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\ SURSERIFTION RATES: lished by the Coarprodatiy Publishing Os, Inc, dally except Sundey, st 50 & 6s % Page Four St., New Yerk City, N.Y Yelophowe Algunquin 14-7954. Ontle “DANWORE.” wal By Mew everywhere: Ome year, $6: six months, $8.56; 3 months, $2: 1 month, Se, JUNE 27, 1988 Address and maf cheeks to the Dafly Worker, 5¢ BE. 19th St, New Yerk, MN. ¥. $A ® excepting Bereugh of Manhattan and Bronx, New City. Foreign and Contrei Perty Canada: One year, $8; 6 months, $3; 7 38. LONDON DELEGATES STRIVE NOTES FROM TO COMBAT U. S. THREAT THE USSR. OF WORLD DUMPING DRIVE Fear Toiling Masses W Down of Living Stand ‘ill Resist the Beating ards in New Inflation Campaign to Meet American Challenge LONDON, Jone 26.—The dollar 2 severe slump in French and other BULLETIN gained in exchange today, while continental gold currencies revived ByA. G. BOSSE Moecow Ball-Bearing Plant The First State Ball-Bearing plant | is now a year old, and is going like | a house afire. During the three quarters of last year it didn't fulfill} its plan in any respect. But in the| first quarter of 1933, the production plan was exceeded by 17 per cent, output being 81 per cent above the) previous quarter. Production costs | were cut 38 per cent, and labor pro- | ductivity increased as much. This} year output is scheduled to total 5.5/ Maxim Litvinoff, Peoples Commisar for Foreign Affairs, of the Soviet Union NNT | BY ARKS| | | FROM the Agony Column of ‘The York Times: “Gentleman, American Ex-Banker, offers services) as travelling compan- ion. Address: F. P., Nayarit 462, Mexico.” The Sniper seizes upon this item as one of profound importance in aiding our economic recovery. It opens vistas of a new and important | industry: that of teaching American ex-bankers the gentle art of hiding | out. There are approximately 8,000 | closed banks in the United States; | allowing an average minimum of | five officers to each bank, we find @bat there must be at least 40,000 | | | HOW GERMAN FIGHT NAZI WITHIN THE FACTORIES WORKERS TERRORISM Communist Factory Cells Bigger Than in January Despite Arrests and Dismissals “Enormous Effect of “Foreign Anti-Fascist Work, Demonstrations Before Consulates” How do the workers in Germany carry on their fight against the Maat Pd f! ¥ reports that France and other nations was likely to go off the gold | inion ball bearings, a 51 per cent American bankers. Most of these| terror? This is a question which interests us most keenly. : { standard increase over last year, and casts | 40,000 American bankers will eae We have had graphic descriptions of the Nazi atrocities, of the . are to be lowered 32 per cent. Twelve | ip eT eave Teer for Men. | SaVagery practiced on individual workers and of the ruthless suppression INDON. June 2 u r of jof State Cor Mand sso- | types r last year, eta a i yorkii ee oo : sal 6.—A a umber La ent : rdell me a his asso Se oe ee ere en eae vee : #& |ico' and other quiet and secluded | of the organizations of the working class. e European countries at the World |ciates in the American delegation. It 3 ‘i ss a spots. | And we have learned that, despite all this, the revolutionary workers Foonomic Conference, _especially| is felt that the coming of Moley| ones are to be turned out. Tractor | Now head of the Soviet Delegation at the London Conference. Pic- Sie ; net pecially J keep the Red Flag fl The speaker for the Ge delegation at the e : peo ‘ : lunceeeas iare | *p the ag flying. The speaker for the German delegation a those still on the gold standard, have | means repudiation of them as incom- bearings, heretofore impo: ture taken in Moscow, shows Litvinoff playing chess w’th his son, Micha. plea ‘ é te lla: a F | @O. why should not General John: : now being produced there. The piant rs ; Anti-Fascist Congress in Paris said: “We have not given up the fight. On been trying to reach a petent to carry forward the aggres- | Po" DEne Proc oo9 mechanics.” Al-| CHESS experts say that both have opened with “Pawn to King’s Fourth. son include instruction in “scram-| the contrary, we have strengthened it.” greement try to 2 nite si 1 ¢ America erialisi ‘ 2 ee Oe allan ees ae ioe ae see ny is i o vs : i agreement to tr: mvald entering | sive (DoNsy of seas imperialism: | most 90 per cent of all workers at~ 8 e ies aedl pares i be ana || But how? Below: we print a letter from a worker in the General Blece on a policy of inflation as a means of | The papers caustically state that the| tend technical courses. This plant Peay i pidioh ee tacts uf ire| tric Company of Berlin, written for the journal, “Anti-Fascist Front”. He meeting the threat of American im- | assistant secretary of state is coming | is the largest ball-bearing factory in| rreste n 0 ice American ex-bankers would require iol Stunialy GXia sgeneRtnalis: Gere SEaeneia i ies Perialism to on a world- | to take the leadership of the delega- the world, in point of capacity |=) the employment of at least ae deseri *s simply an : grap) ically how the fight is carted on, how thei} adie dumping campaign tion and ‘ell his titular chier what to aoe Z a | if ‘ papetrat gins a eae utes oe ne front oh the eee is being bare Me ee one ae sree to 7. ey ; + do. Tractor and Auto ants | R d h t B l % <A a if *| workers in other countries to exten and strengthen their fight against? The French, Italian, Swiss, Dutch ; eae| a a a feeble voice from the : and” Belgian delegations have. been age ee ees ids Thruout Bulgaria jas: es eis ne fac ye ae holding “informal” talks -and it is 7 tractor at the end of April, after a| : oe Z could re-write his advertisement as i “i : understood that they have agreed to ij year and a half of operations. In| All Traffic Stopped Troops Halt Trains, | follows: BERLIN, June 10—Dear Com-|worked out the following slogans:— try to k all attempts to engage = the first 24 days of April, it turned| N eon | “American *Ex-banker, accom-|rades.—I write to you as a worker in ‘Twelve weeks of Hitler—Murder in a price raising war out 1,850 machines, as against the| Nobody Allowed on Streets plished fugitive, offers his services as|one of the factories of the A. E. G.| of the workers, capitalist Govern- Fear Outbreak of Strike Wave nd also hesitates to meet the { the dollar to the pound introducing further inflation, The European delegations from the larg- e* coun know that such a trade war carried out with depreciated cur- rencies will be, in every sense, a war of each against all. Instead of the “co-operation” between nations they have talked so much about, the capi- talist powers are ruthlessly proceed- TRADE TALKS WITH SIMONS Demands Britain Re- move Trade Ban On Soviet Imports LONDON, Yune 26.—Maxim_Lit- vinoff, commisar of foreign affairs of | the Union of Socialist Soviet Repub-| 1,800 set in its plan. The Stalingrad | plant during this same period pro-| duced 3.241 tractors, as against the| 2.560 called for in its program, and| was turned out 165-170 daily. Since Jan. 1 has manufactured 11,720 machines. On May 1 a new type of| machine was to start mass produc-| tion. A report from Chelyabinsk | states that by May 15 it was to have| SOFIA, Bulgaria, June 26.—Bulgarla is still ruled by martial law, while the police continue a house-to-house search for revolutionaries. They have already made 1,150 arrests, and claim to haye seized 250 rifles, 600 revolvers | and 200 bombs. Large groups of prisoners are being marched off to prison hourly. Tourists are compelled to stay within their hotels and even members of the diplomatic corps were not al-¢ lowed on the streets, All traffic has to cil litate suppression of the re-} | made its first tractor. ceased, trains being stopped outside | VOlutionary movement, according to Sofia’ by a cordon of soldiers, who|the Jugoslavian press. The official reason given, the round-up of Mace- donian irregulars, although the only version which foreign correspondents The auto industry produced in the! first 24 days of April as follows: | Also prevent anyone from entering or Stalin (AMO) plant in Moscow—| leaving the city on any road. 1,554 trucks (output), 1,536 (plan) ;| Similar steps have been taken at all travelling companion to other Amer- ican ex-bankers. Has studied the art of rapid disappearance under Insull, Harriman, and Sherwood. If desired, will supply bankers with blunt knives safe for fake suicides. Special rates to Tammany crooks. References: Mr. Charles Mitchell, late of the National City Bank, who thought he was going to require my services.” ‘HE German press, goose-stepping as die, der, oder das Schoene ler’s Ministry of Pro} (the General Electric Company), the greatest industrial concern in Berlin.| Already there is far more intensive | anti-Fascist work than was the case! a month ago. Thus, the Communist Factory Cell in the A. E. G. at Hen- nigsdorf published on the first of May a four-page paper which had a} very good effect among the workers.' ment, dear margarine, taxes, unem- ployment! “Twelve hours of the Commune— exproriation of the capitalists, epening of all the factories, im- prisonment of the exploiters of the people, the workers in the dwell- ings of the rich!” These slogans were cut out in lino- In the A. E. G. Turbine Works, the|leum, and we then nailed the stripes ‘ cell paper comes out, on the average. | every 14 days, and in the works at) Treptow a number of Iecaflets have} already appeared. ogee Even the attitude of the workers in| news and information. of linoleum on a blotting pad and so printed the leaflets one by one. Heckle Nazi Meetings During the night we stuck a nutte ber of them on the factory gates, and _ tng to grab markets from each other jicc and re : ) | other cities and towns in Bulgaria,|in Sofia were allowed to cable, is) Adolph calls the tune, announces!+.y §.B, 9. (that is, the Hitlerite| placed the others about. the streets. 4 in the struggle for worid trade dorelan, mipiesen uae teetadl ean | aster aed area Aeraeros [in toelmoreriiients drive e whic | tease Aelia tot, Wise aettal eh -| that “Yoreign planes" accomplished ational Socialist Factory Organize-|" Our fellow swerkers, Who were Abe Aside from the dangers involved) ference today at the foreign office| respectively. | believed to presage the proclamation | Communist campaign. — dropping anti-Hitler pamphlets. The|ti00) 38 becoming critical, not to) solutely hungry for reading matter, ¢p im such a free-for-all market strug-| to discuss Anglo-Soviet trade rela-| Sep ae |of a dictatorship aimed at the grow- | a berpid'* ourigndle "enbuah, tok ‘lice mention that of the older employes! took up the leafiets with enthusiasm gle the governments of England,| tions. Litvinoff visited Simon om} Blind Mechanics ing Communist movement in ™ AUSTRIA SEIZES lsusttiae the opening 4 Germany's who are pot eed oNan ne when they came to work in the sponse of the working class oe - Sis | teen ire inno John a or eee Tanan thar Raids a Blind, Says Belgrade | Moreover, no one at all has seen | and many come to us whom they Naturally, ‘we now aie attend the 5 ther drastic beating down of their] qoivitie. secret of the departe| are similar plants with a hundred| BELGRADE, Jugoslavia, June 26.) NAZI CHIEFTAIN any of the pamphlets, and a ae know as Communists, and ask us for| Nazi meetings. Thus, in the A. E. G. already miserable living standards in the carrying out of such a trade war. ‘The English make no attempt to con- ceal their fear that should living costs arise rapidly as a result of fur- | ther inflation the workers would im- mediately demand and fight for wage ment of overseas trade, was sitting in is regarded as evidence that the| British government is compelled to| try to resume trade relations with} the Soviet Union | Must Restore Trade First. Litvinoff, with long experience in| | bers to learn at an electrical plant, —The total cutting off of Bulgaria} from the outside worid was ordered! workers. | é 'Nazi Deputies, Mayors LaborCommissariat Unseated 2 28S Merged With Sovie times as many workers, this one is unique — all its workers are blind. The Soviet Association of the Blind,| which owns it, is building another | plant to employ thousands of blind} | | VIENNA, gune 26—Continuing its | campaign to foil the Nazi efforts to \force union with Hitler Germany, the the planes. But the illusion of black specks darting about in the air is one of the usual symptoms of an unhealthy liver. Is it possible that Pretty Adolph’s playmates have been keeping late hours in bad com- pany? The Social-Democratic workers have completely left their leaders. They receive no leadership from them and are very embittered. The greater part of them have now real- ized what “democracy” means and stand alongside us for the principle at Hennigsdorf, the N. S. B. O. held a meeting of the skilled mechanics with the intention of getting the whole department into the organiza- tion. During the discussion a com- rade, who had been appointed by us for the» purpose, spoke as follows:— “From the speaker we have heard increases and the unemployed would! meeting and defeating the under- ‘ 1 aed Se ara ae lof the dictatorship of the proletariat.) about the tremendous performances stormily struggle for an increase in| handed trickery of fhe espitalist| ‘gether with workers with nord) | Dollfuss government yesterday seized| worsmRs who have no choice but |” In general we Communists now | of the Hitler Gevemmenl, but how the “dole.” * | diplomats state” bciore the confer-| eeraroanin MLy etanpeted: Anis: Trade Union Bod | Allted Prauenfeld, Jeader of {ne Au.) W to sweat through the hot sum-| stand high in the appreciation of | is it that Hitler, as leader of the Such a situation carries the threat | ll ag aap Manado sh per cessfully with the other workers, and ye to flee into Italy. Sing vanes i toes a pee fe peeled =e eae et Ha Sea, ‘pannet,foift his pro- ee political’. CONSeRUPREES, | Ocher question ‘can be disciseed | Rie ew arene ee SS stone Nazi leaders expelled from Austria sii) enough to be taxed will be in-| fact that many of our factory sy tere Jeading to a sharp accentuation of | Oorerred specifically to the qustion| VeVOr assembling transformers. An-| (From the Moscow Correspondent of are establishing headquarters ACrOss| frosted to know that Mr. Charles| councils have beer arrested and pei Lire ts ae ee the class struggl> - z | other interesting test was this: The the Daily Worker.) | the frontier in Italy, from which they} ‘res! vernment? See New High Tariff War As an alternative to currency infla- tion and to try tomeet the world-wide price cutting and dumping that the United States has threatened the British, French, Italians, Spanish and many smaller states are discussing the raising higher of the tariff walls to try to shut out American products. There have been many instances of | of the imprisoned British engineers, | new in prison in the U.S.S.R. for| their counter-revolutionary wrecking and sabotage activities against Sov- iet power plants. There will be another conference | between the two ministers within a few days. HOLD SAN DIEGO YOUTHS SAN DIEGO Martin, charged | | daily average of 15,000. | MOSCOW, June 25.—The Labor/are directing Nazi activities in Au- Commissariat of the Soviet Union is} stria. F to be consolidated with the organ-/ Nazi Deputies Unseated. ization of the All-Union Central) The Diet of Lower Austria voted Council of Trade Unions both cen-| yesterday to annnul the mandates.of trally and locally, according to #!/a)l* Nazi deputies, mayors and city joint decision of the Central Execu-| councillors. The Tyrol State gov- tive Committee of the U.S.S.R., the| ernment has removed the Nazi mayor Council of Peoples’ Commissars of | of Kitzbuehel, sentencing him to im- the Soviet Union, and the Central) prisonment and a fine. Council of Trade Unions. | Chancellor Dolifuss, imitating Hit-| The decision assigns to the Central| lerite methods, has ordered that bon- “Spaika” artel (handicraft or indus- trial cooperative) put a blind worker named Ginsbérg to work on a press, on which during thé past ten years normal workers had turned out an average of 8,500 articles daily. Gins- berg announced himself a, shock worker, with a goal of 9,500 a day, but during the first month made a Such is the Soviet solution for an- other problem practically insoluable | E. Mitchell—who has never sweated in his life and who has not been paying any taxes recently—is plan- nine t6 open his palatial summer home Alson on the beach at South- ampton next week. \CHOOL-TEACHERS in Savannah, Georgia, met in the Independent | Presbyterian Church there to im- plore the aid of Providence to keep their salaries from being cut. large numbers of comrades have been thrown on the streets, we only strengthen our activities the more. Socialist Workers and Anti-Fascist. Work A number of Social-Democratic Party workers are already taking an active part in our work, receiving du- plicated leaflets from us and dis- trifuting them among their acquain- tances. Linoleum “Type” for Leaflets “But that in spite of the poll-tax and high rents are still here disturbs me very much. “Is being done for the provison of work? Or why are more workers continually being dis- missed from our factory instead of new ones being taken on?” The comrades thus went on point by point until he was finally inter- rupted by the speaker. But the workers had understood the mean- with “assault with deadly weapons” h | trade agreements being entered into| as a result of. the police attack ent under capitalism. Here blind work-| Council of Trade Unions the execu-| fires be lighted on 5,000 hilltops; They are applying to the wrong| Now, a eat ae ian eed pa ae ne Pie They ~ + that give preferential tariff treat-| the National Youth Day demon-| ers beg, sell matches, or make brooms] tion of the duties and functions of| throughout the nation and salutes | office. : jyou a little al b meeting meni to other nations, while shutting out with prohibitive tariffs the prod- ucts of the United States. Conference Still on the Rocks As to the world economic confer- ence itself, it is still hopelessly floun- dering with very little prospects of taking on even the semblance of life | as far as any sort of agreements or united action is concerned stration here, was bound over for) jury trial by Judge Curtis. Frank| Young was also bound over and the hearing of Goldman continued. Disabled Vet Tells What Roosevelt’s “New Deal” D of 21 guns by the artillery to sym- bolize the Heimwehr determination to defy Nazi efforts at Austre-German union. at a charity “lighthouse.” There! the Labor Commissariat. The Trade they have their own high schools,! Union Council is directed to present study at the regular universities, are| a concrete plan within a month for taught the usual trades. carrying out the decision. To our diligent and faithful con- tributor Lars Hallaman, thanks again for the above contributions. work. Our latest leaflet was a sheet of four by eight inches. We produced it in the following way. First id tor Him we | ended with no single new member for the N. S. B. O. Communist Cell Grows Despite Arrests The Communists factory cell in the A. E. G. at, Hennigsodrf is on the other hand, stronger by five members than in January, and this in spite of arrests and 5 Here is an example of the disrup- tion of the N.S. B. ©. in the A, KE. G, factories. At the beginning of May | Its hat with the arrival of By EDWIN RO:FE Hl x toner ssed in the war and they, The answer read in part: several members of this organizatian sa shoulders slightly stooped, black eyes i OMT ee ae ; | ‘ Prof: Moley, who is Roosevelt's f : i c | . + t “A review of your file indicates | at the Hennigsdorf Works came in 4 personal rcp esentative, the end m sre Phe veaia ‘018 Pellasaat | cances eae ney asniceea te: niet Thrown Out of Maine Hospital, Given No Fare coulan' ae tae eS that you Have sd recat prolonged ||one of our most valued and _best- yt s Xe i - gassed overseas in 8, co | i i come quickly. It is thought that the | on the streets of Portchester, N. Y.jand to his comrades. The suicide of to New Jersey Home; Fellow Veteran “Dozens of Hospitals” Beriog, “of ppepljalizadon st U- 8. | ere rentoan ai ae ting of x tion | " i oily is ° ; : Veteran's Hospital 81 in the Bronx, an illegal meet a conferences the American delegat while hitch-hiking back to their) Pauchpuss shocked him deeply. Killed Himself When he did receive hospital treat-| 244° masmuch as the Asthmatic |the Red Trade Union Opposition, ; holds with other countries are at-| homes from a veterans’ hospital in| we himself suffers from bronchial | ment, it was only for a short time at! condition is incurable, it is sug-. | Which was to take place in a neigh- £ tempts to lay a basis from which Mo- | Maine almost a month ago, only a | asthme—a malignant incurable dis-/| te uffis a one place. He has been to dozens of} gested that you enter one of the | boring meeting-place, because, as the < ley can try to get agreements that|small item appeared in one of the | ease—which attacks him regularly ais in the Woolworth Build-| RoSPitals. He recalled short stays in| National Homes where necessary |N. S. B. O. members said, the Nazi {will fall in line with United States capitalist sheets. The item an-| Sometimes three or four times | cause Ee ey SE Ne eae ere edtay. Gent MRO BE the Fox Hill Hospital, Staten Island:| care ‘and treatment may be pro- |storm division intended to raid’ th policy. nounce’ seadaihes 'e “| day,” he told me. en these at-| i " i Street ambulance doctor |2¢ Polyclinic Hospital, and) cured.” meeting-place and steal the funds { -Meswhile the British and contl- | ee oe ee nid to. le |tacks come, he cannot breathe. He | brought, on by being, gassed on fe | The Teated him by injecting adten- | Ninth Ave. New York; the Brooklyn| “rhe above letter is signed by Harland membership list of the -Red tat enly scorns Secretary |, They had been told to leave the| chokes. The beating of his heart be-| battlefield, and exhaustion. ip yin Tai ot Naval Hospital (where he was treated|; Sharp, M. D. chief of the Out-/ Trade Union Opposition. * mental’ press opens "| hospital because “drastic reductions| comes slower and slower. He feels condition was Officially characterized eer into his ape ro loose, | for varying short periods five times): Patient Sarvices sherds ‘Admini- | Nazi Worker Aids Communists | ; pe in veterans’ appropriations necessi-|as he felt when he first inhaled| 85 ‘not serious. adrift, as al is le regal oe ae U. 8. Veterans’ Hospital 81. Bronx; stration Lyons, 3. 9. | ‘The comrade was, therefore, able, tated this step.” So the hospital au-| poison gas on the battle front at the A Jingo Gets Publicity ROIOUBHIORS "ANd: “the DOWEL: tO” SORA Castle: Polity.(N: Xo) Hospital, al; ‘Attack Lasted 20. Minutes iby warning the others, to pe vent 4 | thorities told him Camel Hill section in France fifteen| * When, on Capolina’s request, the| "4 breathe. UiS, Veterans, Hospital, « Oteen,|” weittenin int-on the bottom ef tiile (this: action By obeaevasae Berks ‘ WAR VETERANS It’ was Roosevelt's: new deal to the, vears ago. hospital notified William A. Darcey,| Capolina had been sleeping in, North Carolina; Walter Reed Hos-| ietter are the following words, By E.|able to ascertain that the A veterans, in action. { : * liaison «‘"cer of Les Vingt-cing Post| Parks, on benches, in hallways and | pital, Washington, D. C.; Veterans’| Kaiser, a doctor at the Jewish Hos-|of the N. 8. B. O. had ih fact warned i The two men were Daniel Capolina,, yHEN America entered the war,| 1576 of the Veterans of Foregin Wars,!0n the ledges of buildings. | Hospital, Tucson, Arizona... . * pital in Brooklyn, where Capolina | our comrade correctly, since the Nazi BEING SENT TO 42 years old, of 811 12th St.. Union’ W paniel John Capolina was a they were notified that Darcey would) Edie aed |. There were many others, but Ca-| had dite of his frequent attacks: storm @rision went to the meeting- at City, N. J.. and Alfred Pauchpuss, 35, | young wireless and radio operator. | arrange to furnish Capolina with| JE described how he had tried to/polina could not recall them all he, “ ‘qaniel Capolina suffered from a | place, but of courap fruitlessly. ‘ pit i 1 of Brooklyr ee He was married, had two children, a/ transportation to his home.” "Togain his health, going from) ‘liked. exhausted “after almost’ three|~}ronchial asthmatic seizure—very | Foreign Anti-Facdst ? NEW ENGL AND One Committed Suicide | boy and a girl. This, Capolina says, was just so . ‘ | days without food. severe—lasting twenty minutes— | Have Enatmous Effect La i i + Pauchpuss t6 dead. He committed| Gapolina was among the first to go much words. “As soon as he (Darcey) | hospital, to hospital, never for very/ “He showed me the following docu-| felieved by adrenalin hypodermi- You cannot Smagine what an ey suicide last week, Hovelons a & overseas. He fought as a private in|got this into the paper, he was | [On perl pe Ee rae ioe ment that he always carries with| cany” | “enormous effect ¢he démonetratiann t a a vain ‘year struggle to find work! ¢, , ah | vi ie } J i & 3 Bs 2 ie i i Camps to Be Separate ha adequate treatment for uber: | ay epee: ih claplepha esa fee eee peg ea in the United|‘0ld his services were ‘not wanted | vould be unable to receive fiestinent HEN Capolina we he took with wast Conmesion, sek ny earn t _ from Other Forced — culasis contracted as a result of his! He saw service on the English | Hospital. Capolina was discharged, | Hien Jf Was diecovored that he was 8) when seized with an attack, “| Wein: soveraltooples of the” Daily | Shela antivitien ° enbageet Wea mi Labor Recruit sasaiiaian > mpry ty {ront, in Belgium. He fought at) He made his way to New York emits pore (Seal) | Veaken crplaising:thectjaity's” wiaat | AUrOaAsaane eal ane tae ; abor Recruits _ Tells of Suic (Chateau Thierry, at Belleau Wood. | No Food for Three Days ; “Only last week, when I felt al VETERANS ADMINISTRATION | on the vets, He also took the address. Whenever news is received of Daniel Capolina described Pauch- | He escaped death. somehow, at both When I saw him he hed not eaten little better than usual for a day oF | United States Veterans Burean lot one of the Posts of the Workers ‘trikes against ships flying the Nazi "aia meral Fox Conner, commander of (By a Worker Correspondent) “hopeless.” Whenever he applies for| five years in the r wit) (Signed) W. W. VERNER, M.D. | who has « wife and four children,|the actions of the foreign £0MIthe Pisst Corps Area here, ftom) BALTIMORE, Md. — An unem-, hospital service, he is red-taped, put |the Saartents #6 te eniucitans ok jut terete chtl baie et eek rt ree amati g sisecy (ob far. severe years, Gontranict tie, Nanie aaesnine, _ 8)Major General Paul B. Malone, com- | pioveq worker in the jungles of Bal-| Off, sent to other hospitals and cal-)has his honorable discharge. Aside| vertebra in his spinal column, ex, i eigen ay is eepehis family alive, He told ge and. bot wnoee, ab eoMOeT Ea camps -with other recruits to the) forced labor camps, but are to be| placed in seperate camps. Some 2,000 of these war veterans have been in training in Virginia. ‘They are reported as now in condi- tion to begin work. This was stated a telegram received by Major mander of the Third Area Corps ih Baltimore, who has, been in charge of training the war vets. _ Six Camps to Be Set Up. “Six camps will be established in the state of Massachusetts and it is also expected that about 1,000 addi- tional war veterans from this state puas’s suicide, He is filled with re- Discharged Just As Pension Is Due, Vet timore told me his story. He served six years in the Army and four years and five months ‘service was at the Fort Davis Canal Zone. He served overseas in the Navy during the big slaughter. He was discharged upon expiration of his term, on Dec. 1 Is Torn from Family| Capolina received a medical dis- charge from the U. S. Army on Feb, |10, 1919. Since then his life has been |@ ceaseless, fruitless struggle to live, | to regain his health from the govern- ment which deprived him of it, Now his case is indexed in the Veteran's Administration's files as lously assured that his condition is “incurable.” PTR, Der (HEN Capolina collapsed on the streets of Portchester on May 28, he was penniless, weak from hunger. He was discharged from the Veterans Hospital in Maine because of the (By a Worker Correspondent) IRRIGON, Ore—My father served from minor injuries, he received a sunstroke, the after-effects of which gave him arthritis in the spinal column, During the !ast seven years he has obtained pension increases from $6 a month to $60 because he is totally disabled, but last week E. W. Morgan, ‘TOTALLY DISABLED VET CUT FROM $60 MONTHLY 10 $6 AS AN “ECONOMY” pension “in the amount of $6 month- ly, on account of age.” (He is 63), cepting the three at the base of the skull, are infected with arthritis, and that he is totally disabled. Under the “New Deal” the officials ignore their own records and all decency. « Tt is unnecessary to reiterate the | sufferings which he and the other TO WHOM MAY IT CONCERN: This is to certify that the above named veteran is suffering from Bronchig] Asthma. He requires hypodermic injections of solution for the relief of attacks of his condition. By direction: I asked Capolina whether I could have this sent out to be engraved, so that Daily Worker readers could have proof, in facsimile, of the complete authenticity of his story. But he would not—could not—relinquish it. ‘Tt means life or death to him. Wf he gets a sudden attack and this docu- Back-Breaking Work on Farm to Pay Rent (By 2 Worker Correspondent) JACKSONVILLE, Fla—f former sailor, who fought in the World War, me that all his children had for breakfast for months was a little sweet hot water and stale bread. ‘They had nothing for lunch and a little grits for supper. He was living in a shack for which he was asked six dollars per month, BOSTON, June 26.—The_ entire of these bloody battles, while hun-| for almost three days. He had suf-|two. I almost. got a job as wireless 22h West 34th Street | Bx-! y a \ . Embassy umber of war veterans that re-|Sentment and hatred for the govern- dreds fell at his side—only to fall| ‘fered another seizure of his terrible! operator on the Dollar Line,” Cap-| New York City reg lence fights for el paildings oe ues dee eee mained at Washington to acept work | Ment which took his health and his, victim himself to the fumes of poison| ailment in front of the Liggett’s olina said. “But then they found | October 14, 1232 “Tl look them up!” he ‘said. | in the factories, } im the “reforestration” camps, is to| livelihood from him, and threw him|gas while fighting in the Camel Hill | 4 Capolina, Daniel |” : The rejoicing over these events te {be used in New England. The ex- | Out to the junk-heap. He is a medium | section. C—237214 lS") an ne, gn (especially great because the. Nazis in “J soldiers are not to be placed in| height, with tired lines on his face, Listed as Incurable N.Y. G. ‘Vet's Family Must Do their speeches and newspapers always make propaganda for “national sol« idarity,” and declare that there is no international working-class solid- arity. Every time, therefore, that such report comes and the workers push do not know what to say, because workers edge and by whose directions I am writing you this letter say that proofs of the international class struggle against Fascism an even stronger influence in the factories than leaflets, and that every Nazi flag which is torn down abroad encourages us in our resistance. And will be enrolled. Others will be sent! mee He was then a ranking cor-| drastic reduction in veterans’ expen-| Director of Pensions, notified him Veterans undergo with their ailments,|ment is not found on his person, our | He got in arrears and the big-|on the ground of my own experiences: to work under conscript labor con- | — ditures by the Roosevelt sdministra-! that from July on he will receive a| but we must take note how openly| great and charitable hospitals may! hearted landlord made him a pro-|I can confirm this. et ditions. at less than a dollar a day,| He had just a little over a year|tion. Knowing that he lived in Union} ___—_—_ _____ cs (the government shows its contenapt| leave him to die on the streets. Or,| position to go to the reforestation | Asks More Ant’-Fascist Work on the Woncoski river project in more to do before being eligible on | City, N. J., the hospital authorities $15 A MONTH IS A LOT TO LOSE | for workers, even for those who Tisked if a good-hearted young doctor hap- camp and his family could go to his Therefore, we beg you not only to Vermont after their period of traln-| f' sergeant’s retirement pay of| nevertheless refused to provide him (By a Worker Correspondeni) | their lives for it. Every young worker | pens to be near at the time, he may| farm and he wouldn't charge any-|give the foreign workers our thanks, ing at Fort Devens. Common labor-/ $147 a month. While serving his en-| with fare to his home. He was| NEW YORK.—A veteran who has should realize that the government, not knowhow to treat Capdlina with-| thing. but to call upon them to develop ers have been getting from 82 to) listment in Panama, he married and| thrown out, to grub his way back to| been drawing $23 for injuries incur-| will doublecross him even worse than| out this Rote. | So now they live in an old aban-| their anti-Pascist activities even $2.50°a day for such work, but all| has now two children. All three of; his friends and his two children, His|red in 1911 was cut to $8. This is/it has the present veterans. The “New Asked for Aid doned barn with rats and mice. The|more widely and strongly, so that will be displaced by those en-|them are in the Panama Republic| wife is dead now. just another example of how Roose-| Deal,” if understood, will remove the} Early last year Capolina wrote to| wife and children do -back-breaking | we shall be able to hold lout ta rolled. in Roosevelt's forced labor| and he in paid off here in the States.| The day after he collapsed, the| velt Ad the politicians ask the vet- the Veterans Administration office) work on the farm, and the govern- | struggle, and to attack until the vice The Department of Labor does not| United Hospital stated that he was! last, bit of loyalty that the workers oppressor’s | govern- camps at less than half the former erans ( be patient and wait, instead rate of or” organizing, have for thetr allow his family to come kemewbh) “well on the way to recovery.” The of ment 4 in Lyons, . J., asking for hospital treatement 4 ment check she gets, she has to apply te the back v= , under the noses of the Nazis, these oy such \ zn have