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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1933 against the Soviet Union, still remains the basic ele- ment of Fascist foreign policy. Hitler offers world capitalism the rich loot of the Seviet Union, in re- Chinese Red Army turn for the restoration of its “equality” with the | - scior tingarialied Coeiers | Advances; Seizes | Tt is significant that Hugenberg was high up on the | | Fascist ticket in yesterday's elections. | A r ms in Szechuan It is well to remember that the Fascist butcher, Hindenburg, is still President of Germany by virtue | Social-Democratic Party united with him against the |S/Xth Anti-Communist —By Burek Workers in Many | Cities Hail Soviet | 16th Anniversary Pledge Defense of the Dail rker “America’s Only Working Class Daily | Newspaper” j FOUNDED 1924 | Bublished daily, except Sunday, by the Comprodetiy Publishing ©o.,"Itic., 50 East 13th Street, New York, N. i Telephone: Algonquin 4-7255 | of the fact that in 1930 the leaders of the German | { . Gable Address: “Datwork,” Now York, ¥. ¥. Communist Party in order to defeat Hitler! It Driv ili i Wewhington Bureau: Room 984, Mational vrese sutilémg | is well to remember that this monstrous Social- phe arid to — i Mass *® | ins eetings ® ¢ 24th and G. St., Washington Subscription Bates: D. ©. | Democratic betrayal of the German workers was | approved in this country by Morris Hillquit and | Norman Thomas, who called Hitler’s present Presi- SHANGHAI, Noy, 11—Severe fight- NEW YORK. — Workers in hune ‘By, Malt except Manhattan and Bronx), i 9» 98.00 " if T wont: $3.50 3 months, “$2.00 1 month, % oats dent, Hindenburg, “a great democrat”! posters ers cag eine | dreds of cities throughout the coune : Mgwhattan, Bronx, Foret 4 Canada: 3 yeer, $9.00; : i bs pees es Wee Ue | ari p mths,’ $5.00: 8 months $3.00. 3 | ESTERDAY’S election is Fascism’s call for war anes Red Armies of the Soviet} eee the ae SR (ton tae * __—# By Carrier: Weekly, 18 cents; monthly, 76 cente. us a, = * | districts makingyadvances against the 2 i in Fascism, the desperate brutal stand of a dying | furious attempt of Chiang Kai Shek) ling Bocthiisn ‘on the 10 compere MONDAY, EMB! 5 | aoe NSY eee ; | man workers bread and work. | turns to blood for nourishment | sary of the Revolution, and renewed |their pledge to defend the workers’ fatherland. capitalist system, cannot solve the crisis, give the Ger- Like a mad dog, it she blood of the work~ to stem the gains of the Soviets by a) heavy concentration of troops in the} Sixth Anti-Communist drive. | | | Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill. The national convention of the unemployed in Washington on Jan. 13, to which all worker's organizations should elect delegates, will be a decisive step forward in forcing telief and social insurance from the Roosevelt bankers’ government | A Fascist War Call ‘ERDAY, the Fascist government of Germany held fan “election” in which the German masses were terrorized into going to the polls to give their “ap- jal” to Hitler's withdrawal from the League of fons, and his demand for “equality.” But this “clection” is meaningless as far as the ¥eal sentiments of the German masses are concerned. ‘The cunning Fascist Hitler and his advisers have the question upon which the German masses yote in such a way as to conceal its real purpose. | ‘German masses are asked to express their hatred | the Versailles Treaty. Naturally, the German masses But behind this profound hatred for the Versailles iy, which the German masses feel, the Fascists preparing for a war for the re-division of Europe ind the colonies. 7 Fascist rulers of Germany represent German capital, Prussian landlords, and the militarist ‘y of the Kaiser. This reactionary clique ; against the Versailles Treaty only in order to jlish a new slavery for the German workers and r the toilers of Europe and the colonies. in ie He a PS 1B election was conducted under conditions of the test terrorism. The “election” itself is an act against the German masses no less sinister ‘being disguised in electoral trappings. he European correspondent of ths New York ld-Tribune, certainly not ® mortal enemy of Fa- gives the following picture of the conditions of | ay’s “elections”: “Uppermost in the minds of the German men 94 women is the dread that the Nazis will penalize if they dare oppose Hitler's will—by handing ‘ names to the secret police—and will pro- . @ new excuse to send thousands to the jails of C police to be horse-whipped.” s also # well-known fact that the German elec- are so arranged that every ballot marked 3 be traced to the worker who marked it. Thus ‘worker who even stayed away from the polls * marked for Fascist jail and torture. | a Paes ee Vadvent of Hitler to power has intensified every erjalist antagonism which leads to war. Hitler's wal from the League of Nations is a signal man imperialism is getting ready to fight colonial markets, and for a re-division of Allied imperialists, particularly France, on the and, are arming to defend the Versailles boun- “The imperialist war for markets and colonies oitation is thus breaking down the whole Ver- icture. This means war. the central policy of the Fascist war policy plan to conquer and divide the Soviet Union. igenbe! jum; in which Fascist Ger- invites the leading powers of up still higher, and the workers will be hounded by the double attack of a lowered standard of living and increased taxation to. pay for the Roosevelt govern- ment’s expense in carrying out this policy. Roosevelt's New Deal is not only full of cards | marked against the working class but the whole pack contains the insignia of the skull and cross bones of starvation for the toiling masses. NRA Cuts Wages Again E thousands of employes of New York's hotels and 28,000 restaurants have had their wages sizeably reduced in the decision of the local compliance board of the N.R.A. that their tips be included in their minimum wages. The N.R.A. again proves itself an employers’ body, using every trick and every possible method of reducing the workers’ wages. The restaurant | workers, who are working under the blanket code, were given the impression that to their minimum wage of not under twelve dollars a week would be smoothly for the employers, agreeing with all of the restaurant owners’ demands and deciding that the tips which bring the workers’ wages above the blanket code minimum will be taken from them. Before the code, most of the restaurant workers were getting much more thon they will get under the N.R.A. decision. In the food industry, as in all industries, the work- ers will have to carry on a fight against the wage cutting practices of the employers’ board—the N.R.A. ‘The program of the Food Workers Industrial Union, for union wages and working conditions In all branches of the food industry, can be won providing a militant struggle for this program, and against the wage-re- ducing campaign of the N.R.A., is carried out. Our Ally i most important allies of the American working class are the poor and small farmers, These farm~ ers, as well as broad sections of the middle farmers, | are hardest hit by the whole development of post-war capitalism and especially by the economic crisis and are most brutally exploited by the government, by the banks, by the trusts and the insurance companies. ‘Their interests are consequently directed objectively against finance capital, In this situation the main task of the Party In its work among these toilers consists above all in the or- ganization of the agricultural workers independently | of the farmers, in organizing them {nto the Party and trade unions, in organizing and leading strikes of the agricultural workers, which In many places already played an important role in the development of the farmers’ movement. At the same time the Party has the possibility of mobilizing not only the poor and small farmers, but also broad sections of ruined middle farm- ers, for the struggle against capitalism on the side of the proletariat, while at the same time it can neu- tralize other sections of middle farmers, The winning over of broad masses of farmers as allies of the work~ ing class is an important prerequisite for a successfill struggle against the offensive of capitalism, against fascism and for the defense of the Soviet Union, and finally for the victory of the proletariat. From the Open Letter. | Welles conferred with the ABC lead- | ers of last week’s uprising before | they went into action. Ai the same time, Carbo’s news- paper praised Roosevelt enthusiastic- ally, trying to drew a distinction in the minds of the Cuban masses be- tween Welles, who is carrying out Roosevelt's Wall Street policy and the President of the United States. The student’s newspaper, “Alma | Mater,” declared that Welles en- couraged the counter-revolt, and has since the overthrow of Machado at- tempted to lead counter-revolts. They stated that Welles was responsible for the uprising of the officers of Hotel recently. The stud given his passport and be ousted from | Cuba. The open assault-on Welles arises | bassador it willbe easier for them | to strengthen their tie with the | Roosevelt regime if. the interest of | the American bankers, the Machado regime at the National | s demanded Welles be | plary courage throughout the trial,/ indignantly declared that he was not | |frightened but amazed at the absurd | accusation. The presiding judge here | again reprimanded Dimitroff for his | use of the term “absurd arcusation”; | declaring Dimitroif was insc’ent and| once more threatening him with ex-| pulsion from the court. | The next witness, a landlord, testi- | fied that Dimitroff had rented a room | from him in 1931. Dimitroff declared | this testimony tallies with his own statement: ;I have told the truth | about myself and refuse to make an; | statements about the Comm Party of Germany, with which I was never connected,” he said. Detectives Tes °y Four detectives were next examined about decuments alleged to have been found in Dimitroff’s room. Detective Braschwita stated that the police be- | that Dimitroff’s activities “were cor- | tainly not confined to Bulgaria.” The detective stated that in the docu- ments allegedly found in Dimitroff's |lieve Dimitroff to be a high func-| Dimitroff vehemently protested he had never seen the documents al- | | leged to have been found in his| | room. He repeated his former de-| claration that the crosses on the Ber- lin map were made by a third per. son, after the map had been taken} from him by the police. He did not Imow anyone by the name of Hel- mut, he declared, nor had he ever} seen the envelope with the inscrip- | tion Helmut, which the detectives | | alleged to’ have been found in his | room. Furthermore, declared Dimit~ off, there never was any Central} European Bureau of the Communist | International | One of the detectives swore that | | the material found in Dimitroff’s | | room had been treated according to} | Police regulations. Dimitroff here clashed with the detectives, the pro: | guard corps had laid hands on the) | material allegedly confiscated from his room. This the detectives nai- | | urally denied. * the cretly supporting the ABC uprising of a few days ago, which was aimed to strengthen the reactionary control of the government. 8 BUENOS AIRES, Nov. 12.—Argen- tine papers yesterday featured on their front pages a statement, under a New York headline, that Roose- velt's ban on the discussion of tar- ffs and currency stabilization was likely to cause the failure of the con- ference. The papers carried state ments by Latin American delegates expressing disappointment at Roose- yelt's attitude. The atmosphere sur- rounding the preparations is strongly reminiscent of the London Economic Conference which was wrecked on the rocks of the economic and cur- rency warfare raging between the i | imperialist powers. secutor end the presiding judge, de- | at the general membership meeting of the Young Communist League, tonight, 7.30, at the Workers Center, | 35 East 12th St., 2nd floor, | Party Headquarters | ss | BROOKLYN.—The Brownsvilie | Communist headquarters was attack- | ed Sunday afternoon by a gang of | poolroom hoodlums who . charged | the building with clubs and bottles. | Murrey Gold, young worker, had his head split and required ten stitches. ‘The raid by the gangsters followed an attack upon a Red Front mem~- ber who was marching along Pitkin Avenue with a red flag. The em- bryo fascists are from the poolroom at Powell Strect and Sutter. Ave. FINNISH WORKERS IN MAINE TOWN DOUBLE QUOTA EAST HOLDEN, Me—The Fin- nish Workers’ Federation of | this town decided that its quota of $5 in the Daily Worker $40,000. Drive was the Versailles Treaty, which adds to their ex- | added the tips, thus giving them a minimum wage | 1.1, the bitter anti-Wall Strect sen-| tionary of ‘'. Communtst Interna-| nouncing the documents as forgeries. | Earepecre ; i whe ’ A - - murs! a ‘J aL IES. m « : {too small, when its first collection tation by their “own” German capitalist exploiters pb gos the amount they were receiving before the | iment among the workers and peas-| tional, connected especially with “the | He demanded the names of the fire| Hathaway at Y.C.L. Meeting list brought in’ $4.03 very quickly. . yoke of foreign exploitation eae l|ants. The Grau regime hopes that | Central European Burecu of the Con.- | eon on, since it was clear that! (tarence Hathaway, editor of the | second list was put out which raise The N.R.A. compliance board hes functioned | hy replacing Welles by another am-| munist International.” He declared | private persons, storm troopers and) paily Worker will deliver a report |8335 then’ ’a third which brought $2.75 more, thereby doubling quota. This money was raised among a Finnish population of only 75 work: ers. 7) from the Spanish) ‘Two subjects form the basis of the forthcoming Congress of the Pan-American Union. Faced with the problem of the crisis and of war, which is the only capitalist way out of the catastrophic economic situa~- | tion of the imperialist and coionial world, Yankee imperialism is organ- izing the Pan-American Congress, to | be held this December, for the double ing the base of the commercial treat- ies which it is trying to impose with a velvet glove upon’ several countries, and to draw them into a united front of war against its imperialist rivals and the Soviet Union. Roosevelt is trying to carry out the bankrupt policy of Hoover—to efface from the minds of the oppressed peo- ples the conviction of the imperialist character of the infernational rela- tions of the United States. ‘This policy is shown in the formu- lation of the commercial treaties with Colombia, Brazil, Argentina, etc., which make up part of the projected customs union proposed at different times by the governments of Salva- dor and Chile. Today, the govern- ment of Salvador is trying to gain recognition from Washington by su- gesting the formation of an Ameri- can League of Nations at the Pan- American Congress. The commer- cial treaties (and the customs union, which may succeed in being organ- ized) which would benefit exclusively purpose of extending and consolidate | Storm Clouds on Horizon From “Mundo Obrera” (translated | yankee imperialism and the incipient ) p bourgeoisie of the semi-colonies, and | | the American League of Nations, con- stitute the double offensive of Yankee | against British imperialism, in or- der th drive the latter out of South | America. The two formulas, drawn up with great premeditation, form a substitute for the putrefying Mon- roe Doctrine, which smells of impes‘- tion, military intervention, bloody tyranny, hunger and crime. Roosevelt's New Formula Because the Cuban masses have created enormous difficulties, Roose- veli is utilizing the situation in an attempt to demonstrate to the peo- Nes of Souh America and the Carib- bean that the imperialist encc) of The interview between President Roosevelt and the diplomatic repre- sentatives in Washington of a num- ber of countries in order to discuss “fraternally” the “danger" of inter- vention in Cuba, is the application of the new formula of “multilateral in- tervention” discovered in Washing- ton. This will be presented at the next Pan-American Congress as a conclusion to the discussion left un- finished at the last Congress, held in Havana, on the right of interven- tion. This interview in Washington had as its object the creation of the illusion that the capitalist regime of the United States has been cured of its former imperialist “vice” and that the Yankee government has ended. | ed by it. Nevertheless a formidable [lect of | American warships is now anch |in the harbors of Cuba, read) meosses. And if direct military in- cause Yankee imperialism is hesitat- | ing, among other reasons, the danger of losing its hegemony in| | the coming Pan-American Congress | | and subsequently in the control of | | the countries of the Caribbean and South Amezica, a control which it exercises because of the criminal co- operation of the bourgeois-landlord governments. Storm Cleuds We shall not discuss now the well-| known fact that military intervention | is neither the fundamental aspect nor) | the basic phenomenon of imperial-| ism; nor the fact that the economic and political domination determined by the investment of capital is the main characteristic of imperialism, although we see that the history of Yankee imperialism abounds in acts of violence in the subjugated coun- tries, and that these acts will be re- peated. whenever its interests in them are threatened. The important fact is that, as was agreed at the last Pan-American Congress, the Right of Intervention will be discussed in Montevideo. And it is at this point on the horizon that there appear it is now disposed to work in a spirit of brotherhood with the countries op- of Pan-Ameryican Congress. Mr. Roosevelt. U, S. In Tight Place Over Cuba Cuba is the “enfant terrible” of the to| continental family and is putting | countries where Yankee drown in blood the development of! Yankee imperialism, which is so, predominates, to curb tae a of the revolutionary movement of the | carefully avoiding military occupa-| Roosevelt in the face of hreat tion, in a tight place. But the revo- tcrvention is still concealed, it is bo-| Iutionary movement in Cuba ts on| th The of adoption owing to! blcody meihods of repression by the gain government ef Grau San Martin in| order to put an end to the liberation movement of the masses, shows that the policy of Machado has been re- vived in the new governments, and that the masses have only one pros- pect, only one guaranty of life and liberty: a workers’ and peasants’ gov- ernment. ‘The revival of the policy of Ma- chado is causing greater mass strug- gles, the road to the formation of a government of the oppressed and exploited. ‘This will make it neces- sary for Yankee imperialism to land marines, who have been sent on more than 30 warships, which have sur- rounded this island of the Antilles since summer. Probably Roosevei: will try to give it the character of a multilateral intervention, or, rather, intervention by imperialism with the express support of its lackeys, the governments of the Caribbean and South America. British-American Antagonisms It is possible that this maneuver will not have the desired effect. The dark storm clouds which threaten to destroy the elaborate demagogy of indignation of the masses will make feself felt in the subjugated coun-| ism. jo s, and British imperialism will | profit by this situation by obliging |many delegates, even those from imperialism revolutionary movement in own countries. In this way h imperialism will attempt to ‘w positions at the'expense of of the ! Bri une Yankee bankers. This is by no means however, @ guarantee for the oppressed peoples, First, because the masses will gain no advantage from one or the other imperialism, since both equally ex- ploit and oppress. Second, because this situation will increase the ane tagonism between British and Ameri~ can imperialism and will bring nearer ihe danger of a new imperialist war in these countzies, making more ime | minent the direct participation of ime | perialism in the conflict. ~~ The Pan-American Congr has, as a final a‘m, the greater submission. and exploitation of the’ toiling masses in the countries of the Carib- | bean and South America, in the in~ terest of imperialism. The Pane American Congress is a life-belt for Yankee immrialism, which British imperialism is attempting to snatch from it. Our position is Clear and decisive against these imperialist conferences, and for the revolutionary anti-ime perialist struggle of the masses for national liberation from all imperiale * Ra ey) lt’ Br k P. mis i crs : the ne ‘The greatest gains of the mel ‘ OS eit s oken T es | e Tesolution of the Communist International on | Army are being made in Szechuan CHICAGO, Ill, Nov. 9% — Mine o | Gurmany has been confirmed by events. “Hitler leads | Province, in the western portion of | | thousand workers gathered in the RESIDENT ROOSEVELT, with every new pronounce- | Germany to catastrophe,” it declared. Ce In its drive towards the| ae Renee pate, bey riled the », ment and every new “program” on unemployment, | | Only the German Communist Party fights for the | Yangtze River,.the.Red Army cap-/ | anniversary of the Russian Reve 4 makes it clearer that his policy for the seventeen | Teal way out of the crisis, against the hideous Versailles tured the cities of Hsuiting, Haui-| olution. oben eee general sec- filion unemployed is nothing but charity and forced | slavery. Only the proletarian revolution, the estab- | Gouri Ww ar yam ats eth ai ane | TRA. aati ites Iabor, relief cuts and starvation | lishment of the proletarian dictatorship can break the | Sr Wanshien, which would give the| |meeting, showing the strength and The campaign speeches of President Roosevelt were | chains of the Versailles slavery and the exploitation | Soviets in Szechuan control of river! |srowth of the Soviet Union in the Alled with promises to the unemployed workers. These | Of the German capitalists who rob and oppress the / traffic going into the province and a last 16 years. Speeches paid lip-service to the deep going need and | German masses. | base for penetration eastward to- 2 . . demand for social insurance in order to catch votes, | Only the proletarian revolution can stop the insane | wards Hankow. The Red Army | _SOUTH CHICAGO, Mll.—Six hun- Roosevelt: said in a campaign speech on October 6, | W8t Plans of the Fascists against the Soviet Union. | seized 20,000 rifles and 10,000,000) dred steel workers, many of whom 1982, “We need for them (the unemployed); a greater | It is this lesson that every day is being rammed | founds of ammunition in its latest were Rerlneh in the Ilinols Steel &Ssiiranc of security. Old age, sickness and unemploy- | home to the German masses by the heroic German jadvance. This means more workers ely aoe Sa vere jeg ae ent insurance are the minimum requirements in these | Communist Party, whose growing leadership over the | 2" Peasants can be armed, and the | p packed. the Crossow Hall k : Red Army strengthened for greater | hail the victorious march of the Soviet days.” On October 20, 1932, Roosevelt repeated his | German masses is the spectre that haunts the dreams | 4 iy, n ces, | workers towards Socialism in the Promise to the unemployed as follows, “If starvation | Of the Fascist war mongers. f; P | U. 8.5. R. Many workers joined the and dire need on the part of any of our citizens make | | Severe Fighting In Kiangst | 4 sage a party. Necessary the appropriation of additional funds which >] | The fighting in Kiangsi, seat of| beara at P bere ay Would keep the budget out of balance, I would not | A Costly New Deal |the Central Soviet Government, is| te eo 2,500 in Los hesitate to tell the American people the full truth and especially severe, with many dead re-| ,) . cnn ‘ LOS ANGELES, Calif, Nov. 8— fecommend to them the expenditure of this additional 'HE Roosevelt regime charges the workers heavily for | ported. For five years, Chiang Kai| Twenty-five hundred workers crowded @fiount.” the privilege of starving. The New Deal, we learn, | oie ee conten teeet hundreds of | ae the oes Opera House to cele- a et ae cat : ays i 7 i jousands of soldiers in this territory | rate with speeches and mass sing- “The “fall truth” is now apparent. These demagogic, | #8 80 expensive proposition which the workers are | i | yote catching promises have been forgotten. ‘The gor | paying for now, and will pay for more heavily in the | Hi. atrorts have failed siserably. ‘The | : Benian Romine whlaen ae ¢mment has taken all measures necessary to protect | ee eer ae aes class have their way. | Red Army during this eeiod has| Helping the Daily Worker through bidding for | Speiser, of the Bronx, with a bid of $5.07, lost by three | Red Squad detectives surrounded the | the pocketbooks of the bankers and employers by re- alance sheet of the cost of the New Deal was | heen able to extend the Soviet terri-| Possession of the original drawing of Burck’s cartoons: | cents, Announcement of names of winners will be | hall. fusing the demand for social insurance. President | Published yesterday by Dr. Virgil E. Jordan, president tory into Fukien province, against) | Harry Cagman, Brooklyn, N. ¥., wins an original | published dafly. Total to date $106.28. Sam Darcy, district organizer of the Roosevelt, in his campaign speech in Boston on October | Of the National Industrial Conference Board, a capl- | the famous 19th Route Army. | Burck with a $5.10 bid collected from taxi-drivers, | Communist Party, evoked tremendous Hl, said, “Immediate relief of the unemployed is the | t#list statistical agency. : F | While Chiang Kai Shek increases | _ a audits applause when he contrasted the agri- immediate need of the hour. We must do all we can | renter or a ae tis a the aa Lane’ | his war against the Soviet territories, | r 200 H Strike! ee eee a ont aie eee im the way of emergency measures. But no mere | the continuation of mass starvation we learn that |/the Nanking government yesterday on unger Trike a Bao Niahasd = : “ emergency measures of relief are adequate... As to | Roosevelt's New Deal has already cost $15,195,000,000. | decreed that there should be no anti- |VAZIS E10 ea s 5 ‘Hu | ais for t @ condjtions of the San Joatjtiif’ Valley {umnediate relief. ‘The first principle is that this nation | D'. Jordan kindly pro-rates it on a per capita basis, | imperialist propaganda permitted on| in Yugoslav Prison) cotton pickers and the success of ‘ . : th ion of the-celebration of th ° . | . collectivizations under workers’ con- owes a positive duty that no one shall be permitted stating that it means every man, woman and child e occasion of the celebration of the | e | trol, oe y | in the United States will have to pay over $100 to | ovethrow of ths Manchu dynasty.) TQJ" We LA} | sercrapve.—two nunarea poi-| MONTEVIAeO Mee ; Sarees ; . ‘ A ‘: | the government, in some way or other. All of the Kuomintang newspapers | | tical prisoners in the notorious Yugo- | ? GARY, Ind—Ten steel workers Peis thonkaincis cf workers, under the leadership or | ‘Where .did this ffteen biion dollars go? ‘The | Pumimed that te Sondiene of the} Defendants Nov vA slavian Mitroviza Jail, including 135 | Sil: t b joined the Communist Party and six The unemployed Councils, sent delegations to | sTeater portion of it went to banks and huge corpora- | than they were 20 years ago” | u eé1| Communists and s number of Croa- | S SHENT ON CUDA scine workers joined the ¥. 6. L. Washington, to demand the enactment of the Workers | tions. The next biggest slice went for war appropria- | peter: ee | so tian Honest ee been a on MEPS lata oor anniversary meeting ae ss tions, under the guise of public works. Some more iDi itr 7 7 ger-strike against torture an | . at which 40 steel workers attended. a win tnt the queeticn ot adequate fun | was supposed to have gone to farms and for relief. D d 0 ti i im itr off Pillo TIES) treatment since Oct. 10. Their de- |Ar gentine p aAPerS|s. K. Gebert, District Organizer of employment relief and of social 1 S | But the farmers are demonstrating that they received | eman US Ing OL Nazi Perjurers pane a Bis ig pices hear Predict Failure Hie GF Pee Sr Soh gt ww i | help whatsoever and are resisting starvation. The } he oe eS Boa ads " 4-year after these high-sounding campaign prom- | T° ’ : | Despite Judge ison cells and workshops in winter CICERO, Tl—Six hundred workers te Wore made, Roosevelt said, “The first objective, | Unemployed are being yanked off of the relief rolls ‘Welles from Cuba: Die nae | ara, Penilastant to SeAA ODER M of Conference ignored the intimidations of the police " | and told to starve as best they may. 9) ripe i Ye { nS loth a ked the J the first necessity is that the citizens of the community | (Continued from Page 1) eis Se ele NEW YORK —Secret: ff State and plainclothes men and packed Pesiteh the churches, the comimmity chest, the chari- | , THe fifteen billion dollar New Deal was a hand-out | A eee ee | LONGSHOREMEN SUPPORT , Recipe €\hall to hail the 16th year of the ,~ table. organizations of the community, are going to do | to the big trusts and the war industries. The very | i S un er evo | vestigation had been made in Hen-| “DAILY” Hull sailed on the “American Legion” | pujiding of Socialism in the U.S. 8.R. K Meiechare to their utmost extent first” (Sept. 8, 1983, | S#me Industrial Conference Board previously admitted | wie |ningsdor? to check up on Van der| NEW YORK.—Unit 1, Section 2, | Saturday for Montevideo to direct aisle, Nov ocove” LW mech’in Washington at opening of Community Chest | that under the New Deal real wages (the amount of | ’ cr Lubbe's story, although Lube him-| communist Panty raised $15.83 so far| the forthcoming Pan-American Con-|, HAVERHIDI, Mass. Mov. & u Mee Yor funds from the employed workers.) | food, clothing, etc.) the workers can buy went down Grau Gov tWants Some |self stated he had met several ac-| forthe Daily Worker. The member- | ference in the Uruguayan capital, He pi Beer sos teas oe students |” When campaigning for votes, the first necessity is | Under the New Deal. One Less Diseredited | tuaintancss there. umitrert Pernted | ship in this unit is composed of long-| was accompanied by other American | the ee Ga of 16 age Seicabinemployed shall.atarve. ‘When putting into | © WoW *he\workers are told they anust pay tor lower Co at LA bere tae tate to ditconer |quoTemen, ‘che. of whom gave $10 of delegates to the conference: workers’ power in Soviet Russie, effect "the program of the bankers and the employers, | 98° increased unemployment, greater attacks against from Roosevelt pec ag see discover | his pay, earned by back-breaking| 4 yeport handed him before sail-| Joseph Costello, Alba Pace and A. A. the NRA. wage-cutting, speed-up, unemployment, | their rights, and for war Preparations. - | A erieatnal tamed Wihle, Geougit to | BaNOE onthe: Nave ONS eer |ing by a committee on Latin Ameri-|Melinger recounted the accomplish- strikebreaking drive, the first necessity is taxation for 9 : | HAVANA, Nov. 12.—A demand that | the court directly from ‘prison, ‘ass | Sep ms | can policy embodies a broadening of | ments of U. 8. S. R. and contrasted the unemployed. It is more convenient for the Roose- logic of the New Deal is to lower the standards | Wall Street’s Ambassador to Cuba, | serted he met Dimitroff in the Moa- | room, they “discovered certain names | the Monroe Dostrine under a pro- the proletarian Siero ae with the velt- government to give the unemployed forced labor, of iiving, smash the workers right to organize and | Sumner P. Welles, be withdrawn be-| Sit prison-yard after Dimitrott’s ar=| connected with ocrtain functions,” | Posed agreement with the puppet bloods, Tascist_ regimes to separate the youth from their families in militar- | Strike, and then hand the workers and farmers a bill | cause of his complicity in the coun- rest. He declared that another pris-| Hie stated that in these documents | S0vernments of the South ‘American | a7 ae . ized ati kers off the exist- | °f fifteen billion dollars for it. ter-revolé last week, Was voiced by|oner, Krause, showed Dimitroff a) Dimi abe feels eel x, | countries. The committee was set up ized ‘Conservation camps, to cut workers off the exist- | ; influential individdals and ze |ouere Res @ | Dimi 's pseudenym was Helmut, P ti a] NEWYORK.—Thousands of workers tig Felief lists, and to forget embarrassing campaign | __ Every time a worker takes a bite of bread he con- | Miyehbial InComeia’s HN ReWSPeDers | newspaper containing photography of | The prosecutor helpfully announced | bY the Foreign Policy Association and | | 1g 9 huge halls Sunday, Nov. 5 Eee. 3 tributes to the fifteen billion dollar war and corpora-. | backing the Grau regime today. himself and the other defendants,! ne remembered a Helmut as defend- the World Peace Foundation, ap- | Bs hail the 16th birthday ‘of Sovi et ‘ ‘The workers, in all organizations, can see from | tion loan item. If the worker buys a shirt, or other Those voicing the. demand openly | accusing them of the arson. ant in the Cheka ‘Trial. The detectives | Pendages of U. 8. imperialism. Russia. In the Bronx Coliseum and Roosevelt's cainpaign promises, and from his present | Piece of cotton goods, he contributes. But the moun- page that tb weld Re san for/ Wihle asserted that Dimitroff be- | again produced the notorious Berlin| Questioned by reporters on the|in Arcadia Hall, Brooklyn, prominent actions against the unemployed, that Roosevelt is car- | tainous cost of the New Deal is young and growing | ‘tations with the, Ro to establish jcame “pale and frightened.” | This| map with the palace, Reichstag and| statement made two days ago by @| speakers addressed the audierice and fying out a program which means starvation for the | lustily. Roosevelt's wild inflation schemes will cost ey Wale EMG | eee ae ie confirmes by'| other public. buildings marked with| Cuban Senator advocating American| contrasted the difference ‘between @ unemployed and security for the employers and bank- | Still more, and the workers will be told to foot the | aonb ie Were pclae Krause who, with his fellow criminal, pie crosses. The Nazis have used| armed intervention against the rev-} collapsing capitalist system and pats tt Sai ited aétiod sparen Ce tinciesees | Ue | President Grau's “supporters de- is pre are eer So eet | te map in an attempt to prove|olutionary Cuban masses, Hull de-| government which is controled by (@) i lv a cho ecur' sen- : ‘ i ; . I oc c244 andl partctine WOrKRIX Gan nrce More loans will be given to the banks, more infla- | clare that Welles encouraged the ie Woit the Neat dictatorahip, |that the German Communist Party clined to reveal the plans of the} workers. . pei ‘ol cornet 4 | tionary measures will be inaugurated, prices will go | ABC uprising. Sergio Carbo, rich : - | had planned a series of arsons of | Roosevelt government, which already the bankers’ government of Roosevelt to enact the | 3 ? |mewspaper publisher, stated that| Dimitroff, who has shown exem-/ public buildings. has intervened in Cuba by cordoning Gangsters Attack ¥ island with warships and se-| H