The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 13, 1933, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

aad Be Page Four Published by the Comprodaliy Prbttshing Co. 13th St, New Fork City, 8. ¥. Telephone ALgon Addrens and mail cheeks to the Daily "Worker, daily exeont Bendey, at 52 8, auin 4-7956, Cable “DATWORK.” 50K, 18th St, New Terk, . B. By Mail everywhere: One year, $6; six months, $8.50; # months, $2; 1 month, 7e, exeepting Rerongh SUBSCRIPTION BATES: of Manhattan and Brenx, New York City. Canada: One year, 39: 6 months, $5; 7 months, $3, Catholic Worke YS | Clash With Nazis | at Munich Meet Hundreds of Young W ‘orkers Beaten by Nazi Troopers as Police Forbid Journeymen’s Congress | MUNICH, Germany ler regime among the German masses led Sesterday to serious clashes be- tween Nazi Storm Troopers and dele- COMMUNIST PRESS WIDELY READ IN ALL GERMANY Sentences Reported by Nazi Press Reveal Mass Circulation MUNICH, Germany, June .—The wide circulation of the illegal Com- munist -press all over Germany is re- vealed by a report in the “Voelkische Beobacl Nazi central organ, on & trial of Communists before’ the Munich Special Thomas Kaumer, Heinrich Wald- herr, Micheel Gilch, Franz Vincenz and Karl Wolf, all worke sentenced to terms of impr: ranging from three months to a year for distributing “400 copies of the ‘Neue Zeitung’, illegal] Communist in Munich, as well as Com- leaflets, calling for a general rike on May 1.” As the illegal Communist Party papers are circulated from hand to June 12.—The ¢ growing dissatisfaction with the Hit- | tes to the National Congress of the Catholic Journeymen’s Association hei Young Catholic workers attending the Congress are reported to have sung a parody on the Horst Wessel song, Nazi anthem, and a leading member of ie Congress taunted Nazis marchi a counter-demon- stration with “You are shouting ‘Heil Hitler!’ and yet you'll be glad enough when we deliver you from this man Hitler The Nazis attacked members of the Congress, tearing off their badges and beating them with clubs. The leader of the Swiss delegation was arrested and beaten, but released after a protest by the Swiss. Consul to the Munich police authorities. During the night several hundred Nazi Storm Troopers raided a hotel Catholic apprentices were ing, dragging them out of bed and beating them so badly that two of the young apprentices had to be taken to a hospital After the clashes the police author- ities suppressed the Congress and ordered the delegates to take the | first train out for their home towns. | Police and Storm Troopers today | |surrounded the headquarters of the |Catholic Journeymen Association, ordering the occupants to vacate |The Nazi Storm Troopers are taking over the building permanently. The official police statement on the clashes admits the anti-Nazi attitude of the apprentices, saying that the |Congress had to be suppressed be- cause of the “unruly conduct of the JUNE WEDDING } | | 2 IN BARCELONA | KILLED; AZANA IS AGAIN PREMIER Guards tried to disperse Great Britain, the world’s MADRID, Spain, June 12. — Two | financial center, and France, one of workers were killed and several in-| the main bankers of the world, speak jured in Barcelona today when Ciyil| of refusing payment of their debts, striking | the Soviet Union pays the notes it Fight of All Against All At London--Says Pravda (CONTINUED PROM PAGE ONE) greatest | hand, every single copy being read by | delegates.” dozens of persons, the report in the| This latest in the series of clashes | “Voelkische Beobachter” confirms the | between the Nazis and the other | bourgeois organizations indicates the |grave conflicts and antagonisms | within the bourgeois camp in Ger- | |many. Although the German capi- | |talist class has established Fascism | in an effort to save capitalism, the | frequent collisions between the Storm mass circulation of the Communist press Other trials of Communists are, re- Ported in the same issue of the “Voel- kische Beobachter”, such as the work- ers Kraus and .Reiter, and Karolin Bauer, bookkeeper elling Com- for munist newspapers. The court also | Troopers and the Stahhelm, the Na-| sentenced Comrade Ebert, a cabinet- and now the Catholics maker, to two months in jail for y thaat Fascist rule is far from distributing copies of the Communist Paper “Roter Kampf” (Red Struggle) secure in Germany. And of even greater importance 1s Franz Kammel, Communist. was|the fact that the Catholic workers sentenced to six months in jail for|are rapidly beginning to revolt distributing seven copies of the “Neue | against Fascism, although their | Zeitung” | priests tell them to “render unto The sentences imposed by the|Caesar that which is Caesar's,” ie. Nuernberg Special Court for the dis-|to accept the counter-revolutionary tribution of Communist literature ex- | regime. The Munich clash is a land- ceed even the heavy sentences of the |mark in the growth of anti-Fascist Munich Court. The Nuernberg| sentiment among the workers of | worker Buchmaier was sentenced to | Catholic belief, who have been inac- | three years imprisonment for having |cessible to anti-Fascist propaganda | distributed Communist leaflets. up to now. Mass Protest Can Save Thaelmann, Torgler and Dimitrov from Death By WILLY TROSTEL. Koenigsberg, Trier or Berlin; in- | ESR | Stead of Cathedral bombing— | pe Allega) leatiegy Issued by OU | Dieters: instead oF co-oer- | German comrades exposing the ab- f A H ee | ; at : ative premises, Karl Ljebknecht | ominable system of takjng hostages He emu | racticed by the Nazi murderers, is) House—and everything else would | bi : tally. In fact, as regards dia- | a. terrible document. By its publ cation in the legal press abroad, mil- lions and millions are being given an bolical cruelty, civilized Germany puts backward Bulgaria right in | building workers- in the University | signs. Attempts have been made, and Plaza, | are still being made, to undermine us The Cabinet “crisis continues’ with | 2¥, ‘ade boycott, shouting about our A a ‘dumping. Now Britain has aban- both the President and the politici-| doned the gold standard in order to ans frightened by the growing revo- . n |fight for world markets through lutionary temper of the Spanish mas- |dumping. The United States has ses. After Prieto, the socialist leader, | abandoned the gold standard in order and Domingo, radical socialist, hed/ to counteract British dumping by failed in their efforts to form a cabi- | American dumping. Both Britain and net, President Zamora was forced to|the United States are now shouting call again on Manuel Azana, whom | about Japanese dumping. he forced to resign three days ago. Capitalists Cannot Ignore U. S. §. B A Fight of All Against All. “The Soviet Union, if need be, will Both the bourgeois parties and the socialist leaders are afraid to hold new elections at the present time, | get along without the capitalist world, with dissatisfaction ripe among the | just as the peasant, in Saltykoy-| peasantry over the government's fail- | Shchedrin’s story got along without ure to carry out its land reform pro- | the general, though the general could mises, and with one giant strike after) not get along without the peasant. another breaking out all over Spain. ltr the capitalist world will realize which means that the crisis has not | been solved, but continues, with the class antagonism growing more acute | every day. for it to recognize the indisputable fact of the existence and unchecked | 8rowth of a system of socialism on one-sixth of the world’s surface. | Would it not be far more advan- | tageous for it to seek certain bene- | fits from peaceful trade. relations | with the Soviet Union, from normal | credit arrangements with the Soviet | Union, than to attempt rejuvenating itself in the blood of the Soviet Union? This question, apparently through oversight, has not found a place on the agenda of the Confer- ence. But we think that it would be well to regard it as one of the cen-| | The Bulgarian comrades, Dimitrov, ‘Tanev and Popov are threatened not only by the German, but also by the | Bulgarian fascists. Thejr alleged connection with the Sofia Cathedral outrage was intended to be used to impart to the Reichstag fire the character of an international Com- ASCISTS PRINT. idea of the actual state of affairs the shade | munist crime. As, however, it has Leaders’ Lives Ini Imminent Danger. The lives of the imprisoned lead- ers, of Comrade Thaelmann, Torg- im Germany, whjch must fill them with indescribable fury against the fascist rulers. In addition to the victims of fascism who have been buried, there are hundreds and hun- dreds whose bodies are lying unin- terred in the forests or floating in the ponds and rjvers. But apart from these murdered victims there are thousands and thousands who are languishing behind barbed wire, be- hind prison wells and in the prison hospitals, and are delivered over to the mercy of the savage Brown Shirts. Savage Reign of Terror. The leaders of “national Germany” deliver bombastic speeches about comradeship and chivalry, but “at | the same time maintaim a reign of savage terror surpassing anything ever known even in the Balkans. In the year 1925, the English Colonel Malone published a pamphlet de- seribing the bloody rule of Zankoff in Bulgaria. He wrote ‘The Osvoboshdenie society, the co-operative society whjch had 70,- 000 members, was declared to be il- legal and the whole of its prop- erty, amounting to hundreds of thillions of francs, was confiscated. The rulers in Sofia went so far in their cynicism as to use the won- derful building of the co-operative society jn Sofia for the police, and it is now officially called the ‘Bu- reau for Public Safety,’ whilst it is generally known as the Chamber of Horrors. Judging from what we saw during our last stay in Sofia, this designation seems to be jus- tified. “Under the Zankoff government massacres. have taken place in Dom-Palanka, Phjlippopolis, Bash- ardshik and Damokov. No less than 15 members of Parliament, who were elected to represent the ‘interests of the workers and peas- ants, were murdered, some of them in the streets of Sofia. “This cathedral . outrage was made an excuse for immediateiy persecuting all advanced sections of the population, for hunting down by the military officers’ lea- gue, the peice and the soldiers of all political opponents of the Zan- koff government, of whom it was said, after they had been murder- ed, that they had committed sui- cide.” Ome only needs to ‘change the reme—in piace of Sofia to ptt met |lic trial, the greater the danger of | |t e@ usual “suicjde”, “shot while at- |tempting to escape”, or “combined | inflammation of the lungs and kid- | jneys”. Thus the life of Comrade | Thaelmann is in immediate danger Baseless Reichstag Fire Charges. The accusation of setting fire to the Rejchstag is obstinately main- tained against Comrades Torgler, Dimitrov, Popov, Taney, although, as is known, Comrade Torgler, as soon as he heard of the charge of arson brought against him, voluntarily re- | Ported to the authorities, and altho | the Bulgarian comrades had just as |much to do with the Reichstag out- rage as, say the American Ambas- sador in Berlin. But jt is precisely the lack of “evidence found in the catacombs” that constitutes such a great danger to Thaelmann, whilst the fact that Torgler, Dimitrov, Tanev and Popov had nothing to do with the fire in the Reichstag is an even greater danger to them. Since the “Manchester Guardjan” and the Paris “Journal” openly ac- cused Goering, Goebbels and their Nazi gangsters of having set fire to the Reichstag, the German govern- ment is like a whipped cur, The windle of the Reichstag fire’1s be- coming from day to day a greater source of embarrassment for the gov- ernment itself. It is therefore hjgh time that the accused, who serve as an inconvenient reminder to the pub- lie, should be got out of the way ac- cording to the approved methods the Meals | become perfectly obvious that the fire ie the Reichstag was the work of the Nazjs, the rulers of Germany | nave no longer any object in con- ler, Dimjtroff, Popoff, Tanney and | Recting this crime with the Sofia | others, are in part larly great | danger. The “evidence” found in the | “catacombs” of the Karl Liebknecht House is said to have proved the guilt of the leaders of the Commu- nist Party This “evidence” was | used as a reason for declaring a state | of emergency. On March 2, the| |“Angriff”, the Berlin organ of the national socialjsts, promised ‘that | these documents would be submitted | | to the public. Over ten weeks have passed since | then and absolutely nothing has been | submitted to the public, in spite of |the fact that Goebbels has a state | |forgery factory at his disposal. But | the less evidence there is for a pub- | Cathedral outrage. All the worse therefore for the accused! Goering and Co. need show less compunction towards the arrested Bulgarian comrades than towards | their own countrymen. We know only too well the methods employed by the fascist governments of Bul- garia in order to get rid of people abroad who are inconvenient to them. For jnstance, it was proved that the Bulgarian Ambassador in Rome, Ra. deff, was an accomplice to the mur- der of Chauleff, the leader of the Macedonian Lefts, and also that this same Radeff had designs on the life of Comrade Dimitrov. And Comrade | Dimitrov is now in the clutches of the German Radeffs. One can there- | fore have some idea of the danger threatening him. Immediate Action Needed. Prompt action is necessary. We | call attention not only to the suc- cesses of former big international campaigns to save comrades whose lives were in danger, but also in the first place to the foreign situation of the German government. It is in a state of complete isolation, and it has been fiercely attacked jn the foreign press. When it was at first stigmatized on account of its cru- elties, it remained quite indifferent. But cince Hitler’s emissaries abroad have had to run the gauntlet and the German government is being treated in a way jn which no other government has hitherto been treated, it is coming to realize that it can- not tread all the laws of humanity under foot with impunity. Tt is our task, therefore, to mob- ilize world public opinion on behalf of our comrades. Factory meetings, big demonstrations must be held, delegates must be sent to the Ger- man Consulates and Embassies. Del- egations should also be sent to inter- view our own authorities and also business people, manufacturers and bankers, who have business connec- tions with Germany. The precondi- tion for this work, however, is a tre- mendous press campaign. Tf we work indefatigably and in- tenmty our campaign, ovr tmemsoned compades will be reacned, 9 | ate endeavor to counteract the anti- “WELT AM ABEND” Socialist: “Edits New | Sheet Posing as the “Worker's Friend” BERLIN, May 30—In. a. desper- Fascist activity of the Berlin work- ing class, the Nazi Party has re- sorted to a disgraceful trick, pub- lishing the former Communist work- ers’ evening paper, the “Welt am Abend”, as a, Fascist newspaper. The “Welt am Abend” is being published with exactly the same set-up as for- merly, but it reveals its own dema- gogy in a “Notice to Our Readers,” in which it says: “The ‘Welt am Abend’ will pay Special attention to social problems of the workers and office employ- ees.” The Fascist “Welt am. Ab- n “the newspaper of the working clas- ses.” ‘ Socialist Edits Fascist Paper. The new Fascist “Welt am Ab- end” ts edited by the Socialist Du- derstedt, who was an editor of the Berlin Socialist “Vorwaerts” until a short time ago. Although the greatest effort {is made to give the paper a revolu- tionary appearance (The two head- lines in the second issue read: “Austria Suppresses the C. P.” and “Tom Mooney acquitted,” while the the paper contains reports on the Second Five-Year Plan, “Morgan's Bribery Maehine,” “Profits at the Expense of Poor Settlers,” “Protect the Man of Labor,” and “Protect the Small Artisan”) the Berlin workers says that it is its aim to be} tral questions.” Under the headline “Squaring the Circle,” Pravda reviews the maze of imperialist contradictions and con- flicts in the economic field, showing} that “in world markets, there is the most acute fight of all against all.” The editorial states: “Four years after the beginning of the crisis the imperialists have gathered to ‘cure’ the capitalist world from the ills of the crisis. Undoubtedly, at the con- tries against each other will be formed, fall apart, and form again. the conference to further its policy }of preparing economic against the USSR. The Four- Power Pact, which the English Die- Hards regard as the first step in the |formation of an anti-Soviet .inter- ventionist bloc, they expect to turn jat the London Conference, as well as use it against the U.S.A. At the Lon- |don Conference, one country will be represented that knows no crisis, no the future with certainty, and which is building the new Socialist order. This country is the U.S.S.R. This country is regarded with hope by all the oppressed and exploited of the capitalist world. With its social- ist construction, its successes in de- veloping productive forces, in raising the living standards of the masses, and in building socialism, the prole- tariat of this country shows all toil- ers the way of getting rid of capi- talis slavery, crisis, and constantly increasing poverty and want.” SENATE MOVES AGAINST VETS ‘Wage Sham Fight to Reduce Cuts WASHINGTON, June 12.—Nation- wide pressure of the angry war vet- erans on the Senate has compelled further maneuvers on the part of the politicians now that the bill is up in | that body. | Senator Steiwar of Oregon offered | a motion to instruct those who confer with representatives of the house to | demand that reductions in veterans’ | relief and compensation be limited to 25 per cent of what is now being | Teceived. Still Maintain Deception At the same time the Senators who are waging a sham fight for the amendments are all in favor of the Roosevelt policy of cutting off all vet- erans unless they can prove to the satisfaction of the hunger govern- | ment that their ills were the result | of war services. This means that each individual | case will be taken up and put through jall the red tape of the veterans’ | bureau, while the victim starves. | No Senator raised the question of | immediate payment of the balance of the bonus. Bridgeport Co. Works 3 Shifts on War Order BRIDGEPORT, Conn., June Chase Brass & Copper Foundry here shipped last Saturday to Jersey City, Boston and Hartford more than 100,- 000 pounds of unfinished material fer cartridges. The foundry, formerly making ash trays, now is making heavier pieces which apparently are designed to fit on the end of big laugh scornfully at the Fascist en-| day deavor to put on a proletarian and “revolutionary” mask, Although tens of thousands of sample copies have been distributed gratis, the new Fascist “Welt am Abend” has been wholly rejected by the workers of Berlin. That the former editor of the So- cialist “‘Vorwerts” should be editor- in-chief of the new Fascist “work- ers paper” is not surprising, Duder- stedt 1s merely imitating the action of the Wuerttemberg State Execu- tive of the German Socialist Party, and the Socialist members of the Brunswick Diet not to mention do#- ens of other Socialist leaders, who. PORT CHILDREN; WANTS TO GIVE THEM AWAY NEW YORK.—Velma and Evelyn, |six-year-old twin daughters of John |De Marco, salesman and veteran of |the Ttalian-Turkish war, were of- fered by their father for adoption to anyone who @ould offer them a home. ‘The fatigt said he was willing to openly went over to Pascism after eon cose | A CONTRIBUTOR, Ben Stevens, writes us that the Navy Depart- ment is “requesting” that the film of the recent Akron disaster be de- layed, or permanently dropped. The Navy Department, he says,| thinks it is not good for the masses | to be reminded how easily people ean get wiped out in these war ma- | @ reason for war, and the Kuomin-} JUNE 18, 1938 Foreign and .--By Burck. | Chiang-Kai-Shek Inciting Japan- Soviet Conflict “Compromise With the External Enemy With Object of Crushing Communists” A portion of the Kuomintang press in China expresses its~“‘indignation against the U.S.S.R. in connection with the negotiations concerning the sale of the Chinese-Eastern Railway. They even speak of the necessity of banishing the Soviet Ambassador from China. The fact is that the Soviet Government, wishing to re- move one of the most important rea- sons for a war against Japan, is ready | to sell the railway, constructed by the Czarist government in Manchuria, this railway being today in possession of the U.S.S.R. and under joint man- agement of the representatives of the Chinese-Eastern Railway and of the| Manchurian Administration. The Soviet Union wishes to remove | tang newspapers evidenily wish the} U.S. 8, R. to engage in a war... because of the colonial “right” of the Chinese government to participate in the management of the C. E. R, Kowtows to Japan. The Kuomintang government of the butcher Chiang-Kai Shek—which is extremely courteous to the Ambassa- dors and Consuls of imperialist Japan, at a time when the Japanese army is seizing one region after an- other in China—threatens, through the bourgeois press, “new rupture of relations with the U.S.S.R. because of the negotiations about the C.E.R. The Kuomintang counter-revolution- ary bourgeoisie, which retreats be- fore the Japanese militarists almost without a fight and is betraying its own soldiers on the front, depriving them of active support, now wants the USS.R. to fight for the sake of the unprofitable C. E. R. However, aS a matter of fact, the Kuomintang lackeys of imperialism ference, groupings of capitalist coun-| England will attempt to make use of | blockade | into a weapon of anti-Soviet struggle} unemployment, but which is facing $ |ruling in Nanking, do not intend to seriously resist Japan. They have a} different occupation: to smash their | own workers and peasants, to block-| ade and to smash the Soviet. regions of China. | Of Use Only in Civil War. A British bourgeois paper issued in China—the “Peking Tientsin Times” of Jan, 24—wrote as follows: “Nan- king has recently ordered abroad) | chines. And the films might focus too much attention on the day-and- | night war- preparations now going | on. AX? what has, become of the pros- perity that was to have come | rolling along with the beer barrels? Where all was noise and ballyhoo | & few weeks ago, there is now only| | silence. | armaments, consisting mostly of air-| The big beer prosperity has failed | planes of light con:truction, of trench | to show up. guns, etc., which may be of use only | | . * during a civil war and are not a| | [aera have to get another cam-|means of offering resistance to| | paign now. | Japan.” | The Chiang-Kai-Sheks themselves | tee good dough in the White| do not always conceal their inten- | House business. For a weekly| tions. The Shanghai bourgeois news- | series of interviews, Col. Louis Howe| PaPér, “Sinvan Bao” of May 19th, | and Water Trumbull, news writer, get | Yeported a speech delivered by Huan- | Fu, the representative of the Nan- king government, upon his arrival in | Peiping. Huan-Fu, who was sup- T the same time, the news comes 7 are fs posed to organize the defense of Pei- that girls working in hat factories | Posed said, in part: wet trom 00 cen ou 80 & ee “Some persons have recently pro- posed a compromise with the Com- Roosevelt prosperity has come! munists with the purpose of fighting back—for his politician friends, for| the Japanese. This is absurd. The the, Peuimeny boys ete. | best policy to save the position and f | Party (i.e. the counter - revolu- But the workers somehow can't! tionary Kuomintang) is a compro- en eae oe | mise with the external enemy with NEWS item announces that the | {He opiect of crushing the Commu- Vatican will install new hydrants.) Such is the treacherous face of the | They'll need awful powerful ones! xoumintang “patriots.” They are | © cleanse it of the ten centuries of! more afraid of the Chinese toilers | arummulated corruption, | | $1500 per broadcast. than of the Japanese generals—and this is quite natural! They are retreating before the Jap- anese army, but maintain huge | hordes for a blockade and war against the Soviet regions of China. And they want the U.S.S.R. to be into a war on account of the Chinese | Eastern Railway. The world proletariat will wage al struggle as ever in defense of the Soviet regions of China and against the partition of China by the im- perialists. But the world prolet it will at the same time expose Chiang-Kai-Shek butchers and proy- ocateurs, cringing before the im-= Pperialists. Anti-Fascist United Front Conference in Newark, N. J. Tonight NEWARK, N. J., June 12.—The United Front Conference Against, German Fascism and Anti-semitism is rallying the workers and organi« zations affiliated with the conference, to a parade. A meeting will be held tomorrow, June 13, 8 p. m. at nine Belmont Ave., Newark, N. J. All dele egates affiliated with the conference are urgently requested to attend this meeting as definite plans will be dis~ cussed on how to make the parad@ and demonstration on June 24, Na« tional Anti-Fascist Day, a success, Preparations are also being made to hold Tag Days on Jane 24th and 25th to aid the victims of German Fascism and Anti-Semitism, Meeting Thursday to Prepare Anti- Fascist Demonstration June 24 NEW YORK—The local City Committee to Aid Victims of Ger- man Fascism has called a mobiliza- tion meeting for Thursday evening, June 15, 8 p. m., at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and Irving Pl. to check up on preparations for the Anti-Fascist Day in New York on June 24. All organizations are re- quested to send delegates to this meeting. June 24 is Anti-Fascist Day throughout the world. The German United Front Action Committee, to- gether with all other united front committees, have set this day aside for the New York Anti-Fascist dem- onstration, which will be held at Union Square at 2 p. m, All organizations, carrying ban- ners and slogans, will gather on Madison Square at 12 noon, June 24, and then march with bands te Union Square. (By a Marine Worker Correspondent} BALTIMORE, Md.—The Salvation Army is not only recruiting for the Roosevelt forced labor camps, but is stooling on young workers who don want to be fooled into joining the army.—A. M. | ake aaa | An editorial in the New York Her-' | ald Tribune states that the house of | Morgan is “one of the nation’s most | Precious possessions.” | That was a slight error. They | mean that the nation is one of the | Morgan’s most precious possessions. rise ea is planning to use the first Beeth- World’s Largest Aluminu Plant Opens in Soviet Union; a teas Does segue Sowing Campaign Nears End — ™ oven's Choral movement of the! Ninth symphony as a “hymn of | peace.” | | | the. imperialist gentlemen of the League of Nations. ' } total European output, or one fifth of the world output of aluminum. The growing importance of aluminum in aviation, shipbuilding, electric equip- ment and other industries, enhances the significance of this new triumph | of sovielist construction in the Sov- iet Union. A paragraph In today’s papers an- nounces the successful completion of a three billion ruble internal loan | which was floated in 20 days. The workers of Kharkov celebrated the completion of the loan campaign in Plendid socialist style: a huge pas- EETHOVEN gave god-like expres- | sion to the most towering revo- lutionary sentiments, expressing the aspirations of the bourgeoisie when it was a revolutionary class. wR ee ‘The bourgeoisie is now a reaciion- ary decaying class. Ce ee eS The music of Beethoven belongs to | the workers. The bourgeoisie must shiver when | they hear some of the storms i | Beethoven’s seventh or third sym. | phonies. | |senger plane carried udarniks who | had made the best showing in plac- ‘ing the loan, while below, dazzling rockets and fireworks were bursting and giving a fascinating birds-eye Cl ahs Assuming that they tmdersiand what they hear. Which is very un- | likely. Since no class wants to hear | its own death sentence. |Chicago Worker Puts Life Savings Into Soviet 10 Dc. Bonds NEW YORK, June 12.—The “Novy Mir,” Russian Communist news- paper, has just 1eceived a check for $620 from a Russian worker in Chi- accompanied by a letter in which he writes: , “Please do whatever is necessary to transmit. this check to the Am- torg Trading Corporation, requesting them to buy 1000 roubles of Soviet bonds for me. “These bonds shall remain on de- posit in the Moscow Government Bank, and please send me a cer- tificate for them ..... “I convinced myself that a worker must not trust the capitalists. Every- thing he owns is being taken away from him with. the prospect of being thrown out on the streets in his old view of the giant plants, factories and workers’ homes built during the Pyatiletka. This was by way of il- lustrating the results of previous in- ternal loans, and the purpose of the second Pyatiletka loan. Significant of the rising material welfare and political consciousness of the rural population are figures showing that while in 1931 individual peasants did not at all participate in the internal loan, and colhozes absorbed only 20,- 000,000 rubles; this year individual Peasants subscribed 114 millions, and colhozes 520 millions. A notable increase in the output of pig iron is recorded during the past week. On April 12 output reached the record figure of 203 thousand tons. It looked like a momentary spurt, for production soon fell to a lower level. In the last few days though, the record figure has been consistently maintained and even exceeded. The new record is 21.4 thousand tons. Goal output has also improved con- siderably, and is nearing the sched- uled daily production of 215,000 tons, with 207,000 tons already attained. = While the itis still proceeds in the northern ions, newspapers anmoence ® 85 per cent.commietion | which amounts to 35 per cent of the © (From the Moscow Correspondent of the Daily Worker.) MOSCOW, June 12.—The Aluminum Etsctrolitic plant, the firet of the Beethoven was the sort of man huge aluminum combinat at Dnieprostroy, opens today. |-who would spit his contempt upon! from the Dnieper Hydro-Electric station, the greatest in the world, the | aluminum combinat will attain a capacity of 40,000 tons annual output, of the sowing ptsetam by the state ieciaay, 98 fer cent by collective farms, as of June 5. Attention i now fully centered on the prepara tions for the harvest. Weeding applied on a large scale for the firse — time on grain areas, adds to the bright outlook for a record crop. Threat of Soviet Embargo by Austria VIENNA. (By mail).—Austria threate ens to decree a general embargo on Soviet goods unless the negotiations with the Soviet Trade Delegation are concluded before June 15, according to the semi-official “Reichspost”. The Soviet representatives are demanding that the embargo on important Sove ig@ exports be lifted before the Soviet Caion places orders with Austrian, manufacturers, but the Dollfuss gore ernment refuses to do so. SOVIET RADIO NEWS All those who have been ‘disape pointed in not receiving the Come intern Station lately should not blame their own receivers. Since May 1 this station has been off the 5@ metre channel and is now broad~ casting on 1481 metres (2026 k. oF with a power of 500 k.w. ‘ Station REN, Moscow, on 46 metres with an output of kw. and RV in Khabarovsk is on ‘ metres with an output of 20 kw. output of these two stations is low for our reception, ma The readers of the Daily will be informed just as soon as a change is made in the broadeast schedules and the wave-length, power and time will be given. i * The Comintern station can only be received with a long-wave (commere cial type) receiver. The household recetvers do net wih eae lr | RS RSS DERE A RE Se

Other pages from this issue: