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f *s Page ‘Daily AWorker — COMMUNIST PARTY U.S.A. (SECTION OF COMMUNIST INTERMATIONAS) Ametiea’s Only Working Class Daily Newspaper” FOUNDED 1924 IBLISHED DAILY, EXCEPT St DAY, BY THE JMPRODAILY PUBLISHING CO., INC., 4 E. 13th | teet, New York, N. Y. dephone: ALgonquin 4-795 4. Able Address iwork,”” New York ¥ oo Bur Room 954, 1 Press Building, 1 and F &t fest Bureau hicago, Ml. hone: Dearbor: 1 year, $6.00 0.75 cents year, $9.00. THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1934 R.R. Men---Danger sae! IDENT ROOSEVELT unde double attack against the auto and aie Workers. Utilizing the whole force of the govern- ment, he insists that the railroad workers continue to suffer the 10 per cent w cut for at least six Months after June 30, 1934, when the agreement has en for the cut is supposed to end spite all their to work with e wage cut just as g with the Wall trike of the auto xtension of ds are wo to smash the = for the the ny F. of L. Stree ely In fact, they are using the same tactics which, in the name of a compromise, originally brought about the 100 per cent cut and later continued it. Instead of mobilizing the railroad workers and pre- Paring for a strike, instead of demanding fhe un- conditional return of the cut and an increase in wages, th ued a statement against the proposal of the roads for a 15 per cent cut. In this manner they fit their tactics to the strategy of the roads and the President of accept- ing a so-called compromise for a continuation of the 10 per cent cut Rank and file protests against any extension of the 10 per cent. wage deduction and a demand for a 10 per cent increase in wages to meet the rising cost of living have postponed for a time acceptance by the officials of the 21 standard railway labor unions of the 10 per cent wage deduction requested by President Roosevelt and accepted by the rail- road owners. Floods of resolutions have been passed in the lodges and even by company unions who have been. forced to make a show of getting an increase in Wages because the temper of the men can no longer be ignored. Negotiations with the roads are far from over, however. The railroad managers have again raised the threat of a 15 per cent basic cut and as in the past we may expect our chiefs to run to cover under this threat and make a com- Promise settlement unless we compel them to do what we wish. Now is the time for workers in every shop, yard and terminal, and in every lodge to get into action. Not only must the railroad workers let the chiefs and the company union officials know that they mean to get the 10 per cent cut back and that they are out for an increase in wages to meet the rising cost of living... They must prepare to strike for their rights over the heads of our officials if necessary! governme 'PECIAL meetings of all lodges should be de- manded, calling for a report on what is going on in Washington and where the workers again go on record against any extension of the cut and for an increase in wages. Calls should be used for a referendum of the workers before any agreement is signed. Mass meetings should be organized now while the negotiations are going on to discuss what is taking place in Washington, warn against leaving matters in the hands of the reactionary officials, and pass resolutions for strike action if necessary to enforce the railroad workers’ demands. On the company unionized roads the workers must call the bluff of the Shop Craft Company Unions whose paid officers called for a return of the 10 per cent cut and an increase in wages. Every worker who pays dues into the company union should demand a meeting where the question can be thoroughly thrashed out. These “representatives” io have no intention of doing anything to carry ofit their “demands” must be replaced with real rpnk and file committees whose task it will be to obilize the railroad workers for action. EVERY department on all roads such commit- tees of action must be formed as bridges between ie unions and the unorganized, especially the Ne- ‘© workers, and company unionized workers. Such mmittees should also have as their job the set- ling of all immediate grievances of the workers, hich go on regardless of wage cuts and Wash- jinston conferences, Strike votes which have been taken against violation of agreements, unsettled grievances and changes in working rules and which have been temporarily set aside when the Presi- dent’s Emergency Boards stepped in, must be re- vived on the wage cut issues, so that a solid front ee the roads can & SE es daa abed os / | | | resentment of the men has already expressed itself for strike action. The Unemployed Councils must be enlisted in the fight and lead the action to prevent recruiting of strikebreakers by the roads. United front ma- chinery must be established between the rank and file of all groups and organizations of railroad work- ers to take over the direction of the fight against the roads and keep it away from possible sellout by the union officials. The workers of all industry are going into action against the attacks of the corporations. Now is the time for railroad workers to bring back the traditions of Debs and the militant struggles of the past. Organize to defend your jobs and your working standards! Organize for the right to belong to real unions of your own choice! De- velop your own leaders who can be trusted be- cause they have shown on the job that they can- not be bought and will fight to the finish for the interests of railroad labor! Take over the leader- ship of your lodges to carry out the wishes of the 400,000 organized railroad workers! Cloaking the Advance of American Fascism INDER cover of an attack against Nazi propa- ganda in this country, the House has just passed a resolution introduced by Representative Dickstein of New York, which is aimed squarely at the revo- lutionary labor movement and the Communist Party in particular. The resolution provides for a committee in- vestigation into the “extent and character and ob- ject of Nazi propaganda in the United States.” But this is not all. The loyal capitalist politicians who fill Congress also provided that the Committee in- vestigate “the diffusion within the United States of subversive propaganda that is instigated from for- eign countries and attacks the principle of the form of government as guaranteed by the Constitution.” There can be no mistaking the reactionary in- tent of this clause. Its very phrases echo the time- hallowed, stale verbiage of professional “Red- baiters.” This ostensibly liberal and progressive resolution against Fascist activities in this country, is, in reality, aimed at the very forces that are in the forefront of the fight against Fascism, the mili- tant working class movement and its vanguard, the Communist Party. Jnmistakable evidence of this is that one of the ieading reactionary “Red baiters” in the coun- try, Ham Fish, has already responded eagerly to the House resolution with a telegram to Dickstein stating enthusiastically, “I favor the resolution. There is no more room for Hitlerism in America than there is for communism. Both of these are foreign forms of dictatorship.” SCS EF. FISH deliberately lumps Fascism together with Communism, He knows that they are as far apart as day and night, as sky and earth, that in fact they are direct opposites, deadly enemies. Fascism is the undisguised dictatorship of the cap- italist class against the working class. Fascism is the rule of the billionaires, no longer concealed by any of the trappings of democratic parliamentarism. It is the open rule of the most powerful capitalist reaction against the workers and impoverished farmers, buttressed and concealed by deliberately incited reactionary race hatreds, chauvinism, etc. Communism is the direct antithesis of every that Fascism stands for. Communism is the rule of the proletariat, the working class, over the ex- Ploiters, the capitalist class. It is the setting up of the dictatorship of the proletariat in place of the present dictatorship of the Wall Street billion- aires, which is quite as brutal and ruthless in its oppression and exploitation, as real as the Fascist Hitler dictatorship for all that it is hidden by bourgeois democracy. Fascism is what exists in the prison-house hell of Hitler Germany. Communism is what is being created in the Soviet Union. As far apart as death from life. Fish and his colleagues pretend to fight the Nazis. Let us remember that Dollfuss, the Aus- trian Fascist, also claimed to fight the Nazis—and slipped over his own Fascist terrorism while he was doing it. The people who are sponsoring the Dick- stein resolution are not and cannot be real fighters of Fascism. For the simple reason that they them- selves are easing in American Fascism right here at home! Fish and many of the Congressmen who voted the Dickstein bill are themselves the advance agents of American Fascism. It is they who are inciting militarism, chauvinism, reactionary terror- ism against the militant working class fight on Wall Street exploitation. How then can they fight Fas- cism? The Dickstein bill and the trickery of the Ham Fishes surrounding it is a reflection of the wide- spread hatred for Fascism that exists among the masses. The political tricksters in Congress are trying to capitalize on this anti-Fascist hatred and turn it away from real struggle against Fascism and its American advance agents. The real fight against Fascism comes from the working class and its revolutionary vanguard, the Communist Party. The Ham Fishes et al who are trying to crush the Communist Party are doing large service for advancing American Fascism. That is what makes the Dickstein resolution menacing the working class, DUNNE FORCES COMMITTEE TO HEAR TOOL. PROTEST ON WAGNER STRIKEBREAKING BILL j (Continued from Page 1) } are listed here with United States | Gorman, ih Steel and other open shop corpora- “Yes ey | tions whose motives for opposing | this bill certainly are not the same as our motives for opposing it,”| fluence. [enat are alleged to support Com- | ‘“Communistic Gorman said, “we are com- batted on every side by that in- These people come in after | clubs among the Walsh asked} workers?” Gorman then reported that “these Communistic groups” do “a lot of house-to-house work,” and “take the workers when they are very young.” Dunne said, referring to the com-| mittee’s sandwiching the T.U.U.L. between corporations listed offi- cially in opposition. Thereupon Walsh turned to the stenographer and directed: “You may list the witness as representing a branch of organized labor.” “When will I be heard?” Dunne persisted. » “Tomorrow,” said Walsh, “or \We'll set a special time then so you 't be contaminated by the pres- of the employers.” ‘It’s not a matter of contamina- ” answered Dunne, “but for us be grouped with those corpora- loas might give rise to certain mis- derstandings.” Gorman followed the lead of other ican Federation of Labor lead- in endorsing the Wagner Bill, ‘Wagner himself has declared prevent strikes.” The bill is put forward as a boon to labor in e fight against company-union- but even witnesses supporting it nave testified that the bill will not destroy company unions. Combatting It On Every Side Gorman urged enactment of the bill to “give us needed relief.” “Has your organization experi- we have created an organization | and we not only have to fight the |employers but we have to fight them. They are aiming to destroy the organization for the advance- ment of their own political phil- osophy.” Walsh smiled. Davis smiled. Gor- man smiled. The co-ordination was | smooth. | “Do you know who finances the | organizations such as the chairman | named?” Davis asked. | “Yes,” Gorman took his cue, “I | am not in a position to say since the recognition of the Soviets, but we did have definite information that they were subsidized from Russia.” Several reporters smiled around the press table. Later your cor- respondent pointed out in Gorman’s presence that he was attacking the N.T.W. and he again declared that “they” are “financed from Russia.” Walsh asked Gorman whether “that’s the reason why, I suppose, organized labor opposed the recog- nition of Russia—that’s one of the reasons?” “That's one of the reasons,” Gor- man repeated, adding, “and of course, there are others that you enced extreme difficulty in compet- ing with organizations that are We | up among textile workers; are aware of.” Walsh didn’t go into this. He ked instead whether there were “Do they have schools?” Walsh asked. Gorman said, “Yes,” and Walsh asked whether they were “underground.” “Secret,” Gorman confided. “And we are now getting the result of that. These young people are spreading throughout the country and are preaching these destructive philosophies. Their whole attack is against the American labor move- ment. Of course, they are aiming to gain control of it. I do not believe there is an industry in the country that is more affected with this sort of thing than ours.” Walsh put in: “That’s why I asked the questions. I was aware that this sort of thing is happen- ing.” “We do not only have to fight the employers,” Gorman said. “We have to fight the Communists as well. If the National Board were permanent and this bill were en- forced, there’s no doubt in my mind that we could organize that industry 100 per cent.” Gorman said that there was tre- mendous “clamor” in the South seeking a general strike “as the only means of protecting the workers against discriminations, etc.” Asked whether the Wagner Bill would pre- vent this strike, he answered that it would, “if we had it now.” | | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1934 IU. S. Workers Send $4, 027 Ly C. P. of Germany _ PRES. ROOSEVELT TAKING HIM FOR A RIDE —By mens | Bit GREEN Leaders Raise Fascist Threats Meet Revolutionary Ferment With Demand “Strong State” PARIS, March 21.—In the guise of “defense of the republic,” leaders of the National Confederation of War Veterans, now meeting in Na- tional Congress in Paris, are seek- ing to turn the organization of 3,500,000 ex-servicemen into a fas- | cist reserve. Maurice de Barral, secretary of the organization, broadcast from the Eiffel tower radio station today the threat that the veterans would “take direct action in the streets” unless the government is “brought up to | date.” Raise Fascist Slogans These leaders are seizing on the deep unrest, caused by the crisis and the Stavisky scandal, which has shaken confidence in the whole gov- ernment apparatus, to put forward their demands for a “stronger gov- ernment,” a direct fascist threat. The demand is supported by al- most the whole capitalist press, which is largely controlled by the all-powerful steel trust, the Comite des Forges, which owns or controls the chief armament firms of Europe. Yesterday a large Paris crowd sought to take from the police a group of arrested officials, held for French Veterans’ |Pittsburgh Workers Plan to Send Delegate to U.S. S. R. EAST PITTSBURGH, Pa.—Seven | hundred workers assembled in the |Turtle Creek High School audi- torium-last Thursday to hear Her- bert Goldfrank, national secretary of the Friends of the Soviet Union, speak on the U.S.S.R. and outline the plans of the F. S. U. for send- ing a worker delegation to the So- viet Union for a two months’ visit. opening gun of the campaign to |send a worker representative from complicity in the Stavisky swindle. The depth of the revolutionary ferment in France, against which the government and the leaders of the “patriotic” organizations are at- tempting to stir up a fascist fury, may be seen from the fact that the Socialist Party and its daily, “Le Populaire,” are forced, in order to retain their influence over the masses, to raise the most revolution- ary-sounding slogans, to the point where “Le Populaire” carried yester- day the headline, “Vive la Com- mune!” In this situation the Communist Party has made great strides in developing the revolutionary united front of the workers against the menace of Fascism, as was demon- strated when the largest workers’ demonstration Paris ever saw, 200,- 000 workers jamming the sitrects, “| followed the Central Committee of the Communist Party at the funeral of the revolutionary workers killed by the police on February 9. Goldfrank’s address marked the | the Westinghouse plant as the dele- gate from this district, which cam- paign will be broadened to draw in all working class elements in the Pittsburgh district and make them feel that the delegate is their per- sonal inspector for Russia. At the meeting Thursday, three | Westinghouse workers were nom- inated for the delegate berth—Bob Whisner, of Turtle Creek; Pat | Moran, of Turtle Creek, and Frank Castle, of McKeesport. The worker | delegate will be elected by a ballot ,of the workers at a mass meeting which will be held during the first week of April. An intensive drive is now under way in the whole Pittsburgh dis- trict to raise the $300 necessary for the delegate’s traveling expenses by April 10. During his stay in the Soviet Union, where he will arrive in time for the May Ist celebration, the delegate is the guest of the Soviet Trade Unions, but his fare to Mos- cow and return must be raised by the workers in the district he rep- resents. All workers in the Pittsburgh dis- trict should support the campaign by circulating collection lists for the expense fund and arousing the interest of all individuals and or- ganizations desirous of bringing a true picture of Soviet Russia to the American worker. Address all communications and donations to T. W. Shane, Jr., Sec- retary, Pittsburgh Branch of the F. S. U., 2116 Braddock Ave., Swiss- ‘Money Now in Hands of Leaders of Underground i Struggle in Germany Partial Tabulation Shows That the Party Raised $2,311.47; “Support German Workers’ Revolu- tion” Rally in Coliseum Netted $1,716 NEW YORK—Partial returns tabulated by the Central Committee of the Cymmunist Party of the U. 8. A. show that $4,027.88 has been sent to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Germany from America since the beginning of the campaign of the Central Committee to support the German Party. The American Party has under- taken to assess itself regularly to } support its German brother Party. Of the sums reported here, $2,311.47 is proceeds from sales of special Stamps, assessments and donations, and $1,716.41 is the net proceeds of the “Support the German Workers Revolution” rally at Bronx Coliseum, Feb. 11, These funds have been placed directly into the hands of the Cen- tral Committee of the German Party which, despite the murderous terror, tivities of more than 100,000 dues- paying members in all parts of Germany. In addition to these funds sent to Germany, the Communist Party has transmitted $600 to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Austria, raised in America for this purpose since the beginning of the workers’ armed uprising in Austria. Funds collected by the Communist Party are turned over to the Austrian Communist Party. These contributions are not to be confused with the moneys raised by other organizations than the Party, under the leadership of the International Labor Defense, which are transmitted to the Interna- tional Red Aid in Paris, for the relief of all worker victims of Doll- fuss-Heimwehr fascism, and their families. PARTY CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE GERMAN COMMUNIST PARTY Assess- District Special Stamps Donations ments Total 1. Boston $ 2750 27.50 2, New York 1,139.50 128.63 45.48 1,313.56 3. Philadelphia .. 50.00 50.00 4. Buffalo .... 6.00 245.50 5. Pittsburgh 35.25 23.41 1.27 59.93 6. Cleveland 245.50 96.50 7. Detroit .. 17.25 11.57 28.82 8. Chicago 96.50 61.00 9. Minneapolis 61.00 17.00 10. Omaha ..... o. 17.00 12.00 ll. N.-S. Dakota . 12.00 71.50 12. Seattle .. 71.50 18.50 14. Newark 18.50 3.00 15. Conn. 3.00 40.00 18. Milwaukee 40.00 12.25 19. Denver . 12.25 3.50 Florida . 350 02. 02 Miscellaneous . 235.51 9.38 244.89 TOTAL ........ 1,806.25 437.55 67.67 2,311.47 MASS MEETING, FEBRUARY ll, 1934, AT BRONX COLISEUM INCOME: Admission ... Collection Buttons TOTAL INCOME $2,699.16 EXPENSES: Coliseum Rent ...........++ sreveeeeeees-$ 750.00 Electric Spots and Radio Mixer . sees 75.00 Program: Workers Labor. Thea... ..$25.00 Radamsky’s accompanist 15.00 Freiheit Gesang Ferein accompanist ......-+.. 3.00 W. I. R. Band +» 10.00 Piano rental 63.00 Signs 25.00 Publicity and Printing 60.00 Miscellaneous Expenses ... 9.75 982.75 NET cessccscdcccevors + $1,716.41 Ice-Breaker Krassin to Cross Panama to Rescue Soviet Group Special to the Daily Worker MOSCOW, March 21 (By radio) — The famous ice-breaker Krassin, which rescued the crew of the arctic airship “Italia,” will speed through the Panama Canal on its way to vale, Pa. Behring Strait, to rescue the ma- rooned members of the arctic expe- dition, whose ship, the Chelyuskin, sank, leaving them stranded Meanwhile, the fiyers Galyshev, Doronin and Vodopianov, who flew from Khabarovsk to Cape Wellen to aid the Chelyuskiners, arrived at Okhotsk yesterday, having covered 1,200 miles. They are leaving today for Nagayev, on the next lap. The 69 men of the Chelyuskin party have supplies sufficient for two months more. Yesterday was commemorated the fifteenth anniversary of the foundation of the short-lived Hun- garian Soviet Republic, which was proclaimed on March 21, 1919. On this anniversary, as the crisis brings imminently close the day when the workers and peasants of Hungary, led by a Party steeled in fifteen years of struggle, will again rise and seize power, the Commu- nist Party of the United States has addressed an appeal to the Hun- garian workers of the United States, reviewing the lessons of the events of 1919. The text of this appeal, signed by the Central Com- mittee of the C. P. U. S. A, is printed below.—Editor. APPEAL OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF THE U. S. A. TO THE) HUNGARIAN WORKERS IN THE, UNITED STATES Workers! Comrades! Fifteen years ago, on March 21, 1919, the red flag waved from every housetop in Hungary. The Hungar- ian proletariat was the first to) follow the example of its Russian brothers and establish its own state, its own Soviet power. The youthful forces of the young Soviet Republic threw themselves with boundless enthusiasm into the work of carrying out in the shortest possible time all the changes that were needed to transform old feudal Hungary into the land of the toilers. But the objective difficulties of this tremendous task could not be can- celled out with the fire of enthusi- asm and with proletarian self-sacri- fice. What was lacking then for the consolidation of the proletarian State of Hungary has been acquired during the past fifteen years by our Hungarian comrades: the Leninist method, which is the only guarantee that when the Hungarian toilers will once more gather their strength and establish their second Soviet Republic, they will build an invin- cible proletarian state for the work- ® Lessons of Hungarian Soviets, Founded 15 Years Ago COMMUNIST PARTY OF U.S.A. ADDRESSES HUNGARIAN WORKERS ON ANNIVERSARY OF SOVIET FOUNDING The short-lived period of the Hungarian Soviet Republic and its lessons are of tremendous value to the workers of Hungary ,as well as to the entire world. Here was the example which showed that only under the leadership of the Commu- nist Party and with a united front fighting on the line of the Commu- | nist Party is it possible to establish workers’ rule. This is why it is necessary always to remember the Hungarian Soviet Republic. The Hungarian proletarians re- member that there was a short pe- riod when they owned the factories, when there were no capitalist usurp- ers to exploit them, when, under workingclass leadership, the workers toiled in common interest. The Hungarian peasants remember that there was a short period when their small land was not taken from them | by the bankers and tax collectors, when the proletarian state seized the huge lands owned by the feudal barons and the Church, in order to collectivize them. The workers and landless peasants of Hungary re- member all this. And because fifteen years of misery and sufferings have passed, today they know already how to do it the second time. The Communist Party of Hungary, grown and steeled in these years of terrible oppression, is leading today the struggle of the Hngarian workers and peasants against the capitalists and big landowners. The illegal Communist Party of Hungary leads huge mass actions in spite of the | raging bloody terror of Hungarian fascism. Did Not Die in Vain We honor today the martyrs of the Hungarian Soviet Republic and of the Communist Party of Hungary. From Tibor Szamuely and Otto Korvin to Imre Sallay and Sandor Furst, the road of the Hungarian revolution is soaked with the blood of proletarian heroes. But the names of these heroes today are whisperd in reverence in every house where workers and peasants live. These ers and peasants of Hungary. names @re the consolation of the starving masses, who have learned to believe that they did not die in vain. The young Hungarian Soviet Re- public rose on the ruins of Austria- Hungary after the war. The impe- rialist powers of the Entente sent the armies of the Little Entente against the young proletarian state. This struggle, even from a military standpoint, could have ended with the victory of Soviet Hungary; but— and this is the main lesson of those days—the fate of the Hungarian proletarian dictatorship was not de- cided on the front, but behind the front. The heroic red soldiers of Soviet Hungary were successfully repelling the enemy on all fronts and were directly instrumental in tying the hands of the capitalist armies which were attacking the young Soviet Russia. But the fate of Soviet Hungary was being decided behind the front. Seeds of Counter Revolution The Communist Party of Hungary was formed in the first chaotic months of the collapse of the war. It took but a few months to estab- lish the proletarian stete Four months of ceaseless agitation, illegal work, the soldiers coming home from the front, the organizing of the un- employed masses, brought the re- sults: on March 21, 1919, Hungary was declared a Soviet Republic. But in the very form of these Soviets was contained the seeds of counter-revolution. The Communist Party gave up its independence to unite with the corrupt Socia! Demo- cratic Party. The Communist Party gave up its independence, because it did not know that this was not a unification with the proletarian masses, but only with the leaders of the Social Democracy. The Hungarian Social Democratic leaders, with their cowardly defeat- ism, with their lack of principles and opportunist maneuverings, or- ganized the counter-revolutionary forces of the Hungarian bourgeoisie and opened the gates before the counter-revolution, through which the armies of the Czechs and Rou- manians and the Hungarian White Guards swarmed to crush the prole- tarian state. Young in experience, the Hungarian Soviets and the Party which was formally liqui- dated could not defend their rule. The Social Democratic parties of other countries helped the Hun- garian Social Democrats. The Aus- trian Social Democratic Party was wedged between two young Soviet Republics: on the east by the Hun- abet on the west by the Bavarian Soviets. The treachery of the Aus- trian Social Democracy, which brought its fruits just recently and which began already in 1914 at the outbreak of the war, could have been seen by every worker in the spring of 1919. From these bloody days of 1919 until the bloody winter months of 1934, the road of the Austrian Social Democracy is a straight one. Never did they miss a single chance to betray the inter- est of the workers. Failed to Win Peasants Another circumstance which helped \ (collapse of Soviet Hun- gary wat Ae tack thatethey. dia not win the peasantry for their allies. The Hungarian Soviet Government confiscated the lands of the church and feudal aristocracy, but it failed to distribute it among the poor peas- ants. Instead they tried to collec- tivize them immediately. In a country of big estates, where the peasantry had been oppressed for centuries, this action of the Soviet Government was not understood by the poor peasants. And so instead of becoming the allies of the prole- tarian state, involuntarily .they helped the counter-revolution by their resistance. The exploited, starving peasants of Hungary have since then learned by bitter experi- ence that it is not the Communists who are their enemies. Today they understand that their only enemy is the Hungarian ruling class, the bankers and the landowners and their murderous fascist government. The world economic crisis has un- mistakably shown to every worker that the fascist government’s policy is to crush the resistance and struggle of the workers against cap- italist exploitation and starvation. This is true not only in Hungary, but throughout the capitalist world, and here in the United States also, A Strong Communist Party The memory of the short-lived Hungarian Soviets and the lessons from it have forged the Commu- nist Party of Hungary into a strong fighting party. Fifteen years of illegal Communist work has steeled them as the only vanguard of the Hungarian toiling masses. Hungarian toilers, workers, farm- ers, comrades, you who are living in the United States and share the fate of the American working masses, don’t forget the victorious Soviet rule of Hungary and its les- sons! Support the Communist Party of Hungary with all your strength. Support the Communist Party of the United States of America in the country where you now live, and where it is leading the struggles against fascism and war, against starvation, against ex. Ploitation and terror, for the lies eration of the working class, for workers’ rule, for Soviet America. The Communist Party is a Party of class struggle. The Communist Party leads all your s' of all Neca and farmers. pene garian workers in United States: nis Build your fight organiza- tions in this comes Build the American organiza- tions of class struggle! Support with all your strength the Communist Party of Hun- gary! Join under the struggle of the C.P.U.S.A.! Long live the second Hungarian Soviet Republic! Long live the Communist In- ternational! With comradely greetings to all Hungarian toilers, CENTRAL COMMITTEE _ COMMUNIST PARTY U8. AL ‘f is leading the heroic ate »