The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 24, 1928, Page 4

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EEE Mh Page Four : DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1928 Presented to the Plenum of the Central Executive Committee | of the Workers (Communist) Party By OTTO HUISWOOD, NORMAN TALLENTIRE, WILLIAM WEIN. STONE and HERBERT ZAM and adopted by the Plenary Session of CEC. xecutive Committee of the Workers (Communist) | In this situation it was inevitable that the Congress should place in the foreground the most determined struggle against the. imperial- ist war and against the poisonous pacifism of the social democracy. The Congress correctly emphasized the need for most energetic strug- gle in all countries to expose the role of social reformism as an un- conditional prerequisite for the sugcessful fight against the bourgeoi- sie and against the imperialist war, and for the realization of the united front of the workers from below. The adoption of the program of the Communist International by the World Congress marks an event of world historic significance. The program gives a Marxist-Leninist analysis of the whole period. The program of the Communist International is the program of Resolution on Decisions of Sixth World Congress of Communist Internationa of the Bolshevist Party and its Leninist leadership has known how to lead the proletariat thru the difficult conditions of the NEP and the isolation of the Soviet Union by the imperialist nations, to the strengthening of its socialist sector, and by a constant application of energy in the accomplishing of the gigantic work of socialist con- struction and the building up of the basis of socialism, of heavy in- dustry and the collectivization of agriculture, in maintaining and con- solidating the alliance of the proletariat with the poor and middle peasantry. The World Congress approved the decisions of the ECCI and the CP of the Soviet Union, condemning and uprooting the international Trotskyist opposition. | danger and against all conciliatory attempts to cover up, and protect | the opportunist elements. | The situation in the Communist Parties of the Soviet Union and Germany and our brother parties of the Communist International and in the Workers (Communist) Party of America, proves that only by a merciless struggle against the right danger (open opportunism) | and Trotskyism (opportunism covered with left phrases) only by the | liquidation of the conciliatory tendencies toward opportunism can we | forge the various sections of the Communist International into one | solidified world party of Communism. | The plenum-of the Communist Executive Committee of the | Workers (Communist) Party expresses its deep-going conviction that ‘arty roves without reservations all the resolutions the world dictatorship of the proletariat and of the establishment of . vee pees 4 + the work of the World Congress will link the Communist International Ss sah : victory over Trotskyism and the energetic struggle against ‘ g and decisions of the Sixth World Congress of the Communist Inter. Communism in the whole world. The program is a sure guide in our ‘ Fatal A iegneittatery tasnienclea Wwithioc ia Steet Dany Were ands | With the broadest proletarian masses more than ever before. The national and expresses its will to carry out all these resolutions and struggle for the Bolshevization of our Party and for revolutionizing pod Central Executive Committee instructs all departments of the Central are pre-conditions for the successes of the brother proletariat of the decisions wholeheartedly and energetically. the American working class. lt is a magnificent fighting weapon in Soviet, Talon, Executive Committee to secure and publish all documents of ae 6th ¥ The Si World Congress of the Communist International means the hands of the world proletariat. Th view ofthe: rapidly growing war dagen, ta ‘congresd Jultly Congress so as to make them available to the broadest sections of our i @ turning point in the life of the Communist movement. The World The colonial question, in other words the struggle for the libera- hasized the necessity for tightening up the ‘pothhevlaidiaeipling, | Party and for the revolutionary workers. Gongress gave a correct Marxian-Leninist analysis of the world situ- tion of the colonial and semi-colonial countries from imperialist op- cTul Goriesuaiat pactica and unwavetitge atta pe lalauntnet ripNeln: | The Central Executive Committee calls urgently upon all mem- c ation and solved the problems before the proletarian revolutionary pression (especially the great Chinese revolution) and the solidarity Seni arves Ths eemae correctly placed the emphasis upon the | bers and all units of the Party to study thoroughly the theses and movement. The analysis of the Congress combatted the illusions of the International working class with the oppressed peasant masses right danger mathe main danger facing the Communist International resolutions of the 6th Congress and to carry out systematically and r about the permanent character of capitalist stabilization and showed how imperialism, which in a number of countries is increasing the of the colonial countries, played a great role in the deliberations of the World Congress. Great headway was made in the solution of the today. persistently without the slightest reservations or hesitation all its | decisions for the world victory of the dictatorship of the proletariat. 7 3 " - ; A ; , By Executive Committee endorses this view of the con- \ P forces of production, ig developing by the very fact of its technical | questions of aLtin America and the problems of the Negro masses of Dae eenizal palo Long liv : eatioual and organ mal progress, tremendous unsurmountable contradic- | the United States. : gress which has been fully justified by the events after ah tanarc | ne live the Somunanlst International! tions. The World Congress correctly estimated the Third Period of | The World Congress manifested the determined will of the work- _ The Central Executive Committee endorses the pesleene oe ed | Hail.the work of the Sixth Congress! Bost-war imperialism as a period of catastrophes, new wars and revo- ing class of the world to defend the USSR, the only fatherland of the Political Committee which elt the Aight es sas a a ae Hail the world program of the Communist International! # Tutionary er: The period is characterized by the intensification of proletariat. The congress recorded with satisfaction the economic Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the Party Conference ey ae Cire sad the outer and inner contradictions of the capitalist system. and political progress of the Soviet Union which under the guidance the Communist Party of Germany in their fight against the rig] ong live the proletarian revolution! ‘ Continued from Previous Page nists to their core, and their opportunism is even more emphasized by the fact that they picked up Trotskyism in its last, in the most counter-revolutionary stage of its development as their unifying ide- ology. In the real class content there is no essential difference between out-and-out, open opportunism and Trotskyism, Both are equally op- portunistic, both reflect the pressure of non-working-class, petty- bourgeois, labor-aristocratic elements on our Party. The difference between them is mainly in appearance, methods, and history, and in some demands. Trots m is that species of opportunism which is characterized by the following three specific features: (1) ultra- left beginnings, covering its Right deeds with Left phrases, (2) cer- tain special features growing out of the specific conditions of the Rus- sian Revolution; (3) certain international aspects, in that in certain periods of its evolution it attracted some ultra-left elements in the + Comintern. The “made-in-America” brand of outright opportunism does not have these feztures, but it exhibits its own special characteristics, growing out of the concrete conditions of this eduntry. Among others these characteris are: (1) Its roots are in the world hegemony of perialism; (2) its social basis is the influence of the y and petty-bourgeois intelligentzia upon our party; attitude toward Marxian theory in genergl of a re- ation of Marxism. But despite all differences in hods, in their history, it is necessary to it opportunism and Trotakyism are equally sonrentoDe and having the confidence of the overwhelming majority measure of expulsion only as the ultimate step. Political Committee, demanded the printing of its joint platform with Ms ic, and that in many stages of the struggle. they may of te eat Party membership. ‘The Fosver-Bittelman opposition is 8 The Central Executive Committee Plenum instructs all Cannon, the ‘Right Danger in the American Party.” In other words, Py unite, they may form a common front against the Leninist line, | Unable to fight the out-and-out right danger, because it is unwilling against the Comintern, against our Party. THE OPPOSITION, THE RIGHT DANGER, AND TROTSKYISM The Foster-Bitt fight agai elman opposition refuses to conduct a serious Trotskyism, and coneucts only a sham battle against the Right d: The whole analysis by the Opposition of the world role of American imper' m prevents them from seeing clearly the real sources of the Right danger in our Party. In underestimating the war danger, underestimating the influence of the labor aristo- of opportunist poison, basing policies on the rves of American capitalism and neglecting adeq eration of the tremendous surplus profits of rican imperialism, which is the basis of the power of social re- m in the ranks of the working class—the whole analysis of the } Mobilization ot the Party for the Struggle The meaning of this, which the Plenum of the Central Executive Committee rejects with contempt, is that the Central Executiye Committee with its policies is weakening the working class and strengthening the bourgeoisie. If this charge were true, it would be the duty of the opposition to demand the immediate expulsion of the Central Executive Committee. If this charge were true, then it would be the duty of the opposition to concentrate all its forces on the destruction of the Central Executive Committee of the Party instead of fighting the right danger and Trotskyism. It is clear that such analysis by the opposition must inevitably prevent the opposi- tion from conducting effectively the fight against the right danger and against Trotskyism. Policies of the opposition of reservations to decisions of the World Congress of the Comintern are again one of the factors strengthen- ing the right danger and Trotskyism. Already some insufficiently clear rank and file workers in the Party are using the argument that if it is permissable to have reservations toward World Congress decision of the Comintern on American imperialism and on the Ameri- can inner party situation, then it must be permissable to maintain reservations on decisions of the Comintern on the problems of build- ing socialism in one country and the inner party situation of the Central Executive Committee of the Soviet Union. The fight against the right danger and Trotskyism cannot be conducted except by fol- lowing the line of the Communist International without reservations and under the leadership of the Central Executive Committee, which is the legitimate leadership of the Party. elected by the last Party to turn any fundamental self-criticism against itself, because it is one of the main sources of right errors in our Party, because it ac- cuses the Central Executive Committee as being the right wing. The Foster-Bittelman opposition is unable to conduct a vigorous struggle against Trotskyism because due to its illusions about the “left” character of Trotskyism is does not recognize clearly the opportun- istic core of Trots! m under the covering left phrases, because with its policy of reservations to Communist International decisions it undermines the faith of the workers in the leadership of the Com- munist International and its leading party, the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. The opposition’s policy of reservations on Comin- tern decisions supplies the Trotskyist Cannon group with the most dangerous argument that the leadership of the Comintern cannot have a truly Leninist leadership, it must be a right wing Téadership, Against the Right Danger and Trotskyism. \ convention itself the most thorough-going, systematic discussion and struggle against the right danger, which is the chief menace to the Leninist line of the Party, and of Trotskyism, which threatens with an immediate split of the Party. The discussion must aim at an ideological self-clarification of the Party. The following basic tasks confront us in connection with the right danger and with the recurrence of Trotskyism in the Party: 1. A broad ideological campaign is necessary against all mani- festations of the right danger and against the slightest tolerance of the right danger in the Party. Uncompromising struggle against the socialist party; clear attitude towards the leading role of the Communist Party; a vigorous struggle for the organization of the unorganized; and for new unions; exposure of white chauvinism in our ranks; concentration on factories; drawing of proletarian elements into the leadership of the Party; fight against underestimation of the war danger and pacifist illusions. 2. No tolerance of Trotskyism in the ranks of the Party. The Central Executive Committee Plenum fully endorses the organiza- tional measures taken by the Political Committee and especially the expulsion of Cannon, Swabeck, Abern, Schachtman, O’Flaherty, Dunne, Skoglund, Hedlund, Sulkanen and Askeli, from the Party. The Central Executive Committee approves the policy of the Poleom to expel leading and responsible party members and non proletarian elements who consciously adopt the position of Trotskyism and sup- port Cannon, and to try to persuade rank and file proletarian ele- ments and to try to win them away from Trotskyism and to use the subdivisions of the Party to wage a broad, thorough ideological cam- paign against Trotskyism. 4, Energetic defense of the Comintern and unreserved accept- ance of all its decisions. 5, The frankest, most thorough self-criticism is necessary from the top to the bottom in the Party. The Central Executive Committee Plenum states that the Political Committee did not exercise sufficient self-criticism, and instructs it to take decisive steps in this direction. 6. Merciless struggle against any manifestation of bureau- cratism. 7. It is necessary that the Central Executive Committee and the Party as a whole shall make a decisive turn towards building the Party organization on shop nuclei lines and break all resistance to this 9. ‘Measures must be taken to achieve more real party democ- | racy, At the same time the centralization of the Party must be com- pleted and the language federationism must be eradicated. | 10. The Central Executive Committee Plenum fully endorses the decision of the Political Committee to conduct the pre-convention dis- cussion on the freest possible basis, only within the limits of the statutes of the Party, and the basic principles of Communism, giving a chance for expression to every shade of opinion within the Party. 11. The Central Executive Committee Plenum fully endorses the action of the Political Committee, calling upon the comrades in opposition to join the leadership of the Party and to draft a joint thesis, which will accept as its basis the estimation of the Comintern Congress on American imperialism and on the radicalization of the American working class, which will give up the fight against the present leadership of the Party as a Right group with Right policies, and which will concentrate its struggle against Trotskyism and the Right danger. The adoption of a joint thesis and the acceptance of the line of the Comintern do not exclude, of course, the legitimate fight of the Opposition for the majority in the election of delegates to the Party convention or any criticism of any actions or decisions of the Central Executive Committee. . The Central Executive Committee Plenum states with regret that the Opposition refused the offer of the Political Committee to unite all Communist forces within the Party for the purpose of carrying on a joint struggle against all manifestations of the Right danger and of Trotskyism. The Opposition after the rejection of this offer of the the Opposition finds it to be perfectly in order to have the same plat- form on all American questions as Cannon has against the Central Executive Committee, but finds it impossible to have a common plat- form with the Central Executive Committee against Canrion and the Right Danger; The Central Executive Committee plenum considers it as one of the main tasks of the Party Conventior to eradicate unprincipled factionalism and to find guarantees of a complete Lenin- ist unification of the Party. woes f ; is Slag i if it does not help to oust the present leadership of the American policy. i Foster-Bittelman Opposition prevents them from conducting a system- a Stay . a 2 ® Kelth-Albee rf atic successful fight against the Right Danger. The Opposition, which | F2tty, which is an out-and-out right wing leadership. 8. The Central Executive Committee Plenum fully approves the : ] up to recent times included Cannon and which today is the Bittel- | TASKS.IN THE STRUGGLE AGAINST THE RIGHT DANGER policy of the Political Committee calling upon the Party to elect rank Best Film Show A ME + man-Foster Group, constitute in the history of the Party, a group af- AND TROTSKYISM. | and file workers from the shops, mills and mines as delegates to the In Town flicted with trade union ideology and with opportunistic inclinations. | | various Party conventions. One of the decisive tasks of the Party | 42nd Street and Brondway aun Now, after they have lost the bulk of their rank-and-file trade-union The Plenum of the Central Executive Committee considers as | convention will be to give a strong impetus to the proletariahization of | % followers, who have become supporters of the Central Executive | ne of the main tasks of the pre-convention discussion and of the the Party and its leadership. \ HE PERFECT X-MAS PICTURE FOR YOUNG AND OLD Committee, they try to play the role of the “Left” censors of the “MI e 99 I Party. The Bittelman-Foster group charges the Central Executive | ot er Committee with being the Right wing of the Party. | vf FH s * I. W. W. life-problems, but also | The Communist International declared that this charge is un- 4 MILLION FACE yon eel of Capitalism Ts | their past life with all the bitterness | (FACES OF CHILDREN: 4 founded. Despite this decision of the highest organ of the Communist | é n : ae |of poverty and failure, The artist, THE PERFECT XMAS PICTURE FoR Ue Sanvcu movement, the opposition continues to put forward this empty | | Sh * ‘Ss lb ad. 9?! Grover Burgess, puts into the scenes eats accusation, and tries to distract thereby the attention of the D | Own in ing ing QULDIUYAS | great deat of power and passion. |ff| “LIFE OF SANTA CEA U8 in tee ares < Party from the real right danger and from Trotskyism. It can- | | He at a oe see . : parscen se Tot be considered as an accident that the present opposition gave | ; . sinclai i are too long. It is difficult to keep | —— 3 pam a birth to Lore, the first Trotskyite, and to Cannon, the most danger- SaiaaES |tetls Sra CMI Rat eI nia ale fen perme boli an audience adi for a lengthy ieee sede aeeeee civic REPERTORY 1 on Gus Trotskyite, who is trying to split our movement. It cannot be |Communists in Kansti|him to write this play. In 1923, an|bines actuality and dreams, pilot Se fa ae Wings Over Europ 50e; $1.00; $1:50, Mats, Wed.@Sat,2.30 Syeiderel as’ on secident thes Cannon's recenitibg groasd ts ote” |) (Qo aya ts b/ W- W. strike broke out in the) After a couple of months’ confine: | "= 0 UcinsHon- : | EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director. rty is in the ranks of the opposition. It cannot be considered as an ganize Peasants |harbor of St, Pedro, California. The | ment in the stinking, dark hole, Red| Broadly speaking, the general im- phe ES Nichols and | / Tonight, “Peter Pan.” Aecident that the whole Minnesota group of V. R. Dunne, Skoglund, and | SHANGH: brary : _|police threw all the 600 strikers into | Adams’ physique is broken, but not Pression of the acting is favorable. MARTIN BE ie ‘Tues. Eve, “Cherry Orchard.” Hedlund, that Swabeck and his group, that Askeli, Sulkanen, and all s AI, Dec. 23—It is esti- | prison (sunny California is known his mind. He dies bravely. As a|The directors have used a lot of 46th Sts w (CK THEA. | A rrrrun 146 W. B7th st. me the Finnish right-wingers were integral and leading parts of the jean nee bss 2,000,000 Chinese | for its gray, dark prisons), When |rebel, he tells his comrades to sing, |Sense in the production, and the ac- Ifentite Gian EOS, CCatsecte Noon to Midnight jester-Bittelman opposition. It cannot be considered as an accident jReeres f in ihe Province Will'ihe strikers refused ‘to discontined (and they answer with the strains |S play simply and naturally, You Thursday & Saturday, YHOUSE Popular Prices hat the opposition withheld from the political committee for several i pts ie eit alsa due | singing their wobbly songs, the {of the well-known “Warshevianka,” forget at times that you are in a BERNARD SHAW'S Snare Rep yeeks the information about the outrigkt Trotskyist position of Can- by al tee ab ths Hecate eine |minions of law and order closed all| ‘The play has some faults. Sinclair | Me8*™e M | B b “Lucrecia Borgia” i fon, that they handled the Cannon outbreak of Trotskyism first in | °Y i rallagi ukticevee vii be ex. | the Windows of the prison corridor |is not a dramatist. The intellectual| A new note is to let the dead ajor ALDALA |) witn coneaa veiat ana cast of 50,000 “ their caucus instead of bringing it immediately to the attention of the | land forced steam into the prison a ot woman speak with sound accompani- $$ 2 at ; : pected from the Nanking govern-| e prison | worth of the wobblies is also not : Thea. W. 5: Political Committee of the Party, that they selected Cannon as their | oe, es cells. The prisoners kept singing | profound. Sinclai ‘ ment. Another new note is the GUILD Thea. znd St. jokesman at the membership meeting of the biggest district of the | Ment, which did not even signify | inti they fell olan ECON TAGE (eee Te ie Gare eee aaa RgEDSRCALDT GE eure cSt NTU! Mts. Tues, ‘Thurs &oate nae ees Aged: |that it was aware of the situation (Uri hey fell unconscious from lack jams’ lips his own words, humani-|everberation of the echo. It gives Tnes._Thurs&Sat. 2:30 Party (New York) on October 2nd, altho in their group meeting, held lin Kansu until the middle of No.|°! ai" and heat. tarian generalities, that have no|® better illusion of another world. EUGENE O'NEILL'S | gn - same day Cannon had already revealed himself as fighting vember, when it was too late to do| These few lines give a picture of |connection with the prison tank.| With a minimum number of sets, the omintern. j ; oR, , | anything even if it so desired. the play and of the I. W. W. at the; This does not, however, alter the | the scenic director (Manual Essman) trange Interlude $ =. There is no consolidated right wing in our Party since the Cannon On the other hand the revoluti |time when they were a revolution- | general impression which is entirely | Succeeded in creating a prison with Jom © “ 4 group left the Party. There are only tendencies toward a right line Lip Gearken aa bcd ic Ni |ary organization, though actuated|a good and healthful one, all its horrors. The light effects john GOLDEN, Thea.. sth een sere are numerous right errors.” ‘The plenum doom Hot CHAT EO MS, |e” dae ys laadatant of | PY false revolutionary ideas. The first act, with its mass scene |®T¢ excellent in all scenes, One feels EVENINGS ONLY aT, 6:30.) ———____- OAT Bittelman-Foster group with being a consolidated right wing group. | fr)’ Ghir ace Communist Party are| The entire action takes place in|in prison, is carried through with|that the scenic designer and the | '—— ARTHUR HOPKINS presents mM The plenum of the Central Executive Committee charges the organizing Soviets and winning |Ptison. From beginning to end it|power and rhythm. The end of the | director have learned much from the “HOLIDAY” opposition within the Party that, on the one hand, their whole analysis | more adherents to the Red Flag. It|i8 @ sharp struggle between the |act reaches a high, artistic altitude. | Modern European theatre. . Ethel Barrymore Nt prevents them from conducting a successful fight against the main | was reported last month that when |@wakening harbor workers and the | When the prisoners sing with chok-| “Singing Jailbirds” has been pro-| in “THE KINGDOM or Gop» |_* PCW comedy by Philip Barry danger facing the Party, against outright opportunism; on the other | Marshal Feng Yu-hsiang, whose | tools of the shipbuilding owners’ or-|ing throats their song as their |duced in a number of countries, with By G. Martinez Sierra POLY MOUTH Qoro ursmnease hand, that they show in many respects tendencies towards a tolerant | sphere of influence is supposed to|fanization. It is class struggle|voices give out and gradually die,|great success. A vote of thanks is! FIRST MATINEE TODAY 2:30 |—GxTRATMATINED PRIDAT, attitude towards the followers of Trotskyism in our ranks. The | extend over Kansu province, sent | Without frills or trimmings! Bru-|an electrical current passes through |due the New Playwrights group for| Ethel Barrymore Thea. 47th St., ———— Plenum of the Central Executive Committee reiterates the statement troops against the evolutionists, |tal, murderous subjugation without |the audience. It is a proletarian |bringing it to the American stage.| rvs. 8:20; Mats, ‘this Weel’ aera’ | Ave demand the tmmed:ate recomnt- of the Political Committee, which already protested against any at- (the soldiers joined the workers’|Perfume! The play is raw and|sacrifice in the finest and highest| With all its weaknesses as totone|F! day ahd Saturday, Chick, Sd1i,| Saregt geoviet Unio by the United }s tempt to link up the eee eee opposition with Kg ven \ army. naked as is the war between labor |sense of the word. A wealth of |and production, it is a telling rev- a The Central Executive Committee warns every party comrade agains : . in|@nd capital in our “democratic” | revolutionary pathos lies in the olutionary play, a portrait of the| fMfmmiimmlluiiiiiiE Rey such a mistake. It is to the best interests of the Party to save as many ltanne x ia ibera heel iher pute country. courageousness of the herded har-! ruling capitalistic seat heel in the VT . q OPEN DAILY comrades as possible from Trotskyism, and it violates the most es- | hich will enable him to send troops| There is not much to tell, The | bor workers, in the hurling of their |land of the brave and the free. iI! “a ii} wit i from 9 a. m-9 p.m. yc sential interests of our movement to drive any comrade into the arms levee easily to the far distant prov- story of the play is short, The dis- |S0ngs into the faces of their ©P-| We very strongly recommend all i if ‘nth p | hi dha of the Trotskyist group. The Central Executive Committee Plenum ince, A group of Belgian bankers |trict attorney taunts the leader of | Pressors, their only effective, sharp | yyy readers to go to see this New f/ é ‘ emphasizes this with the utmost energy, because of the need of @ | gre now in Shanghai working on the|the strike, “Red Adams.” He tries | Weapon. Playwrights’ production. The lead-| 1 PROTECT WOUR EYES | complete union of all Communist forces in the Party to beat back the | project, jto buy him. He tries to discourage | Together with the actors on the |ers of the troupe deserve the patron- WITH WELL FITTED GLASSES counter-revolutionary onslaught of Trotskyism against our Party. At |" po oi. the 9,900,000 peasants in|him. When he does not succeed, he |stage you feel, when the air traps age of all class-conscious workers, Prenat bias Oa the same time the Central Executive Committee Plenum states that | 1015. who face death by starvation, | breaks him physically. “Red” Ad-|are closed, that the last bit of air t scientific methods are employed. the Hise Eee vee a ie not nee a combating atte Janother 12,000,000 peasants in the ams is thrown into a “hole” in the |has been choked out. Together with + ; POPULAR PRICES ism organizationally as well as ideologically. e wrong analysis o: ivi .|¢ellar of the prison, without air,|them you feel the scalding steam Gg in t American imperialism by the opposition, their wrong attitude towards Pieridae sea pie nea Be without clothes, in ‘darkness, and|that the guards have dove in to Whalen Breaks Dicks LA Frei the Communist International and the policy of reservations to the 6th | present famine may be worse than| hungry, Various hallucinations rush | silence the prisoners. Who Let the Rothstein (Formerly Polen Miller, Optical Co.) World Congress of the Comintern, the repeated violation of discipline, | f°"Cr igaz-7s, when 8,000,000 pea-|through his fevered brain. He sees| Nest to the first act, the third af; INGTON AVENUE, Corner 10608 Si d the perpetuation of factionalism, the demand to print a common plat- | 300 °a.04 , wh himself a free man. He sees his|is the best, especially the trial scene. Graft Become Known 1690 LEXI te by form of the then joint Foster-Bittelman-Cannon opposition, “The wife who perished, a victim of pov- |The players do not use any masks, Right Danger in the American Party,” simultaneously with the publi- erty and lack of medical attention. | and that makes the thing more hu-| With a sweep of his sword-like cation ie kag awe nad babar ilk bat! tee Lepore ie 63 Japanese Workers | He struggles hard with himself not |man, more alive. The trial scene pens taper oP Grover Whalen charge that the Central Executive Committee is the right wing o! *. . to lose his mind entirely. is played well, rounded out and |yesterday sliced off an entire depart- . the eae ail these, Boles of the Sacra Wil as visa ele beg re 8 in pear gc In his hallucinations, Adams sees | pointy, grotesque and mixed with a Hip from “ police Héica the es- IT WILL BE AN EYE OPENER ot in combating the right danger, in smashing Trotskyism. The opposi- : p a private room in a night club, | little burlesque. The impression, |Pionage and central raiding force, k ‘ i i tion went in its factional blindness even so far as to charge the Central fu ine; Fear i where a representative of the ship | however, is not weakened on ac-|and demoted its 30 men and three Pe A A tere a oie come eeeee od He i Executive Committee of the Party with being a counter-revolution- TOKIO, Japan, Dec. 21.—Sixty-jowners disports himself with acount of this. women operatives, from Deputy || et Iso Th fe focal: antl Ane a C Pay Dae. ary factory: i three miners, at work in the Haru-| woman of easy virtue. A little later; It seems that both Sinclair and |Chief Inspector Valentine down. ucts; Also Therapeutic foods ani te “sg oO ‘i sd. “These pve it iti) ake Ne ee of be Central tori coal mine, near Kushiro, Yezo | his (Adams’) comrades appear, and,|the directors had laid the greatest| ‘This was Arnold Rothstein's latest-|f| tre (open evenings) or send 4c stamps for our Catalog, Committee of our Party, have the effect of paralyzing the Island, were trapped underground|as in the good old times, they all| weight on the second act. On the !revealed legacy to the police force fighting ability of the Party, retarding its activities for de- | today ‘by an oleae gr go to the “Chink” to eat. His dead | shoulders of one player, Grover Bur- | which protected his billion dollar 1 ae by See ce ore ten aia ae ta veloping mass struggle and mass organizations, and hence |tered the props at all the entrances | wife appears and speaks soothingly | gess, has been placed a colossal bur- | drug ring so long, but which let him ao are weakening the working class and strengthening its ene- and shor ic the surrounding territory |to him—-that she will never leave |den, He must, through hallucina- | get shot nearly two months ago, and Phone: Lexington 6926. ries.” for miles around. \him, Red Adams, however, is not tions, nut only reveal bits of the |fears to find any of his murderers. 6s | t é ee t

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