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a0 ys Page Six , : THE DAILY*> WORKER \ i ir ss THE DAILY WORKER) Comintern Opinions of the Ultra-Lefts 1 | Published by the DAILY WCRKER PUBLISHING CO. x in its struggle against. the ultra-left movement is still moving to the right.}And for this reason théir fractional Jand the German Communist Party. will | and mentioned the statement of Stalin | 1118 W, Washington Blvd., Chicago, Ml, Phone Monroe 4712} (international Press Correspondence.) |From this fact arise two dangers for | work must be settled with, prevent it. We don’t demand that SUBSCRIPTION RATES OSCOW, U. §. S. Ri, March 16 (By |the American party: . An relent Ruth Fischer sign anything. She has|in the German commission, according | By mail (in Chicago only): | By mail (outside of Chicago): Mail.) ~The twentieth and closing |4anger that Communists driven to f2- Lominadse on Bordiga already signed enough, But we do|to which he (Stalin) did not believe $8.00 per year $4.50 six months | $6.00 per vear $3.50 six months |session of the enlarged executive [SPair by the right tendencies of the demand that she cease her fractional]a word Ruth Fischer said. Urbahns pointed out that Lenin used other i problemical methods. . This is true, but it is only true because in the past we never had a case like Ruth Fischer. At the first congress Lenin carried $2.50 three months | $2.00 three months committee of the Communist Interna-|Working class movement will run : work, The Comintern must not per- tional opened under the chairmanship |*Way from it towards the left. 2, The OMRADE LOMINADSE: The com-|init the spreading of these fractional Address all mail and make out checks to of Comrade Geschke and began with |@@nger that the Communists simply pliment that he was an honest and | machinations, the so-called “Ruth- THE DAILY WORKER, 1113 W. Washington Blvd., Chicago, IHinols the cgntinuation of the discussion participate in the general move to the seaside Baca ihe always eX-| rischerizing” of the Comintern, upon the report of the German com-{Tirsht. We must not forget that we |Pressed his real opinions has turned!’ se Germany partly leadership will J, LOUIS ENGDAHL \ U # " i, SaPrareSoae sh heen A Be Editors A were compelled to expel Lore and his | Bordiga’s head and he begins to ex- he etessiei eae v Geevae aponinuonet: ‘ . supporters a little while ago, and that |aggerate this virtue and to become Pe prone. enough is fae ue helena on. the: ‘sharpest passible , ptruggie OR) J, LOE Business Manager Comrade ira een eee ie we have a Hula in Czecho-Slovakia, |the real “enfant terrible” of the en- atid eats e pent bane against the Italian comrades, but one Entered as second-class mail September 21, 1923, at the post-office at Chi- | (Be existence of a tendency lnside tho}. sundby in Norway and a Souvarine |larged executive. He criticized the} in TAL ona shGGld hot catl the lead-| oa; cent them end aidouss - with | cago, Ill, under the act of March 3, 1879. Communist Party of Germany to util-]i) prance, policy of the Comintern in a speech |° 02 ‘Bat one should not call the lead-| théin like comrades, because they hon- | - ——————- | ize the existing difficulties to form an four hours long, but proposed no con- ership of the party Leninist; it was |stly spoke their opinions, and did not } > adBiee 290 Advertising rates on spplicnion. artificial opposition against the gen- HE chief problem of this session is | (1444 policy of his own. only on the way to Leninism. But we | fight with the methods of the Viennese eral policy of the Comintern. There the ultra-left danger in Germany, | ay. utra-left answer that. the Communist Party of | cafes, } Th I . . * P : exists no discrepancy between the|which we must liquidate ideologically | a bechagre ca ca raimeiig < utilize |Germany represents this possibility of a (4 nyunction m Fassaic whole policy of the Comintern and the |completely in this phase. Scholem is é od tena pain eg ion for petty | development to real Leninism. : igs he i pe resolution of the German commission, {of the opinion that 'tlé international sia ae: eae we ‘or instance, The Maslow Process “ The inevitable injunction has made a belated appearance in Pas-} the resolution is only the logical con-|regards the ultra-leftsas destructive at en . 7 ies ace the Ruth Puphie. hha Aouvarine 4 saic. They usually come much earlier in such struggles. It is much|tinuation of the general decisions of }elements because we! are in a period cg Hs patti 4 i rar ANUILSKI then dealt with the» ay ag ik: ‘ . N all the world congresses and all the of relative stabilizatiéi:° On the con- i the iene COM EATER. Xe OMMA DEG EN P Maslow process. It must be said q like others of recent years and follows faithfully the precedent} ocsions of the enlarged E. ©. ©, I.|trary, the ultra-left# “are disturbing eat thace i Secviee ena aa ae UILSKI: That}inat Maslow did not act like a: revo- a | established by Harry M. Daugherty, strikebreaking attorney general] 1t is, therefore, peculiar that com- {elements because théré is a crisis in Y oO eee eat wou the discussion} intionary; weipre: his: jutges. | -Hortrind . 7 ree : = ‘4 it ades who were silent in the political |Germany and a leftwatd move of the theses of the German question were |which we have had in the enlarged}io get himself out-of the trouble by ? of the Harding-Coolidge cabinet, in his assault upon the striking sion suddenly discover their-op-|working class and flie'ultra-lefts are obs iets gi arid by the whole partion pen ie ee hiding behind the mistakes of the cen- shopmen in the strike wave of 1922. It prohibits ninety-ei ‘tie- al feelings i i i interfering with thd) Winning of the ab we. ea: Ww! e forma-|tral committee at that’ time, i rT s € 0 tp nety-eight partic-| positional feelings in this question of ‘Scholem | The ultra-left has many nuisances, |tion of an international defeatist: trac- bids should have said that the differences. details: The ultra-left comrades are |social-democratic workers. inside the Communist Party. were ipants in the strike from “promoting, encouraging, directing, partic-| but iti a inator is the |tion against the Comintern. In -pe- ‘ seized wi ic the danger) wants to speculate the feelings | but its common denominator ie bF pe. seized with panic before the dange upan He, how- |*truggle against the Communist Party |Tiods of slow development certain ipating in any manner in any movement to induce the employes of |from the right, which to them is eter-)of the good left workers. nothing to do» with a bourgeois court, eK bs ¥ “i ww i: j ways fall away from the e Forstm: g a . any. ‘ . In det fi h nt danger {ever, had no idea of the meaning of {of the Soviet Union and against the /Sroups a It is peculiar. that. Urbahns, of ail the Forstmann and Huffmann company. to cease their employment .....|nal. In determining the rig! Be dee of, a H¥bbel’s |Comintern. ‘There is a danger of the |Conimunist Party, but this defeatism] people, who-adopted a heroic attitude the Comintern analyzes always the|the German from consulting with or encouraging any striker or contributing money or advice to such striker or toward the success of such strike.” If recognized and obeyed this ukase from a satrap of the mill concrete situation of the particular party and the particular country. Of all the oppositional speakers, only “Meister Anton,” he ‘ihderstands the world no more. He’ stes a stabiliza- tion in Germany where Wwe see a crisis. formation of an international left frac- |18 well-organized. tion, perhaps even of a new interna- ‘The mentality of the Ruth Fischer’ tional. This danger must, however, |group resembles the mentality of the not be overestimated. Souvarine group. In this connection before the court at his trial, should now defend Maslow. Manuilski calls to mind the attitude owners would end the strike. But, like the shop strike of 1922 and|Bordiga had a certain firm program.| It is true that on, ail, international of, Hibner, Kn’ the Paterson silk/ strike of 1924, this par eae ob will be held in| Tis shows that there is no ideologi-|scale there is a relative stabilization,| The ultra-lefts have no considerable |We naturally do not mean such £004} 154 other Hele Nosihc pias ‘ ; 5 ag cal basis for a broad development of|but Germany is perhaps the weakest |Support inside their own parties. In workers as Maslovski, Y, the struggle with the Polish -polic contempt and considered the scrap of paper that it is. Workers] ino uitrateft deviations. link of this stabilization, Zinoviev is|Italy Bordiga lost the whole Young| The identity between the ideas of] That is the tradition of the Comintern. | thruout the nation laugh at the imprecations of this creature who[ j; js not merely a question of the|right when he draw "the distinction |Communist League and the majority |the Ruth Fischer and Souvarine/Ruth Fischer and Maslow have not j prostitutes the bench in order to aid the mill owners break the strike.|personal dissatisfaction of certain} between the present left group and |of his one-time supporters and in Ger-|groups consist in the following: Both|this tradition. They are not. lefts, many Ruth Fischer and Scholem have also no masses behind them. (Inter- ruption of Domksky: “What masses have you?”) I need no special masses because I don't carry on a policy in- dependent of the rest of the party. The petty bourgeois ultra-left elemeits were incapable of adapting their pol- icy to new conditions. The crisis, however, has been passed and the ultra-lefts are attempting, without suc- Souvarine and Ruth Fischer shout all the time and everywhere about the|}gouvarine, and they must be dealt erises in the Comintern. Ruth Fischer) with by the Comintern from this point sees right dangers everywhere; she,|ot view. (Strong applause.) \ however, does not say in what these | Jugo-Sla View | | ee | dangers consist. Ruth Fischer is only living on the capital of old Brandler- ism, OMRADE OGNYANOVITCH (Jugo- / Slavia) declared that the ultra-left action was defeated, had no ideolog- VE WILL CONTINUE 1 ED ELIE [German comrades with the German|the left group at the third congress. Se CONTINUE 0 SEND Sep ore pene ee central committee, we must fight the |The left group at that time had its MANN-HUFFMANN STRIKERS AND TO ALL THE OTHERS] ororts of these comrades to form a|origin in a revolutionary impatience. AND OPENLY DEFY AND FLAUNT THE PUPPET JUDGE, |fraction inside the Comintern, ener-|The present ultra-left group is an ex- BENTLEY. getically. With regard to the rumors |pression of unrevolutionary hopeless- } Jni 3 that the Comintern is going to the | ness. Peper ane court of Se Unite ee right, we must emphasize with all! The ultra-lefts change their opinion the right of peaceful picketing and hence strikers who defy Bentley’s| ,ossible clarity that the decisions of | very often in this enlarged executive. injunction are within their legal rights. the present enlarged executive are in|In the beginning they admitted their In the Paterson strike the daily injunctions of Judge Vivian M.|20 way contradictory to the decisions /sins, now they don’t any more. Scho- of previous congresses, and that they |lem even said that if he were to deny but rights, who go in harness with It is her aim to sow the seeds of suspicion against the Comintern and the Russian party thru her accusation vis wer “ini ‘ vi , _ Jewis riage flaunted and the slogan became “injunctions will not) .-. based upon Leninism. his old line he would be a rénegade. |CeSs, to create the appearance of a | of the right danger. With Souvarin it | {cal clarity and attempted to organize make silk. \ It is the greater slahder and’ failure |"¢W erlsis. The most important isj;, just the same.. When Ruth Fischer |itself internationally without a pro- In the Passaic strike the workers will prove to the mill owners| [american Delegate on German | |to recognize the role of the Comintern |the Ideological struggle against the|deciares in her letters that Russia|gram. Scholem did not win the revo- ae raate tI ultra-left, but we must not neglect the.|wants to enter the league of nations |lutionary workers from the K. A. P., and their lackeys, the courts, and the police, that injunctions will Left when someone says that he“could be- hot méke. woolens come a renegade insidé the Comintern |°T@nizational struggle. The more un- principled is the opposition the more this is also only a means of awakening | but the Comintern did it. the mistrust of the international prole- eae Investigate the Whole Industry Senator William E. Borah announced. the other day that unless some action were taken by the committee on manufactures regarding the proposed investigation of the Passaic strike he would interrogate Senator McKinley of Illinois, chairman of: that commit- tee, on the senate floor. Following this announcement, Senator Gerry, democrat of Rhode Island, told the senate that he favored an in- vestigation of the whole textile industry = pointed to the Willi- mantic thread strike that is still on in Contecticut, ” Said Senator Gerry regarding Willimantic,and the ten per cent ‘wage cut which provoked the strike: “The company paid a dividend of ten percent and set aside over $1,000,000 as surplus, yet the wagecut was enforced, and many of the workers were evicted from their homes when they resisted. There could be no question of ulterior motive in this strike, since the strikers belonged to the United Textile Workers of America, which Is affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. The remarks regarding possible “ulterior motive” anticipated the “red” scare that will be made by Senator Edwards, the textile senator from New Jersey, who has been sabotaging the proposed in- vestigation by conniving to delay the meeting of the committee. Ed- wards has announced that he will make a lengthy report defending police terror and denouncing the strikers whom his wife and daughter hypocritically fawned upon when his home was picketed. Certainly there is every reason why the whole industry should be investigated and the vile conditions exposed to the gaze of the whole world, but the important fact to keep in mind as a subject for| was not quite successful, owing to the special attention is the fact of banditry and savagery that exists in Passaic and vicinity where every semblance of our alleged liberties are trampled under foot. Intelligent labor will be contented with nothing less than placing the mill owners and the various city and county administrations of the strike area in the pillory. OMRADE DORSY (U.S. A.): I shall vote imefavOrn"Sr the resolution upon the German question. The pres- ent leadership of the Communist Party of Germany has the confidence of all sections of the Comintern. Ruth Fischer, complains of the sharpness of the struggle against her group in Germany. This is, however, justified by the great number of mistakes made by the. party under her leadership, mistakes which she is not willing to correct. Ruth. Fischer is now con- tinuing. the double game that she played-with the open letter, in relation to this resolution, She is trying to organize a left wing opposition in- side the Comintern. She does not recognize the great ultra-left danger which is present in the Communist Party of Germany. She refused to carry out the direc- tives of the Comintern in the trade union question. All these mistakes made it necessary to remove her from the leadership of the Communist Party of Germany and to set up a new central committee. The next task of the central committee is not to obtain unity with the leaders of the opposition, but to win the workers who Stand behind this opposition. The E. C. C. 1. did everything possible to come to an understanding with the comrades of the opposition, but this fault of the opposition, Bordiga Ag: Right IOMRADE BORDIGA then spoke: The danger from the right is not a phantom, but a reality. Ercoli says Passaic, as a blot upon the face of the earth, should be made the} that I only speak of right dangers in starting point and Special attention devoted to it-alone, From thence|#2 ®bstract manner, but one really the investigation of the industry could proceed. A Tribute to Shop Bulletins The arrest in Philadelphia of members of the Workers (Com- cannot demand that I give the exact address of the right dangers. Such exact details are not possible. But, nevertheless, a right danger exists not only in the resolutions, but also in the actions of the Comin- tern, also in the treatment of the Ger- by recognizing his’ own mistakes. (Applause.) IOMRADE SEMARD:. At the pres- left deviation is thé chief danger. After the collapse in 1923 a section of the honest Communist}'workers in Ger- many came under the influence of the Ruth Fischer group and for this rea- son the ideologicabogtruggle against this group is of* tance. Cae We must declare ‘with all possible must be drawn into the party work. left and right, Germany. In both tries we shall fight upon the basis 6f Leninism and ent moment in Germany the ultra- great impor- clarity that Ruth Fischer and her sup- porters, quite apart frém any personal considerations, are “politically bank- rupt. It is charactefistic that the ideology of the Ruth !Fischer group is in many points in agreement with the ideology of the French right opposi- tion. Naturally, in the present situa- tion right deviations are possible, in Germany and in other countries. We must. not, however, become panicy in the face of these rigt ‘dangers. The ultra-lefts speak al t a return of Brandler and Thalligimer to work. To this we must retufh a clear answer: that whoever is honéstly prepared to carry out the line of the Comintern The present German central com- mittee is strong enough to utilize the representatives of various groups in the practical work, We must, how- evere, at the same time reject defi- nitely all rumors about the “right de- viations” of the Comintern. Just now we'see an energetic struggle against the French right and we would strug- gle in just the same way against an international right wing shouldst form itself. We must against both The right danger} is at | present stronger in France, the ultra-left in ‘of the decisions of previous con- necessary become organizational measures, | Kuusinen, E.C. C.b .% OMRADE KUUSINEN: _ Histor! cally speaking, the German left fulfilled a valuable mission in the Ger- man revolutionary movement, above all in 1923, and it made a valuable contribution to the bolshevization of the Communist Party in Germany. After the winning of the party led ship, however, it still pursued a | tional policy and degenerated into, the so-called “Ruth Fischer regmie.” A resolution of the third world congress says: “Democratic centralism fn a Communist Party organization should be a real synthesis, an amalgamation of centralism and proletarian democ- racy. A formal or mechanical ceén- | tralization would mean the centraliza- tion of ‘power’ in the hands of: the party baureaucracy for a dictatorship over the other members or the masses of the revolutionary proletariat out- side the party. But only an enemy of | Communism can contend that thru fits function of leading the proletarian class struggle and thru the centraliza- tion of this Communist leadership the Communist Party wishes to dictate to the revolutionary proleariat.” But down to this day Ruth-Fischer does not understand the difference be- tween dictating and leading. The con- sequences of this were amongst many others and great reduction of the party membership fn the Ruhr district and the loss of our position in the trade unions. The Ruth Fischer re- gime killed the internal party democ- racy and all new signs of party life almost completely. The executive was compelled to interfere, otherwise the party would have been destroyed. The party quickly found sufficient forces to normalize the party leader- ship. Thereupon Ruth Fischer opened the second phase of her doub}e book- keeping. She signed the open letter tariat agains tthe Soviet Union. lov, Ruth Fischer, Korsch and Scho: lem represent “a west European Com- munism,” a west European orienta- tion at the same time when the Ger- man bourgeoisie is seeking a west orientation against Russia. [ Manullski Criticizes Souvarine | OUVARINE ‘compared the, Lenin mausoleum with the grave of Ma; homed; or that of the Tartarleader, Tammerlan, and by this he wants to compare the Red army with the Tar- And that reminds one of the declarations of Korsch about the “ped. imperialism.” ae | The internal party course of the Ruth Fischer group led to a great weakening of our party organization | of the Ruhr district, one of the ‘strong- est ‘proletarian organizations. the fall of Ruth Fischer from leader- ship the Ruhr party district had four thousand members. © ‘ y In consequence of the alteration, brought about by the new party lead- ership, this number rose to nine thousand. A similar example is shown by a comparison of the presidential elections with the last Berlin munici- After the fall of .the Ruth Fischer central committee the party leadership went over into the hands of healthier and proletarian ele- ments. This leadership rebuilt the authority of the Communist Party and achieved considerable success. Ruth Fischer had-no right to criticize the /Polish party takes up the standpoint Communist Party nor to speculate upon the difficulties which have arisen from her mistakes. tar army. pal elections. Never Had Case Like Ruth’ Mas- After BAHNS protested against the methods used by the Comintern The ultra-left embodies only petty bourgeois pessimism. Right devia- tions are chiefly to be seen in the trade union question and in the ap- plication of the united front. In Jugo- Slavia the rights operate with ultra- left slogans.. Bordiga abandoned some of the ultra-lefts, but objectively he supports them. The Comintern will liquidate the ultra-left. Ditmitrov, Bulgaria IOMRADE DIMITROV (Bulgaria) made the following declaration; “The Bulgarian delegation supports unreservedly the resolution of the German commission. In Germany the chief danger which must be fought comes from the ultra-left. The Com- munist Party of Germany must finally overcome the unproletarian dishonest Ruth Fischer group. The contention of Bordiga and Hansen that the Comintern is going to the right is ab- solutely baseless. Thie is proved by the example of France and Bulgaria, where the Comintern struggled against the right danger. The actions of the ultra-left represent an organ- ized attempt upon the unity and the bolshevist.character of the Comintern. We shall fight against this and the workers will go with the Comintern and not with the ultra-left.” MRADE BOGUTZKY (Poland) made a declaration in the name of the Polish delegation, according to which the central committee of the of the theses of Zinoviev in its con- demnation of the ultra-left deviations of Domsky. The fact that Domsky recognizes his ultra-left mistakes does not mean that he has given up the policy of double bookkeeping in Po- land. The Polish tparty will fight against the ultra-left on a national and international scale. f ae [ Unemployment Relief in the Soviet Union fractional letters. The last phase of | !— this double game in the new fractional ELIEF for the unemployed in, the ; workers. The first category receives ee et ree 5a ibe hence U.S. S. R, is in charge of the so-|20 per cent and the second 20 per cent t is characteristic that the Ruth | cjq) insurance department of the state. | of the average wage of the workers of ¥ " Be ternational scale is desirable, but I MRADE KILBUM (Sweden): 1} fischer group did not wish to inform All K : : rade " ; insured and their dues | their industries. To this sum is these comrades is a tribute to the effectiveness of these bulletins. It|cannot agree with the attempts of, reject the ‘conteifhia‘of the Ultra- |ene commission: about “this. nlatform. Al pe a praised Pree aersegiee Ace oo 5g B48 also proves the correctness of the Communist tactic of concentrating] left comrades in this enlarged E. C.}left that the Comintéfm does not fight] One looks into the eyes of the lover, prises, concessionaires and the private | Ployed and their families have a right on the shops and striving to realize in propaganda and organiza-|C. I. because the left opposition is }strongly enough agaist the right dan-| into the mouth of the horse, but at the | employers. According to the decision |to free medical attention, death and munist) Party and the Young Workers League before the plant of| man and French questions in this en- {8% °f the Comiitein. (Appiguse.) }and at the same time wrote secret the Budds Auto Body Manufacturing company for distributing the}larged EB. C. ©. I. It is true that an shop bulletin issued by ,the Communist nucleus in that plant and|organized resistance of the left the attempt being made by the agents of the concern to convict |*®*!st such right dangers on an in- Kilbum, a tional work that dialectic connection between the general class|°™Y Possible and permissible in open |gers, For three years Swedish | hands of a politician, The declaration | o¢ the people's commisariat of Octo-| birth attendance, freedom from taxes; ‘ cease ~. |and clear discussion, and not in the|party fought the right d/imger under |of the Ruth Fischer group is a politi- lo struggle and the specific problems that confront the workers in|form of rumor, intrigues and maneu-|the most difficult effeug*:ances and | cal action. nes ber i on a ay eee lea! pis pe er ay for ae the yarious units of industry. vers behind the scene. When they |qrove out the right . The ultra-} It stresses continuously that there | workers ain’ sisi: Mg withbut lectri iA { F the one million unem ved, one lefts shout about a danger, but] is a crisis in the Communist Party of | consideration of how lon, O a4 ig they have half are now receiving regular ganda of the class struggle in the shops the firm is not direetly Hin Me eka nice ea tas, Maye swe Seanr area pinigy § tas pir foe sais worked; (b) unskilled workers, who|1ief, Public works pepe ton We affected. Such abstract propaganda seems equally remote to the} jt absurd that the left comradts said] Hansen voted agafaist,the resolution |The Ruth Fischer group wishes to bave wanes 0° vont onteaaiier: unemployed and other arrangements workers. But with the shop bulletin as an instrument for attracting | nothing in the political discussion and | pecause it mention ‘ing against} arouse distrust in the party leader- ©) clatinad pak cho late Wirkan mee ae ee condition. It is the the attention of the workers thru voicing their own grievances the] !eft their oppositional speakers for |the German right danger and not be-| ship by continuously spreading rumors |three years and are organized, and five ean tha rallet te nse catanarice py i . i i ‘ * the last moment. Co This is proof ris Ruth Fischer has the same 4 I mn be a p ne cause it was incorreet. of crises, Ru 7 struggle then becomes a part and parcel of their every-day lives. ‘And he ia right, But, nevertheless, lof the poverty of leftewing arguments. |in view when she speaks of « surren- reare hark. saupoy ua enates to raise the relief sums. In the bulletin of the Budd shop nucleus attention was called] :,¢ Comintern itself is partly res ‘ ‘4 : 2 pon- | It is a calumny to that the Comin-| der of the party to the right. It is ab- & , to the hazardous conditions of labor that take a ghastly toll of life] sible for this by its methods of work, |tern does not fight against the right | sura when Ruth Fischer, of all people, | °°) Ne a ae U. S. Sues to Collect and limb. The workers who had suffered in silence were learning |Which do not make for ye Siar danger. We re fopmtt Lpeagy-soeed demands a clearing of the internal . si ins acti Mihi aid sion, The honest left workers in Ger-|against the right, ance, Norway, j party atmosphere, * anat some of their co-workers were gi ing audible expression to their many must analyze the general policy |Germany, Sweden, ec: Scholem {s| Further, the Ruth Fischer group 4 resentment against the mechanical butchery that prevails, In despera-|o¢ the Comintern and their leaders or|tho embodiment of a type of party|manded a free and wide discussion peity bonrwect cletnats. have tebie- tion the spies and company police of the shop arrested three workers |ex-leaders critically upon the basis of) leader who has neyer rooted in the Jand no organizational measure. Who- |; oq as unemployed in order to get distributing the shop bulletin. their real class feelings. working-class move ay eee n over calls to mind the policy the | the relief and the advantages of hous- These arrests will further emphasize the bestial conditions in| j—————_—, | "n°. Party, aud. in evolution is /Ruth Fischer central committee must | ing electricity, etc., which are granted pe Bhat : Comrade Pepper common to Levi, Frossard and the | admit that more dishonest double deal- loyed. ‘The conditi the shop and will aid in stimulating the workers to action that will eee ultra-left. The ultradeft \deology must} ng is hardly’ possible, One of, the ising GaRKhiad Sarkota, ek pcr fulfill the fears of the special agents of the Budd concern who said, OMRADS EBPPER then spoke: be destroyed, but we must not over-|nost important points of the German |... Wicaune’ thére {en sched Ot “Phe next thing you know you'll have a strike here.’ .»« : Se aalocation ne ra look the danger from the right. resolution is the demand for a quick | country people to the cities, where it The workers in this slaughter house will not forget thatthe first!agreement with the utterances of to raise their voices in their behalf were the Communists, thru the |Dorsy upon the ultra-left dangers. I}doned jit and the same happened in} Comintern by its lack ciples “ Germany under the Ruth-Fischer-/and damages the party by its diplo- vinfllar nucleus organs in order to reach the masses of labor. In America the whole working attain its ends, for the Comintern a : ¢ da Pagar we " J , ef | em had eae So long as revolutionists confine themselves to abstract propa-|»ad the majority some left leaders * $10,000 Forbes Fine (Special to The Dally Worker) Suit to collect $10,000, the amount of the fine assessed against Col, Chas. R, Forbes, upon his conviction on charges of defrauding the United States while head of the veterans’ bu+ reau, was filed by the H conditions are necessary be- cause great numbers of former When Hansen was leader of the] iquidation of Ruth er frac- | ae la f the sh letin, wish only to, amplify his remarks, We c cfleetive weapon of the shop bullet Se ey tines fai kiso| Gopuiein. central “sora bor Norwegian party the masses aban-|tion which 3) confi in the Ht sire are two This experience should encourage all party members to establish right dangers inside the Comintern.| uitra-lefts are everywhere the organ-|rMHi Ruth Fischer + en pag ‘oo who ft, First, skilled ae van worke: ane, y