The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 14, 1933, Page 4

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% 7 SUBSCRIPPION RATES: Published by the Comprodaily Publishing Co.. Inc., daily except Sunday, at 50 Be . Page Four Ith St., New York City, N.Y. Telephone ALgonguin 4-7936. Cable “DAIWORE.” rw ~ Mail everywhere: One year, $6; six months, 8: 2; 1 month, 7Se, JULY 14, 1938 aba a: Shall bhack¥-'t, the dally Works, Be RT aVINCERL Reve NOES excepting Borough of Manhattan and wronx, New York City. Foreign and ress and ma Centra vat Party S.A. Canada: One year, $9; 6 months s, $3. ROOSEVELT SEEKS PACTS eran: ee |” All That's Holy, I Pledge Ceniployadent Reliet? By Burs Ja pan Pushes Tt IN ANTI-BRITISH DRIVE Two Soviet Borders in rebellion against French op-j} pression, were victorious against a| | strong French army until their] Proposes TradeAgreements Carrying Forward Fight Against Great Britain That Wrecked a London Parley | med. was killed and his body seized | by the French. Nevertheless, the) | French, who have greatly intensi-| fied their long-standing offensive | against the Moroccans, say it will| take at least until the end of sum-| | mer to smash their resistance. } GHANDI ENDS HIS swered by Mass Mobilization on August Ist. commander-in-chief, Sisi Ben Ah- ee APANESE troops are moving closer to Soviet territory not only in the north of Manchukuo but through a drive to New War Moves in Attempt to Secure Mon- take Chahar Province, inner’ Mongolia, which touches on the opoly of Chilean Nitrates and Other Munitions WASHINGTON, July 1 terday notified Argentina, | foreign serv officers that: “the pr ire that the state department begin exploratory studies of he department | of state and Colombia, through its dent he; expressed the yes- SHAM OPPOSITION TO IMPERIALISM Congress Party Meet Peoples Republic of Outer Mongolia. Two Japanese brigades, as well as bombi now driving towards Kalagan, Hsiang’s government in the no It has always been the war polic to attempt to invade the Sovict g planes, supported by Manchukuo troops are the seat of General Feng Yu rth of China. of Japanese imperialism ee : ; f ton arate! e's Republic | This would have to take place on the the possibilities of negotiating a trade agreement” with each mins Union through the People’s Republic’ | 7 i : Hes ASN RY: as to Accept British Plot of Outer Mongolia as well as through | Kitin border of Manchuria and the of them 3 f s Vladivostok and 1 re S Soviet Union and through invasion Vaisan 1 es adivostok and Manchuli regions: ne M ‘a Outer "Mi mr Ae A cable dispatch to the New York | Of Inner Mongolia and Outer Mon- retary of Sta BRITAIN SCORNS POONA, India, July 13—Mahatma HeraldeTribiite, aute? Faly ie, teow | Golia’ “enown cas “the” Bedbie'a nee ences with 9 Gandhi, now meeting here at the its Shanghai correspondent, Victor | Public of Outer Mongojia, an inde- gentina _Ambas | Indian Congress Party conference is Cas aa ed “F ‘Crusade | Pendent republic which has close ob Bran t 3 agate ay Keen, is headlined “Feng’s Crusade f azil | about to make open peace with Brit: iF " ” ties with the Soviet Union) ae - & ail sper cee Invites Japan to Take Chahar. s wit et Union). lombi ish imperialism The Next Step teade pacts 1 WORKS PROGR AM satin ot the! Inala, Cones , The Opposite Eftect The war for Chahar opens the way Gade-pacts. It agai AYE | ™ Bcine on Me er tin teens | “Tuesday,” says Keen, “the ‘Chris- |for the attempted fulfillment of the tel to. nile ane other South : Gandhi At prev: on: tian general’ private war, which t step of the war policy of Jap- ut to le 2 ° Sou r Bt sawey he s is for the purpose of recap- | anese imperialism. fonériean countries Regards It As Man- cons: rraad cepe ine the | TRE are turing Dolonor and expelling the The present military drive of Jap- Move Against British Interests. oeuver for Consump- Japanese and Manchukuan troops, | anese imperialism was deliberately h the failure of the London | ,. + 2 F is likely to have the opposite effect staged through the assistance of economic conference was not tion of U. S. Masses e fight for Ind of providing the Japanese with a|General Feng Yu hsiang, While in tioned in any of the official - Now the gathe good excuse to occupy the whole of Japanese pay, General Feng an- ments these series of proposa od LONDON, July 13.—Great Brit- private. Ai capitalist news. | Chahar, which is part of Inner Mon- | nounced himself as the “commander Latin American couniries are recog- ain today rejected emphatically the here carry the view thet Gan- golia.” of the anti-Japanese forces.” His nized as a direct lt upon B: fy complete, open . = bd Roosevelt proposal that was put be- troops began an attack on Papaohti- ish interests. As regards Argentine peace with the Brilish government, HE Tanaka memorandum which | enko in order to drive forward to Whose capitalist government is in afore the economic commission of |gnd to accept n::d cooperate in put- = Bi Z ties satan one k as far back as 1927 outlined the retake Dolonor from the Japanese. powerful position and abl to play |‘N€ World Economic Conference for | ting yer the constitution for fudia : : ie “s with which J@Pamese policy in Manchuria and mar eter, pa Off British and United States rival-| “an internationally coordinated pro- a h slave-inasters * ° ees apiate Fe ice aie for war against the Soviet Union laid tHE Japanese, as previously ar- ries in its own interests, gram of public works.” ee } Protest Ase Against hey ee A i te wala emiinds: 06) stccas Jon ‘tlie ‘strategié position uf ranked, ties thie ‘as AURIS ROE Washington is making a definite ‘The proceedings of all the com- To End Civil Disobedience _ ‘You know what many Italian work- | Inet and Outer Mongolia for. at-| taking a greater slice of Inner Mon- bid to weaken the influence of its raiss reflects the paralysis that Senne is oe ready to wi 8 ‘ 4 ers say when you talk to them of their | ‘cking the workers’ fatherland golia and of reaching closer to So- great rival, Britain grips the conference f. Walter aan de beatenee NEREICN Ghar F > t A d own condition—“What we need in this. The Tanaka memorandum was) viet territory. So intense has become the trade Runciman, president of the British was started in 1929 by Candhi ta ian ASCtS rma a country is a Mussolini.” And they d!@Wn up by Premier Tanaka ani General Feng Yu hsiang, a. war War between Britain and the United board of trade, informed the dele-| M7 O45 head off the rising tide of say that because the Fascist press Presented to the emperor of Japan lord who has sold himself to every States that the Washington admin- sane are eee Hee a gal truggles of the peasantry against. the eR EN LT 3 tells them that Mussolini serves the in 1927. One of the most openly | imperialist power in China, is clever Meee eit connie at eae es that nature rich landowners and io switch the Worker Calls for Demonstrations to Counter interests of both sides, of the bosses avowed imperialist documents ever to|at using demagogic propaganda to strike wave into -peaceful and inef- and the workers come to light, the memorandum fully e nt cover up his betrayals, He sends a of entine Deception for American Masses. fective channels. Gandhi told the Propaganda Effect of Balbo Flight The struggie against Fascism by Ujlined the present war policy of | fow of his soldiers to precipitate the ket. What chance of success Roose- From the first tae proposals for masses to disobey particularly the law 7 z a the American workers is not to be J#Panese imper m. It traced, al- | Japanese advance, but would quickly velt has in the Argentine is prob- ee ee noe oe ~ | providing for a tax on salt, and called Aa ; % ; most step by step, four years in ad- shoot down any attempt on the part an international public wi el ee Gee 2 , limited only against German Fascism, ry step, SAtesAnuAds | SHOU sane ser lematical, in view of the vicious | train have mot been Teenried’ og | for boycotting of British cotton, In| SHEDIAC. N. B. July 13. Ee ates Sete Helin Hnke FR Cae ATL eT particularly | Vance the accomplished invasion and | of the Chinese people themselves to manner in which the United States <orously put forth. They are rec. |'®% matter of salt, Gandhi made| commanded by General Italo Bal oe Now Brunswick, Canata, om its way against Italian Fascism, which by no “ismemberment-of China. Baron Ta- | arm themselves and start a real, government has carried on a world ognized as propaganda for con- vaudeville trips to the seaside to cook | land, tock off from Labrador today for New Brunswick, Canada, on its way means is any better than any other. | "aka pointed out that in order to people's war against Japan to pre- wide campaign of slander to try to a few spoonfuls of salt as a demon- grab the markets to which Argen- tina supplies meat. The Yankee propaganda machine abroad and ai sumption of the American masses in an effort to make it appear that the Roosevelt slave code applied in the United States are panaceas that can stration of “civil disobedience.” The cotton boycott aided the Indian cot- ton mill owners, and was used as a| Tuly 13. received a let- NEW YORK, — The “Daily Worker” has to the Chicago “Century of Progress’ exposition, landing here this afternoon. their movement and to get the sym- pathy of the almost five million Itali- I hope to read soon in the “Daily Worker” an appeal to the American | working class to protest and dem- consolidate the gains that would be made (and that have since been made) it would be necessary to pro- voke a war against the Soviet Union. vent the China. further penetration of A Truce with Japan A rooms ih aajlageapa rc eA onstrate against the agents of Mus- The Chiang Kai Shek government 4 home circulated the scare that be applied throughout the world. rt | Pretest to keep the India ‘vies Y°S| ter from a worker correspondent, ans in this country, the majority most solini, to show that the workers of having. ‘relinquished’ “the #¥hAmiGe gentina meat was a menace to also indicates that the Roosevelt Pore Pec setae Gat ait un-| telling about. the publicity which | exploited workers I would not be this country do not want to see any 7 ra Manchuria and North Ching to Jap- because of the prevalence among/government will try to explain the doantedty “be followed by the usual, the Italian Fascist and English surprised to see im a few days oné of | “spectacular flight,” but demand the anese imperialism, has made a truce eyne of hoof and mouth disease ure of its own “recovery” pro- Sitwevinte WIE ike British eloacny: ‘and, Wnguage press of America is giving the usual Ragin Lem etbi nd pas freedom of all political prisoners of SHOW EXPOSING with the invaders. But the Japanese which affects hums ho consume home by i ae aay i alli - honor of Ba and his men, e y i " ¢ ich affects ns who consum ome by “bisming 1 on {hb | a cgeiab pase aembanie’ 46. the imper- the Balbo flight, and calling for or Italy and the leaders of the Italian id diseased meat. A quarantine on Ar- gentine meat imports is in effect in the United States in behalf of Swift, not follow the United This will serve the purpose t other nations of the world | ialist_ exploiters. In the meanwhile the trade union leaders who led the strike struggles ganized protest demonstrations against this glorification of Fascism. The “Daily Worker” agrces entirely should not discuss who they are per- sonally, What counts is that they re- present one of the bloodiest regimes working class: Antonio Gramsi and Umberto Terracini. Yours for the Cause. IMPERIALISM TO. are not satisfied with the big slice of territory they have gained, although it comprises a population of 40,000,- nd other le: ng to mobilize sentim ; vi i i rh resses the workers in Europe. Bop ene Nanking ‘contest goxetn: ment trust | Cnet Tenders of the or United Stares against the in, 8% rotting in Meerut prison. Over, With this correspondent. His letter that oppresses the workers in Europe B. Ch, | ment heade¢ by Chiang Kai Shek, is meat trust aan” sete t © 3M~ | 50,000 Indi: vorkers d asants| is printed in full below: In the “Daily Worker,” I read every- SAF REESE Sapte 5 Be i ff doll: fi 4 peri rivals of Wall Street—a | 90: ian workers and peasants 4 ; ANTI-JIM-CROW MEET CALLED ls receiving millions of dollars from See New War Moves sentiment that may be turned in fill the jails. When the Gandhi truce : . Gay ‘the sppeals: of ‘struggle against, A? ie : ig Wall Street, and recently purchased Latin-America, iong the battle any @irection to suit the American | 18 signed, only the Nationalist Dear Editor German Fascism. PHILADELPHIA, Pa—A confer-: ae a number of American bombing ground -of the sharpest trade rival- ruling class that is driving toward Porters will be released, but the re: For weeks, I have been reading in| Recently, the “Daily Worker” called ence against Jim-Crowism and Nesto John Reed Club H pianes. mies between the United States and! imperialist war. 7 " (Tesentatives of the Indian peasants) the American capitalist press, and the workers to the Brooklyn Pier to segregation is being planned for Dy. * Wo os ake Britain, is also of the utmost im- and workers will be kept in prison. | naturally in the Italian fascist daily demonstrate against the Gaymen en- Thursday, July 20, at 8 p. m. at 1331 Proletarian Art Y the struggié for Chinese markets portance in connection with the im- Proposal Definitely Killed. Gandhi's latest move will not stop|of this country, “sensational” news voy. ‘That was right. But what about N. Franklin St. The conference is be- Exhibition i and for the dismemberment of perialist war preparations. War is) The proposal for “international |the struggle for India’s independence, about the Balbo Flight, the representative of Italian Fascism? ing called by Sections 9 and 13 of the i China, the imperialists are utilizing already raging between Bolivia and | public works” was very effectiveiy but is a step forward to his exposure; This is one of the means which the You know that the Fascists in this Communist Party and Young Com- mae ‘He conflict ‘between thé various Paraguay as a result of the increased killed when H. Colijn of Holiand|in the eyes of India’s toiling masses.| Italian Fascists use to propagandize country have at their disposal a large munist League. CHICAGO, Il.—While the “Cen- Livortheri: Southern: ana ‘Oanteal war aggressiveness of American imperial- }ioposed and sucreeded in tury of Progress” exhibition, glorify- lords: Feng Yu hsiang, after he be- tine etnies cp ay a ae ene : see oes ie bl . . . . . ing a century of capitalist expl gins to vacate Chahar, when the pce We Noes up with Britain peter ee on public tation, with wo-kers sta Japanese continue the drive he in- in support of Paraguay. Under these Works until the “monetary commis- S t W k , O l B é ht N t Ha b ; ae e i sub ee a. “ee *onditions trade discussions with the |S!0n is in a position to join us in url O or ers n 4 L O e nm m UY vation. wages to show off the mar- | vited, will press against the Nanking eieby an : t Kk i ve Jer: vi government, From the South, the Argentipe minister that work.” Since no agreement on vels of modern civilization, goes on ilitari inst NAnKly ia: Be include most fa pol that means the aa + as ok tei at the Chicago lakefront, the John mi itarist war against bass rg ; tion is defiitel Tisitor Fi xerman Workers E: ing prepared by the forces of Gen- maneuvers gale weaken dead. oa | AMerican. Visitor Finds ( Bs f : German Workers LAg- Reed Cid of Chicaso will open on | cra1 ‘Chen Chi Tang of Canton, and Britain. Thus, unde guise o commcted Wit Seas a’| MGlétamey Bligh Cer U.S. Envoy Hails Hitler erly Take “Daily” jn jsuy 15 an equally significant ex- | his ally, Hu Han Min, now in Heng innocuous trade discussions, the © ect Militaney Hig’ \ ; . : RS Mie toward iniperialist war 1 (Pcvualist policy and a Deter? ne wee A i t f G hibition. Kong, close to his British advisers, speeded up poe P pram vars niea te Lae OR Vaterfront signt 0 op This is an Anti-Imperialist ex- | Warships Desert American imperialism, pursuing a Seial Cee ae -——— | Cae hibition, of paintings, posters, charts,! During the past few weeks a nume policy of the most insolent aggres- eee Boul ae By JOHN R. McMAHON “Are the Socialist rank and file photographs, contributed from all | per of ships, formerly under the con~ Blystess against its foremost rival,|the American Standard Oil cust | HAMBURG. This the a waa joining the red front?” parts of the country by the John | trol of Nanking, deserted and steam- Britain, is also striving ; z syed eet Git of Nast taciee tn Gap | “They certainly are. They are los-|Reed Clubs of America. This ex-/ eq southward. The commanders of support on the part STE ENP ‘Here’ the. wunt-abines: buy. faces are jing their illusions and their blind |hibition graphically portrays and | these vessels offered themselves to American countrie from. its glum, there is surface cleanliness with | |faith in their crooked leaders, espe-| exposes the true nature of the im-/ tio Canton forces in thelr struggle puppet states which are ready to do 0] KY RETURNS : aes tial dates ri cially since the latter have no more |Perlalism whose loot is so lavishly | aoainst Nanking. puppe | iN inner depression, nobody dares speal j and out. When those lead-| displayed in the “Century of Pro- | ? i ts bidding out to his fellow nor to join a ‘crowd’! ) Jobs to hand out. hen those lead- | oh fair, tf italist fair One of the big factors behind the Chile has long vech a source of th of three or four persons lest bullets [eee ed - Buta GWE ey Abs up ne Ee fiecnrodusts sot no der fac. | Southern drive against Nanking can Supply of nitrates and copper, both - ON fly from hands of brown-shirt hood-} trolled a lot of city jobs, as along |S2ows ‘t the | be scen in the recent British an- war materials, for the United States Ut is probable that negotiations with tepresentatives of that country will take the direction of striving to ob- tain a monopoly of these materials as further moves in the preparation for imperialist war The government today extended invitations to Sweden and Portugal for discussions of trade agreements, LONDON PARLEY Says He Didn't Discuss Recognition of. USSR With Litvinov lums, I heard a little boy cry but no! \laughter of children. I saw a band of nine or ten-year-old storm troop- ers armed with small clubs attack a group of workers’ kids who retreated, but rallied in a culvert to pick up missiles. Here amid the most ad- |vanced engineering equipment of any harbor city in the world I saw a youth the Hamburg waterfront, and try to tcries and of far-off countries, use them to bribe and corrupt the John Reed Club exhibit shows the masses. No the socialist leader-ras-| brutality and oppression by which é i . f them these products are wrung out of the ped rea agi aati tet c sweat and blood of workers. was the Hamburg chief of police, Schoenfelder, and he persecuted the Communists without mercy, The Nazis have just put this scoundrel in jail but it is too much to hope that they will keep him there. Hitler | The exhibition will open Satur- day nitht, July 15, at 8:30 p. m. wit! Topcheysky will @ reception, at which Morris speak, describing : | Henkow, Ab the the ideology and the technique em- | |mouncement that the boxer fund of | 14,000,000 pounds, around $60,000,000, | will be used to develop British trade |in China, and that several millions of dollars will be used to complete \the railroad from Hong Kong to present time the | vailroad is interrupted for a space of |a few hundred miles. The British | now want to supply this missing link i r ‘ needs fellows of that stamp. But the!pioyed. This is without doubt the 4 thereby carrying the trade war NEW YORK. July 13,—Rooseveli’s C0-operate with a dog to propel a milk rank and file are swinging over tate important exhibition of pro- | and thereby tap the rich trade of against England in Europe outside representative. Prof. Ray-|Catt, and three young men literally) us in good numbers.” Hetarian art which has yet been | Hankow and tha interior, bringing it the London conference. Tue state de- | mond Moley. who attended the world harnessed together to haul a wagon Hamburg looks prosperous in its|brougiit together in America, and into the Britis crown colony of partment has instructed its ministers Economic loaded with paving stones. in Lisbon and Stockholm to inform the foreign offices of those govern- conference at London to help push forward American imper- ialist policy, returned today on the} This dismal, fear-ridden city sud- denly came to life at nightfall on the spacious Fifth Avenue, with less traf- y class conscious er. to ev shopping centre, a cleaner and more|Si0uld be of the greatest interest Honk Kong. As a preliminary step, |the British are seeking to fortify i ‘ . ae es ke _ there puppets throughout this region, fic, plenty of bicyclists. But the! ‘The cxhibition is at the head- ii sev re lise iner J 5 rt . waterfront. ‘ : str a the ican Perea inst Roosevelt destrea discus. | liner Manhattan with Herbert Bayard |Walerfront. feaders “grumble. end the ecnnomie/ ohasters «of fie John Peed: Club, ron Meet OS He cane eee, eeements Amended o eaeisicy ia ie brought us papers—the ‘Daily Worker’ heart of the city, the harbor, has a) 3475 §, Michigan Boulevard be ey nae A 2 é ericar le) a ns financial ad- si y t i 1 i * sieohs from New York and also the English IGetnparas vane Harte dhccner ctl rae ra | JPPANESE imperiatism, carving out PRUSSIAN POLICE The assistant secretary of state, PAUY Wormer? Ha, ha! That is good! |big ships are laid up ai the piers. Thousands of Soviet — J'a new empire for itself in the : s M4 who is head of the so-called “brain -~° seat (ass me some too. I do not read English Long rows of electric cyancs, the last ‘Working Women Meet. North of China, moves towards the trust” in the Roosevelt administra- a - [Word in harbor mechanism, point ‘i 3 center for its own benefit, struggling TOLD TO ENFORCE tion, did not give any indication that j2nsuage bul my pa resect i idle fingers at the sky. for Zetkin Memorial agains: American imperialism and its 4 VU his ‘brain was functioning. When dent Wil te sean be PE ee She arbor wobkers Were are tall pa puppet Chiang Kai Shek govern- asked: “Do you think the conference 19 baa beastie hilt of militant: spirit, ready to give open) MOSCOW.—Thousands of working ment. SLAVERY DECREE was a success?” Moley replied: “I Eager hands clutched at and almost battle to the class enemy at the first; women met on July 1 in the great) Meanwhile, the war danger height- = can’t say nat do you think?” tore the precious copies — uate ‘ good opening. They have kept their Moscow Park of Culture to honor the | ers throughout the Pacific, with % see When Moley left for London he them as if they were five dollar gold | ‘ eight hour day and are buildin; up, memory of Clara Zetkin, Speaking | American imperialism rapidly build- Spying. Strike Smash- | stated that the ference was on a| pieces, I wished I had a bale of them 2 @ powerful united front. They are ajof Comrade Clara Zetkin’s reyolu-| ing its naval war machine for the ay 4 i “sure course of solid echievement.”| instead of a mere dozen or so. A heroic vanguard in tbe army cf the tionary life and struggles, Nikol-| next world slaughter, ing Made Duty of All Cops BERLIN, July 13—Carrying out Adolf Hitler's decree giving a Council of Trustees of Labor composed entire- | ly employers the supreme author- gover wages and conditions of wo: ier Goering of Prussia has is- an order making the police an gral part of the enslavement ma- ‘ine. The police are charged with sup- pr @ all strikes, lockouts, and any protests of any kind on the tt of the workers. They are or. id to act as spies for the labor When he returned he was careful not to comment on the smashing of the conference on the rocks of the sharp antagonisms existing between the ri- val imperialist powers. Doesn't Know What Happened When the liner docked Moley gave | the following statement to the press: “I have been on the water for a week, together with my associate, | Herbert Bayard Swope, who accom- panied me at the President's request, | and our knowledge of the recent de- | velopments in London is less than | yours here. Concerning my stay in London, where I was for just a week, I shall report with Mr. Swope at once | sudden suspicion hit me, Here was |a beefy Prussian face, there a mili- | tary-looking chap, and next a white-! collar clerk, Also on the dock above loomed the helmeted brassy figure of @ cop. Workers Defy Nazis “Is this all right?” I asked un- easily, looking around. “Yes, yes!” laughed a brawny steve- dore who had lived in America, “We are all united front here against the damn Hitler.” (At the name a fiaxen- haired pink-cheeked youth drew his | freight hook from his hip and passed |it significantly across his throat, |though with a grin, as he echoed shown practicing the Fascist salute Berlin, William E. Dodd, U. S. ambassador to Germany, and his wife, are as they sailed from New York for |caught with those papers I dis-} tributed?” I asked. | “Jail, not to mention beatings in the Nazi rooms. But you didn’t notice anybody refuse a paper, did you? They search our homes too, The Com- munist press is all outlawed and the Nazis print only their propaganda | + Comrade Thaelmann. We did not know it until you told us. It helps us to know of the support which the workers in America and other coun- tries are giving us in the struggle against fascism. We have sixty thou- sand jailed or in prison camps. A bit of literature smuggled in to them is | things, The sailors of Hamburg were among the vanguard of the revolution of | 1918, which the social democrats so ishamefully betrayed by collaborating | with the bourgeoisie, opening the way for the Hitler dictatorship of capital- ism, We bcarded a sightseeing bus in this city. The guide pointed to a sec- tion of narrow streets and alleys with ancient brick or stone dwellings of four or five stories. “That is Neukoeln, the workers’ district,” he announced. “It is full of communists. Very dangerous to go | proletariat and will yet achieve great ayeva said: “When Soviet working | women came to Clara Zetkin, she |asked them endless questions about life in the factories and collectives, about their new lives under socialism. She dreamed of a journey to Mag- nitogorsk, to Dnieprostroy, to the col- lective farms of North Caucasus, the lower Volga district, and Central Asia. She wanted to report to the working men and women of Germany on these mighty achievements of socialist con- struction.” The meeting sent a mes- | Sage of greeting to the Central Com- |mittee of the German Communist Party. Seek ‘War Against U.S.S.R. The Japanese are driving north- ward, attemping to provoke war against the Soviet Union in order to solve the sharpening contradic- tions of all the imperialists at the expense of the Soviet Union—by Slicing up Soviet territory to ap- pease the colony hunger of the ime perialists. Every day sees new provocations invade Soviet territory and Soviet citizens. They arrogantly tempt to browbeat the Soviet pl potentiaries in Tokio who, following |a policy of peace, negotiate for the of the Japanese, Their armed forces, j i | | “Hitler), « iv - | lies, kes -|@ godsend. Send us cards, papers, ai ” i “f 4 i ‘ Mets, io watch scrupulously that‘ the State Department and, of stad hasboe pose Eee iG cna tery tor outatte sere Everything the | eaftetss babe pl Abel Fe most sie Paes pee and is aul-| Disaster in Pacific. Fare ey ao ene fe orders of the trustees are carried, Course, to the President. may 7 Nazi. \for ras: rapt , thankfully received. One of the pro- ea Po Meret a ( Sut to the full,” and “to report on) While he would not taik of any im- ain thine sertdin Root Neha Mol Enclediam ig trot VO nent suc Mepe aLane viotims of the, terxor in the| Powerful why?’ Mnocently inquired) - GEOUL, ‘Japan, «July 18. — The | ‘On every tront Be Wat sank gh 4 aeyiing tho: could endanger eco-’ pressions of the conference Moley was|not dare to interfeye with us when|press circulated undeveroand ¢ Hamburg district is Albert Walter, an American passenger. |steamer Chosan Maru rammed the growing. Every worker should strug- F nomic peace.” , very emphatic in denying 5 We are at work, Once they tried; | bitterly need outside comrade papers Sccretaty of the ie heal bh sail-/ ‘The guide had no answer. (Chinese merchant ship Tunan Which | 81 garnet SE seat, ont ed The legal apparatus by which the conversations with M. Lit We threatened stulce instantly and |like the “Daily Worker.” They not Qt and Harber workers: He is in a’ 1 tnwardiy thanked the guide for sank off Shantung Point today. 30 of fue, Sapertaliay’ eae prenatal whole German working class is made viet Commissar for foreign affairs they quit the attempt. As for that cop/only inform us but give us great Hitler jal ott, <i ie strbintt 1 pothap tribute ‘to the workers and his ine Timan’s passengers and 53 of its ait Be mr a Preparations, w slave class under the law. without had anything to do with recognivion above, we don’t. mind him and he|cheer. It is inspirmg to learn that | Were NO atrotities but a hospital here! soo mony to the gallant, undefeated, 3 | Rally to the August 1 demonstrations tight to bargain, strike, or even cam-| of the Saviet Union or creniis to the won't bother us.” the LL.D, is sending an English and)i8 Tight now full of people crippled revolutionary spirit of the German crew were rescued but 122 persons | against imperialist war and for the ciain, is thus made complete ( Sovier gaxsenmenyy | “What happens if any of you are.@ French lawyer to the defense of for life by those thugs, ‘masser are still reported missing, ‘ defense of the Soviet Union,

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