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? SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Mail everywhere: One year, $6; six months, $3.5 excepting Borough of Manhattan Canada: One year, $0; ¢ ‘Pr av d a” O utl i nes STAY THE HAND OF THE NAZI EXECUTIONER! _ By Gropper Nazi Aims in Trial | _ of Four Communists Published by the Comprodatly Publishing Co., Inc., daily except Sunday, at 50 R 13th S¢., New York City, N. ¥. Telephone ALgonquin 4-7955, Cable “DATWORK. Address and mail chacks to the Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th St., New York, N. ¥. 5 3 Mewees, wey « month, Te, 4 Bronx, New York City. Foreign and months, $5; 3 months, 38.. BARBUSSE, BROWDER, PROF. GOLDSCHMIDT TO SPEAK AT ANTI-WAR RALLY SEPT. 29 Nebraska Farmers, Jobless Organizations, Pick Delegates to Big Anti-War Meet NEW YORK.—Conditions in Germany leading up to the arson by the Nazis will be described from first-hand experience by Alfons Goldshmidt, exiled German professor, when he will make his first publie mass appearance in the United States as one of the main speakers at the U. S. Congress Against War, which convenes in Mecca Temple and in St, SEPTEMBER 22, Iwas Portg th A. | | il \| | —By Michael Gold—— Buried Alive. In a manner few Europeans can| : Americans get to| By VERN SMITH. jiose insanity of | MOSCOW, U.S.S.R., Sept. 21 (By Cable).—“Defeat inevitably awaits his truth and| a regime requiring such means of protection,” declares “Pravda,” official L. Mencken 80 | organ of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, which comments caustic- cans like to be| ally on the trial, which opens in Leipzig today, of the defendants in the “Defeat Awaits Regime Requiring Such Means | of Protection,” Editorial Declares a can you, Pri John Dewey. The | truth is, if o1 in America one | is born with little peculiarity. Let me confess I have attended Several dance- hons and enjoyed them. I am for those gam- bling m: our chances for winn 10,000 to 1.) And so every native son has some of it in his blood. | The other night I found to my sur- | prise that I actually enjoyed paying fifteen cents to see a man who had| been buried alive for twelve days. | It is a new and popular racket through the coun’ and has taken the place of tree-sitting. But it reached Staten Island only a few weeks ago, and here in a tent by the Hylan Boulevard we saw posters an- nouncing that the “Duke” was on his twelfth day, and was trying to smash his own record of 31 days under- ground in Kansas City. So I paid my admission, naturally. Tt was a good show. They had dug a big grave and stuck three large stove- pipes in it. Through the largest pipe wou could see the dark face of a jazzy young man—the Duke. He was lying on a pillow, listening to the radio that had been installed in this modern grave. He had several pulp love-story magazines to pass the time, also, for there were electric lights, Buckets passed up and down to give him food and drink. He was quite cozy. But it got tiresome after the first week, he was telling a pretty flapper. And sometimes a drunken sightseer would throw lighted cigarettes down on him and set him afire. That was t danger. But he was na- mp, having laid 31 days in y. He expected to better his tional cr this reco: I spoke to him next, and chanced | “Vee gayts?” I asked corpse. He shrugged his and said, “Nu, man macht * (One makes a living). then I understood he wasn't | altogether nutty, but just another American trying to get along, and a lot saner than the dim, dupes who still stand in and wait for Roosevelt, jent breadlines Hillquit and Nira to make a revolu- tion. Found Roads Full of Wandering Youth (By a Worker Correspondent) SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y— After 11 days spent “on the bum,” having been hounded as a “deserter” and stoned by a railroad detective | | zig trial offer as against the numer- ous depositions of eye-witnesses as well as from the most prominent political leaders of Germany, even from the anti-proletarian camp, all of whom presented indisputable evid- ence of the innocence of Torgler and the other comrades? The Nazi Answer: Forgeries “The Nazi can answer with noth- ing but false documents and obvi- ous forgeries in the best police-style. “The Leipzig trial has a double object from the Nazi viewpoint: it must not only accuse the defendants and justify the judges in calumniat- ing the proletarian revolution, but must also whitewash .the counter- revolution. The bourgeoisie under. stands full well that the fascist. ter- ror is unable to destroy the Commu- nist Party of Germany, nor is it able to subjugate the proletarian masses and bring them under Nazi influence. The German proletariat has by no means as yet said its last word. Fascist justice intends to make use of the trial mostly to ‘prove’ that the Communist Party, the vanguard of the German, proletariat, is a party of terrorists and incendiaries. Fas- cist justice deems it its task to shift the esponsibility of the Reichstag arson from the heads of its own Nazi leaders to the heads of the Communists. “The Nazi understand well that their effort to prove that Commu- nists use arson as a method of po- litical struggle is quite hopeless, but they cannot renounce this thesis at this late date, for otherwise they must expose themselves.” Continuing, the “Pravda” editorial says that “already last November the Central Committee of the Commu- nist Party of Germany adopted a resolution reminding all its members that all anarchist and terrorist ef- forts serve only to distract the masses of the workers from genuine strug- gle and help provocateurs in their dirty activity. “The German Communist Party has grown up as a party of reyo- lutionary mass struggle of the pro- letariat. Such it has been and such it remains—although it is now forced to Jead an underground existence. “The attempts to attribute methods of individual terror to the Com- munist movement will fool few. Real Culprits Shown “Only one of the real culprits in- volved in the Reichstag arson plot stands in the dock today, and he is the fascist hireling, Von der Lubbe. His connection with the National Socialist (Nazi) Party has been am- Ply proven. The London public trial for daring to snach a ride on a| conducted by the international jurists freight train, Gerald J. Clark, 19, a| showed indisputably who are the real native of Saratoga Springs returned |ihcendiaries and who their victims.” ‘Get Soviet Business | Competition Is Keen |Among Capitalist Na- tions for USSR Trade} PARIS, Sept. 21—Eager to get some of the trade with the Soviet Union | which has, up to now, been going to} |Germany, France today entered into | |a commercial conference with repre- | Sentatives of the Soviet Union. The sale of engines, airplanes, is particularly desirable, French repre- sentatives said. In return, they will open French markets to Soviet oil, |lumber, and grains, The competition among the large countries for Soviet trade is growing more intense as the crisis intensifies, and the Soviet Union gets sironger through her industrial and agricul- tural successes. A FASCIST GOV'T | VIENNA, Sept. 21. — Instituting |martial law and the death penalty | for acts against the state, Chancellor |Engelbert Dollfuss formed a fascist government when he dismissed his | old Cabinet and selected a new one made up of pro-fascist tendencies. Dollfuss himself will be the Aus- | trian Hitler. This does not mean the abandon- | ment of the fight against the Nazis or against the Anschluss. Dolifuss also appealed to the Social Democrats for support. Nazis to Redivide States to Districts BAYREUTH, Germany. — Plans to do away with all state . boundaries were disclosed by the Nazis at one of their meetings. Bavarian Min- ister Schemun revealed that Hitler plans to redivide the states along the lines of the Nazi organization, with 87 districts. This will enable them to control more firmly thé activities within the given territory. Destitute Father Carries Dead Child Praise Soviet Bonds As Safest Buy in the World NEW YORK.—“It is with a gteat sense of satisfaction that I recently Sylvania, is typical of hundreds which | learned that I can buy Soviet bonds in this country. To be able to realize | 7 per cent on one’e money in these troubled times, to be freed from worry | about stock market fluctuations, and to know that these bonds are backed by the full strength of the Soviet Union, and are actually helping to bud Socialism—these considerations weigh@— sae se . Buying Will SaveCotton Market, This letter from a purchaser of,) bonds living at Chestnut Hill, Penn-| the Soviet-American Securities *Cor- poration receives every month. From all over the country, from from a C.C.C. camp, a disillusioned | but much wiser boy. Before being sent to camp east of | Lewison, Idaho, the upper New Yor! state contingent of boys was sent to| the Plattsburg barracks for a “train- ing course” in military drill before | being shipped to Idaho. The camp in Idaho is situation in a’ considerably higher alitiude than that to which the boys were accus- tomed. This resulted in severe nose- | bleeds and congestion. Clark, who| had many nosebleeds in one day, appealed to the company surgeon. | He was told that his tonsils were} diseased and must be removed. How-/| ever, the company commander or-| dered Clark to continue working and | refused to give him his discharge} Papers. Whereupon Clark, who was) feeling extremely ill by this time, left camp. | He met several other boys from various C.C.C. camps, who were all leaving because of the rotten food, brutality of officers, etc. When Clark arrived in Lewiston, he was listed as a “deserter” by the| authorities and refused money for carfare home. Accompanied by a Trenton, N. J. youth who had also left a C.C.C. camp, Clark boarded a freight train bound for Chicago. After five days they reached Chicago gaunt with hunger. The boys con- tinued East’and hopped a freight. bound for Toledo. On the freight he found almost 10 men, boys and even girls who were all on the road trying to find some means of subsistence in this way, since they could not obtain any at home. On this train he and the others were stoned by a detective who forced them off the train and ar- rested a few who resisted. The roads, Clark reports, are full of both girls and boys who go back and forth over the country trying to eke out their miserable existence. Clark tells of a girl who was killed near Cleveland when she fell off the freight train she had attempted to board. Civilian Corps Boys Denied Vote; Grounds: ‘No Permanent Home’ SELINGSGROVE, Pa.—Those young fellows who are “camping” in the Civilian Conservation Corps, have | been refused the right to vote. | Several hundred of these forced la-| bor campers marched down from! their mountain camp, and came to/ vote. They were refused. The State Elections Bureau held that the camp- ere were ineligible to vote since the ad were not their permanent resi- jmany as a model comedy of fascist 5 Miles fot Burial YAKIMA, Wash., Sept. 21—Don Hopkins, a hop picker, carried the cold, dead body of his seven-week- ‘Justice’ and law of the bourgeois old son from Moxee to Yakima, a exploiters, |distance of five miles, to the nearest “Defeat inevitably awaits a regime | undertaker. requiring such means of protection.”| ‘The Hopkins family live by berry- ¥% PEREP | picking, and they are so completely City Hospitals Send destitute that Hopkins was forced to walk in with the body when the in- Away Workers Before fant died in its sleep. They Have Recovered | There are over 5,000 hop-pickers in hee the valley, who earn the starvation- NEW YORK.—In the effort to| wage of $1.25 per hundred pounds. cut city expenditures as much as | Most of them are white, although possible in order to pay the bank- | Imdians, Filipinos and Japanese are Concluding, “Pravda” declares: _ “Leipzig will take its place in the history of the class struggle in Ger- ers, the administration is clearing |*!° employed, patients out of the city hospitals | every social class, come letters of en- thusiasm for the Soviet gold bonds. A worker from Twin Falls, Idaho, for example, writes: “I have a few dollars in savings, but dare not risk it in the banks. I want to place it in Soviet bonds for my own good, and for the good of the toiling masses of the Soviet Union.” A Chicago lawyer writes: “There is no question in my mind that the Soviet Union bonds are the sanest and safest investment today barring none. Many foreign govern- ments as well as foreign and domestic industrial establishments ave de- faulted in payment of their obliga- tions. The economic strength of the Soviet Union grows by leaps and bounds and in direct proportion with the economic strength of that country grows the soundness and security of their financial obligations.” At the present time the Soviet bonds are considered among the safest in the world, since they are Payable in any desirea currency, American dollars for example, on a gold basis. As the dollar fluctuates, the Soviet Union guarantees to main- tain the 7 per cerit interest rate. The Soviet Union will buy back any number of the bonds one year after the date of purchase at par value and accrued interest. ‘They are backea up by the full guarantee of the Soviet Union. Complete information may be ob- tained from the Soviet-American Se- curities Corporation, 30-32 Broad Street, New York City. Officials Declare jLarge Transactions Signal of Recognition, Is Rumor WASHINGTON, Sept. 21—So great are the prospective purchases of American cotton by the Soviet Union, that if the present negotiations be- tween Roosevelt's representative, Henry Morgenthau Jr., and the Am- torg Trading Corporation are suc- cessfully concluded, the price of cot- ton will leap upward, it was reported | today. In addition to purchases of about 2,000,000 bales of cotton, the Soviet Union is ready to buy large amounts of machinery, engines, etc. The appointment of Morgenthau is interpreted in official circles as Signalling some form of Soviet recog- nition in the very near future. The current dickerings for Soviet purchases of American goods are said to be practically completed, pending the adjustment of minor details. Jugo-Slav Labor Leader Murdered | in Fascist Jail Was on Central Body of Illegal Mexican Communist Party NEW YORK.—Chris Vidas, Jugo- Slavian immigrant to the United States, who returned to his native country to help fight the fascist ter- ror there, has been murdered in a Yugoslavian prison, the International Labor Defense learned today. Vidas, whé was also known in this country as Vuk, came to America at an early age, worked as a railroad laborer in the west, and became con- scious of the class struggle there. In 1921, he was deported for working class activities, to Jugo-Slavia. His activities in this country had been largely exposure of the terror in his home-land. In 1924, the persecution of the fascists, who came to power in Jugo- Slavia forced him to leave. He went to Mexico, where he continued to carry on revolutionary activity, and was a member of the central com- mittee of the illegal Communist Par- ty of Mexico, As the fascist terror intensified in Jugoslavia, he continued to expose and fight against it wherever he was, and in 1931, returned home to con~ tinue this fight under illegal condi- tions. , A month after his return. home, he was arrested, along with his sister and his sister-in-law. The other two ————. | ARREST WORKER FOR SUICIDE ATTEMPT, | NEW YORK.—John D. Earle, un- | employed, 65-year old worker, shot | | were released, but he was kept im- | His mother died of grief when she prisoned in Zahech Prison, and tor- tured for two years, until he died. was told of this murder. ship Berengaria, according to a cable received by the Congress Arrange- |ments Committee yesterday. He will | arrive in New York on September 29, in time to address the public mass reception and opening of the Con- gress on the same night in St. Nich- olas Arena and Mecca Temple. Browder to Speak Other speakers will include Earl Browder, General Secretary, Commu- nist Party, U.S.A., A. J. Muste, of the Conference for Progressive Labor Ac- tion, Harriet Stanton Blatch, pacifist, |Devere Allen, Socialist leader and editor of the World Tomorrow. J. B. Matthews and Reinhold Niebuhr, both of the Fellowship of Reconcili- ation, will act as chairmen at the St, Nicholas Arena and Mecca Tem- | ple, respectively. ie eects Join Congress ae | legates to the Congress meet see by the Holiday Associ- ation of Arcadia, Nebraska, a farm- ers’ organization, Donald Henderson, Secretary of the Congress, announced yesterday. Delegates have also been elected by various organizations, in- Guard War Secrets As Powers Talk of Greater Armaments Conflicts Grow Sharper In Fight for World Markets, Colonies LONDON, Sept. 21.—Semi-official adinission that Britain “would oppose any system of prying into every mili- tary secret,” was made here yesterday after a cabinet meeting discussing the Geneva “Disarmament” Conference scheduled to open soon. The two main points taken up was the building of 34 cruisers and war- ships by the United States under the NRA, and the re-arming of Germany. The “military secret” statement re- ferred to maneuvres of French im- perialism for control of German arm- ament, with the British seeking an alliance with both fascist Germany and Italy. : So far as the Anglo-American na- val arms race was concerned, British officials stated “Great Britain might not be worried should a naval race develop between the United States and Japan, but in such a case, Eng- land might be forced to participate in the race.” The imperialist powers are preparing for a new war for markets and colonial plunder. A huge increase in world arma- ments, typified particularly by the $238,000,000 U. S. naval building pro- gram, and the recent grant of mil- lions to the army from NRA funds, shows the necessity of speeding prep- arations for the Anti-War Congress to be held in New York Sept. 29. All workers organizations, especial- ly trade unions, should immediately make it a point of business to elect himself near the heart this morning.) Write to the Daily Worker about | delegates, if they have not. already but failed at killing himecelf. under arrest today at Unity Hospital on charges of illegally possessing a} weapon. Police said he would re- cover. | He was| every event of interest to wo-'--- ‘done so. in your factory, neighbo-” city, BECOME A WwoRKE RESPONDENT. ‘ \ On Saturday the Daily Worker has 8, pages. Increase your bundle order for Saturday! before they are completely cured. One worker, still so weak that it was difficult for him to get his home, told a Daily Worker re- porter yesterday that he was noti- fied in the morning that he must | leave that afternoon. | eight articles by Robert Hamilton Food for employees and patients | on the Reichstag fire, the men and has materially declined in stand-| forces involved, and the back- ard in the last few weeks. Wages| ground for what has been called This is the first of a seriees of | of hospital workers have been cut 10 per cent since the “economy” program and the NRA code for the hospital workers has gone ‘into effect. Orderlies and nurses work 12 hours a day on two shifts, seven to seven. Because of their heavy work and long hours they are tempted to “take it out” on the patients and handle them roughly, patients report, Proud Southerner Renounces U. S. to Get Fascist Citizenship NEW YORK.—So intense is his love for the “ideals” of fascism that George Nelson Page, a Virginian who Proudly traces his ancestry to the days before the American Revolution of 1776, has decided to become a full- blown Italian citizen. In fact, Page, who is a descendant of Thomas Nelson, one of the many land-owners who signed the Declara- tion of Independefice, was so con- vineing in. his zeal for the fascist regime that he easily persuaded Mus-| solini, in a personal interview recent~ ly, to shorten the usual probationary period from five years to a few months. What intrigues Page particularly, it seems, is the idea that Fascism is the “only way of making capital and la- bor live together peaceably in one state”—by the simple device of crush- ing all labor organizations. “the most criminal frame-up in the world’s history.”—Editorial Note. | —Editorial Note, * By ROBERT HAMILTON | On January 30, 1;33, Adolf Hitler, | head of the Nazi Party, was ap- | Pointed Chancellor of the Reich by | President von Hindenburg. General von Schleicher had resigned as Chancellor two days before, ending a period of nine months during which cabinets having the support only of the Junkers and big business had tried in vain to consolidate capitalist rule in Germany, iB Hindenburg called Hitler to the Chancellorship “with the advice and consent” of Herr von Papen (who had directed Imperial Germany's spy | system i the United States during the World War) and of Major Oscar . * | | and von Papen’s intimate crony. This disposes of the Nazis’ legend that | Hitler's assumption of power was due to a “second revolution,” to a “re- awakening of Germany,” In actuality, Hitler and his party | Were called into the cabinet by the ;Steel and coal industrialists and the wealthy landowners. Thyssen, the | steel king, Hugenberg, the German | Hearst, and the Junkers felt that they | had to have more popular support for \their government than von Papen or von Schleicher alone could obtain, and they were therefore allotted three Cabinet posts to the Hugenberg Na- tionalists’ nine. ‘ The Nazi Party wanted sole power von Hindenburg, the President’s son | The Background of Events in German Plot of the Nazis; the to the German Masses y Prior to the Reichstag Arson “New Era” Promised by Hitler | s posed by the NatfOnalist Cabinet maj- ority; and finally it wanted some way of producing a pogrom atmosphere to justify the complete suppression of the Communist Party in Germany. Joseph Goebbels, now Reich Min- ister of Propaganda, conceived the Shastly idea of setting fire to the Reichstag as a siznal for unleashing Fascist terror against the German working class. Goering, Speaker of the Reichstag and commander of the Prussian police at the time, was given the job of executing the fertile plan. As part of the plan, Dr. Melcher, the Nationalist Chief of Police of Berlin, was transferred to Magdeburg and re- Placed by Admiral yon Levetgow, a loyal Nazi.The Karl Liebknecht House, headquarters of the Communist Party, which had been seized and occupied by the police weeks before, was again “raided” and “planted” material al- legedly incrimiating the Comunists was suddenly found, although re- peated police raids and searches dur- ing the weeks of police occupation had previously failed to disclose any such material. (That was why Levetzow took the place of Melcher as Chief of Police!) ‘The details of the plan for burning the Reichstag and how the Reichstag was set on fire will be discussed in a later article. What interests us here is how the Nazi arson plan bore fruit —what followed the burning of the German Reichstag. + During the very same night: that the Reichstag was set on fire—while in Germany; it felt the restraint im- huge bronze dome—warrants were dis- | tributed for arrest of 1,500 leading Communists, pariy leaders and intel- lectual sympathizers, These 1,500 war- crushing the Communists with an iron lated by the Nazi bands. The “Brown rants, all filled out by hand in pen and ink, and most of them bearing photographs of the men wantzd, were ja the hands of the loval detective bureaus within three hours of the dis- covery of the fire. A former member of the Berlin Police force states in the “Brown Book” that it was physically impos- sible to have filled out all these war- rants in that short time. The only in- ference left is that they were all pre- pared ih advance and kept ready for the giant provocation—the Reichstag fire—that the Nazi leaders knew be- forehand was going to break out on the night of February 27th. That same night Hindenburg signed the barbarous “Emergency Decree for the Protection of the People and the State,” which suspended articles 114, 115, 117, 118, 123, 124 and 153 of the German Constitution. The suspension of these articles abolished at one stroke all civil liberties: freedom of speech and of the press, personal freedom, freedom of assembly, the privacy of telephone and telegraph communication, and the like. Ger- many was turned into a giant prison cage, with the population exposed to the tender mercies of any police measures. and exclaimed to von Papen: “This is a sign given by God. No one will now be able to stop us from \hand.” Then turning to the Berlin |corresponcent of the London “Daily | Express” he continued: You are witnessing a great new era in German history. This fire is its be- ginning.” What is Hitler's New Era, which be- |gan with the Reichstag Fire? More than 100,000 opponents of Fascism are starving in the Nazi prison and 45 concentration camps, beaten almost daily, and always exposed to the dan- ger of death at the hands of some sadist storm trooper. Fascist Terror The “Brown Book’ ‘published docu- ments and affidavits on scores of beatings and torture by storm troop bands. It states that the International Committee for the Victims of Hitler Fascism has records of 536 checked and verified cases, with physicians’ certificates stating that 17 of these victims are crippled or injured for life, In 375 of these 536 cases the helpless victims were forced to sign statements that they were “well treated” by the Nazis. Many of these statements, were extorted while they were still In the torture chambers. Conservative estimates of the num- ber of persons tortured or severely beaten shout Germany fies the burning of Reichstag vary from 60,000 to 350,000. Over 500 Murdered. Mare than’ 500 of the Tegime have murdered “The Most Criminal Frame-Up in the World’s History” during the seven months that Hitler has been in power; 46 known victims were killed or tortured to death in the single month of April in Berlin alone. Over 100,000 Jews have been rend- ered outcasts by the Nazi regime, with 50,000 of them refugees in neighboring countries. There were 43 reliably iden- tified bodies of Jews slain and muti- Bock” alone records 300 verified cases ‘of torture of Jews at the hands of | -Nazi storm troopers. . \ Workers’ Organizations Destroyed | Every single organization of the troyed by the Nazis. Beginning with their most feated enemies—the Com- munists—and later reaching out for the Socialists and the Christian or- ganizations, the Nazis have seized, converted or destroyed thousands of union headquarters, co-operatives, bookstores, newspapers, printing ants, labor sports unions, cultural ganizations and clubs throughout the country. This is the New Era that Hitler promised. And it is only one aspect of his new era that we have discussed mee McPhersons, chst. Na Sy thie ¢——___— ———_—___—_—__—_—— i Arena on Friday evening,°———_ out tree-sitters, py porbedS oa haptics sre, 7 ° Pic B: cluding farmers’, in the Connecticut s six-day bike | “The Nazi ruling circles fear’ the FranceConfers ith Speaking at the same meeting will | cities of New. Haven, Hartford, New We enjoy being swindled. We) erect, of the Leipzig trial, which | | |be Henri Barbusse, world war veter- | Britain, Waterbury, Stamford, ing some lunatic real cash) youd never take place if it de-| . ran | an and noted French writer, leaves | Port, South Norwalk, Springfield and nething obviously nutty. | pended on their will alone. What| Soviet Officials to France who Saturday on the Steam- |New London, fi ut, and neither | can the stage-managers of the Leip- | The Steel and Metal Work - dustrial Union of New York Clty ea terday added three delegates to its list, while the- Unemployed League of Springfield, Mass., announced elec~ tion of four delegates to the Con- gress, Bie nis Mann Exclusion ginald Bridgeman, Secreta: the National Council’ Britis itd War Movement, placed a protest with the U. S. Ambassador in England, sharply hitting.the exclusion. of Tom Mann, veteran English labor leader, from the United States to attend the Congress, “at a moment when not only the American Government but also the government of Japan have an- nounced gigantic increases in their naval establishments, at a moment when the United States government has thrown,.a cordon of warships around the island of Cuba.” PVvVVVVN New York RED PRESS BAZAAR —FOR— ® Daily Worker @ Morning Freiheit @ Young Worker , Friday, Saturday, Sunday OCT. 6, 7, 8 Madison Square Garden MAIN HALL Program: FRIDAY .- INTERNATIONAL CHORUS OF 1,000 Grand Dance Spectack GREETINGS oY German working class has been des- |- Clarence Hathaway Editor, Daily Worker. Moissaye J. Olgin Editor, Morning Freiheit. SATURDAY THE AFRICAN DANCE. ENSEMBLE International Costume Bal of 10,000 Couples SUNDAY AFT. Famous German Erstes New Yorker Bandonion “Orchester “Children’s Spectacle EVENING . Final Sale of Merchandise DANCING "TIL SUNRISE ADMISSION Friday and Sunday... .35e Saturday ...., 40¢ Lit. Fund ... 10 TOTAL... ’ et | With Advance Ticket Obtainable At Every Organization, 10 Cents Less At The Door. Combination Ticket For All 3 Days 60: Cents, DANCING EVERY NIGHT “* To the Tune of here—the arrests, tortures, and mur- ders that characterize Hitler Germany, For all of this the Reichstag fire was the fitting prelude. The flames towef- ing above the huge building were a giant torch, a livid signal for a St. Bartholomew's Massacre that far out- did and still outdoes the most sinister pages in the history of religious pers?- cution. On the foundation of the Reichstag fire, Nazi terror in Gcormany has been built—and the overwhelm- ing ‘proof of their guilt in executing VERNON ANDRADE’S | ORCHESTRA > For Information Call f= Write te NATIONAL PRESS BAZAAR COMMITTEE 50 East 13th, Street (3th floor) cx New. York City this ‘monstrous frame-up fnust arouse the workers of the whole world to aid art job of totally foul thing—German Telephone: ALgonquin 4-948 ‘ 5