The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 16, 1927, Page 4

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22 AZ Page Four THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, AUGUST 16,1927. menaimiaatise are THE DAILY WORKER The War Menace Against the Soviet Union | 7 and the German Reformists | Published by the DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING CO. Daily, Except Sunday 83 First Street, New York, N. Y. Cable Address: “I SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail (in New York only): By Mail (outside of New York): $8.00 per year $4.50 six months $6.00 per years $3.50 six months $2.50 three month 00 three months Phone, Orchard 1680 ork" Addr 1 mail and make out checks to THE DAILY WORKER, 33 First Street, New York, N. Y. J. LOUIS ENGDAHL : 3 alo eee clare cet eee iditors WILLIAM F. DUNNE 2 ¢ Haditors ....Business Manager Entered as se t New York, } Y., under Advertising rates on appl fon, | EL 21 3y S. PEREVEZNIKOV. During the last months there was a number of facts pointing to the ac- menace of a new imperialist war. raid on the Soviet embas: safes in London, the rupture of Anglo-Soviet relations, and murder of the Soviet amba: or in Warsaw and the semi-acquittal of the mur- |derer—all this unmistakably points to the possibility of a bloody solution lof the conflict between the country lof the toiler world. and plotting have become a world- wide calamity.” | Caine, Nee ; In other words, there is no menace | British conservatives, but on the |“Russian methods.” Thus {he Ger- jman social-democracy reacted to the rupture of Anglo-Soviet relations. The same spirit of hostility to the | workers’ republic, and of anxiety to |whitewash the world "bourgeoisie and rs and the capitalist | to absolve it of the charge of pre-|gle shall be achieved. | paring for war, pervades the com- to do. instead of increasing the struggle for the workers’ demands in the effort to javert the menace of war, are doing y at, of war, and the blame for the present; their utmost to curb this struggle of | the blowing-up of the Arcos/ situation is to be placed not on the | the workers. | eee ce | The death blow to the militant plans of the imperialists against the USSR and the revolution in China| will be dealt the moment that the junity of the trade union movement |upon the platform of the class strig- But the Ger- man reformists are the leading bat- And by no means negligible part in} ments of the social-democratic press|talion of the international troop of | ———-|this conflict falls to the lot of Hin-jin denburg-ridden Germany. connection with the murder of Her con- | Comrade Voikov. In “Vorwaerts” of | saboteurs of the united front. | Now as before they are continu- The trade union bureaucrats, | ‘The Three Musketeers’ | Set to Music The vaudeville bill at the Palace this week includes: Jack Donahue, | Charles Ruggles, assisted by Esther | Muir, Julie Brown, Kay Carlin and Lester Elliott, in “Wives, Inc.,” by! Roy Briant; Miss Juliet; the Male Ensemble of Winthrop Ames’ Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Company with J. Humbird Duffey; Bill Robinson; ' Charles Harrison and Sylvia Dakin; | Eileen and Marjorie; and the Les Jardys. Edgar MacGregor has been en-| |venient geographical location, her fa-; June 7 we read that the murder of | ing the practice ef expelling revolu- | £28¢d by 1. Lawrence Weber to stage | Gary Passes--but Garyism Remains. i ‘ a : Captai v raltlas jmous “knowledge of Russia,” her|the Soviet ambassador was “an act j tionary workers from the unions, and ARORaTERE ELE ng yee i | ; : | pe ier Hone a és - : E is. due 5 = ~ . * e ,|great experience in the conduct of/of individual terror, of individual|of repressions against Communists. Sige ” e 5 wi rey. Elbert H. Gary, who died yesterday morning, was for years |®' F | DP here in November, In Carl Hemmer’s_ ne’ evue & Sea ie F 5 Z wars in the East, as well as the need! vengeance,” and on the following day|It was only a month ago that the the most powerful individual in American industrial life, not|or protecting the rear of the future|the reformist newspaper took up,the| conference of the Central Union of | merely by virtue of his chairmanship of the colossal trust known /eastern allies of England—all this;defense of the Polish government | Employes, i. e., the leading organ as the United States Steel Corporation, but because he and his BENS ie impennliats a ae mohegan the eee us paver aan) et es nln iieves ac, j ai] Ore peg sj a - < 9 iev 6 fj. | only the neutrality, but also the open public, si? ie Soviets ave no;ment amo J neve Sy rs see eates Mi i responsible for a labor policy that became defi participation of Germany on their; grounds to saddle the Polish govern-| the famous “Kassel decision” that the nitely associated with his name and known as Garyism. | side. ment with responsibility for the mur- | Communists have no right to occupy The blight of Garyism fell heavily upon the American labor | imc | der,” says “Vorwaerts.” And it goes| official positions in ue unions : ‘ Paw te world wan ee : siti is quite obvious that the Germanjon the pod-poo the idea of any im-| The whole tactics of the reform- movement after the world war and was a reflex of the position} It is qui jon. the i f any ; ti . vorking class ca affor vate ie 5 E thejists are det ntal to the labor Emerging from the world | Working class cannot afford to watch} ation of the British tories in ejists are detrimenta “Allez-Oop,” now at the Earl Carroll « | theatre, Fred Babb and Ethel Parker, and! -———— Syme the Philippine Sextette are the head- liners at Moss’ Broadway this week. Other features include Collins and! | Peterson, Gilbert and Wells and the. | pictures of the heavyweight contest; 777 =O SCO CUT)Y) TDD between Jack Delaney and Paulino | Uzcudun. | All seats are reduced for the yy S rey , P A erice apitalis a *, A . s er. Best Sea 2. of supremacy of American capitalism. ging fro the development of events in idle! assassination of Soviet representa-| movement, and advantageous only to wr. yputhery B As : Core Theatre: 46 at ar at war as the most powerful and arrogant capitalism in the whole | equanimity. Considerable portions of the bourgeoisie. Mulberry Bush,” a new play | B'way. Matinee Wednesday, by Edward Knoblock will be done | world, American capitalism blazed new trails in systematic ex-|the latter are still swayed by the re« The assertion that British diplo woo oe hake hy sAsEne Weeder ines face Ld OT ERR aoe eer oital : Meee opmian ite of i F Ayes gan oe y A, H. s’ in association | Little Theatre ploitation. The labor policy of the industrial group around Gary |formists. In spite of the long chain;macy was acting by means of mur-| Jt would be wrong to think that with C. B! Dillingham. | St., W. of Bway. oe \ ; After the great steel of open betrayals and cynical back-/der and assassination is nothing but|the reformists of the free unions X iceniniie wets cemr STREEF’ aS decis BNE BUCS Vous ly _anti-union. srk sliding on the part of the reformist|/the raving of a feverish imagina- S27 strike which, but for the covert treachery of the official AM™EF- | jeaders, tens of thousands of workers| tion.” (“Vorwaerts,” June 10, 1927.) ican Federation of Labor bureaucracy, would have been successful are still in the ranks of the social- ‘8 ® in establishing a powerful union in the basic steel industry and democratic party, whilst the leader- would have given tremendous impetus to the organization of the|Ship of the free trade union arse 2 = «,|in the hands of the reform other great basic industries, Gary headed the open-shop drive) Tho ORee taclega uc against labor, and developed the present-day labor policy of the | the fight for the inter were confining themselves only to passive support of the designs of the bourgeoisie, or that they were bash- On the other hand, the shooting of | fully disguising their position. Noth- still} 20 imperialist agents, a necessary act|}ing of the kind. Whenever for one} . j of self defense of the proletarian|reason or another they did express es into) state against imperialist plots, brings|themselves on the subject of the war of the|the reformists into a state of fury.}menace, they spoke precisely in the} FOLLIES A musical version of Dumas’ ro-! mantic tale, “The Three Musketeers” | ¢ is announced for production, Russell Medcraft and Norma Mitchell, au-| | thors of the “Cradle Snatchers are j the librettists and Lewis E. Gensler, | | composer of “Queen High,” will do} the music. The lyrics ees MO: AMEO NOW! St. & Bway Sensational Film | C Nave & “The Russian Revolution” | mi dominant industrialists. That policy, briefly stated, is that the | bourgeoisie, it is essential for the lat-| After mourning the shooting of “the|“Vorwaert’s” tone. Among the num-/ written by Robert A. Simon, author Ree : Nh NS erate | American industrialists are so powerful, so invincible, that they |ter that the war should take the/hostages,” to which it devotes a lead-/erous trade union papers expressing | of apron Ballads,” recently pub-| |" > 'xouiLt ri Ss } ord to dispense with even the mildest semblance of labor | Yorkers by surprise, that they should) ing article under the mrelodramatic| themselves on the Anglo-Soviet rup-| Tre drama of Wart Pauine continue to believe in peace eternal,/headline of “Twenty,” the organ of|ture, the transport workers’ paper, | awakening only when the guns begin|the German reformists speaks about|“Der Deutsche-Verkehrsbund,” had) _ Carroll Mae Comas has succeeded to roar. On the other hand, it would] the storation of the reign of ter-|the following to say: | Anne Shoemaker in “The Ladder” at be essential to present the case as|ror” ang about the “recrudescence of} “England has broken up diploma-| the Cort Theatre. George Alison is though the Soviet Union was the ag-| civil war in Russia.” \tie:“welations with: Russia. |... (On| er eee EE Sees gressive party in the war and guilty] Most of the social-democratie pa-| this subject all the ‘Rote Fahne’ pa-| Edward Hilbig, MeKees Rocks, |in its outbreak. Without such ideo-| pers yve-echoed the central organ of|pers are sounding the alarm about What the Dail Worker Pa. Soins @ signs +9 e06 tastes el logical preparation it would be im-|the social-democratie party. In the/the alleged menace of war... . y | Bess Galersten, New York ....1, organization. As opposed to Ge the official policy of the American labor bureaucracy—Gompersism—as carried out today by the Green, Woll, Sigman, McGrady outfit. Gompersism is that policy directed toward convincing the owners of industry that they need labor leaders to hold the workers in subjection and pre- vent the labor movement developing along militant lines. ! Revolt! Not Acted but Actual Occurrences eS See taking the place of Carl Anthony the same production. i | ism s ay' Gomper to the master class: “You need us to aid you against the pos of labor.” G ism replies to Gompersism:, “We are powerful enough possible just now to drag the work- ible development of radicalism in the ranks |¢"S and peasants to the battlefield against the USSR. The task of sucl ideological preparations of the masses has now fallen to the lot of |whole campaign of the reformist | press engaged in ideological prepara- ition for war, one cannot help feeling |the presence of a definite aim and a {singular purpose. England wishes to go on trading with| Russia, and therefore she does not! even think of war, whilst the Soviet | bureaucracy knows that a war would| be like its death-Knell. Russia does | Means to the Workers More Encouraging Contributions to Our Emergency Fund. Jacob Task, Roxbury, Mass. | Ward Kerr, Midvale, Ohio . lee | Frank Ferentz, Midvale, Ohio ..1, .F. Baumholtz, Midvale, Ohio | M. Sablar, Midvale, Ohio a : : r : . 1 4 ry, i i to smash labor without your assistance! We don’t even need la-|the reformists, particularly in Ger-| It is quite obvious that the leaders|not even cancel her orders in Eng-| as Piet tin ee od ae hee igutonantal’? jmany. It is this partcipation of thejof the German trade unions, whose|land. . . .” (“Der Deutsche Verk-| Louis Chisocho, Akron, Ohio ....1.00! Deter Tiesak Hibbing, Bes. 400 Tas ene hee : st : re |reformists in the preparation for warj proud boast it is that they are “bone|ehrsbund,” June 11.) Andy Carametros, Akron, Ohio ..1.00/ coat 5 : ‘aN Other industrialists, particularly some of the railroads, have thet constitutes the essential differ-|from the bone and flesh from the| Now, can there be any talk after| Geo. Jackeen, ero: Oho. 40 Henry Rirsch, Rochester,N. Y. ..1.00 | attempted to overcome labor organization with company union- ism. But certain labor lackeys, of the type of William H. Johns- | ence between the present situation jand that of 1912-14, when the world | social-democracy flesh” of the German social-democra- cy, maintain in principle the same this about the menace of war? | | The war menace was deliberately | Dave Goldberg, Akron, Ohio ....1.00 A. Stoker, Grand Rapids, Mich. Peter Ross, Chicago, Il. 1.00 | Paul Mersten, Chicago, ll. -1.00 Herman Schneider, Chicago, Il. 1.00 1.00 tone, convinced them that the labor “leaders” could abandon was at least inj position on the war question as the| ignored by the conferences of the|E. Keldermagi, N. Mexico ......1.00/w. p. O'Donnell, San Jose, Calif. 1.00 trades unionism for company unionism through “peaceful tran- words Onroeed to Pagan latter. They too are filled with|different unions which recently took! Jori Davilov, N. Mexico . +-1.00' 5. J. Buzan, Clifton, Aiz....... 1.00 sition.” : The policies known as Garyism are being inaugurated in the! mining industry of the United States. For a time John L. Lewis and the officials of the United Mine Workers of America waged a fight against this trend. For instance, the mine strike of 1922 was waged for the purpose of convincing the mine owners that they could not get along without Lewis and his gang. As soon as the mine owners were willing to deal with Lewis he brazenly betrayed ihe rank and file demands. The same performance was repeated by Lewis in the anthracite strike of 1926. Against both Garyism and Gompersism stands the vanguard of the working class, the Communists, who strive to mobilize the workers for a determined fight against these twin blights, either ef which spells defeat and betrayal for the working class. By relentlessly unmasking the criminal treachery of the la- hor lieutenants of the capitalist class we pave the way for a real fight against the open shop, the twelve-hour day, the yellow-dog contract and other features of Garyism. : Gary, as an individual is dead, but Garyism still remains and can only be exterminated by the mass power of the working class erganized into powerful industrial unions and supporting a poli- tieal party of labor that also appeals to the exploited and op- pressed farmers. In his life Gary was an enemy of society, a elass-conscious member of the ever decreasing group of powerful magnates who dominate all of American industry. The reptile| press will spill tons of ink and waste millions of reams of paper to publish eulogiums to this exploiter and oppressor of the work- ers, but we will explode such illusions by emphasizing the fact that all of the millions amassed by this industrial colossus were wrung out of the broken and bleeding and baked bodies of the countless thousands who slaved in the modern inferno before the blast furnaces, in the rolling mills, the tin mills and other branches of the octopus known as the steel corporation. Gary as an individual played such a small role in the steel corporation at the time of his death that there was but the slight- est fluctuation in the stock of the steel corporation. The idea that such corporations are run by powerful individuals is exploded by the fact that the industry goes on just the same the day after he died as it did the day before. Not a wheel slowed up because of his demise, which proves that it is not the Garys and their kind who are the real force in industry, but the workers with hand and brain who make possible all industry, all progress. The workers, in the course of the struggle, will eventually come to learn that they can get along without Gary and all the other captains of industry much better than they can get along with them, and, as the foremost fighters in the front ranks of the working class, the Communists not only emphasize the im- mediate tasks, but we strive to direct the movement toward that point where the working class, the class that built all the indus- tries will own and administer them under a workers’ and farm- ers’ government. Los Angeles’ Drive Against Labor. Los Angeles, aside from its earthquakes, is also noteworthy because of its viciously reactionary character in general. For years it has been the hot-bed of the vilest aggregation of scab- herders in the whole world. It fears any demonstration on the part of the working class. Its vicious attacks upon the radical movement in an effort to crush the agitation in behalf of Sacco and Vanzetti is part of its perpetual drive against labor. It is not that the powers that be in that benighted city are particularly opposed to the Sacco and Vanzetti agitation more than any labor activity but because that agitation impels the working class to action, that the raids were conducted against the headquarters ‘ \ i \ At the moment of the highest ex- citement among the workers, caused by the British provocation during the days of the break-up of Anglo-Soviet relations, the leading social-democra- tice newspaper .“Vorwaerts,” the mouthpiece of the leading circles of German reformism, raised the ques- tion of the “spectre of war” only to |refer to the League of Nations in |which the German bourgeoisie is |represented and to calm the work- ers that “there could be no talk of any imminent menace to peace” (“Vorwaerts,” May 28, 1927). Having thus discarded the menace ;of war, “Vorwaerts” started upon the |next task of working up public opin- jion against the Soviet Union. After a friendly rebuke to the British gov- ernment for its “nervous and intoler- able behavior,” the organ of the Ger- man reformists went on to insinuate against the USSR: “On the other hand,” says “Vor- to be a poor lamb, so tamie and quiet |The Russian methods of espionage waerts,” “we need not believe Russia; that she will not disturb the water.: boundless devotign to the interests of their bourgeoisie. Nevertheless, bear- |ing in mind that passiveness on the | part of the trade unions just now is tantamount to directly supporting the bourgeoisie, the reformists of the free trade unions of Germany have chosen the position of silence and ab- solute ignorance of the war menace. TE ag ag So far not a single word about the war menace has escaped either the General Federation of the German trade unions (ADGB) not the indivi- dual trade unions. This is all the }more criminal, since in the prevention of war a responsible part is to be played by the German trade unions. The German transport workers, rail- waymen, chemical and metal work- ers may compel their bourgeoisie to withhold support from the interven- tionists. But to this end they must be mobilized right now. An intensive campaign for the 8-hour day, higher wages, and for the general everyday demands. of the workers, would con- siderably hamper the war prepara- tions of the capitalists, but this is precisely what the reformists refuse members wrecked by police bulli organizations and trade unions. of the Workers (Communist) Party and the homes of its known es. California has the reputation, well-earned by its ruling clique, junder the domination of the Southern Pacific Railroad, of being ithe worst state in the union as far as conditions of labor are concerned and it is one of the few states still trying to enforce the anti-labor “criminal syndicalist laws” against labor political It is time that a determined fight were put up against this place in Germany. On May 380 in| Frankfort the conference of the Ger-| man stonemasons’ union was held. test against the actions of the Bri- tish government USSR, and in favor of establishing, a united front with the Soviet trade unions. This proposal was rejected | upon the insistence of one of the) leaders of the reformist trade unions, the well-known reformist Eggert.) Similarly the resolution moved by Comrade Pieck at the conference of the German Woodworkers’ Union to include in the agenda of the confer- ence a special item “on the tasks of| the trade unions in the defense of was rejected. | menace, it was necessary to empha size that these people did not find fascism, Messrs. D’Aragona, Colom- that the reformists of the free unions| are tolerating similar fascist desert-| were made by Eggert and Winkler, | Leipart and Tarnow to retain in lead-| ing positions in thein respective unions such people as had been ex- pelled as fascists even from the so- cial-democratic party. All this goes to show that the re-| formist leaders of the German trade! unions realize their close affinity to! Julius Kose, N. Mexico Alexander Berkman, N. Mexico .. | A. Eriksson, N. Mexico .... . att | Harold Decker, N. Mexico . The Berlin delegation moved a pro: IE. Wisbiinia, Mo Maxie A | Sam S. Stoian, Chicago, Ill. Braet O Srel Ge Neder, Chirayoali oc | Tanase Ezan, Chicago, Ill. John Indrika, Chicago, Ill. . Jebe# Miller, Chicago, Ill. Geo. Costin, Chicago, Ill , Walter Sellers, Grove Cit: 5 H. J, Miller, New York, N.Y. .. D. Haan, Chicago, Ill. | J. B. Suplit, McDonald, Pa. Leon Calvert, Maywood, Ml. Carl Engelhandt, Saginaw, Mich. Rose Nelenick, New York, N. Y. i ; " Jos Kaspel, Detroit, Mich. ...... revolutionary China and the USSR’ | H. W. Roney, Washington, D. C. H. W. Reny, Washington, D. C. Noting the attitude of the German} Ben Cannen, Louisville, Ky. ... trade union bureaucrats on the war/I, Cannen, E. Boston, Mass. .. Edward Lawson, Canton, Ohio. .. M. Andiaserich, So. Chicago, Ill. any words of denunciation for the) I. Martens, Moline, Ill. deserters into the camp of ate eae es New Brunswick, i bino, & Co. It should be remembered | Paul Stade New Brunswick, Harry J. gts ers in their own ranks. At the con-|Max Goldberg, Elizabeth, N. J. 1.00) ferences of the stonemasons’ and the | Paul Renick, Elizabeth, N. J. .. woodworkers’ unions, earnest pleas! C- Peenete) New Brunswick, John Zuparko, Hillside, N. J. .. |J. Kamson, Milwaukee, Wisc.....1.00{ declared today. | Henry Renne, Philadelphia, Pa. | Lawsen, New York City J. Neweroff, New York City Krank K. Thomas Lukich, N.S. Pittsburgh 1.00 miles at sea. Sd NB I. Siwezynski, Porterville, 1.00 California 2°: bo eee: 1.00 00/4. Hermann, Chicago, Ill. ......1.00 Anna Porter, San Jose, Calif. ..M@ Decision Is Made That ‘yoo American Life Is Worth : 00)Ten Ordinary Mexicans 0 WASHINGTON, (FP) Aug. 15.— | An American life is worth 10 times as much as a Mexican, the Mexican- | American joint claims commission has -1.00) decided. Concepcion Garcia a Mexi- jean girl, was shot and killed by an | American army officer while she was 0 crossing the Rio Grande in 1919. Her 0 | parents have just been awarded | $2,000, the American delegate dis- 0 | senting. 0 0 But 47 years ago an Anierican mine employer was killed in a dispute in which a Mexican laborer claimed he had been short-changed. The em- plover’s son has just. been awarded $20,000. -1.00| 00, } 00, baie 1.00} ; ais Drsiedin weeretie rer Ee 1.00 To Save 36 Hours. WASHINGTON, Aug. 15. — A re- 1,00 | duction of 36 hours in the mail sched- lules between New York and Europe -1,00;may be the result of the 500-mile .1.00 | “special delivery” flight to the Levia~ 1.00 | than next Monday, postoffice officials Lieutenant Clarence 1.00| Hi. Schildhauer, in a giant naval scout Japa y res 1.00| plane, will attempt to land 100-pounds ..1.00/ of delayed mail on the decks of the Onishi, Chester, Pa.>..1.00| shipping board’s great flag ship 500 sort of tyranny and it is to be hoped that the workers of Cali- fornia can be brought to a realization of the necessity for poli- tical action against the lackeys of the scab shop who now dom- the fascists, with whom they will make common cause in the event oi war. Only the vigilance of the work- inate that state. In all the seven years’ from the murderous clutches of labor party playing any part wh into print because of its support speech on Boston Common. Other permits to jmade whereby the socialist lalc its police permit for demonstr: |tims of capitalism., At the last |son’s permit.” sectarian S. L. P. to value a per This action ought to be suff: outfit agita tocracy no one ever heard of the The Socialist-Labor Party Is Heard From! ation te free Sacco and Vanzetti the nts of the Back Bay aris- : fading remnants of the socialist- iutsoever, But on Sunday it got of the police suppression of free hold meetings having been revoked in the effort to silence the Bosten demon stre tions, arrangements were y was, to grant the use of ry p tions in behalf of these two vic-|, moment the valient socialist labor |party clique announced that they “would not jeopardize their sea- | This action was particularly contemptible because, had the defenders of Sacco and Vanzetti known before hand of this atti- tude, they could have made other arrangements. It is quite in keeping with the after-war traditions of the mit to speak under police censor- ship of more value than a determined fight to save two workers from dying at the hands of capitalist hyenas. 3 Professing to be Marxists, they insult and besmirch the name and works of Marx by even referring to him. icient to bury the remains of that x ing masses organized in the trace unions can prevent the reformi from placing the class organization of the proletariat at the service of je military adventures of capitalism. et The war menace and the position of the reformists in the face of such! menace imposed upon the revolution- ary wing of the German” working class the specific task of arousnig and mobilizing the masses of the rs. The German Communist | has unfolded a wide anti-wili- st campaign, tirelessly exposing, efore the workers the flagrant hery of the reformists upon the ion of the war menace. The, rations and mass meetings of thousands, and numerous reso- lutions adopted by factory and trade! union meetings protesting against the provocation of war, indicate that! the campaign conducted by the Com-! munist Party is meeting with su | jcess. But the fundamental task still, remains: the masses of the workers | must be emancipated from the influ- | ence of the reformists by increased) propaganda in the factories and) workshops, For every pace of the front wrested from the reformists within the labor movement consti- tutes a blow at the bourgeoisie, and chstructs and renders remote the pos: | sibility ©? sau BOOK BARG/ This combination of a book, two pamphlets. and a magazine, the- official ergan of the Executive Committee of the Kuomintang, issued in Wuhan, give an opportunity to every worker to hav2 understanding of the great events and of the Chinese Revolution. a real ound AWAKENING OF CHINA Hi. DOLSEN A new edition of a book that has sold into thou » \ AT MPECIAL PRICE? sands of copies. — 50 CEINA IN REVOLT A discus: by outstanding figures of the Con munist Liat ational RUSSIA TURNS EAST Ky SCOTT NEARING A view of Soviet diplomacy whole East. CHINESE CORRESPONDENCE Official organ of the Kuomintang, Do not order a bundle—we have enough copies only for this cou- bination offer, 2 ALL FOR 75 CENTS (Send a dollar and get also the new. book “Civil War in Nationalist China” by E. R. Browder.) Books offered in this column on hand * in limited quantitie All orders cash * and filled in turn as received. the —10 in China and oon nn 0 Sn NoNaNR mene een

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