The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 18, 1927, Page 3

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Cee —————————E, a se sere ee THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JULY 18, 1927 “Storming of Perekop” Gigantic Ballet, Will Celebrate November MOSCOW, July 17.—The Acad- emy of Opera is conducting daily rehersals of the enormous new ballet, “The Storming of Pere- kop,” which will represent ‘the final attack on Baron Wrangel’s troops, the last white guard army to be driven from the territory of the U. §. S. R. Over 1,500 per- formers will take part. Among the characters represented will be Wrangel opposing the Soveit Union cavalry, General Budenny and Frunze, People’s Commissar for War, who recently died. This opera is part of the celebration of the tenth anniversary of the Bol- shevik revolution, November 7th of this year. Build Concrete Roads In the Soviet Union| MOSCOW, July 17.—Experimental | have been built in the Caucasaus by the} conerete and macadam roads Commissary of ‘Transport, in efforts | to solve the Soviet Union’s great in- | ternal need of passable highways. The make road- building in most parts of the Union| ment similar to that made with Col.| particularly difficult. Most roads are| Hugh LL. severe frosts of winter now either soft dirt or cobblestone. Identify Aviator’s Plane. RIO JANEIRO, Brazil, July 17.—! Wreckage of the plane found some HUGE SUM READY The Death of Kevin O'Higgins (GREAT TRADE OF § 7) IN SOVIET UNION , FOR STEEL MILLS ‘American Technique, $30,000,000 will be spent in the de- | celopment of the metal industry in | Soviet Union within the next five years under plans now being drawn by the Metal Institute at Leningrad. Most of the budget is for new plans, | Says the announcement which is made | By T. J. O}FLAHERTY HOUSANDS of editorials have ap- peared in the American capital- ist press on the death of Kevin O'Higgins, vice-president of the exec- utive council of the Irish Free State, foreign minister and minister of jus- tice, and practically all the editorial comment that I yead was eulogistic of the dead official, condemnatory of the militant Republicans and appeared to be in the main, the product of one mind, with variations for each paper to create the appearance of originality. O’Higgins was, extolled as a “strong” man, and the practical ap- 4 e EE eA Pe Irish Republican Leader Dies —@tunate people. Those assassins were the Black and Tans, the offscourings of the slums and jails of England and eee dives of her Oriental possessions. | Against those human vermin the | Irish Republican Army battled until |the treaty which created the Free State was signed in the winter of , 1 , between the British govern- nt and the representatives of Dail ‘HE Dail split over the treaty, the pro-treatyites winning by a bare majority. DeValera, the leader of the opposition faction held out for an | amended oath of allegiance, but most , of his follow did net care so much about the wording of the oath as the fact that the treaty kept Ireland in U.S. SB, GOING TONEW MARKETS British “Die-Hards” in Considerable Worry By TOM BARKER LONDON, (FP) Jul 7 the assuranc f the Br ment that tra on with Sov vious that t ate the Lon cies as far 1 Despite | by a visiting delegation of six Rus-| plication of this virtue that won the jsian engineers, having their head-| approval of the capitalist scribes was | quarters at the office of the Amtorg’ his brutal suppression of the Repub- Trading Corp., 165 Broadway, New’ ican movement that sought to bring {| York, which handles exports of metals | about the political separation of Ire-' jand machinery from the United/ land from Great Britain and the States to the Soviet Union. unity of, the country under one goy- | Visiting America. ernment. } American engineering methods will} Jy crushing this movement O’Hig- be followed in the expansion pro-| gins did not hesitate to use the firing gram. The six Russian engineers are) squad against his former intimate now visiting. American’ steel’ and/ friends. The number of Republicans |machinery plants and consulting) that he was directly responsible for | American engineers. One or more murdering in this fashion is put at of the American engineering firms|77, Yet this is the monster who has |may be engaged to serve as consul-/ heen credited by the capitalist edi-| jtants in Russia under an arrange-| torial hacks with having a kind Weart, { in proof of which they adduce his al- -{leged collapse when he heard the | sound of the gun shots that snuffed | out the life of the rebel Rory. O’Con- nor, his former bosom friend, who and technicians | jeft all his possessions to the O’Hig- all the countries | pins family by will. Cooper for the Dneiper. | dro-electric development, and | several American firms for the So- | viet coal fields. ; “Our executives | realize fully that of Countess Markievicz, a prominent figure in Irish republican act S died last week, after two operations |\for appendiciti The coantess was >| tion was killed in action and the Free the grip of the Empire and split the ; country in two political parts by |‘ granting autonomy to the tory/¢ North, thus giving the British a base! ] of operations in Ireland against the! Indiz nationalist’ revolutionists. r 500,000 ped from | wer N the elections that followed the| plit the pro-treatyites won a ma- jority of the deputies for the treaty, the Labor Part ceepting the pact! ? jas a step in ad ly The militant Republicans refused to | {e"stand, to pure jaccept the treaty and decided to|%#™e basis, and in th {maintain the military organizations BrQwete Of | that forced the British to m MONS ee ee The Collins-Cosgrave-Mul-| /0don’s exp a on, the pro-treaty group,| Despite Home jeuddenly decided to fight the mili-|Hick’s statement | tants and civil war followed, Michael |Tefuses to sac | Collins, the leader of the treaty fac-| Sian trade t gers, and that Russ a campaign of| London for trading pury tile leaving Australia from the grow from the ilar scher mission is purchase instead of as to Sum Secretary s will re- Germans State inaugurated Sonos With working class ammunition. Prime the Big . Berthas with heavy, fied by an engineer here as that of| velopment of metal industries, “said | Saint Roman, Portuguese airman, | Fi. A. Rottenberg, spokesman for the} who left Senegal on May 5 to fly to| delegation. | Brazil. He never landed. Thé; Construction of the new tractor! the reason for the universal praise! showered on O’Higgiris by the im- perialist press and their regret for his death. He was a defender of the \appeared when she was sentenced to O'Higgins helted the firing squad, the Arcos raid and the suspension of death, this sentence. was commuted to |penal servitude for life by Sir John|no more. Maxwell. In June, 1917, she was re- N ‘ ; r terror under the leadershi f Kevin| ceive the same treatment a Fe Perey oe | time ago by a fisherman off the|in the world the United States has| vee ; ding DOr in 1868 at Lissate:', County! O'Higgins who took no as én thalot Frenchmen, it would. seem that charges to shatter { coast of Brazil is tentatively identi-| most to, give us regarding the de-| m te) Ro. mivatery, surrounding (ako 7 Ghe is: shown a: as she/ Easter Week Rebellion. Before) the Soviets are not going to forget the bulwarks of i capitalism. Lead the powerful | 77 of his former comrades fell to rise; 1iplomatic relations quite so easily And despite the efforts of British wreckage discovered was that of a/ plant at Stalingvad, to have a yearly | capitalist system in Ireland and all Goliath plane, the type used on this; output of 10,000 tractors, is under | ver the world. flight. Den’t Forget the Sustaining Fund! &, LEFT WING UNIONISM By DAVID J. SAPOSS of Brookwood Labor College { j | | MONG academic people writing about labor prob- lems David J. Saposs has come closer than anyone else in the appreciation of the va- rious forces that are at work the labor movement at thé sent time. He has worked h Professor Commons for He has invasti- w many years, | gated ‘the steel strike, stock yards, and has written’ exten- } jleased by the British governnrent with Like many others in} . a mee Ae ¥ |way, said Rottenberg. Machinery! history and in the history of all ye aa Pa ee ar leatory: j valued at $6,000,000 may be pur-/ Pressed countries he snatched at the | chased here for the plant. opportunity afforded him by the} | The metal industry is said to he, treaty which created the Free State,|movement in order the only manufacturing industry jn, to step in as England’s chief jailer of their masters, w others become the Soviet Union with an output still the Irish workers and peasants. employers or foremen and presidents | below the pre-war level. During the) “The Irish Question” has been a/of corporations or organize detective {first 6 months of. the current Soviet} thorn in the side of every British; agencies to spy on labor. The traitor ‘fiscal year (October 1 to March 81) | government for centuries. Against | is to be found in all countries and in the output showed an increase of! the rebellious Irish people, England | all social groups fighting for free- about, 40 per cent over the same|Used every method known to the}dom. O'Higgins was a political rela- |period last year, and was about 75| tyrant, from the most brutal and/ tive of the social revolutionar and | Der cent of the figure for 1913,| bloody ‘suppression to an interna-| mensheviks of Russia who joined with | During the current year about $120,-| tional campaign of slander which | the foreign powers in tryihg to drive 000,000 will be spent on major con-| painted them as either clowns and! their own people back under the | struction in the industry. | buffoons whose only virtue was a Czarist yoke. : | facility for making the world laugh! ppcauSE of the general confusion . at their antics, or élse savage and| that prevails over the situation in; What the Daily Worker i | Means to the Workers ferocious being whose ynormal ac- Ireland and because of its importance | | tivities were murder, arson and lying. | 1 || More Encouraging | Contributions to Our Emergency Fund. those tools remain in the trade union to better serve pal zt «7. | in the imperialist epoch a brief sketch pabe poliey - blood and terror failed | o¢ what transpired in Ireland since {to quench the unconquerable spirit | Tames Connolly, Padraic Pearse, Sean | of the people, but the campaign of | MacDermott and. several. other révo- | character assassination was more jlutionary leaders were murdered by successful. In fact even today there} the British government because they are radicals with a fairly intelligent! id |—By A Chicago Worker Correspon-| grasp of the class struggle whose | and refused to acest as sincere the | dent. | knowledge of the Irish struggle is! feigned indignation of the British | Mrs. K. Kelly, Cicero, Ml....... $5.00| hardly on a higher plane than that | povernment over the German inyasion | | Walter Conradi, New Bremen, possessed by the hacks who write im-| of “poor little Belgium,” whose rul-| Ohio 8,00| Perialistic editorials on the Irish : : ; Ae ing class prostituted itself for Great pea atari (collected) sae ne question for the capitalist press. | Byitain ind France. (This is a ‘Bood | PURAAE Motos katie nd + 383. GabiGciesie: Toa uuedion Galt Slt atte the militant socialist James | place to remind our readers that Ar-) | Geo. B. Hoxie, Los Angeles, Calif. 1.00} the British right! | M. Shapovaloy, Riverside, Calif. 1.00! ; fe Connolly and his comrades raised | thur Sender, i | q i the flag of rebellion against the| Wing socialist who is now so exorcised | Albert M. Firey, River Rorest, Ill. 3.00! British empire in Dublin in 1916 un-| over the execution of several Czarist aca i (Collected) Paterson, | til today the sewer pipes of capitalist conspirators by the Soviet govern-| Te Se ES Poe Sen 40! journalism have been exuding their) ment, was a member of Asquith’s! |M. J. Murphy, Anaci | poisoned filth against the gallant|coalition cabinet when James Con-! | Montana -1.00; men and women who risked. their|nolly, a fellow socialist was murderéd’| | Budnick, Nuc. 1F, New York City 8.00) lives for the cause of Irish freedom| by orders of that cabinet. Needless | to say Connolly was not an impérial- | E. Tusa, (Collected) Monessen, | from British rule. Those lickspittles > ut a | BR ce desea von mtg se ae sss 10.18 | could not find terms harsh enou | . gh to lee re pela Oakland, Calif. eee Fs) hurl at those brave souls. They were et a em petlens, Calif. +. -1.00 ‘murderers, agitators, lunatics. The - Bartoshevich, Newton Upper | traitor, the stoolpigeon and the re- {st socialist | tionist). | AFTER the reign of terror that fol- louse, revolu- tried to free Ireland frém British rule | | WHEN the civil war ended and the| tiplomacy to prevent Russia from aie . | getting credits in | °" military campaign of the Repub-| that a far greater |licans was crushed for the time be- é jing, O’Higgins became one of the leading men in the Free State gov- jernment. The British government liked him. He believed implicitly in imperialism and expressed his ad- |miration for Mussolini. Ireland, are are looming in the United States. jwhich was hitherto a thorn in the} ; ‘i | side of British imperialism would now .be a friend in peace and an ally in wirers a al y |war, The Free State government |thru its minister for external affairs | ¥ . | pledged the manhood of the country Worker's Carnival | to the defense of the empire. O’Hig-| | gins attended the last meeting of the es! imperial conference in London O20) sre Se. MoRENL tu dn <a atute: ot only one week before his death at- ed Se Panta ie ‘ Foe tended the Geneva naval parley where|®TC8t ¢xcitement. Passersby z > ., | Wondering why the picket lines he is said to have supplied the Brit-| ing ga the job with aaeh tes jish naval experts with information | my,, Nenad ia of acetic? ing ins on the co-operation that could be ex- cinhsod TUOOREE cunt th ae as pected from the Free State in case! inee, WHY i ik? “Wink wrens? of hostilities with another power or| WS, Why why: ireobhile ks date jcombination of powers. | groups are debating with each other. N the récént elections the anti-| Some are saying, “Gold will win eas- treaty Republicans made gains ily,” others are saying, “Where do while the Free State supporters lost you get that stuff, it’s a walkover }ground. Every sign pointed to a re-| for Goretsky.” vival of the Republican spirit. The Free State government was consid- ered in a precarious condition and for a while there was doubt that Cos- grave, O'Higgins and company would form 'a government. Had the Labor Party under the leadership of the re- actionary Thomas Johnson, who is supported by William O’Brien, secre-|has shown splendid results. tary of the Irish Transport and Gen-! Furriers Pull Against Cloakmakers. eral Workers Union and a formér co-! 4 tug df war match has been ar- worker of James Connolly, adopted a| ranged for The DAILY WORKER militant policy, for labor and Repub-| Carnival to be }weld at Pleasant Bay licanism, it would have taken the 1 ground from under the feet of the|teams of Furriers quibbler DeValera whose policy is al-| The teams are as follows: most impossible to unravel or under-| Furriers—M. L. Malkin, stand. A police sergeant decided to in- |vestigate. He put two: of his best men on the job. work the Tammany stalwarts ered the truth. The leading s: |this new venture is M. L. Malkin, | who has been canvassing the workers every minute of the day. His work After hours of hard] liscov- | rit inj |the financing of Soviet industry is| Park on July 28rd and 24th, between! and Cloakmakers. | | Gold, cannons of the class struggle with ° the destructive shells of revolutionary propaganda. The Daily Worker is the heavy'shot which must be poured into the strongholds of the enemy. Copies of the Daily Worker, whether carried from worker to worker through individual distribution, or through mass distribution in hundreds and thousands, have the same disintegrating force which the cannons of capitalism had upon the ancient walls | Fz $i: |Glantzman, Yaker, Kuchinsky, In-| | a bl ae: asians by Pee, saoare 1 |negade were exalted and the gibbet| the oriit Gir chon see DeValera refused to take the oath | trator, Potash, Friedman, Liemer, - of the feudal Lett Wing Unionism” rep. 1S loses. Becca ae ore ed and the firing squad were suggested| seemed crushed. ‘Thousands of sus.| 0! allegiance to the king. He had a/ Pappas, L. Yanowitz, F. Brownstein, barons. They, help eae hs dua develope ot te Kasin: € ae ‘3. as the proper reward of self-sacrifice. pected persons—suspected of being | foratule of his own which meant prac-|J, Mailman, J. Schneider, Lenhart | j. we Sriaty Sue wevererea see relia plage Ohio. + 1.00 It was the policy of glorifying the hostile to British rule—were in vari.| tic@lly the same thing. His group| and Pesach. | to destroy the unong the trade unions, "Bo aa dopia, Kast Orange, Ind. 12-501 seb as the highest type of citizen) oug prisons, The majority of the| “®% Not seated and the Labor dele- | _Cloakmakers-—Roman, Goretsky, | juggernaut of tion, dual unionism, revol: ey pte Gop a ae get “koa applied internationally. Irish capitalist papers were bitterly gation of 22 members now constitutes | Kudrenetsky, Saifer, Koretz 1 $ Honey ana opportunigtic ead. |} C Pimitrof, South Bend, Tad. .5 que exgcution of O'Higgins by un-| opposed to the revolutionists, So | the, OPPosition which is. muted and Friedman, J. Korenberg, Moskowitz, capitalism from ee rca. ent ae [aS RRR VER ORIS OE 21.00, ~ known persons was seized on as| Were the clergy of all demoniations ‘ ‘ " Ir. ae te que 5 oe within. They are ca Communists are the th | Jos Linke, Grand Rapids, Mich. 1.50|@n excuse by those seribblers to trot | With the exception of a few young} HAD the anti-treaty Republicans ad a pepiosi + Glantz, J. Sel are like h of this book. pao Worker ac: |. K. Field, Detroit, Mich. ......4.32 out the hoary hokum about Iweland | catholic priests. All avenues of ex-| taken their seats and made an ue 6 ike s rapnel fire, tive in the could afford to be without this book, which is full of docu- meniary material and is therefore a very useful refer- ence volume. The Seamen's . Journal wrote the foliowing about “Le Wing Unionism”; @ “The book pre- sents a fair und | d account question ing from within,” amalgam: is usually dismissed with. oat much consideration from the mind of the conservative lubor official because it makes him see red.” William 2%. Foster says of this book: ery. imilitant trace unionist should own a copy of Saposs’ ‘Left Wing Follow this ad- * vice and secure a copy of the bouk. Cloth Bound, 192 pp., $1.60. READ ALSO FT WING IN THE ‘T UNIONS By Margaret Larkin —10 WHAT'S WRONG IN THE CARPENTER’S UNION —10 WORLD, LABOR UNITY By Scott Nearing —10 DAILY WORKER PUB. COMPANY 33 First Street, New York, | Jos. Ozanich, Centerville, Iowa. 10,00 and the alleged inability of the Irish | Pression were closed to the revolu- |C. P. Wilson, San Jose, Calif. ..1.00| people to conduct themselves except | tionary movement. But ways and | Frank Copp, (collected) Kansas in a manner that brings joy only to| ™eans were found and within a year | ity, Kansas ............ .00 the undertaker and the manufacturer |#S & fesult of the policy of murder | \J. A. Lavvoff, Duluth, Minn. . 00 of embalming fluid. Tho murdors | Pursued by. the government, the great 'M. Yaich, Milwaukee, Wis. . 4.25 | take place with such monotonous fre-| Majority of the people were won over W. Trapp, Minneapolis, Minn. 1.50| quency in the United States that only | to the Republican cause. Rody Staycheff, Toledo, Ohio . 320) a very unusual one stays on the front WHEN the world war was brought Walter Swezey, Sioux City, Iowa 3.00| Page more than a few hours the capi-| to a close with the defeat of the alliance with the Labor Party or at| This is going to settle many argu- least made an att¢mpt to do so, it being willing for the opposition to| Workers must be at the Carnival to vote the oath of allegiance out of | Watch this Olympian contest. Bring existence, thus creating a situation | Y°UT friends. that would compel the British to! either consent to a reopening of Volunteer Censor Finds negotiations or resume the policy of! |C Williams, San Francisco, Calif, 1.06 | talist editors adduced from the kill-| central powers the Irish republicans | |E. Miller, Toledo, Ohio .......38.00,ing of O'Higgins that England was! took advantage of Woodrow Wilson’s | | Vera Fruman, Baltimore, Md. ..9.00 | Tuite justified in witholding the right! insincere speeches in behalf of they O. Zimmerman, Milwaukee, Wis. 6.50 of self-government from Ireland. Be-| freedom of small nations and guc-| Section 4, New Yorie City ......6.25) fore the creation of the Free State,| ceeded in making ‘a lot of trouBle for | M. Crusevich, Ziegler, IM. ......1.50| there might be some excuse for 4) England. Here in the United States | F. T. Rentz, Bethlehem. Pa. ....1.00, hot/headed patriot in popping off an’ a gigantic propaganda campaign was | | Frank Lehti, (collected) Fort Myers,' obnoxious British oppressor or a launched which made the capitalist | _ Florida -3.00 grasping landlord. but now that the péliticjans sit up and take notice. .00| Trish are permitted to govern their They ped on the bandwagon, hol- jown country, nothing but an’ in- lered for Irish freedom and kept on! s -2.00 | satiable thirst for gore could be the. shouting as long as there wes.a vote | M. D. Damirez, Mexic _F. ..2,05| motive for the crime. So the anvil! or a dollar to be gained thereby. G. A. Karr, Cleveland, Ohio |S. Lopez & R. G | Fla. terrorism at a time when her atten- tton is devoted to holding her own in| Staging Wicked Movies several parts of the world simultan-| eously, | ello If the Labor and the Republican} WASHINGTON, July 17.—-Canon parties had genuine revolutionary | hase, superintendent of the National leaders of the Connolly type, they Reform \Bureau, a private organiza- would be able to unite on an anti-im-| tion of volunteer censors, has asked perialist program that would hasten President Coolidge in a letter sent the day of complete freedom for the |Yesterday to work to have passed a Irish workers and peasants from |law giving federal control over .mo- foreign rule and native exploitation |tion picture companies similar to the and constitute a valuable contribu-|tadio control law, tion to the antisimperialist forces! Meanwhile, Canon takes advan- everywhere, |tage of the present suit against Fa ....5.25| Chorus hammered. Hl eR: - ; i a "Higgi |JN the elections that followed after} |A. Raisonen, (collected) Grand | | That O'Higgins was a tool of the J he cecions (he the Republicans j Rapids, Mich. .7.25| British government in Ireland net a at ga ieteiey, 1B |M. Whittier, Coske, Mont. . 25.00 representative of the Irish pro- | Won an overwhelming bine w iping | \3 ont, 1.00) ducing classes, the worker and pea- the old renegade Redmondite crew} The usefulness of a dominant, bru-|mous Players to demand that large tal, imperialist like O'Higgins in a | companies be broken up, so that “com- situation like this can be easily seen. | petition may restore some decency to ments. The needle trades are going | would be possible, the Labor Party|*? come in their thousands. All other | |Mrs. O. Rammal, Coske, M. |J. Lamdes, Youngstown, Ohio 23.50 | | Mrs. J. Kaslan, Hartford, Conn. 5.00, |S. Krasonya, Milwaukee, Wis. . .5.00) W C. Blayed, Cannon City, Colo. 1.00 C. J. Anderson, (collected) Port: Ore. F. E. Mauritz, Powers, Or I FE. Dunbar, Los Angeles, HM Bete ee ear ee el 6.00 Hung. Amer. Sing. Society ....50.00 Lit. Wor. Wom. All. Br, 37, Grand Rapids, Mieh., «+9 1000 J. L. Davidson, Seattle, Wash., .2.00 Ben Rob, New York City ...... 5.00 Bernice Zmitris, Johnson City, 3.50 IR Roel teva Heads ey ainaa Carpenters Local No, 2090, New York City . - 50.00 A. Bimba, Brooklyn, N. Y. .....2.00 sants, is clear to anybody who has made a study of the recent Irish his- tory. O’Higgins was only one of such tools. The whole executive council of the Free State serves the same purpose. O'Higgins was the outstanding British servant, not be- cause he was more willing than his) associates, but because he possesed those qualities which are indispensable to the successful execution of a ruling elass’s decrees. That O'Higgins hap- pened to be Irish instead of English only added to his usefulness. Flere in America some of the most useful 00| instruments of the employers in their perpetual war against labor are men. who were trained for leadership. in, the trade union movement. Some of off the pottical map. The Redmond Jt is not surprising that the British the motion picture industry, which is gang favored constitutional methods | government and the imperialists of|a school for crime and immorality,” only, which in practice meant agree-| all countries should mourn his loss, | Chase includes in his de ing to the perpetuation of British rule in Ireland. HE success of the Republicans frightened England and agents, were dispatched to Ireland to try out the old method of political sedution. | But the militant elements in the Re- publican movement held out for a Republic and complete independence. The established the Republican Par- liament, called Dail Eireann and pro- ceeded to organize a government. The British declared the parliament ille- Lack of Funds I Preveiits Civil Service for Driés WASHINGTON, July 17.—The pro- hibition department will not be placed on a civil service basis October 1 as provided for by legislation passed by the last session of congress. Altho examinations have been given most of the administrators by the civil service commission, no funds are gal and sent @ horde of the most ac-|available for compilation of list of complighed scoundrels into, Ireland |eligibles, that were ever loosed on an unfor- , both for these posts. end the position of agents and investigators, v unciation nd Dis- of which \the Motion Picture Produc tributors of America, In Hays is the head, and points out in jhis letter that none of the attorney general’s office can be trusted with the prosecution as they are all lined up with the defendants. or — ———— Volunteers Wanted To help with some important work at The DAILY WORK- ER office, 33 First Street, ii Old Postmaster General |former Postmaster General Will .N.| § which explodes and sends its destructive messengers in evi direction. : GS Five Thousand New Readers for the Daily Worker are equal to five thousand heavy guns battering every day and every hour at the walls of capitalist society. Build the Daily Worker Army with Five Thousand New Readers, Load the guns of the Proletarian Army with the working class ammunition’ that will dest ‘Seapitalism.

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