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Page Four bb (Continued from Page 1) ton Rd., Bronx; Grand St. Exten- sion, Williamsburg; Hinsdale and Sutter Aves., Brownsville; Utica Ave. and Eastern Pkwy., Brooklyn. with a mass noon-dey demonstra- tion at Boro Hall, Brooklyn. Eggaling to Speak Tuesday Night On the night of July 2, Eggaling, the German seaman who was snatched from certain death while about to be returned to Hitler Ger- many, will speak at a Free Thael- mann meeting of marine workers at 140 Bread St. Thousands of leaf- lets are being distributed among the demonstration called by the Com-| seamen and longshoremen along| eS a : the waterfront in preparation tor | SEN Party and the Free Thael-| this meeting. The petition campaign for one million signatures for the freedom of Ernst Thaelmann is beginning to make headway. One worker de- cided to devote one whole day to the campaign and the results of his one-day efforts were 100 names on the petition lists and $6 in cash for the liberation of Ernst Thaelmann and all political prisoners in Nazi Germany. This good example should be followed by all organiza- tions and the million signatures will be obtained in a very short time. The Anti-Nazi Federation yester- y -'day urged all organizations to con- & tinue the mass picket line at the Nazi Consulate, 17 Battery Pl., and to bring their own placards. German Refugee to Speak at Thaelmann Conference Today NEW YORK.—Hans Baer, refu- igee from the Hitler terror, will be ithe principal speaker at the Free 'Thaelmann Conference arranged by the Associated Workers Clubs, for this afternoon, June 30, at 2:30 bers of clubs are invited. 'Thaelmann-Scottsboro Meet in Bklyn. Monday BROOKLYN. — Answering the jonstrous decision of the Alabama lupreme Court upholding the lynch cg Red Builders To Hold Open Air Meeting in Sheridan Sq. Tonight NEW YORK.—The New York Red Builders will hold a-large open air meeting on the Daily Worker and the role of the Red Builders at Sheridan Square, Greenwich Village, Saturday night at 9 P. M. Neighborhood workers, professionals and stu- ents are urged to attend. One of the speakers will be Tom Lewis, widely-known soap- ooxer and former friend of Bill Haywood. Unemployed and pam-time workazs, attend this meeting. See how Red Builders can earn expenses selling the Daily Worker. Join the ranks of she Red Builders. War and Fascism and the basis for Congress). FASCISM, Adopted at U. S. Congr War, New York City, Sept. 29-Oct. APPEAL TO THE WORKING WOMEN OF AMERICA: TO ALL VICTIMS OF WAR: The black cloud of imperialist war hangs over the world. The peoples must arouse themselves and take immediate action against the wars ..how going on in the Far East and Latin Amer- ea, against intervention in Cuba, After ten years of futility, the armament Conference is meeting ments which are preparing, more The Four Power Pact is already nothing but a new maneuve: for the coming war between the imper: of Fascism in Europe and especia. Japanese militarism, have brought perialist antagonisms to the breakin; Naval race in history is now on means and that they will resort to iro perialist war in an attempt to divert the atten- o'clock, at 11 W. 18th St. All mem-| (EDITOR'S NOTE: We print herewith the | manifesto adopted by the Congress Against War in 1933. This manifesto is the basis for | the activity of the American League Against | (MANIFESTO AND PROGRAM OF THE AMERICAN LEAGUE AGAINST WAR AND increasing preparations for war, and against the growing danger of a new world war. once more the grim comedy of promises, to Screen the actions of the imperialist govern- | than ever before in history, for a new war. and an attempt to establish a united imperiai- dst front against the Soviet, Union. Many, and the sharpened aggressive Policy of “Free Thaelmann” Meets Mond. verdicts against the Scottsboro boys. the Angelo Herndon Branch of the League of Struggle for Negro F is organizing an open-air mee! at Glenmore and Watkins St next Monday night. The meet i demand the freedom of the boro boys, Angelo Herndon and Ernst Thaelmann. Cleveland Workers to | March on Nazi Consulate Monday, July 2 | (Special to the Daily CLEVELAND, O., June Worker) 20.—A | mann Committee will take place b fore the German Consulate her Ontario and Prospeaqt, at 12 o'clock noon, Monday, July 2—the da | when Hitler’s bogus “People’s Cour | is to begin operations. Street corner meetings and an auto parade this Saturday will help | prepare the demonstration. Thou- sands of leaflets are being dis- tributed. . . . |Chicago Workers to Mass on Nazi Consulate July 7; Campaign Gains (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, June 29.— Climiaxing an intensive drive to force the free- dom of Thaelmann, Chicago work- ers will mass Saturday, July 7, in front of the German Consulate in a mighty protest demonstration. The International Labor Defense, | old lady whe called conductors and} worker entombed in the Nazi dun- the Communist Party, the Chicago Committee to Aid Victims of Ger- ;man Fascism and the American | League Against War and Fascism pee undertaken the job of rallying | thousands of anti-fascists for the | protest. | The demonstration will take place | promptly at noon in front of the Consulate, McGraw-Hill Building, 520 N. Michigan Ave. Actions to | force the police department to grant @ permit for the demonstration have been started. Neighborhood Meets Sat. and Sun. This week-end a number of neighborhood meetings and demon- | strations will be held, all of which | will serve to recruit workers for the | central demonstration next week. The campaign of delegations, pick- eting and sending of resolutions is being speeded up. The Chicago Committee is pub- | lishing a special Thaelmann edition | of a newspaper this week-end. Bun- | dles can be obtained at 208 N. Wells, | Room 310-4, | Demonstration in | New Haven, Conn. | NEW HAVEN, Conn., June 29.— | Climaxing a series of neighborhood meetings throughout this city huge Free Thaelmann demons tion was held on the Central Green here last Saturday. Delegations Flood Nazi Consulate in Philade!phia (Special to the Daily Worker) PHILADELPHIA, June 29.—Heinz » Manifesto of the F irst % a % the present to the increasing war ess Against | 1, 1933) | another, and exploits MEN AND | to prevent them from against the nent war danger is on! | the fundamental crisis World Dis- to perform intensively | materials, exposed as position in ialist rivals, preparations The rise ly in Ger- | disarmament. Serious all the im- i point and icy and opposing all | tion of the masses from their misery and as | the only capitalist way out of the crisis. Fascism Breeds War The rapid rise of Fascism is closely related | forced labor, militarization, lower standards of | living, and the accentuation of national hatreds | and chauvinist incitements as instruments for the “moral” preparation for war. people of one country against the people of national groups within each country in order to solve their common problems, | The War System The war danger arises inevitably out of the | very nature of monopolistic capitalism — the ownership of the means of production by a small capitalist class and the complete domi- | nation of government by this class. The immi- which continues its existence only at the cost of intensification of exploitation and oppression of the masses at home and in the colonies, and of struggle among the imperialist powers for a redivision of markets and sources of raw Only in the Soviet Union has this basic cause | of war been removed. volves rallying all forces around this Peace pol- destroy the Soviet Union. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY. ay to Hit Nazi Court! |; | i | Delegation sent by Barre, Vt., | International Labor Defense to help picket Boston Nazi Consulate to demand the freedom of Ernst Thaelmann, leader. German Communist r, member of the Young Com- was arrested sticking ‘Free Thaelmar ers on ca }on the Market Street “El.” Passen- }gers were sympathetic, except an ye 20 | complained. | Delegations - from the United Ukranian organizations, Working | Women’s League, and Ukranian Sports Club called at the Nazi Consulate today.and left resolutions | condemning Hitler's murder regime |and demanding the freedom of | Thaelmann, and all anti fascist | fighters. The Needle Trades Workers In- | gation, | The Marine Workers Industrial |Union, Butchers Union, Office Workers Union, have all adopted | protest resolutions and are selling | “Free Thaelmann” post cards and pamphlets. Rank and file workers jin the Tazi Drivers Union, Painters, |etc., have passed protest resolutions. Workers in the Samson Polay Good- man Dress Shop are carrying on a vigorous campaign in the shop. |. A mass trial of fascism will be |held Friday night, July 6, at the Garrick Theatre, Broad and Chest- jnut, with Lord Beaver and Kurt Rosenfeld, as the main speakers. An automobile parade will travel through the city on July 7, while a house to house canvas for signa- | tures to the “Free Thaelmann” peti- |tions will be conducted July 7 and 8, | Frank Heliman will speak on fas- | cism over WPEN Tuesday 0 F }and Harry M. Wicks on Thuvsd: jat the same hour, . Paperhangers Local | Demands “Free Thae’ | PHILADELPHIA, June ‘Pa- danger. scism means | to concent It sets the | the internal: racial and | demonstra’ | uniting in joint action the upper, ly another expression of of the capitalist system, of peace. as in the There. are no classes We can struggle against war in- | ing and attempts to weaken or whether t | dustrial Union sent a similar dele- | m,,| sion becomes particularly present moment, especially wher. it is put forth greatly increased the danger of a war of inter- Vention against the Soviet Union. The greatést United States, England and Japan. The British- American antagonism is being fought out in | Latin-America already by open war—the so- called local wars being in reality struggles be- tween these imperialist powers. The presence | of thirty American warships in Cuban waters | is itself an act of war against the Cuban revo- | lution. The collapse of the World Economic Conference revealed only too clearly that the great powers are unable and unwilling to solve the basic international problems by peaceful The United States Prepares for War The government of the United States in spite of peaceful professions is more aggressively than ever following policies whose only logical | result is war. The whole program of the Roose- velt administration is permeated by prepared- ness for war, expressed in the extraordinary | military and naval budget, mobilization of in- dustry and man power, naval concentration in the Pacific Ocean, intervention in Cuba, the continued maintenance of armed forces in China, the loans to Chiang Kai-shek, the ini- tiation of currency and tariff wars—all of which give the lie to the peaceful declarations of the United States government. Under the guise of public works, the N.R.A. among the around it sections 0! which are countries a new im- vidually or through the League cf Na’ The Congress declares that the basic force in the imperialist countries for struggle against the war danger is the working class, organizing Ww | perhanger’s Local No. 306 of the| United Brotherhood of Painters,| Paperhangers and Decorators of! America passed resolutions de- manding the -freedom of Ernst Thaelmann, Hamburg longshoreman | and heroic leader of the German Communist Party. Copies were sent to the local Nazi Consulate and | the Nazi Ambassador Hans Luther in Washington, D. C . Cables Protest to Chief Nazi Prosecutor NEW YORK.—Answering decep- tive promises of the chief Nazi pros- ecutor Werner, reported in dispatch- es from Berlin, that Ernst Thael- mann would not be executed but would likely be sentenced to ten years in prison, the National Com- mittee to Aid the Victims of Ger- man Fascism, 870 Broadway, New York City, today issued a ringing call to all workers and sympathetic | organizations to intensify their ef- forts to save Thaelmann, “The statements made by the| Nazi chief attorney show the effect! of the mass pressure already ring- ing around the world and clam- oring for the release of the innocent, tortured anti-fascist fighters, “Al | fredWagenknect, National Secreta: of the Committee declared: “It also intended to lull the mass r | sentment, to silence the protests, to make the aroused, indignant anti- |fascists the world over feel that | Thaelmann is safe. This is a deli- | berate smoke screen. Not a single |geons is safe with his life. Thou-| |sands have been tortured, shot,| |murdered, mailed, and the same |fate awaits Thaelmann and all other political prisoners unless the mass fight is developed sufficiently to force their release. | “In the promises of the chief at-| |torney of the Nazi hangmen, we | must sound the note of alarm, We! call upon all organizations to flood | the Nazi attorney chief with cable- | grams along the lines of the follow- ing cable sent to him in the name of our committee today: “Attorney-General Werner) Reichsgericht; Leipzig, Germany. “Regardless your promises touay’s press hold you responsible safe re- jlease Thaelmann and others. De- |mand abolish Veclksgericht, similar | to lynch justice against American | | Negroes, | (Signed) | ALFRED WAGENKNECHT, | National Committee to Aid Victims | | of German Fascism.” | | Ninn eee 2% | | Court Again Postpones | Decision on Anti-Nazi | Consul as Workers Protes. | NEW YORK.—Decision on the case of eight young workers arrested for picketing the Nazi Consulate, 17 Battery Place, was again postponed |yesterday by Magistrate. Stern as |indignant workers packed the} | Magistrates court on Center Street. | | The Magisirate set July 11, at 1 }p.m., for decision. a “It’s his blood pressure, Sir Law figures in the Daily Worker every almost dies.” Hoff, suzerain in the art world, nderotto.. He reads the circulation day and whenever it goes up he |, contributes the sketch as his bit towards the campaign for 20,000 new readers of the Daily Worker. Second Congress Against War, Fascism (Continued from Page 1) or major fraction thereof. Na- tional, state, county and city bodies shall each be entitled to two delegates. The program adopted by the First Congress will be subject to such amendments and additions as the | Second Congress shall deen: neces- | sary in the light of the year’s ex- | perience. | The National Committee will in- | vite outstanding international lead- | | ers of the struggle against war and) fascism in other countries to attend. An Arrangements Committee will be set up to act in consultation with the National Committee in plan- | ning the program of Congress activ- ities, to gain the broadest possible participation. | We call upon all supporting or-| ganizations and local committees to} begin systematic and_ energetic! work, to secure the building of more and stronger local committees, so| that the Congress will comprise at! least 5,000 delegates representing | every section of the country and| every element joining in our jena gle, Forward to the defeat of the war makers and fascists in America! NATIONAL COMMITTEE American League Against War and Fascism. Dr. Harry F. Ward, Chairman, Robert Morss Lovett, Vice-Chair- man, Lincoln Steffens, Vice- Chairman, Earl Browder, Vice- Chairman, Anna N. Davis, Treas- urer, Israel Amter, Roger Baldwin, Max Bedacht, Ella Reeve Bloor, Winifred L. Chappell, George A. Coe, Barnett Cooper, Professor George S. Counts, Malcolm Cow- ley, H. W. L. Dana, Dorothy Detzer, Margaret Forsyth, Maur- ice Gates, Rabbi Benjamin Gold- stein, Annie E. Gray, Gilbert Green, A. A. Heller, Donald Hen- derson, Francis A. Henson, Harold Hickerson, Roy Hudson, Langston Hughes, Rabbi Edward L. Israel, James Lerner, E. C. Lindeman, Rev. R. Lester Mondale, William L. Patterson, Rev. A. Clayton Powell, Jr., Henry Shepard, Wil- liam Spofford, Maxwell S. Stew- art, Alfred Wagenknecht, Profes- sor Colston E. Warne, Louis Wein- stock, Ella Winter, Charles Zim- merman, By HELEN KAY HERE were two heroes in the } lynch courts of Georgia, chal- | lenging the rights of the Southern |ruling class to continue their system of brutal terrorization and oppression. One was the defendant Angelo Herndon, the other his defense attorney, Ben Davis, Jr., who was greeted in New York at a christen- ing baanquet by a spirited gather ing of some four hundred Negro and white workers, to fill his new post as editor of the Negro Liber- ator. The one time Harvard football player tackled the problems be- fore him and pledged himself to put the same stuff that he showed in the lily white courts of Georgia into the fighting NEGRO LIBER- ATOR, a damning indictment of the system that keeps his people and all the working masses in op- pression, He spoke of share-cropping, the infamous system where the im- poverished Negro and white ten- ant farmers do all the “cropping and the wihte laondlords get all the shares.” Davis, Jr., the undivided support of the Communist Pa in helping to build the Negro Liberator. “The Struggle for Negro liberation is not new,” declared Earl Browder, ‘it has been going on for generations, But the Communist Party has been able to introduce something new into this struggle. There is a new un- dertsanding of how this liberation is to be achieved, established by the theories of Marx and Lenin, and that is unity and solidarity on a common program of struggle with the revolutionary working class. The released from oppression more than them leap forward in their histori- cal development directly into a so- cialist society.” Journalists Speak Speaker on speaker pointed out the bravery and courage of Ben Davis, Jr., to hurl into the very teeth of the lynchers the revolution- ary program of the Communist tives of the bourgeois Negro press were forced to Iend their voices in greeting the fighting new editor of the Negro Liberator. Mr, B. Whit- ney of the New York Age, and the Norfolk Journal and Guide evinced pride and support of the tremendous courage of Ben Davis in fighting on behalf of the Negroes in the South. Mr. Post of the Amsterdam News went further, and gave greetings to the assembled on the need of a pa- per such as the Negro Liberator. | For proof he stated, “You might not guess that by what we have written but what we have not written.” ; Other speakers were Paul Peters, | George Sklar, authors of Stevedore, | Agnes Smedley, author of “Chinese Destinies”, Mr. Lois of the Spirit. of |the new business manager of the Negro Liberator, Harry Gannes of the Daily Worker Staff, greetings Earl Browder, general secretary of | the Communist Party assured Ben} same way that the Soviet Union! 100 national minorities and made | Party in the south. Eevn represen-| | Service Federation, Merril C. Work,| \Big Ben, Jr., Tackles New Job As Editor of Negro Liberator jfrom William L. Patterson, too iq jto appear, and James Ford, Secree |tary of the Communist Party of | Harlem, | A rousing protest was sent by the |assemblage to the German Consul jand to Hitler. For the immediat and unconditional release of Erns |Thaelmann. Such talent as repre. sentatives from the cast of Sleve: |dore, from the Hall Johnson Choir and the new National Negro Thea- ter entertained with song. The I, W. O. Symphony Orchestra and the Red Dance Group performed, Woolen Strike ‘Called Off B Demands for . Wages, Recognition Referred to Roosevelt Board WASHINGTON, D.C., June 29.—- Officials of the United Textile Workers Union yesterday called off the strike of 75,000 woolen and | worsted workers, which was sched- uled to begin Monday, July 2, and agreed to refer all wage and other questions to the Industrial Rela- | tions Board which is being set up | for the textile industry. | The United Textile officials fol- lowed the same procedure they had followed in the cotton textile industry, calling a strike, but mak- | ing no preparations for it, and at the last minute betraying the union members by dropping all demands |and referring everything to “in- | vestigation” of a Roosevelt board. | The local unions in the woolen |and worsted divisions had voted . | almost unanimously to strike for their demands. The agreement of | the U. T. W. officials with the N, |R. A. and the employers, includes | the appointment of Francis Gor- man, vice-president of the U, T. W., to the Industrial “Relations Board. Arthur Besse, representing the employers, stated, “Union officials exhibited a most co-operative atti- tude throughout the conference.” Gorman has now called a meet ing of the local unions for Sun- day, at 2 p.m. in Wool Sorter’s Hall at Providence, Rhode Island. The U. T. W. officials issued a statement in Washington that “we. are satisfied that at last the ques- tions of machine loads, hours and | wages will be worked out on a sat- | isfactory basis, ... We have rec= | ommended to our locals that the | strike should be withheld.” |The National Textile Workers | Union calls on all woolen and | worsted locals to reject the agree- | ment of Gorman and to prepare | strike for their economic demands | by setting up united front action committees in all mills. U.S. Congress Against War has diverted immense funds from the care of Starving millions to the building of a vastly larger navy and to mechanization of the army. The widespread unemployment has been utilized rate young men in so-called reforest- ation camps, which the War Department is using for trial military mobilizations. tary training of youth in the, schools and col- leges is being further developed. more, national holidays and specially prepared ‘The mili- More and tions are being used to glorify the armed forces and to stimulate the war spirit among the masses. working overtime | basic war materia}s for shipment to the warring countries in South America and the Far East. A centralized war control of industry, along | the lines of the War Industries Board of 1917, is being established. As in 1917, it is drawing Mundreds of factories are to produce munitions and leadership of many trade unions into active collaboration in the war machine. Smoke Screens for War This Congress Against War warns the masses against reliance upon the League of Nations and the Kellogg Pacts as effective instruments The Congress declares that this illu- dangerous at the recent Congress of the Labor and Socialist International and the International or groups which can benefit from war or war | Federation of Trade Unions as a method of Therefore the Soviet Union pur- sues a positive and vigorous peace policy and alone among the governments proposes total combatting the war danger. For Mass Resistance effectively combat war only by arous- organizing the masses within each country for active struggle against the war policies of their own imperialist governments, hese governments are working indi- tions. in close alliance all of the exploited f the population, working farmers, intellectuals, the oppressed Negro people and all toiling masses and all organizations and groups generally oppesed to war on any basis. The anti-war movement allies itself with the masses in the colonial and semi-col ial against imperialist domination, and gives full support to their immediate and un- conditional independence. PROGRAM The Congress pledges itself to do all in its | Phones: Chickering 4947-Longacre 16039 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE Fan Ray Cafeteria 6 W. 29th St.. New York Garment Section Workers : Patronize Phone: TOmpkins Squ: John’s Restauran SPECIALTY—ITALIAN. DISHES | A place with satmosphere where all 302 E. 12th St. 5 -- WORKERS WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Tasty Chinese and American Dishes PURE FOOD — POPULAR PRICES 848 Broadway tet. 13th @ 14h st. radicals meet | New York Comrades Patronize JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) ae iets | 98 Second Ave, WHERE Our Comrades E Pee RAPOPORT'S DAIRY and VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT N. Y. City N. Y. U. Comrades Patronize VIOLET CAFETERIA 28-30 WAVERLY PLACE New York City Russian and Oriental Kitchen Comradely Atmosphere VILLAGE BAR 221 SECOND AVENUE near 14th Street, New York City power to effect a nation-wide agitation and 10. To for organization against war preparations and war. attempts to weaken the Soviet Union, To this end we join together in carrying out | whether these take the form of misrepre- the following immediate odjectives — sentation and false propaganda, diplo- 1. To work towards the stopping of the matic maneuvering or intervention by manufacture and transport of munitions imperialist governments, and all other materials essential to the 6. To oppose all developments leading to labor, conduct of war, through mass demonstra- Fascism in this country and abroad, and organi tions, picketing and strikes. : especially in Germany; to oppose the 2. To expose everywhere the extensive prep- increasingly widespread use cf the armed . arations for war being carried on under forces against the workers, farmers and thousands the guise of aiding National Recovery. the special terrorizing and s:ippression of 3. To demand the transfer of all war funds Negroes in their attempts to maintain a | bear the b to relief of the unemployed and the re- decent standard of living; to oppose the placement of all such devices as the at growing encroachments ‘tipon. the civil ian Conservation Camps, by a federal ? ‘ a sae system of social insurance paid for by the eee eae gal ag ee aes of carryin: government and employers. government, 4. To oppose the policies of Amevican Im- " perialism in the Far East, in Latin Amer- 7. To win the armed forces to the support ica, especially now in Cuba, and through- of this program, out the worid; io support the struggles 8. To enlist for our program the women in™ | interferes of all colonial reoples against the im- industry and in the home; and to enlist perialist policies of exploitation and armed the youth, especially those who, by the | class, the suppression, crisis, have been deprived of training in | oppressed 5. To support the peace policies of the the industries and are therefore more Soviet Union, for total and universal dis- susceptible to fascist and war propaganda. armament, which today with the support of 9, To give effective international support to | and youth, masses in all countries constitute the all workers and anti-war fighters against clearest and most effective opposition to their own imperialist governments. war throughout the world; to oppose all and Fascism rm committees of action against war and fascism in every important center and industry, particularly in the basic war industries; to secure the support for this Program of all organizations seeking t» prevent war, paying special attention \ » veteran, unemployed and farmer izations, By virtue of the mandate granted by the of delegates from all sections of this country and groups of the population which urden of imperiglist war who, though they differ in political opinions, trade union affiliations, religious beliefs, and the methods ig on the struggle against war, are bound together by their desire for peace, and on the strength of its unshakable conviction that the struggle against imperialist war is use- ful only to the extent to which it effectively with and check-mates imperialist war plans, this Congress calls upon the working ruined and exploited farmers, the Negro people, the sections of the middle class bankrupted by the crisis, the groups of intellectuals of all occupations, men, women. together, to organize their invincible force in disciplined battalions fot the decisive struggle to defeat imperialist war, SPECIAL FOR MEN Here’s a sizzler to keep you cool over the 4th. 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(A gold rouble contains 0.774234 grams of pure gold.) Principal and interest pay- ments are based upon this fixed quantity of gold, payable in American currency at the prevailing rate of exchange. SAFETY Throughout the sixteen years of ils exisi- ence the U.S.S.R. has unfailingly met all its financial obligations. MARKET The State Bank of the U.S. S. R. will repur- chase these bonds on demand of the holderat any time affer one year from date of purchase, at par and accrued interest. Soviet Socialist Republics 7 GOLD % BONDS Interest Payable “Circular D-17 fully describing these Oudeene Circular D-17 fully deseribing bonds will be sent on request.” SOVIET AMERICA SECURITIES CORP. 30 Broad Street New York ‘Tel. HAnover 2-592 at The Chase National Bank of New York