Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
EE! Ry SS AENEAN nen RRR Bee Page Six DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1934 Daily, QWorker SERTRAL ORGAN COMMUNIST PARTY U.S.A. (SECTION OF COMMUNIST INTERMATIONAA) “America’s Only Working Class Daily Newspaper” FOUNDED 1924 PUBLISHED DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAY, BY THE COMPRODAILY PUBLISHING CO., INC., 50 E. 18th Street, New York, N. ¥. Telephone: ALgonquin 4-795 4. Cable Address: “Daiwork,” New York, N. Y. Washington Bur R 954, National Mress Building, léth find F st D.C. Migiwest Bureau: 1 1s St., Room 705, Chicago, Hl. ¥elephone: Dearbor: 1 Subscription Rates By Mail except n year, %6.00 § months, $3.50; 3 n 0.75 cent Manhattan, Bronx, 2 1 year, 99.00; $ months, $5.00; 3 months, By Carrier: Weekly, 18 cents; monthly, 75 cents. FRIDAY, MARCH 28, 1934 Taximen, Stick Till You Win! HE HEROIC SPRUGGLE that the New York temi drivers are waging against company unions and for better conditions in the industry under the leadership of the Taxi Drivers Union of Greater New York, deserves the admiration and support of all workers. It should serve as an example for workers im every industry in their fight against the N'R.A. wage slashing program. Understanding that their very life depends upon unionization of the taxi industry, understand- ing that without a strong fighting union they will never be able to win a decent wage scale, the hack- men are putting up one of the most stubborn, mili- tant fights in the history of New York labor. The huge mass picket demonstrations of the past two days have already forced the fleet opera- tors to begin to talk about granting some of the strikers’ demands. Parmelee, Terminal and Radio fleet operators have agreed to take back all men who have been discriminated against. But they still hold out against recognition of the Taxi Drivers Union. They want the drivers to vote on the ques- tion of the union after they return to work. The drivers will have nothing to do with such a plan as at present presented by the company, and cor- rectly so. They will not go back to work without their union. i eos along with this demand, and connected with it, goes the demand for improved conditions and higher wages. That is why the taximen are so stubbornly fighting for their union. In fighting for union recognition, the struggle must be relentlessly directed against the LaGuardia slave code—a code equally miserable as the tex- tile code, which brought the wages of the workers in the weaving mills down to $12 and $13 a week. The LaGuardia code would bring the wages of the hackmen down to $12 a week through the minimum wage joker. LaGuardia is using his police in an attempt to break the strike and put over his code. Gang- sters from the Sherwood Detective Agency are at- tempting to saddle this code on the drivers. The so-called Brotherhood, the Parmelee company union and the N'R.A. are for the $12 code. Indeed, the first draft of the code was worked up by Mr. Allen, an N.R.A. chief. The Taxi Drivers Union is demanding a min- imum of $23 for day men and $25 for night drivers. The union stands for unemployment insurance to be paid out of the pockets of the bosses. It demands vacations with pay, no blacklisting and no discri- mination against Negro drivers. This is what the union stands for. That is why the union is militantly fighting against the com- pany union, against LaGuardia’s starvation code, and for recognition of the fighting union of the workers, the Taxi Drivers Union. The hackmen are putting up a pioneering fight against company unions in New York. They deserve and must get the support of every worker who feels their fight is his fight. All hail the fighting taxi- men of Greater New York! The 8th Party Convention and Non-Party Workers PREPARATION for the %&h Convention of the Communist Party, many sections of the Party heve already held conventions. These section con- ventions, heki in the shadow of looming tremen- dows class battles, and in the midst of raging strike struggles, have shown that the delegates coming feom the Party units are beginning really to carry owt the fundamental tasks of the Party. The most serious questions of winning the masses, of rooting the Party in the basic industries of fighting against hunger, fascism and war, were taken up as they never have been before. Tonight the New York District Convention opens at Bronx Coliseum at 177th Street and White Pains Road at 7:30 pm. with a huge mass meet- ing. Speakers at this convention opening will be Berl Browder, general secretary of the Communist Party; James W. Ford, member of the Central Committee, and Charles Krumbein, district organ- iver. Here will be discussed before New York work- @ts the main problems to be taken up by both the District and the National Convention of the Com- munist Party. ‘Fhere will be mass delegations from non-party workingelass organizations, * . . \ eameeell WORKERS who, through the Austrian and other events are being stimulated to dis- cuss the questions of revolutionary struggles and the program of the Communist Party, should pay the closest attention to the discussions and deci- sion of this 8th Convention of the Communist Party. In the A. F. of L. and other unions, members of the militant unions of the Trade Union Unity League who find in their ranks that the most mili- tant workers are the Communists, exposing and fighting against the A. F. of L. misleaders, should follow this Convention of the Communist Party closely. Here will be hammered out the Commu- nist policies in the trade unions in order to win the masses on a united front basis against the hunger and strikebreaking program of the Roose- Haiti Officials Seek | Reward for Faithful HINGTON, March 22—| ts that they have paid up| st and amortisation on the robber loan of $11,000,000 to faster even than they i to, Haitian government of- € . led by President Stenio Vin- cent will negotiate here next Mon-| to be given back control of customs. The customs are new controled by U. S. agents, | backed by U. 8. marines, who are to remain until next October, May Day vious order, Day edition. Detroit Bookshop to A || Order 1,000 Copi Service to Wall St.) ; eee oe Oty May Dey Elled DETROIT, Mich—In view of the fact that the Daily Worker is doubling the amount of the Tenth Anniversary edition by printing 500,000 copies of the issue, Book Shop here, at 1981 Grand River, will also double its pre- according to J. Brown and B. Green. They plan to obtain 1,000 copies of the May velt regime, and to lead these struggles to the higher and greater battles for the overthrow of capitalism, and for the winning of a complete vic- tory for the workers—Soviet Power! With the Communist Party leading the struggle against the Roosevelt New Deal, pointing the way to Soviet Power as the way out of the capitalist crisis, the District as well as the National Conven- tion is of the greatest moment to the American workers. The Roosevelt government is now openly act- ing as the strikebreaking force for the auto, rail- road and steel trusts. The whole workingclass is aroused to action, with their economic struggles becoming political struggles even before they walk out on the streets in strike. Ciass lines are sharpening more acutely every day. It will be in this situation that the 8th Con- vention of the Communist Party will open in Cleve- land, Ohio, on April 2, with a huge mass meeting in the Music Hall of the Public Auditorium. This historic Convention should receive the close attention of every worker who feels the neces- sity of fighting against the growing fascist char- acter of Roosevelt's New Deal and its criminal war policies. EEE Stop the Firetrap Deaths, Force LaGuardia to Act! b pbise more working class men, women and chil- dren were burned alive in an East Side tenement fire on Wednesday! Forty-eight human beings—men, women and children—have died excruciating deaths by flame in New York’s slum firetraps since the progressive Fusion administration assumed office on the first of the year, less than three months ago. Forty-eight men, women and children burned to death! This is the ghastly toll of LaGuardia’s demagogic policy of piling promises to the skies, but taking no action. And Tenement Commissioner Langdon W. Post merrily continues on his much-ballyhooed and fake “crusade,” occasionally demanding (in the presence of the press and newspaper photographers) that an obviously rotting tenement be evacuated. There aré 67,000 old-law tenements in this city. Figure out for yourself how long it would take to empty them all at Post’s snail-like pace. The Fusion administration knows what it is doing. It is to its own advantage to keep these firetraps occupied as long as it possibly can, the agonizing deaths of 48 men, women and children notwithstanding. LaGuardia, through his Tenement Commissioner, yesterday resorted again to the old demagogic trick of blaming the firetrap deaths on the previous city administration. At the same time he virtually ab- solved the wealthy owners of any of the guilt for the fire deaths by declaring that the ‘Sammany officials should not have “lulled into a sense of security” these tenement owners! How long will LaGuardia get away with this? How long will he be permitted to ooze with empty honeyed phrases, while the Astors, the Stuyvesants, the Hamilton Fishes, the Wall Street banks, con- tinue to reap their blood-stained profits from these 67,000 tinderboxes? How long will these wholesale deaths—these wholesale murders—continue? ee ee answer rests with you, the workers of New York City who are forced to live in these build- ings, to pay your hard-earned and miserable wages for the privilege of existing in constant fear and danger of death by fire. The answer rests with you! You can force LaGuardia to take action if you organize com- mittees in your tenement house, on your block, in your neighborhood! Get your entire neighbor- hood solidly behind the following demands, pro- posed in a recent statement by the New York Dist- rict of the Communist Party on the tenement fire deaths: Organize in every house. Set up committees in every slum block. Demand that all tenants, Ne- gro and white, in firetrap buildings be moved at once into safe and sanitary dwellings; that the Home Relief Bureaus assume responsibility for moving expenses and rent payments for all unem- ployed families; that all workers’ families living in firetraps be given preference in all city dwellings, in all city apartment houses now in existence and those to be built. Fight against any form of discrimination against Negro tenants; for the right of all tenants to choose themselves the section in which they wish to live. Demand that LaGuardia immediately carry out his campaign promises. Demand that the slums be torn down and that fireproof sanitary apartment houses be built—the rentals to be from four to six dollars per room max- imum! Tenants are already organizing in various parts of the city to remove this death threat from their midst. Tenant strikes are already in progress at 221 E. 6th St., and at 139 and 145 Houston St., in the heart of the Lower East Side slum district. Workers of Red Hook, Yorkville, Harlem and other workingclass districts of Greater New York: Follow the example set by these striking worker- tenants! Refuse to pay a cent of rent while the lives of your families, your friends and neighbors, are in danger! ———EEEEEEee Tomorrow’s 10-Page ‘Daily’ ecto ten-page edition of the Daily Worker will be one which all workers will want te read and keep permanently among his files of vital working class literature. In addition to the usual features of the regular Saturday edition, there will be five outstanding ar- ticles by leading members of the Communist Party, here and abroad. Leading this list of articles will be Manuilsky’s report to the 17th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. William %. Foster will con- tribute an article on J. B. MacNamara; Karl Brow- der will discuss the League of Struggle Against War and Fascism; Jack Stachel will write on the pre- sent situation in the automobile industry, and Robert Minor will write on Hugo Gellert’s “Karl Marx's ‘Capital’ in Lithographs.” Workers are urged to make sure that they get this important issue of the Daily Worker! “Bomb for Goering” Was Nazi Attack on ' Jewish Movie Man BERLIN, March 22—The bomb explosion yesterday which Berlin press announcements said was aimed at Premier Goering of Prus- sia was actually a Nazi bomb in- tended for David Oliver, a Jewish motion picture theatre owner in whose theatre @ movie was shown which was later banned by the Nazis because a Jewish actress ap- peared in it. Premier Goering was nat even in Berlin, the Workers A ustrian Socialist W 3,000, Wound 119,682 in Yr. | 174,000 Held Prisoner, | | Anti-Fascist Aid | Body Reports | | | NEW YORK.—Figures of the} number of victims of Nazi murder | |and torture since the first of 1933, | compiled by the International Com- | | mittee to Aid Victims of German | Fascism, have been made public | | here by the National Committee to | | Aid Victims of German Fascism, | |the American section of the inter- | national organization. | The figures, compiled three weeks | ago, show that 3,000 anti-fascists have been murdered since Jan. 1,| 1933, the overwhelming majority | being Communists. Of 67 sentenced | to be beheaded by the courts, 26/ have already been executed. (Since the report was completed, two more Communists were beheaded, at | Koenigsberg, and two more sen- |tenced to death, at Duesseldorf.) A total of 119,682 have been per- manently crippled, or otherwise wounded by the Nazis. Political prisoners in the concentration camps, storm troop barracks, and prisons, are known to number 174,000. Figures compiled for the single month’s period, Oct. 1 to Nov. 1, 1933, show that 59,183 were tortured in concentration camps, and 396 tortured to death in prisons. The National Committee to Aid Victims of German Fascism is financing homes for political or- phans at Saarbruecken and Maison Laffitte, Paris. Its headquarters are at 870 Broadway, New York. More than 20 branches have been organized throughout the country. Hitler Demands New Wage Cuts As “Jobless Aid” Will Also Help Girls To| Marry So They Will | Have To Quit Jobs Nazis Murder'| THE WOLF IN SHEEP’S CLOTHIN' —By Burck | cab Striker Anti-War League Calls Mass Meeting April 5, U.S. War Entry Anniversary NEW YORK.—April 6, the 17th anniversary of America’s entry into the World War, will be the occasion of a monster mass meeting against war here, called by the American League Against War and Fascism. The immediate war danger, the jingo campaign promoted by the Roosevelt government which is speeding war preparations at an unprecedented rate, and the tasks of the American masses in the fight against war will be brought for- "> Nicholas Arena, 69 West 66th St.. Friday, April 6, at 7.30 p. m. Dr. Place of Profit,” speaker. Among the other speakers will be Louise Weir of the Women’s Inter- national League for Peace and Freedom, Robert W. Dunn of the Labor Research Association, Carl Brodsky of the Communist Party, ward in a mass meeting at St. Roger Baldwin of the Civil Lib- Harry F. Ward of Union Theological Seminary, author of “In a book on the Soviet Union, will be the principai erties Union, Annie E. Gray of the Women’s Peace Society, and Jack Davis of; the Workers Ex-Service- men’s League will also speak. There will also be short speeches by many representatives of trade unions and other organizations af- filiated with the League. Cards are being distributed which when presented will be good for a five-cent reduction in the 20-cent admission fee, All unemployed who have their unemployed cards will be admitted free. BERLIN, March 22.—Adolf Hitler | yesterday broadcast the long-prom- | ised Nazi scheme to “reduce unem- ployment” among Germany’s six| million jobless, The principal means he proposed | is @ further lowering of wages, and a billion-mark public works pro- gram which will put fat profits into the pockets of contractors. “Wages and dividends must step back,” he declared. “I am happy | that the German worker has realized this despite almost impossible wages. It is said, however, that some em- ployers are unable to understand this, and believe the present era of reconstruction must be expressed in especially high dvidends.” While being forced to admit that wages are “almost impossible,” he went on to boast that savings de- posits have increased a billion marks within a year—which could only come from interest and dividends. Another means of “reducing un- employment” announced by Hitler is | @ plan to assist 200,000 girls to get married, so they will have to give up their jobs to men, What is your Unit, trade union, mass organization doing to get new subscribers for the Daily | Worker? Help put the sub drive over the top! Milwaukee Youth Conference Against War, Fascism, Apr. 5 MILWAUKEE.—A united front youth conference against war and fascism is being called for Thurs- day, April 5, by the local Mil- waukee section of the American League Against War and Fascism. This conference is to be held at Bues Hall, 914 Plankington Ave., at 8 pm. All youth organizations, groups of young workers and stu- dents, are invited to send two dele- gates each to the conference. Helen Armstrong, secretary of the League, in a statement issued today, declared that this confer- ence was being called to combat the increasing growth of Fascist or- ganizations in Milwaukee. She stated that the youth, especially the young workers, had a decisive role to play in fighting the fascist on- slaught, and that this first con- ference would be the beginning of a sustained drive against imperialist war and fascism. One of the tasks of the meet will be to counteract the flow of jingo- istic propaganda which annually | the date when the U. S. entered the war in 1917. The call is beind directed espe- cially to the Young Peoples Social- ist League and similar organiza- tions, in the effort to make this conference as broad and all-inclu- sive as possible. A number of youth groups have already indicated their intention of sending delegates. EO wn 1 MILWAUKEE—The Young Com- munist League of District 18, in a statement issued yesterday, de- clared that it fully supports the call for the united front youth conference against war and fas- cism. Will Build Playgrounds NEW YORK—A war memorial fund of $340,000 will be used to build five playgrounds, one in each bor- ough, it was announced today. This money was collected in 1918. It has not yet been announced whether the playgrounds will be constructed close to working class districts or flows forth on and about April 6,' not. ‘Austrian Governor Reveals Details of Socialist Betrayal VIENNA, March 22.—Confirma- | tion of the treacherous negotiations of the Austrian Social Democratic ‘leaders with the party of Dollfuss, even after Dollfuss’ murderous at- tack on the workers had begun, was given by Governor Reither of Upper Austria. Otto Bauer, leader of the Austrian Social Democracy, has already ad- mitted in a statement (republished in full by the Daily Worker) that he and the other Social Democratic leaders has offered “every conces- sion” to Dollfuss’ fascism, to the point of agreeing to allow him to rule dictatorially by decree. Reither has now revealed that on Feb. 12, after the fighting had be- gun, ex-Chancellor Karl Renner and General Kroener, chief of staff of the Socialist Republican Defense Corps, offered to support a new gov- ernment of Dollfuss’ Clerical Party, in which Reither would take the 1 place of Dollfuss. | Forty Leaders of Latin- | American Confederation Thrown in Prison NEW YORK. — Word re- ceived from Argentina reveals the fact that the Justo goy- arnment is seeking to take the lead among South American governments in a terroristic drive to smash the revolutionary trade unions, all anti-war and anti-fas- cist. organizations, and the Commu- nist Party. Forty leading members of the Latin-American Trade Union Con- federation have been arrested in recent weeks, at the height of a press campaign around a “Commu- nist plot” invented by the govern- ment of General Justo to justify the smashing of all militant work- ers’ organizations, and especially the red trade unions and their pan- American confederation. This “plot” is the invention of the “Special Section Against Commun- ism,” a terrorist branch of the po- lice which has unlimited powers and is responsible only to the Sec- retary of the Interior. Among those arrested are Miguel Contreras, General Secretary of the Latin-American Trade Union Con- federation (Confederacion Sindical Latino-America), and chairman of the Pan-American Anti-War Con- gress at Montevideo; three succes- sive secretaries of the Argentine Trade Union Unity League (Comite de Unidad Sindical Clasista), Mar- cos Kanner, Francisco Monaco, and Luna. Others arrested include Oscar Creydt, Secretary of the Latin- American Committee Against Im- perialist War; two leaders of the Latin-American Trade Union Con- federation, Oscar Maguin and ® Argentine Gov’tin Terror Drive Against Red Unions in the railway union; Audano, a Communist representative from Ro- sario, and Peano, one of the best- known leaders of the Argentine working class. This brutal campaign of terror is especially aimed at the Communist Party, as the leader of the strug- gles of all militant organizations in Argentine. In addition to the ar- rest of leading Communists, the Communist Party was stricken from the lists at the recent elections. This sudden drive, which is clearly aimed to break up the whole revo- lutionary movement in- Argentina, and which is unprecendented in its ferocity since the infamous Uriburu dictatorship, is carried out with the active assistance of all the bour- geois parties, including the Socialist Party, which is collaborating effec- tively with the brutal Justo dicta- torship. It comes at a period of sharpen- Every pro- ing crisis in Argentine. Workers’ Organizations Aid Fund for 8th C.P. Convention NEW YORK.—In response to for the Convention, tion program. zations of the Lithuanian workers The first individual donation bes present. The Obrana Readers Club of of the Convention. Help carry it through! Florindo Moretti, the latter the leader of the trade uniom opposition Central Committee, P. ©. Box 87, the appeal of the Central Com- mittee to the language organizations, the Central Committee of the Lithuanian Workers Literary Society of America has donated $10.00 “In the name of five thousand members and two hundred and fifty branches, we wholeheartedly greet the Zighth Convention of the Communist Party,” the organization stated. Party is the only party which consistently fights the Roosevelt starva- It leads the working masses in the struggle against war and fascism and for the defense of the foreign born. We appeal to all our members and branches as well as to all other mass organi- “The Communist to close ranks under the Leninist leadership of the Communist Party!” from a local branch was received yesterday from the Bridgewater, Connecticut branch of the Lithuanian Workers Literary Society of America. Branch treasury, and took up a collection of $3.26 among the mem- They donated $2 from their New York sent a donation of $5 to the Central Committee yesterday, to help carry through the work Branches of fraternal and language organizations throughout the country are urged to follow the example of these workers. The tech- nical needs of a convention of 600 delegates from all over the country, lasting from April 2nd to 8th, are very great. convention of the Communist Party will make working-class histroy. Send your donation today to Farl Browder, In this period the Sta. D, N. Y. €. Contreras, Chairman of Anti-War Congress, Seized in “‘Plot” gram and every law sanctioned by the Justo regime aimed at strength- ening its position has resulted in more hunger, more misery, more oppression, more terror for the masses of workers and peasants. Growing Struggles The workers and peasants are be- coming progressively more radical- ized, and are seeking the road of struggle. The high political level which this struggle has attained is shown by the strike in August, 1933, against the landing of 100 German Nazis at Buenos Aires, and_the widespread repudiation of the Pan- American Conference at Monte- video under the leadership of Cor- dell Hull, U. 8. Secretary of State. The anti-war movement has made great strides since the Monte- video Congress Against War, and has extended its influence particu- larly in Paraguay and Bolivia, hav- ing already resulted in many in- stances of rebellion by groups of workers and peasants. Reformists Attached to Gov't It is in this situation that the Justo government has launched its brutal persecution of all anti-war, anti-fascist, and other class-struggle organizations. This drive is taking place precisely at the moment when the reformist National Confedera- tion of Labor is being formally turned into an official organization attached to the Justo government. One of the Buenos Aires news- papers quotes a militant railway worker who declared that the suc- cesses of the “Special Section Against Communism” were realized through the treason of the reform- ist chiefs of the Railway Workers’ Union, who called the secret police in to break up opposition in the ad | © orkers Join Communist Party Despite Leaders’ Gag, Workers Tell of Betrayal VIENNA, March 7 (By Mail). — Social Democratic workers and Republican Guards continue to come over to the Communist Party of Austria. Groups of Republican Guards in Vienna Doebling and Vienna Alsergrund, numbering sey- eral hundred men, have joined in a body. Large groups of the dis- banded Social Democratic youth organizations and cultural associa- tions, the “nature lovers,” etc., are also joining the Communist Party with their functionaries, bringing with them their funds and equip- ment. * 28 @ Schutzbund Refugees Bitter PRAGUE, March 6 (By Mail).— The Social Democratic leaders in Austria have prohibited the Social Democratic refugees, especially the Republican Guards, to give anyone any information about the struggle without the permission of the lead- ers. This prohibition is, however, entirely disregarded by the Repub- lican Guards, especially when speaking to Communists. In the course of a conversation with a group of these Republican Guards, they spoke of the causes of the defeat of their uprising. With the utmost bitterness they pointed out the treacherous role played by their leaders. “The leaders told us at one time,” declared a Republican Guard, “that the situation was un- favorable for our struggle, and only Hitler would benefit by it. But when they saw that they could re- strain us no longer, then they said that the situation was favorable, but they did their utmost to prevent the fight. “When the news arrived about the conflict in Linz, we were ready to begin fighting at once. We must say that our subordinate leaders behaved well. But the head of our Republican Guard, Koelbel, told us as late as Monday that nothing was going to come out of the fighting, that we should go home and re- spond to the roll-call again on Tuesday. We came on Tuesday, and, without waiting for the signal of the commander-in-chief, we oc- cupied the workers’ buildings, “All Communists Now” “Among us there were not only Republican Guards, but Commu- nists and unorganized workers—in a word, all who had been able to obtain arms. It was a mistake on our part that we did not occupy the bridges, public government buildings, post offices, etc., and that we remained on the defensive. If we had only had an organization and communication with the other fighting divisions, we would have been able to hold out longer and to ward off the soldiers. But we had no plan of attack or fight. The Social Democratic leaders, such as Renner and Bauer, are regarded by us as traitors, and we are ready to hans the logical conclusion from » When this Republican Guard was asked whéther there are Commu- nists among the Guard, he replied: “Now we are all Communists!” Women Delegates Go to Austria to Distribute Relief LL.D. Urges Intensified Collection, Rushing of Funds Raised Special to the Daily Worker PARIS, March 22—A delegation of women, organized by the Inter- national Red Aid, parent body of the International Labor Defense, has left for Austria, to take charge of the distribution of relief funds raised through the I. R. A. through- out the world for the victims of the Dollfuss-Fascist terror, and their families. The International Red Aid yes- terday cabled to all its sections throughout the world, urging that the collection of relief and defense funds for the Austrian vietims be hastened, and that every penny collected be cabled to Paris imme- diately, ie eek NEW YORK.—Responding to an urgent cable from the International Red Aid, the International Labor Defense yesterday called on all its branches, and on all organizations to rush funds collected for the Austrian victims, to be cabled to Europe. Funds should be sent to the I. L. D. at 799 Broadway, New York, The New York district of the J. L. D. has announced that it has countered the $600 quota set it by | the national body by undertaking to raise $1,000. aod Denver Dis- trict of the I. L. D. has notified the Bren cffice that instead of its quota, it has undertaken raise $60. sg I.L.D. Plans Tag Day for Victims of Fascism NEW YORK.—The New York District of the International La- bor Defense is arranging a Tag Day for the victims of Austrian fascism on March 31 and April 1. All mass and fraternal organi- zations should call at the District office, 870 Broadway, and secure boxes for their organizations. “Now We're All 'f Communists,” |/ ‘Say Refugees j H ; |