The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 8, 1933, Page 4

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Page Four Published by the Comprodatty Pubfishing Ce., Ine., dally excopt Sunday, at 90 8. 13th St. New York City, N. ¥. Telephone Algenquin 4-196, Cable “DATWORK.” nA mall cheeks to the Daily Worker, 56 E. 28th St., New York, N.Y; wy Mail everywhere: One yor, $6; six months, $5.56; 3 months, $2; 1 month, The, JUNE 8, 1938 excepting Borough of Momhettay and Bronx, New York City. Fereign and Camada: One year, $8; 6 months, 9%; 7 months, 35. “THAT THE FULL FUNDS FOR UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE SHALL BE RAISED BY THE GOVERNMENT FROM FUNDSNOW SET ASIDE FOR WAR PREPARA- TIONS AND BY TAXATION UPON INCOMES OVER $5,000 A YEAR” —From the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill. New War Threats RELIEF FOR |s PARK s] German Moratorium in 4-Power Pact; VICTIMS OF - one reat Will Be @\' U.S. Builds Army NAZI TERROR Weapon at London “cover” the World Economic Confer- ence for a group of American news- Y x <a a x Suggester headline to go with his} As Germany Signs the Pact—-Mussolini Re- European Centers Aid j cabled dispatches from the Economic | opens Treaty Revision Talk | Refugees Along the | | The Hlegal May Day Rote Fahne, Communist | Party Paper of Germany DIE ROTE FAHNE Mal-Nummer Anlilaschistisches Mal-Manilest 1939. Armites ArGeiterimen Jumgartckes papers. European Agrarian States Form United Front Against U. S. Wheat Exports | BASEL, June 6.—A meeting was held here of the Board of the Bank Conference: JIMMY WEARS LAV- ENDER CRAVAT AS POWERS CLASH OVER DEBTS. | * * a ‘nts sam vo Ge Tos en av foe antes ‘untnchee Sender wee Tr? cet sb) Ory ABU es eviicten Mies tw ae er Ren oa V4 German Borders | Decide Bide amie: dee vienna 50,000 Tons of War INITIALLING OF 30.000 tons of APOWER PACT ||hoct bon nee NOW SECURED By 2 Marine Worker Corre- spondent Relief work for the victims of Ger- man fascism, both within Germany as well among the emigres in neigh- boring countries, has been organized | | and is going ahead on a large scale, | | according to a report from the In- | | ternational. Cooperating Committee | SAN FRANCISCO, Cal.—During bet teeter iebenage Me tnimen pew te de Sowictantay gis ¢* Nm sesbevtany neicm Sent abe: de Wall & wetouleéce RapaaDarmes | | weet New Hungereiend at’ Nome: Paschemas Aer 2 sevnury senaten Tr gem wear Mugerieliiug IB ee Yorber etn Communists Are Active Even.at that the dispatches should be worth reading, for what Jimmy scale thieving after his Tammany ed- three-cent stamp. ioe | HOPEFUL sign that college stu- doesnt know about organized, large-| ucation,. wold go on the back of aj of International Settlements at which Sir Montague Norman, Governor of the Bank of England, Hjalmar Schacht of the German Reichsbank, and | Clement Moret, Governor of the Bank of France, were present. It was | decided that Leon Fraser, president of the B. I. §. should represent this ternational “ 's’ bank” at the > pert sagan Mlarpaaad wars ea ceive any formal American stote- ts on the debt® question. fi There was much talk of the pro- | ™ents on the debt* quest at the London World Economic Con- ~ |to the National Committee to Aid dents may not remember as much | phesled coming German moratorium . | Germany’s Acceptance the last five months fiom Janu- | | victims of German Fascism, 75 Fifth of the dope handed out in the capi-|on. private debts. This German New Anti-American Bloc. LF 2 Tact’ | ary to May, 50,000 tons of scrap] | avenue, New York talist universities as is usually| threat is regarded here as a move to pee ie June 7.—Delegates | s Last to | iron and bales of cotton were ship- | | : | thought is found in’ the curious item strengthen Germany's bargaining po- | from Poland, Rumania, Yugo-Slavia, | | ped to Japan from one dock alone | | ep kay International Committee | ver ermany sent out by the Associated Press| sition at London. Germany could | Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Estonia, | Come | from Long Beach, Calif., loaded | | Wes: | from Lexington, Ky. either declare the moratorium before | Lithuania, Bulgaria, Greece and Tur- { a jon American and Japanese ships. || | “In Germany, in spite of unprece- | eas | ese! Asked who Frank Lerond McVey|the conference starts, promising to| key, are assembled here to discuss BULLETIN or — : ley sane hed we ait pew she :°| Demonstrations and |4s,sone-half of a class didn’t know.|raise it if she obtains help, or else | the possibility of their joint action > * i ‘orms of relief activity. ROME, June 7.—Mussolini, in U. S. Army Keeps Full xy i his long awaited speech before the Italian Senate on the subject of Eighteen relief kitchens are already at work in Berlin providing food to Officer Roster, Funds Unemployed Actions | Communist Press Grow f | Despite Sentences of | | P. S.—McVey happens to be president of the university. issue a warning that unless she gets what she wants at London, the mor- atorium will be proclaimed. ference. A common platform of fin- ancial and economic planks was the Four Power Pact, again . 1 Victimized workers and their fami-| Throughout Germany | Fascist Courts RAVO Mr. Baldwin—the only Re-| It is also rumored here that the | ®87eed on. | brought up the question of the re- for tional Guard tes, irrespective of political attili- Publican ‘onthe; New. ‘York, Olly Gaited ‘tates fay sock ber asked to Demand Debt Cancellation. | te tee Ves Sener ; Re - anon or creed. Each of these kit-/ BERLIN, June 7.—A revolutionary|. BERLIN, May 28—The circulation| Board of Aldermen. Speaking of| agree to a truce on inter-govern-| Unless the demands of these | | precently some countries,” he said, WASHINGTON, June 7. — With) chaps, is Preparing 70 to 100 meals | demonstration took place May 24 near| of the illegal Communist press is on| O'Brien's new tax, scheme, which he| mental debts by the European powers | states for complete cancellation of | gave evidence of a campaign | Norman H. Davis talking disarma-|daily, Similar kitchens are functi-| the Arminiusplatz in Moabit, workers’| the increase throughout Germany,| says is ‘for unemployed relief, you| acting together. Only Great Britain | the war debts were agreed to, said | against revision, but after the mene at orneys) Rud et War, Se in es fae nee en district of Berlin. Several suodred According to the Bremen police:| called him a liar. No—my mistake.| and Italy seem at the moment to re-| Finance Minister Madgearu of Ru- ] world war, or any war for that ern, announced at Chester, Pa. that | found for children of victimized work- | workers took part, and at the end of! “Communists again distributed six- ave the alternative that he mania, there would be no more pay- 1 matter, the question of reviston | the officer personnel of the United|ers; they are placed with adoptive |the demonstration they tore up the 4 eu eae Ee main in the claas of possible payers bags will always come to the table for discussion.” ac ra e. r i in fayor of paying only if this : ROME June 7 The first stage of peace program” w re not enough. the mittee. | young workers, and even the bour-| ment. for circulating illegal Commu- * . . | carinot be aaa . filing. A resolution against the the farcical negotiations on the Four | War Department issued a statement) «petief kitchens have been estab- | geois. press printed reports of the| nist literature. The police wert able So what is the money to be used me gE tae | most-favored-nation clause in com~- Power Pact is now drawing to a bpedeteriaiee fund myoulss Be ee lished to feed the acute emigration | demonstration, The “Deutsche All-| to arrest several’ Communists distri-| for? You answered this question very LONDON. June 4 —- Viscount | Merial treaties was carried, ingness to e lates raft ini 2 pI ts al _ v i in} ‘i 7 ie ‘ e and the French signature. decided | allotments have been cut, but funds| France, Alsace and the Saar slong | Young fellows committed outrages in| admit therefore that their . rigid| money is to be uséd to provide sel-| cellor of the Exchequer, has written! “This group of mainly agrarian upon yesterday, plus the English and Ttalian signatures, which had been promised though without enthusiasm several days ago, complete the 1 Difficulties during the last 72 hours centered around Art.III of the text in which. Germany insisted on having a reference to her right to arms equality. This was opposed to the! bitter end by France, and the French 4 % ey: var. .| Finance Minister’ Savatoysky of | Guard for future imperialist war. alone. In Strassburg, | charge that dozens of these trees have| the illegal “Ni "9 Pi ton uve balance of trade. Embarassed for- draft has finally won out. ‘fhe pact | ea ate Alaaos, tha mecmiioatiiy aioe A, , hed eery Neue Zeitung” is pub-| Bravo Mr, Baldwin. But we're| eign debtors of Great Britain would| Poland pointed out that the agri- no longer contains any statement | Gov’ trancs, to oie Worl cobamnittes aril beer Loum up by workers and that) lished every week in a ten-page pee cultural states represented at the i that the powers accept the MacDo- nald arms plan, nor does it mention | German equality. It merely states | that the four signing powers “will do their utmost for the success of the Disarmament Conference”. Even the rest of the document has been altered out of all recognition | from what was in Mussolini’s original States Army will not be reduced As if frank exposure of the Roosevelt so-called “arms reduction these camps. With the disabled war veterans stripped of their pensions and com- pensation, with unemployment relief collapsing all over the country, Roo- sevelt’s Administration digs up mil- | lions of dollars to maintain the offi- | cers’ corps intact and to continue in- | tensive training of the National BRITISH RULERS, REPRESS MASS, ACTION IN INDIA) parents, if necessary. On a single Sunday'in Berlin alone 1,500 marks | were collected illegally for our com- | the western German frontier. have been provided nevertheless for| ae es | | Saar food for 300 refugees has been | provided daily in Neunkirchen, Wie- | belskirch and other towns. The po- | litical refugees receive three meals a day and have been supplied, with | the necessary shoes and clothing. | “In Saarbruecken the refugees were | put up in private houses, 7,500 meals | having been served “in a period of |two weeks a widespread relief action was started @ Mee early days of April. Food, ciothes and shelter were provided for 3,300 refugees during the month of April. The Strassburg Committee also sent food convoys to the Saar territory. “The Czechoslovakian committee, under the chairmanship of Profes- “Hitler ©ak Tree” planted *there on| Hitler's recent birthday. Most of the demonstrators were! the neighborhood of the .Arminius- | platz, necessitating the summoning of | the police. The tablet on the oak tree| Planted on Hitler's birthday was| smeared with paint and broken.” The newly appointed General Po- lice Commissioner for Wuerttemberg has just issued an order for special protection of the oak trees planted at every street corner during the Hit- ler birthday celebration. The police special storm troop detachments have had to be assigned to guard them. Mass Actions of Unemployed ‘The fascist press of Frankfurt pub- lishes reports of unemployed mass ac- tions in Bochum, Duesseldorf and Hanover. These demonstrations were of such size that even the fascist press bey to break its usual ironbound si- lence. page illegal issue of the ‘Arbeiter- zeitung, last Tuesday, in spite of the | warning issued by the police a few days ago threatening severe punish- search has failed to uncover the il, legal printing plant of the Commu nist Party of Bremen. | Ask in Vain. | The Bavarian government in Mun- | ich has published an appeal to the people: asking them to cooperate with it in uncovering illegal Commu- nist printing plants, where Commu- nist papers and leaflets are printed. The appeal was in vain, however; Sue, greeted enthusiatically by the! workers. Up to the present the Munich po- lice have been unable to arrest a single distributor of Communist leaflets. The Communists are work- ing under the workers’ protection, and all police efforts to recruit stool- Pigeons have been unsuccessful. This heroic ,work of the Communists might just be very “dense.” Our view is that you might have said both, and still haye erred on the side of truth. But let that go. ies for Comptroller Berry's son, and former Sheriff Culkin’s nephew and for hundreds of others who have no business on the city’s payroll . . .” ad, en) ve You said: “This money is to be used to provide funds to offset the graft and leakage in the Department of Hospitals and in the Department of Docks and elsewhere .. .” really sorry that you are the only Republican on the Board. The Demo- crats have their snouts in the public trough right now. That’s why you're willing to talk. But it’s too bad that you are the only Republican on the Board—isn’t it? * Because Republicans have snouts tod. Don’t they? —all the other thirteen debtors are fairly certain to default. b British king interests ate understood to an article in the Daily Mail oppos- sing English default on theAmerican debt. His reasons are worth noti ing. He writes: “Our nationals are the greatest creditors of foreign countries in the world. They have overseas investments amounting to $4,000,000,000, bringing in normally $20,000,000 a year. This income is the main item in maintaining the need little encouragement to follow the lead of Great Britain and repu- diate their debts to her.” Snowden unblushingly ends the article by saying that the “honor” of Great Britain is at least worth “twelve mil- lion pounds.” Thi. difficulty, that England is a creditor nation to the rest of the world, as well as a debtor nation to ments in foreign currencies or in their own. The ¢onference~ also looked to regional economic action in the event of the London parley states also organized itself as an| anti-American bloc on the wheat! question. A resolution demanded ~ * unconditional recognition of the right of preferential treatment for European grain. The states, mem- bers of the conference, declared that they would not reduce their wheat acreages, and said that “America must take the first step.” conference had a population of more than 100,000,000. Acting in. unity, they will have a not insignificant role to play in London. hee exe Turks Raise All Tariffs. ISTANBUL, Turkey, June 7—The Turkish government has issued a new tariff law which for the mo- eee TS LSS SASS a Manes. though this was auoney | Forbid Tax Strikes by | *l 8 medical and legal advice to| austria center, sheng siseubt| the ‘Socialist workers, espetially As oh the. dopey qiiestion,; athe aama|-torHeety dnapeasa an calls tartans | | a aia ae ech d Pp tg |e, etuses, from Germany. | railway police tried to drive otf hun-| !e,,00cT, Democratic Party as Creed of Protestant || tacts do not ‘of course apply to| and went tnto effect without any 3 ° ne i S “An energetic collection campaign " e a i zs ., Eh sup cckscnlating ate viceets Oppressed Peasants Ve Au enengenie cousction oammbalge | dreds of workers wives, who;ware'tin-| Satori pe tieratge crehinitibe® of France, Italy, or the other powers.| previous warming. to such an extent that only the com- mas are left from the original draft have the four powers been able, to CALCUTTA, India (By mail). The British Magistrates of the Nawakhali and Chittagong districts have handed | May 1, these funds being used to pro- | vide various forms of relief in Copen- | hapen, the chief center of German loading a coal truck, taking the coal home with them. The infuriated women turned on the policemen and locked them up in the truck. The Communist literature have also come in from the Ruhr, Leipzig, Hamburg and Frankfurt. Nazi Ministers “God has created me a German. But in spite of Snowden’s article, every sign here is that the payments will be repudiated on June 15. at eso The former customs law laid down that tariff advances could only be f made after a three months warn-| | a tae i y wit ; . ing period had elapsed. The new .) Fe ae moang en OMY HM ME) Gown an. injunction, effective May| emigration in Northern Burpe. | police fired. several shots, ‘wounding handing dest, Special Courts are! | Germanism is a sift of God, and wesshtts Ut Upto England. | ew simply says that this. interval The ceremonial initialling of the | 1St, prohibiting all strikes and de- rilbeal Gian \ohietiy 1 but noe sual | ages of e unemployed workers.| sentences on Gommunists caught | | God wants me to fight for my HIN! IN, June 7. ‘or: 01 . Promulgatio. treaty will now take place in Rome but it was pointed out that after this ceremony a new period of nego- | tiating would become necessary if the pact was to be ratified in the vari- ous parliaments ofthe four powers. FRANCE WILL NOT PAY ON JUNE 15 Hopes England Will Follow Her Example | PARIS, June 7—The French gov- ernment does not propose to pay| either the defaulted payment of the debt due America on the 15th of De- monstrations in the cities, or any mass action by the peasantry against the money lenders and tax-collectors preying on them. A reign of te! has been institu- ted in these districts to suppress the militant workers and peasants, be- cause the authorities do not want a repetition of the days in 1929 when| the arsenal of Chittagong was cap- tured by the workers, who distributed all the guns and ammunition among themselves—and when the police in- spector in Nawakhali was killed in clashes between the workers and the authorities. Money lenders charge outrageous interest. Peasants are forced to pay 118 per cent a month interest, making {them virtual slaves to the usurers. Peasants are compelled to pay gov- ernment taxes to the landlord, which is included in their. rent, but when the government tax-collector comes numbers are added to daily by the | women and children who are join- ing their men folk. This second re- |fugee wave raises special problems in the field of children’s relief: Spe- cial children’s homes and family housing are being planned all along the German frontier. Maternity cen- ters are to be opened for expectant mothers in various frontier towns. “Though much has been achieved already, we realize that we have mertly touched the surface of the tremendous problem. What has been accomplished was made possible by the National Committees’ good re- sponse to our appeals. For instance, the French Committee has contrib- uted 15,000 francs to the Interna- tional Relief Fund, in addition to the relief work they are doing themselves. Czechoslovakia collected 10,000 frequest. coal thefts in the Ruhr led to this bloody clash,” ac- cording to the “Frankfurter Zeitung” of May 28. Food Stores Raided Unemployed workers stormed a food store of the Storm Troopers in Duesseldorf, which was opened on the occasion of the Schlageter celebration. The store, in the quarters of the Bak- ers’ Guild, was guarded by storm troopers. These Nazis were beaten by the unemployed, and one of them, Stemmen, died of his injuries. Unemployed attacked a number of food stores in Hanover, smashing the windows and taking away all food- stuffs. The police threw a cordon around the whole district and made More than 80 arrests. Force Withdrawal of Relief Cut The mayor of the little town of Sontra (near Kassel), a Nazi, ordered a 50 per cent cut in unemployment distributing illegal néwspapers and leaflets. Comrade Juerr, e yousz girl typist, was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment by the Berlin Court on May 18 for distributing leaflets. Mass Trials. é Under the headline “Special Court on the Belt,” the bourgeois “Stutt- garter Neue Tageblatt” reports mass trials of workers who sold the “Sued- deutsche Arbeiterzeitung,” the “Tri- bunal,” and other Communist liter- ature. The nationalist “Tag” of Berlin, reporting the trial says “The accused stated in court that. she still believes in Communism. The District Attor- ney declared: ‘The public must be told of the bold and impudent man- ner in which the Communists dare to behave in these Special Courts.’” An office-worker by the name of Germanism. Service in war is not a violation of Christian conscience but is obedience to God.” mal negotiations are* taking place between the American and English governments on the question of the June 15 debt payment, though it is officially denied here that the Eng- lish cabinet has received or will re- of this new law also means that Turkey is setting aside a number of commercial treaties she has en- tered into with other countries which contain most-favored-nation clauses. By NATHANIEL BUCHWALD Daily Worker Correspondent It was just a local affair—the cpening of a new clinic in the So- Kolniki section of Moscow. A feature of the new health cen- ginsk is about 60,000. For a town of its size, Noginsk is well supplied with medical service. The local Soviet maintains one general hospital, a children’s hospital, a maternity hos- pital, a “consultation station” for “We Are Producing a Most Precious Article-Workers Health” houses, clinics and other health tn- stitutions maintained by the Glu- hovo Combinat are all by-products of the Soviet system of social insur- ance. The workers do not pay a ko- pek for these services. The factory ; % t i : ther and child, where infants are | management is obliged to pay into cember last, or the new payment} around they h to pay the tax alj| crowns up to May 1, while other | relief ‘The unemployed: Communists, | Kormes, . also caught distributing] ter, equipped according to the last | mothe y EO SANE A on eth moana ey cave teeny {2% 21 | sums have been received from Spain, | Socialist and Neer arkeg, assembled | leaflets, admitted that he had read| word of medical science, was the |supplicd with milk, and where | the social insurance fund something month: this procedure is great, since the| England, Holland and America. The | and marched to the Town Hall, where| them. The court then declared that| large auditorium where the open-| mothers are instructed in the funda- | like 16 per cent over and above the The cabinet has as yet not made! peasants receive no benefits from the | collections in the United States how- his case was so serious that he would mentals of child care, a nursery | total payroll. Out of the huge fund its.decision public, but Daladier, the | French Prime Minister, gives as rea- sons for the government's non-pay- ment the fact that»he would be ove: thrown by the Socialists and Nation- alists in the Chamber of Deputies if he advocated payment; the Jact that government, except a strong military force which is always on hand to keep them in subjection. Even prop- ertyless peasants are forced to pay taxes. Numerous small outbreaks of peas- ants and workers in all parts of India ever, are still far behind those of the European countries. “In addition to the actual relief work, our committee has published special material giving an expose of the exact situation in Germany, thus enlightening the public on the real @ stormy scene was enacted. Many unemployed members of the Nazi Party tore up their membership cards and threw away their party badges. The pressure of the indignant work- ers compelled the Mayor to retract his r order. Workers Wenate Days’ Pay for have to be tried by the Supreme Court in Leipzig. The Berlin political police arrested nearly 50 printers on May 16, 17 and 18, the sole charge being that they formerly worked in the City Printing Plant, where the “Rote Fahne” had ing celebration was. held. The hali was filled with workers from the neighborhood. The platform was decked out with banners of several factories and local workers’ organ- izations. The Presidium included a score of workers, men and women, who obvi- where children are cared for while their mothers are at work, three kin- dergartens and a public drug store. ‘With the excention of the drug store, where medical and hygienic supplies are sold at nominal prices, all this health service is free and available thus raised the factory builds and maintains its health institutions, 7 gives the workers free vacations with / pay, and maintains a variety of in- stitutions and activities calculated to improve the living conditions of the workers. It goes without saying because payments from Germa caused by ‘hese unbearable condi-| character of the fascist terror.” Defense been printed. They were arrested| ously were proud of the new insti-|to every resident of the town. poet 2 insurance fund also covers were stopped by international agree-' ijons, are qge order of the day. Dis-| Ree ae Within the last two weeks the| at the labor exchange or in their| tution in their neighborhood. There| But in addition to the institutions | the payment of sick-benefits (full ment, nee cannot pay the United | jjlusioned th Ghandi and be-| ‘This report from the International | Wuerttemberg District of the Red Aid| homes and brought to police head- States since Germany does not pay her; and the fact that French de- fault, especially if supported by En- glish default, will create a situation at the London conference where Am- erica will not be able to evade a com- plete reconsideration of the whole question of internationg] indebted- trayers of @e national struggle who offered “non-violent” struggle coupled with the round table talks, and who opposed fighting for the every day needs of the masses, these masses are now looking for leadership to the revolutionary movement. In spite of the government attack unions in the cities. The peasantry is | Committee shows that actual relief | work—inside fascist Germany as well as for the emigres in the adjoining | coutitries—is going ahead rapidly. Hundreds of refugees cannot be aided | because of shortage of funds. It is | the highest proletarian obligation of the workers of America to make up LL.D.) issued and distributed two numbers of the “Tribunal.” In addi- tion a special number was published, with articles on the situation in Ger- many, and several leaflets were dis- tributed. The workers of a big Stuttgart fac- ‘ory (for obvious reasons we cannot members ave paying their dues regu- quarters, where they were grilled for hours. The police arrested these printers in an effort to prevent the illegal printing of the “Rote Fahne” and other publications, although the po- lice know all of these printers and know very well that they have noth- was music rendered by an orchestra hidden from view. There were speeches. There was loud applause and even the playing of the “Inter- nationale” at the mention of certain mames of local workers. who per- formed deeds of quiet heroism in pushing the project to completion. of humanity,” a “friend of the poor’ maintained by the municipal (Soviet) government, there is a complete health service organized by the Glu- hovo Textile Combinat. In the set- tlement of Gluhovo, where most of the plants of the Combinat are lo- cated, several well-equipped health institutions are reserved exclusively day nurseries, indergartens and wages plus medical care), maternity benefits, etc. For a worker of Glu- hoyo, money fever stands between his sickness and his cure, Close Health Supervision In the factory proper there are first aid stations in every depart- ment, and every plant has its physi« tory are objects of constant vigil- : a tan . y ? u ‘ Built by the Workers for the workers of the factory. Here | cian and nurses, as well as an infirm. — ues oes ey, Fanart Pee for their inactivity in this field in bear ve sor May te ah Es bade printing the ileal) mere was a conspicuous absence | again you find an up-to-date hos-|ary for emergency caser. The dnt ST ATE EXPLOITS | Meousande BN dnc aae rea ate labor organization, every | 2% the Political prisoners, Red Aid of speeches eulogizing a “benefactor | pital, maternity quarters, four model | tary and safety conditions of the fac~ BULGAR JOBLESS becoming more aggressive and is car- rying on their struggle | union, must begin collecting for Ger- man relief at once. Funds must be rushed to the National Committee to Aid Victims of German Fascism, 75 larly. The increased activity of the Red Aid has led to many police raids, in which some comrades were arrest- Toscanini to Boycott Bayreuth Because of who, by his. monetary contribution hhad made the institution possible. The new clinic was not the gift of a rich exploiter to his slaves,—it was “children’s platforms.” . Nursery Part of Factory ‘The nursery is as much an organic ance on the part. of the factory man- agement and the trade-union com~ mittee working hand in hand, i ed. But the a : ‘ 2 f organizati medical organization of the fectory JAP ‘AN PREPARES aa ay doe toate deateoleon ppp ect a Nasi Anti-Semitism & health institute ie the local Bh devecencnt dedi caaeteigla. or ce . eg record of every worker Eve On) io tb ik SAN, workers’ government, rayon—So- | scientific researeh. On the to | and checl up through ex- Men Live on 30 Cents to the international distributing Dictator of Uruguay . MILAN, Italy, June 6-—The Nazi Viet of Sakotnit, forthe residents of | work aces cea in ke cha beens | siunationm THA salt exper . sy persec! icians e ion. a Day in Labor Army | SOFIA, Bulgaria, June 4.—The| sompusory labor army in Bulgaria,| for which every man over is} liable, nets the state a profit of} DRIVE TO SOVIET MONGOLIA LINE SHANGHAI, June 7.—Japanese $800,000 a year. The men are under troops are concentrating in Chahar nilitary authority, they are taught} province, in preparation for a drive “patriotism” and that they have @| through Mongolia towards the So- “duty to the state,” and they get! viet frontier, according to Lieut. Gen. food, shelter and clothing free. The) Koiso, Japanese Chief of Staff, who quality of the food, etc, can be seen} declared that “Japan must occupy vy the fact that the cost to the state | Kalgan to protect Jehol.” ‘f each man is 30 cents per day. But} Two thousand additional Japanese he forced labor that these men do, | troops have arrived at Dolon Nor from HEIMWEHR GUARD AUSTRIAN BORDER “VIENNA, June 7.—The Austrian government yesterday sent Heim- wehr detachments from Innsbruck to the German frontier, armed with machine guns, to act as frontier guards. Heimwher armed detach- ments have reinforced the regular uch as draining swamps, building Jehol, reinforcing the troops there,| jams, repairing roads, nets the gov- while Japanese planes are very ac-| ‘mnment 45 cents per man per day. | tive in the Kuiyuan region. Reports| Here is state socialism on a grand from Kalgan state that Feng-Yu- police at Kitsbuehel, Tyrol resort to suppress Nazi activities. The Inns- bruck police threatens to use severe | measures, including the use of fire-| Pushes Fascist Aims BUENOS AIRES, June 6,—'The | Fascist movement in Uruguay, led by | President Gabriel Terra, the dicta~ tor, is carrying further its program of destruction of all political liber- ties. by censoring telephone conver- sations, closing opposition newspa- pers, and deporting or arresting its opponents, following the alleged dis- covery of a revolutionary plot to overthrow Terra before the June 25 elections. KUNITZ IN PROVIDENCE MONDAY | PROVIDENCE, R. Il.—Dr. Joshua} Kunitz speaks in Providence Monday, Jews, pacifists or radicals, has'led Ar- turo Toscanini, conductor of the New York Philharmonic-Symphony Or- chestra, to cancel his contract to di- rect “Die Meistersinger” and “Parsi- fal” at this summer’s Bayreuth fes- tival. ‘Two months ago Toscanini and ten other leading conductors and musi- cians sent a cable protest to Hitler from New York, appealing to him to stop his persecutions of such artists as Klemperer, Walter and Busch. No reply came. The Nazis only response was to bar all compositions of the signers of the protest from the Ger- man radio. ‘ ‘ Yesterday Toscanini telegraphed to Winifred Wagner, manager of the After the formal ceremonies, “spread” of tea and cakes and sand- wiches was served to all comers, Then came an inspection of the building with its 102 rooms. revolution this industry most deplorable condition, now flourishing. We are building healthy socialist society, and we must have healthy men and women to build it, and a healthy young genera- tion to carry on the work.” ‘ ‘Well Supplied nursery to leave their children. On the way home they take them back. During the seven and a half hour period com) the regular shift and the lunch hour of the working women, their children receive the most attentive and expert care at the hands of a trained corps of nurses and supervising physicians. (Noginsk maintains its own training school for nurses.) 16,P.C. for Insurance Mothers are allowed time off to nurse their suckling infants. The older children are fed at the nursery. Modern principles of education are practiced with respect to games, rec- reation and physical care. A sense of self-reliance is inculcated in the chil- is also carried into the homes of the workers by a staff of visiting nurses, Yet it would be wrong to think attained the millenium. Many workers still have to be edu- cated to keep their shoes in factory, and to take care bruises. PUBS SOMO WIP 4} SaztTeor with splendid stubbornness about the work of overcoming them. There are millions of yards of various textiles produced annually by the Gluhovo Combinat, but along e - f with textiles the workers’ regime is wale, with the government going Hsiang has already assembled an. arms, if Nami violence does not cease.|June 12, 8 p. m., at the Swedish festival and intimate friend of Hitler,| The uth of this simple state-| dren at an early age. It is the most es to business, sweating the labor it army of 100,900 at Kalgan. The pro-| Chancellor Dolifuss, Austrian dic-| Workingmen’s Hall, 5? Chestnut St.,| that since: “the lamentable events| mont is Siustrated at ey een aig eta Laeger the pant Ledeen teat signet ak gc mploys, and setting standards which Manchukuo Chinese commander, the| tator, returned from Ttaly yester-|}on the subject: “The Jew in Soviet | which injured my sentiments as aj the town'pf Nokinsk Sd ie Glu- pre ® group Ly Ani ith work ticbehe wan ie | make it easier for private employers renegade General Liu-Kwei-Tang, is| day, saying that. his agreements with | Russia.” | Man and artist have not yet under-|-hovo- ' Combinat 1s located. | low table, busying pie becaeoit destroyed © depress conditions of all the reported preparing to march on Kal-| Museolini andthe Pope guaranteed| ‘The ts under the a change,” he would ‘The Combinat employs me a oe tools ; ee class ‘United States vorke>” + gan from the Kuiyuan area, the independence of Austria, — ot the Friends ef the Soviet 'U i Bayreuth gathering. .. | wepkens. The tote! Popmiation Si sks ins Serpe ars lity every capitalist county, = _ ‘

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