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Page Two

Tapa Po Ose ash ss A Vi O.C Ava:

THE PEOPLE’s
ADVOCATE

Published Weekly by the
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> BS Street
Vancouver, B.C., Phone, Trin IHG

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Canadian Heroes
Insulted

ROPPING a erocodile

tear out of the corner of
one eye for the families of the
men of the Mackenzie-Papi-
neau Battalion who have
been killed in action in Spain
the local News-Herald in its
issue of April 29 unloads a
deluge of reactionary bilge
in a disgraceful pro-Franco
editorial under the Sneering
heading: “Canadian Martyrs.”

The mercenary editorial
writer scoffs at the idea that
the men who left Canada to
fight the hordes of Franco,
Hitler and Wrussolini were
martyrs to the cause of Lib-
erty, and has the impudence
to call them “traitors to the
land Seg adoption,” the
assumption beings that onl
“furriners” have joined a
Mac-Paps. “Paid mercenar-
1€s is another term he applies
to them, and he wants to
know who paid for their
transportation to Spain.

“They are not loyal to Can-
ada,” he goes on, and con-
cludes with a justification of
the murderous intervention

of Hitler, Mussolini and
Chamberlain.

The MacPaps are upbraid-
ed by the skulking pro-fascist
scribe for having “deliberate-
ly disobeyed the orders of
the country in which they
were living at the time of en-
listment,” and permitting
themselves to become “em-
broiled in a quarrel which
Was no concern of theirs..’

What and whose orders did
they disobey? The orders of
the King government, orders
against giving assistance to
the legal’ and democratically
elected government of a
friendly power. The “orders”
of the King government were
and are a crying disgrace to
Canada. By those orders Mac-
kenzie King betrayed Spain,
dishonored the Canadian peo-
ple by failing to live up to his
obligations to the League of
Wations, and ranged Canada
officially with the abominable
fascist Sangsters and their ac-
complice, Chamberlain.

“A quarrel which was no
concern of theirs”! But it is
a concern of theirs, and of
every hater of fascism and
defender of democracy in the
world. Who started the war
in Spain? The News-Herald
knows it was started by a
small group of traitorous fas-
eist generals, landlords, fi-
mance capitalists and clerical
obscurantists, all acting as
agents of foreign fascist states.
The News-Herald knows too
that mercenary Moors were
brought to Spain and that
huge armies with airplanes,
tanks and all the modern
equipment for mass murder
were sent in by Italy and
Germany. The News-Herald
has no condemnation for this
foreign intervention; it re-
serves its spleen for the few
brave men who risked their
lives in defence of democracy
mot only in Spain, but in
Canada.

After the hordes of Moors,
with huge armies of Hitler
and Mussolini, have overrun
more than half of Spain; after
the bombing of towns and ci-
ties and the mass slaughter of
tens of thousands of non-com-
batants — men, women and
children. The contemptible
Wews-Herald hisses because
a few thousand brave, self-
sacrificing men bared their
breasts to hold Madrid against
the barbarous fascists as they
will hold Barcelona and other
cities.

A quarter of a century ago
when men were going from
Canada to Hurope such rags
as the News-Herald did not
talk about a “quarrel in
which Canada has not the
slightest concern. And yet de-
spite the lying slogans about
«5 war in defence of democ-
racy,” the 1914-18 war was an
imperialist war and NOT in

defence of democracy.

But the conflict in Spain

IS a war in defence of democ-
Tracy in Spain and throughout
the world, including Canada.
And when faced with this
Situation, the Wews-Herald
takes its stand against democ-
racy and reveals the cloven
hoof of fascism which is be-
coming a menace in Canada.

Disobeying the orders of
the Mackenzie King govern-
ment, forsooth! To their eter-
nal glory be it admitted, yea,
proclaimed, that they did
flaunt those orders. And by
doing so they established the
historical fact that NOT Mac-
kenzie King, but the men of
the Mackenzie-Papineau Bat-
talion, are the REAL grand-
sons of Willian yon Macken-
zie.

The News-Herald by its
pro-Franco hissings has in-
sulted the heroes of MacPap
Battalion who together with
their fellow defenders of de-
mocracy from England are
redeeeming the good name of
England and Canada which
has been indelibly tarnished
by the pro-fascist policy of
Chamberlain and Mackenzie
King.

There are scab restaurants
in Vancouver that have been
placed on the Unfair List. It
is high time that the journal-
istic garbage spewed out by
the WNews-Herald outfit is
also placed on the list of ‘““We
Do not Patronize,” for it is
not fit to be touched with a
ten-foot pole—M. B.

Quebec And Labor

REMIER DUPLESSIS of

Quebec is the leader of
the fight to stop the federal
government enacting nation-
al, uniform legislation to es-
tablish codes of wages, hours
and working conditions. In
order to “explain” this oppo-
sition to Canadian progress,
he talks about the “minority
rights” of the FrenchCanadi-
an people.

What is really at stake is
not the right of the French-
Canadian people to their lan-
guage and culture, somethings
which is unalterably theirs,
but the “right” of Quebec
capitalists (only a minority
of whom are F'rench-speak-
ing) to maintain that prov-
ince as a special low-wage,
long-hour area of Canadian
economy.

These “patriots” who wax
wrathful at the suggestion of
dominion legislative powers,
and who attempt to inflame
the French-Canadian people
with lying arguments about
“English domination,” are in
reality the enemies of the
French-Canadian people.

This was brought home
pointedly to the people of BC
the other day when D. F.
Mathers, past president of the
Canned Goods Association of
BC, proved that this province
cannot compete with Quebec
products because the mini-
mum wage for cannery work-
ers in Quebec is half of what
it is here.

“We must face the situ-
ation,” he said. “Either mini-
mum wage rates need to be
set by the federal sovernment,
or the provincial government
will have to draw a distinction
between industries which
have to compete with the low-
wage conditions of the east
and those which do not. BC
canneries will shortly be in
the hands of the receivers.”

He added that “where local
canneries formerly sold car-
lots of goods in Saskatchewan,
we now sell practically noth-
ing. It means that Alberta,
which formerly took 40 per
cent of the pack of Royal City
cannery, now gets a big pro-
portion of its goods from the
east.”

Here you have it in a nut-
shell. Manufacturers in the
west use as an excuse for cut-
ting wages here the low wage
paid in Quebec and Ontario.
The alternative to that is stat-
ed by Mr. Mather, the setting
of federal codes which will
break the low-wage system of
Quebee and Ontario by
equalizing the conditions of
labor through the country.

Here then, is how the pad-
lock law, the fascist laws
against trade unions and
other measures passed by the
Quebec government with the
backing of Premier Hepburn
of Ontario, affect the living
conditions of every Canadian
man and woman.

To press for national legis-
lation governing social and
labor conditions means to

- stop the~drive to fascism in

Canada.

A Foctnote To Czecheslovakian History

The Commune Of Tabor

By William Bennett
cE THE 14th, 15th and 16th centuries, Europe was stirred by the social upheavals known in history as the peasant revolts.

Breaking first in France with the Jacquerie, the peasants revolted against the grinding oppr

ession imposed on them by the

feudal nobility, visiting well-merited death and destruction on their class enemies, until the overwhelming weight of hireling
soldiery restored “peace” by almost exterminating the peasants of the districts affected.

The English peasant revolts
under Wat Tyler and Jack Cade,
the Taborite movement in Bo-
hemia, the Peasant Wars and
the Commune of Munster in
Germany Dosza in Hungary and
the revolts of the Russian peas-
antry under Stenka Razin and
Pougatchey,
the same merciless exploitation
by the “chivalry” of these lands.

In France, Hungary and Rus-
sia, these struggles were purely
social in character, but in Eng-
land, Germany and Bohemia
they were linked with the move-
ment against the dogmiss of the
Gatholic church and their real
social significance was lost in
the atmosphere of dogmas and
religious frenzy that featured
the years following the split in
the church. .

When the air is cleared by a
waft of the wind of science ap-
plied to history these movements
stand forth unmistakably for
what they were—efforts to abol-
ish the then existing property
relations, a people’s united front
of the burghers, craftsmen,
small merchants and traders of
the towns, and the peasantry,
serf and freeman, against the
feudal aristocracy.

The most successful of these
risings was that in Bohemia dur-
ing the Hussite Wars in the 15th
century, the Taborite movement.
Hach of these peasant wars had
its own characteristics and that
of Bohemia was a combination
of struggle for national inde-
pendence, religious freedom and
class war.

&

HE Bohemians are a Slav peo-

ple. German domination was
foisted on them, by German im-
migrant settlers, by the German
emperors of the Holy Roman
Empire and German ‘princes’
who got their claws on Bohemian
estates, and by German intel-
lectual influence in the univer-
sities. Slay sentiment reacted to
these factors by developing a
burning nationalism among the
whole Slav nation.

This in turn expressed itself in
the religious life of the country
by opposition to the reactionary,
dogmatic section of the Catholic
church, which was German in
the main. Breaches had already
been made in the unity of the
Gatholic forces by the teachings

By Victoria Post

HE annual campaign for the

Jubilee Children’s Summer
Camp is now well under way
Mrs. Hyslop, secretary of the
committee, tells me.

At a recent reunion of children
and parents held in the Ukrainian
Labor Temple, plans were laid to
raise further funds for the open-
ing of the camp early in July.
Drawing of the winners in the
Hope Chest raffle took place and
Winning tickets were No. 914 for
the chest, No. 254 the pillowcases,
and Wo. 938 the lunch cloth. The
committee now has tickets out
for a cushion, proceeds from
which will go to swell the fund.

Last year 204 children attended
the camp and had a swell time.
The cost per child is $3.50 a week,
which includes transportation,
fare, food and everything neces-
Sary to keep the kiddies happy.
The camp usually opens immedi-
ately after school ends and all
children of school age, boys 7 to
14, girls 7 to 16, are eligible. This
gives many mothers a chance to
have a rest during the holidays,
as well as giving the children a
change which they might not be
able to obtain otherwise.

Mrs. Hyslop is anxious to get
in touch with all the children
who attended last year, but sev-
eral families have moved and so
lost contact. If there are any
other children who would like to
go, parents should get in touch
with Mrs. Hyslop.

e
LANS are being pushed
ahead in Great Britain to en-
able the population to protect it-
self from aerial bombardment
and gas attacks.

Posters, newspaper ads, films,
leaflets and booklets, trucks,
trains, and even aeroplanes are
being utilized to make the public
air-raid conscious. Londoners are
provided with a free entertain-
ment each night in the form of
brilliant searchlights, and anti-
aircraft gun practice.

Air raid shelters and gasproof
rooms are being built beneath
London streets, and even the
householder himself is building
his own “funkhouse’’ in his own
back yard.

Gas masks have been designed
for everybody, children, horses,
dogs, and even chickens!

Shrewsbury claims to be build-
ing the first municipal bomb shel-
ter in Britain. It is to be ten feet
below the ground level, and holds
one hundred people. Since the

population of the city is 32,370,
it seems like the
quickest!

survival of the

were the result of ~

of Wrycliff in England and, in
part these teachings found ready
response in Bohemia.

Three religious elements con-
tended for power in the country,
all of them claiming to be the
true Catholics and all of them
branded by the church as here-
ties. First, the supporters of
things as they were, opposed to
any change in doctrine or pro-
cedure, composed of the great
nobility, almost all the Germans
ineludinge the German workers,
and the higher clergy.

Second, a moderate group, de-
manding only reforms in the doc-
trine and administration of the
church; willing to confiscate
chureh property to be divided
among themselves but opposed
to any further disturbances of
the existing social order. ‘This
group was composed mostly of
the wealthier townsmen and some
of the native clergy.

Third, a revolutionary group,
demanding religious reforms in
doctrine; that the church should
not be allowed to interfere in
affairs of the state; that the
priests should renounce all aristo-
cratic living, should follow the
example of Christ and the Apos-
tles; that all church property.
should be surrendered to the peo-
ple for the use of all,

Along with their religious de-
mands they put forth a program
for the reconstitution of all so-
cial life; that there be no more
rich and poor and that all should
work and share alike. This group
Was composed of the craftsmen
and lesser merchants of the
towns, the masses of the peas-
antry, some impoverished nobles
and the majority of the native
priests. These were the Tabor-
ites whose very name, for 15
years, struck terror into the
heart of every reactionary in
Europe, whose songs, on at least
one occasion, at Zatec, were
Weapons enough to put to cow-
ardly and disorderly flight the
Papal armies sent to extermin-
ate them.

ts)

Hifi first open act of war be-

tween the reformers and the
reactionaries occured when rep-
resentatives of the town council
of Praha interfered with a re-
ligious demonstration of the
Taborites. A battle followed in
which the Taborites captured the
town hall.

The councillors suffered the
fate meted out to traitors accord-
ing to the custom of the coun-
try, defenestration. They were
thrown from the windows on to
the flails and scythes of the
Taborites in the streets below
as the body of KEoltchak was
hoisted on the Czechoslayaks
bayonets in Siberia in 1919, when
they discovered the counter-
revolutionary purpose for which
they were being used.

Civil war had come to SBo-
hemia. Under the leadership of
John 4Zizka, the revolutionary
craftsmen and peasantry built a
fortress on a hill in the vicinity
of Praha to which they gave the
mame of Mount Tabor and from
which in turn they became
known as Taborites.

They established at Tabor a
communal form of life, not the
result of utopian dreaming, but
growing out of Biblical teach-
ing and the hazy, still remem-
bered barbarian communal or-
ganization of the days when they
settled in the land.

Rich and poor shared alike.
All distinctions due to property
were abolished. Property was
held in common. All political and
religious questions were settled
in open-air mass meetings. They
ate in common dining rooms. All
intoxicating liquors were pro-
hibited.

The community was divided in-
to sections, one to cultivate the
fields and maintain the food
supply and the other to muster
arms in the Taborite army. These
two divisions took turn about at
farming and soldiering, so that
all were farmers and all were
soldiers. Their zeal for purity and
simplicity of life was due more
to their political than to their
religious ideas.

Their fame spread throughout
Europe and, although King Wen-
ceslaus of Bohemia forbade any-
one to visit Tabor on pain of
death and confiscation of goods,
peasants and craftsmen flocked
to their banner, not only from
other parts of Bohemia, but from
all over the continent.

e

nder the leadership of John

Zizka they built up an army,
the first Red army in history.
With the most primitive of weap-
ons, flails, seythes, forks, knives
and iron-studded cudgels they de-
feated the trained soldiery of the
conglomerate hordes of German,
Imperial German Empire. The
French, English, Hungarian,
Spanish, Dutch and Italian mer-
the cross fled

ecenary soldiers of
from them like the hare from
the beagle.

Zizkea, their military leader

was eminently fitted to be the
hero of a revolutionary army. He
possesed a genius for leadership
and organization unequalled in
his day. Although he belonged
to the lower nobility, he held all
easte prejudices in scorn and in
the strugsles of the Taborites,
he recognized the impossibility
of ~compromise.

He was a soldier by profession,
had already-lost’ one of his eyes,
lest the second one in the

Gays Fad to use the eyes of ais
Taborite brothers in ordering his
troops in their victorious battles.

Tabor was made into an im-
pregnable fortress. Zizka drilled
the peasants and artisans and
shaped them into a puritan army
capable of inflicting defeat on
the armored knights of the Hm-
peror and the Pope. The tactics
and generalship of Zizka, en-
thusiasm and confidence in their
cause and their leaders, more
than compensated for the defec-
tive armament of Tabor’s Red
army.

Pope Martin V, first owner of
black African slaves in modern
Europe, called for a holy crusade
against Bohemia to root out the
communist heretics.

In the first crusade, 150,000 of
the pick of Europe’s mercenaries,
including the Catholic Bohemian
nobility were utterly routed. Af-
ter this defeat, the Bohemian
jobility joined their forces with
the Taborites and the moderate
Jalixtines, and Bohemia present-
da a united front to the foreign
i@Eressors. :

In a second crusade the fol-
lowing year, the terrors of ex-
communication were added to an
army equal in size to that of
the first crusade. The Papal bull
ereated terror in the ranks of
the Gatholics but welded -more
closely the unity of the reform-
ists.

Five holy crusades in all were
launched against the Bohemian
peopple, one of them led by an
Englishman, Cardinal Beaufort,
and the last under the leader-
ship of Cardinal Cesarini, whose
army fied, and the Cardinal with
them, leaving behind his coat and
erucifix and the Papal bull or-
dering the extermination of the
Bohemians, merely on hearing
the songs of the Taborites.

Zizka died after five years of
campaigning and his place was
taken by one of the Taborite
priests, Andreas Prokop. In re-
taliation for the slaughter of Bo-
hemian people Prokop led the Bo-
hemian armies across the borders
and laid waste the lands of Si-
lesia, Lusatia, Meissen, Saxony,
Bavaria and Hungary. A hundred
towns and a thousand villages
were destroyed, and a wholesome
fear of the Communist’ instilled
in the German aggressors.

e

WN the 15 years of Hussite wars,

the Bohemian armies wrote on
the pages of history a long line
of victorious battles—Vysehrad,
Sadomir, Porcic, Zizka Hill,
Wemsky Brod, Aussig, Kladrau,
Techov, Domaslice. In all the bat-
tles of the united Bohemian peo-
ple against reactionary foreign
invaders, the flail»vielding Red
army of Tabor was the spear-
head, as the 8th Route army of
the Gommunists in China is the
spearhead in the defense of
China against Japanese imperial-
ism today.

As Mount Tabor was impreg-
nable, the Taborite Red army was
unconquerable, but the fox-like
cunning of their enemies brought
about a split in the Bohemian
forces. In spite of the protests
of the Taborites, a pact Was
agreed upon between the Bo-
hemians and the Vatican, a pact
which created an alliance of the
nobility, the middle class and the
church reactionaries against the

workers, peasants and poor
priests.
A few eccliastical concessions

were made by the Church to the
moderate elements and the basis
for internal strife established.
This followed as surely as the
enemies of Bohemia foresaw. The
popular front was broken. In-
ternal dissention brought about
the fall of Tabor, not by foreign
enemies but by Bohemians.

At the battle of Lipany, the Ta-
borit=s were defeated, their lead-
er, Prokop, killed and their forces
dissipated. For several years they
held out in their mountain fort-

ress but were finally conquered
by the Bohemian Cromvyell,
Podiebrad, in 1452.

Tabor gave democratic color to
the two centuries of Bohemian
life that followed, a color that
has persisted through three hun-
dred years of German rule. But
the years immediately following
the passing of Tabor were filled
with reaction. it is a principle
of the church that “faith should
not be kept with heretics” and all
the flimsy concessions of the
Basle pact were wiped out; Pope

Pius the Second declaring the
agreement null and void.
The democratic rights and

privileges the Bohemian people
had won were taken from them.

Serfdom, which the peasantry
had thrown off, was reimposed
on them> and was one of the

reasons for the loss of Bohemian
national independence in the fol-
lowing century.

The dust of Zizka was dug out
of the grave and thrown in a
ditch. A censorship of the kind
demanded by Cardinal Villeneuve
and Archbishop Duke in Canada
today, was established, books and
newspapers could only be sold by
permission of the bishops. Statues
of John Hus were torn down just
as the statue of Mendelsohn in
Leipzig was torn down by the
Wazis a year ago.

eS
HE Germanization of the coun-
try was carried a step fur-
ther, to be completed a century
later when the serf-peasants: re-
fused to be slaughtered
interest of the nobility who had
placed the shackles on them after

in the.

Tabor—and Bohemia became a
German province of the Austrian

Empire.
Bohemians were prohibited
from speaking their own lan-

Guage just as today Basques are
punished under Butcher Franco
for praying in their own lan-
guage, Muzkera. Protestants were
expelled from Bohemia as Jews
are driven out of Germany and
Austria today.

Germanization was to make of
Bohemia, together with the South
Slav countries, a reserve police
foree to stem the growth of Wes-
ern democracy, as in the 1849
revolutionary period, and Bo-
hemia was to provide Austria
with its greatest and most re-
actionary generals, Wallenstein,
Schwartzenberg and Radetzky.

In the early 13th century, when
Wenceslaus the First was on the
throne, Bohemia was recognized
as the champion of European
Civilization for turning back the
hordes of Ghengis Khan. Today
Gzechoslovakia may have to re-
peat its 13th century effort and
become a champion of world
civilization against the threaten-
ing criminal hordes of Ghengis
Hitler.

eS
ITH the freeing of the
Czechoslovak people from

German rule, the traditions of
Tabor are revived again. Immi-
grant minorities are not butch-
ered or expelled as in Nazi coun-
tries, but granted by the demo-
eratic constitution of the coun-
try, right to representation in
parliament, their own language
schools and proportional repre-
sentation in all public imstitu-
tions and offices.

Gzechosiovak democracy is de-
fending world democracy in
Spain and John Zizka’s name
lives again in the Zizka company
of the Dimitroy Battalion of the
International Brigade, alongside
the company of the same batta-
lion named after the leader of
the Communist party of Czecho-
slovakia, the Sudeten German
Karl Gottwald.

Of the thirty-six Communist
members in the Czechoslovak.
parliament many are Germans
and they represent not only the
people of Czechoslovakia but the
victims of Nazi-ism in Germany
and Austria also.

Leaves
from our

Notebook

NEW school of Chinese drama
has evolved out of the
current Sino-Japanese hostilities.
Almost all of the plays presented
in the Chinese theatre teday are
military in theme and symbolic
of the present struggle.

A current drama is entitled
“Binal Victory,” taking its name
from the war slogan of China.

The play opens with a village
scene, several country damsels
singing and gossiping as they
enjoy a respite from air raids as
the grip of inclement ‘weather
which keeps the planes grounded.
Each of them has her boy friend
among the youths enlisted in the
“Chwang Ting” or Youth Army,
but instead of tears they all give
their soldier sweethearts cheers
on the eve of their march to the
war front. The boy loved by the
prettiest girl of the group is Pao
Sheng .

Then comes the
ganda corps, lecturing, singing
and giving dramatic perform-
ances before the villagers. The
enlisted men begin their march.

The scene shifts swiftly to por-
tray the disheartening news of
the fall of Nanking and the ar-
rival of the Japanese soldiers.
The village is captured and many
of its inhabitants are killed.
Among those taken prisoners by
the Japanese is Pao Sheng who
is being dragged to the execu-
tion ground when his executioner
Suddenly shakes hands with him
saying that he would rather die
than serve the Japanese warlords.
And die he does by shooting
himself after setting Pao Sheng
free.

Meantime, the Chinese mobile
units have destroyed the defense
works set up by the Japanese
and the Chinese reinforcements
have arrived in the nick of time
with the result that the village is
retaken and the “Blue Sky and
White Sun” flag again hoisted.

i)

There is a tendency sometimes
to regard the sit-down strike as
a new technique to improve la-
bor’s conditions. The idea goes
back many years. It originated
in Brance before Columbus dis-
covered America. When Rouen
Cathedral was being built, the
workers sat down on the secaf-
folds and inside the partly fin-
ished building to enforce higher
wages. In 1565 there was a sit-
down strike in Lyons. In 1750
Belgium textile workers staged
a sit-down. In the textile mills
of England in 1817, sit-down
strikers attempted to burm down
the factories when-the troops
were called ont.

war propa-

SHORT

JABS

Se

By
OL’ BIEL

= Daladier, tempc
Quid Pro Gictator of Fr:

Quo. is very sure of
self. When minister of war
previous government, he +x
statement that is worthy of : 4)
“Ti a new war with Gern |}
comes,’’ he said, “I will enroj}4
Communists as a shock battal jg)

This is a one-sided state: 4
which does not give the vj
point of the Communists any fF;
ing. Daladier can only enro) |
Comimunists as shock batta 4
on the Communists’ own te qj
and in these days, that mea
stern and intransigeant stru
not against Germany and
German people, but against I Wi
ism and fascism, in France
Spain and CGzechoslovakia,
well as in Germany and Ital; ]f
* He got the vote of the Com #}
nists in the Chamber of Depi 9}
only on this condition, and ™
two hundred planes that lai
in Barcelona immediately fol
ing were the first fruit of 4
undertaking. 4

1 >
Ach! Des Big “celebrated
Schmell! ler’s birthday
plaining how he wins his fig 4}
The press report, however, | |}
refers to the film of the se
Dudas alleged fight. Schmell
at the same time, gave the j
ruler shadow demonstrations
the fist and footwork he use
get decisions,

A rumor has seeped out f
Germany that he went all ow }
show Der Fuehrer how he i {%
the world’s championship,
president Hoover has been y
ing in Germany and held convyi
With the big shots. Goering is
only Nazi leader to have impr
ed him. Goering reminded }
of Al Capone. (Hoover's hand
of the bonus-marchers gives |
the right to pose as an autho)
on bullying gangsters.) Well,
story goes that Goering was
third man in the ring and
Wazi hero lay down on the fl
while Goering counted /
Schmelinge has the honor of be j
the only contender who ever ¥
that championship lying flat
his back.

But he did not show how
lost it in his next fight t¢
“dirty” Jew.

J. Ll. Garvin of the London “
server” is one of the most @

5 stamding reaction |
Canaille. pen-prostitutes ¢
produced in a country noted
the multitude of that breed
canaille. I am compelled to
the French word because noth:
in English covers a range of ?
tenness to be sufficiently desc
tive of this Chamberlain toad:

In a recent article, he as
“What is Czechoslovakia? It
tains about 15,000,000 various { |
ples. The Czechs proper |.
minority of rather less than 7,5
000 ruling and rather lording |
over a mixed majority of of
peoples—Germans, Slovaks, M -
gars, Ruthenians, Poles. Is {
democracy ?’’

No, this is not democracy; £
ther is it true. The Rutheni
(Ukrainians) by the way, vo
themselves into the Gzechosloy
ian Republic. The Germans
mostly Social Democrat and Cc
munist and on May Day deciai
their readiness to defend Gzec
slovakia against Hitler fascis
Henlein leads only a small secil
of Sudeten Germans whose tht
der is made in Berlin.

And what of the British Empil
A-none-such nation like no otf
on earth. It contains about 50
000,000 of various peoples. @&
British proper—a minority |
rather less than 45,000,000, ruli

D
Der Herrn A
A
4
(

and rather lording it over
mixed majority of other people}
Trish, Canadians, Australia

New Zealanders, Maoris, East:
dians, West Indians, Red India
Boers, Egyptians, Arabs, Jey
Wegroes, Fijians, Malays, Chine
Esquimos, Spaniards, Italia
French, and many other natit
alities. Is this democracy? 1
but it is true.

The Czechoslovaks should i
the Henlein Germans what t
200 per cent Americans tell 1
foreign-born workers, “If y
don’t like this country go be
where the hell you came from.’

The Nazis let 1
The Plea Is truth out in sp
Guilty.

of themselves. E
erkel, No. 1 stooge and “co-o1
nator’ for Hitler in Vienna,
alarmed to the point of apople
at the comments of the democ
tic press of the world on the bla
bath to which the Austrian peo
Were subjected through the WN
“peaceful anschluss ”

The mouthpiece of the Germ
Nazi party in Canada, Deutst
Zeitung fur Canada, published
Winnipeg, prints a digest of
Statement of this advance gu
of Nazi culture, or lack of cult
rather, admitting that “priv
confiscations and similar p
jects” did occur but a prociar
tion forbidding them was pos
and subsequent arrests pro!
that these outrages were comr
ted by well known figures of
Viennese underworld.

Correct; and of the Berlin 1
derworld also, every one of th
wearing the hakenkreutz of 2
zism, twisted, crooked like tt
Own degenerate minds.

Don’t miss Peter
Peter The yirst at the Gl
First.

all next week.

comes with a better reputat
than any other picture from
Soviet Union. But see-it for yo
self. You cannot lose!