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Pablished by the Comprodatly Publishing Os. deity gxoopt Sundey, at 5 E iste st. % Clty, N.Y. Telephone ALgo: “DATWORK. Address and mail ehecks to the Dally Worker, 98 K. isth St., New York, B. ¥ Page Four Filipino People Are | Betrayed by Quezon Aid to Hawes Bill Widespread Demand for Independence Forced Island Legislature to Order Quezon to Oppose Fake Independence Bill Quez Worried Over His United With Aquinaldo, and Makes Only Request for Modifying Bill $5,000,000 Fortune, By ANGEL L. MONDLJAR. Manuel Quezon, President of the Philippine Senate, ived in the United States at the head of a Filipino mi allegedly to oppose the Hare-Hawes-Cutting Philippine Inde- der Act, and is already silently leaving for Paris without [SPARKS| OW that the eye of the Vasko baby IN has ben removed, the capitalist press will have to find something else to divert the minds of the people from their real probiems. | @ENATOR THOMAS says that the Roosevelt inflation pr m is the most important piece of legislation in the last 6,000 | years. Senator Reed is indignant. It |couldn’t be the most important | legislation in six thousand years, | says the Senator, | since the world is jonly 4,000 years old | You may go to the head of the | Sunday School class, Senator. | oe THE needy in Manhattanville, re- ports a New York paper, get le: relief than other sections of the At least 22 per cent of the children are suffering from undernourishment Most of the houses are in poor re- | SUBSCRIPTION Raves: By Mell everywhere: Ons yoor, $6; elx months, $5.50; $ months, $8; 1 montis, Way ch of Manhattan and Bronx, New York City. Foreign seé One year, $9; € months, $5; 7 wonths, $8. Japanese Plot to Seize by Force the Chinese-Eastern R.R. Japanese Army Divisions and War Material Being Rushed Through Manchuria to the Siberian Border; Attacks on Trains Chinese General Announces Japanese With- drawal from Part of Conquered Territory Is to Mobilize for Attack on USSR MOSCOW, April 27.—Dispatches from Khabarovsk, on the | Manchurian border, report a Japanese plot to seize the Soviet- owned Chinese Hastern Railway by armed force. Japanese divisions and huge stocks of war supplies are moving north and east to the Soviet border, dispatches from Saag aca explanation of his action. Quezon did not come to the |pair and have no heat oe ht water.”| Manchuria assert. Japanese® =| United States to campaig z | ‘This section is just a little nor’ ~ dane rishi: ;,, Japanese atmy has transported onel Se aneai iene Act, {sained Dod |of Columbia University, the Cathedral | Consul-General Morishima, in /givision of troops and large quanti. ieee vit pa el at , a2 lof Sant John, the Divine, Rockefel-| Harbin, is the center of the | ties of ammunition into North Man- which was designed by the Osmena Flees Philippines |ler’s Riverside Church, and the Jew-| various acts of sabotage and theft | churia.” aws’ drafters to further pauperize the The Filipino people realize that jish Theological Seminary conspiracy, He has diretced the| ‘This information is borne out by : neople of the Philippines. The Phil- | Osmena ajority leader of the Pi | + id bs “which have recently paralyzed traffic | the sudden retirement of the Japa- ippine Le ure ved Mr. ippine House of Representatives, be- | PR. ROSENBACH, noted collector | om the Chinese Eastern Seven trains |nese invading forces from North | Quezon to go to the t States them to the American imper- | of rare books and manuscripts, is| have been deliberately derailed and | China, retreating back to the Great i] to oppose the Act, under pressure by Hare-Hawes- | permitting his treasures to be ex-| wrecked in this campaign. The Japa~| Wall. As a result, the separatist 1 of the people of the g Bill na fears for his | hibited for the benefit of the unem-| nese Consul-General is also charged Paneer a North ae ea oe Islands. Bpt since he a life as wel tical defeat should “ ” “th hi Sil loyed. with having inspired the threats of | establishment of a new “buffer state” i Islands ; Bre Sane jare go home to the Philippines ‘Our two governments are looking with like purpose and close similarity of method eae diducltics the ore: Bortae in tae Bate eggplant Se eave oileneer | his plan; instead opposing d he therefore has poe his, at the main objective of the conference,’—From Roosevelt-MacDonald Statement. | making! Soviet ni management ae \ hes cn governinents, sabotage t Act, he came out for moderate family to Hong Kong. In the mean- | ! i ge he with having even dictated the actual) of effective resistance to the Japa- a few Filipino mi tiie) Queaon! Lak” GEreiaeee tor GRR | ee ee z “————""_ | 1SHBEL, MacDONALD, daughter of | letters sent by the Manchukuo For-| nese advance in North China is also self, and the American | secret transfer of Ormena’s fortune rs ° I the odious Ramsay, announces) eign Office. illuminated by a statement of a imperialists. This is proven by the | of $12,500,000 to foreign banks. i | seis ing people good. | ag bf eral Yu, Chinése commander in the q tatement issued to the press by Que. | _ Quezon, realizing the loss of his ally abter in tne ts ory @) [thet the rise soeechin people,” PEIPING, April 27.-Ho Ying-| Tientsin area, General Yu said that zon on his landing in New York City | Osmena, has therefore called on Ag- says Ishbel. Ching, Chinese War Minister and|Chiang-Kia-Shek, Chinese generalis- uinaldo to help him in his maneu- | Miss MacDonald is staying at the Commander-in-Chief in North China, simo and head of the Nanking on April 23 Aguinaldo Enlisted by Quezon by publishe me In a statement made before he left M: *. the revolutionary Filipino par dal,” he revealed his ac e sonal fort a tremendou i inducement to io Aguin aldo, noted Filipino guerilla fighter against American troops after the to come to inaldo is also is Spanish-American he United States. anxious to see whether his mone} still safe in the closed Harriman tional Bank in New York. vers to “moderate the bill.” Today in the Philippine Islands public indignation is higher. ing to the left, to the revolution- novement, to Communism. Two ators have just been elected to se by the illegal yezon is thu: facing an extremely hard task in be- traying the cause of independence, owing to the upheaval of the Filipino workers. This is why he has done his double-dealing; while in the Phil- ippines promising to carry out the in- dependence policy of the Filipinos, and as soon as he gets to the United States consulting the Wall Street fin- failure to mislead Aguinaldo’s Influence in the Philippines Since the dawn of the first Philip- dine Republic in 1898 Aguinaldo has real reason why for Paris, abar he Philippines is the | I s now decamp- | enjoyed considerable influence in the military and political life of the Phil- ippine Islands i of his persec- ution of military lea S after the Philippine Revolution. Aguinaldo persecuted Gen. Antonio | ug and | ning the Filipino cause. Se . Faked Philippine Budget Auditors going over the books of Col. Rooseve! Early Fight for Tom Mooney The author of the following ar- 4 Comrade Johnstone, was for many years an active organizer of the Chicago Federation of Labor, | ang took a leading part, together | with William Z. Foster, in organ- izing the Chicago packinghouse workers. Comrade Johnstone was | among the first to join in the fight for the freedom of Tom Mooney. | He is at present the District Or- ganizer of the Communist Party in the Pittsburgh district.—Editor’s Note.) | en aes: By JACK JOHNSTONE. | OR 17 years ever-growing numbers | by the League An unearned crown of militancy, during this period was placed upon | the uneasy heads of Fitzpatrick and| Nockels, dut to their office of presi- | dent and secretary, but, at no time,| did they formulate the policy, the! program or the tactics. This was the} work of Foster and the left wing.| Many. times Fitzpatrick and Nockels | acquiesed In policy what they did not agree with, due to the weight and strength of the left wing, and the growing movement that supported it. Under these circumstances it was quite natural that the rank and file) of the Chicago labor movement was} ‘Trade Union ‘Educational ; of the working class In every country, l except the Soviet Union and caused their defeat, necessitating the organ- izing of the Communist International | Waldorf-Astoria, one of the ritziest | hotels in the country. | Not bad for the daughter of the |leading griduste from the school of | social-fascism. of 8 ECRETARY of the Treasury Woodin, ite greatest Secretary of around which the unity of the work-|the Treasury since Hamilton, is get- ers of the world is now being de-| veloped. All this has developed since the ar- | The prison doors closed on Mooney at, a time when capitalism was in a relatively rest of Tom Mooney. ting an enviable reputation for finan- | cial wisdom. | The other day he appeared before |the Senate Banking Committee and so great was his ignorance about the inflation measures now being passed, strong position. It now finds itself in a rapid process of decay facing on the one hand, a similar situation as it did in 1914 with war as the only solution for the growing imperialist antagonisms; with war for thé redis- that Budget Director Douglas had to answer most of the questions for him. | ay « | Inquiring Reporter of the Daily | News, whose deliberate doctoring | of the answers printed in his col-| | yesterday issued a communique, say-| government, feels the “Communist ing that “confidential information| menace” is more serious than the | states that the Soviet-Japanese dis-| Japanese invasion of North China. pute over the Chiwese Eastern is suf- | Yu added: “The Communists threaten ficiently serious thet armed conflict | Chiang’s capital and seat of power. may be expected at any time. The! Naturally, I understand his position.” NAZI BASE NARROWS WITH CRISIS IN “STEEL HELMETS,” VET GROUP Disaster to German Economy Under Hitler Policies; “Bread and Work” a Fiction tribution of the world already started F ers throughout the world ssed for the freedom of Tom | Mooney and Warren K. Billings until) rallied quickly to the defense of Tom Mooney. | today one does not have to talk much | RANK AND FILE INFLUENCE about whether they are innocent or) Many other instances could be |mentioned where the Chicago Fed- Luna and Gen. Andres Bonifacio, | the Philippine Government have just guilty. | t leader of the Katipuman, a national- | found a discrepancy of over 7,000,000| What does the struggle for |eration of Labor and its two main st revolutionary organization. Apol- | pesos-between the surplus of 2,000,000 | Mooney’s freedom mvolve? Why is | leaders did not always follow the re- actionary part of the A. F. of L. In with Japan in the lead, and on the) urge of mass strikes, revolutionary struggles of the work- other, a rapid uj ers in all countries. ‘Today, the social base for port of capitalism is narrowi change in the relationship of forces umn was exposed by the Daily Worker some weeks ago, seems to be up to his old tricks. In answer to the question put to members of the Roosevelt re-foresta~ the sup-| tion Army, “Would you erlist in the ing. This| regular Army?” the inquiring re- | porter reports an overwhelming ma- BERLIN, April 27.—The break- | the world-wide boycott of German up of the mass basis of Nazi sup-| goods. The Reichsbank gold reserve ort is ft r gccen by the | dropped to only 8 per cent of the cur- |e within the Steel Helmets, | rency circulation of —3,500,000,000 with Col. Duesterberg, vice-chief fo | marks, and all efforts to increase the the Stahlhelm ousted today by | Franz Seldte, commander-in-chief. |. The “coordination” of the Stahl- helm with the Nazi storm troops mario Mabini, Filipino revolutiona: journalist was sentenced to banish- ment in Guam, while Artemio Ricarte, x living in exile in Japan, was banished to Hong Kong. Aguinaldo, Quezon, Osmena and Sandika were personally responsible pesos announced by Col. Roosevelt, |it that many who in the ‘earlier | former Governor-General, before his | period of the Mooney defense gave | retirement, and the actual deficit of |it support such as President John/ 5,000,000 pesos. No official explanation is given for this shortage, and the island govern- ment is trying to hush the matter up. What happened to these 7,000,000 pesos? Did they wander into the pockets of grafting American “ad- ministrators for the frame-up of General Noriel of Cavite, who was sentenced to the gallows. Thus all of these so-called Fitzpatrick and Secretary Ed Nockels | of the Chicago Federation of Labor, and (who still express a verbal sym-| fact the Chicago Federation was for of L., continuously in trouble with Gompers and company and their pol- icy on many questions, including Tom Mooney defense. Now, we see the pathy for Mooney), in practice actu- ally help to keep Mooney in prison? ‘The writer was the organizer of the Chicago Mooney Defense Com- mittee set up shortly after the in- | Chicago Federation of Labor stil) un- ndependen: have hands dictment of Mooney in 1916 and re-| mained as the secretary of that Com- mittee until the First National Con- U.S, AND BRITAIN IN TRADE WAR ON EVE OF ECONOMIC CONFERENCE ference to free Mooney held in Chi- cago about 13 years ago. The writer was also responsible later for getting the confession of perjury from the main witness, John McDc id, and der the leadership of Fitzpatrick and Nockels, who took part in the first free Mooney Conference also held in Chicago, not only refusing to par- ticipate in the present free Tom Mooney Congress, but, on the con-| trary, ‘aligning themselves. with those forces who are now more anxious than ever to keep Mooney in prison. | What has happened between 1920-21 and 1933 that has brought about this and condition$ of struggles affects the Mooney case, as it affects every years the militant center of the A. F.| problem before the working class. FORCED TO SHOW COLORS. We cannot weep over those who place their own personal interest above that of their class, as Fitz- patrick and Nockels have done. They alt have gone back to their spew. ‘Their | (forced to report that the wor! the reforestation camps are leav jority of the young workers as being together delighted with their new- found bliss. Yet a few pages on, the News is ‘kers in ing them every day by the score. You're getting careless, Mr. In- |presages action in the near future |to remove the remaining Nationalist ministers from the Hitler cabinet. | Pee tt BERLIN, April 26—The Agricul-| | tural Council of East Prussia yester- | | | gold reserve have been in vain. The growing unlikelihood that Germany will ever pay the short and jong-term private debts owed foreign | investors has just about ruined all chances of Germany’s tapping for- eign credit sources. Even the New York Times corres- pondent in Berlin asks: “What about internal economics? The Nazi prom- ise was work and bread for all; how | day requested incellor Hitler to oust Dr. Hugenbersg, Nationalist Min- | is it to be kept?” He concludes quiring Reporter. Par | | ister of Economics and Agriculture, | | and put a Nazi in his place. progressive cloak was never more! , py MELLON’S banks have passed | Hugenberg’s position has been fur- | open betrayal by those who were Growing Rivalry Gives the Lie to Pious “Good was one of those who took McDonald among the first to come to Mooney’s| than a cover for their own advance- ment. As “progressives” they had a tacit if not a written agreement not to interfere internally with the pow- erful unions headed by racketeers in| the organizations of the street car- men, building trades, printing trades, teamsters, etc., in Chicago. As long| as they were able to do this, they) could be progressive in words and, resolutions proclaiming their sup- elt administration port of the Roosev That just about ther weakened by the Nationalist or- | ganization’s decision in Brunswick to) join the Nazi Party in a body. ‘The economic situation is far from} completes the list. | First it was Du- bright. Exports were very low in} April figures are ex- | “Miracles do occur occasionally. One may save Nazi economics, but » real *- miracle will be needed ..” Unem~ ployment is not diminishing, foreign orders. are being cancelled by the thousands, and the German masses are beginning to see that the Nazi “Promised Land,” the paradise of the “Third Reich,” is only @ specious mir~ Pont and Raskob.| March, and thi Then Ww Charles Schwab | pected to be catastrophic, reflecting age. and Melvin Tay- | lor of the Steel Will” Speeches of MacDonald WASHINGTON, April 27.—As Premier MacDonald leaves for England, issuing optimistic reports about good will between the United States and Britain, news reporis of developments which indicate the growing intensity of the struggle between Great Britain and the United States for markets |of the most important committees in| free 8 class war prisoner. In both to San Francisco in 1921 to tell his Then story to the Grand Jury. THE EARLY FIGHT FOR MOONEY ‘The Chicago Mooney Defense Com- | mittee in the early years was one) the country, second only to the Com- | continue to arrive. : ; mittee set up at the coast, by Bob| News reports coming in from South American markets indicate that | Minor and his very few courageous | developments there are leading to a @— batile al between the United gepreciated sterling gives her. States and Britain for the markets} Ip these international struggles for of the leading South American coun- tries. For example, the most recent com- parative figures published by the Commerce Department show that the United States exports to Argentina have far outdistanced the exports of Br to that country. Of the to- United Britain on the other hand. passed the United States as a cus- tomer, buying more than three times the smount of Argentine goods bought by Britain. Since leaving the gold standard, ain has her position in he South narkets. The United S off the gold standard, is prep: mugele with Bri 6s, America Fights for Canadian Markets The arrival of Premier Bennet of Canada, for discussions with Roo- sevelt are part of the struggle be- tween the United States and Britain for markets. Since the Ottawa Agreement of last September, Amer- {ean exports to Canada have declined while Great Britain has been getting a lion share of the Canadian mark- et. The supposed advantage to Can- ada in the form of large British pur- chas of Canadian manufactures have not materialized. n for these m Canada is America’s. second larg-| markets, Roosevelt, and Great Britain are using as weapons the whole ques- tion of war debts. Neville Chamberlain, Secretary of| cago Federation of Labor, especially, | patrick, the British Exchequer, has announced headed at that time by John Fitz-| frowned upon and tried to defeat all the British budget contains no| petrick and Ed Nockels. They gave| efforts at mass pressure, in spite of ision for the next war debt pay- t to Americ This is, obviously, challenge to the United States, in- cating that Britain expects trade concessions, On the other hand, Roosevelt is holding the threat of debt payments over European $ as a trump card in his man- euvering for trade advantages for American imperialism. FRENCH INFLATION DEMAND GROWING Finance MinisterHints Devaluated Franc | PARIS, April 27.—Despite the con- fident assertions of leading French | capitalists that France would con- | tinue on the gold standard in spite of |what Britain or America might do, men the forces for inflation in France are | steadily gaining ground. Finance Minister Georges Bonet has modified the previous stand of the govern- ment against inflation by his state- capitalism has large investments a ment that France is in favor of stable Canadian industry and mines, Ben-|CUrrency, even if it is inflated. He net comes to the United States in a|thus admits that inflation has be- frank attempt to restore by new trade |Come @ possibility in France. agreements with Roosevelt some of} Meanwhile, the French press is the lost business between the two) Steadily increasing the demand for countries, {some revaluation of the franc in Such trade agreements between|order to meet the gold embargo on est customer. In addition, American | policies for the Chicago Federation. | 1916-1933 colleagues. The latter later merged with the Tom Mooney Defense Com- mittee. if | through the long years of Mooney defense in a period of war hysteria? There sre two phases to the Mooney case: The first, to prove that Be was framed up and that he was convicted because he was a loyal fighter for his class; and second, to) phases, the same general tactics had | to be pursued—mass pressure of the working class. It can be sald right here that all defense, there were always two play with the left wing in the Fed-) eration to their hearts’ content. The)! left wing, however, became stronger, | penetrating the most reactionary of | these unions with amalgamation, labor party, strikes, Sacco-Vanzetti, Tom Mooney, etc. tion of struggle; the middle road was | Class collabora- | Ho ‘Trust. was J. P. Morgan. And now it is old | Andy, one of the} | richest industrial barons in the world. | Andy played a big part in the jover Hunger program. He finds it SOCIALIST LEADERS TRAVEL ABROAD S HITLER AGENTS; OTHERS QUIT ' Heroic Workers Defeat Fascists While the | | impossible. It became more difficult) {4 his liking. Roosevelt's Hunger program equally | to straddle. Tt was either to the) Socialists Betray Struggle left or to the right. i ‘They knew where their bread was’ buttered and they crawled back to. the camp of the enemy, a camp that | “The Chicago Mooney Congress, April 30 to May 2, will be a big step toward my freedom. PRAGUE, April 27.—Otto Wels and Friedrich Stampfer, two of the fore- '—Tom Mooney. | most leaders of the German Social scribed in “Barricades in Berlin,” has followed Otto Braun in resigning his Reichstag seat. The’ militancy and strength of the} groups, two ideas of defense: the Chicago Committee was made much} purely legal method, and the other, easier to develop by the ready and/the necessary legal methods fortified willing support given it by the Chi-/| by mass pressure. At all times, Fitz- Nockels and company ready support to the Mooney fight! the fact (and it was conceded even because of mass pressure, providing | by them) that the demonstration of | it remained strictly within the limits|the Russian workers before the| of the law. American Embassy in St. Petersburg During this entire period William | was the outstanding act of class soli- Z. Foster—already then a nationally-'darity that compelled President Wil- known labor organizer—exercised a son to demand a commutation of strong influence in shaping militant | Mooney’s death sentence. It was with the help of the Chicago, Many things have happened since Federation of Labor, for example,| Mooney was convicted; and the that the Mooney defense was able| changing in the forces in the struggle to expose Oxman through his notori-| for the freedom of Tom Mooney, re- ous letters to Regal. It was the Chi-| flect the changes in the character of | cago Federation of Labor that sent | the working class struggles for which the photo of John McDonald) Tom Mooney went to prison. In this! throughout the east that loccted Mc-| respect, the miniature rebellion led| Donald in Trenton, New Jersey. It they had never really left. WENT BACK HOME. ‘They now have called upon the| locals unions affiliated to the Fed- | eration not to support tl Mooney Congress. This is the final) and open admission that they prefer Mooney in prison than Mooney out. Zt is more than this, they now un-| cipal elections in Innsbruck, capital | derstand more clearly what the fight) city of the Tyrol, the Nazis topped | | the poll with 15,000 votes, to 9,000 for | to free Mooney is all about. ™ | Pan-German Fascists Beat Pro-lItalians in Austrian Ballot he Free | VIENNA, April 24—In the muni- Tt means a fight against wage cuts, | the Christian Socialists and’10,000 for against unemployment, against forced | the Social-Democrats. labor, against imperialist wars, for | Unemployed insurance, for the free- dom of the Scottsboro boys fascism, against police terror. did not know in the beginning that this i what the struggle freedom of Mooney meant. |afraid of the struggle. They shrink) before the aroused masses. SERVE POLITICAL REACTION. the pro-German Fwist wing in Au- stria over the pro-Italian Fascist wing headed by Chancellor Dollfuss , against They ee the! is to. render more difficult the col- | from the Woodworkers’ International. ey are | jaboration of Fascist Germany with} The Social-Democratic deputy, | Pascist Italy in the diplomatic secret | Grzesinski, former Prussian Police negotiations now in progress for the imperialist re-division of Ewrope. This election is a partial victory for | torious slogan at the last Leipzig Christian Social Party. Its tendency | Democracy, are negotiating with Dr. | Czech and Siegfried Taub, Czech So- | cialist officials, trying to get them to | stop printing news of Hitlerite atroci- | ties in the Prague “Sozialdemokrat,” | Socialist central organ. This is their | loyal fulfillment of the pledge given the Nazis that the German Socialists would endeavor to stop all anti-Hitler news in foreign Socialist newspapers. ele | | BERLIN, April 27.—Tarnow, chair- | man of the reformist German Wood- workers’ Union, who coined the no-/ | Convention of the Social Democracy, | | that “the Socialists must be the doc- ’ | tous of sick capitalism,” has followed | Otto Wels’ example and resigned | Minister and responsible for the May | Day, 1929, bloodbath in Berlin de- These new incidents show the “progress” of the German Socialista in fitting themselves into the Pitlex Fascist State. ° REICHENBERG, Czechoslovakia. Nazi storm troops occupied the trade union headquarters in Riesa, Saxony, ‘Thousands of workers then marched in front of the building day after day, forcing the storm troops to withdraw, with the police powerless to inter- fere, A conference of shop council« lors unanimously voted to strike at once if the storm troops should ever occupy the trade union building again. Serious pitched battles, with guns | and revolvers used on both sides, have occurred in Dresden, Zwickau and ‘Wurzen between workers and storm troops when the latter tried to seize the People’s Houses and trade union buildings. was primarily through the Chicago} Federation that Mooney was gotten} to prepare the confession of McDon- ald and to pay the expenses to take McDonald to the coast and back. I remember when John 8B. Fry, then editor of the Molders’ Journal, came through Chicago in 1918 and tried to convince Nockels that Mooney was guilty and Nockels ordered him out of _the office of the C. F. of L. Foster's entrance into the Chicago Federation of Labor as @ delegate and as an active leading force in the by Fitzpatrick and Nockels against the Gompers reactionary bureaucracy has long been squelched. Gompey saw to this and put it very bh to Fitzpatrick and Nockels: either they quit “playing around with the reds” or else someone would take their places as president and secre~ tary of the Chicago Federation Labor, So they quit. It was not difficult for them to quit. Their struggle against the re- actionary and crooked Skinny Mad-| den machine that ruled Chi- cago with an iron hand pushed them oft| served their purpose to try and get Chicago iabor movement about 1912} up as progressives. They tried to They could not kill the fighting, spirit of Mooney or break his class) loyalty. Fitzpatrick and Nockels de-/ veloped with the political reaction and they use the waning prestige that their short adventure into “pro-~ gressive” politics gave them to strengthen political reaction. It once ‘Tom Mooney out, it now serves their purpose to keep Tom Mooney in. The John B. Frys, Fitzpatricks and Nockels can look down all the crooked political paths that they have tra~ yelled since Tom Mooney was ar- rested into each other's eyes and un- Armored Cars in Vienna Pro-Italian Faction Threatens Force to Block Austrian Nazis VIENNA, April 25.—Karl Vaugoin, Christian Social Minister of War, threatened that the Austrian Army would be “resolutely employed” against the Nazi forces in Austria as well as against the Socialists, in a public address yesterday. Vaugoin’s party, which is wholly a had a profound effect not only on| continue in this role until a strong’ the Chicago labor movement, but on | left wing under the leadership of the the labor movement throughout the |'Trade Union Educational League was country, From then until 1925, the| formed in the Federation that de- Chicago Federation of Labor, under| manded action and not merely lip the leadership of Foster and the left} service. wing that organized around him, be- came the recognized ideological leader in the many militant, bitter) Today, the conditions of the work- ing class that Mooney fought ageinst are s thousand times worse. A new derstand each other perfectly. Their interest is not with Mooney or what Mooney symbolizes; their interest lies with the Fickerts, the Swansons, the Bradys and the corporate interests that tried to murder Mooney and are still determined to keep him in prison. dominated by Italian influence, has mobilized all the country’s armed forces to prevent a putsch that “would reduce Austria to » The Christian Social government has let it be known that it will dis- arm the Styrian Heimwehr (the Christian Social private army) strike battles that developed in that/| alignment in class forces has taken recently announced that they which. would, Canada and the United States will) sterling and the dollar, naturally be to the disadvantage of Revenue Declines Great Britain. Britain Prepares tor Money Battle Coincident with these cievelop- ments, Great Britain is trying to en nue and the increase in the gineer financial agreements with expenses For the France whereby Great Britain’s fin-|monihs of 1933, tax collections total- | ancial power is strengthened. Injled 7,900,000,000 frances as against | agreement with France, Great Brit-|8,500,000,000 francs for the first quar- ain is attempting to maneuver into|er last year. Collections for March euch position that she will be able/were 84,000,000,000 less than last bud get oreserving trade Mi | | French Reverme Servi | bal One of the forces making for {n- ene ion in France is the decline in the! “ L i first. three | SUP period throughout the country. place and ig still rapidly changing During these years it was the Chi-| today. The Soviet Union has been n created: out of capitalist chaos and) vs, anarchy since the prison doors closed | -|on Mooney. Fascist terror and mili- | ALF ready to Japanese Steamer at N.Y. for War Material NEW YORK.—Marine Workers In- dustrial Union has discovered that henceforth co-operate with the An- strlan Nazis, OUSTED CONPUCTORS INVITED TO MOSCOW, The national railroad strike, the Karu Maru, Japanese steamer, is MOSCOW, ‘April 27.—The Mos- j tary dictatorships are established in} | number of countries. The cowardly of the Socialist Interna~ the national miners’ strike and many other strikes, were deserted and be-~| betrayal trayed by them. The organizing of tHe stockyards, the stee! strike, and many other major campaigns, sma- nated from the Chicago Federation brutally and more frankly after the war in # whole series of betrayals the imperidtiee wag, spltt the rumks in| home the mass strikes and revolutionary union's to keep the dolar up et will, thus/March, it was ennounced by the/of Labor, under the leadership of struggles that followed the ending of loading scrap iron for munition man- ufacture at Pier 3, Eric Basin, Brook- tional in 1914, continued even more | lyn. cow Philharmonic Orchestra has in- vited Otte Klemperer and Bruno Walter, an conductors dismis- 4A ] (