The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 8, 1927, Page 3

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EMBER 8, 1927 SOVIET PROGRESS November 7, 19 2GFILIPINO REBEL | Pi!2 Naxtarn j THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY. Page ‘Inree “WE ARE INVINCIBLE,” BUKHARIN | TELLS MEETING OF MOSCOW SOVIET | n ute, a shout, then the black jthe heavy mist . with its turrets|or the gray or the red or the blue or |fost in the g Behind the | green caps disappear down the hill be- “Our Cause Is the Cause of World Revolution,” jmausoleum, against the wall, a magie|hind the fa ets of the sc *) ‘ f | number—9—the birthday of the Reya-| church of Iv: le, past the Communist Leader Say s at Anniversary Meet s 4 ; | lution. tround stone e where stood the phe *) arate re eert Gi ial ya | No need for banners flaunting vie-| gallows ... for this the eariticee Enlists Under Banner of (SPECIAL CABLE TO DAILY WORKER.) an rao e ; resse ied So elite yeeant ae ine eay meets te square Anti-Imperialist League MOSCOW, Noy. 7.—‘“We are invincible because our cause is | the cause of the world revolution,” declared N. Bukharin, chair- man of Praesidium of the Communist International, addressing The decd is in t WASHINGTON, Nov. 7. (FP).— settings. a Next year it will be Railway mileage in the Soviet Union | number NINE. Pablo Manlapit, fighting Filipin : nlovement is close to 47,500 miles, as compared | TEN and then RLEVEN and so on the swing o labor leader and ortenied = the official meeting of the Moscow Soviet the Grand Opera House with 36,500 miles in 1913, and 42,500 down the years anvil re is & nev ‘long the outstanding revolutionary igure last night, at the celebration of the tenth anniversarv of ¢ miles in 1917, says Harold Kellock of | number, a ONE and that will i for’ among Filipino nationalists, has be he ne m os i ee on or the tenth anniversary of the No- the Soviet Union Information Bureau | mark the first anniversary of the IN- | leader come a member of the All-America vember revolu fon. | Scores of delegates from all over the world, in Washington, in a statistical sum-)/ TERNATIONAL REVOLUTION. jof men anti-Imperialist League. This step, addressing the Soviet in the brilliantly decorated theater, voiced mary of Soviet progress since the * i * one ing horses flying wit taken at a spe wien a mlapit is ‘S their determination to defend the gs 1917 revolution. Gray buildings opposite the flying non beh There must be the height of his popular in the Fay ee antes ee ies ; This rail mileage serves a total|flag, whieh is also gray too, but es 0 \Philippine Island as well as among 1 enter 0 stage of the brilliantly decorated theater an was a huge red star, with rays’ o¢ ; made of red cloth—stretching the ( jout to the boxes and the gal- f s/ aon di Filipino workers in Hawaii and thru- out the United States, is of the ui- me consequence for the future of the Filipino nationalist movement. population of 146,304,931, according | stifly in the heavy air. C to the last census, taken early in 1927. ling the Red Square solidi The population in 1913 in the same (ches of red and blue and g territory was about 143,000,000, but | bla Those are the caps, ma during the world war and the civil|the sections. In his letter of application, made | y7-1)- Ser, V pa i ated mi ys pie war it sank to about 131,000,000,, Horses saddled in blue and red, A public today at the headquarters of / Millions in Moscow pace, and erie the ace P ; : Hence there has been a gain of 15,-| white horses and brown and black, | The cro ithe U. S. section of the All-America ) <i ‘ana yy | World capitals, Against the Red sy : ee Se 00,000 in the past six years—an ef- | riderless, ing the signal for, The ome i anti-Imperialist Hera Union Celebr ate Anniver sary |Star stood a bust of Lenin, sur- "SS 3 fared Clare sae i fective answer to the charge that So- | mounting. Surges for Square, New York, Manlapit declares 5 ere ee cd HU, Hlowars Fpian ts — eee y the build- siat Russia was committing suicide. Overflowing down the hill soldiers, trum. It asks: io. Stalin? |that the whole policy of the official (Continued from Page One) es d by flowers. Nearby oc 1 in the Soviet Union. Retail Prices Drop. ‘orderly masses of gray, headed by No eed RS Jt has Philippine Nationalist Party headed|proves that the toiling masses of | Stood a guard of honor. late John Reed wrote a hook on Retail prices in September showed | brass bands, also waiting. found Kalenin. It feasts on him. The | by Manuel Quezon has been wrong. ali countries look to the selievements'| Building Socialism. vovember Revolutior which he ar 5 ‘ : ‘8 * mounted police press back this hunery He comes out for a more radical policy | of the me of the Soviet Union as} 4 : sation o ; eat Days That Shook the a reduction of 15 per cent since last yi} a pe ce A rr ovation g ted U World.’ fall. The retail price index for, Suddenly from up the line a/Ctowd . . . the procession of workers |and a leadership maintaining close vements of the international | chairman of the Moscow Soviet, when| jt) ton venn enn ve tS | September was 198, compared with| trumpet call ... the strains of the | has started, — - ;ties with the labor movement in the | working cl % he extended his g ngs to the for- ae tio vee Se 100 in 1913. This is no higher, in pro-| “International.” Clatter of horses|,. The square is again filled . . . this| United States. tulated the work-|eion workers’ delegations. An in wrectio portion. than the index in some |hoofs, swiftly striking the cobbled | time with red banners. The square is Distrusts Politicians. ors of Uninig othe Rad (strana ietssah< was Wade ‘on. bauAl? other European countries, The na-|pavement .. . Voroshiloy. He sweeps | {Wed with the red banners of the) «pike you” he writes, “I am not in- Army, the d proletariat, and the | 5¢ Central Commitiee of the All- tional budgets have been balanced | past each detachment and as he comes | marching es Factory after fac-| clined to think too highly of the poli- oppressed masses of all countries on | Upion Communist Party by Bukharin, nenee since the currency was restored to a|each band takes up the strain... .|/0"Y - . - Dynamo, where they make | ticians. I opine that the Philippines | the occasion of the Tenth Anniversary | \h4 was wild! outurier. gold basis in the summer of 1924, | “The International.” On 5 eee street cars . .. Amo,| should have new men to lead the for hav conquered Russian capi-| appeared on the platform. he sons of Cooperatives have grown until the| The army fills the Red Square. A x here they -make automobiles . . . struggle for independence.” | talism, seized power and heralding the | “Tq our country we are build 8 WY he sonsumers’ cooperatives have 12.000,-| giant voice speaks to them. No one | ovale fectorica +: Mines. There is) “The capitalist press mi s | world revolution. | Scialfsms,”” Bukharin declared, transmitted 000 members, and operate 60,000 | can see from where the voice comes; /® “tit ahead. The British Youth Dele-| American public opinion by saying “We Will Not Rest.” are building up Socialism on the stores; the farm cooperatives have |but ten magnifying horns mounted on ea gee Bo flying red banner | that only Filipino politicians want in-| “Our best men have given their! G¢ the victories won in the fie " 7,500,000 members. Last year these | electric light poles give forth the} — aes e rostrum to the left of the dependence. This statement is. un-jlives to the revolution,” he said. “We | struggles of ten years ago. Our Revo-|t® the Soviet Union. organizations handled 44 per cent of |Words: “COMRADES . .. WORK- (oe telerautioger Ge Youth, symbol | qualifiedly false. The truth is that | ill not rest until we have built So- ae ie Baleack ay the interna-|took place during the t« the internal trade and more than 10|ERS . . . PEASANTS.” The content |) eye Solidarity. Young | the masses of the Filipino people want | cialism. Should cur enemies violate |tional struggle of the proletariat,|Pefiod; his secon per cent of the foreign trade. is in a strange tongue, but of the |‘) n°rs among them, for whom Rus-|independence, and that Awmerican|our frontiers, disturb our work of per sar ys ian ;ywith the begir “Be A i" L vai feels | 8142 workers have given and giv gen * Age . Hundreds and thousands of the b g Trade Increase. inusic gf this powertul voles one feels | eae at M ana ar | Capitalists and imperialists are there | peaceful construction, the Red Army | cong of the proletariat of all countries |/9f economy he Sovi ion. Now Foreign trade turnover increased | the words . . . and again the refrain: ili geousiy. Mounted above the! (in the Philippines) to exploit our re-| will draw its sword to repel the at Daas ue tenes atoate vo [he said, he was y the ae from $199,000,000 in 1922-23 to about | “COMRADES WORKERS . . .| Pe te they review the spirit of the | sources. . . . Webi sauita lean lene clive Gieial: (tn eae veer cete cote ee aaca tan ‘Ss §800,000,000 in 1926-27, with a favor-|PEASANTS . ... THE INTERNA. | revolution. Much is exnected of them.| apn big intereste—the Wall Street {ist construction! Long live our vic. |L2t, ‘welt memories be glorified and) Tce = ap So- able balance of $30,000,000. Ameri-| TIONAL . . . VICTORY.” ie ee theresaé mOUeh for youl) Gear au aaeiveed -Grigaside” aad \torye” pe oe their names live thru the centuri¢ eae : A ‘i Lahuod intitade * | to do at home. | foche inlay i New Historie Epoch. u,” de “are the can-Soviet trade last year was $90.- ‘ ees Bet thie Dating crooked politicians —are responsible | Asks Unity With Ranks: in ROCHE GLa ai gage tthe of th 900,000, compared with $48,000,000 i Budenny’s march Budenny |., e Br Youth march the ae 2 3 f fer z Our revolution opened a new fhe iP 000,000 in himself on the rostrum ... inside, so| 0th of Ru e Siberia for the outrageous exploitation of my| Speaking on behalf of the Commun- epoch in the history of mi Th Aged Veteran Pledges pipe quietly lies Lenin . . 7 one remem- laeetes Ee ost the Ea pe pl : aie say ee rocguraane Gallagher declared, the ten years before the November Couturier was followed on plat- Sete ated a ««,) | British Youth mar mre | American people may have the cour- have come from a country whose | pavojuti capitalis: ras growin ck ae ae AIDE RORS ALFONSO. sede the tired, patient, beautiful | Chinese and RN SL ac age to establish a labor government. | government has been openly hustle |vaeger var es Hie ae ie Ms ele a ere Fae Paris irene et 7. — An aide-de- Budenny’s march... and the | Pioneers, march mothers with babies |: Then my country can hope for) to the Soviet Union. I say that if the |time within the very heart of capital-| er ie yee hore of King A’ 'fonso, of Spain, has |soldiers begin to file past. Gray |i" their arms, march grandfathers, | 2»Solute, immediate independence. capitalist government of my country |ism phenomena were developing which |iet Union for } ad een arrested at Seville in connection | soigiers in the gray mi t hing.| 28t the British Youth march the Has Confidence of Masses. jattempts to disturb the ] ful life |¢oi1 on mankind as a tremendous cat-| pir i Re with the sensational theft of jewels : Fe Ta EL ae | Workern.o? the Comi ional ie : of the Soviet Unicn, the B : fea iene tars fh they sie Ua ee Bi hry Union hich the iin british J Gray soldiers telling the workers of pein oF the Comintern, the Profin-| Manlapit has often been referred to | Of the 2 » 2 S aclysm—-the imperialist war. The war|with gun in hand i of the im- agent ae tnd salto Na the world that next year it will be|‘¢?: Fifteen Youths, there is much | as the potential leader of a truly revo- | Ns class will do everything poss left behind a trail—a picture of the/perialist powers dare attack it,” cone na ae praca ‘oO pie oa of | PEN and the next year ELEVEN and | £0" You to do at home. lutionary nationalist movement in|to transform an imperialist bites into “general madness of capitalism.” The! cluded Gay. : ig) oe rincess Anne of France, | 5) on, until there will be a ee ONT| The crowd is hungry for heroes. The | the Philippine Islands. He is the only |@ secial revolution. I declare that the phantom appeared to threaten the peaking o he talkies eae fs a private dispatch from {and that will mark the INTERNA- | Uttish Youth pleases them. But leader possessing the confidence of | nity of the ¢ ommunist International | x4in of all human culture. ret Fu ota inet TIONAL REVOLUTION. again, Trotsky? Yes, there at the|the Filipino masses, whose love he|alone ensures victory. Everyone who | «amidst i sricane of the warlof the Er ne, deaeet Th ch corner of the rost aoepte j ee ee ah : Abe fet, dent fie Cantey sof ie Amidst the hurricane the war|of the En ent, described eir caps tell them apart... | e he rostrum . . . in the big | won during his leadership of the great |attempts to destroy the unity of the |... onred the first Glos. trom the the trata cit : ARE YOU GETTING THEM? lotherwise all are alike. It takes one | brown hat . . . Ahhh Kalenin, he is sugar strike of Filipino and Japanese | Communist International is she enemy fake ot ‘the u Ru rat Tpralebatiae, pai n exploited ee = rl od jcoming down. The crowd surges workers in the Hawaiian Isl in| of the revolution. which grew into a great force in thel Ind Fr Sabot es He ole cas ~-jagainst the fence behind which li rad result of which he was|» “Under the Leninist leadership of a vavanel ; Ase samen; and ciulcre ae ie which lie the | 1924—as a result of which he was|» “Under the Leninist leadership of e e revolt ry gil dan + |dedd Heroes of the Revolution. They framed up and set to jail by the U.|the Communist International we will 2" Of ,% buge revolutionary move-jclared ‘Saklatvala, worked not. fur surge back, ‘they ‘etd ey, ape Pe Bae jail by the U./th Ta ee Re a " -,;ment. Our revolution having fought;themselves but for capital ge back, they see Rykov, then |S. Sugar interests in Hawaii. He was|exceute all of the tasks following | .s¢ the onslaughts of world eapital-|hours of work bei imitie |Budenny. They do not see Trotsky released from prison only 2 few|from the November Revolution.” eochapget mes uh ahora. Pee oie Bota see }lean against th e gauge ag jism, has stirred the masses to cre-| their wages negtigible | ainst the mausoleum and/ months ago, after serving his mini- ed Army Parade. ative wo The Soviets are the new y | Weakly find his way down the stairs,, mum sentence, So sreatly Hes) tattesine eh soho dal Vue Chet Ap emee oer Learn Lesson From U | supporting himself with a cane "Ifeared by the Sugar Trost that his|or a. pat the speeches a parade) watchword and slogan thruout the! They bo thesde Week eae ane: eee ceeee ean ust that his!of the Red Army was held, in which world. In our country they ave deeply! yoke, 1 | Ss Wet, it is cold. For three! release was made conditional upon contingent: ed, roKide Wel Snoted and: have becomecthe backs yom ee for four, for five. Only one/his leaving the Hawaiian Islands. It the huge square to the musie of mili- bas ea art shi iit tie er ee peg eavized le id. It will keep. on | being atiputsted that He could not ‘gol; patie ccdic cheered be thé thou. |e eee Ene Working |er the Novembe . “teri try bands. ily cheered by the thou “The working cl: allepow: manana Enmercae until six in the evening . . . banners, |to the Philippines, he was forced to sandsof workers as defenders of the| he eee oar h i ill PoW- the path t tr Len men, women, children, the come to the United States, where he serene a puelie : rate be ‘ ane woe to him who wil On behalf > delega- workers of the U.S.S.R. The ampli-}is remaining temporarily. ee ne 2 fotee ses tion, Li s ng 3 ‘ ‘sl In the meantime the streets of Mos- | , 1g masse: fiers announce each delegation. Com- | Contrasts Manlapit and Quezon. Se eae ae jot Chin EUGENE LYONS | |munist Youth, oe sale | i a jcow were filled with mass demonstra-| “Quy constructive tasks are enor-| ongace aeeeed et een : ee Commenting upon Manlapit’s letter, | tions, which after eleven o’clock, took | mous and without ade we ban nella Street car workers, Hera Hurray, | anuel Gomez, secretary of the T |the form of a parade marching to-| conquer the most difficult problems pats in A new book on the world famous case shouts the crowd. : Peete ae een |e eee rae: Te march post which capitalism will find itself an-| However | ‘ A "i - £ 2 st League, pointed out the con-!Lenin’s mausole: continued until 41), solve, eae: of the two courageous martyrs of Linaainy a eu cies pearing: behind trast Between Mantapit’s Histevation fei tate, i aciael cree Bayes eee gan under the| tte intern: : | the fantastic turrets of the church of | Sh enatat hi Spa Ses J ay ‘Our revolution began under the) aig of the ~~ wt photographs of all peo- | Ivan the Terrible, past the stone acs i end Me Bae a eemets of Man-j Million In Procession. banner of the proletarian revolution. hia Sal f ‘trom 4H ple invol ved in the case and cartoons | where stood the gallows .. . into the| hed ieee bi lent of the Philip: | Over a million people—members oi We stand in the vanguard of the| shackles of mae. from leading newspapers of America | gvay mist, passes the singing crowd pine pate, who. is in tht. country ithe Party, of trade unions, of the| world labor movement; we are the ene with President Coolidge. | Pioneers-—participated in the largest | only force that can free mankind from “Unlike Quezon (the ‘official’ lead- | ‘demonstration which has ever been |barbarity and we claim that this lib- seen in Moscow. Many lorries, deco- | eration is inevitable. jrated with red and filled with chil- Revolution Invincible. idren whose young voices mixed with| “We speak in behalf of millions of ithe cheers of the crowd, moved down |workers and peasants in the name of the streets. Members of the “Osso-|the future of mankind. On the tenth '* viachim” marched in the parade. | anniversary of the November revolt n Innumerable red banners and post-|tion, the All-Union Communist Pa: jers-—-satirizing the British war-mong-|calls to the toiling masses of the {ers and their satellites—the reform-|/world and declares confidently, tet | 2 st leaders—were a feature of the pa-/any one attempt to snatch away the | ‘rade. Much merriment was caused by | fruits of our victory, the fruits of the! C jon the other hand, establishes contact | an ox—wearing a high hat—repre- We! and Europe. rial edition $1.50 THE CASE OF SACCO-VAN- ZETTI—by F. Frankfurter Cloth—#1.00 ON THE SACCO- VANZETTI CASE—by Ellis |. +. passes the celebration of the | inth anniversary of the Revolution. | | ey ler of Filipino nationalism), Man!apit ‘does not place his reliance for Philip- Capture of Almada {pine independence upon some special Reported Likely hy In a beautiful memo- “whe ‘dispensation from the agents of | American imperialism at Washington | but upon the revolutionary will of | |the Filipino masses. When Quez |comes to the United States he v {Republican and Democratic poli cians, bankers, businessmen, ‘in- | fluential people’ generally. Manlapit, on behalf CARTOONS the North meeting. The “wo $.25 | | ANTHOLOGY OF SACCO-~ | i} | \ VANZETVE POETRY twith workers ? | g i re- | victory of the world proletari $.25 -MEXICO CITY, Nov. 7 e i working clase Se a oer senting the British tories—marching|are invincible because our cause - WORKERS LIBRARY \Jose Gonzalo Escobar pe avid \ally of Filinino freedom in this coun- |4°W" the street. ¢ vagy, {the cause of the World Revolution.”|~ommn PU ‘ | President Calles h nt het eee | ey Teta significant that Quezon has| , Many workers carried posters w ith) The last words of Bucharin’s speech | nece PUBLISHERS tine Cotavel Hecise Aina Ee aay [had not one word to say in sappurt | figures, showing the rise in produc-|were drowned in a storm of applause, |of Manlapit, nor did he make any ef: |tion since the first revolutionary jfort to see him altho he knows of | Y¢2™S: others with sums of money | |subseribed by various eens | |to the industrialization loan. Among the marchers were many ‘Chinese working men and | 39 E. 125th St. the whole assembly sianding up and ge oa Pay singing “The Internationale.” Greets Moscow Workers. On behalf of the Moscow Commit- tee of the All-Union Communist Par- women, |iy, Uglanov, secretary of the Moscow New York | surviving leader of the counter-revolu- #3 a ee | tionary outbreak of last month, at an eas A i learly date. He reported that he was C°Urse that he Bas this country.” ‘hot on Almada’s trail. General Ja- Helps Anti-Imperialist League. leinto Trevino then will remain the|, The affiliation of Manlanit. follow: ngs were stings at The meet- by represen- exchanged Leningrad and K ing ended w tative \\ SEPT.-OCTOBER ISSUE Commumet Ansiyns ‘and Theory. Leninst Con- and inter pretation of all Phe- nomena of Social || Life {} Editoriale |}| Statistical Material. Truth about Sevier Russia SO aad ate FIT Address, after Oct. 25th: 43 E. 125th St., New York, N, Y. Now: 1113 Washington Bivd. Chicago, M1, © Just off the press. Table of Contents: ‘The Murder of Sacco and ' Vanzetti By ROBE I a BOS a ‘The Convention of the Pan- ‘American Labor Federation | By ARNOLD ROLLER. Whither Wuhan | By &Z-TOH-LI. \¢ hina and American ‘Imperialist Policy By EARL GROWDER. With Marx and Engels By AVROM LANDY. FOR SALE on newsstands in New York, Boston, Detroit, Cleveland, Los Angeles, Fi 9, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, ete, SUBSCRIPTION: GY RE OTEIED a 'a 5 06:9 ie sets ee'e's dee Do year ..ocisis...sees.0-+$2,00 Foreign and Canada........ 2.50 | i H { 1 E Copy .....25¢ % Nee nnn no nn ony {only reactionary leader of consequence ‘at large. | “ * * | MEXICO cr Nov. 7. Juan 8. |Adona, former minister to Spain, to- \day was banished from Mexico. He | Was put aboard a steamer bound for Havana, at Vera Cruz. | The government charged Adona with complicity in the Gomez-Serrano He will go to understood. | counter- | Madrid to tution, Abyssinia Wavers As U.S, and Britain Yelp for Fat Morsel LIVERPOOL, Eng., Nov. 7. — Dr. Wargneh Wagner, who represented the Abyssinian government in nego- neering Corporation, of New York, for a concession to construct a $20,- ia, declared today that no formal con- ‘tract had been signed, “No contract has been signed and so far as I know no misunderstanding exists. We are only’ too anxious to meet the wishes of Great Britain if the British Government does not ap- prove the scheme that is the end of ih” . tiations with the J. G. White Engi- ; 000,000 dam at Lake Tsana, Abyssin- | jing upon the affiliation of Anacteto | Almenana who joined some time ago, | gives the All-America anti-Imperial jist League an excellent starting poin: jfor effective work in the Philippine |Tslands. National sections of the | |Leagne oxist in eleven countries of | |Tatin America and in the United | | States. bunt up to the present no sec- | | tion has been organized in the Philin- to the celebration of this workers’ i pines, altho correspondence with the Tslands has been maintained. Scott Nearing recently visited the Philip... vine Islands for the All-America anti-| Imperialist Teague, stopping off on! his way to China. | ‘Berlin Workers Fight Back as Police Attack Teath Anniversary Meet | | | | 1| | BERLIN, Nov. 7.—One Commu- | | nist was shot and seriously | | wounded and several arrested when | police attacked demonstrations in j honor of the Tenth Anniversary of the November revolution here yes- terday. The demonstrators fought back and injured a number of |: policemen. —s showing in allegorical groups the | Committee, in a brief struggle of the Chinese against for- ign imperialism. In the evening Moscow was bril- liantly lit, workers spending their eve- igs in the theaters, movies, clubs. intrance everywhere was free. Moscow gave itself full-heartedly holiday, at the same time warning its class enemies that they will meet with strong resistance. Bratianu Gets Hundred | | Legal Sharks for Trial Of Leadex in Carol Plot BUCHAREST, Nov. 7. More ‘than 100 lawyers will te present to represent the government ard the de- lfendant when M. Manoilsecu, under seeretary of finance in. the Averescu cabinet, is arraigned on Thursday charged with treason in connection with the alleged Carolist plot. The witnesses will include leaders of the opposition party, several minis- ters and a son of Premier Bratianu. Manoilescue was arrested late in jOctober at the frontier while return- ing frony Paris, where he had inter- viewed ‘ormer Crown Prince Carol. | veteran revolutionist, on the platform pione: ed their eech greeted! greetings in ihe name the workers of Mo Ee *- | ors’ children of } cow Party,” declared Uglanov, ‘ */ eoncluded with t rock against which all attempts to/ ternational.” shake the Party will be broken. The! concert Moscow Party is the bulwark of Lenin’s will, | Pollowing represent | ’ 4 loscow. The meeting singing of the “In- After. the meeting a ballet was presented, Greek Workers Tum Monarchist Meeting Into {aor Protest - (Special Cable to Daily Worker) the Fy delegations | ke, declaring that the Tenth An-} the cause for celebration not only for workers in the Soviet! Union but also for workers thruout} the world. Workers of Mos ly welcomed each foreign and heartily applauded their speeches. | British Delegate Spea | J. T. Murphy, speaking for Communist Party of Great Britain,| declared that the first duty of the; By G. NICOLIS. British Party is to defend the first! ATHENS, Nov. 7—A royalist mass “ proletarian revolution and to. further! meeting organized in Saloniki in hon- the revolutionary cause in all coun-/or of the monarchist leader Tsaldaris ries, “Not only does the Communist {was turned into a labor demonstration Party, but the whole British working] yesterday, when workers, after fill- class realizes that the proletariat ofjing the hall and booing the reaction- the Soviet Union opened the way for/ary government and monarchists, a better futur: for mankind. British|marched thru the streets of the city. workers support the Russian Revolu-| Tsaldaris cautiously refrained from: tion despite the treachery of the Brit-|attending the royalist mass meetings ish reformist leaders. The appearance of Clara Zetkin, w warm-| BOOST THE DAILY WORKER! GET A NEW READER! )

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