The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 25, 1929, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Page Four DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JULY 25, 1929 ———~ | ' Statement ‘of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the U.S. A. Jn the Appeal of Jay Lovestone and Others to the Communist International ' marks of Lovestone’s appeal not-|ever this danger arises in propo- >, ee, ns - - f But into all these glittering pic-;kets from the capitalist competi-|treachery to his faction, and raises{and the Communist International pn [cone nus its meetings snd the formu- I. The Relation of the Communist tures of prosperity there falls the|tors. And it becomes daily clearer | factional loyalty upon the pedestal|/the matter of Pepper’s return to/lation of documents only as a cau-| withstanding, the Party carries on/sals and actions in contradiction to ty of the United States of| shadow of the basic contradictions| that diplomacy is insufficient and of revolutionary virtue. The Party |Moseow. But when he is requested |cus in defiance of the authority of|widespread mass activities, is in-|the revolutionary line and of the America with the Comintern. }of capitalism. Society needs ‘its|that force is going to be used. The|needs an iron discipline; Love: to admit this deception to the Party|the Party and of the C.I. |tensely active in the offensive strug- | Party. Lovestone sheds tears about productive machinery in order to/| policy of the government as agent does everything in his power to un-/and the C.I. then he balks at, “self- | The Central Committee of the|glés of the textile workers in the | the bygone days in which the Right 1 devia- provide the necessities of life. Capi-|of the capitalist class to secure mar-|dermine Party discipline and to re. South, It is now organizing the | danger supplied him with a factional i Like a typical petty-bour-| Party, the responsible leading body.| i seni nec 4 u uption fol-|talism uses this machinery in order | kets at the expense of the capitalist | place it with factional discipline shop-keeper he tries to defend | of the Party is exercising its author-|defense of the frame-up victims in| issue against his opponents and : to evade |t) make p nd to increase its|competitors remains the same in|The Party welcomed the C.J. Ad- his personal conduct, even though |ity and duty—in spite of Lovestone.|Gastonia. It is organizing the de-| where he could, without a quiver of s full political | pital, The purpose of production | peace and war time. The only dif-/dress as a formidable weapon |it is obviously indefensible, while he|Tt has answered Lovestone’s split-|fense not merely as a legal techni-|his conscience, hide and suppress all jon the Pp of the capitalists, pro-| ference is that in the war the sol-|against factionalism; Lovestone de-|does not care a damn what happens|ting tactics through the Political | cality but in the form of mass Agi. Wanuests Honk of Right tendencies duction for profit, is in flagrant con-|dier and his cannon replaces the/nounces the C.I, Address because |to the reputation of the Party. Committee and will answer as de-|tation among the American workers, | within the ranks of his own faction. mobilizing the American workers for | He sees the Party taking serious the ja defense through’ more conscious |war danger. He sees the agitation faction in the class struggle. The | and propaganda of the Party con- Party is active in all fields of in-|cretized in the mobilization for In- dustrial struggles in’ spite of heey eerie Red Day on the nee ati £ ac faa ees aa : persistent efforts of Lovestone and|August. He sees the line of the 5 . ciation of other comrades who are|sing the policies and tactics of our). Jnarul of followers to paralyze | Comintern put into action and bring- | arrying out the decisions of the |organization, Lévestone complains of Nts activities, to sabotage its work,| ing results and he is making a des- omintern. All comrades of the Pol-|the liquidation of the Polcom. As to misdirect its energies and to!perate effort to defend his line, the | | 5 f it i rganization. |line of maintenance of factionalism per’s presence in America during the|the Polecom to rubber stamping the | Split its organization, The Party 1, | tradiction to the social purpose of | diplomat with his negotiations and it destroys his faction. ~ | production, production for use. This s. Considered from this angle} phe party recognizes how. fast | basic : adiction is intensi ied | it is clear that the American goV-| 444 how far Lovestone has traveled with the tion of the pro-| ernment today is already convinced | toward the camp’ of the enemy since ductivity of capitalist industry. that peaceful means are no longer | 5). sixth Party Convention. It un- ed production, with pro- | sufficient to secure the aim. There-!besitatingly expressed this recogni. robs_ ever larger | fore, the present period is dominated | tion in the promptness with which it s of the working class of the | by the most intensive war prepara-| accepted the expulsio:. of Lovestone. f livelihood which capi-|tions. While rationalization has | ty the most proletari-n sections of provides for it: a mar-|Partly led to this condition, it is in| jue Party, like in Detroit, Pitts. The C.I. demands of him that he|cisively in its coming plenary ses- admit and condemn the deception he | S!0n. practiced on the C.J. and the Party| Precisely at a time when the Po- in the matter of Pepper. Lovestone/| litical Committee of our Party has answers this demand with a denun-| become a real leading body, discus- ‘ co is yet a more section of his right against buro who had knowledge of Pep-! long as he confined the activities of | . : in if at ‘ ia . 7 | fered to r -|and the substitution of his right line ket for its labor power. Conse-|tarn intensified by it because hae burgh, Cleveland, Chicago, there is period when he, supported by Love-| decisions of his faction, he had no ‘aa Roe pA ee pr she dinecotahe Goranten and? quently permanent unemployment is economic preparations for war drive | practical unanimity in support of | stone, claimed to haye been in Mex-| fault to find with the functions of |.V7/N& Int Bese eo Tietes acd a vaeelin |is too keenly aware of the danger|the Party, f jof opportunist and petty bourgeois | tion of this that makes him so des- Jideology in this present period of | perate and that dictated to him this |struggle, That is why the Party is/ appeal. Only thus can the spirit of ready and able to defeat Lovestone’s | vindictiveness be understood which maneuvers and propaganda. It is| dominates this document. Only thus | just this readiness of the Party to|can the pettiness be explained with |defeat him that irritatgs, Lovestone | which this so-called appeal to the |most, He sees that his agents and| Comintern is formulated. emissaries who defy the Comintern] The Comintern and the Party will Decision, » ho violate Party instruc-| answer this latest effort as it has \tions, who counteract Party policies, | all his other attempts to deviate the are taken to task by the nuclei, by| Party from the line of the Com- |the section committees and by the ie 7 2 |munist International. istrict Committees. In every case + nar of such anti-Party activities these athe Ware 8 Corecune de eenes Fi ‘ |The Party is closing its ranks. The local Party bodies took the initia-| p, ate es ; ete tive in removing the insubordinate| jan? Foal a te eae official or functionary. Lovestone is}. ae ‘ Baaved: bye the ebtecuveness With ward towards carrying out the great wing tremendously in Amer! toward further rationalization. hes the workers s s about class division. co, have submitted long ago their|the Poleom. But when the Polcom statements of the facts to the In- | begins to disregard the interests of ternational Control Commission, the|his faction and consider only the h |only body that is acting on this ques-| problems of the Party, then his ire n. Lovestone must understand |is aroused and he raves of “degen- t he is not called upon now tojeration.” Were it not so serious orm upon others but to own up/one could laugh at the ‘Knight of for himself. | the Sorrowful Figure,” the Don Hey sees «| Quixote Lovestone, whose mind and Lovest is 0 - | f . A lige trick "with the factional cable bOdY are still wandering in the far- of May 15th, First he attempts to|£0"e Past and who tries to force disown it, and then, doubtful of the |the condemned and dead practices of cess of his maneuver, he denies | the past into the healthy pulsating its splitting character. But the ca-|/ tty life of the present. , ble speaks such a clear language| Our Party has entered a new life. that no effort will succeed in ex- Its inner-relationships are re-orien- plaining away its purpose. It is an| tated from factional groupings, fac- | tional sympathies and antipathies to act leading directly to a split to e vefuse to publish Comintern deci- |Party loyalty. The Party conscious- | the expulsion, Boston, Philadelphia, Along with the economic and mili- | Minnesota, Kansas, promptly and | tary preparations for war, American | wholeheartedly answered the defi a simplifi-|capital is directing its offensive|ance of the C.I. by Lovestone wi f production. The skill of|against the advance guard of the|a determined support of the expul san acquired in years of|working class, The anti-red propa-|sion of Lovestone by the Central} ining becomes more and more | ganda is intensified. Persecution|Committee. The Young Communist s in modern production. The |augments tht propaganda. In Penn-|League met «nd fought practically sses of skilled workers are re-|Sylvania our Party has again been|unanimous Lovestone’s splitting at- r illed and unskilled, | forced to defend the right of work- | tempt in the League itself, and sup- Later he goes | The rker sees himselfjers to belong to the Communist;ports Lovestone’s expulsion. In ence by the robbed of the value of his skill and|Party. Where the legally assigned|New York, where Lovestone after A often to hire out as unskilled,|funds for these activities seem in-|his return established a headquar- Thus automatically the standard of | adequate, these available funds are|ters for his splitting campaign, he| the American workers is|augmented by volunteer collections |succeeded up to now to organize only | of what are “the |reduced, Because of that the Amer-|and volunteer contributions to anti-|a pitiful handful of followers. The | ty matter But | ican working cl=ss is becoming more/|red activities. Another form of|general direction of Lovestone’s po- ‘unction of the C.I,| homogeneous. This, too, teaches the | mobilization is thé closer and ever |litical views is characterized by the workers a lesson about class divi-|closer connection established be-|very composition of his group of jonalization mea’ that Love- to be the} + sidered | living of a ‘oble smaller, inne t is the by Lovestone; he also has {si i i i- r = ‘ ; if rte ‘ i | tasks that stand before it. a » work of the | Sion. tween the functions of private capi-|followers. Three-fourths of them| sions, It is a direct splitting act|ly carries out the line of the E.C.C.1.| * ., he says,|. The simplification of the mechan-|tal and of government. The merger |are school teachers, pedagogues who |to instruct the caucus to dispose of |by a gradual but purposeful trans- nich -the .Eerty,, end; all its -units CENTRAL COMMITTEE, make the|ics of production enables capitalism | f private capital and the State into lack a proletarian class approach to|the Party’s property. It is a direct|formation into a Communist mass | are fighting all manifestations of CP., U. better and|to force the workers to adapt them-|SPecifie forms of Sta‘e-Capitalism, | the problems of our Party. They are} «pjitting act to instruct a caucus to|Party of action. The derogatory re-'the Right danger concretely wher- By the Secretariat, remove without cause and without |———~— any official action Party function- aries for the sole purpose of get-| siete thesis oo ore 100 Old Stberia” Striking of the caucus, What the Party had| Film of Exile Under Czar e with its tas’ ortable doctrine, Lovestone; and hen he goes on further, it becomes that he wishes to make this statement a on the C.L, a conception that tl able to cope with This becomes clear when develops his guments into »|selyes more and more to the tempo | as pointed out in the Sixth Congress | condescending toward the working | . jof the machinery, Every ounce of |Program, finds its most classic reali- \class—expecting thankfulness on the | ‘energy possible of the worker is thus jzation in the present Hoover admin-| part of the wor':ers for the “ser- \being exhausted in the process of | istration. All of the steps taken by | vice” ~condescendingly rendered a day’s work. This speed-up uses up the ruling class for meeting the|them, But even with this congre- the life of the worker in America| ¢Mergencies growing out of the con-| gation at his disposal, Lovestone did |with such rapidity that at the age tradictions of their social system are|not succeed in getting more than of 40 he is thrown as useless on the {dictated by a growing consciousness \2 per cent of the votes in the meet- Be Ese we rap-heap. This teaches the work-|0n their part of the weaknesses of|ings of *he Party in New York, the| should immediately discontinue all| [i= £°Uowing is @ joint statement ers some lessons about class division, |this system. The more glorious | headquarters of the opposition, |actions in line with this cable. | by J. U. Reisman, director, and | The growing unemployment and | capitalism Seems to be, when meas-| he Party recognized this as a| |S. Yermolinsky/scenarist of “In Old atements about “serious errors|the gradual elimination of special wheal beep nea! Phenomenal’ necessary condition for its further yeturn to America to set right his Siberia,” the Sovkino Film at the| ited by the Comintern in its |*Kill as a necessary qualification SOR iret ete He tcadl ¢/existence as a revolutionary party, private affairs. We*keeps quiet,|Cameo Theatre for its premiere | yceeTho fob- | Suey Workers OR aati peeing Ae 20a re ‘Carita Ser. [2d therefore accepted and immedi- |first, about the fact that he had| showing. one trans-|Siaught of American | capitalism “aPita’ Become. | Capitalist prosper-| ately applied the Address. As a re-/ample opportunity to set in order | « ; ji in this i ict | of organi-|@ainst the existing wage standards. | ity cuts the very brénch on which it| sit the factions have been shat- lhis Srivate atin hatine Le Te dor The events depicted in this film| whole of our inventions, fictions and | eakcine! tela directed against | Wage cuts become the order of the |! cobb ia ioe capitalism is|tered; collective leadership has | Moscow; secondly, he hides the fact | fictitious events, The characters creations produce the impression of he fact that after six years of fac-|44V_ in all industries. This cele te sar a areca ise been established; factional groupings | that the “private” affairs he attend. |t00 are fictitious. Yet these men Laat oy Abney rite ‘aloe ora ionelism, which neither he, the Ma-|teaches the workers some lessons DYevSrns AOL CRiShg cules, have given way to the Party as the|ed to immediately upon his return and Shese events have been put on both men and events ‘historical. E ae sass about class division. prepares against the working class tention: aoe : A “Former political prisoners who is, rou no (ormarcis group |" "hese continuous and numerous|a8 Well as against its capitalist |CnY tigect ree the free aeleeeae | Was the holding of caucuses and the | the Screen as a result of our sincere /1446 seen the film vouch that in| sa ne “ with its taste ‘and. to lessons begin to speak an impera-|Tivals and competitors. It proceeds | aa eer oa Sadi eine eer og |Cteanization of a split movement jconviction that only by the use of| : : | posals of all individual members of | agai ty. Thi etions shall we ‘be ‘able to| > maim it 8 true to reality. : hee ; “ {against the working class by the| 2 jagainst the Party. This movement such fictions shall we be able to put an end to the factionalism of (ore Eta The Tree noire evek Poli use? ot ar State Siver the Party has replaced the two-|has now crystallized into the setting| give a typical and striking picture which he was a top leader. peo nest, Chis Iapeeaee.. = ney, com| i |Party system with its fixed factional] yp of a directing body for the Love-| of the old Siberia. i |mence to fight. In shoe, textile,|for the suppression of the workers 11445 platforms, and proposals. ee rae rao eee ee a R Developing his theme, Lovestone | ot, trahsportaligd ote: tbe work. and by participation in the conspir- plans, p D prop i. | stoneites' abortive grouping, This| “While working on the scenario goes on to say: “It is amore deci-|—.. take the initiative with increas-|2¢y of international capital against! Lovestone refuses to accept this | directing body is that section of the! and the film, we studied a good deal | sive test of discipline and loyalty to1s.5 frequency for attacks against |the Soviet Union. It prepares|new condition. He feels that he| majority of the delegation to Mos- of historical material made available | submit to decisions when one dis-|\y° z ta ikaw Eng- | against its capitalist rivals for an|can “lead” only under tie old con-|¢OW which still defies the Comin-| through the kind co-operation of the | . these conditions, toes - 4 tai hit 7 ‘, agrees with them than when one | jand States, in New Yorke in the | imperialist economic and military | ditions, His “Communist” concep-|tern- Lovestone in his appeal even | Society of Political Prisoners, and agrees with them.” Then why, Jay| \the editors of their penal magazine. ‘ | Middle Western States, in the South, | Wa? |tion and “revolutionary loyalty” do|tries to give a legal status to this id you not submit to| strikes are taking place. Unskilled |not fit into a Communist Party and | body. He says, “There are only two) «Our pris-a warden, Illarion Os- | BETTY LEE CARTER, a right to demand of Lovestone was that he should condemn this cable as | an act of splitting, and also that he} film is a composite and therefore somewhat “unreal,” somewhat | sharpened in its pronounced fea-| tures. This is true of some of the} characters as well as the events and | backgrounds, “We worked to the end that the} Lovestone raves about his right to In the cast of “Bed-Fellows,” Luis Carter’s comedy at the Waldorf Theatre. Louis A. Safian announces the pur- chase by Showshop, a new producing group, a play by Howard E. Koch! and Edward A. Edwards, tentatively a entitled, “B, A., B. A., Black Sheep.” “SILVER APPLES” TO BE The play was recently tried out in STAGED BY McKAIG. stock under the title of “He Went + to Collage.’ ‘This, the second of aix|) fo smenaee, MeBale qielia. ya that 4 cyte “ Lovestone in hi -call x | hoi, A ; . pline, not once, but | offensive against the increasingly | of the present economic and political jtional. They only fit into a fac- rectly to the last National Conven-| sq notorious jailers such as Vi-|during the forthcoming season, is|next season are the following: “Sil- | you break! i hearable conditions imposed upon |situation in the United States. jtion in which he is not merely a Besa bedlth one menbereiny namely, | sotzky, Obolyanov and Golovkin, }now being cast. ver Apples” by Bertram Block and discipline, ce profession of |hem by capitalism. | While the Communists, because of |Sdier or officer of the revolution-|t nie Committee and the Dele-| And the central figure among. the Katherine N. Burt; “Water Weed,” peeity, then | it again, and/ ‘The American bourgeoisie answers |their theoretical understanding of|2"Y "my, but in which he is the | gation of the Convention to the | evolutionists, Ilya Bertz, stands) ro nioht| marks the 350th per-|a dramatization by Merlin Taylor of ere tO : ulsion, make | this growing offensive with a coun-| capitalism, are supposed to lead the | boss- This role fits his petty-bour-|Comintern.” The Party understands = aida ea Goat tee Aine Genel ae |for the Sazonovs, the Maslovs and other famed martyrs of exile. “Beyond the prison invented for the screen, loom up the Central Alexandrovsky Prisno, the Kutomar, | | the Kishinév and the Oryol peniten- \formance of “The New Moon” at the jImperial. At the same time “Follow |Thru” will reach its 225th perform- ance at Chanin’s 46th St. Theatre. a novel by Alice Campbell that is now so popular in England. It will shortly be published here by Farrar and Reinhart. ns of loy Jay { Lovestone is approaching very near { the position when the best Commun- | ts will be those who most disagree | 3 ss te , and who differ | em in the re-| insists to be | 2008 individualism much better \this threat very well, and knows that |than the role of a disciplined com-|it is nothing less than an attempt lrade. That is why he strives with|to set up a parallel body to the ‘all his might to bring back to the|O-E.C., a rival C.%.@. It will tell Party the pre-Comintern Address | Lovestone that the delegation to days of factionalism. | Moscow was elected by the Polburo ter-offensive, A czarist police sys-| workers, Lovestone tem is introduced against the work-|even behind the spontaneous reac- The private individual spy sys-|tions of the workers. These spon- of t's American capitalists of|taneous reactions of the workers sterday is today augmented by of-| manifest themselves in numerous cial spy systems as inaugurated | | sporadic strike movements of unor- : % ‘. | tiaries> dhered to |." j pple 1 4 . i a a 2 is {on the night before their departure. 4 i recently in New Yorker So-called | ganized workers in many industries.| In his appeal Lovestone tries to} tt will tell Lovestone that the dele-| “The film does not abound in| ® eA law enforcement commissions, as|Instead of seeing in the present play as his trump card the financial | events, in story; most of the work | d a y 7 [eee : gation to the C.I. has no legal exis- strike movements the manifestations |difficulties of the Party at the | ence within the Party except for the of a process of radicalization, Love-|present moment. In renegade fash-| execution of the functions assigned stone insists on protesting against|ion he attempts to spread defeatism| +, it, This funct!:n was to repre- a conception of a “general” radicali-|and to exploit the difficulties of the} sont the viewpoint cf the Party in Deke with th N 5 en the|zation-of the workers. He refuses | Party for his splitting purposes. In With the decision of the ea he iy against this full xi nt [Ze American tariff laws, primarily |to see that these manifestations of|doing this he withholds from the eSaytnar he 1s Hed f . St). method of economic warfare be-| radicalization indicate the process./membership the information that the when ae ae pea uenan Jay Poveatone, tween the capitalists themselves, are|If they are not yet general they |financial difficulty is heritage from | The peronateal way in which Love-| adorned with jokers aiming at the| present a broad and effective basis|his “administration.” The finances stone endeavors to cpver up his new | puzzling and gagging of the work-/of action for the Communist Party! of the Party were left by him in a| disruptionist theory of the relations|. s ! e 7 Miss. Settien in tho Comintern is ing class. for the spreading and deepening of|most chaotic condition. the one appointed by Hoover, are openly concentrating their activities upon the problem of suppressing | ?,;and paralyzing the labor movement anywhere, but” | ond the working class, Even the but hé goes on to} has been put into establishing sep- | arate episodic scenes and situations. Yet the cumulative effect of these} |episodes was intended as that of a} steadily mounting drama. “We did not intend to give a nat- uralistic portrayal of prison life with all of its minute details. Our must Comin- to order state categorical tem has full rig } gomrade for wor LAST 2 DAYS! A Blasting Argument Against War! SE '—THIS AMAZING FILM! AUTHENTIC! ACTUAL! “FIGHTING FOR THE any | Moscow. C.I. on the question involved the delegation ceased to have any legal existence within the Party and can Quinn Martin, N. ¥. World, say: “Fighting for the Fatherland has a shocking, sicken- ing force behind It, a punch of hor- shown by_his profession that those _ whom he arrogantly names the for- mer leadership of the Party (there- by setting on ope side all members of the C.E.C. and Polburo who do not agree with him) “have been and will continue to be very energetic in loyalty to the C.I.” This statement The sharpening of these internal jcontradictions of American capital- ism are an outgrowth of its very | growth and power. The dominating jzole American imperialism and its | financial interests play in the world, forced it into a leading position in the settlement of the reparations this radicalization into all sections of the American working class. The Communist International and our Party emphasize the process of radi- calization to show the Party*’s du- ties and tasks; Lovestone~ empha- Sizes the insufficiently general char- acter of the radicalization in order The suspension of the Daily Work- er for one day, caused by an unex- pected crisis growing out of Love- stone’s financing policy, is used by him as an argument against the Party, against the Party leadership, and against the C,I, Address, In reality it is the CI, Address which | July Issue The Communist A Magazine of the Theory and Practise of JUST OFF THE PRESS ror.” FATHERLAND” —and on the same program—— JOHN BARRYMORE in “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” 52 w. Sth street Continuous Daily 2 p.m. to midnite Spring 5095-5000 Ay : 4 jquestion. American leading capi-|to prove the difficulties of the task|has saved the P: rty f thers pion cae LELaen Ge SEETRATENAcaMisiel MA. at th Sane tl th e he ae. talists have prescribed the methods|and the limited character of the “ae inevitable fuinealal cafaveroohe Marxism-Leninism screen-blography of the Master-Composer of the "Ninth Symphony pers | 1 in the Appeal, in which he attacks, | o¢ settlement of this reparations|duties. One is the perspective of | Ledchvaoio tell cova Saaestactadioo meanness not once but several times, the lead- ership of the C.I., and wherein he again makes covery insinuations and statements which are fully in line with his “running sore” propaganda, which itself was in line with the whole of the Brandlerist attack on the Comintern. This section of the Appeal :: nothing less than a pitiful attempt to justify his breach of dis- cipline and his political line by the erection of such @ new, non-Leninist theory of international relationships as would disrupt the Comintern and give free play to the Brandlers, the _ Jileks, the Lovestones. The Present Situation in the United States. The outstanding feature of Amer- ican imperialism in the recent peri- od is the speedy progress of ration- alization. The replacement of work- ers by machinery on the one hand and the speed-up of labor on the other are progressing at a rapid Peace. This process of rationaliza- tion has increased the productivity of the various industries tremen- dousiy. Thus, we see productivity acceler- , profits increased and new capi- accumulated in an ever quicker po. All the apologists of capi- ism, the economists, the politi- s, the journalists, are comment- upon this feature and boast t the prosperity of American alism, nts |question through the Dawes and Young Plans. Theze Plans provide for a settlement by means of a most intensive exploitation of the German workers. The execution of these Plans presupposes that the com- modities thus produced by the Ger- man workers find a ready market. Otherwise the surplus pressed out of the blood of the German work- ers cannot be realized. After Amer- ican capital was instrumental in |finding this solution and of helping |to force it upon the German work- jing class, it proceeds with a new itariff bill to organize an economic | |war against its European competi-| |tors, Thereby it is trying to close |or take away the very markets from the German-made commodities which are indispensible to it if Capitalist Germany is expected to live up to the provisions of the reparations settlement. The international relations of | American capital today are domina- ted by the desire to defeat its Euro- pean competitors in the struggle for markets. American capital needs markets for its goods and for its rapidly. accumulating new capital. The present economic war exempli- fied in the new tariff bill is only the forerurmer of a military war. Every ounce of strength, every subterfuge of diplomacy is used by the capital- revolution, the other is the perspec- tive of opportunism, Lovestone’s opportunism mani- fests itself not any less definite in his consideration of the inner-Party situation. The coming class strug- gles demand a unified Party; Love- stone fights for his faction against Party unity. The Party needs the univided loyalty of all its members; Lovestone ridicules Party loyalty, Save $1.60 by getting tickets at the office ist government of the United States to gain and secure the needed mar- fap Shae a CT creamery 3 -: Wocolona coorssanvs Camp ON LAKE WALTON, MONROE, N. Y. Fifty Miles from New York City MODERN BUNGALOWS, ELEC- TRICITY — MUSIC — SPORTS LECTURES AND DISCUSSION $23 for Tents—$27 for Bungalows Special LOW RATES for Members Round Trip Ticket Thru Our Office $2.00 N. Y. Office Phone Stuyvesant 6015 CAMP TELEPHONE — MONROE 89 and which has created conditions un- der which it may be possible for the scribable financial chaos inherited from Lovestone, Lovestone complains that “What is demanded of us by the Address lis self-abuse,” not self-criticism. With this he tries to cover up his refusal to admit openly to the Party the many indefensible actions on his part. He found it perfectly in or- accuses those loyal to the Party of der to abuse and deceive the Party | Party to straighten out the inde-| THE REVOLUTIONARY STRUGGLE AGAINST IM- PERIALIST WAR HH. M. WICKS THE RIGHT OF REVOLUTION—AN AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARY TRADITION A. LANDY RIGHT TENDENCIES AT THE TRADE UNION. UNITY CONGRESS WM. Z. FOSTER GASTONIA—THE CENTER OF THE CLASS STRUG- GLE IN THE “NEW SOUTH” WM. F, DUNNE THE YOUNG PLAN ‘ The Reparations Conference andthe War Danger A. FRIED The New Reparations Plan, by FURTHER NOTES ON THE NEGRO QUESTION IN THE SOUTHERN TEXTILE STRIKES CYRIL BRIGGS CAPITALISM AND AGRICULTURE IN AMERICA (Continued) Vv. I. LENIN ECONOMICS AND ECONOMIC POLICY ¥* B, VARGA LITERATURE AND THE CLASS STRUGGLE FRANZ MEHRING REVIEWS AND BOOKS Price 25 Cents G. P. WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 EAST 125TH STREET NEW YORK CITY York State Federation of Labor has decided to, hold its annual convention in August. No program for the un- employed is planned, and no plans for organizing the unorganized, trial starts ~ FAKERS MEET IN AUGUST. ALBANY (By Mail).—The New The Gastonia Textile Workers’ ty. °c! Twenty-three workers face electrocution or prison terms! Rally all forces to save them. Def-nse and Relief Week July 27—August 3! Sign f the Protest Roll! Rush funds to | International Labor Defense, 80 | East 11th Street, New York. | atronize our @ Advertisers © Don’t forget to mention the ;Daily Worker” to the proprietor whenever you _ purchase clothes, furniture, etc., or eat ina restaurant = js iiopriity > Re ae

Other pages from this issue: