The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 24, 1933, Page 4

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y Fuplismng co. Page Fom » Telephone ALgonquin 4-7956. Address and matt checks to the Daily Worker, 50 E. 18th St., ime. dally except sunday, al bu Ke Cable “DAIWORE. New York, N. Poty BSA JAPANESE AT PEIPING GATE; CHINESE FLEE Treacherous Withdraw SHANGHAI Japanese troops have now entered the city of Peiping and are guarding the Japa- nese quarter. Japanese patrols are now roving the city Japanese occupation loo! near future since the Japan sent 80 cases of gasoline by Peiping to fuel 200 mote which will be used du within the city General “Ho War Minister, re: armistice had been firmed the Japanese that all their forces wer on all fronts. The Chinese have withdrawn all Chine from the city, and Chang-Sintein, west of Peiping This practically closes a camps which cost the Chinese 15 liv though there is no knowledge of w the Japanese losses were. The Ch Generals = Southward | and con- that “or nese militarists have consistently r ‘0 poli- The Berlin “Germania” on April) treated since the beginning of the|' were committed in| 26: “Paul Pabst, a worker, campaign, which started with the / “this success is not/ out of the window of a Stor entering of Jehol by the Japanese c he calm political sit-| barracks after his arrest. The Chinese generals have done ng to the destruction of| was broken, causing his death.” nothing to defend their territory and movement and scist issued the the jumped from the second floor prison and died of his injuries.” The Dortmund “Generalanseiger” 4 miners’ leader, died of wounds re-| the Berlin Morgue, under orders from | above, has refused to allow the bodies lers| to be as soon as the Japanese have ad- of the natior al gover of April 28: “The Communist Funk, vanced they retreat. Whatever re- so successful work of the sistance the Japanese monn Bee ceived ‘while attemp' to_escape.’” been that of the private soldiers in se are eleven cases of mu the caren ee act reperted by the capitalist papers and Saieracddibcacamsicpin known ¢ news agencies in Germany. Anyone N Fl h 22 ews ASN » 2% 117 Jailed Austrian ; ; Communists Start The Associated Press reports Tokio that the Japan approved steps for the pur the Chinese Eastern allway churia from the Soviet r aw of Manchukuo is to ase under Japan's the amounf® and various Sovie cdheessions in Chinese viet influ stern nee in } churia. | ni Fr on Hunger Strike VIENNA, May 12—Seventy Communists held in the Vienna prison have gone on hunger strike | five jail without any indictment against them, Forty-two Communists imprisoned in St. Poelten district jail have ; the same ere arrested, in- the Communist aldermen of St. Poelten. Nazi Culture: The Burning of the Books in Berlin Over 100 German Worker Mirdeved in April; 46 Bodies in Morgue _ f the j c | press could easily supplement this fist. jumped| ment is also effectively disproved by | Troop| the official | His back | Morgue, stating that 46 bodies were| make swastikas out of frankfurters. | two Political murders.” | in protest against their being kept in| |SPARKS| peace message.” ance Minister of China. “Sing a Soong of profits, Dividends sky-high Repartitioning China Like a piece of pie.” One of our contributors, J. B., promptly wrote us: “TI think the Chinese workers would finish your song about Soong some- thing like this: “Oh, Soong won't sing his song for Jong, We workers aren't lame We'll build more Chinese Soviets And end his little game.” a RT ee refully following the provincial! decree forbidding the manufac- The Prussian government's state-| shape of a swastika. A contributor N. W. writes in “But report of the Berlin} what could be more fitting than to reecived in the month of April, with| faces so badly battered as to be whol- ly unrecognizable. The director of It’s just a ice of baloney, anyway.” E had just finished reading how the Soviet Union is poisoning the minds of its children by teaching them that there is no god, when we received this contribution from P. K. in Pfitsburgh: “Capitalist child culture: Cut rates were recently offered at some movie theatres tor special children’s show- ings of the Hollywood box-office hit of the year: ‘42nd Street.’ Pouring out into the streets at the end of the show, a group of boys and girls, most of them under twelve years of age, were singing something that sounded like this:“You go home and pack your be photographed. And yet the! fascist government knows of “only/| SAILORS MUTINY IN JUGOSLAVIA ZAGREB, Jugoslavia, May 23.—The | Jugoslavian government has mobil- | panties, I'll go home and pack my ized the Jugoslavian navy to suppress | scanties’ .” | the revolts of the peasants in Dal- “eile aN 'HE Navy which has just cut the wages of the sailors, has forbid-! den them to use profane language or to curse. The sailors haye plenty to curse about. But they may take the hint of the Admiral and decide to express | their resentment in a more effctive ' way. matia, atia. the Liga district and in Cro- The crew on a number of warships red that they would not shoot comrades down. The naval then arrested a large} number of sailors and petty officers | on these ships. ‘Socialist New Leader Arouses War Hysteria We print below an article taken @ from this week's New Leader. Next to it, we print the New Leader's reply to an analysis of this article which appeared May 16 in the Daily Worker under the title, “Preparing to Repeat the Betrayal of 1914.” We give the article as an example of Social-Fascism. And we reprint the New Leader's “reply.”—All the emphases are ours.Ed anti-Marx, ution is only the If the psychosis a surging up of an SOCIAL DEMOCRACY IN DANGER (This article was American Socialist Berlin.) on by an aes NEW LEADER now residing in | THE BRAY The Socialist International is fac- ing a crisis. On every hand demo- of cracy—and with it, of course, all hope of Social Demo threatened by the great dr Fascist dlictato THE WEEK Burope only three little republies) remain, surr y the fron of their Fasci: s. And it only in the der on the nortt and wes of the cor and that thr: Socialist pa s to funct on Of a the western democ of the continent the only one tha can be classed as a pow fg And i icant that in this only remaining Jarge democracy. the Socialists should Jast fave considered it necessary week to break an old pi eSaciel Feactiis”” Agate vote the military budget. vote, | Caught Selling Workers proclaimed as an act of “ ‘treason” by | | To the Capitalist Class all enemies and Critics of the So- ee cialist_ movement on the left, and Faithful guards of tee hailed with glee by all our opponents | | ye of the workers do some of the right was no act of treason at Se ikaatiia ole wk aa all, It was simply a proof that the criminal tendencies are again majority of Socialist deputies now | foosed. From the Daily ——. consider a strong army necessary | Cine, who, what, which: as a defense against Fascist invasi a ak They that In France of Fas probably with aap of the Social Leader, print ident satis and approval, a momen- faction Yattear ete m in a wa expected soon, and not be prevented now all probability—blaze up on the Western Front The Socialists, whe voted the hud get only did what they felt sure, | their peasant and labor constituencies | | wanted them to do. All Socialists in France had just seen with amaze- ment and alarm how the Hitler party writi article in - Th “The Leader i t traigora tha betray , the erthrow of ¢a , way that they be- e workers in 1914, In the words of The New Leader, we can already the sound trayed t had at one blow stalled the Social a seyegt age Democratic Party with its eight mil shen ak te vane rewe lion followers, the Communist Part Lghieaia sgh ca ; of the “young wgrkers of the world when the énlistment drives with its five millions, and the strong ly ofganized labor movement with it hy defense corps of four hundred thou | are going on as the imperialist and men, which had been held up|] Stmiee hurl themselve to the Prench workers for years as a| | the Soviet borders shining example of how if should be done The French people as a whole re- alize that the bellicose and reckless | against the Daily Werk May 16, in its editorial called attention to the : ; S| article in the New Leader, and Hitler. leaders intend to scrap all! warned the working class against treaties and re-arm; and it is only) this open war provocation. ‘The too obvious that the rearmament of Germany will be but a first step—| if they can make it so—to a war of revenge—a war the shat- New Leader in its very next issue (May 20) then took full responsibil- ity for the article and emphasized to repair its crime against the workers by tered self-esteem of German mili reprinting, under the above insnlt- tarism, and nationalism. Germany is, ing caption, part of the Daily in the grip of a mass-psychosis, of Worker's protest against the Yew which the present anti-Semitic aang |, Leader article of the week befey 6 on j tention of all Socialists to a great | difference between the last war that was supposed to make the world safe | | for democracy, and the war that now | threatens to break over France. The essential difference is this. The World War was a struggle for export mar- kets between capital nations of ail political complexions. The war new threatening will be more purely political im its nature and will be in fact a struggle in which the block of middie European dictatorships seek to extend Dictatorship as a poli- tical system, by force, into the de- mocratie countries of the West. The outlook is made more menac- ing by the fact that Russia, with its vast natural resources and man- power, s adjacent to the dictator- ships on the East. The govert |that could sell oil to the < |nayy for war on republican China | cau with an equally elear Communist | 1 oil the German rm: Au und: the torships are brothers | nd where immediate Tes des with ef e seems practically certain, / Against the United Front of the dictatorships will stand the great de- | mocratic republic, defended, I have | | tittle doubt, by every native son, save the few and discredited Communists. The French peasants and workers are | too intelligent, too, realistic in their attitude toward life, and too much de- voted to their mother country to dodge behind any lofty pacifist ideals if a Fascist army were to invade Prance Bi can they help from witho mocratic neighbo: their own defe depend any ? Their little de- Will be forced by ess state to main- tain strict neutrality. The English people—and this applies especially to he labor movement itself—are so imbued wilh ‘pacifist. sentiment, it seems incredible they should again go to fight in France: acc upon rding to theiy peated resolutions they will er again fight even to defend England on English soil against n BT | foreign. invasion And what kind of an answer wouid | the American people give us if we Socialists asked them to go into Janother European war this time | with us) to make the world safe for democracy @ second time? There are also Jugoslavia and Europe to whom French governments have | » vast gifts of guns and muni | tlons of war, in the hope’ of bribir them as allies, But these are in every case reactionary Fascist dictatorships, and what chance is there that they. will remain the allies of their former | business partner in a war of dicta- | torship versus Democracy? | Capitalism is forcing the final con- flict, and this is taking ihe form of | Fascist Dictatorship attempting to crush the bourgeois Democracy which it despises in order at the same time to stamp out once and for ail the Social Democratic parties. 1| belieye our International is faeing | | Rumania in middle the past (1s most serious crisis, lican France. | In Their True Colors Ww ARE printing two aa frou the New Leader, leading organ of the American Soeialist Party. One is an article printed in the New Leader of May 13, and the other is an attempted “witty” reply to the analysis which the Daily Worker of May 16, under the headline “Prepar- ing to, Repeat the Betrayal of 1914,” made of this article. We believe that it will be very instructive to examine the way in which the leading organ of the American Socialist Party attempts to meet the serious political charges and conclusions of the Daily Worker anal- ysis. ‘The sentiments which are expressed in the New Leader article are of extraordinary importance to the working class and the revolutionary movement. They are even more momentous because of the time in which they appear. The article in the New Leader appears’ at the very moment when the war tension among the imperialist powers, and between the capitalist world and the Soviet Union is approaching the breaking point. The imperialist statesmen are now shouting louder than ever “peace.” And the imperialist statesmen and their masters have never more feverishly prepared for war than at the present moment. It is in the midst of such a situation that the New Leader prints the article below: What does this article say? In the Daily Worker of May 16, we analized in some detail the po- litical meaning of the utterances made in the New Leader. We at the ideas and the temper of the New Leader article is extraordinarily similar to the ideas propagated by the Socialist leaaers and the Second International at the outbreak of the World War in 1914. We showed that the voting by the French Socialist Deputies of the recent war budget of French imperialism is en act that differs in no way from the voting of the war budgets in 1914. We showed that the Socialist leaders not only of France, but of the United States and the rest of the world are repeating today the very uments which they used in 1914 to justify their defense of the imperialist world slaughter. Today, the Socialist leaders say that they act as they do because they reflect the wishes of the workers and peas- for HE other day we commented on T. V. Soong’s approval of Roosevelt's | Soong is the Fin-| We wrote: | ITLER has just issued a special) ture of frankfurter-sausages in the | ‘By Mail everywhere: One year, $6; six months, $2.50; 8 months, $2; Bronx, New York City. 35; 7 ths Davis Challeng es Foreign 1 month, 7s, MAY 24, 1988 Demonstrate Against Wiedemann at 8 A. M. Tomorrow ‘PROTEST. THE) America’s Rivals ARRIVAL OF _ At Geneva Meet NAZI AGENT! But Is Sharply ‘Related: a ‘Gicarmanmerit Con- Marine Workers Call ference by France, England Four Power Pact Proves A Source of New Frictions; War Clouds Gather Again GENEVA, May 23. ESOT H. Davis, ender of the United States dele- | gation at the Disarmament Conference, said in his speech yesterday that America was “willing to consult the | peace, with a view to averting confli | of “neutrality” was pronounced dead, as Davis revealed that the U.S. A, | ers in \if it agreéd with the world powers & in declaring any country an “ag- gressor,” would refrain from taking any steps that would have the ef- |fect of defeating collective aetion | |taken to coercé that nation. | The French press is eta ha long will the United States accept | | phrases for cold facts. Joining in| | | international action to “coerce” a| country, as has béen shown by | Japan in the Manchurian and Chin-| | ese conflicts, means nothing less than a declaration of war, or else the calling of a bluff. ' Hypocritical Definition. Davis suggestéd that “the sim- plest and most accurate definition |of an aggressor is, a country whose armed forces are found on alien soil | in violation of treaties.” This defi- nition is pointed against Japan, but | Japan’s answer is simply to point to thé United States armed forces in South and Central America, in the Philippines, Haweii and else- where. This unedifying game in} which the pot calls the kettlé black | exposes the hypocrisy of Davis's! | Proposed definition of aggre: a. Wants to Disarm Rivals | But America’s co-operation along | these lines is conditional on European | | disarmament—on “a substantive Te=| duction in armaments.” America wishes to decrease the military Strength of its imperialist rivals, | This is clearly brought out by the | | French press comments. The famous | ‘veactionary journalist “Pertinax”, | writing in the nationalist newspaper |“L'Echo de Paris,” said: “The dang | contained in Davis's proposals out- | weighs the good for France. Nothing | the United States will offer could | persuade us to weaken our national | defenses against Germany and Italy.” |Even the radical “Ere Nouyelle” | | writes: “The Davis plan is motivated | |largely by economic considerations. | But France must remember that it hes a neighbor (Germany) of 70,000,- 000 people, organized and ready for war.” French Attitude Stiffens The French Cabinet, meeting yes- terday, sent new instructions to Paul- Boncour, and said #.at it hoped that the Disarmament Conference “would start at once to talk security as well ;as disarmament.” As regards the Four Power Pact, | the Cabinet stressed the fact that | though the pact has been initiated, \‘“negotiations are not yet ende | France is struggling for elbow room, | to allow further manoeuvering. Louis Marin, Radical Socialist de- | puty and leader of that group in the French Chamber of Deputies, attack- ed the government this afternoon on | the question of the Four Power Pact. ‘*If you sign it, we will overthrow the government,” he said. Premier | | Daladier replied: “I will certainly | sign the Pact when and if final ex- | | amination shall prove it to he accep- At the Disarmament Conference, Davis called for immediate consider- ation of Part 2 of the British draft scheme, which . limits men under arms, reduces offensive guns, tanks and fighting planes. Sabotage Arms Meet As soon as Davis sat down, Sir John Simon, British Foreign Secretary, and \Paul-Boncour, French Foreign Min- "ster, repudiated Davis's proposals | and moved that Part I of the British draft, which deals with the question of security, should be taken first. Ar- thur Henderson, president of the Conference, and one of the leading figures in the Labor and Socialist In- ternational, supported the English and French spokesmen, and ruled that the Conference return to the | reparations for the next imperialist war. | The article in the New Leader repeats almost word for word the vile | intervention slanders now being spewed by the poison propaganda ma- chines of the white guards in Paris, Riga and Constantinople. The article in the New Leader describes the Soviet Union as a “men- to the world. The article in the New Leader repeats the propaganda which French imperialism is now pouring out as the ideplogical justification for the proposed attacks on the Soviet Union The article in the New Leador deliberately fosters race and national- hatred between the French and German working class al the very moment when the French and German capitalist class are trying to do the very same thing. Tn 1928, at the VI World Congress of the Communist International, the Resolution on War spoke as follows “tn the last imperialist war, the Allies made use of the slogan, ‘Fight against Prussian militarism’, while the Central Powers used the slogan, ‘Fight against Tsarism’; both sides using the respective slogans to mob- ilize the masses for the war. In a fuiure war between Italy and France, or Yugoslavia, the same purpose will be served by the slogan ‘Hight | against reactionary fascism,” for the bourgeoisie in the latter countries will take advantage of the anti-fascist sentiments of the masses of the | people to justify imperialist war, These words of the Communist International were prophetic. Today, | in the words of the “Communist International” of April 15, 1933, French imperialism with its agents from the Second International, is now striving to raise the prestige of bourgeois France as the “bulwark of democracy | against fascism,” and to create the necessary prerequisites for a “sacred unity of nations led by France.” ‘This is the analysis*which the Daily Worker made of the New Leader article, And all that the New Leader can do is to distort the article by ex- tracting the first and last paragraphs and then trying to laugh the whole matter off as some comic incident. i The lives of millions of workers depends now on their struggle against the imperialist war propaganda poison. ‘The article in the New Leader does noi help the working class to fight against imperialist war. It di- veetly leads the workers-into the imperishst world slaughter ace” istic | trolled by the League, that is, really, | power in Europe, This second scheme | consideration of Part I. Davis had | apparently not been expecting this, | and sat as if stunned. The European | ‘nations wish to hold up discussions | of concrete disarmament plans for | the sixteen days between now and} the Economic Conference, where they | | will again meet the United States, this time not in the shape of an “angel of peace” but in the form of their principal creditor. France Throws Monk: France's tactic is to accept a reduction in principle. but to’ pre- sent, with this acceptance, a number of impossible conditions. Two of the conditions made by France this af-! ternoon at Geneva were: the stand- ardization of armies and war mater- ials; and the transfer of. aggressive weapons to the League of Nations in- stead of their destruction. The first of these conditions is simply unwork- able; while the second brings forward in a new form the old Tardieu plan for an “international army,” con- y- Wrench, by France as the strongest military has been produced before by the | French, and has always been re-) jected by the other nations. Paul- Boncour'’s speech to the Conference startled even the Commission of hardened diplomats, since it showed that the French are not prepared) even tentatively to accept proposals | for reducing war materials until their, demands are satisfied. Members of | the Commission described Paul-Bon-_ cours speech as a “monkey wrench | thrawn into the machinery.” This sneech by Paul-Boncour came | without 1] table to France.” | | ‘CREW STRIKES 0 ther states in case of a threat to . The traditional American policy an | | Japanese | Say Sccan Iron in N. Y. for WarAgainst China NEW YORK.—Barges are being | loaded at Elizabethport, N, J. with | scrap iron that is being transferred | | | to Japanese ships in the Erie Bas-} in, Japanese purchasing agents are also buying up scrap iron in| | other parts of greater New York’s}| | harbor and sehding it out to aid| the manufacturer of munitions in| 1 | Japan, after nearly all the delegations in- cluding the German, had accepted on| first reading the article limiting the caliber of guns and the size of tanks. The other delegations, playing at/| “disarmament” are angry with the | French for bringing this sabotage of the Conference into the open by re-| fusing to play, even in a fake game.) Paes Poland Opposes Pact. | WARSAW, May 23—‘“The Four Power Pact threatens to destroy offering substitutes” said Foreign Minister Joseph Beck today. The polish newspapers say the Pact! is “absolutely unacceptable.” | PHT rene Roosevelt Fiasco. } LONDON, May 23.—British reac- | tions to Davis's speech at Geneva to- | day stress the fact that the United States, by accepting a place on the Permanent Disarmament Commis- ion, has bound itself up with the European control of German arma- ments. “Enter America” is one head- line, but “Roosevelt Fiasco” is an-j other and move realistic comment on; Davis's achievements at Geneva to dete. Hitler Naval Review. | KIEL, Germany, May 23.—Hitler| helped along the general peaceful at- mosphere of Europe today by stag- ing the most gigantic naval review) since the days of the Kaiser jand| making another of his well known warlike “peace” speeches. Hitler said: “We want peace—perhaps more than anyone else. But only that nation which retains a sense of the neces- sity of honor and freedom is worthy of peace. In this sense the German} uprising proclaims the German strug- gle for freedom and equality.” This speech was made to the as-| sembled naval officers and _ sailors. | Immediately after the address was! outlined, Hitler embarked on the} battleship, Schleswig-Holstein, and the fleet put out to sea for gun prac- tice and foie alt } USSR Delegation to. London Conference (Moscow Correspondent of the Daily Worker.) | | MOSCOW, May 23—The U. S| | | | | | S. R. Council of Peoples’ Commis- sars has appointed Maxim Litvin- ov, Foreign Commissar, as head of the Soviet delegation to the World Economic Conference in London.) The delegation will include V. I.| | | Mezhlauk, Deputy Chairman of the | | Soviet Union State Piznning Com-| | mission, as vice-chairman, and Ivan M. Maisky, Soviet Ambassa-| | dor to Great Britain, and A. V. Ozersky, Deputy Commissar for Foreign Trade, as members. Revolutionary Soldiers. Arrested in Bulgaria SOFIA, Bulgaria, May 23.—Five soldiers and three non-commissioned officers have been arre: ted in Raslog | for “Communist activi With the growing frequency of the} cases of revolutionary soldiers an | officers being arrested, the capitalist | press is asking with alarm whether) the Bulgarian army is at all fit to combat a revolutionary outbreak if) the need should ay DANISH CRUISER FIRST OF MAY COPENHAGEN, May 23.—On May 1. the sailors of the cruiser “O°fert Fischer” sent a deiegation to the cap- tain, demanding leave from 1 p.m. on. When he asked if they wanted to join the First of May demonstra- tion they said: “Yes.” He then re- jected their demand. The sailors at once voted ta go strike, and after striking three hov they won a complete victory. The captain gave the whole crew permis- sion to join the May Day d-mon- stration. Sailors hoisted the red flag on the! icebreaker “Lillebjoern,” but the So- | cialist “Labor” reliable officers from other. ships transferred to the "“Lillebjoern,” to isolate the Laide iaie from the other ships in the fleet, red flag coukd not “be callowed:t to shay there,” for Demonstration at “Columbus” Pier | Avpeal Also | Issued by | German Anti-Fascist Action To thé Seamen and Harbor Work- the Port of New York and Vicini Fell workers: On Thursday, May 25, at 8 am, Hans Weidemann, Hitler's envoy, will arrive in New York to carry out his mission of bringing his masters and the Roosevelt govérnment to- gether in common action against the workers of Germany and the United States. This fascist thug, his hands drip- ping with the blood of heroic dock- workers of Hamburg and other Gér- {man ports and his government, the government that ordered a 30 per cent pay cut forthe German sea- men, must bé given a fitting re- ception by the sailors and harbor | workers of New York. Our German fellow-workers are fighting the fascist thugs who are trying to wipe out ali trade unionism by ruthléss repression. They have | lost many heroic fighters already but they continue to fight. Across the sea comes their call for international solidarity. They shout to us to keep this agent of the mass assassin Hit- lér out of the country. Our jailed comrades in the fas- cist dungeons call us to strike a | blow for their freedom! The fas- cist thugs must go! American marine workers have no use for thesé thugs and the Wall Street govern- ment that is aiding them! We call upon the members of thé International Longshoremen’s Asso- ‘ciation and other unions of the in- dustry to adopt against the State Department mitting Weidemann’s entry. We call all longshoremen and sea- protest resolutions pér- men to follow the heroic example, of the dock workers in Barcelona, Spain, who refused to unload car- goes from fascist German ships. All out Thursday at 8 a.m. to de- | monstrate against the Nazi murderer at Pier 4, foot of 58th Street, Brook- lyn, where the “Columbus” is dock- ing ae Workers 'ndustrial Union of the U.S.A. Section of the Intérnational of Sea and Harbor Workers. pier tis The Hitler government whose hands are dripping with the blood of the revolutionary workers, which tortures thousands of workers in the concen- tration camps, dares to send a repre= sentative to the United States—Goeb- bels, the Fascist Minister of Propa- | ganda, one of the most bloodthirsty pogrom inciters against the working class and the Jewish population, who as minister of “enlightenment” is trying to root out Marxism by burn- ing all revolutionary literature, is sending Hans Wiedmann as his rep- resentative. We call upon the workers of New York to demonstrate anew their re- solute opposition to the Hitler regime | on Thursday, May 25, at 8 a. m, Meet this representative of fascism in the proper manner, when he arrives on the “Columbus” at Pier 4, 58th Street, Brooklyn. —German Anti-Faseist Action, MASS MEETING TO PROTEST ARRIVAL OF FASCIST AGENT ‘Open Air - Meetings to| Precede Coney Island Demonstration NEW YORK, May 23.--A mass meeting to protest the landing of Hans Wiedmann, Nazi emissary, in America will be held Wednesday eve- ning, May 24, at 8:30 p.m. at Casa "Amore, 31st St. and Mermaid Ave, Coney Island. The call for the maz der the auspices of Fe Communist Party demands the release of Thael- mann and the thousands of other -werkers imprisoned by the Nazis, pro- | bests Jews, and calls for a united front of: against pogroms against the all workers against fascism. , Bein ce JERSEY CITY, N. J., May 23-< “What is Happening in Germany To- anecting, un { | | TEES f a a i ' i | i ez government ordered | day?” will be the topic of a lecture |at Fraternity Hull, 256 Ceniral Ave. dersey City. N..J. A. L. Dalger, of | ihe Nationa! Committes Azainst Pas: {eism and ctaff writer ef “Der Arheite er” will be the main spedker in Gere |man. Admission free. aah ae Tenight the workers of the Browns- ville section of Brooklyn, N. ¥. will merch through the main strests te rally the workers and small shope | keebers in protest agains! the arrival of Mans Wiedem: on the “Colum- bus.” ‘The March will begin at the corner of Pennsylvania and Sutter Avanues at 8 p. m, end will end in a huge | open-air mass mecting at Hopkinson | and Pitkin Avenues. All organizations, labor. fraternal — and Zionist, have been invited ae Section 8 of the Communist Pi New York District, to ti

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