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THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1928 age three FOREIGN NEWS AND FEATURES --- BY CABLE PHILADELPHIA 10 CELEBRATE BIRTH OF SOVIET UNION Lovestone Will Speak at Big Meet Friday PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 7.—Phila- * e 2 “Free” Elections in Nicaragua: Wall Street Wins AND MAIL POINCARE SEEN AS HEAD OF NEW FASCIST CABINET Will Put Thru Heavy War Measures F “THE RED BEAUTY SPY” More London Daily Anti-U.S.S.R. Lies The London Daily Mail, one of the most vicious anti-Soviet British newspapers, delights in “cooking up” stories as often asgpossible which slander the Soviet Union, its goy- ernment, its leaders and its workers and peasants. of the extremely subtle, but deceit- ful Soviet beauty. It warns gov- ernment officials all over the world to beware of the female So’ spy, who will even prostitute herself in order to get important information. According to the Daily Mail, gov- ernment officials should be careful REPORT CHINESE LORD PREPARES FOR CIVIL WAR Marshall Wu _ Peisfu Collects Army + delphia. workers. will tum éut in PARIS, Nov. 7—It now appears| ,Omy recently the Berlin Workers £5 to whieh Women ney jcnoone tc | PEKING, Nov. 7—Rumors UAtes thousands to celebrate the eleventh | {certain that Premier Poincare will] /Husrrated Tevanled pictures appear! eal precaution before they choose, |Current here to the effect that anniversary of the Russian Revolu- | form a cabinet, decidedly reactionary ing in the Daily Mail, which pur- Marshall Wu Pei-fu, former north- | tion and the successful Communist |in character, as his is the only name |PTted to represent the decadent life, Of course the Da’ Mail says i election campaign, Friday night, at |mentioned in various political con-|°f the Soviet Commissars at Yalta,|nothing of the British espionage ern leader, is now collecting an army's) that Labor Institute, 810. Locust St. |ferences which President Doumer-|#5 evident lies taken from a’ film system which, although under the | and plans, with the aid of the Man- Jay Lovestone, executive secre- |gue has had with different political produced in the Soviet Union dépict- direct supervision of one of its chyrian armies, to wage war ing the life of the bourgeoisie be-| nobility, does not stop at anything to tary of the Workers (Communist) | Sroups. 4 " panes sn against the Nanking regime and. # Party, will be the principal speaker | Due to the decision at the Angers |*0%, the revolution, get” ite victims, and which uses | °" "Or, shall Feng Yocskiang Sm dete snake cleats aed eslohes, jeonvention of the so-called radical |, TH Daily Mail has now presented |every opportunity to incite action oust Marshall Feng Yu-shia j tion. An extensive musical pro- | socialist party, it would be impos- to its British readers a description | against the Soviet Union. the Peking area and Shantung gram and a series of living pictures sible for any members of that*party,) — province. a will be further features of this huge to participate in a cabinet. By the It is known that the Nanking gathering of the class-conscious workers of Philadelphia. Members of the Workers (Com- munist) Party have been preparing for months to make this meeting a e The American marines shown above are part of the contingent which saw to it that the “free” and democratic” elections in Nicaragua ran according to orders from Wall |resignation yesterday of the four jradical ministers, Albert Sarraut, |interior; Henri Queill, agriculture; | Edouard Herriot, education, and Leon | |Perrier, colonies, the way is left Street.. open for Poincare to form a one- | Moncado, the fake— TERRACINI, ENEMY OF — FASCISM, NOW DYING government made several attempts.» to capture Wu, knowing the danger threatening it from that direction>” Marshal Feng, granted the overlord- of Shantung in return for adq = mighty demonstration in support of| “liberal,” was chosen to represent Wall Street's in terests il vii i in in y erence to the Nanki i i aan Ae fieste workers’ ‘repute’ aft Fi Miatipua cadeneaitely, s in terests while the marines continue to remain inh party government, | By J. F.. |now able to get concerning Kis state a ahha enki . support at ithe: Party irhiqhiclegis < | Poincare has enough of a major-| The functionaries of the Commu-| of health surpass our worst expecta-|4¢ Marshall Wu. mt in the struggle for a workers’ and ‘ ity in the house of deputies to put| nist Party of Italy, members of the| tions. Comrade Terracini is suffe Should the war lords) again dna farmers’ Soviet government in ‘BARRICA [ ES | thru his heavy armament measures| executive, party secretaries and/ing under especially painful symp- | aygurate a civil war, Nanking wove America, The many workers who Vi and his budget, even if the opposi-|trade union functionaries, journal-|toms of tuberculosis. The veins of suffer a heavy blow. It would paenicant usiecetes tee Sia Pay | |tion bourgeois parties form a bloc.|ists and members of parliament who| his left arm have swollen enormously yrobably mean’ that a separate and platform of the glass struggle AROSE O VER NIC ‘HT ! oo Agee Se were sentenced on June 4th of this|and for some time the ends of his yovernment would be set are expected to attend this celebra- GIVES POLICIES | year to an aggregate of 400 years of| fingers and toes have been bleed-\1, in Peking, shattering ‘Nanking’ tion and hear the leader of the . ‘ i KING imprisonment were transferred| ing regularly. He is lying in high siction of ‘ onal unity.” American Communist Party analyze : | (October see the fifth anniversary| Another barricade has for hours| shortly after their conviction to pris-|fevor and is helpless. = a the significance of the successful : ere |of the outbreak of the Hamburg In-| offered the most obstinate resist-| , ons which are dangerous to health.) Comrade Terracini is lying in his Communist election campaign inthe | Parliament Opens But swvection of October, 1928. For|ance. From above, from the house-| Comrades Gramsci and Terracini are/ prison cell, for his transfer to the fi y light of the victorious onward marchi Jobless Ignored iteariy a year, Hamburg had been tops, a number of snipers descend. | a Oa Wa Ma) im Sancte Stefano Prison, others are prison hospital was refused, although of the Soviet Union. = |the scene of bitter fights for wages,| From their observation posts they |in Portolongone, others again are in| the prison doctor declared that he Other speakers at this celebration y et ee for the eight-hour day, for the pay-| have noticed in the distance the ap-| TANI San Gemignano, Omeglia and Vol-;has no medicament wherewith to will be Herbert Benjamin, district | (Wireless to the Daily Worker) | ment of wages in gold currency [the |proach of an armoured car, and have 234,325 Work Will| "= prevent the further advance of the organizer; Clarence Miller, district| LONDON, Nov. 7.—Parliament| continually falling exchange value\decided that it is better to attack Bea Or ate bea We ts Ripeese ies Sek bas. siso net bears * Geeinisar, of the Yate ‘Warkars | bed entered’ the last inession before laf the'mark made pauper ‘money ae\the car from. below, tn the atrest Change Shift hese are, the jeadly. notorious | btoved “the governor of the prison aos (Communist) League, and represen- |"eW elections, which will probably) most valueless before the workers One of them succeeds with a lucky death chambers of Italian bourgeois declares that he has not the power, (gi) 49 the Daily Worker) ~ tatives of the Pioneers and other |e next June. = |could spend their wages]—and also|shot in hitting the radiator; the| MOSCOW, (By Mail).—A special] justice, prisons with subterranean ‘> gyn’ a improvement of diet, 98) prorgRyy fov. 6. 2 Tae working class organizations. pane customary ‘speech from the for political demands, such as a|machine is out of action. The snipers|@0vernment commission for intro-| solitary confinement. celle, el inae piea ert aba fog SE pratiesaie Pre . nd see- Bes ae s all critical conten-| workers’ government and control of|return to their eyrie. So the fight |@uction of the seven hour working | ture chambers, wyunee pestilcnciel ats Dep si 2 gee pA re only by the | otaty. of Bakers \ ions. The program includes help| production. In October, 1923, the| proceeds. + |day has passed a resolution accord.| undermines in a few months the Departmen’ of State! . Union night ; - }to British factory industry, redue-| whole working class of Germany iia es. jing to which in the course of 1928-| power of resistance of the most ro- Publish Denial. charged with embezzling union tion of local taxation, also partial |stood on the verge of insurrection,|(¥N Wednesday, the 24th, the group |29 the seven-hour day will be in-|bust people especially as oe VG ee funds. Weisbart. is leader of the nrotective tariff for protection of but it was only in Hamburg that|M of leaders find themselves com-| ‘reduced in 208 enterprises with |oners may receive no, food! il diet, |e, Route illness of Comrade Terra-| socialist party in this city and hast British industry. Both these mea-|the movement developed into organ-|pelled to give the signal to retreat—|°24925 workmen. the completely inadequate jail diet cini got into the foreign press, the waged a bitter campaign against sures would “increase taxation on |ized street warfare. Larissa Reiss-|not because the workers are de.| During the first quarter of 1928.| 80, that within a short time Italian government was compelled. the Communists. 7 the workers and the high prices al-|nar describes the battle in her book,|feated, but because there is no sign|29 the seven-hour day will be or- Prisoners inevitably suffer, as a cath obviously for the purpose of mis- sbart is still in prison and“his ready prevailing. “Hamburg at the Barricades,” from|of a general revolution in Germany. | S@%ized on 112 enterprises employ. | Sequence of this ae aiet taba ney_| leading, to publish a denial which has done much in discrediting |) i the Fact _The crown ignores unemployment, | which this story is taken.) What would be the use of continu-/iR 93,156 workers and counting the | ‘tition, the worst forms of Tocttl. said nothing. In spite of this denial the socialist party in the eyes of the # Service of the Factory | sithough it is increasing rapidly, : Peer tian ing the fight which had broken out|8¢¥ workmen who will be received | losis. These prisons were previous y it is beyond doubt that the reports/union rank and file. It is not’ yet 1 ‘The labor party enters parliament |myp Barricades grew up as if out|in Hamburg alone? after introduction of the seven-hour| Used for the most dangerous mur- concerning the condition of Comfadel established how much money is this- ap gs Pp s Is to b them y with certain demands. It boasts it] 1 op the earth, | aes an é 4 |day, there will be 101,734 workmen |erers and criminals to bury Terracini, which come from an abso- sing, but a shortage of $300, was Galicual Gran Phat Oa will have 600 candidates in the next| (hit scare, mereased with in-] But it is not so simple to give the | employed on the new scheme, (alive and to expose them to @ very jutely reliable souree, are all too ac- definitely cctabishe ee lenipetied rem O06 NS | deckion.2 1G aipesla! to, ths unibme|coce week rata ee reat oe erent ne Gey mmc As erat nes certain early death, as the Italian|curate. The government wishes to onshore 2 ers’ union if they did not want their ployed to wait until there is-2 labor : re - pi ol tained intoxicated -with victory, in which = criminal law does not yet include| prevent the transfer of Comrade no littl icitament. “Asean i own conditions to be dragged down | Docs corr rom somewhere, The inhabitants|the defense can at any moment go the direct death sentence. Terracini to hospital or, at least,|neq especially im Franee and “Bing! tq the level of -the Chinese silk/” phe Communists and organized “ote eee ork algae es over to the attack, where there are 3 ‘The conditions that must prevail in|to delay it until his condition is so|jand la have atieady siet Gem workers, ie ae unemployed are intensifying their|2M¢ crecting barricades. | Toiling hundreds of barricades, and where these prisons are evident from the|bad that medical treatment can no/sponse. It is urgently necesat ‘Join Nat'l. Union.’ 1 entation” daMasiing? Work: 6r aan. § ig they dug up the pave-)the workers are preparing for the , ireumstance that even reactionary| longer save him. t pibactas i Yi “Conditi f mill een in the pean s P-|ment and sawed down the sacred|general attack, for the | hapa i j that. protests ‘should be addressees onditions of mil ha s port. They are preparing a march | trees of the Danie eo cabid s |gen 1 attack, for the last act of bourgeois jurists, barristers, judges! The only possibility of frustrating! the Italian government by factories south, in the northeast and in Penn-/- + unemployed from the whole coun-|" .. 3 Liga jcivil war—the victorious seizure of | and professors have demanded for/ this criminal plan of Mussolini con-| trade unions and the organizationé sylvania are being depressed to! 1,1 upon Westminster. Piled up right across the street,| power. . . . $ | + |many years the abolition of these) sists of mobilizing public opinion in| of the workers in. other countries.) | such an extent, due to the united | ‘ ae the barricade renders it impossible] Now the workers retreat. Cursihg | prisons, which they themselves term| Italy and abroad. In Italian working) There is not a minute to | national drive of the mill owners) =~ _|for the enemy to see what is behind| inwardly with vexation, as their last| BUffalo Blaze Destroys | “ttaly’s stigma.” I will mention one) class circles the reports have caused | Quick’s the word! \ against the workers, that the ons _ fits rough, forbidding front; it}act they fling ‘the enemy far back | Wi vk - H es of many examples, Cesare Civoli, | way of fighting off this attack is. |diverts his attention and serves him|from the barricades. ‘The insur-| orKers Homes professor of criminal law at the Uni-| -— : thru the building up of a re na-| jas the only visible target. The barri-|gents take advantage of the result-| 3S pr aee cs versity of Pavia, refers in_his| tional workers' organization,” Poyntz jade receives with its empty breast|ing confusion in the ranks of the|,. BUFFALO, N. Y., Nov. 7.—Two) Manual of Criminal Law, published AMERICA PREPARE declared. When the applause that F D V |the whole of the furious fire which}enemy in order silently to leave | fiTemen were fatally injured, seven! in 1900, to this form of punishment’ , is greeted this statement had quieted) |the troops direct against the in-|their trenches, barricades, and|iJured and more than a score over-|as a “terrible application of the down she told the workers not to, visible opponent. |watch-posts. They retreat with CMe When two fires swept com-| death sentence.” (Manuale del Dirit- 4 THE NEX’ T W AR refuse but to accept the aid pro-| pee __ The troops are compelled to attack| their weapons, take their dead and|™e"cial districts in this city late) to Penale, Milano 1900, Page 117.) ferred to their own srngele ayia All Workers Urged to |in the open streets. The workers take| wounded with them, wipe out all Yesterday and early today. For this reason, Comrade Terracini 3 the outs: gs nee S| Send Immediate Aid up the fight in their own quarters. |traces behind them, and disperse| The dead were James Byers and was right when at the pronounce- DY Hie Neon Tesele 7 ae ate } All attempts of the regular troops) gradually, in the streets of the sub-|Edward Thompson. It is believed| ment ‘of judgment he shouted to the Union offer. The speak resse a, ss jto capttire Barmbeck on Tuesday, | urb which now have become silent. they were overcome by smoke. fascist blackshirts who figured as| JAY LOVESTONE particularly the great sneeseity, oh : ‘on eae Ss ee Octboer 23, proved vain against the! ‘The retreat according’ to plan is The second blaze swept a two-| “judges” at the special trial: organizing women workers an eat once, since debts have piled uPp|scattered, invisible, and unseizable - li ba zg “|story building and several small “You have not the courage open- ~ TINITE TATE >pDpR 7, wives of the strikers, calling atten-/and are waiting to be paid off by position of the sharp-shooters who, Enis eta of sharp-| stores nearby before it was brought ly to condemn us to death! But THE UNITED STATES IS PREPARING tion to their great capacities for | further contributions, from somewhere or other, from the] x, P * i ~|under control. | you know only too well that you FOR ANOTHER WAR WHY? helping the strike toward victory. | There are still a number of city windows of . the second stories, | None (1 hem leaves his lofty barri-| “oo. uier fire, in which a dozen| have really condemned us to death bie ‘ ee ; ck | committees and units which have de- ieee f peace. Senorer: Lem low in the) aa 2 re pe gre af mal - : oe Officials Incompetent. flee mendiig tn tell apne, yeok= gamly, ike oer aie down bh streets, the last fighter has left his|Duildings were burned, started in) in sae, us into those subter- | —The role of American Imperialism After criticising the so-called set-| sbiy in the expectation of getting a hail of bullets against the empty|(tenchs before the last wounded |* pelt agi ATU Sa ac diate bates ele, , —United States vs. Great Britain tlements being allowed by a Przaeee ava Tiksae pre Ghee to oe: Be ce bullets against the empty man, supported by comrades, has | 2nd Yapidly spread to adjoining Buried Alive. " PECs aaa “ sens kneed ait Monn es or "| mit at once what has been collected, N anticl ti f ttack by disappeared in the doorway of a| buildings. Many persons living in) o far it has not been possible to| —The Significance of Peace Pacts cials of the union, | the "speaks | and to send in separately what they Orne (une. leeateriendly, hones. jtenements in the section narrowly |establish fairly regular communica- | —The Role of Reformi. warned the workers to force ee ate atl Avalline for. | armoured cars, the | insurgents} The whole day they still hold out, escaped with their live ltion with the comrades buried in ole Of e) TITEL tlements guaranteeing recognition | Contributi i succeed without dynamite or other | repel the Whites, run from one quar- PB oer | these prisons. They are shut off —The Role of the Communist: Part of the union, where the employer ontributions Received. explosives in destroying a concrete ‘ k < *. | ically fi h ter 1d ary os tovdeal. with the union rep.|. Among the contributions received |} tlige which looks as if it would last|tr, age’ fret tee ee Argentine Paper Hits jhermeticelly from the onter won eee 4 if Serer Ip and not directly |Yesterday was $24 froth Nucleus 4| sonever ‘Th 2s it it Mould last | the -steep housetops, hanging over|” 9 1 * They may write only once in several This pamphlet should be in the hands of every : resentative only and not directly eee ee tiih the geod ward forever. The workers discover its|abysses, past attic windows through! At U.S. Intervention | months and then the prison censor ; c : ry SEE re eee the cate: that “More is coming.” From an old ‘wnerable artery—a huge gas main| which the police begin to make their! in Nicaragua Polls ‘il! Permit to pass only letters which worker interested in a clear analysis of America +? . |together with the ‘followi eet , r ci e empty silence behind the barri-! wu Beers | been allowed vis r ves. aie i ‘ SEAR a Workers’ Union, and a member of eee eee ne lena setter: blindly into a still and empty street. cades, | BUENOS AIRES, Nov. 7—The| Concerning the fate of most of these munist) Party toward the coming war. ; the strike committee, then took the set with tve| A halt is made in order to repair its ‘i i jleading capitalist daily, “La Na-| comrades we are, therefore, in com- 7 floor for a few minutes to bring to campaign list with $3.25 to help im an} Th t ala pte fight becomes a pursuit. The| ion.” editorially commenting upon en : i Ae athens ers the | Party election campaign. This is put) eee aee ne ee nove it Whole population conceals and res-| sho ‘recent tReatial: clecton anette erence 2: 10 cents the attention of the workers ie very little-and should be many times Particade springs up in front of it. cues the heroic rear-guard of the|, e recent presidential election in} tp yegard to Comrade Terracini . tay valuable services being rendered 40 | reatae: for the splendid work done| Th? ©ar turns about—sawn down Hamburg October—these wounded Nicaragua, condemns the interven- | alone our Italian comrades have suc- WORKERS LIBRARY PU De ! the strike by Communist shop news- | T°On" ait ie Spon alt of eae trees, their branches and limbs! hunted solitary fighters who still | i°nist: Policy of the United States. | cceded in getting a few reliable mes- Ciena AR BLISHERS papers and bulletins Be by | créat cause against exploitation and|ttetching right across the road, bar|eep up a fire high above the town;|_. The case of Nicaragua is con-|sages; messages which are in the 43 East 125th Street New York City P Communist groups in New Jersey | oo oression. Thanking you for the its retreat. lhe suddenly make their entrance |Sidered as an example of the viola- highest degree alarming. Prior to 4 2% and New Bedford factories. She) siitnfut efforts i ‘ducti \JHE actual fights lasts the whole| into st: ecinlettiee seldian tl tion of national sovereignty, the his arrest Comrade Terracini’s health| JL + » 1 of these diminu- sy eTTo. Ss In conducting our . int range iz lass homes-—— a . S, A Pp | read from several o: Sect ‘i of Tuesday. The first attacks h bl hand: i newspaper declares. This policy,|left much to be desired. The insuf- « & bs ‘d showed how whole | ‘lection campaign, and hoping that 4 , r wit leeding hands, torn clothes, aitLa Neston! ex e se tive papers an we will obtain good results, I remain, begin at about 11 o’clock in the|with black, patched lips, with a|S@#¥s “La ‘acion,” places the armed ficient diet during the two years he) columns were devoted by the Com- munists to telling the workers in other sections of the country of ‘the struggle the Paterson silk workers were conducting, Gertrude Mueller pointed out that publicity of this sort, reaching workers in the mills and factories by the thousands would be invaluable in getting sup- port for the strike in matters of relief and funds. The Daily News Record, a tex- tile trade journal published in New York, carried today a statement to the effect that some silk bosses are contemplating moving out of the city. Although left wing workers here recognize this as the usual threat of bosses in a strike situa tion, it would be better to prepare for any eventuality by affiliating to the National Textile Workers’ Union so that escaping bosses could be tackled by the national union wherever they go. - Benefit Dance. e Donald, Pa.” A group of foreign-born workers in the steel center of McKeesport. Pa., sent in $7; Nucleus 28 of Los Angeles sent $5; and the Finnish Workers Club of New Rochelle, Y., sent in $11. Ten Philadelphia. Police Dismissed PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 7 UP).— Three police inspectors, five cap- tains and two detectives of the Phi- ladelphia police force were dismis- sed today when they refused to de- fend themselves before the police board on charges they were “unfit” to hold office. The charges arose from the in- vestigation. of the police officers’ activities and their wealth by the id jury. Announcement is made today of @ dance to be held in Turn Hall this Friday night at 8 o’clodk, for the benefit of the strikers. ~The affair will be under the union’s auspices. Wives of striking workers, organ- ized into councils, announced yes- terday that they are preparing to serve coffee and cake and other re- freshments to strikers doing duty an the picketing lines, particularly the mourning “emons! \ Turk Police Jail Hungarian Workers It is reported from Constantinople that the Turkish police have ar- rested a number of Hungarian im- migrants who are suspected of being Communists or of symrathizing with Communism. The _ arrested workers will be expelled from ; Turkey. Fraternally yours, Tom Ray, Mc-| morning. The most stubborn at- tacks take place in the Von-Essen- Strasse and along the line of barri- cades extending from both sides of the railway embankment. The police storm the railway station. Their de- N, | tachments run along the railway em- bankment in order to dislodge the workers from above. They are allowed to pass the first and second ambush unscathed. From the third they are swept by a mur- derous fire. The insurgents fire not only from behind cover, but also from the neighboring housetops. Snipers are scattered over the roofs of the houses, and keep whole streets, the most important crossings and squares under fire. In the street below is a trench and a barricade. The insurgents have al- ready held it for some hours. A de- tachment of police attacks with in- creasing fierceness. Then:a cry is suddenly heard from above. “Away from the barricade!” The people do not know what is the matter. A young worker of about twenty-three, obviously wounded, comes down to them. He tells them to clear away from the barricade as the insurgents lying on the roofs are afraid of hitting their own people while firing at the police. The work- er disappears again in the entrance of a house, and a few minutes after police to withdraw. the fire from the roof forces the crowd of pursuers at their heels who, cursing, threatening, seeking, run past the very door which has just |been closed behind their victim. | ee € | NE of the last to retreat was an| | old worker—staggering from ex- | /haustion, his clothing in rags, drunk | |from weariness, and no longer able \to cling to the smooth glazed bricks of the chimney-stacks. Arrived be- low in the shadow of the door of a courtyard which offered him the way to freedom, he halted again for a moment, raised his rifle, in order with fury and zest to fire off his last cartridges. The whole of the corner of the wall against which he leaned was pitted with bullet marks. It was a blind chance that he was not hit. It was only with the greatest difficulty that he managed to get away at the last moment. Round his neck, over the open shirt and sweating hairy breast, there hung a brand new neck-tie. “Whatever are you Wearing that neck-tie for?” he was asked. “I wanted to die looking smart,” was his reply. Such was the spirit \of the prole- tarian fighters in the Hamburg’ in- surrection. , . os "HD FARMERS AND AGRI- Ge eased DA wed) OMI BAYS THE COMMUNIS' forces of the country at the disposal|was on remand further weakened| of private companies, regardless of | his physique. Italian comrades, who) | whether this action may be a cause|saw him at the time of the trial, all) |of war. Every new reader of The DAMY WORKER is a potential soldier in the coming battles of the workers. |said that even then he was reduced} |to a skeleton. Apart from Comrade} | Gramsci, who was very ill, our Ital-| ian comrades were, therefore, chief-| ly concerned about Comrade Terra-} cini, But the reports that we are Goyal Its Significance for JANUARY 5, 1929 WILL BE FIVE YEARS OF THE COMING OUT OF THE DAILY WORKER CITIES ARE URGED TO BEGIN MAKING ARRANGE- MENTS FOR CELEBRATIONS NOW, BERTRAM manifestations, etc. 35 East 1251 Streev. WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS The TROTSKY OPPOSITION American Workers BY D. WOLFE HIS BOOKLET discusses every phase of Trotskyism: its historical roots, its theoretical basis, its international A LARGE SECTION of this pamphlet is devoted to an analysis of Trotskyism in America from “the Gossip of Eastman” to “Trotskyism as a Jewish Issue.” 35 CENTS PER COPY i o fo Se : = Pos New York Crry, iS Be 8