33 per cent of the 1929 total, would only be fur- ther reduced. Inflation would fur- ther reduce the purchasing power of the masses. The capitalist dream, to get out of the crisis through these measures, will remain an empty| dream. This policy is, how-ver, part of the policy of U. S. imperialism for another world imperialist war, in which, like the last war, the masses will be called upon to die by the} millions to save capitalism. | Call to Action. } The masses must organize a mass} | ing an “intelligent interest in their/ worried. The much heralded turn surroundings.” fot the better has already brought an What would the Herald-Tribune| admittance of a further fall in pro- | think if Japanese spies in America| duction in the month of March. and | began to take a similarly “intelligent | @ very substantial fall in the dollar. | | | As to the 30-hour week and mini-| resistance to these attacks. We must mum wage proposal. The 30-hour| resist every atiempt to cut wages. week without any wage compensation) we musi fight for wage increases for the hours lost is is the old Hoover} we must demand higher wages to Stagger plan. The Black Bill does’ meet the rising cost of living. The interest in their surroundings?” . * 'HARLES SCHWAB, Chairman ‘of the Bethlehem expressed for the twentieth time his copviction that “the bottom has been reached.” He | Not a single problem that existed |at the time when Roosevelt took | Power has been solved. On the con- | trary, the crisis is growing sharper and the whole situation has become very much aggravated. The object not carry any wage compensation with it. The proposal of the T. U. U. L., which made this amendment to the Black Bill through its repre- sentative appearing before the Sen-_ ate Judiciary Committee which held, fight for unemployment relief, for federal unemployment insurance at the expense of the government and the employers, must become the fight of the whole working class. We must oppose the forced labor camps and time one of the coal feeds was put out of action by placing metal ob- pects in the spur of the gear. After | this act of sabotage this coal feed | gear was dismantled on the instruc- tions of Gusev. This put it out of action for a year and a half until | Gusev's arrest. | Delayed Boiler Installation | Deliberately, with wrecking aims, | the installation of boilers was delayed | for long periods. As a result of these | criminal acts by Gusev the capacity | of the power station was reduced by one-half from twelve thousand to six thousands kilowatts. Gusev and Sokoloy simultaneously prepared a series of breakdowns in- tended to put the power station out of action the moment there began an expected military attack on the USSR. Spied With MacDonald This criminal activity of Gusev and and giving them bribes for commite ting criminal acts. Military Espionage. Thornton also engaged in military espionage in the U. S. S. R., gather+ ing secret information of military value through MacDonald, Cushny and Oleynik, and giving bribes as mentioned above to state employees for information received. Monkhouse In the Plot, Monkhouse, the Metro-Vickers reps resentative in the Moscow office, wag fully aware of Thornton’s actions in organizing breakdowns in the elec~ tric stations. He participated in the | bribing of state employees for cons cealing defects in equipment, and i, installation. Thornton's instructions in several power stations were carried out by Oleynik, an employee of Metro-Vick- ers and a citizen of the USS.R., who also recruited agents for the English spy. Kutuzova, employed in the Moscow possi} oo ees of the proposed legislation is to carry| hearings on this bill, was rejected. | Gam, ‘a public works program to! S°E0lov was committed in collabor- office of Metro-Vickers, knew about a en Aen bicbioges eertiee _ STRASSBOURG, April 9 (By bas ipeen saying this Since 1929-/ through further attacks on the liv-|The T. U. U. L. in its amendmont| eae aaeeey Pearshion Dae GEorkeer: tia a opie oF pemenet the counter-revolutionary work of the “Daily” by a worker Ma‘l)—A conference of the represen- | Mesnwnue the world crisis plunges! ing standards of the masses and at| also proposed a minimum wage pro-| pods, hospitals and schools. We| ‘a2-Vickers, the engineer MacDonald. | using a low-wave set for the purpose throughout the past tatives of the miners of Alsace-Lor- raine and of the Saar, has appealed Charlies thinks that In the future | the same time to create new illusions that will facilitate the carrying posal. But the minimum wage pro- Yosal of Roosevelt, without guaran- must demand the payment of full who participated in planning break- downs. In addition, on instructions English engineers, and systematically transmitted money to various mem- « union wages on all public works jobs. bers in the spy and sabotage groups ide Hs dectomnation terce to all the pits in these districts to | ,“e ill not work for wealth alone.| through of these attacks with the| teeing that there will be no wage| We must fight for the shorter ‘ork,| of MacDonald, Gusev and Sokolov which had been set up in the power Me tawet Sesame ot oe Fail, Mobilize for the Anti-Fascist Con- | PUt. for the true aristocratic aim of minimum of resistance on the part| reductions side by side with the re- day without reduction in pay. We| Collected and gave MacDonald secret stations, for espionage and wrecking, Scr ie Golntants Sree toasting oo. ees doing good to our fellow-men.” | of the workers. It is presented as a|duction ef hours, means that the! mu 1 information of state and military im- to re-broadcast a Moscow on March 25. “I have been receiving Moscow for program from ceived from 4 to 5 p.m. every day on & wave-length of 50 meters or 6,000 kilocycles. Transmissions broadcast by the Comintern Radio Station can| the sabotage of the united front by be received on the same wave-length from 3 to 4 p.m. and from 6 to 6 0.m.—all New York time Anti-Fascist Meets ist and bourgeois Jewish organiza- tions completely failed. In spite of | these groups, a large meeting was | addressed by John Davis, a leading Socialist Party member; 8. Goldblatt, This is the sort of disgusting flap- doodle that John D. was handing out as the guns were pouring lead into the camps of the Ludlow strikers, AGAINST FASCISM Jeer Socialist Chiefs “humanitarian” program against the ‘money changers’? But it is in reality & mouthing of worn _ out | phrases to cover*up.the old method | hours and wages. And in connec- tion with this whole program there it to be undertaken a gigantic infla- ;tlon program (the details are still under discussion). Naturally this | whole program is not separated from | the whole international position of minimum wage will become the maxi- | mum wage. It will result in whole-| sale wage-cuts for the greatest por-| tion of the workers. The Roosevelt- ! ment is trying to present a good front at the coming conferences by cutting the war budget, they would in | reality greatly increase the wat bud- get by carrying out this work under the guise of 2 big public works pro- must oppose subsidies to the bank- ers, the rich, and demand taxes on the rich to support the unemployed. ‘We must oppose the compulsory arbi- must fight against the growing fas- cist reaction in the U. S. and sup- | port the struggle against Fascism in Germany and other countries. The United Front—a Burning Need. This struggle demands the estab- lishment of the united front of all portance. | For this criminal activity Gusev and | Sokolov received bribes from Mac- | At the Zuevka power station the chief wrecker was the state employee, Kotlyarevsky who caused the break- down of the turbo generator in 1932, organized the breakdown of the oil pumps of the turbine by deliberately These crim- Light Sentences. On the basis of the facts estab- lished in Court showing the degree of guilt of each of the accused, and h r : is a ig] 1° right | Donald. Gusev on various dates 2,500} on the basis of the decisions of the the past year on a low-wave set, Ana Charlie's Bethlehem Steel| of shifting the ‘whale burden of the| Perkins stand on the railroad wace| ieroteline othe ies Yor Toubles and Sokolov 1,000 roubles; | Gentral Mxecutive Gorontes cr the ihe letter States. “Reception is not} ©. f | bd | Corp. Is. one of the world’s worst | deepening crisis om the shoulders ot} dispute shows. this already quite jl werkers’ rights. We must de-| Thornton Boss of MacDonald Soviet Union March 14, 1933, by vir- regular, the winter months giving) IV [VOTIO ago slave-driving companies. the masses. Clearly. Furthermore, the heavy in-| mand a stop to the discrimination! -pnic ori inal activity of MacDon- |tue of which Soviet state emplayees he poorest reception. With the com- cid When the Steel workers take) What: does this latest production-|flation which accompanies this bill of Negro masses and fight for equal| aid “vse oe vie by orders or convicted of wrecking and betraving ing of summer, however, I expect to}. tas Charlie's factories away from him, | labor program consist of? ‘First, it| will mean in practice that while the| rights. We must demand a stop to|s.,WaS committed by orders of | 116 fatherland of the working clase year Moscow every week. The sta-/ Workers, Professional | they will aive him a pair of overalls | claims’ to undertake to Organize} minimum wage will remain fixed in/the attacks on the foreign-born|sOornton, another = Metropolitan- | .¥. subject to stricter’ punishment tion which comes across is the most x * and give him a chance to “do good! pianned and controlled production.| dollars, the actual standard of liv ng | masses. We must establish the unity | Vickers engineer, with whom, as with tay employees of private enterprises, powerful low-wave tion in the People, udents Join for nis tetiow-men.” Secondly, as an incentive for the| will continually decrease as prices’ with the fight of the veterans for| M&¢Donald, Gusev personally dis-| the sentences given by the Court world.” ROBIN i eon capitalists it proposes to guarantee | rise. | the bonus and against the allowances | U8sed plans for breakdowns at | (already printed in the Daily Worker) Schedule of Broadcasts, NORFOLK, Va. April 18.— About| Fellow workers:—We want con- | profits. ‘Then it proposes that the| Now, as to the Roosevelt, Public! cuts, with: ihe farmer for relief,| Meeting in Zlatoust in 1931 and at} were jess in the case of the British ras gharker aiso includes a” pro-/two lvmmdred Jewish und gentile | tributions, Short peems, quips, odd | hours of labor be eut down to 30| Works Program. ‘Thus far this PrO- | against foreclosures, and cancellation | #artsisk in 1932. | then im the case of the Soviet offie stam_of broadcasts sent to him by . professioval people and| bits’ of news, hours (this is stil} under discussion) | gram has resulted in the stopping of of debts to the poor farmers, Finally,|, 4% these meetings. Gusev gave | cials: and for the latter, terms of F the Radio Station of the All-Union! tradeamen, held a protest meeting | |and together with this. to-establish| federat construction. Roosevelt has| we must oppose the war prepara-| Thornton a number of items of sec- | imprisonment and confiscation of k Council of Trade Unions of ‘the U. 8.| against the fascist regime in .Gere) 77 i ~ ~~ |% minimum wage. Next "to inaugu-| already indicated that he would as-|tions and be on guard against the| et information of state and military | property, instead of the death sen« Fi 3. R. According to the schedule,| many. Efforts to enlist the National rate a public works program. It] sign to the public works the build- war plans against the Soviet Union, | 1™portance. tence, were given only because it was E lvansmissions broadcast by the Mos-| Jewish Workers Alliance, the Work- | Proposes to organize boards to regu-| ing of more warships, and other war And in connection with all this we Activity of Another Wrecker held that the criminal wrecking ac FS tow Trade Union station can be Te~| men’s Circle and other social-reform- jate not only production but also| machinery. ‘Thus, while the govern- tivity of the defendants was of a jocal nature, and did not serlonsly injure the industrial strength of the U.S.S.R. Decision Final. Of the emplovees of the Moscow office of Metro-Vick: Thornton was | mae a ae ot oe gram. Furthermore, this work—build- kel AF of ho| Cogsing these pumps. given three. years’ imprison “4 These programs can be sived tae oi le Aner 1 beset Sane | Who Oppose Unity | the U. 9. and the coming conferences| ing battleships—as well as other beers Ge cera eoibesey palit 4 inal acts were committed in coliabor- | Sreeponald, i onmnderedte erpet 4 syery day in the following languages: | 8°80" ©! nemployed Councils, | Tels with the various world powers. It is construction now carried on through | je exposed and the masses must re- ation ae the aforesaid MacDonald fact that he acted at the direct in- Berman, on Monday, Thursday, Fri- eas oh aig | BRUSSELS, April 14—Two thou- | ——— Rg TT x pudiate them and rally in united | from wublen: Kotlyarevsky received | stigation of his chief, Thornton, and fay, Saturday and Sunday; Dutch | eee Ee re udent | sand workers toow part in a meeting ipo Fonte on Tuesday; Czecho-Slovak, on Wed- organizations in the University of called by the reformist trade unions | front struggle for these demands. | The Socialist leaders, who/are pre- sesday; English, on Monday, ‘Wed- | Chicago held a united front protest nesday, Priday and Sunday; French, on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturd: Swedish, on Thursday and Sunday; ‘ngarian, on Tuesday; and Span-/ ish, on Saturday. At the close of each English trans- mission, a regular feature of “Five meeting against the fascist terror against intellectuals, radicals and lib- erals. he te Na READING, Pa,, April 6.—The Na- tional Executive Committee of the Young People’s Socialist League at- in which the socialist deputies Geld- ers and Spaak delivered speeches against the united front. They were continually interrupted snd heckled by the workers. . e ° PRAGUE, April 14.—In spite of FRANCE AND HER ALLIES IN BIG TRADE WAR ON GERMANY PARIS, April 13.—In sharp retalia-; ports to France. Immediately the | tion against the attempts of the Hit-| Little Entente followed suit. Rumania | Jer regime in Germany and Mussolini! ordered its customs officials not to venting the united front of the work- ers, must similarly be exposed. The masses must draw the conclusion from their repeated refusal to enter the united front to free Tom Mooney, and their policy of barring militant labor organizations from the Conti- At the Ivanova power station the wrecking was committed by the chief ov, in collaboration with Lebedey, an employee of the Metropolitan- Vickers Company, Nordwall and other Persons who will be put on trial sep- arately. Lobanov systematically put chain in view of his full confession, was given only two years in prison; Monk~ house and Nordwall, since thelr par- ticipation in the work of sabotage was slight, and Cushny, since his crime was committed long ago (1928), Were sentenced to deportation from the U. S. 5S. R, All the sentences were final, and jali«' aN ‘ e nental Congress in Washington on cannot be appealed. They entet Minutes” of latest news is presented. | tacked the fascist persecution of | the Socialist Party's rejection of the | in Italy to reach a working agreement | furnish import licenses for German! May 6{h Hind 7th, a ii a Phas Bo: aegis into force eatin as Sunes irien Workers who possess low-wave radio Jews and workers in Germany, at its | Communist united front offer, Czech /t9 weaken. its Influence in Rurope,| goods. Chechoblovakla established an] ne gait ana their govern bedrins of the taoter goul-yurine of | Hat: fluished’ reading the “declan. s9ts are urged to tune in and to write | meeting hi socialist and Communist workers are | the French government has’ opened| exchange compensation office with | ment, who have already reduced| Pounnes 2 ult Of these wreck. | 820 the officials of the Court immes } fo the Daily Worker about their re- ane a Joining in common united front ac- | g devastating trade war against drastic regulations against German | Jarge masses to starvation and re- i al aed phase pines sn ~\ diately took Thornton into. thelr 1 cuts The bourgeoisie has torn away | TONS. Germany. imports, Poland followed Rumania’s | duced the rest to xemi-starvation, are| ‘ne Aels there were Gor station ana |c2"Se. From Nordwall, Mor i from the family its sentimental | In Komotau ‘an industrial town| The French government led the at-| action. Jugoslavia raised her tariffs| planning new and more vicious’ at- pipettes oa tha atonly of to [20d Cushny a pledge was } ci sy (aicage | Mooney Congress. | vel. and has reduced the family | in the Northwest of Czechoslovakia) | tack by serving notice on Hitler tHst| against’ Germany. Some of the Scan-| tacks, ‘We must not lows & moment. oberg power t0/ that they would ; Writ 30 to Mag 3, will be a won to = mere money rem- | jomt meeting of 4,000 Communist alts intended veise her tariff rates) dinavien epuntrles are taking simllsr| We must establish the unity fall 5 H L-