The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 3, 1933, Page 5

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Page rive Parade on May 1 lazing With Lights, Red Flags As Million | Mescow Bl Cheer Stalin; Hail ee - Red Army, Navy; | a ged Machinery Exhibit , 2 Bee | ABOUT BLOW AT USSR |Throws Responsibility |\for Cutting Chinese ‘Eastern on Manchukuo BACKS UP PUPPET STATE Hitler’s Forced Labor Army | Red Square, Banners Proclaim in Dozen| Languages: “Proletarians of the World, | March Under the Banner of Leninist Communist International” | By N. BUCHWALD. (Moscow Correspondent of the Daily Worker.) | MOSCOW, May 1. (Delayed)—As the Kremlin clock-| ‘ower chimed ten this morning, the Kremlin gates opened and | Comrade Voroshilov, Red Army commander-in-chief, cantered | out on herseback amid tremendous cheering from the Red Army and: Navy ranks assembled in Red Square. Thus, to the playing-of the Internationale by massed bands of 1,000 pieces, Moscow's’ May Day celebration opened, but from 7 a. m. on} isis ~ Another “Workers’ World” The rs heading Denies Sending Troops letin of the working class n ‘and country 2K JOINT STRUG ..” ‘But Then Sends More ct [coi aay = nnmien ne we- GERMAN COMMUNIST trolled 100 per cent by Japanese ad-| M A y 1 it A N ] F ESTO read visors and a Japanese army staff in| Manchuria, the Japanese foreign of- fice professes that Japan is not a HABE E : |party to the serious dispute th BERLIN, May 2—On workers had been gathering in all parts of the city for the} \ Swann and Ramecetaent oe the of the Commun: international workers’ festi 6 ee as eg ea aa “ | Chinese Hastern Railway. pd the ers { Oe : f qui Fe So & = 7 ‘ e FB He eis a i “The eyes of the | Moscow's population W458) yead in a dozen different I*nguages: : PB eA ce he ms ae ree German proj } afoot early this. morning al-|“Proletariens of the World! March f *the 1924 agreement regulating the “Class co } though it had gone to bed very late| Under the banner of the Leninist | uw er nnoUNnCces orce Or: {management of the railway should} leaders of the j the night before, when the whole | Communist International! ‘ i >] |be revised to give Manchukuo greater, internation j population was im the streets admir- | Slogans Greet Foreign Communists. % omer . th 1 aca ‘ rig ‘ control.” Japanese officials suggest tween the ext { ing the’ decorations throughout the | SOW AS sa SIGE eae WOU) a that “Manchukuo may close the line city showing the toilers’ achievements | be shouted: Greetings to the workers | pe t | to Russian through traffic pending a veached thi j and pat Ay lof Britain sa ate Communist el es nion ed uar ers | satisfactory answer,” Le Fm ap i sah F i |Party.” “Long live the Communist aaa? Sot J denials of tr ove- Pee tagis ‘ Moscow Allaze With Lights. } » Sce-eurqeaues ‘apanese deni: of troop move fascists, the i | Party of France! | : ae \ |ments toward the Soviet border in|’ fascig da we Oe ae ‘and every | aa ess, Be Od ie ners All Union Officials : : Manchuria are exposed as a sham Basag rik ye oe 4 surged into quare with their | s i 4 L J by news arriving from Mongolia of " he ini pee ee tar Pht eee bands and banners from all districts | Thruout Ger many st the Japanese occupation of the city, sam fe pipes B pig oayp stata ‘Theatre Square had a mammoth of Moscow. One striking feature was | Are Arrested of Dolon-Nor. The seizure of > many factories carrying high poles | model of a looming mill, which ap- | bearing portraits of their bert shock- peared to be working through the The proletarian dictator democracy of the work the only re Dolon-Nor cuts the Urga Railway, z and the t HIS PLAN FOR SLAVERY OF WORKERS, Barat oe t EROS Sel CE TN which furnishes direct communica- | “You are asking the question: Where is way to work, bread, lib- use of cunh'ing lighting devices. The Ligeia sare i jloegde ps go | dans : fopid ee BERLIN, May 2.—In Hitler's May First speech before a huge crowd on | Norn ee erin etic eerie | erty and Socialism? Hitler who promised all masses, give Opposite ‘side of the square was Oc-| Ponti” with the clenched fist of the | union headquarters throughout | Tempelhof Field, he combined glittering generalities with the announce- | dispatches from Chinwangtao report| YoU the answer: Wait er four years! starve, you cupied by. giant tractors climbing UP |.Gorman revolutionary workers. Oth-| Germany today Trale urine cere | ment of compulsory manual labor for all male citizens. Another point in| that another brigade of Japanese| AFe persecute tortured. The nothing but an indlined plane. ers carried samples of their work, | ccymany today. Trade union offi-| his announced program of fascist aid to capitalism was the abolition of all | troops has passed the Great Wall en | Scorn for yow ition of taxes on Near. the Pushkin statue, where | Which they proudly carried in the | cials ‘Were arrested throughout the | collective wage agreements in force between the trade unions and German | route to Mukden, and reliable advices; ©OSumers, but o: e tax on automobiles, the offices- of the great Newspapers | procession as proof that they were | country. employers. --———- ~————~| indicate that all available Japanese, ‘ise in the price of m at the door and unem- ») are locaied, a giant printing Press | Going their part to ensure that the| Storm troopers decupiéd the! Hitler said that- the forced ae worse” under the influence of poli-| troops are being concentrated in | Ployment increases in oe | gave information on the circulation | s.cond-Five-Year-Plan will mean | premises of the German’: labor) Pian Will be carried into. execution tical insecurit | Northern Manchuria, “All Germany is to be a penitentiary. Hitler's terror against y { | and influence of the Soviet press) Guslitative as well as quantitative | bank, -wher ae ise WF before the end of 1933. The Nazi| Fear Financial Panie | only a preparation for a new imperialist slaughter in whieh you district by district. improvement of prodwetion. 2 where moss ade Union hres gd announced that Hitler| Nearly all the German pres is pub- for German investors.” It is obvious that all German newspapers have re-| ARGENTINE ™ ADE be driven to the sham only real fatherland, the Soviet Union. “Worse then in 1924, the leaders of the Socialist Party and th ss to conclude an alliance w: orking class. Wels, the Chairman pf ; i {funds are deposited. eY, ‘Street of Satire.” |" cglear alter Hone Ene te hae is. are deposited. Robert Ley One, street, Kuznetzky Most, was | ee Mose | Nazi eee: Of Satire” for the |5°5 marched through the square, | ernie “trent lied | Three o'clock, four o'clock, five 0'- | oes , with every window filled clock—they still poured in. Almost | ' with, glant reproductions of satirical | corainiy six and seven o'clock would | of world imperi Would give the details of his widely) advertised “Four Year Plan” which) he proclaimed when he took office. | But even bourgeois foreign —cor- Reichstag deputy, was in| charge of the offensive against the | trade unions. ceived orders from the government to deadly enem All trade union newspapers and thé*Socialist Party, has left th melding th f respondents were forced to admit the) calm the people and avoid a financial | bn poss he aA capers peta og bin poe 0 cartoons, "s Sine! s ey mous hardly see the end of the parade.| publications have boen placed un-|“meagerness of Hitler's economic] panic. An interesting commentary on | ES ow are leaving Amsterdam Internationa’ e ‘Iron Front’ has “Pyavda cartoon depicting Litvinov i| eelaesha aemaasiek ha Neri | Program.” the.inflation policy of the Reichsbank ‘ oy ae .| voluntarily dissolved, and your trade unions which you built up for years tehing the Die-Hards: “U. 8. 5. R.| As I left the square before the end | der Hitlerite supervision, The Nazi | Pros policy Roosev elt Str ives for | ‘ * ° i i 2 e ichsdruckerei ] under heay: crifices, @ulalte dées ;of the demonstration I found the) factory organ will become the of- No Enthusiasm is that the Reichsdruckerei (where ler heavy sacrifices, n't spel Mexico.” ions" Aiertrayed ‘the struggle Jagainst such enemies as kulaks, bur- jeauerats, drunkards, loafers, and so forth. + At midnight, Moscow was as light as midday, ‘revealing how completely the Metropolitan-Vickers wreckers failed im their attempts to destroy ers early afoot everywhere. By eight o'clock the road in front of the great Serp I Molot factory was impassable. whole city covered with winding | | Snakes of columns of demonstrators marching to and from Red Square. | | The truly international proletarian | | character of the whole demonstra- | tion was typified in Voroshilov’s speech, in which he extended grect- ings to the Red Army and to the workers, peasants and toilers of the ficial ‘newspaper | of the Federation of Labor. The Nazis also seized all the consumers’ co-operatives of - the working class, who have a tremen- dous network of stores and fac- tories spread all over Germany. German Socialist ‘trade union leaders with Hitler for the “peaceful” incorpo- ration of the German trade unions must always remember that they serve the workers’ cause. He then Hitler spoke of “a giant program roquiring willions of marks” for road construction and other public works, | but gave, mo indication of where the money for this visionary project was to be found. Hitler's speech evoked | but little enthusiasm among his | hearers, although he endeavored to! | to the unemployed.” That was Hit-| | ler's contribution to the problem of German currency is printed) has fired 's and is hiring Nazis Anti-British Pact , , to ensure secrecy) WasHINGTON, May 2.~Another| regarding its operations. : phase of the world-wide conflict be- ; Herr Poensgen, one of the heads Of tween the United States and Eng- the Steel Trust states: “We are quite|/tand, involving trade relations with bewildered at the turn of events. If\the ‘Argentine republic, was reached | it goes on like this, then we are driv-| today in the Roosevelt conferences. Little Chance. of Suceess::: During that period, the Argentine | fascist regime has failed to outline} any definite economic program. He! are to be sold root and branch to Hitler the way to Soci: capitulate, the o: fascist. bloodhour red banner of pr Day, , except the only Party whict did not and will never surrender to Party which despite all terror will lift ism higher than ever on this May great trial of strength between the d:t- tator i of Hitler and Goering and the unconquered giants of the CG hot e L 8 se Bent ical | i vorth | ™@n proletariat. The world must know that the German working class the efficiency of Moscow's power | Soviet Union and the whole world.| Fellows Socielist Treachery | rouse chauvinist nationalism against) (26, ,Owsnds, Cconomic and political) Mere is at stake trade once worth has not been defeated. . | Stations. - « He reminded the Red Ar ny ho:This »mew Nazi-vonslaughtis® a | e.Fest, of the world, The ‘fascist | es AE | States, most of which has, during the “The Communi calls to you: Mass strikes on May First, Free | An early:morning tour of the out-|tnar may Day wasa festitat of is. |-asquet=to hi satiath rthe} Shancellor made a pathetic appeal-to) Even the.New. York Times corres- | ie Pt Neat" one to, Britain, Streets for thé revolutionar: demonstrations of the anti-fascist skiris of Moscow showed the work- | ternational significance and that they | Soviet the negotiations’ of ‘the | German. business men “to give work| Pondent in Berlin admits that the|?' Q : _ Proletariat, strikes and dem subjugation. “Unite for the fi s against apitalist exploitation and 2 F over all barriers of pariiés " . t | continues, “Marshall music and end- | ruling class, leading an independent) ang organizations under the Red Flag strugele. Wi : called ie yoube sailors es teil Gerais | unemployment. arading “wety ry re-|political existence, has been able to “Ure aed. Poti, eke atnening ink Shp ete se. apace Chilaren Were | mobilizing “in the peat after him the oath of allegiance | int the fascist regime. The nego-| 1 tne meanwhile, Getmany’s eco-| 2% parading serve temporary re- political existence, has been able, to Unemployed, you are starving while all the store houses are full school playgrounds, while nurses | t» the workers’ state which they did | ‘tions apparently were not mov- | nomic position grows-worse and worse | Wire » but. the. e ines D0" waen Bridish and: Asnerican. antago-|. eb! for an inc ment relief, open the storehouses ; were gathering outside the hospitals. | enthusiastically. He concluded: | 78 fast enough for the Nazis, and/ ander the Fascist regime. Th e| 2@5t. Ultimately, that basic ea Mek Aa wi. cant Aegean Waal “Fellow workers in the trade unions! Deiend your unions which you ‘a Factories Show Exhibit. “Long -live the World- Revolution!” | they summarily seized’ tontrol of | monthly bulletin ofthe Deutsche | #ssue must be met with a satisfactory | Hiss. ereated for the class strugek / dar every factory there were mo- dels and’ charts showing the nature the trade union machinery. The fascists, aided” and ‘abetted Mass games, dancing, and physi- cal culture exercises were organized | Bank admits that a number of in-| } dustries* show marked decreases in! ‘ - a gained more favorable conditions | SCOR e: PARE: A. WPRBe Or) oe England while economie. and) which .is in sight.” and not to make alliances with 1 Defend your militant functionaries and fa employ- ers. tory councils! hence political relationships with the | “White collar and inte: ual wo! ! Fight together with us against of the faetery’s work and the extent | in alt of ft hak Gclaat inact val | Production “in consequence of recent No Program es have become strained, ™edieval cultural barbar of its fulfilment of the Plan. The | gosonctretne role ed en ed | Perso amiss Mackin sod Belirelt Railtainavenberctuinataevigninae-|. He.cadmite ‘tha np “progress is| 7" ih Bega ae “Poor peasants, fr m the sherifls of the ‘Third Heich’ have great Amo-factory had a’ show of its | Square. | OF the . workers’. etruggles, wey | 1 eo aoce tenis Bastern Asia have) being made inside Germany toward sme vu-| ‘KR away the last id last pig, do not pay a penny of taxes to'the products: fine cars, motor trucks, bi- ee ES | seize the machinery of the trade| oon wholly suspended, The electrical | the fulfillment of the crucial promise| , During this time the try ingen fascist, dictator: @ in your hands! cycies, ete nearby. Col. Robins Impressed by Red Army, | Uions, but this does not mean that | ingustry complains bitterly of stag-| of better times. ‘The unemployment | ing, class hag tied, as the Majo! “Only ma the fascist. dictat just as they Sagenry oe eer agen | Colonel Raymond Robins, who the fighting spirit of ‘the German | nation. The orders from the State| figures show a slight decrease, but) Ro bs ’} smashed Kapp and C: he Berlin tr strike broke the Von ng fore n o’cloc! strucl be if every inch, of space available for spectators in Red Square had been taken. The spectators consisted working class is broken. Strikes are taking place all aver Germany everyday and the’ revolutionary | watched the giant May Day parade in Red Square, described the dem- onstration as highly impressive. | railways and the Post Office about) which there had been much publicit; Pare stated to have been a thorough) this is illusory.” | tens of thousands of workers impris-| oned in concentration camps are not Chile)-—-to form an economic and po- He points out that/jitical alliance against the United |States high tariffs which bar prod- Papen cabinet. “Organize armed mass sel strations, of your life and tection of your demon- ne bloody fascist pro- |ucts of those countries. | iat “will fi ; : <i uae ‘ | yoeations of ihe storm troops a ‘ i “The Red Army,” he said, “appears | German proletariat will fight on, | disappointment. The cotton industry| listed as unemployed, while the) The Argentine delegates, Thomas | ph aa Ei ek ist Party G . Rae ee ee reer of the Soviet {Me to be a powerful arm for the/ and’ yetonquer the, trade uitions | reports that business, which had been | thousands of revolutionary workers|Le Breton, the Argentine ambassador| | “ely around the banner of the ¢ hist Party of Germanys tae Re eee eats or te reoviet | defense of Soviet territory.” —- for the class struggle, ‘yery dull before, has now grown| and Jews thrown out of employment) to France who is the envoy to Roose-| 10m vanguard of the proletarian revolution nion ..2 Moscow. . f } workers won't watch demonstrations ~they march in them. | Among ‘the interested spectators | were the niembers of the diplomatic corps of thé imperialist. powers and | their military attaches, who doubt- less found much to give them food | for thought The place of honor was assigned to workers’ delegations from abroad, including a British delega- have had their places taken by Nazi | workers whose names have heen ‘stricken from the unemployment rolls./ton, are particularly enraged at the) He concludes significantly “Then the| barring of frozen meat from their “taut easy no pang rene fot ane mown deen STRUGGLE TQ RELEASE THAELMANN ano | Spread foot and mouth disease, This ’ 4 . | “Industry is certainly not picking |? regarded as an attempt to carry Ny} , . up thus far. Factory chimneys’ are | on’ an international campaign to. ~ still smokeless and | machinery still| ‘ |frighten buyers of the Argentine! stands idle. Empty buildings cannot | product. It is pointed out that the pay taxes for long. Closed industries velt’s parleys, and Felipe Espil, the Argentine ambassador to . Washing- | GERMAN COMMUNISTS CALL TO MORE os Soviet F actory at Work (By An American Worker) | questions about these matters; (Continued from Yesterday.) | Tr | nify . these. difficulties, and shout "The factory, you see, the country, | from the housetops that they will not | May Day Slogan: Against Fascist Murdér . The workers’ that it was capable of defending it- tion. Red Army Parades. The first part of the demonstra- tion was a parade of the armed workers .and. peasanis of the Army, Navy and,.Air Forces plus large con- tingents of armed factory workers, As yank, after yank marched by— veterans of the civil war, young Komsomols,,, factory workers shoul- dering their rifles, highly trained troops of famous proletarian di- visions with. steel helmets and bay- onets at the charge position, sailors from Kronstadt, frontiersmen from the furthest outposts of the Soviet Union, flying pilots who only re- cently left“the factory bench—one realized that here was a nation that didn’t fear arming its toilers. The march past of the troops was reget bya parade of cavalry un- its, followed in ttirn by a magnifi- cent parade of mechanized units em- bracing every conceivable form of mechanized’ weapons, including 500 eight-wheeled tanks and new twelve-’ wheel highspeed tanks. Airplane# Drone Over Square. , Overhea@:in /perfect formation there squadron after squadron of air- planes, bombers and scouts, mono- planes and biplanes, dazzling all by their close: formation and the skill with which they were maneuvred. state demonstrated against capitalist aggression, differentiated this from mili- tary spectacles in the capitalist world was the internal nature of the affair, The Red Army is re- not only as the defender of ‘Soviet. resi saat base aggression, but as the friend o: tollers of all countries, 's Workers March. When the display of the Red fight- ing forces “finished there started the great march of the Moscow workers. A striking feature of the demonstra- tion was the international character of its Everywhere one read and heard Workers shout: “Fraternal #8 4t their plant means being concerned The leading comrades in the fac- tory, however, are not entirely satis- fied with what has been accom- plished in improving the material and cultural conditions of the work- ers. As yet, they explain, not all workers can live in the factory apart- ‘ment: houses because there are not at this time sufficient rooms. This means that it is necessary to build more houses. It is necessary, they point out, further to increase the earnings of the workers, which are now on an average of 200 rubles per month, z (It must be remembered. that, beside the money wage, there is, closely interconnected with it, a “so- cial wage”—social insurance, cultural provisions, housing, co-operatives with special low prices, vacations, ete—which usually equals or ex- ceeds the money wage.) The cultural life, the comrades explain, must be even more greatly improved. The material and cultural condi- tions of the workers in the Soviet Union are always kept in the fore- front. Improvements are daily being made. But the January Plenum has laid special stress on this point. De- cisions are taken here very seriously, and are put into effect, The comrades in the leadership of the plant, there- fore, pay the strictest attention. to the carrying out of this decision to- gether with the others. They express assurednegs that within a short time the requirements of the Plenum re- garding this issue will not only be fulfilled but exceeded, What is the attitude of the workers regarding the execution of the deci- sions, regarding the entire work and life of the factory? It is a well of enthusiasm, that flows from a deep understanding of the decisions of the January Plenum and the problems confronting the country. The workers know and feel that the country and the plant are theirs, Being concerned about the problems facing the country and about their own lives, their own well- fo the revolutionary work- % ! Long live Comrade ‘such answers as the following to this is our factory, our country, our life. Why, if we raise the produc- tivity, if we cut the cost of produc- tion, when we improve the quality of our products, 80 much do we help to build our socialist country; so much do we enrich our own lives, our material and cultural conditions. Of course, we are- most interested in carrying out the decisions of the January Plenum, and We are doing our utmost to accomplish it as quick- ly and in fhe shortest way possible.” Such are the answers one gets ev- evywhere in the factory, The workers do not hide the facts which show that. everything is not yet perfect. “But. these,” they explain, “are our problems, and we will solve them by building up our socialist country.” The workers feel and. deeply re- spect. the iron leadership of the Bol- shevik Party in the country as a whole, and in the plant. They see in the Party the only leadership that was capable of achieving the tre- mendous successes in the first Five Year Plan. They know that only by following the leadership of the Len- inist Party can the second Five Year Plan be fulfilled. This is why the January Plenum decisions are louked upon by the workers as irdn rules to be observed and carried through in life. This is why there is such a great determina- tion on the part of the workers in the plant to carry through the Jan- uary Plenum decisions. AM) We have gone into detailed exami- nation of the problems and hard- ships confronting the factory on the road to reconstruction, of contribut- ing its share towards the building of Socialism. We did this because the problems and hardghips confronting this factory are characteristic of the country as a whole. The way these problems are met and solved in this factory is also characteristic. of the entire Soviet Union, The enemies of the Soviet Union, beginning with Matthew Woll and Ham Fish, and ending with the Rey- erends Normd@m ‘Thomas and A. J. being. One gets from the workers Muste, always rejoice over the hard- ‘ships of the Soviet Union, They mag- ¢ be overcome, that the Soviet Union | is doomed to failure. | Of course, each of these gentlemen | does his work by the methods most | suited to his own particular role in the service of the bourgeoisie. One, in an open fascist manner, calls for intervention and boycott against the 8,.U.; the other in a more “refined” way talks of the “experiment that is | being made in Russia ‘but whose suc- cess has yet to be shown,” using “rev- olutionary” -phrases to sugar-coat their poison. } But what we have seen in this factory, and what is true of the en- tire country, is something. quite dif- ferent; tremendous strides forward, heroic successful efforts to overcome all obstacles in the road of construc- tion, and the building of Socialism. | Difficulties, hardships? Yes, many of them. But we have scen what_is the nature of these; they are the dif- ficulties of growth, of tremendous, | immense growth, reconstruction, and | new building. | Russia prior to the revolution was | @ peasant country with a “backward | | and medieval technique.” This back- | ward country has the task to “catch | | up and overtake” the highest teeh- nically-developed countries in the| world—and to the joy of its friends, | the toiling masses of the entire | are the world, and the disappointment and more vage of its enemies, this is success- fully being done. Such a tremendous job cannot be | accomplished without hardships and difficulties. But it is important to understand, in the first place, the nature of these hardships, and the way they are being liguidated. The factory we have examined answers these questions. The workers of every country can easily understand all these things. And, understanding, they also know the supreme impor- tance of straining every effort to help ward off the imperialst attacks being prepared against the Soviet Union and its socialist construction, to mobilize the toiling masses for ‘decisive struggle against “its own” capitalist oppressors, end to follow the road of the Octover revolution. of (THE END,) | stok, 7 unprofitable undertakings fascist upheaval. Sadistic torture, and widespread distress. intense. A meeting of the Strikers took place a few days ago, at which it was decided to extend the strike to the whole district of Bialy- After the meeting, the strikers marched to the neighboring town of Wassilkun, to pull the workers in the | textile factory there out on strike, On the way, police detachments tried to intercept the marchers, but de- spite the police resistance, the work- ers reached Wagssilkun, where they entered the textile factorigs and per- suaded the workers to join the strike. Under the workers’ pressure, the veformist leaders were foreed to de- clare a one-day solidarity strike for the whole Bialystok district. The workers in the Czenstochowa Paper | against a decrease in wages. | downed tools but refused to leave the! be Douglas-O-38, powered wit! factory. ‘ Milis have gone on_ strike They and | also become unprofitable. Tax money is needed to carry out the grandiose Nagi schemes. Upon these schemes depends the fulfillment of the basic) Nagi promise. And upon its fulfill-| ment ultimately depends Nazi con-| tinuances,” Germany is in the throes of a vio- lent crisis made even more severe by The fascist (henchman of a dying capitalism, | , Whose bible knows only the use of) terror and themselves unable to cope with the) Specter of growing economic disor- | U S A A bd Cc ganization bt And in this crisis, Hitler's solution for | for owe rmy ir orps, the millions of Germany's unem- ployed is unpaid conseript labor and} \the smashing of the German trade unions. POLISH TEXTILE STRIKE GROWING WARSAW, Poland, April 23.~—Dis- | patches from Bialystok report that) the textile strike there, which has/ jalready lasted six weeks, is growing find | charge of such meat spreading dis- ease is pure inyention on behalf of | the United States meat trust. Argentine Favors Paraguay Involved in the discussions now go- ing on is also the question of the re-| sistance of Paraguay to United States |war of Brazil against that country.| of Berlin-Brandenburg to hold out | England backs Paraguay and the Ar-) continues: }gentine also aids Paraguay. Group of Aviators and Airplane Mechanics Are Interested in Soviet Aviation (By a Worker Correspondent.) SEATTLE.—Work is getting under way at the Bocing Airplane Com- pany’s plant in Seattle, Wash., on the 111 all-metal, low-wing, single-seater P-26A pursuit planes recently ordered by the Army Air Corps. The first of the fleet is scheduled to take to the air in June, with the production schedule planned to turn out two planes a week for 10 weeks, and three planes a week ing about June 14, @——~ -————--_— + with completion of the order set for | 1 have qulle @ large group of avie April 11, 1934, | ators and aeroplane mechanics who New War Planes. | are interested in the U.S.S.R. and in Completion of 113 single-seater | Particular the progress of Soviet Civil wasp-powered carrier fighters of the | Aviation. Aircraft. Mechanio, F4B-3 and F4B-4 type was accom- plished recently by the Boeing Co., Editor's Note: The Daily. Worker with a shipment te San Diego. Pro- | enthusiastically welcomes the duction of ' these high-performance | portant news which this worker can military planes was begun in 1931, ie with the fighters going to both the send in. If the group of aviators east coast and west coast marines,| interested in Soviet aviation. will as well as to the navy’s aircraft car-| write a collective letter about their riers. own conditions, and ask specific Also six new planes are to he added | questions which they would like the to the equipment of the 105th Ob-| Soviet aviators to answer, we will servation Squadron, Tennessee Na-| forward such a letter to the Soviet | tional Guard at Nashville. The ships,| Union ad see thet a | which will be delivered in Jun 1 |, back. No ne¢d to sign 650). We wilh neviy you U H. P. Pratt and Whitney engines, . | Writes Aircraft Worker im- | and Terror,” “Disarm the Brownshirts” , U.S. Workers, Demand Release of Thaelmann BERLIN, April 23.—The latest number of the Rote Fahne is on salein |imperialist aggression in inciting the| the Berlin streets, The front page has an appeal of the District Committee in spite of fascist terror. The appeal “Our means are limited—every serap of paper, written or printed whith reaches you, workers of Berlin; has Pto be published under great danger. War Planes Being Built) six'ntis cites neat. will always be the mouthpiece of the workers, our leader and herald | battle!” The Rote hne pub! ing sh for May Daj Against Fascist murder and terror! Yor the release of Ernst Thaelmann and other political prisoners! __ ce For the disarmament of the brown | murder gangs! For the defense of all workers',or- , ganizations! | Against all attacks on the | tarian standard of life! | For the seven-hour day with full | wages! Against imperialist war! 3 _ For the defense of the Soviet Union, our proletarian fatherland! Against Fascist dictatorship, fo: workers’ and peasants’ government! For Socialism—the only way ovt of misery! in 1 proje- ee Sere |. HAMBURG, April 22.—Communist lleaflets demanding the release of | Ernst Thaelmann, Tor,ier and zen | proletarian leaders jailed by thg fas- \cists have been distributed in Ham- | burg during the past few days.y | ‘The Hamburg police have issued a | communique stating: “In spite of the | severest counter measures, Commu- nist newspapers, leaflets and .pam- phlets are still being printed and seld in Hamburg. Anyone knowing, these |facts and failing to commupicate |them to the police is liable to pyn- lishment up to one year at hatd | labor,” A Hamburg sailor named Petersén was Sentenced to 15 months’ impris- onment for distributing the Commmu- \nist illegal newspaper, “Rand Watt’ } (Red Wateh), Ary

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