Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Page Six Deily,.<Morker “America’s Only Working Class Daily Newspaper” FOUNDED 1924 aily, except Sunday, by the C 50 East 18th Street, New York Published €o., Inc., * New York, N. ¥ 954, Nati Building Subscription Rates: By Mail Bronx year, $6.00 6 months 1 month, 75 cents. Canada: 1 year, $9.00 Wee y Carrier WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, What Now, Mr. Dickstein? Dickstein estigation into the FTER a month of dawdling, the House Committee finally opens the i Fascist plottings of Hitler Nazi agents in this coun- th fact of extraordinary significance, and of the in- But it is a revealing as to the sincerity Mr. Dickstein shows no eagerness to Worker exposed the Daily who originally have the Nazi plots, through the now notorious intercepted Nazi before the Committee. documents, come And this all the more remarkable when one con- siders that the authenticity of these damning docu- ments, which have withstood the most searching in- | vestigation and examination, were again authenticated only yesterday morning by a former leading Fasc whose identity the Dickstein Committee carefully con- eeals under the name of Mr. “X.” ICKSTEIN has played a deliberately evasive, and contradictory, role with regard to the Daily Worker's ‘Nazi documents. On one occasion, Dickstein expressed his willing- ness to call the editor of the Daily Worker to testify before the investigating committee. At another time, he angrily refused to commit himself on this point. And on still other occasions, he asked the Daily, always through a third party, if it would agree to send a representative to appear before the committee. The manner of these “invitations,” has always been peculiar. Yesterday, for example, after having many assurances that the Daily would be ready to appear before the Committee, Dickstein again asked the Daily | if it would be ready to appear before the Committee. It is not too much to say that, without the testi- mony of the Daily Worker, in whose possession are the original documents, and whose revolutionary initiative actually forced the whole matter into the open, the Dickstein investigation will not only be on ineffectual gesture, but an actual whitewash of the mass of Nazi plotters! Dicks ation sees fit to narrow his in- to the act of a single individual, 0 has been forced into hiding by the tivities knows th t Spanknoebel was a larger Fascist machine, a connected with the Ger- iom in this country, but which has the and cooperation of a Congressman, such prominent red-baiters as Ralph M. of the National Civic Federation, and others. cog in Easley Why don’t you go after these American agents f the Nazis, Mr. Dickstein? If you are really in- rested in putting an end to Fascist plotting here, why don’t you ask Mr. Ard Ralph Easley? \ Ham Fish some questions? nted a letter from Easley, a is its Nazi document, proving hh the Fascist plotters here. Dickstein? To disregard the evidence of the Daily Worker, to limit t presentation of evidence, already authen- ticated beyond any doubt, is to protect the real Fas- s, and to hide the true extent of their Easley'’s conr What about to block a really deep-cutting in- m under the pretense of an investigation! Mr. Dickstein, that your own private ave confirmed the authenticity of the Nazi and Easley-Whalen documents to Just what is it, Mr Meariul of using them? Dickstein, that makes you 80 Follow This Example! ¥Y YORK workers set a splendid example of devo- tion to the Daily Worker when 1,000 of their repre- sentatives brought a total of more than $1,600 to the Daily Worker Banquet in Irving Plaza last Sunday. Receiving less publicity than any similar affair in the past, it was nevertheless the most successful, Why? Because more than ever before workers see the Daily Worker as their principal and most effective instrument for gaining victories on the picket lines, ‘in the struggle for unemployed relief, in the fight ‘against the N.R.A. hunger-codes, in the fight for bread and freedom. The New York workers said vigorously that they will keep their main weapon sharp and alive. aye KEEP our Daily Worker alive an additional $15,647 mhust be raised. This will put the $40,000 drive over the top, an absolute necessity to the life of the “Daily.” New York workers will not rest with their splendid jemonlevement, but will intensify their activities to raise * the remaining $9,000 of the $20,000 quote. The In- ternational Workers Order can help achieve this by ‘conducting its end of the drive in a more vigorous ‘manner than before and raising its full share of $8,000, of which abort $2,000 has been realized so far. * e a achievement of the New York workers is an ex- % ample workers in Chicago, Philadelphis, Detroit, ‘sen Praneisco and in other American cities can fol- with fruitful results. The $40,000 drive shows, far, comrades, that workers will give willingly out of their meagre earnings to save their and our Daily when approached and acquainted with the purpose and need of our Bolshevik paper. - They will be ready to give until it hurts capitalism ‘on November 24, 25 and 26, the Daily Worker National Tag Days, if we mobilize all our forces for these days and approach the masses of workers. But before the Tag Days take place much work to be, done. The drive must be organized in a better manner, placed on a quicker tempo. The Tag Days should not only complete the Drive, but result in passing the $40,000 quota. _ New York workers show what can be done. Fol- low the a se this example, comrades, and put the drive over ton. It means life to our Daily Worker. rf DAILY NORE NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1933 Another Financial Crisis 'HE spectre of financial crisis even more devastating than the bank crisis of last March now faces the | Beni: “Requests” “This Should Quiet Things Dow for a While!” Roosevelt government. The through all hide it Within note of capitalist alarm and fear is breaking the efforts of the Roosevelt publicity to three leading capitalist of have definitely admitted e Roosevelt government, faced with the failure of the N.R.A. to erating speed toward deeper financial crisis and to- the last two days, business opinion, solve the crisis, is heading with ac- cel uncontrolled, currency inflation. Listen to the Washington correspondent of the New York Sun in yesterday's papers: “We are in the midst of a financial crisis, the gravity of which cannot be overestimated . . . the evidence is overwhelming that American capital is fleeing to Canada, to Europe; that dol- lars are being sold . . . till the inflation panic is over...” And the financial writer for the Evening Post: “Coming together as they do (bond selling and flight of capital out of the country) they must be interpreted as a forecast of severe mone- tary and credit collapse.” And Letter: then the confidential Washington Kiplinger “Roosevelt must plunge ahead on dollar de- preciation . . . the course toward inflation seems to us likely 'HAT Roosevelt is being swept along toward the Nia- gara of financial, inflationary crisis, is thus ad- mitted by the most reactionary press. It is a development that the Daily Worker has been predicting ever since the Roosevelt government. took office. The financial crisis is only the reflection of the fact that American industry is now entering a new, profounder stage of economic crisis. After six months of the Roosevelt N.R.A. program, it is now clear that the N.R.A. has actu- ally intensified the crisis through the added pil- ing up of huge supplies of manufactured goods for which there is no market. Roosevelt's farm measures, in addition, have actu~ ally intensified the extraordinarily deep agrarian crisis in this country. The Roosevelt price structure, perched dangerous- ly on high ground without the slightest real founda- tion in economic f sustained artificially only by Roosevelt’s desperate inflationary pumping, is show- | ing signs of impending collapse. And it is this which drives Roosevelt irresistibly toward printing press money. But even profounder is the basic intensification of the whole economic crisis. Steel production and general business activity have been dropping steadily for three months, so that now the whole summer inflationary, seasonal boom has been completely erased. And this drives Roosevelt. toward | desperate inflation as a solution, a solution doomed to failure. HE financial crisis, the Roosevelt inflation will mean mass misery and starvation, mass ruination and pauperization, such as the country has not yet known. It will mean hell for the city workers whose meagre wages will melt before the rising prices and the cheap- ening dollar. It will mean the completion of the ruination of the smal] farmers, who will feel the weight of new huge taxes to pay for the paper currency. The Roosevelt inflation and means that the drive toward war as a solution for the crisis will bé redoubled. The workers can meet this Roosevelt money cheap- ening of their wages by a relentless fight for higher wages, for the abolition of taxes for the workers, for reduced living ccsts. And the small and ruined farmers, united with the proletariat and under its leadership, must fight for cancellation of all mortgage debts, and taxes, higher prices from the monopolies and lower prices to the city workers! Fight against the Roosevelt inflation which slashes the wages of the toiling masses! Fight against the Roosevelt inflation which turns dollars into pennies! For higher wages to meet inflation prices! The Union and the Jobless ‘HE important role of the revolutionary unions in or- ganizing the unemployed workers was sharply brought forward in the New York District convention of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union. The reports and discussion emphasized that lay-offs face thousands of steel and metal workers In the New York district in the coming weeks. Thousands are already laid off. ‘The policy of the International Association of Ma- chinists and the Boilermakers’ International, like all A. F. of L. unions, is to desert the unemployed. They are fired out of the A. F. of L. as soon as they lose their jobs and cannot pay fat dues to the official- dom. The refusal to organize and lead the unem- ployed, the splitting of the unemployed and employed, is an integral part of the whole strikebreaking policy of the A. FP. of L. ‘The district resolution of the S.M.W.1.U. says: “Our union has completely failed to carry through any work among unemployed metal workers ... We should work in the direction of building up a powerful metal work- ers’ Unemployed Council which shall lead the struggle tor unemployment relief and insurance paid for by the bosses, the state and the federal government.” . . discussion and decisions of the district conven- tion of the S.M.W.LU. show that the unfon is aware of the rapidly growing problem of unemployment in the metal and steel industry. But in this union, as well as the other revolutionary unions, only beginnings have been made. In practice, in the day to day work of the revolutionary unions, the unemployed work is some- times forgotten. Several millions of the unemployed in industry will never get jobs again. The unemployed are used by the boss and the A. F. of L. officialdom to split the working class and use the unemployed as a club over those still having jobs, to lower wages and break strikes and unions. Millions of part time work- ers get pitiful pay and need relief and insurance, ‘The slow reaction of the revolutionary unions to the leadership of preparations for the National Unem- ployed Convention to take place in Washington Jan. 13, 14, 15 is one reason why the national campaign 1s lagging against Roosevelt's whole program of relief cuts and forced labor (a wage reducing scheme) and for adequate unemployment relief and social insurance. All of the revolutionary unions have the task of im- mediately intensifying the campaign against unem- ployment especially in the view of the rapid sharpen- ing of the crisis and tho cutting off of relief. the financial crisis | Recall of Welles as Cuban Ambassador Use: Representative’s Hand -in- Counter | Revolt -Exposed WASHINGTON, Noy. 14--Unable \longer to conceal the fact that U.S. | | ambassador Welles led the counter- | | revolt last week in an attempt to es- | |tablish a more reactionary Cuban re- gime, Senator King of Utah called | | at the state department and “request- | ed” the withdrawal of Welles. | Senator King's conversation which | state department officials were kept secret. But undoubtedly details were given of Ambassador Welles engineer- jing of the armed uprising in an ef- |fort to replace the Grau regime by jone headed by Cespedes. What Sen- | ator King told-the state department, | | of course, was not news to it, be-| | cause it has been in close touch with | Welles and has supported his counter- | revolutionary maneuvers. | Senator King advised the recogni- | tion of the Grau government as one which would protect American invest- |ments and wusiness. Otherwise, he said, the only step was, direct armed intervention, The Grau regime, whose hand has been strengthened by the collapse of {the Welles-A.B.C. directed counter- | revolt, is now bidding for American support, justifying this by sharpened | attacks against the workers and peas- ants and by more determined sup- | | pression of their organizations. if | The demand for the ousting of the} | American ambassador, representative |of the bankers and American exploit- |ers in Cuba, which comes from the | __ |masses has been taken up by the | | Grau-Batista government for its own | Jends. With Welles already impli- | jcated in the movement of the former | | Machado officers and supporters, it | is difficult for President Grau Pa justify relations with him. Reports from.Cuba show that the | | American business;men are now fa- | | voring recognition of the Grau re- | |gime, as the best: means of stopping | @ strengthening of the workers’ and | peasants’ revolutionary forces and ac- Oi Others are asking for immediate | | military intervention, either to bol- | ster up the Grau regime or to place jone in power acceptable to Wall | Street. | | The court martial of the 38 pris- |oners charged with complicity in re- bellion has been: completed in Ha- |vana, but the decision has not been | announced. The Grau regime is act- | tng in a conciliatory manner to these | puppets of Welles. It is the general |opinion in Havana that only three | will be sentenced to exectiion, and | even these maybe reprieved. The | Grau-Batista regime is acting in a \conciliatory fashion to the counier- revolutionists.in~order to get their support for his government, and to | placate American imperialism which | direct the uprising. | Fighting is_still going on in the \ interior, but reports do not make it clear who is leading the struggles. |Three hundred in an armed band | |are reported to haye seized the Mo- |delo planation near Agramonte, in| |Santa Clara Province. But whether |these are peasants, seizing the land, jis not made clear. | Information from Holguin, the third | largest, city in Cuba, declares an | armed uprisng, is being prepared. |'There are reports of major struggles in the vicinity of. Media, Luna Yara and Niquero Village, deep in the hills | of the interior. | Dutch Mutineers Get Jail Sentences SOURABAYA, - Java, Nov. 14. — | Nineteen native Sailors of the Dutch | battleship De Zeven Provincien, who mutinied last February, were sen~ tenced by court-martial today to terms of six to.18 years penal servi- tude. Five more groups of sailors are | yet to stand trial, For five days the crew of the De Zeven Provincien ‘held out against pursuing battleships until bombing from airplanes put an end to the mutiny off the coast of Sumatra. The sailors had mutinied in protest of a pay cut. Heiping the Daity FSUto Demonstrate | Saturday Against White Guard Plots at “Washington Sauare at 9 A.M. NEW YORK.—vhe Soviet Union has cal Mass nds of the ganization which ha; anti-Soviet demonstration t urday at Washington Square. This counter demonstration will ex pose the attempts of this tion to finance activit! Soviet Union and to nizing the Soviet Unio: previous occasions, when W ites Guardists attempted to held anti-So- ceeded in stopping them by expos their lies and slander. This demonstration ly announced for Thursday terday’s Daily Worker. All workers and sympaihizers are Halt Nazi Speech at Columbia NEW YORK— rotest telegrams and intensive plans for a demonstra- | tion stopped the Nazi representative from speaking here today. Hans Lu- |ther, German ambassador to the U. | S., scheduled to lecture at McMillan Theatre, Columbia University, tonight, will not appear, college offiicals say. The demonstration has been called off. In @ statement issued late Monday night, Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, President of Columbia stated that Herr Luther is ill and will be unable to speak Wednesday. He said, how- ever, that December 12 has been set as the tentative date on which Luther will make his scheduled address. By that time, it is hoped, indignation against the Nazis, evoked by the farcical Reichstag “trial” and the planned execution against the four Worker through bidding for the original drawings of Burck’s cartoons: Fi n | to Berlin, ed for a coun- | Easley + Congressman “| Dickstein H, Teltson wins yesterday’s drawing with a $2 bid. Total to date $111.78. —By Burck | wantin 6 Bur. National Committee Protests Nazi Trial to “Justice” Buenger to Aid Victims of German has dispatched another cable addressed to Chief Justice Buenger and a copy ad- dressed directly to Torgler, Dimi- troff, Taneff and Popoff: “We declare the Reichstag trial and the Nazi elections the world’s greatest swindles. We expose your plot to use both to murder work- ing-class leaders and increase your barbarous persecution. Your Nazi Reichsteg trial has utterly failed to connect in any way the four de- fendants with this arson, and in- ternational Inbo- knows, as van der Lubbe admitted teday, that the Nazis burned the Reichstag. We vehemently protest the threat by Goering. to execute Dimitroff de- spite his innecence. To you, Torg- ler, Dimitroff, Taneff and Popoff, cur committee, which includes or- ganizations totalling 490,000 work- ers, intellectuals, educators and other professionals, send greetings and admiration for your courage- ous strurgle against the fascist | murder bands representing the German bourgeoisie, and promise unceasing activity to help defeat Hitler and his Brown Shirt assas- We demand your immediate elease. International opinion | hes declared Hitler, Goering and | Goebbels guilty. “National Commitiee to Aid Vic- tims of German Fascism. “ALFRED WAGENKNECHT, | “Executive Secretary.” ttee Wilhelm afe | intrepid Communists, wili have died | down. | The postponement of the lecture, | aS well as the faculty luncheon which was to precede it, followed several |days of preparation by the National | Student League and the N. Y. Com- |mittee to Aid Victims of German | Fascism for a mass demonstration at | Columbia at the same time Luther was to have been speaking. . Many |letters and wires were sent to Butler ‘protesting the lecture. Although the demonstration at Columbia has been calied off, the Na- tional Student League and the N. Y. Committee are mobilizing their mem- bership and affiliated organizations to join in the anti-Nazi demonstra- tion called by the N. Y. District. of the Communist Party for Monday, Noy. 20 at 11 a.m. in Union ‘Sauary. EW YORK.—The National Com-| Roosevelt Confers With Officials as Money Crisis Looms U. S. Securities Still Falling; Commodity Prices Rise WASHINGTON, Nov. 14.— Faced with a growing financial crisis as a | result of the failure of the inflation- | ary measures to bring about any re- lief from the effects of the growing crisis, Roosevelt today had a closed | conference at the White House with his financial advisers. It is rumored that the recent sharp | drop of the United States bonds was a major subject for discussion. United States government bonds have been dropping fast on the New York Stock Exchange as a result of the fact that further, uncontrolled infla- tion seems an inevitability. In addition, large funds of Ameri- can capital are being hurriedly shipped out of the country by wealthy investors, who see no way that Roosevelt can avoid going deeper and deeper into currency inflation, with consequent financial crisis. The dollar is still at its low point, with all commodities rising in value jin domestic markets. Cotton, sugar, corn and wheat rose in price, giving profits to speculators and raising the cost of food for the city workers. The pound rose to a new high of | $5.21 as the weakness of the dollar \continued, indicating approaching | financial crisis and more inflation. Japanese Banquet Filipino Leader TOKIO, Noy. 14—Manuel Quezon, leader of the reformist independence movement in the Philippines, de- clared today that the Philippines are seeking entire freedom from the United States and neither exnected nor desires American naval and mili- tary “protection” after independence. Quezon spoke at a luncheon given in his honor by the Pan-Pacific Club. His audience was mostly composed of Japanese military and civilian offi- cials, but with U. S. Ambassador Jo- seph C. Grew in attendance as an N.Y. Workers Demonstrate Against Nazis Monday Workers in Many Cities to Protest Reichstag®rame-Up Protest Cables Pour Into Nazi Fire “Justice” NEW YORK: Bivork kers* organiza- tions throughout-the country have set the wheels of mass pressure into motion with the calling of mass meet~- ings, demonstrations and sending protest wires to the Reichstag fire judge in Berlin demanding the release of the four Communists on “trial,” Germany has.been literally. flooded with protest cablegrams, demanding the release of ‘Torgler, Dimitroff, Po- poff and Taneff. Mass delegations have beaten a steady path to Nazi consuls in New York, Chicagg, Buf- falo and other big cities. Demonstra- tions and mass meetings against fas- cist terror and persecutions have been held in hundreds: of cities throughout the | country; In New York the Communist Par- ty took steps to.mobilize its mem- bership, sympathetic organizations ard all workers, students, individ- uals and organizations for a pro- test demonstration Monday, Noy, 20, in Union Sq. at 11 a.m. It has urged that tens of thousands will turn out to protest the Nazi plans to mur- der the four workers who are being framed for the crime committed by the Hitlerites themselves. Many clubs, leagues and individuals have already sent protest cablegrams to the Berlin Nazi trial judge. Wires should be addressed to Justice Buen- ger, Reichstag, Berlin, demanding the immediate release of Dimitroff, Torg- ler, Popoff and Taneff, and. protest- ing against the frame-up trial and the contemplated murder of the four workers. nee CHICAGO GETS INTO ACTION CHICAGO, Nov. 14.—Six mass meetings demanding the safe re- lease of Dimitroff, Torgler, Popoff and Taneff are scheduled for this week, the Chicago Committee to Aid Victims of German Fascism announced today, Workers, Students and farmers will rally on Nov. 12, 15 and 22. Delegations of workers and intellectuals have already vis- ited the German consul here and more committees are being framed. eee CINCINNATI, ‘Noy. 13. — Because the German Hervig Mannerchor re- fused to allow the use of their hall for Nov. 10, the mass protest meet- ing called by the Cincinnati Com- mittee to Aid the Victims ‘of Ger- | man Fascism has been postponed to Friday, Noy. 1%,.'The meeting which will demand the release of the four German Communists on.trial for their lives will be held in Bigelows Hall, 211 Odd Fellows Temple, Elm and 7th Sts. enn ee ee CLEVELAND, Noy. 13.—In order to raise money for the fight to save Dimitroff, Torgler, Taneff and Po- poff the Cleveland Committee to Aid Victims of German Fascism is running a dance and_entertain- ment Saturday, Nov. 18, at Oak Pythian Temple, 706 E, 105th St. . 8 © BUFFALO, Nov. 14.—-A delegation representing the International Labor Defense, Steel and Metal Workers Union, Communist Party, Young Communist League, Trade. Union Unity League, Friends of the Soviet Union, League of Struggle for Negro Rights and others will visit the Ger- ,man consul here Wednesday to de- mand the immediate release of Dim- itroff, Torgler, Popoff, Taneff and all other class war prisoners. observer. Quezon expressed coffidence in Japan's willingness to keep hands off an independent Philippinés.” Quezon’s speech and its apparent approval by Japanese official circles take on par- ticular signifipapc because of the bitter antagonisms between the Japa- nese and U. 8. imperialists in their increasingly furious struggle for mas- tery of the Pacific and control of China. y Quezon is on fits way fo Washing- ton to plead with Roosevelt. and the U. S. Congress for a new “inde- pendence” act. Katayama. 1 Reveals the! Link in Chain of Plots Against Soviets EDITOR’S NOTE: Sen Katayama, veteran Japanese Bolshevik, fighter against war for half a century, died a few days ago. One of the last things which he wrote before his death, was the stirring article about interventionist plans against the Soviet Union which follows: ° . 8 By SEN KATAYAMA In ten years the world exports of armaments increased from 39 million dollars to 64 million dollars. In 1932, one single country sold armaments to two others amounting to well over four times as much as was sold throughout the world in 1930. Be- tween 1920 and 1930, the export of armaments of all countries reached 616 million dollars. ‘The polished peacemakers of the League of Nations listen to this arith- metic of cannons, and reckon up the present and future military super Profits. Geneva has become the official meeting-ground of the war plotters and interventionist cut-throats of the whole world. 'The League of Na~ tions is the recognized arena of specu- lation in blood. The repertory of the League of Nations is a masquer- ade of words and gestures to conceal real bargains, Geneva is beconiing more and more @ socially dangerous centre of the most shameless. provocations and the most impudent plots against interna- tional peace, against the freedom of nations, against the world stronghold of the toilers, against the Soviet Union. Forging Plots Against Soviet Forging Plots Against U. S. 8. The more difficult it is for the im- perialist bandits to come to some arrangement among themselves for a new division of the world, and the more unstable the international situ- ation becomes, the more ardently they forge a new chain’ of plots against the country of victorious so- cialism, The Japanese imperialists do not participate in the official sessions of the League, but they are the favorites in the obstacle race along the path towards new anti-Soviet intervention and towards a new world imperialist conflict. With their bandit claws they have seized on the Chinese East- ern Railway. The official Japanese documents published by the Soviet government clearly prove that the acts of violence perpetrated against officials of the Chinese Eastern Rail- way were committed on direct in- structions from Tokio, China, covered with blood, is being strangled by them. With insolent provocations they make open preparations for an attack on the Soviet Union. They talk loudly and brazenly of the ap- proachine months of open military operations. Munition Makers Eager Behind the scenes at Geneva, Jap- anese interventionist promissory notes are openly discounted. The British, German, French and other munition SEN KATAYAMA firms are bargaining there as to how they will make the best use of the war situation in the Far East. The British partners of Japanese imperialism rub their hands in the gambling fever. It is solemnly an- nounced that Lord Lloyd at the Con- servative conference demanded a fresh increased programme of arma~ ments. The monthly magazine of the diehards, “Fortnightly Review” openly reproaches Hitler for compel- ling the neighbors of Germany to “forget their fear of Russia” (October, 1933). This reproach is more elo- quent than ten detailed plans. ‘The imperialist antagonisms in the ‘West have confused the cards of big é interventionist, diplomacy, and so in Geneva Araki is the favorite of the lobbies of the League of Nations. He rattles his sword so loudly that even from the meeting hall of the Japan- ese Council of Ministers can be heard the roar of voices quarrelling as to the date of intervention. He rattles his sword so loudly that the jackals of war industry, the con- dottieres of banking speculation, creep out from under the diplomatic gates. The threats of Araki are quoted by Armstrong and Vickers, by Ger- man and other cannon patriots. “Heil Hitler” was the greeting of the fascist murderers to their rep- tesentatives in Geneva. “Heil Hitler” also means “Hail Araki.” ‘The Hitlerite gang is most closely interested in building up an anti- Soviet interventionist front of sup- pert for Araki in the East, for as yet it has not succeeded in carrying out its interventionist plans from the ‘West: When the guns begin to speak on the Soviet frontier, many others will also, begin to talk differently. For who is going to refuse interventionist super-profits? It is possible that the way to a big reshuffling of imperialist forces, which would turn the wheel of for- tune in the direction of Hitler, lies through’ a Japanese invasion of the Soviet Pacific coast districts! . It is a fact that this call of bloody obscurantism and interventionist pro- tion has been issued in Geneva. ‘Heil Hitler’ Heil Araki? Twin Spearheads Against U. S. S.R. imperialists E Bargain at Geneva.for War Plunder, se that Araki is: not and. never was in Geneva. + The Soviet ‘union: is | a tremendous factor for peace, and ly for this reason, in. ing for a new war for the re ba ivision of the world, the imperialap “War-monis are hastening to sét “Atak on! ithe US.S.R. They are stealing “Hell Araki.” Sma. Gavel ¢ ‘The proletariat;’ the “ollers, all those who are being dragged by ad talism into the jo of slave wars and intervention’ Wust oh gh a firmly and 1 tabs act, 5 Down with m! This means: Down with a “War, down with anti-Sovit “intervention, pros yoked by the wat‘niongers. The cause of féace te inseparable from the defense of the Soviet’ Union, the only fatherland of all the toilers and oppressed." * Bs 4) They shout? “Heft ‘Araki Our reply is! “Hands off Bir Sov- iet Fatherland; Down with the Ger- The Vanderveldes, Blums, man, British, ‘Frénch .aad’. other Arakis. 1 with the Wtiditers of intervention!"* ’ and Hendersons. 5 did 1 not it_and did not want to it. have good reason to try to eye os on the flag of the US.S.R. the dictatorshio of the ptol e Hitlerite dungeon. ae late “Heil Araki into thelr sociale fascist. jargon; gh they swear | ~~ A