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Published vy the Comprod: 13th St. Address age Four ly B.¥ Publishing Ge, & New York City an@ mail checks te the Datly Worker, Telephone ALgongnin 4 ne. dally except Sunday at Se S. 6. Cable “DAIWORE. 80 E. 13th St., New York, é, ¥, Dail lorker Purty USA Britain Hurt More |CHILDREN UNDER CAPITALISM AND CHILDREN Than USSR by the Embargo on Trade Moscow Pravda and Izvestia Point’ Out the Monopoly on Foreign Trade and Absence of Crisis in USS R Give Advantage MOSCOW, Apri] 24.—Pravda writes as follows regarding the 15th ULS: §. R.: We have made a stand foreign trade of our whole co CHINA STUDENTS HAIL EMBASSY OF SOVIET UNION SHANGHAI, April 24—The new Soviet Ambassador, Comrade Dmitri jogomoloff, and his staff arrived in nghai yesterday en route to Nan- the capital, He was greeted en- iastically by Chinese Communist lents, who met him at the works, The Japanese advance into North! China continues, with further Japa- nese advances below the Great Wall reported. General Kawahara’s forces have pushed nine miles below Kupei Pass, hough the Japanese War Of- ice had ordered the troops “to cease heir advance. The Japanese and Manchukuoan army commander are planning to set up another puppet regime in North China to act as a “neutral zone” and buffer state between China proper and the state of Manchukuo. The in- ading forces are now camped along he Lwan River below the Great Wall GIANT VICTORIES IN SOVIET UNION Meat Production Rises; 4 New Cities Planned MOSCOW, April 24. The state plan for the provision of meat for the last quarter of 1932 and the first quarter of 1933 has been fulfilled 109 per cent. The quota for milk has also been exceeded. prostroy Power Sta- 200 ion Kilowatt ectric power in existenci ed for t new The first Soviet-made generating dynamo has been installed. Experts state that it i in the least inferior to the dynamos ordered from the United States the first about Four new model socialist cities are being built in the Urals as part of e gigantic plan of socialist indu construction. They are: Per- n will have 80,000 in-| nouralsk with 50,000 alsk with 30, 20,000, Phese alist construction comp! great achievements of soci- blast the die-hard British press which seeks to defend the convicted Metro-Vickers engineer-wreckers by stating that their trial was a Soviet. move to hide the breakdown of the Russian socialist economy 1 of the Pier, | waving red flags and setting off fire- Anniversary of the Foreign Trade Monopoly of the m defense of of Lenin and who signed the decree for the na tionalization of foreign trade, by that decree closed the coun the monopoly yuntry Stalin try's gates to the economic interven tion of capital ‘Stalin said that cancellation of the foreign trade monopoly would Tean turning our country from an independent country into a semi- colonial one. The world economic jerisis, which is shattering the very foundations of the advanced capi~ talist countries, hasn't crossed the | frontiers of the Soviet Uni ‘ade is Socialist, like our and therefore knows no ct Imports More Than Tripled. the nature of utionary imports, consisting of groceries and articles of luxury with the Soviet Union's present im. ports: machinery, equipment, ete. Prayda says that the nature of Soviet imports helped the industrial produ tion of the U. S. 8. R. rise 3.4 times as high as in pre-revolutionary years Even now, Pravda continu more sensible British conseryativ are saying that the “Russians will be able to do without us and Russian purchases here if we introduce im- pediments for them. Our market will go to Engiand’s commercial com- petitors.” British Industry Will Suffer, ‘The die-hards (extreme anti-Soviet British Tories) wish to break off all relations with the Soviet Union and attempt to organize nited front for imperialist attack ainst the country of the Soviets. Tt and prohibition of their importation will strike at British industry. We ean purchase the cessary ma - ment everywhere. Briti: circles are already reckon- ing the number of plants they will | have to shut down, as well as the in- | crease in the army of unemployed. | The growth of the Soviet Union is opening up tremendous prospects for our foreign trade. Participatton a this trade depends upon the sen- sible business circles in every coun- | | tr | Tavestia, writing on the same sub- | ject, says: “The manifold growth of our economy fully refutes the wrong |ideas that the U. S. S. R. wants to lisolate itself from the world market. On the contrary, the industrializa- tion of the country has created a new for the widest de- ‘onomic connectioi t Union and oth countries. We are successfully ing the lems of our libe: from foreign. economic dependence, but We becoming ar portant consumer market “The monopoly of foreign trade is a lever with whose assistance the proletarian state helps to further the development of foreign trade. We shall not give up the foreign trade | nronone more than any other bastion of the fortress ia. | WORKERS FILM AND PROTO LEAGUE Negro children being examined by doctors at parents’ and children’s gathering arranged by the Provisional Committee Against Child Misery at Lafayette Hall, New York City. The effects of hunger and privation was soon discovered im their thin emaciated bodies. Only three out of the 43 examined could be considered in good health. Eleven needed immediate hospital attention. The rest were suffering from such ailments as malnutrition (hunger disease), rick- ets, bronchitis, bad teeth and heart disease, All directly related te the appaling conditions under which they live. WHERE WORKERS RULE; Swimming lesson for workers’ children. The pool is in a Soviet Union city. It is equipped with the most modern filters and over 300,000 quarts of fresh and purified water is pumped through it daily. See the mus- cular development in the arms of the youngsters, and contrast it with the unhealthy condition of the Harlem children in the photo to the left. See the eager, enthusiastic faces of the Soviet Union children! British spies and all the reactionary forces in America are »lotting to invade the Soviet Union, crush the workers there into wage s/2very and make the Soviet children look like those in Harlem. IN DUNGEONS OF THE BERLIN Sa ts POLICE By EGON ERWIN KISCH (The Prussian Minister of the In- terior Goering recently made a categorical statement to foreign | press correspondents denying that a fascist terror was raging in Ger- many. He admitted only that large numbers of Communist Pariy of- of their tormentors. And that was why there was this throng around me, that was why I was assailed by this flood of facts and sights which left me quite. faint and dizzy. Attacked at Home They had all been surprised in their | houses by oO} ficials had been taken into “pro- Storm Troop's tective custody.” the Sunday of the elections, or the The following personal experi- | Gay after, and had been ill-treated| ences of Egon Edwin Kisch, a (in front of their families; their fur- niture had been smashed to bits and their books torn to pieces. Without being allowed to dress completely— many of them were without shoes— they had been dragged away to the Nazi barracks, first to the so-called “Friensenkaserne” (barracks), and later to a factory in the Friedrich- strasse converted into a barracks for the Storm Troops. “We'll soon knock the Communism out of you!” For five days and five nights the Storm Troops had been doing their best to drive Communism out of them in every possible way. One of the chief ways in which the spirit of the non-commissioned officer, now awakened from the dead, expressed itself was as follows: the writer, in the prison of the Berlin Police Headquarters (Kisch was ar- | rested at the beginning of March and later expelled to Czechoslo- vakia) stamp Goering’s statement as a lie, They show to what hor- rible physical and moral tortures the imprisoned revolutionary work- ers in Germany are subjected). —Ed. } #2 Ab | I had hardly had time to fold my coat on the plank-bed, in order there- by to reserve a place in the crowded cell, before I was surrounded by all its inmates; fifty to sixty imprisoned workers began talking at me, show- ing me their ghastly wounds and re- lating their terrible experiences Th ushed me, thrusting one another aside, their stories were such | workers’ had been compelled to ex- hat I could only grasp the |ercise in the courtyard, to throw ails and could obtain from them no/| themselves in the mud and jump connected story. Again and na up again at the word of command, prisoner would hold forth, tel-|again and again; each time their me his experiences and showing ‘strength failed they were spurred on wounds with sticks and whips; made to fall down and jump up again until they lay there so completely unconscious that ne blow from stick or whip could bring {hem to their senses. They were obliged to line up every and, their arms raised in the fascist salute, to shout hour after ceasingly tortures, id now a comrade |come in who had not been with them they wished to unburden their hearts | q: to , to tell him their grievances, | to give him proofs of the bestiality taking castor-oil, to stand up naked enough now!” with their faces to the wall, and to| Count Helldorf, however, Com- keep on bending their knees until) mandant of Berlin, who personally j these movements, to the great delight | superintended the barracks and had of their gaolers, were accompanied| the prisoners led out before him, by the effects of the castor-oil. gave orders for fresh beatings. He One of the prisoners was placed | Was particularly interested in rout- facing his son; they were both given ing out Jews. He made the prisoners sticks, and were compelled, by be- | Sho ir genitals and asked ing beaten with sticks and covered father’s religion?” with a revolver, to beat each other. | “Harder, harder!” the order was giv-| en, and “Quicker, quickér!” Both of! ; them were with me in my cell, father and son, both with their heads and | faces terribly injured, the father’s |right eye bloodshot and protruding, | and his jaw swollen, perhaps smashed, The prisoners were continually given warning that they would be |shot, and that five men had been | shot that day in the cellar. At night their tormentors amused themselves them. by shooting into their sleeping-quar-| Ail this time there was in the bar- ters. One or other of the victims) racks a young boy of fourteen, who would repeatedly shout out “Shoot | had been imprisoned because it was me then, yeu cowards!” whereupon | desired to obtain from him the ad- |he would be beaten with still Greater | ross of his mother who was in hid- Z. “Catholic. “Hm, you're a typical, Jewish half- caste. Your mother went with Jews.” Jews Beaten Most The Jews amongst the prisoners had to suffer most, for they were the teost cruelly beaten; every day they were taken to “execution,” placed against a wall, and revolver shots were fired over their heads to frighten | All these tortures were accompa- j niet by contemptuous remarks; such phrases were particularly popular “We aren’t giving you much fun, are we? On the other hand we are giving your wives all the more fun. In nine; one divulged the names and ad- |Months’ ‘time your wives will have | dresses of comrades, He also was in lfine little Hitler-kids! my cell. No one spoke to him { Kept in Isolation On the day before I was brought | These remarks were the more dis- | back from Spandau to the Police turbing and tormenting, in that not Heaquarters, everyone was brought lone of the prisoners was in even | hither from the Nazi barracks. They |the slightest communication with his| Were obliged to ko on foot; many of \Yelatives or knew whether his wife | them were unshod, and they had to thad not also been dragged off. ir heads hold their hands above their | A game of questions and answers, 204 to march thus through the streets. From other prisoners the Nazis | wanted to discover the addresses of officials or of houses in which secret presses, explosives or arms were. to be found. Of all the prisoners only SEE THE DIFFERENCE! SUBSCRIPTION EATER: By Malt overywhere: One year, $6; six months, $8.56; 3 months, $2; 1 month, Be, excepting Borough of Manhattan and Bronx, New York City. Foreign amd Canada: One year, 99; 6 months, $5; ¢ months, $8, | | @PEAKER RAINEY of the House| Y |) has announced that the Roosevelt | | ted to a policy of currency i fon. | “We will see it in thirty days,” says | Since currency inflation means in-| administration is definitely comm: direct wage cuts and higher cost of living, the workers will have to get | ready for a Rainey day. ‘Danish CapitalistPresa Tells of Vigorous Struggles | IX 1914, the Socialist leaders of the} Second International told the workers that they must forget the class struggle for a while, and that; they must fight for their country | | Today, the leaders of the German} Socialist Party tell the workers that they must fight for the “unity of their | country.” Here is what a certain revolutionist, | Karl Marx, has to say about the sub- | ject “Communists have been accused of | wanting to do away with country, | with national The workers have! which the workers of Bremen, Ham- | no country. u cannot take from | burg, Glueckstadt, and other cities of- | them what they have not got.” | fered the utmost resistance to fascist COPENHAGEN, April 12 (By Mail). Under headlines: “Communists Far From Downed in Northern Germany,” and “Workers Secretly and Well Armed,” the Politiken,” Denmark's most influential bourgeais newspaper, publishes detailed reports on the wn- interrupted attivity of the Commu< nists in North Germany. It describes in great detail numerous cases in { . . * | terror. NEWSPAPER, headiine reads) “Politiken” also reports that the “Manufacturers Optimistic, But| Prussian police raided the “Volun- Withhold Orders.’ tary” Labor Camp at Helligbek (Prov- Evidently they are not letting their} ince of Schleswig), because the cam) optimism get the better of their judg-| had become wholly permeated ment. | Communist influence. 9}, ees | EERE WORKER, from Washington, D. C.| writes: | MO “You correctly bring out that these so-called economies are only to im- preve the efficiency for war and in no way indicate a desire for peace. How- ever, in my opinion, the most im-| portant thing about the sweeping re-| ductions of the Roosevelt administra- | * tion insofar as the army, navy and) EFrame-Up Failure marines are concerned is the effects of these economies on the economic! BERLIN, April 14 (By Mail) —The conditions of the masses of soldiers, “Voelkische Beobachter,” Nazi cen- sailors and marines. It is terrific.) iral organ of April 14, reports that There is a direct wage-cut of 15 per! Ernst Thaelmann, leader of the Com- cent on the base pay. Thus, whereas | munist Party of Germany, is soon to soldiers and mariage previously drew| be moved to the concentration camp $21 per month, no# they will only get) in the former Sonneburg penitentiary. | $17.60 a month, Simultaneously there| which already ¢ontains 300 political | is no ower a re-enlistment bonus of| prisoners. This taeans that the Fas- | TO LABOR CAMP NaziJournal Confesses #75, The clothing allowance has been! cist prosecutor has abandoned the at- reduced 80 per cent, the food rations| tempt to involve Comrade ‘Thael- have gone from 50c per day (1930) to| mann in the incendiary burning of 19¢, etc. Altogether, about 30 per) the Ftsichstag, as only prisoners un- cent reduction, while expenses re-|der preventive arrest are detained in main the same.” concentration camps, but not those | . . {held for trial “PERTAINLY” Lars Hallaman)| The failure of the Nazi govern- writes: “There must be some|ment’s attempt to bring Comrade | meaning to the fact that the ‘rookies’ | Thaelmann to the gallows is due to | of the Roosevelt re-forestation camps/the international protest campaign are being concentrated in points ad-|of the masses, many foreign bour- jacent to large industrial centers. And| geois newspapers having joined in the it is not accidental either that the|campaign for Comrades ‘Thaelmann. Herald-Tribune carried this ominous| 4nd Torgler. It also proves that the sentence: “Firm in the belief that aj Fascist police have been unable to j little army training hurts no ons, | Paeell n teh ee ee eet officers have managed to mix in quite} : a bit of regular army drill this week| Ot the Nazis) set fire to the Reich- under the official designation of /St8 ‘physical exercise and walking.’ ” | GaN Cotas | T= emergency conyention of Lite| | Insurance Commissioners has de- WORLD ANTI N Li | cided that workers can no longer bor- | row on their policies, or get their | | Thus, turn-in value back. all the} | savings of the workers in insurance | policies are frozen |Dramatie Protest by 2 Meanwhile, the workers will be de-| . * | lighted to hear that the salaries oi Sailor nm London LONDON, April 24—A marine four leading insurance companies’ presidents have been raised to $25,000/ | a year. worker got past a heavy police guard around the German Embassy here today and threw a bottle containing @ message through a window. The message read: “Hitler, you butcher! AYOR O'BRIEN of New York, the| bull-necked Tammany hack who now takes orders from Curry at City! Hall, threatens the critics of the New| You have gone far enough.” | York city financial policy with crim-} The guard about the Embassy was | inal prosecution ) occasioned by large anti-Nasi dem- ‘There must be something very sour| onstrations throughout London. in the financial position of New York.) 5 vow April a4-—Pive bh ORKERS who still have enough | 2utos and bby! toured the basal dough to go to the movies Ca bearings i Oia rate eons have noticed that the country is being Goods ‘and German Films.” ‘The pro- flooded with anti-Soviet films. test demonstration was organized by We saw one the other night that! tne World Alliance for Combating | — jhour in chorus: “Three cheers for| which was designated “Cross-exam-|At the corner of the Friedrichstrasse _. jour victorious Chancellor Hitler!”’| ination,” was carried out as follows: /@%d the Unter den Linden one of th Anyone who did not stretch his arm! “What are you?” “I’m a pig of aj Prisoners threw himself under a pa . * . jtautly enough, anyone who did not Communist.’ Anyone who did not an-|iN8 bus, and was picked up with his ~ | Big Increase in USSR Coal, Grain a crude description of Soviet| ant semitism: workers as wild animals with whiskers . who have nothing to do in the world} warsaw, April 24.—A. convention but chase after coy blondes. of Polish Jews, with 852 delegates The villians in this movie called| representing political parties, business one another “Comrade.” Their lead-| organizations and religious orders, er’s name was “Voroshiloy,” the same | voted a boycott of German goods “as name as the leader of the Red Army.) the best means of protesting against ee shout lustily enough, was subjected|swer thus received a series of blind-|1€’s cut off. At the Police Head-| to kicks and blows, The text of an-|ing blows on the head or on the quarters the most severely wounded | other slogan was: “What were we|mouth; but if he gave this answer | Were bandaged and the prisoners were | yesterday? Communists. What shall} his tormentors corrected him with locked up in grouns in different cells. | Production; Living Standards Up (From Our Moscow Correspondent) MOSCOW, U.S.S.R., April 24. the Uc srosecution in thi aging engineer of the sabot- y took 1b outlook in So- when he said: “No (the judge) will de- cide, one thing seems to me incontro- vertible, and that is the impossibility of any attempts whatever to halt the victorious onward surge of the revo-~ of conference area gnali a ni 8 creative effort in the coal industry. promising a further impressive in- | crease in coal output, with a conse- quent increase of production in me we be to-morrow? National socialists.) a blow: “ Hurrah!” They were also made to recite the|a swine of a Communist.” Lord’s Prayer in unison. In the bar-| In. reply to. a question as to how rack-rooms other ceremonies took| they had come by their wounds, the isoners were made to| wounded had to reply: “I fell against drink castor-oil, then let down their, a stove when I was drunk,” trousers and bend over a table; they | Their beards were cut off, their were then beaten with sticks until| heads shaven, generally on one side the skin broke and the raw flesh|only, or singed off or torn out in swelled out. (Almost all my fellow-| handfuls; and in some cases the prisoners at the police headquarters | prisoners’ hair was cut into the form had these wounds. I saw them with ;of a Swastika. socialist fields. The great t Soviet agriculture will be solved through the intensification of the struggle against the remnants of the class enemy, and the strength- ening of the guidance of the Party | in the villages. New Inventions and Discoveries Inspired by the achievements of of cultivation swine of a Communist.” | And next time he had to say “I am/ tinguished, as fresh prisoners were | The light in our cell was not ex- | constantly being brought in. As there j were already more than seventy there | they had to lie on the floor, there |not being enough plank beds. Amongs |others there were also some. soci democratic shop-stewards from a | tmamway repairing depot, who had been arrested in the midst of their | work by some Storm ‘Troops led by an officer. There was also in our cell a | uniformed national socialist who had This sort of stuff has no trouble! the persecution of the Jews in Gare getting by the Censor. As a matter/ many. The convention emphasized of fact, the Censor is probably de-| that it was fighting only the Nazi lighted with it, | regime of Hitler and not the German | If you keep your eyes open, you can} people. see signs of a very definite Anti- . * . | Soviet provocation campaign all CHICAGO, April 24—Kight youth | around. The movies, the radio, the} organizations responded to a call for magazines, are all full of insidious| a West Side Anti-Fascist Youth Con- | poison against the Workers’ Republic. | ference at the Jewish People’s Insti- |tute, and arranged for a large mass | meeting and another conference to SENTENCE DUTCH | be held on May 7. The organizations t y othe: " »s of So-|I i meaty ‘ my own eyes.) When, during this} This continual beating was too|opened his collecting tin and used represented include the Y. C. L. a See iecatey Mirits Wiscte the Den rho choy gainers an Sowit | i ey Ribu tas bear castigation, the purgatives took ef-}much for a major of nite Storm 'the money for himself; he had been Zionist Youth Club with six ples - th stage lai eeene ea he Hea ‘ ; wil ‘ i 3. PY, om bas conference is comparable to the Five-Year Plan, when our socialist | nétable contributions to the building |£¢ct, thelr tormenors shrieked with|Troops, so that at last he stamped | arrested and placed with the political the Youth Club of the ys of Kolhozes which has a oon be covered with new up of socialism. laughter. his foot and shouted to his fellow- New inventions by | prisoners. CRUISER SAILORS the Tabor Sports Union, — bated toe eediet whicl sell tactitiiotin at dw sake Other prisoners were forced, after 'Naat# tn front of the prisoners, “That’s} Until late into the night the in- — Re eS a 1€ SV : our | Soviet technicians, and né 5 a AANA A ia “ jured surrounded me and overwhelm- 7 mm ( Teas ee ttes | plendié ur , tt | cos n the realins of medicine od me with their stories; my nerves SHOLt Term forWhites; Hitlerites Move to aaay sat this €a tage ist 0 and 0 sciences, are anounced \ racked to ‘the utmost and I nfae sae os n re % of the spring no volt Rone Rleague Sat LETTER FROM GERMANY TELLS OF psd Monat MEMES Coane | SONOS Ol Natives os Over Peake ioubt about the fact rew turn | structio 1 bright chapters in the. history “Leave him in peace!” someone — rma ir 1 - has been made in Sov culture. | these fo socialist co! f man's efforts to master the grim shouted, and canie up to we. “You; AMSTERDAM, April 13 (By Mail) 0 se hy bibs bi ( On April 19 the total area sown in! struction igthen the forces of nature. Close upon the tri usiasm of our pro under the leadership of our the spring campaign was three times as much as on the same date last vear. Instead of 3,357,700 hectares in 1932, the area sown to April 15 this | year amounts to 10,262,000 hectares. | More Sowing, Better Work These figures tell only half the story. Your correspondent can tes- | tify on the basis of personal observa- tion in the Crimea and the Ukraine to the spirit of optimism prevailing | mong the peasants in the collec- farms number of Kol- | ative toll and « letariat Party Comrade Stalin To the proletari which has accomplished these heroic | victories, these dastardly crimes, aim- ed at stopping the victorious march of the socialist fatherland, will seem insignificant and even contemptible.” Living Standards Rise The first May Day of the second Pyatileti:a will also be characterized our Central Committee, and | TERRIBLE PERSECUTION OF JEWS (The following letter wae written by = Jewish victim of the Nasis who was forced to fles from Germany Into Italy. The date of the letter, April 5, shows that the persecution and torture of Jews in Germany, and particularly of the working class, is still going on in spite of the denials of Hitler and the rest of the Nazi thugs.) . . umph of ice-breuker Sibiriakoy cams the heroic deed of salvaging the ice. breaker Malygin. The Soviet theatre continues to tower over the whole world, adding | to its imposing list of monumental | productions new successes like “In- tervention” and “Mother,” the latter | an adaption of Gorki’s novel. Soviet literature has recently been enriched | | by novels of great calibre such as | “Broken Virgin Soil” and Merano, Italy, April 5, 1933. Neither father or M. will know whether they are able to continue to In Germany conditions are terrikle. Nobody knows what it’s going to | must understand us. We have had | terrible experiences. In my case, for | natance, they .. .” and he thereupon. | began to ‘elate a fresh story. | ‘They had, it is true, lived through jim four or five days what I had to pass through in the space of a few hours; but they had had to experi- | lence it in person, while I only had | to listen to it. | Not one of these workers who had been so inhumanly mishandled, not jone—with a single exception—had be- +~The naval .court-martial yesterday pronounced sentence against four of the mutineers of the cruiser “Zeven | Provincien.” All of the defendants |in the secret trial were Dutch. They were sentenced to terms of imprison~ ment ranging from four to ten months and to dismissal from the navy. | The tactics of the court-martial iceems to be to hand down mild sen~ tences against the Dutch defendants in order to pronounce ex _2mely heavy sentences later on agei*st the BER''N, April 24—The Nazi Pre- mier oi the state of Mecklenberg yes= terday appointed 2 Nazi Commissar in charge of the Protestant churches in the entire state. This marks the first overt step of the Hitler regime to obtain control of the German Lutheran Chureh throughout Ger- many. Today it was announced that Dr. Kapler, head of the Lutheran Church Commission, would meet with Hitler “ ; 7 and theologians to draft a new con~ A great by further improvement in the living } reysky” and others. Nor isthe growth | practice. Notary public will be taken away as well as state representa- |‘T@yed anything; not one of them|native mutineers. ; stitution. for the Protestant Church, | hozes boast a larger sown area, bet~) conditions of the toiling masses. ‘The | of Soviet art and science confined | tions, also the position at the Board of Examination for Lawyers, His po- |SP0ke without hate and contempt of| The Dutch Social-Democratic Party|‘Ccordinating” it with the Nag | |. ter work, better discipline in the | shortage of manufactured goods in |to professionals. Millions of workers | sition, here in M. ig @ regular colony of fuslth : this ‘kind of enemy! not one hal lost }continues to denounoe the mutineers| esime ‘This will further weaken work, and superior quality plowing | common use begins to disappear with | and peasants are attaining a higher | * § Med be nt iienatnd nerve. his faith in the cause for which he|in the most shameless manner. In a and sowing. The meaning of the new | greater quantities of merchandise lecrees and regulations is appreciated | available to the population, The de- by the majority of kolhozniks. The | partment stores tn Moscow advertise smple formula of “he who will not | in their spring sales a large variety work, neither shall he cat” has been | of goods, at prices which have come translated into concrete acts of ef-|down by fifty per cent. Provision liclency and organization. Far from | stores run by factories continue on refusing to report for work, as hap-| the increase and are improving their level of culture, illiteracy has well | From C, L, (E. 8.) we heard that B. M. was forced to carry # sign nigh been stamped out, thousands, of | fF one hour along the Bruhl. Probably he was standing on the B. with workers are adding their names ‘to | ® few other Jews together. At any rate, they were grabbed and forced the list of Soviet inventors, the cir- | to wear an anti-semitic sign for one hour. We believe that the service in culation of books and newspapers | the synagogue was stopped because this happened two weeks ago in D. pec ie re edbiieal and is ‘The younger people were able to flee. The older ones were dragged to axing to:the wtsiost the siready ex~ | @ public building and each one of them were forced to drink a half liter had been made to suffer so terribly, At midday on the 11th of March I was called from the cell and in- formed that I was to be expelled over the frontier. Only for a minute did I return, to fetch my coat, “Red Front,” I said in farewell, and “Red Front,” sixty voices answered me. A the influence of the Nationalist Socialist election meeting in Rotter- dam, the Dutch Social-Democrat Pehl the allies and rivals of the Duys said: z “The ‘Zeven Provincien’. happen- | ;—— ings are quite intolerable, nor would lect Communists a Socialist minister have allowed ty them to happen, A government which for First Time in took any other stand would be sheer ° ° anded capacity of the Soviet paper v ice! 5 ie | ecti pened last year, kolhomniks were anx- |ration of foodstuffs. Barring a industry. ‘The theatres and movies | Ot castor oll. T don’t know whether they were beaten up or not because | the "ANBRlter BEMtiSa: hechad ithe) “the Thieroatiobal. wockieg clan| | en ious to put in’ as many “workdays” | draught, or other natural calamity, | are invariably crowded. we hear so many terrible things ;that we-easily mix it all'up, For. mure | She Snneliek SEMHoes utd commer muse launen A mighty compalan of | | < SABRI, Apel oss étliht aes ag pessible, realizing that their in- | the new harvest bids fair to replenish | reach into the remotest though I know thet the director of the A. D. store, M. A., was dragged fab Well aa a Svar: “Ay. fountain-| protest to save the East Indian vic- | creas of the nationwide municipal come ef st would be propor-/ the supply of grain and other agri- | districts, N along and was brought into a basement where already another Jew was, hes y mate to effort loreover introduction of a ious damage inflicted last year numimum output per field worker per | the kula! in squandering, pillaging ay, has already resulted im raising | and destroying kolhos crops. Already productivity, and eliminating loafing | the new spring justifies the expecta- heir cultural products, and undo the ser= | to things and the re-| immediate boyoott of German goods wm the tob Hone of the Kolhos Congress that | ond Pyatiletke will he selehrated in Be careful whatever you write when you wells te 0. benign even Istter | Or dey ‘of my moner. Thaw I tees |to compel the Hitler regime to conse | TH some tying le penate Ger lee | Give smerne keniticmns wil mawter Wyn | dine Shetek Ciniee sctloeseed be aT, eddoaeown te lemtove mms ed ie the commession of Jeers in Germenn | by} and kindergartens are being estab- kept in prison. lished by the thousands. | They forced A. to cut the heard of the other one and to boat him up, This in brief is the background of | it according tothe ideas of the N. the beating up was not hard enough | toil, struggle and achievement against, | which, the ‘May Day of the nec | 20 {H* N. beat up hoth of them so badly that A. is still in the L. hospital. pen and my knife in his pocket. He travelled where he delivered me over to the officials of the Czech frontier police in seturn for a receipt, and handed with me to Bodenbach, | |tims of Dutch colonial imperialism. | elections indicate that the Com- munist Party has clected munt- cipal councilmen for the first time NEWARK, N. J., April 24.—Tho | Jewish War Veterans of the state of New Jersey yesterday voted for an