The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 21, 1933, Page 4

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Page Four aoa by the Compredalty Publishing Co, 33 os Ad@ress and mail checks te the Daily New Fork City, N. ¥ Telephone ALgnnqein 4.7856 Worker, 58 ©. Tus,, Anity oxeopt Sundsy, af 28 8 Cabie “DAIWORK.” 18th Mt, New York, M, 7. Dail FORCES ARE GATHERING FOR ANTI-FASCIST ACTION - TO BE HELD JUNE 24 Minneapolis, St. Paul, Chicago, Cleveland, Newark, Bridgeport and New York Join in The workers and their June 24, National Anti-Fascist Day, citi organizations are mobilizing their forces for all over the country. Reports from thousands of miles apart show the nature and the wide extent of the | workers anti-fascist front arising throughout the United States. Minn, committee, consist- foreign-language 0’ ra Minneapo! A provisic ing of variou 20. An t mass meeting will be held Saturday, June 24, in Minneapolis under the auspices of the provisional committee. A united front to which 500 or- ganizations been ted, is to take place Front on ek- for a demonstration on Ju une 24. Newark, N. J delegates, presenting workers’ organizations, German Branch of the the Kranken Kasse, a total membership 000, pledged themselyes i-Fascist Conference June 16 at the German Labor Lyceum to mobilize their organizations a demonstration af June 24. in Militar Fourteen ten German including the Socialist Party and other: of nea’ at an Ant Park. The pa- rade will start at 3:30 p.m. from 347 Springfield Ave. and march to Mili- tary Park, where speeches will be made in English, German and ish. o | puilding of a United Front Congress progressing in Paul, Minn teps have been taken in Perth Am- boy and New Brunswick, N. J.; Lo-| Yonke: ¥.; Proyi- dence, R. I abeth and Hillside N ani rt, Conn, by parade Saturday, | se Jew-| forces for the Nev | Saturday front has Chicago. A German united been established in The ed organizations widespread moyement York City Anti-Fascist Action led a mass rally The St at 79th rman of the Ger- cist Action, will speak Labor Lyceum, Wil- y and Myrtle Aves., Thursday, at 8 pm, on German Fa‘ cism under the auspices of the Joint Conference of Working Class Or- tions of Brooklyn. liminary Anti will be held by the LL.D. Friday of night, and Intervale New n Anti-Fas- Committee is mobilizing all its York Anti-Fascist Union Square on demonstration in June 24 ‘Pravda’ Sharply Hits Hugenberg’s Demands for Soviet Territory German F ascists | B ear "Responsibility for Aggressive Anti- Soviet Memorand™ Soviet Union “Tn vincible, Impregnable| Fortress of Socialism!” MOSCOW, submitted by Herr Hugenberg, June 20 Commenting on German Minister of Economics, the provocstive : sbemorsaidden at the Lenin’s widow. Ship 7,500 Tons of ; Scrap Iron from Baltimore to Japan (Marine Worker Correspondence) | BALTIMORE, Md.—The Nor- wegian ship Norward just rett| | Baltimore with 7,500 tons of scrap) |iron for Japan direct, It seems that the Japanese haven't enough ships of their own to help them prepare for war. Against whom? | ay Be War Orders Increase in Metal Industry As | said good-by to the horse. U.S. Pushes War Plans! the U. S. government is vig- orously pushing preparations for war is indicated in orders recently with metal concerns |are as follows: Chase Brass & Copper Co., Waier- bury, Conn., 150 ton Some of these | ers Clara Zetkin (at the left) in conversation with Nadezhda Krupskaya, JINGO DISPLAY TO: WHIP WAR SPIRIT) |Worker Writ rites of War Designs of Army (By a Marine Worker Correspondent) BALTIMORE, Md. — There was regular war display at Pimlico} k, at which the artillery forces Only a little while ago the government had six submarines and two tenders alongside the Recreation Pier. These vessels have gone from here back to the Canal Zone and then to the Pacific Ocean for maneuvers. rs are given a line of what Subs are not going to do, but all any of us have to do is to chum! up with the seamen on these ships of human slaughter and chissel. the placed | truth out of the unfortunate work- that were starved into joining | the United States Navy. The army display: that the big 50 calibre cart-|bugs were putting on was not out ridge brass cups. This company also| of pity for a few horses, as the horse- *| divided 200 tons of cartridge brass|drawn guns were done away with We) orker’ Party U.S.A. By Meil sverpwhere: One year, 36; six momthe, $6.50; 8 months, #2; 1 manth, 78s, exeepting Boron, Cana Clara Zetkin, aided by a Young Communist, entering the Reichs- tag last a to open the Reichstag session. [Khaki- Shirt Rackoee Hunts Victims With Net of Lies Art Smith Coaxes Dollars Out of Followers’ Pockets by Telling Them Foolish Fables By RICHARD CAMERON PHILADELPHIA, June 20.— The Hitler-minded Art Smith, Fascist pa- | trioteer, never attained any rank higher than private in the U. S. army and U.S.M.C. When he came to this ! city, he styled himself a captain so {as to make a show while organizing his Khaki Shirts of America. | This band of brutes who arm them- | selves with two sizes of ferocious- | looking clubs, some of which are} ‘rede of metal, are nothing more| than a glorified shiri-selling racket ; Smith, Each must buy off of him ;or get expelled. When Smith came here he announced that the K.S.A. | bought outright a property valued at | $360,000.” } “I own this property,” he told an HITLERITES LEAVE CONFAB. | GENEVA, June 20.—The Hitlerite delegation to the International La- | | bor Conference walked out yestert complaining that they were treaier ; with contempt by the other delegat |So thoroughly despised are the Naz! that even the criminal lackeys of capitalism who profess to represent. labor at this adjunct of the League | of Nations were afraid to tolerate | I can't Friends n ‘ “It's a secret, te you about howl got it. gave it to me.” Richard J. Seltzer, real estate op- erator, contradicts Smith, his tenant, by showing that no one has bought, | ne one holds an option on it, and the property month to month basis. cked Whole Spanish Army What is the would-be Duce doing with the $2 fee extracted, as he claims, from seven million followers? |Smith has writen the K.S.A. consti- | for the exclusive profit of one Art! tution, so that he is personally res- | ponsible to. no one of his fellow thugs. To show the profitability of Smith's scheme—he claims to have turned down a job “running the Bolivian Army” at $1,600 a month and ex- penses. Another notable fact learn- ed was that Smith boasted he saw service with the Russian White Army. Also that he was “the only American on Kerensky’s staff” and that he de- feated Spanish Army single- ng cn the side of the Riffs in Morocco. This last state- ment either makes Smith a colossal braggart or a person mentally un- balanced. The Khaki Shirts have so many generals, colonels and majors around while drilling recruits that they get is being rented on a| SURsERETION RAPES: of Manhatten and Bronx, New York City. One year, $9; 6 months, 35; 7 months, $8, TUNE 21, 1998 Foreten a1 “(CLARA ZBTKIN, VETERAN LEADER OF WORKERS ([ARA ZETKIN--TIRELESS ~ REVOLUTIONARY FIGHTER OF THE PROLETARIAT’ In the death of Clara Zetkin, the | Communist Party of Germany loses | its oldest veteran, the German work- ers lose a dearly beloved and fearless leader, and the proletarian women of Germany lose their courageous champion in the fight for woman's emancipation through the victorious class struggle. And Clara Zetkin’s death is not only a loss to the German working class. The workers of the whole world have lost an intrepid, brilliant leader in the struggle for their eman- | ipation. The passing of Clara Zet- kin leaves an almost irreplaceable gap in the ranks of the international pro- letariat. Joining the Revolutionary Movement Born in 1857 in Saxony, daughter jof an elementary school teacher, fClara Zetkin went to Leipzig at tk age of 20 to study at a Teache | Training College. At an early aze| |she parted from the bourgeois liberal feminist movement, her Marxist | studies having convinced her that| the only road to women’s emancipa- tion was to join in the class struggle | for the emancipation of the whole working class from the yoke of capi- talism. ‘Rose Pastor | | Stokes Dead | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | until her illness forced her to discon- tinue activity, In 1905 she married J. G. Phelps | | Stokes, a millionaire-philanthropist, who later figured in the Socialist |Party, eventually turning Social- patriot during the war and ending as an arch-imperialist. They were | divorced in 1925 after years of aliena- | tion as a result of political differ- ences, | | The daughter of Russian Jewish workers, Rose Pastor Stokes came to this country at the age of 11 from} London, East End, whither her pa- rents, had gone from Czarist Russia. |She immediately went to work in a Cleveland cigar factory where she re- {Mained for 11 years. Later, she came to New York, where she became a prominent and colorful figure in the struggles of the workers, most of them | immigrants exploited in sweatshops under the worst conditions. She was 1a staunch champion of the struggles of the Negro masses for liberation, From that time on, she spent} all her life in the ranks of the Ger-| man rite tana working class, From 1892 to 1916, when she was dismissed by the pro-war Central Committee of the German Socialist Party, she was editor of “Gleichheit” (Equality), the Socialist women’s I paper. Organizer of Left-Wing Socialists Clara Zetkin was one of the or- ganizers and leaders of the Left Wing of the German Socialist Party before the World War, together with Rosa Luxemburg, Karl Liebknecht, Franz Mehring, and Karl Radek, fighting against Ebert, Scheidemann, Bernstein and Kautsky, the reformist and pa- triotic leaders of the Socialist Party, In March, 1915, Clara Zetkin con- vened the International Women’s Conference in Berne, Switzerland, and upon her return to Germany was jailed for several months for having distributed the Berne Manifesto. Together with Rosa Luxemburg and Franz Mehring, she published in June 1915 the first issue of the “In- ternationale,” the only number al- lowed to appear during the war. She then entered the Spartakus-bund, the illegal group of revolutionary anti- militarist Marxists, out of which there grew the Communist Party of Germany. Founder of the German Communist Party and the Communist International Clara Zetkin was one of the found- ers of the Communist Party at its Inaugural .Convention in Berlin dur- ing Christmas week, 1918, and was a member of the Party's Central |! Committee until her death. She was one of the initial organ- izers of the Communist Internation- al, and at the time of her death was a member of the Presidium of the Executive Committee of the Comin- tern. Organher of W.L.R. In 1921 Clara Zetkin was one of the organizers of the Workers Inter- national Relief, at the time of the world-wide campaign to aid the fa- mine-siricken areas in Soviet Russia, Only two weeks ago her name ap- peared at the top of an international j appeal issued by the W.LR. for aid to the victims of German Fascism. As an outstanding international personality her name stands in his- tory alongside Lenin, Luxemburg, Liebknecht, and Mehring, whose close friend and associate she had been, Austrian Cabinet Dissolves Nazis . London Economic Conference, in which he demanded the return of Ger- | cups with the American Brass Co. {during the big slaughter in the| them. in ones’ hair. One of these is Samuel and in her burned a passionate ha- for Ter rorism many’s African colonies and claimed that Germany “must expand towards! <1, Mfg. Co, Waterbury,| Wd war. No, this is another pre-}/ None of the Nazi delegates were hee aa Seer bie catia Oia for all forms of racial oppres- 2 s i vi if " 5 " a wgers Ses ths aad “ aredness day for war as they had| even selected by reformist unions. All y is My is y.” | sion, at the East Capemtny the Soviet Union), yesterday's “Prayda” sharply rebukes | G¢1n 195 tons, 45 calibre cartridge | P* ae ead Se abletatien heen [ok eae en appointee “General” Wein peddles the monkey- ‘f hae = logs ara a sete the Fascist schemes for the ‘seizureé brass cups; 300 tons annealed cart-| rooney was framed to life or death like blue caps for tc each. They can|, For a short time she fell under the | between brands of Pesclam for of Soviet territory. The editorial, Those have been ground to powder | ;idge brass cups and 65,000 pounds ofl in san Pensientiney. Phe | es be bought for $46 a thousand. influence of the opportunist leader-| domination over Austria approached in part: | by the millstones of history. What| in) San. uentin:) Penitentiary. oA : ship of the Socialist Party and sup-| a climax last night when the gov- | primer brass cups. The recruiting officers are having | horses are only a means of drawing . S such a time finding recruits that they of the same type submarine destroy- 300| thousands of unemployed workers to ers that were here until Monday. The memorandum which openly of the adventurist speaks | foreign are you driving towards, you gent! men with seven m: } poxied the war. Long before the war | erning faction officially outlawed its Revere Copper & Brass, Inc., rival. y of fascism in no way diffe: ds a i i .| tution, which calls for those joini f _ Similar declarations which| nomy which is falling to pieces? Is| CUPS: | pareioHe Vee inteat weapens ire the Seetrations nt the oR mend being American ie ad renee | Wall Street basis, and her arrest in| Ment at least has the backing of ie eet tale setyuesty by, var | i6-peostie Tat Rascist Germany has) American Brass Co.. Waterbury,| purpose of killing workers like them-|eall on the seamen of these floating| thtese who have taken out first pa. | 2088s City followed soon afterward. ihe oorabinen Lae of ed Setidhy Geruany. “Ever ateengt| atemine 46 Pe ies tie ove Ree fad “ane tons annealed cartridge scives, or to get the workers pre-| war machines to join the M. W. I. U.| Pers. Also starved youths are callo- Leader in Left Wing of S. P. the dissolution of the Austrian Nazi of the German delegation to dis-| in 1918 when our country was much é [ated for the coming war etaonie Ave A against capitalist wars. ae on ales ieee SEONG, | Leaving the Socialist Party with | party, led by Chancellor Adolf Hitler claim responsib: ” the Hugen-| weaker? Hugenberg might attempt| Th? Frankford, Pa. arsenal ha: @ e USSR. ‘ The Daily Worker is being sold at) When they find the applicant cannot | other militants of the left wing in| of Germany. The Nazis were for- berg Memorandum must be rej The German fascists who have seized! when our country is making such us metals and has let steel con-| T also came into the Recrea-|men come ashore and will be sold | from these deluded youth who think; jone of the founders of the Commu- | activity, under their own name or power are trying to find a way out} gigantic strides forward and become | ‘f@cts: totaling 892 tons, in guilding| tion Pier another ship of war, the|at all patriotic demonstrations here | Smith can show them “a way out of | nist Party of the United States, ser-| any other; their Storm Troop de- ical ation in which} invincible, an impregnable fortress | metal U. S. S. Hamilton, with three more in Baltimore. Al. the crisis, | ying as a member of the Central| tachments were ordered disbanded. nperialism finds itself! of Socialism! ... | Committee. Before that time she! and the display of the swastika was through expans in the Eastern} “These shameless gentlemen must | |wes part of the active left wing| prohibited. direction vemember ow power and knowledge © * H ibl: B | which fought the opportunist lead ae, Ne ‘ewspapers were ee Tried Once Before. hat our cowitry kn b e- E at a t ers and policies o: e Socialist et y. pariy’s property the thers who have tried to| talk and dream about s izing Soviet | In 1922. with a mumber of other | were the Nezi parliamentary dope turn the wheels of history. | territory.” Communist leadei's, she was arresied | ties relieved of their mandates, | with a dying industry, ion unemployed, with an eco-| > figure out what will happen now TRACK RECORDS OF RED SPORT INTERN’L ublished told of the Social Dem- | everyone, of course, as an active) hacked about with Imives or scis-|0f the Nazis in the Hedemann| devol ent of the revolutionary i midst samen oa Lasers leaders’ treachery, the |Communist, one of those who form) sors, He was unable to speak, but Strasse, and put into a cellar with| movement with unflagging interest. eat aine mane: Ape ei The outdoor track and field sea- far behind these two nations but| burning of the Reichstag, and how | the basis of the revolutionary move-| the removal of the caked blood and/ other victims. Just before she left for Germany, | auxitiary police at Krems, wounded Son has been officially opened ali France has completely dropped out| the German workers fought the | ment. | the washing of the wounds obviously Compelled To Eat Hair j several months ago, she said, “I'll pull | 39 men, two fatally. over the world. Bourgeois and work-| of the picture, | Nazi terror), | The Nazis knew him, too. And/ occasioned him terrible pain, al- Here. the bestt a toe vere | thvoush. I'm determined. I must) 4 Nazi spokesman defies the pro- ers’ sport organizations are activiz-| .4.; : a ORS | one evening they came for him. They| though he did his best to stific the| Here the beatings and torture were| 6. a soviet America. I will see the seription of his party with the highly ae Sd | Soviet Sporismen Show Increase | broke into his little flat and dragged continued. His hair was cut out in i i : “ ing their members for the coming in Calibre | 3b was not long before fearful re- 3 groans. | tufts, and he was compelled to eat it,| Wo'Kers rice to power and build their | provocative statement that “the national competitions. From the Red| ; |porst began to circulate concerning ae ae i Laas Oe eee The Party doctor bound him as/the ‘result being repeated vomiting | 0" World, as they are doing in Sov-| Dolifuss government has touched a Sport International comes the glad| ‘The Soviet sportsmen although| the fate of the workers taken at| cnidren, he-ved foul abuse on him best he could, and he was then taken | andfurther beatings “for dirtying the | iet Russia, a world in which there| match to a fuse which leads into tidings that marked have been made in these activities amongst the worker athletes of many countries Germany, where the’ worker sport movement has attained gigantic pro- portions has had marked improve- ment in 13 branches of these ath- Jetics. In several cases it has even surpassed the performances of Soviet athletes and made international records Ranking next to Germany in the line of achievements is Norwa, which, estimates show, records im- provement in nine branches of track and ficld snot After these two come France showing a slight im- provement, Czechoslovakia, Switze' Jand, Sweden and the United State: The United States in the past few years has shown little increase in the calibre of its performance, as the International records show. This is partly because of the a: in sending in records to the 8. lof Criticize Recordin: The R. S. I. criticizes ( various worker sport organizations in its re- port, on the laxity they have shown fm recording the results of their track and field meets. Both Sweden and America have failed to send any message to alter the assumption that their previous records remain un- + France has already com- ‘a table of results as have in probabilities Germany and the “8. S. R. In this country, it is hoped that we will shortly be enabled to challenge the performances of wox:-| amongst women athictes in) improvements | breaking only one of their previous! | records hate managed to retain su-}| | field event& Need we explain SHENG 2 NMP ‘ Premacy in & majority of track and to| workers why these athletes free from are enabled to surpass their fellow worker athletes the world over. Although Soviet sportsmen have a preference for mass sports and few aspirations of becoming world beat-| ers in comparison with our so-called | amateur” athletes in bosses’ sport organizations, they have peso to approach the records of thes Jetes in certain ev For e the new Olympic record for the tb meters is 10.4 Previous to the 1932 games it was 10.6; while the present Soviet record for 10.7. At the 1934 World Spartakiad in the Soviet Union as well as in the preparations for it, many labor sports records will undoubtedly be smashed Suspended Sentence for Distributing Anti-War Leaflets NEW YORK.—Rose Stein, Y. C. L. member, convicted of disorderly con- duct for distributing anti-war leaf- lets to National Guardsmen, was given a suspended sentence of 69 days by Magistrate Burke in the Seventh District Court Saturday. The TI. 1 cinion which states that distribution | the 100 meters is} |tons of unenameled cartridge ‘brass | this demonstration to jazz up their also been a heavy; | Nazi Storm Troops in Secret Chambers By EDWARD JAMES buyer’ of nor-fer-| China, ; The members of the Marine Work- | the gate of the pier where the sea- { proletarian. He was a Social-Dem- (Correspondent in Germany for the | ocrat during the war, and in 1920 British Daily Worker) (The three articles previously night from their beds. The relatives of those men who had been kid- | mapped in this fashion were frantic | with anxiety. Half a dozen comrades known to me had been carried off in this fash-| stress, with their splendid jon, and I did my best to discover | their whereabouts and their fate. It Was no easy task The police would shrug their shoulders. The Press published de- | nials. admitted “a few isolated excesses.” The nearest could say nothing more than that | they had been taken off in the night} to an unknown destination I must confess that many of the s were so frightful that I he: believe thein The plain happened to the st | tated to accounts of what men in the Nazi barracks are such that a civilized person living in a | civilized country would not be pre- pared to believe them. Under Cover Of Night And yet they were and are true. | What is happening under cover of night in the towns and countryside of Germany is more terrible than about it. It was a few days tion that the first came to my notice. It concerned an elderly comrade, whom I shall call Braun. That is not his name. I have in my possession the real name, the address, the time, dates and places. Braun is still alive, although for | a time his life was despaired of, and after the elec- concrete case Jdoimed Party In 1920 1 wertwoinnt the news which can be obtained) he joined the Communist Party. In the neighborhood he was known to and on his family. They knocked down the wife when |she attempted to cling to her hus- band, already dazed and bleeding, and carried him off. “Dad's Come Back” For about ten days we heard noth- jing of him. The police were “mak- ing inquiries,” they said. And then) early one morning I was awakened | by a ringing at my door. It was his | At the utmost the authorities | | neer. relative of these men| 12-year-old daughter, a yout pio- | She was white-faced and frightened — but courageous. “Dad's come back,” she whispered. “Come along.” T hurriedly dressed and went off | with her, but I noticed that she was, not going the direction of her home. “He's at.. comrade) ,"" a bath.” When we got there I saw what she meant, In the hall was a small group of comrades, most of whom I knew, and on the floor was a heap of bloody clothes, a shirt with its front as stiff as a board with dried blood, bloody underclothing and big hobnailed boots into which the blood had trickled. The door of the little bathroom was half open. Comrade Braun had returned. A doctor, a member of the Communist Party, and two wo- men were washing him in warm water in the bath. The doctor told me afterwards that it was a mystery to him how Braun had ever managed to drag himself through the streets, A de- in she said. “They've got | body was covered with bruises and % ectieier, Aoerinn 6 wb of arte 6 wot cacedety conucs Brann is 2 Sue tepe af Gerian| wounds. His igce bad been beaten - (the name of another} in and was little more than a bloody pulp. On the Brink of Death His hair had apparenily been to hospital, where he lost conscious- ness the same night and remained on the brink of death for several days before an improvement finally set in. A closer medical examination re- | vealed that his skull was fractured, | his nasal bone smashed, the jaw) | fractured in two places, and his front |teeth beaten in. Kidnapped By Gang Here is the story he told later:) | A gang of Nazis, led by a well-known ‘local Storm Detachment leader, took him in a car to tie nearesi Nazi { quarters. Immediately they got him inside the place they set the electric piano} churning out a march, and then fell jon him furiously, beating bim up with rubber truncheons. “Sta airuten” | (steel rods) and other wearons. H When he was on the ground he was kicked repeatedly in the face by the Nazi leader—let’s call him Schumann. I know the fellow, and saw him later swaggcring through the streets with a bulky revolver at his belt, wearing the white armlet of the auxiliary police and flanked on either side by a regular policeman. Half-conscious, Braun was then flung down the stairs into the cellar, where, after a time, he found five other men lying on the floor, several of them unconscious. All of \them had been similarly treated. One of them was a local official of the Communist Party—call him Blomfeld. ~ Failed To Return | "As he is well-known -looally, the | Mazts annerently caught him on the) | then. to extract the siumps of are going against their own consti- pay $2, they take even a quarter | streets and carried him off. | After spending two days in this/| local terture-hole, Braun. was remoy- ed in the night to the headquarters floor.” Later on, Braun and a number of others were given a basin of water in ‘which they washed the blood away as best they could. Each of the victims was then com- |pelled to drink some of the bloody) and dirty water. The walls of the! céllar in which they were kept were | spattered with blood. Stumps Of Smashed Teeth When I left, Braun was in the! dental department of one of the big} Berlin hospitals. The doctors were, waiting for the gums to heal in order | the} i smashed , teeth. Members of the Nazi storm de- tachments in uniform were on con- stant duty in this hospital. On one eccasion the Nazi leader, Schumann, | came in full uniform to the ward in which Braun was lying, apparent- ly to see for himself what progress his victim was making, The result of such a visit can be imagined. Braun suffered a ner- vous breakdown. A day or so later the ward in which Faun and other victims were lying was closed down, a big card being placed on the doors to the effect that there was a sus- picion of scarlet fever. In fact, however, one or two for- eign journalists had got wind of the case and were making inquiries. The above is one case, but one among many. It is not worse than others, and is, in fact, not so bad as many, for the comrade in question has at least escaped with his life. Should it be possible to obtain an | with “sedition ‘at the disposal of such a committee, (TO BE NUED) ended, however, she was again tak- ing an active part in exposing its that organization in 1919 she became in Bridgema: -Mich., and charged Michigan authori- ties recently were forced to quash all the indictments in @onnection with this case. Up to the very moment of her death, Comrade Stokes followed every will be no unemployment, inseeurity or war.” A more detailed account of the life and working class activities of Rose Pastor Stokes will be printed in to- morrows ADU PU OREES 75, Worker. hunger, WORKERS DEFEAT. PASCIST ATTACK NAZI - PHILADEE BEY ‘June 20.—Five | worsérs were arrested by police here | Saturday evening and an anti-fas-j cist meeting forcibly dispersed after | thorities at Duesseldor’ dissolved’ the the audience had successfully resist | Steel Helmet, organization of Nation~ ed an armed attack by Khaki Shirts, More than 1,000 workers were lis- tening to speeches ata meeting at 13th and Reed Streets, the heart of the Italian section of the city, held by the United Front Anti-Fascist Committee, when a gang of hood- lums, armed with black-jacks, lead pipe and clubs arrived. Khaki Shirts Driven Away As the speakers exposed the anti- labor role of Art Smith, and the gang of thugs he has got together and dealt with the record of Smith as a grafter the hooligans tried to dis rupt the meeting. The workers pres- ent told them to keep quiet. At that the thugs started a fight, but it was soon finished by the workers who ad- ministered well-deserved beatings to the whole fascist gang and drove them away. ‘The Communist Party is arranging has recently been active in Philadel- phir ‘ sport other countries by D. will appeal the con- | for this reason, and because of aj cent taxi-driver had taken him, re- Blomfeld has not been heard of|indepewlent committee of inquiry|an anti-Khaki Shirt meeting this} In other words, workers who strug- BE pE some ‘unbeatable records, | Yiction, whch was made by Burke, | solemn promise I made to his family, spite his state, and they had put! since, and there can be Mttle doubt! into t'@ Nazi atrocities, T am pre-| Thursday, June 22, at New Garrick|gle against terrorism, militarism, Lack of Women’s Activities using the imosi prejudiced terms in|T cannot give any details which | newspapers on the cushions in an ef-|that he has been murdered. He/| pared to place the full details of this| Hall, 507 S. 8th St. An appeal has forced lebor and eee cuts errr % a the exception of Germany| @ddressinic Rose. Burke refused to! would perhaps assist the Nazis to fort to avoid bloodstains. | was not taken from his home at|case, with names, dates and places,| been issued to all working class or-| their i stema: sto) prtedaly / a “and the U. 8. S. R. there has been) ditmiss the case when confronted by | track him down and maltreat him| TI have never before seen any hu-| night, but simply failed to return one | and detalls ofa score of others which | ganizations to jam he united strug- | ucate He Hage tei feats “Vittle if any record of an increase of|® copy of the Court of Appeals de- | again men being in that condition. His) day. |r have been <able to verify myself,| gle against this hoodlum gang that | cannon-fod mn ios A decree was issued by the Dolifuss Cabinet, which for the mo- bidden to engage in any political All the German organizers of the Hitler movement in Austria have been expelled, and martial law has been proclaimed in several areas, The dissolution decree was issued immediately after the latest of a long series of Nazi terroristic acts. Three hand grenades, hurled from a »owder barrel.” Prince Starhem~ ‘sew, @he aristocratic and dissolute young leader of de, “White” Heim- wehr, replies by @cnouncing the Hit~ lerites as “brov® beasts of murder.” An open breaming off of relations between the Austrian and German ROURCTUBENtE Oe soneig ered te is considered likely. STAHLHELM FEUD INTENSIFIES BERLIN, June 20 20. ‘The Naai au- alist. war veterans, in that district today on the ground that it was per= meated with new members hostile to the Hitlerite regime. This latest de- velopment of the conflict between the Nazis and their Nationalist “al~ prohibiti scheduled for June 25, Frana Seldte, Hitler’s Labor Minister and head of the veterans’ was to have presided. At the time the government disbanded four Brunswick Steel Helmet groups. Adolf Hitler, speaking Sunday at Erfurt, threatened to take their chile dren away from parents who the Fascist hunger and war “If the older generation t accustomed to us, we shall take children away from them and them as needful for the Fatherland, he told an audience of 250,000. — HH = oP is Rac

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