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Pate Siz DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JULY 3, 1934 % Daily,AWorker Gaara cneAe SONMIUTEST PARTY ESA (FLCTION OF COMMUNIST MeTEARAROMASD “Ameriea’s Only Working Class Daily Newspaper” FOUNDED 1924 PUBLISHED DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAY, BY THE COMPRODAILY PUBLISHING CO., ING., 5¢ EB. 13th Street, New York, N. ¥. Telephone: ALgonquin 4-795 4. Cable Address: “Daiwork,” New York, N. ¥. ton Bureau: Room 94, Wationsl Wth and F St., Washington, D. C. jt Bureau: 101 South Wells Telephone: Dearborn 3931. Subscription Rates: By Mail: (except Manhattan ond 6 months, $8.50; 3 months, $2.00 Manhattan, Bronx, Foreign and Cs 6 months, $5.00; 3 months, $3.00. By Carrier: Weekly, 16 ts; monthly, Press Building, St., Room 706, Cheago, IM 76 cents. TUESDAY, JULY 3, Twenty Years After WENTY years ago in the Serbian town of Sarajevo was fired the shot that killed the aristocratic parasite Prince Ferdinand, and provided the spark that set off the European powder barrel. It was not, of course, the miserable carcass of this Batkan playboy for which 10,000,000 working class sons gave their lives in the last world slaughter. ‘The snuffing out of the life of this man only set off the explosions of imperialist commercial rivalries which had been accumulating since the turn of the century, when German imperialism be- gan to present a serious threat to the lordly im- Perialism of Great Britain. “Hf you want to know what a war was about, look at the peace treaty,” said a shrewd historic observer. The Versailles Treaty tells us what the World ‘War was about. This infamous treaty provided for & re-distribution of the rieh colonial empires of Africa and the Far East, it stripped German im- Perialism of its coal and iron mines and turned them over to French imperialism. The Versailles Treaty fastened a yoke of imperialist oppression on every small nationality in Europe. * * * World War was, as Lenin drove home with the hammer blows of Marxist logic, an impe- rialist war among a group of slave-drivers for the redistribution of the world’s markets. History knows no more grotesque and foul be- trayal than the way the imperialists and their so- cial-chauvinist lackeys tricked the masses into slaughter with the frauds of “defense of the father- Jand,” and “fight for democracy.” The sections of the Socialist Second Interna- tional, rotten with the opportunism of decades of peaceful parliamentary class collaboration, betrayed every word of its internationalist pledges, became the prostitute purveyors of the worst jingoist poison, each Socialist Party becoming the lackey of its own imperialism. It was only the Bolsheviks, led by Lenin, who raised high the banner of internationalism and proletarian revolution. It was they alone who put into practice the solemn resolutions of the Social- ist Stuttgart and Basle Congresses calling for all Socialist Parties to strike revolutionary blows at their own governments in time of imperialist war. It was they alone who successfully made a break in the chain of world imperialism. The last World War ushered in the epoch of ‘wars and revolutions, the great historie epoch which Will see the steady victorious advance of Socialist revolution. The present world crisis of capitalism brings us face to face with the second great period of wars and revolutions. The world revolutionary crisis grows. The spectre of Communism haunts the ruling classes of the world. Today, the social-chauvinists have become so- cial-fascists. Today, even more than in 1914, the leaders of the Socialist Parties of the world stand ready to do service to their own imperialist masters when the next imperialist slaughter breaks out. To- day they stand ready to lead to the assault on the stronghold of Socialism, the Soviet Union, al- Teady sounding the advance cry to intervention in their cunning attack on “dictatorship,” all dicta- torships, including the proletarian dictatorship. Today, the struggle against war and fascism takes on new meaning, it is involved in the daily defense of the every-day interests of the masses, in the fight for bread. The fight against the militarism of the Roose- velt government (which prepares to unleash its im- perialist aggression), for the stopping of munition shipments, for transport strikes, must go forward with the greatest energy. The program of the great Congress Against War and Fascism must be put into life, despite afl the broken pledges of the Socialist Party leaders who signed its Manifesto. The Second U. S. Congress Against War and Fas- ¢cism in Chicago, Sept. 28, 29 and 30, must be a mighty rallying point of anti-war forces. And always, the purpose must be to drive the anti-war struggle to open civil war for the over- throw of the imperialist government altogether, for the setting up of Soviet Power. For internationalism, for defense of the Soviet Union and Soviet China, for the transformation of imperialist war into civil war, for the most resolute struggle against war and fascism. The NAACP Conference HE 25th Annual Conference of the Na- tional Association for the Advancement of Colored People, just concluded in Okla- homa City, Okla., occurred on the baeck- ground of growing fascist attacks upon the | whole toiling population, directed with sav- | age vehemence afainst the Negro masses in particular. The Conference leaders advanced the usual re- formist panaceas dressed up in a more cunning demagogy: faith in the discredited capitalist courts (under the heading of “Law Enforcement”) and | the pretense that the lynchers and their courts can be entrusted with the task of wiping out lynch- ing, without pressure from the anti-lynching masses. Mary White Ovington, of the Walter White-Spin- garn ruling clique, advocated closer cooperation with the “liberal” section of the Southern ruling class lynehers, represented in the Inter-Racial Com- missions, during the discussion on “The Changing Front.” The fruits of that cooperation are already evident in the base betrayal of George Crawford, Virginia Negro, by the N.A.A.C.P. leaders and their “defense” attorneys who, turned prosecutor, declared Crawford “guilty” and advocated life imprisonment for this innocent, framed-up Negro worker. The traitorous nature of that co-operation is also to be seen in the persistent attempts of the N.A.A.C.P. to disrupt the mass defense for the nine innocent Scottsboro boys, in the weasel resolution adopted by the con- vention, mildly protesting the Scottsboro frame-up | but ignoring the appeal of the Scottsboro Mother, | Ada Wright, for a united front struggle to save | the boys. On the attempt of the Georgia ruling class to murder heroic Angelo Herndon on the chain gang, and to burn six other Negro and white organizers in the electric chair, the conference adopted a traitorous policy of silent acquiescence. The rank and file of the organization, whose | militant support of the Scottsboro fight, forced the top leadership to reverse its policy of denying the floor to the Scottsboro Mothers, and enabled Mrs. | Wright to speak at the Conference, are faced with the task of organizing and sharpening the fight against the agents of imperialism who now domi- nate the organization. Repudiate the united front from on top with the imperialist enemy! Build the united front from below with the revolutionary white and Negro workers, with all elements sincerely opposed | to lynching and willing to carry on a relentless fight for full, unconditional equality for the Negro people, and for the immediate, unconditional and | Safe release of Angelo Herndon and the Scotts- | boro boys! | “vem mente |Support the Hatters Strike IHE strike of the New York hatters, members of Local 7 of the United Hat- ters of North America, which is now en- tering its fifth week, is 100 per cent solid, with every organized hat shot in the city out. Being unable to get one cent of strike relief from the national office of the union headed by Michael Green, the hatters’ strike committee has issued a call to all labor unions in the city to | send delegates to a conference to be held Thurs- day evening in Beethoven Hall where a united strike relief committee will be set up. All A. F. of L. locals, all unions of the T. U. U. L. and independent unions have been invited to par- ticipate in this conference and donate relief to the strikers. ‘The success of the strike depends to a very great extent on the success of the conference. All trade union members should understand this. Therefore all locals, all trade union groups should at once elect delegates or see to it that delegates are appointed for the conference and that donations for the strike be decided upon. The hatters with the labor movement united behind them can defeat the manufacturers. Unite behind the hatters and help them win the strike! Big Soviet IndustryIs Up 28 P.C. — Over 1933. |First 6 Months Output | Is Greater Than for | Entire Year 1930 | (Special to the Daily Worker) | MOSCOW, June 2 (By Radio).—/} | An increase of 26 per cent in pro- | duction of heavy industry of the| Soviet Union is reported for the first half of 1934, as compared to 1933. The gross production for| these first six months amounts to 9,400,000,000 rubles, which equals | the entire output for 1930. | Together with the general growth | in production there has been a con- | siderable rise in labor productivity | observed, namely, about 17 per cent, | | while cost of production has been | reduced by an average of 5.5 per cent in the first four months, and | forming a steady progression—first quarter, 4 per cent and in April 7 | per cent. | | | The rise in the separate branches | of heavy industry is as follows: | coal, advanced 27 per cent com- pared to 1933; pig iron, 55 per cent; steel, 48 per cent; rolled metal, 36 | per cent; locomotive construction, |%3 per cent; freight cars, 40 per cent; motor trucks, 34 per cent; automobiles, 239 per cent; tractors in the Stalingrad, Kharkov plants, 28 per cent; Cheliabinsk plant, from 21 tractors to 3,174. Aluminum production increased five times, These facts testify to the creative enthusiasm of the U. S, 8. R., and the maturity of the Soviet indus-| try. The greatness of the Party in) leading the proletariat in the/ U. S. S. R. is felt in these figures | of the heroic rhythm of the work- | ing class; its technical advances, its economic organizers, and its socialist industry resound in these figures. The results of the work in heavy | industry prove how a Soviet country |is speedily becoming filled with) | vigor, and how great is the organ- |izational genius of the Communist |Party, how strong the determina- | | tion and capability of the Soviet | people to manage the most compli- cated problems. Foreign Workers Mass | To Thaelmann’s Defense PRAGUE, June 28.—A mass meet- ing of coal miners in the Nuerschan mine field, with members of the revolutionary and reformist unions participating, protested against the imprisonment of Ernst Thaelmann. Numerous other meetings through- out Czechoslovakia are adopting similar resolutions, including a mass meeting in Prrau, a conference of municipal officials of the Karlin dis- trict, a Free Thinkers’ meeting in Bohmisch-Budweis, and anti-fascist conferences in Silesia, Doudlebach and Prague. . OSLO, June 28.—A meeting of the Workers International Relief in | Skien, attended by 500 workers, a THE LAST ACT! by Burck Grain Harvesting Starts In Many Districts of U.S.S.R. (Special to the Daily Worker) MOSCOW, July 2 (By Radio)— in all southern districts of the Sov. cereals have already been harvested in the Crimea, Asov, the Black Sea districts and in the Northern Caucasus. The collective and state farms started this harvest much better equipped technically compared to 1933. Scores of thousands of new tractors, combines, trucks and com- plex threshing machines are oper- ating this year in the fields. The organization of the activity of the masses of collective farmers has grown considerably. The power of this activity and organization has grown simultaneously with the extension of the stubborn and per- sistent struggle of millions of col- lective farmers ‘for a high, firm yield, both during the spring sow- ing and cultivation of the fields and after. Despite the drought of May and June the prospects are favorable in a majority of the agricultural membership meeting of the “Djerv” {Sport Union and a meeting of the| | crew of the Norwegian ship “Karin” protested against the fascist terror of the Hitler government and de- | manded the release of Ernst Thael- | mann. | AMSTERDAM, Jn. 28—The Dutch | postal authorities are beginning to intercept and refuse to transmit | telegrams to Germany demanding |the immediate release of Ernst { Thaelmann and all oiner imprisoned ] German anti-fascists on the ground |that “they violate the canons of | decency and endanger the safety of | the state.” This open support of Hitler fas- cism by the Colijn government has | been answered by a new flood of protest resolutions adopted by the workers of all Holland. -Protests of this nature have already been adopted by the Amsterdam street cleaners all the employes of the Am- sterdam hospitals, the workers of the Rotterdam wood working con- cern “Bos,” and the Unemployed Councils of Oudelangstraat, and Hidestraat. ree PRAGUE, June 28—The workers of the biggest steel and metal plants in Czechoslovakia are mobilized in the Thaelmann campaign. A fac- tory meeting in the Trinec Iron Works, with over 4,000 employed, unanimously protested against the continued imprisonment of Ernst Thaelmann and the other anti- fascists in Germany. The workers employed in the Prager Iron Company in Kladno voted resolutions pledging their ef- forts to save Comrade Thaelmann’s life. Communist Proposals to Socialists for A Dniepropetrovsk, | \ districts. June rains had a decisive | : | effect on the increased yield of | |Grain harvesting has commenced! spring wheat, The very early and| Bes x efficient sowing of spring wheat | |iet Union, Over 2,500,000 acres of| played no minor role in this respect. |Many extremely earing sowings | were barely surpassed by the ripen- |ing of the autumn crops. Reports from the district say the harvesting commenced in an atmo- sphere of great enthusiasm and substantial improvement of the technique of harvesting itself. Scores of the most valuable devices for the harvesting machines and threashers were invented by col- lective farmers. ‘Mother of Taneff Arrives in U.S.S.R. Gives Thanks to Gov't for Saving Son MOSCOW, July 2—The mother of Vassil Taneff, the Bulgarian | Fevolutionary, whom together with Dimitroff and Popoff, workers’ mass pressure freed from the clutches of the bloody Nazis in Germany, ar- rived Saturday at Odessa on the steamer Franz Mehring. The aged mother, Maria Taneva, had not seen her son for ten years. “I am looking forward toward) | meeting him with beating heart,”| she said. “This is the first time I! have trodden the soil of the great| Soviet country and it gives me a feeling of infinite joy. When the Soviet government made my son and his comrades citizens after the Bulgarian government had denied them as strangers, I understood where our real Motherland is. “Convey a mother’s grateful thanks to the government and toil- Mass Fight for Foreign-Born Wins Partial Victories Anna Zazuliak Is Saved from Deportation; Bail Reduction for Others NEW YORK.—Mass protest roused by the Committee for Pro- tection of Foreign Born and other organizations and the recent dele- gation to the Department of Labor in Washington, which was eletted at the Protection of Foreign’ Born Conference in Irving Plaza on May 20, has forced concessions in three deportation cases, it was announced. The deportation warrant held against Anna Zazuliak, who was ac- tive on the picket line in the De- troit auto strike with her brother- in-law, William Zazuliak, has been cancelled, Bond in the case of Jack Schnei- der of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union has been reduced from $2,500 to $500. In the cases of Sam Paul and William Zazuliak the bond has been reduced from $1,000 to $500. However, the deportation warrant, against Edith Berkman has not been cancelled. Lay Off Thousands in Buffalo Steel Area BUFFTLO, N. Y., July 2.—About 2,000 Buffalo steel workers were laid off today for at least a week and probably for the duration of the summer as steel orders. slumped and speed-up was increased. At least 5,700 more steel workers will be laid off beginning Saturday ers of the Soviet Union.” and Monday it was also announced. nti-Fascist United Front “Hostile or ‘Polite’ Replies From Socialist Parties Will Not Stop Communist Parties From Consistent Struggle for Workers’ United Front.” By BELA KUN iH. ANY social democratic workers and functionaries were con- vinced by the manifesto of the Communist International of Mar. 5, 1933, on the joint struggle against fascism and the capitalist offen- mutual conviction. And for this{ always called on those workers who concession on our part, we do not| do not share our views as yet on demand anything else from the | all these questions of principle, to social democratic parties than that | fight along with us against our they should draw all the workers} common class enemy, against the into the united front of our com- | immediate dangers menacing the mon struggle against the common | Proletaviat. On January 1, 1922, | after the capitalist offensive on sive, that the Communists are ready to make concessions in the| interests of establishing the united | front of the communist and social democratic workers against the bourgeoisie. We state openly and unreservedly that when we re- nounce polemics against the social democratic parties and our attacks on their policy of class collabora- tion with the bourgeoisie, this re- nunciation dusting the period of our joint actions against the capi- talist offensive, against fascism and imperialist war, is a conces- sion. We make this concession, al- though we are firmly convinced that our polemics against the sup- porters of class collaboration with the bourgeoisie are not only well- founded but constitute an insep- arable part of working class de- mocracy. By no means the least sig- nificant part of this working class democracy is the fact that the workers, who are class brothers but who have different views and convictions, must in the ideological | struggle influence one another by the method of mutual conviction. ‘Working-class democracy means not only the right but the duty and obligation to carry on such class enemy. We Communists will never aban- don our principles and _ tactics under any circumstances. We shall never approve nor give our consent to collaboration between the work- ing class and its class enemy, the bourgeoisie. We have advocated, we still advocate and always will ad- vocate the revolutionary overthrow of the power of the bourgeoisie, whatever its form, whether it is in the form of fascist power or in the form of bourgeois democracy. We have advocated, we still advocate and always will advocate the revo- lutionary overthrow of the power of the bourgeoisie, whatever its) form, whether it is in the form of fascist power or in the form of bouxgeois democracy. We stand for the unlimited power of the work- ing class, for the dictatorship of the proletariat, for Soviet power, which can only be established by the application of proletarian vio- lence as an offset to the violence of the bourgeoisie, only by revolu- tion. We have shown by the ex- ample of the Soviet Union that only the dictatorship of the pro- letariat, only Soviet’ power can bring about the widest democracy for all the toilers and clear the path for socialism. But we have| | the working class had begun on an international scale, we ad-~ | dressed the following appeal to the | men and women of the proletariat of all counties: “Well, you cannot make up your minds yet to struggle along the whole front, to struggle for power, for dictatorship, with arms in your hands? You cannot yet make up your minds to deliver a decisive attack on the citadel of world reaction? At any rate, then, unite in the struggle for a piece of bread, in the struggle for peace. March ‘together in a united army for the sake of this struggle, unite as a proletarian class against the class of exploit- ers and devastators of the world. Break down the barriers which have been raised between you; stand in united ranks irrespective of whether you are Communists or Social Democrats, Anarchists or Syndicalists, so as to struggle against the hard poverty of the present day. “The Communist International has always instructed the work- ers to stand for the dictatorship of the proletariat and for Soviets, | to unite into independent parties. It does not withdraw a single word of what it has said on this matter proving the necessity for the formation of independent Communist Parties. It is con- vinced that every new day will more and more convince the working masses of the correct- ness of its actions. But, despite all that disunites us, it says: Pro- letarians of the world, join your ranks for the struggle for the things which united you, for the things which you look on as your common aim.” * ‘HE Communists again repeat to the Social Democratic and re- formist workers and their func- tionaries: Do you really not feel that the advance of fascism in a number of countries means the direct preparation of a new imperialist slaughter of the peoples, means the further worsening of the con- ditions of the working class? ‘You follow your leaders, who, in our opinion, are carrying on an incorrect policy, a policy of class collaboration, a policy which is not in the intesests of the proletariat but in the interests of the bour- geoisie. We consider that we are oh Ue but our attacks oa the policy of your leaders have not been an end in themselves for us. For us they have always been and still are a means of struggle for the estab- lishment of the unity of the work- ing class against capitalism. While striving to bring about the sever- ance of the bonds of class collab- oration which binds to the bour- correct in criticizing your party, path geoisie such a large section of the working class as represented by the supporters of social democracy, so that the social democratic work- ers may be able to carry on a joint struggle together with us against the common enemy; while striving towards this minimum prerequisite for a successful stiuggle against fascism, we have declared and still declare our readiness to make this concession to your leaders. We firmly hope that even under the conditions of a temporary renun- ciation of the important prerequi- sites of working-clss democracy, the polemic against an incorrect policy, that the joint struggle of the Communist and social demo- cratic workers will convince the social democratic workers that the only correct tactics for the work- ing class are not reformist policy, not class collaboration with the class enemy, but the irreconcilable revolutionary class struggle against capitalism and its rule. It follows from this conviction that no hostile or polite replies re- ceived from one or other social democratic party can compel the Communist Parties to abandon this of the consistent struggle for the unity of action of the proleta- ast. = IRRESPECTIVE of how the lead- ing Social Democratic bodies re- ply to our proposals about unity of action, we shall call on the workers, irrespective of the party they may belong to, to undertake joint ac- tions against capitalism, fascism and imperialist war, in defense of ee the vital interests and rights of the working class. We are prepared to make proposals and we are also prepared to carry on negotiations with the leading bodies of the so- cial democratic parties. But we know that our unswerving duty is to make these proposals not only to the social democratic party lead- ers, by carrying on negotiations be- hind the scenes. If some Commu- nists do not yet understand this, they must now specially take into account the fact that every pro- posal which we make to the Social Democratic Party or reformist trade union leadership, must be accompa- nied by hundreds of proposals to all the links of the social democratic parties and reformist trade unions. ‘We must see that the supporters of the Social Democratic Party, the members of the reformist trade unions, are widely informed by broad mass work about every pro- posal made by any Communist Party regarding joint actions against the class enemy. If Com- munists in France, Switzerland or Great Britain have lost sight of this and have not been able from day to day to present resolutions to the Social Democratic Party organiza- tions through their delegations, and to present them to the local trade union bodies or reformist trade union executives through Commu- nist and social-democratic workers, this is undoubtedly a mistake. Such militant actions for the es- tablishment of unity of action, as proposals for a joint struggle to save Thaelmann, must be widely spread about in tens and hundreds of thousands of leaflets. Such mili- tant measures must be accompanied by. the resolutions of hundreds of Communist and_ social-democratic organizations and factory meetings. Only such a widely developed joint struggle of Communist and social- democratic workers and members of reformist and revolutionary trade unions, and the attraction of the broadest strata of unorganized workers to this struggle, can bring about unity of action. It is neces- sary to make up in the nearest fu- ture for all that has been neglected until now in this campaign against fascism and to save Thaelmann. We shall fight untiringly for unity of action. And despite all we shall bring it about by struggle! Again and again we repeat to the social-demecratic workers: You do not know us Communists if you think that we shall stop half way. The struggle for the united front of the working class is included in the programme of the Communist In- ternational, and we, whose words never differ from our deeds, take our program seriously. Despite all diplomatic evasions, despite sharp refusals of our proposals or the maintainance of silesce about them, we shall appeal to you again and again, and propose that you should fight jointly with us against capi- talism, against imperialist war, and against fascism, for our common class interests and for our direct | demands. And you, social-democratic work- ers, must also not stop half way. Join in the united front of the working class for victory over the class enemy. ~ On the World Front By HARRY GANNES ——= | The Smoking Luger | Danger to Thaelmann |N. Y. Times Distorts—Again | “Purifying” Germany LONG with the headsman’s | axe, the smoking Luger has become a symbol of Nazi barbarism. Fascism is using the approved American gangs | ster tactics of “erasing” those within its ranks whom they no longer can use, who have become more valuable to them dead than alive. | This has not failed to bring forth @ wail of righteous protest from the |piously hypocritical New York Times, whose every line of type will sance timoniously condone executions of | workers. They moan hypocritically | in their editorial of Monday: “But today the German news is stained with blood. . . . This is the thing which today shocks and horrifies the outside world.” | |. The Times, be it noted, weeps in | type solely when gentlemen of the | upper military caste and Junker | dom are slain. It has not done even |as much as complained about the foul murders of Communist and Socialist workers by the Nazi fiends. |It has said nothing about the con- templated murder of Ernst Thaele |mann, leader of the German work- ing-class. Workers will gauge the real note of sincere “anti-fascist” feeling of } the New York Times by this. 'HE New York Times—and the en- tire capitalist press—does not give a tinkers damn for the lives of Thaelmann, Torgler and the thou- sand of anti-fascist workers in Ger- many. It is concerned only about the corrupt scum of its own class mem- bers in Germany. It is only the workers and honest anti-fascists throughout the world who care and have the power to wrest Thaelmann from the blood-stained hands of Hitler's fiends. If ever the life of Ernst Thael- | mann is in danger it is now! | Already sinister rumors of Thael- mann’s death are circulating through |European capitals. These rumors have their basis in the fact that the Hitler regime is narrowing. Great sections of the German population, and above all the German working class, at the head of which is the heroic Communist Party of Ger- many, are stirring against Hitler, many passively, some actively. The firing squad and the assassin’s re- volver remain Hitler's main methods of persuasion. It is a moment like this that the madmen running amok in Germany will seize the least opportunity to murder Thaelmann, just as Kar] Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemberg were done away with in 1919. The anti-fascists of the whole world must be ever against. Thr wave of protests against the Naz terror must rise higher. The shout: of “Free Thaelmann” must be lik: the roar of an angry sea upon thr ears of every Nazi consul in th country! THERE is the “Anti-Nazi League’ of Mr. Samuel Untermeyer nov when Thaelmann’s life is in th | greatest danger? Has Mr. Unter meyr, that self-appointed plumec knight of the Jewish-Americar masses, said a word about Thael mann or the anti-fascist workers who rot in the dungeons of Nazi- land? He emphatically has not. As the Daily Worker stated or dozens of occasions, the N. Y. Time and the wealthy Jewish banker. and lawyers will not and can’t leac the fight against German fascism, or fascism anywhere. Their shoul- ders will not be a perch of safety for the Jewish masses. These peo- ple, the Warburgs, the Lehman Brothers, Kuhn, Loeb and Company. are flesh of the flesh and bone ot the bone of the capitalist class throughout the world. They traffic in the same bonds that Herr Thys- sen and Herr Krupp do. The bloody gold that streams through the line of Morgan courses through their financial veins. These people who have supported bloody attacks upon the workers of the United States from the docks of Frisco to the furriers market in New York are no friends of the working class; they are pards of fascism. A struggle against fascism can only take place despite them and against them. * eared ‘HE TIMES attempts to place the question as if the good knight, St. Adolph, had gone out and be- headed the dragon of immorality in his own ranks, thus purifying fas- cism, It is a matter of public record that Hitler, Goering and the lead- ership of the Nazis are, almost to a man, perverts, drug addicts and abnormal creatures, These dregs of the underworld differ as only in degree, not in kind. The Times consciously distorts facts. Hitler cannot clean the fas- . the proletarian revolution. The social and national emancipation of the German masses will be accom- Soviet power in Germany under the leadership of the Communist of Germany. Only a Soviet power can drain the cesspool of German politics. to the jobless of German, start the factories working, raise the and levels of living of the masses, take the great estates the landed gentry of Junk and turn them over to the peasantry. : Only a Soviet power, : PR Cogent the toiling masses and wi draws the masses into cist cesspool; he is a denizen of it. | West it parity Germany ts a plished only by the overthrow of — Party> ee *,