The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 14, 1929, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YOK. Reports Show Tremendous Progress in Socialist Construction in NEW FACTORIES MAKE TRACTORS AND MACHINES The Five Year Plan in Action The Supreme Economic Council of the U.S.S.R. has ratified the plan ‘of capital investment in the engi- neering industry for the fiscal year of 1929-30. The extent of construc- tion will considerably surpass the outline of the five year plan and compared with the preceding year it will mark an increase of 150 per cent, i.e., the capital investment will be 380 million roubles instead ot 150 million in 1928-29, Expenditures on reconstruction and expansion of existing factories nd plants will amount to 240 mil- on roubles. Investments in new <onstruction will amount to 144 mil- lion roubles. Foundations will be laid for 38 new factories—24 gen- eral machine construction works, 5 plants for the production of agri- cultural machines, 6 tool and hard- we-e factories and 3 -%pbuilding yards, Among the new factories and works there will be several giant plants. Among these will be the automobile factory in Nizhni-Noy- gorod which will cost 64,600,000 roubles. It is particularly worth mention- ing the construction of another trac- tor factory in the Urals which will cost 63 million roubles and the plan to build another automobile factory especially for the production of trac- tor lorries. The value of the 38 plants will be 666,500,000 roubles. In the Villages. The system of concluding govern- ment contracts with peasants con- cerning their crops which has until recently been applied only to certain raw material agricultural products, has lately become widely in vogue | in all branches of agriculture. This year all cotton and beet crops have been contracted and also a con- siderable part of the flax, oil seeds and various other technical crops. Contracts on grain crops have for the first time been tried last year when 4,752,000 hectares of spring and winter crops were contracted. Contracts are concluded by the state through the agricultural co- eperatives with whole villages or large groups of peasants which undertake to deliver to the state the marketable part of thi corps on certain definite conditions. At the same time the contracts make it obligatory for the peasants to in- troduce certain modern forms of ag- viculture. They have to clean the seeds, introduce better methods of cultivation of land, they have to use selected seeds on a large scale and in many cases, if contracts are made for many years, entire districts are rearranged, proper crop rotations are introduced and social cultiva- tion and harvesting is organized, The benefit of the contract sys- vem is greatly appreciated by the easants as experience shows them that the selected seeds provided by the state are giving good results. In 1928 the agricultural co-opera- tives have covered an area of one million hectares with selected seeds by means of the contract system. The farms using selected seeds had a yield 50 per cent better than the others. As a result the contract system is constantly widening its influence. This year about 15 million hectares have been contra¢ted which will bring about one-third of the market- able grain to tke state. Toward the end of May 11,500,000 hectares of the spring crop had already been con tracted of which about 6,000,000 hec- tares is wheat. ‘More than 2% million hectares of choice crops alone have been con- tracted. This together with the con- tracted winter crops (400,000 hec- tares) will give a minimum of 16 million cwts. of choice grain. It ean be definitely forecast that the great object undertaken by the roveri- ment to replace the ordinary seeds used by the peass-'- by selected seeds will be accomplished before the term. t The contract system hastens the levelopment of agriculture and its reorganization on a higher technical level. This is borne out by the rapid increase in the areas cultivat- ing cotton, sugar beets, etc., in the | cultivation of which the contract system has been applied in the course of several years. This is also borne out by the fact that almost ie entire population engaged in tha cultivation of these crops is or- a ised in co-operatives and that the application of modern methods if making swift headway. / Petty agriculture thus gives way ‘to co-operative farming and the sale of farm products in advance in ac- ‘cordance with the plans of the gov- ernment. . Radio Stations. One of the most powerful radio stations of Europe (75 klwt. in the antenna) has been completed in one of the Leningrad factories. It was built for the Central Council of Sov- iet Trade Unions. The station will be located not far from Moscow. Health Resorts. * One of the chief proletarian gains as a result of the October Revolu- tion is the opportunity to go to health resorts and sanatoriums. The network of sanatoriums and health | Yesorts in the U.S.S.R. is constantly K, FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1929 widening. This year over 750,000 | workers of the country will take cures and have their recreation in| health resorts, sanatoriums and rest | | homes. | Twenty-three rest homes are al- ready functioning in Moscow sub- urbs located in the best mansions | jof the former princes and bankers. Higher Education. By a decision of the Soviet gov- ernment the six-hour day and other privileges have been granted to fac- tory workers attending preparatory schools. | Workers and employes entering universities or evening or day pre- | paratory schools receive a months’ | salary on leaving the factories or |otfices. This is sufficient to main-| tain them for the period until they are finally accepted as students. New Railway Lines. | The Council of Peoples’ Commis- sars has sanctioned for the current | | year the construction of a new rail- | way line in Siberia to the Kuznetsk- Asinovsk coal mines. The construc- tion of this railway line is closely connected with the construction cf \the Kuznetsk engineering wor |(the biggest in Siberia) which i: | now proceeding. |. Simultaneously a beginning wil |be made with the construction oi | the Ufa-Orenburg Railway line. Thi: line will cut through the magnificent corn region of South Ural and w thereby draw this district into the economic development of the coun- try. The first technical cloth (cloth ‘used for machinery) factory inthe U.S.S.R. has been put up in Lenin- grad. The output of the factory sat- | isfies the home demand for this cloth which was hitherto imported from abroad. | A new works which turns out ac- cumulator-batteries has been con-| | structed in Moscow. It is the only | works of this kind in the U.S. S. R. and the best of this kind in Europe. Potash deposits were discovered | recently in Solikamsk region. A be- ginning has been made with their j exploitation, and a second big shaft is being erected. German experts are participating in the work. Moscow is the richer for a new big enterprise—a bread factory | Which, together with the Leningrad | bread factory, is the biggest enter- | prise of this kind in the world. The joutput of the factory is up to 200,000 kilo of bread in 24 hours, ie, a big enough supply for 500,000 people. | Owing to such a gigantic scale of | production, the cost of production will be two to three times lower than | in the ordinary bakeries, and the | | expenditure of labor power per unit | of produetion 5 to 6 times smaller. Communist Youth League Will Open District 3 School | PHILADELPHIA, June 13—The Communist Youth League of Dis- | trict No. 3 will open its training | school on August 1 in conjunction | with the New York and Connecticut | districts. | This decision has been made as a/ result of the report given by R.} Shohan, new district organizer after | he had toured the district. | Very many new comrades are will] ing and capable of doing work, but they need a short course of instruc- tion in various phases of Communist activity. Other more experienced members have learned much about work among the youth in the fac-! | tories, their knowledge must be re- | ported upon and discussed. New| plans must he made for wider and} more effective propaganda. four weeks training school course will fullfil these functions.” | Young workers will be present | from the anthracite coal mines, tex- tile mills, and from the steel works jat Bethlehem, Pa. : League units are asked to note that funds are needed for bringing students to the school. 4p Polbureau is desirous of securing the broadest pos- | sible Enlightenment Campaign on the Comintern Ad- dress and the immediate Party tasks outlined therein. All Party members and particularly the comrades active in the workshops in the basic industries are invited to write their | The Address of the Comintern to our Party has raised sharply | the relations of the various sections to the Communist International, especially in the light of the decisions of the Sixth World Congress. It has been correctly pointed out in the Open Letter to the Sixth National Convention of our Party and in the Address that the Party policy deviated from the decisions of the World Congress. The Cuim- intern has likewise undertaken to resolutely correct all other Partics which have been departing from the line of the World Congress. In this connection it is to be noted that the Swiss Party, of which Humbert-Droz has been for many years the representative to the Comintern, not only failed to apply the decisions of the C. I. to Switzerland, but gave support to the conciliatory viewpoint of its representative, Humbert-Droz. The Swiss Party failed to understand the meaning of the third period of post-wa? capitalism as a period of growing class struggles and increasing radicalization of the masses, and also underestimated the struggle against the Right danger. In this respect, its errors were similar to those of our Party. The Enlarged Plenum of the Central Committee of the Swiss Party just recently held has firmly corrected its errors, bringing into line with the decisions of the Sixth World Congress on the basis of the letter sent to the Party by the Presidium of the Comintern. We pub- lish the resolution adopted at this Plenum. In the course of the nlightenment Campaign we shall publish articles and reports bear- ing or. the development of the struggle against the Right danger in various sections of the Communist International. * * Resolution of the Enlarged C. C. of the C. P. of the C. P. of Switzerland on the Situation in the Communist International. 1. The session of the Central Committee of the C. P. of Switzerland, | augmented by the representatives of the district Party committees, de- | clares its unreserved agreement with the decisions of the VI. World Con- | gress of the Communist International. The Enlarged Central Committee declares that the activity of the Executive Committee of the Comintern iz fully and entirely in accordance with the decisions of the VI. World Congress. In particular the C. C. of the C. P. of Switzerland declares its agreement with the struggle which the Executive Committee of the Comintern has been conducting against the liquidators (Brandler, Thal- heimer, Hais) and against those groups which are adopting a conciliatory attitude towards these renegades (Meyer, Ewert, Humbert-Droz, Serra). The C. C. approves the expulsion of the Brandler group in Germany and of the Hais group in Czechoslovakia from the ranks of the Comintern. The session of the Enlarged C. C. declares its agreement with the Tine of the C. C. of the C. P. of Germany and of the C. C. of the C. P. of Czechoslovakia. The session of the Enlarged C. C. further declares its solidarity with thé decisions of the C. C. of the C. P. S. U. and its cee Party Conference. It welcomes the determined struggle which the C. P.) S. U. is conducting against the Right and conciliatory deviations. } ei The session of the Enlarged C. C. states that in the present period | (third post-war period) of jnereased antagonisms, of intensified class | struggle, the danger of the Right deviation from World Congress is the most acute danger. | The session of the Enlarged C. C. rejects decisively the standpoint | of the liquidators and of the conciliators who support them, that the | capitalist stabilization in the present period is a “strong and firm one. On the contrary, the VI. World Congress emphasized quite correctly that | “the division of world economy into a capitalist and socialist sec- tion, the shrinkage of markets, the anti-imperialist movement in the colonies are intensifying to the utmost all the antagonisms Of || capitalism, which is developing upon the new basis which has arisen | since the war. The development of the contradictions of capitalist stabilization is in this way inevitably leading to a conversion of the present ‘stabilization period’ into a period of tremendous catas- trophes.”” The program of the Comintern also states, that “the experience of the post-war period proves that the stabilization of capitalism, which has been achieved by means of crushing the working class and by the systematic deterioration of its standard of living, can only be a partial, temporary and rotten stabilization. 2. The underestimation by all the Right groups of the war danger, | opportunist estimation of the third post-war period. Like the social democrats, the liquidators deny that the war of the imperialist powers | against the’ Soviet Union constitutes the main political tendency of the | present epoch of world revolution. The conciliators, who relegate the danger of war against the Soviet Union to a second place and who place the danger of a war between the imperialists in the forefront, come | very near to these renegades of Communism. The VI. World Congress, however, characterizes the present third post-war period as an era of the ripening of Enlightenment Campaign on the Comintern Address to the Commun St fut 0 also will be printed in this sectio Send all material deal- ing with this campaign to Comrade Jack Stachel, care Na- tional office, Communist Party, 43 E. 125th St., New York City. | opinions for the Party Press. Resolutions of Factory Nuclei | “tremendous warlike collisions, of war of int Soviet Union, of the intervention in Chi ed on by all In those places where the imperialists are confronted by an object of exploitation and at the same time a revolutionary movement which is undermining the rule of the capitalist principles, the forr n of imperialist blocs is most probable. Therefore we see, in addition to the bloc of the imperialist powers against the Soviet Union, a general military, counter-revolutionary intervention against the Chinese Revolution.” & of the s of the r A further result of the opportunist estimation stabilization process is the denial by all Right groupi tion process among the toiling masses. In contradiction to the dee of the VI. World Congress, they reject the p: ctive set up by th Congress, that the proletariat is faced with great struggles. The VI. World Congress declares in this respect: capitalist “This third period, in which the contradictions between the growth of the productive for has become especially acute, inevitably leads to a new phase of wars s and the narrowing of the markets inst the Sov Union, of of between the imperialist states, of wars ag national emancipation wars against imper imperialism, of gigantic class struggles. sm, of interventions “The development of the contr: of capitalist stabiliza- tion, rationalization, the growth of pressure upon the working class, the ruin of the petty-bcurgeoisie, ete., inevitably accentuate the class struggle and enlarge its basis. The general process of radicalization of the working class in the European countries is advancing. ons unemployment, the increasing “If at the beginning of the stabilization period and the general offensive of capital tremendous defensive struggles took place, the of new phase is likewise manifesting i mass struggles, before all by a strike-wave in a number of countries (Germany, France, Czechoslovakia, etc.). The insurrection of the Vienna proletariat, the demonstrations on the occasion of the mur- der of Sacco and Vanzetti, the movement for the Soviet Union.” elf by powerful phenomena 8. The standpoint of the liquidators and conciliators who are ap- proaching them, is the expression of their complete disbelief in the forces of the working class. This is shown most glaringly in their at- titude to the question of the united front, which they co alliance with the leaders of social democracy; in the errone tunist estimation of social democracy as a representing worke interests”; in the fetic! ty both in regard to the capitalist state asd the reformist trade union apparatus in the underestimation of the enormous importance of the problem of drawing the unorganized into the economic struggles under the leader- ship of the Communist Party; in the opposition to the establishment of united front organs from below (fighting committees, strike committees, committees of action, etc.) which is tantamount to a complete capitula- tion in face of the reformists and to an abandonment of the leading role of the Communist Party. 4. The session of the Enlarged C. C. of the C. P. of Switzerland states that the line of the C. C. after the VI. World Congress did not correspond to the line of this Congress, and therefore was an erroneous and opportunist one. This erroneous and opportunist line has found ous oppor- which is the line of the VI.|€*Pression both in the practical policy of the Party in Switzerland (see | resolution on the Canton elections in Basle and Zurich) and in the at- titude of the C. C. to the struggle of the Comintern against the Right dangers, especially in the C. P. of Germany. The session of the Enlarged C. C. decisively rejects the letter of Comrade Wieser of 23rd November, 1928, which wa8 approved by the Central proper, and also the decision of this same Central of the same date on the question of the inner-Party struggles in the C. P. of Germany. The session of the Enlarged C. C. considers both the letter of Comrade Wieser and the decision of the Central proper as a political support of the Rights in Germany and in the Comintern. The s ion of the En- larged C. C. most decisively rejects the political support which the Cen- tral proper has accorded to the conciliatory standpoint of Comrade Hum- bert-Droz on 23rd November, 1928. The session of the Enlarged C. C. fully and entirely agrees with the letter from the Presidium of the Comintern to the C. C. of the C. P. of Switzerland, and considers the decision of the C. C. of 15th December on the German question as a diplomatic evasion of a clear attitude to the struggle of the Comintern against the liquidators and conciliators. The session of the Enlarged C. C. considers it the most important inner-Party task to carry out, by means of a public Party di ion, a thorough revision of the erroneous political line of the C. C., both in The | of an: imperialist crusade against the Soviet Union is a result of the regard to the Party policy in Switzerland and to the struggle of the Comintern against the Right danger, on the basis of the decisions of the VI. World Congress. 5. The session of the Enlarged C. C. states that alre n the first steps which have been taken in revising the erroncous op st line, relapses have been made into this line. It calls upon the whole Party membership to see to it that the line of the VI. World Cong: the decisions of the present session of the Enlarged C. C. are really carried out in the practical activity of the Party. By HENRY ROSEMOND. ! (Vice-President, Needle Trades | Workers’ Industrial Union.) After long enduring the miser- able conditions existing in the nee- die trades, especially the Negroes who are being exploited, first as | workers and then as Negroes, are | beginning to feel the effects in’ the | |industry of the Left wing leader-| |ship and its program of equality of jall races. Ever since its inception, the American Federation of Labor | | has discriminated against the Negro _workers, refusing to organize them. In this. way, the A. F. of L. has! been assisting the bosses, in keep-. ing the workers segregated, prevent- ing them from consolidating into one | powerful force that would effective-| \ly fight for better living conditions. | In contrast to the A. F. of L. pol- licy of betrayal of the workers, is/ the policy of the Needle Trades. Workers’ Industrial Union, which has as one of its main slogans the | organization of the unorganized, | regardless of race, color or creed. | To this program the Negro work- ers are responding enthusiastically, joining the union in large numbers and militantly fighting to help the union to put its program into ef- fect. They are pledging their whole-hearted support to the com- ing furriers’ strike, which will be the first strike of the fur workers | under the leadership of the Left! wing union, Baek Genoral Strike, This general strike will be not) merely a strike aguinst the bosses! Negro Workers Will Support MINERS VOTE T0 ‘General Strike of Furriers for better living conditions, but at) the same time a constructive form) of education and enlightenment for | Hear Engdahl Tell the the few workers that are yet under ; the influence of the right wing Joint| . AGV nce in USSR Council company union, the scab 2 | gang which has time and time sold) WILKES-BARRE, Pa., June 13.— out the interests of the workers in| A mass meeting of coal miners (this various ways: jis the anthracite section) here last | 1. In helping the bosses to re-|\. af duce the wages of the workers and aoe lac SUI AULE Se SueiGks jtenia strikers charged with murder pore ml too iy tor, legal holidays: | or held in jail on other charges. ADIN GASTONIA 2. In helping the bosses to es-| tablish scab shops. | They pledged they would 3. In helping the bosses, together strengthen the Communist Party, | the International Labor Defense and with the courts, to issue injunctions : the Workers International Relief against the workers fighting for their bread and butter. ‘throughout the anthracite regions, Marxism—Lenin 10c 4. In establishing original scab) This resolution was taken follow- agencies thruout the city to furnish | ing an address by J. Louis Engdahl. Revolutionary Lessons—Lewin v.c.cssseseeeen.25€ gangsters to the bosses in time of | acting editor of the Daily Worker. 4 strikes, ~ Engdahl spoke on the textile strikes | Heading for War—T. Bell.......cccceeeess 10¢ Strikebreakers. in the south and on the Gastonia | This same “Joint” Council under the leadership of old strikebreakers and grafters and enemies of the workers is under the direct control of the bosses and cannot do any- thing else but accept whatever the bosses demand of them against the interests of the workers. _case, linking it up with the war danger and the plan to attack the | Soviet Union. } Tells of U. S. S. R. He also outlined the great indus- trialization program being applied in the Soviet Union in 192%, and | As a Negro who has been suf-|Showed how, under a workers’ gov fering from the oppression of the ctnment, the conditions ef the work- bosses and the betrayals of the labor "Ss grow better with every new ifakers of the Joint Council, I urge technical advance, while under cap- all workers, and especially my Ne- gro brothers and sisters, to join the ranks of the militant workers in the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial fresinz the needle trades workers from their present bondage, italism, technical advance, as in the mine fields where machinery is be ing introduced, leads to unemploy- ment, |Trank Vrataric, a left wing miners’ leader, | Union, which alone is capable of| The chairman at the meeting was | \ Imperialism is, at tne same time the most prostitute ané the ultim- te power which h LANGUAGE BUREAU MEET. A meeting of the German langu- age bureau of the New York Dis- trict of the Communist Party will | be held at 8:30 p. m. today at Room 608, 26 Union Sq. ent mmeneced to fits own emancipa’ nlism, and which full: geois society had finally S formed into a means for the en- siavement of labor by capital. — Marx. You Owe It to Your Class to Read @ But— What to Read? Here is a list of inexpensive literature that will make you more fit to carry on the revolutionary struggle. Ten Years of the Communist International 10c Communism and the International SHUSHON Shi hey aiacisaccuneondconses 15c Reminiscences of Lenin—Zetkiit......... Heras: Paris on the Barricades 25c Communist Manifesto (new edition)..........10¢ Wage, Labor and Capital... - the “Up With Revolution”, Cry Workers at Trial of India Union Heads IRUT, India, June of p with the Revoluti houted from the auc the prisoners’ dock union and revolutionary MEI ere and fr 31 tra aders w placed on trial here under the anti- were trade union acts. They rested last March in a ni series of raids which th ment would ar 2 every prose- e eutor. The defendants’ h: de manded of the MacDonald gi nt that the case be tried by a Given to Prove paeal to King )p The Italian republican party feel hurt about a news it - ed in the June 7th y Wor ing organi in co-operation with publicans and another organi known as “The League for the of Man”, in opposition to the Me teotti memorial meeting t Alliance of North Amer nited front of revolu- tionary a ascist workers, in Web- ster Hall, June 9th. The Daily Worker, after speaking about the Anti-Fascist Alliance meet- ing, criticized the social democrats by meeting is th y in con- jun party, an outfit which appealed to the Italian king to ‘overthrow cism’ while thousands of Italian are being murd i armies of Mu lini. In reality, are the legitimate parents of fas cism.” Now the Italian republicans sent in a letter asking us “to be kind {enough to let them know when and where the Italian republicans have ever asked the Italian king to over- throw fascism, how and why the Italian republicans and _ socialists are the legitimate parents of fas- cism,” and they predict that we, won’t answer. We do answer. Crawled to King. When Matteotti was killed by or- ders of Mussolini, the masses all over Italy were so indignant about the brutal murder that the fascist regime was trembling. The anti- fascist forces were divided into groups; one, a combination of social democrats, liberals, masons, the re-| publicans, 3; and the other, was led by the Communists. The first combination called itself the “A no”, and this is the. group th: sked the King to overthrow fascis instead of calling upon the ma: to armed insurrection. They wanted to do away with fascism, but they also wanted to save the capitalist em, | The Italian republicans want to know when they asked the king to the Anti-Fase a ‘as- worker: he The Aventino did present a note to the king asking him to overthrow sm, while the republican party was a part of the Aventino and accepted its politic Furthermore, the Italian never repudiated ship of the Aven- ino, and that is proven by the fact that when the forces composing the Aventino were disbanded by fasc that part of its leade did not go over to fa grated into France and re-organized itself under the name of “Anti-fas. cisti Concentration” with its head- quarters in Paris, The Italian re- publican party is still a part of the “Concentration” which is a direct descendant of the “Aventino.” { | child all ion with the Italian republican ; Soviet FERS WORK P DELEGATION Workers’ Children and zaborers to Go Yor neers ‘oa! District of the’ last night issued a’ rence to consider ng money v Childrens’ on to the Soviet Union, will be held “on , at 2:30 p. m, e first of the series by means of children, and the will be mobil+ ing of this delega- s will be held in rgh, in the South, working class children will be stitute the delegation. From I lected to cor stry. of the oppressed industries of States, the delegation bly consist of a miners’ » a child of a Southern textile needle’ trades worker’s a child worker, and a Negro in company of an adult, The drive for funds needed has been started by the National oneer Committee. The New York ict has already begun the rais- ing of y, but it hopes to enlist the aid of many children’s clubs, and other wor childrens organi- zations in this work, Fight New War. Signed by Ruth Yukelson, district sanizer of the Pioneers, and ad- sed to all workers childrens or- 0 tions, the call follows in part: The bosses are preparing for a They not overlooking in their feverish They are using such s the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts as a means of mili- izing the workers children, and preparing them to become good soldiers for the bosses profits. The Jamboree of the Boy Scouts of Liverpool, England this summer will be a rallying point for the militari- zation of the workers children from every country. The main object of this attack that the bosses are getting ready, will be the workers and farmers government in the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics. The Soviet Union is the only country where the work- ers rule, where there is no child labor and child misery. The children of Soviet Russia are among the first cares of the government. In marked contrast to these con- ditions are the miserable conditions of the workers children here in the United Stat The children live in dirty, old houses, go to schools that ‘are real firetraps, and suffer most when their parents are unemployed. Child Slaves in U. S. Added to this is the fact the nearly 3 million children are;slay- ing their young lives away in the m mills, and fields, of this, the s ntry in the world, victims of the bosses greed. The attack of the bosses upon’ the: Soviet Union is an attack upon every: worker and --orkers child all over the world. It is for this reason that the working class must defend with and blood the life of the therland of the working its sweat Socialist F The answer of the workers chil- dren to the war preparations of the bosses must be the sending of the first workers Childrens Delegation to the Soviet Union, which will bring the message of working class soli- y from the American children Cooperative Summer WINGDALE, N. New York Office Friendly Atmosphere Fresh Food Bathing Rowing, Fishing Sports Entertainment ultural Activities Hiking Tents $16.50 Our busses ‘leave every Home for Workers TEL. WINGDALE 51 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE ONument: 0111 and 0112 ungalows $17.50 Wednesday at 2 2p. m Friday—6:30 p. m. Saturday—1:30 p. m. to the proletarian children of the U. Organization of a World Party.. FREE DESCRIPTIVE CATALOG WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 43 EAST 125TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY rom 1800 Seventh Avenue, corner 110th Street, New York, CHILDREN’S COLONY for children from 5 to 10 years of age. Supervision of experienced leaders.—Comrade Torrent in charge.

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