The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 28, 1929, Page 2

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ZI DAILY WORKER, NE DEMAND ON 7° BUCHARIN FOR A ‘ Policy Discussion Continued MAKE -in Congress of British C. P. Delegate, Hit Terms Sheltering Right Wing Tendency; The rise The Capitulation of Mukden, a Victory of the Revolution A Trial of Strength Between World Imperialism and World YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER ea A Fond Mar WORKERS REPORT U.S.S.R, PROGRESS Socialist ‘Position’ | “In Germany they are discus- | sing a@ new divorce law.”—News | item. W | United Front From Below: “Laber” Colleges Poison; F | 6 H T ON RIGHT ‘ON RETURN HERE Revolution; The Revolutionary Cold Blooded Strategy j ~ Democratic Ilusions Peril to ‘Daily Worker”; | wea of the Soviet Power; The Red Army and the i -Concrete Aid to Colonial Masses Stressed | | aay World Proletariat Liquidates a War (By International Press Correspond- manded the creation of the neces. | Must Prove Words by) Delegation Returns | |¥T-was a day of pride and joy to| American imperialism tried "to steal ence) LEEDS, Eng. (By Mail).—Previ- ous articles have told of the con- gress of the Communist Party of Deeds for the C. I. MOSCOW, (By Mail).—Numer- ous resolutions of meetings of Party sary apparatus, above all with re- gard to the daily which would other- wise be destroyed at the first pro- hibition. The existence of the Party | 5; | | Two workers sat chatting in. the | office of the Friends of the Soviet Impressed by Visit || jchurian government was forced to | sion. every class conscious worker, |@ march for itself by suggesting an when last week the Mukden, Man- | “impartial” international commis- But the dispute was a fight ssion of defeat for | between classes, and there can be sign .an admi: Great Britain, the opening of discus- under illegal conditions would stand officials in the factories and the JInion. They were members of the | world imperialism in its attempt to |no “impartial” arbitrators. x sion by the delegates who finalized or fall with the support won by the units of the Red Army express} | American Workers Delegation to | tear down b yarmed attack through! But, as Comrade Neumann points the correction of the party line by Party in the factories. satisfaction at the victory of the} the Twelfth Anniversary Celebra- its venal tools, the Chinese mili-| out, not only the hangmen who have a change in the leadership. A sum- mary of the continuation of the dis- cussion is therefore given to show; the salutary effect of the congress on the party. The formulation in the resolution Leninist poicy of the Party over the | right wing deviations of Comrades Bucharin, Tomski and Rykov. These resolutions call upon the three comrades in question and/ their supporters to prove the hon-| Almost all the speakers stressed the importance of the daily as a means of getting at the workers in the factories. The concrete ques- | tionS in connection with the daily v handed over to a special com- [tion of the Soviet Union under the Jauspices of the F, S, U. After |spending a little over three weeks jin the U. S. S. R,, the delegation |has just returned to this country. Jacob Korf is a railroad worker The Polish “Socialist” Party re- { \tarists, the fatherland o fthe world | tortured to death over half a mil- lion Chinese workers and peasants, not only the imperialist powers and the bloody Russian white guards, but the “socialists” of the second in- ternational excelled even their pre- proletariat and the fortress of pro- | letarian power—the Soviet Union. | Comrade Heinz Neumann, in a/ recent article, pointed out that this was a fight “between two worlds, a| concerning the rationization in | mission for discussion. of their declaration by active| cently made a declaration of its |from Detroit, a member of the trial of strength between world im- | Vious vileness in abuse and lies and Great Britain was criticized on the| he significance of the colonies in| participation in the fight of the| “position” on the question of the | Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen et a on eras perialism and proletarian world demands for war on the Soviet ground that it gave the impression the struggle against the rationaliza-| Party against the right wing dan-| Trade Union Congress held at the jand Enginemen. William Nowell, aj, * he (The Socialist Party): |yeyolution.” |Union. These social fascists, speak- that under other circumstances the tion were stressed by a number of | ger and against the conciliants. City of Lvov. The declaration | young Negro worker, also from De- “Whatever happens, we will never The Red Army of the Far East ing in the name of the Executive r f rationalization might assist in main-' delegates because the trade unions| They demand from Comrade| was an act. Together with the | troit, is an auto worker anda mem-| &¢ divorced on my initiative!” did more than shatter the murder- |Committee of the Second Interna- taining capitalist stabilization in-|s+¢ued that the low wages of the Bucharin in particular that he| police, the Polish socialists broke | ber of the Auto Workers’ Union. As ous bands of Russian White guards | tional, stated right after the conflict , Stead of. contributing to its destrue- | colonial workers inevitably depress-| should condemn his theories put| up the Trade Union Congress. | they talked, they showed that they/Freanch Statement on |" mercenary Chinese militarists |arose: : i tion. t . ed the wages and working conditions | forward to support his deviations. | Their “position” toward the Pil- \had undergone the greatest exper- | on the Manchurian front. The Red| “That it was the right of China _-The economic ana contained of the workers at home. It was| The resolutions demand also that| sudski military fascist dictator- | ience of their lives. Naval Parley Shows | army was the physical agent of| to demand the elimination of Rus- in'the resolution was also criticized | pointed out that with the exception| Comrades Bucharin, Tomski and| ship becomes equally clear. | Arriving in Leningrad on Nov. 4, J, ialist Ri 1 |the world revolution striking a blow} sian control yer the Chinese because it contained no real analysis | of the London district the party had| Rykov should energetically con- | the delegation separated into groups| +#tPerlalis AVAILITY) xt American imperialism, which| Eastern Railway; as the Russians Se of the situation and showed a right- wing tendency to overestimate the strength of capitalism in such phrases. as “the great reserves of the British empire” and the “end of the downward tendency in a number of key industries.” The delegates stressed again and again the necessity of clarifying the role of the minority movement and of fundamentaly altering its tasks under the leadership of the party. It was also pointed out that the party leadership had not made it clear how the organs of the united front should be formed, and it was therefore necessary that the party should carry on this work systema- tically and concentrate on certain factories in the beginning. This work should be conducted in the closest connection with the eco- nomic struggles and at the same tine care should be taken to develop political. consciousness of the work- efs. Much greater attention would have to be paid to the W.I.R. in the future because in the coming strug- done practically nothing in the co- lonial question. The failure to react to the events in Gambia where the efforts of the workers employed in the factories of a large margarin | lcompany to organize themselves in{ demn the leaders of the right wing | in the Communist International who | are using their names to justify their fractional activities against the C. I. las nearly as possible according to must be continued with all energy | ere Wane ca eee 8Y | industry. irrespective of the fact that the| Ottable series of experiences_-the leaders of the right wing in the 3 ers ene ne wing tutated, | 2teat celebrations of the anniver- Soviet Union have capitulated,| oy of the Russian Revolution, whereby, however, the struggle | to factor interviews with PARIS, Dec. 26—The French | government today issued an official ment” conference to be held in Lon- |don in January, in which the Kel- statement on the naval “disarma- | jwas one of many examples which a trade union were answered with the declaration of marital law and the organization of a blood-bath, All the resolutions point out that | | the struggle against the right wing | | deviation and against the conciliants/ against the left wing deviations | must not be neglected. showed that the Party had not yet adopted a correct attitude to the colonial work. | The question of the unemployed | workers was dealt with by a number of speakers who stressed the poli- Itical importance of the party work Jamongst the unemployed. The situation of the British Young Communist League was also dealt (with and many delegates criticized the fact that the league was still based on the old territorial system and had practically no footing in jthe factories. The failure of the | Party to give the le: adequate | support was also criti A statement issued by the Na-| tional Office of the International Labor Defense shows how Solicitor |Carpenter, of Gastonia, N. C., and attorney Jake Newell helped hush | up the lynching of Willie McDaniels, | a Negro farm worker, near Char- | lotte on the night of June 29, 1929. | The statement of the LL.D. fol-| lows: Lynch law is the greatest means | ized. ‘Carpenter Helped Hush Up Lynching in North Carolina air sioner stot ter | etement ties who murdered our six-fellow | workers. But workers who fight | back and who organize the workers | strength receive long prison sen- | tences at the hands of the bosses’ | courts, just as Beal, Miller, Carter, | Harrison, McLaughlin, McGinnis and Hendryx, Gastonia strike lead-| ers and workers received. | Only by united organization of} both Negro and white can the work- | z i ‘. «1. |logg pact is discussed with thinly apne, ete ote | veiled contempt and sarcasm, The Gkantac lar . |statement, thouga written in diplo- ee DORE jmatie language, cpenly states that “I was in Leningrad at the 12th|the United States has no expecta- though, while it had the power over the Nanking murderers of the Chinese masses, to extend its power | into Manchuria. Today, American imperialism is j defeated, and defeated not only in| ‘This vil sien Manchuria, but in all China. It tried Vandeven Goinohee eee by the Stimson “Kellog Pact Note” | as Neumann states was a “declara- to rally a new force of imperialism |tion of principles for the new world in a war threat against the Soviet war, a pledge of the international themselves provided the pretext for this persecution of the work- ers by misusing labor organiza- tion on Chinese territory as tools for Russian polities.” Union, but the stern force of the social democracy, of the government ell. | Union. anniversary celebration,” said Now- | tion that the pact will prevent war, “It was a tremendous exper-/as shown by its rapid naval con- declares that France will rely on the League of on. Remarkable posters were |Nations rather than the Kellogg carried, bearing propaganda “mes-| pact, and reveals the struggle be- sages, with the Five-Year Plan of |tween the imperialist powers which Socialist Reconstruction the chief !is coming more and more into the theme.” open. The French government de- Korf said he was particularly im-/|clares that it will not lose sight of pressed by the comradely relations | the “need” of a naval force able not between the Red Army and the; only to “defend” France but also workers, in striking contrast to|to “protest” all of the colonial pos- conditions in this country. Officers | Sessions. By “protection” they and rank and file soldiers arejmean forces to crush the native filled with devotion for the Soviet Red Army of the Far East, backed not only by the working masses of the Soviet Union, but of the whole world, under leadership of the Com- munist International, soundly whip- ped the bandits of Manchuria, and \the Washington government became the laughing stock of even its own imperialists. No “Mediation” Po parties of England and Germany to promote, justify and support any attack of bands, any war of inter- vention upon the Soviet Union.” Bolshevist Strategy. But the resistance of the Soviet Union to attack was one of the most superb examples of world revolu- tionary strategy. We give the con- On July 10th the Har cise words of Comrade Neumann: military seized the Chinese Eastern | “But the central committee of the Railway, committed all kinds of |Bolshevist Party, which watched violent depredations to Soviet inter-|OVer the fortunes of the Soviet ests and citizens, under the ridicul-|Power in the name of the trium- ous excuse that the Communist In-|Phant proletariat, performed not r pean : is. \equals, he said, and their only opulations as well as to fight other | dona ba in the cellar of | Wonders of revolutionary energy but a ein Senne by which the white capitalists keep |€TS smash the terrorism of the |§ y ad ial ernational had met in the cellar o! Arcuri gles the workers would receive no 5 mA Rhee cae see 4 bosses. Organize into powerful in-|i8 to defend the revolution perialist powers. the Soviet consulate. Thousands of |@!so wonders of revolutionary cold- support from the unions and no un- REVOLUTIONARY KOREN STU-|the Negro masses down. It is also . ei Pi Robiewans ents atthe aoricess (ae bloodedneaw employed support. No More “Labor” or Legal Illusions. DENTS ARRESTED. TOKIO, Dec. 27.—Because of their }used against white workers, indus- trial and agricultural, as shown by| dustrial unions that take in all work- | ers, black and white alike! Build} United Committees Against Lynch- | ‘orces of Reaction railroad worker, Korf was parti¢yy, larly interested in visiting the rail+ In accordance with the Leninist general line of their policy, the Soviet Government did Soviet citizens were jailed in vile | and terrible prison camps, tortured, | A a ; i is spite, {recent events (lynchi: d burning | ri * 5 A beheaded, starved and allowed to die e The question of the political edu- fight des se tepennke eae gate Neal erate Ae neue |ing, made of black and white work-|tad shops and talking to the Fail to Halt Dlinois |: ‘disease. not permit itself to be provoked cation of the party members was in Korea, 180 Korean students aq (ete, mobs and bossmen murders in |es and poor farmers! Down with | Workers. | “They were eager to get! = Coal Mine Strike|. Russian white guards were mobil-|into war by threatening notes, by argon gr tigeaiehaige sean raladaabaten wie Gastonia and Marion). The bosses lynching and lynch law! Build the |Our reactions to everything,” Korf | ized from all over the world, by the |Tifle shots, by blackmail or by raids. pofated out that the Party would have to find some substitute for the | so-called Labour colleges which were completely in the hands of the trade will attempt to use it increasingly against white and Negro workers junless the united strength of the| There-is an indication of the ris- ing struggle of the Korean masses against ‘their’ Japanese enslavers in International Defense! Mukden Worries at the stated. “One of the things that 5 struck me most was the safety de-| Every force of reaction and ter- vices installed in the Russian fac-|Torism thrown against the miners tories to protect the workers. Ijhas failed to crush their movement. | generous assistance of all imperial- | With cool deliberateness it declined ist governments whose greatest |the impudent “mediation proposals” |uniting force, whatever their dis-|0f the imperialists, And it repulsed agreements, is the hatred of the | with shells and aeroplane bombs the : |Negro and white workers puts a/| aie aug ke? pee shells | union bureaucracy. Courses should |the fact that on December 9, 900) ‘ | * saw safety devices in the Soviet | “Spread the strike” and “Win the zs . |frontier rai “Chi slso be organized for non-party|Korean students were arrested at|stop to it! It also is one of the|Red on Mongol Rifles| tion that 1 have never seen any.|demands” are still their slogans, |S°Viet Union. With the first shots, | Fontie® raids of the Russo-Chinese workers, as had already been done Seil, Korea. means by which the Negro and]. “| ‘The terror continues, and takes in one or two districts. The delegates severely criticised | ~-the Central Committee for not hav- ing paid sufficient attention to the preparations for -illegatityy end~de- ” Try Internati CELEBRITY Il Trovatore: 1 t 12 inch, $1.25 50165-D aereeres CEE Violin Solos The World ix W: 1911-D 4,30 ‘Violin Solos inch, %5e _G~50168-D_ 2 inch, $1.25 Cavalleria Rusti 50167-D Amico Frits: In 12 inch, $1.25 20189F Vengerka, Dane: Kamarinxkaya Pidhirska Kolo Smeritehin WORKERS! COLUMBIA RECORDS Soprano Solos Andante Cantabile (from “Concerto”) Nardini Silhouette (Kramer) I Look Into Your Garden (Wood and Wilmott) Cavalleria Rustleana: Prelude © Part 3 Cavalleria Rusticana: Instrumentals i the Orchestra of the Berlin State Opera House Instrumentals Mi (Under direction” of. Peasant Orch. under dir of Constantine Sadovnik Polka Brilliantschik Vitlage Orchestra of Paulo, Humeniuk: The Evening Bell (Vechérniy Devon) — Kanavka of Chesnokoy ~~ net the Highlanders (Orchestra) Hutzulka—Karpathian Peasant Woman—ot Samuel Philip and His Lemko-Peasant Orchestra: ‘The Music in the Tavern (A Where Have You Been, John Wyskowski and His Village Orchestra: For slavions International Catalogues of Columbia Records call or write and then select the best liked melodies white workers are kept divided. The | relentless struggle against lynchings | and race oppression is a major part |of the struggle of the International | Labor Defense in the South, \_ As part of the fight against lynch } law in the South, the I.L.D. calls the | atention of all workers, black and | |white, and all friends of the labor | movement, to the infamous lynching | of Willie McDaniels, Negro farm worker near Charlotte, on the night of June 29, 1929, Willie McDaniels the LL.D. is firmly convinced by the evidence which it has accumulated and which the county authorities have suppressed, by a mob of rich {exploiting farmers, led by Willie | | McDaniels’ boss, Mell Grier. The lynching report spread about the city, and the county “authorities” in an atempt to hush up the crime The Japanese papers:are attempt- ing to hush up the growing radical- jization of the masses and their re- ingwed fights against Japarzse im- | perialism. was lynched, | onal Celebriiy the leadership of Attorney Jake Newell and Solicitor Carpenter. A f the Negro tenants who ing on the Grier farm at RECORDS balen del suo sorrixo (' pest of |{ the time of the lynching were ar-| (Greetings to You) Schubert « Lotte’ Lehmann |The lynechers were not punished. } ‘They went scot free without any | court even going through the mo- | tions of some farcial trial. | | Today, six months later, the| |guilty parties have not been pun-| jished for the murder of this Negro! farm worker. \every effort has been made to hush | \the matter up, although many of the | details are common knowledge in Charlotte. Solicitor Carpenter, who, ~Yelly D’Arany) aiting for the Sunrise (Seitz & Lockhart) ~Chas. Hackett 5 (Mascagni) (Mascagni) cntrance Chorus Pietro. Mascagni, Conducting jeann: Intétmezso, (Mascagni) termezzo bene ante rin ni m ony Orchestra erence Molajali Saylors and Lell, played his part in covering up this lynching by his ar- rests. . Today, six months later, it is only the International Labor De- e ou Orchestra duty to point out that the lynchers were covered up rather than pun- ished by the authorities. The LL.D. ist farmer, Grier, his accomplices and the authorities who suppressed the evidence on this. The LL.D, has authoritative documentary evidence to prove to the hilt every one of its statements, The Internatignal Labor Defense meyka he Kolomeyka Dance of ce) ‘anichokt ‘(Potkn Dance) ers. Just as the murderers of Ella May, a member of the National Tex- tile Workers Union, and the strike- breaking deputies of McDowell county who murdered six Marion workers, were never punished by the bosses’ courts, so the lynchers of Willie McDaniels never have been nor ever will be punished by a capi- talist court. Bosses’ courts and bosses’ judges, like Barnhill, will never convict lynchers and mur- derers of workers, Negro or white. They will protect them and acquit them, as they did the Marion depu- where in this country.” in Manchuria Region Sat i |. Nowell visited factories in a num- | Mukden, Manchurian dispatches, bey of cities. “As one who has| state that the “war lord” govern-| worked on the belt at Ford’s,” he| ment of Chang Hsueh-liang, who | said, “I was especially interested in | oe ae ee what Goats Te ‘conditions at an auto factory I vis- mands he do, is “paying much at-/jted in Moscow. The difference ate to bt ae Aa eae astonishing.. The terrible, ex= ment amon; ie Mongol people who si let ’'s is \- are the mntive epilation of ea pilates a 7 eegeantce, a Seals wy a ea by Chinese | pressed by the interest taken by the | agents of imperialism. | workers in the factory. They feel | The Mukden authorities claim that | it is theirs, and they are constantly the yous ones are not ie ao |making suggestions for improve-| rying rifles, but that said rifles have | ments.” red emblems on them as do their} “]f the United States attacks the uniforms, and Mukden concludes| USSR, what. will the “Americam| from this that the Bolsheviks are|workers do?” they were asked, | “fomenting” the movement. “Will they defend the Socialist Although the dispatch is very | Fatherland?” The workers of the! meager in details, it appears that|Soviet Union are making and will| these young Mongols are active in|continue to make immense sacr |mew forms. |with company thugs and deputized A move to supplant at least part of the National Guard members of the United Mine Work- ers of America is seen in the an- nouncement that Troop F, 106th Cavalry, Springfield, would be withdrawn from Mine No. 7, at Kin- caid. This action is being sponsored chiefly by officials of the U.M.W.A., because some of its members re- fused to work under the “protec- tion” of the troops and joined the strike being led by the National Miners Union. Thousands of others, even before the troops arrived, joined the ranks of the strikers. At the same time the U.M.W.A. has made it known that it ready to as- sume the major role of breaking alone the strike of the Illinois mi- Agrarian Crisis in Czecho - Slovakia PRAGUE (by mail)—The inter- national agricultural cris s also af- fects Czechoslovakia and one of the tasks of the new government is to find a solution to the problem, forts are being made to organize a grain monopoly with a view to crew- ing up the prices. The German speaking Tcheckish social fascists have already expressed approval of this proposal. Agricultural circles demand in addition the increase of the import duties on agrarian pro- duce and the limitation of the im- port of flour. Tcheckish govern- mental circles are nuch worried by the fact that negotiations are pro- ceeding between Hungary, Rouma- Ef-| “The Soviet Union did not want jwar. It avoided war. It prevented’ ~ war. But the Soviet Union is no vassal stat of the imperialists. If” the Soviet Union had bowed down | before the Chinese militatists, the same thing would happen tomorrow on the European frontier as yester- day happened on the Asiatic fron- tier, Every Pilsudski, every little fascist border state on the Baltic would follow the example of the Kuomintang government.” Defeat Attack by Defense, The Soviet Government therefore’ replied in Bolshevist manner, It liquidated the war by defeating the lattackers. On the day of attack the |Soviet masses flew to arms. “Our, horses are saddled, our lances are sharpened, our powder js dry,” was |the cray. The 14,000 metal work- planned a nice investigation under | z | that Mukden’s military On the other hand, k.lian “Labour” government, Scullin, | }port that 50 Communists, including tern Manchuria, where Mukder mies evaporated when the Soviet | Red Army crossed the fronter in| punitive pursiit of white guard and Chinese military invad It seems’| repressive forces, or what is left of them, are Australia Miners | Reject “Mediation” | SIDNEY, Australia (By Mail).—| ‘The Prime Minister of the Austra-| declared when taking aver the reins of government that a solution would be found to settle the protracted crisis in the Australian mining in- this promise is seen in a proposal made by the government to the tine owners. and the miners which demands chiefly concessions from rejected this. offer of “mediation.” | were arrested after a fight with po- lice when denied the right of as- sembly. + * 8 Advices from Sofia, Bulgaria, re- two who are alleged “emissaries of The imperialist ambitions of fas- cist Italy are said in reports from Tripoli to have led Italian troops to occupy the town of Sebha, 400 miles inlard from the Tripolitan coast in Africa. Behind such an- nouncements are always the dead and wounded, though the dispatch makes no mention of such, In place of such realistic reports the Italian version gives the ridiculous tale that the Italian imperialist troops “received the homage of the tribes- men and disarmed them.” | fi R , the two American. workers ners which began December 9. nia, Yugoslavia and Bulgaria for ers of the Putilov works at Lenin- said, in order to. build and strength- en the country that is theirs. They look to the workers. of the world to help. them. Intensive work is being done to bring together a large number of delegates from factories, mills and shops and from fraternal organiza- tions to the Working Women’s Anti- War ‘Conference called by the Com- munist Party, New York District, for Saturday, Jan. 4, at 2 p. m. at Irving Plaza Hall, Irving Place and 15th St. We know that the imperialists will not and do not intend to dis- they are irreconcilably opposed to the Soviet Union. Not for neace are they building more cruisers. Not for peace is this aircraft race, this ing made to draw the workers of the world into a new slaughter. In- 400 Delegates at USSR) Voluntary Labor Meet MOSCOW (By Mail).—The first congress of the voluntary Labor Brigades who aim at developing the here. There were 400 deiegates present at»the congress represent: ing 100,000° members in all indus- tries. The congress adopted an ap- peal to all workers and peasants to unite in a great effort to carry out the Five Year Plan in four years. The congress also pointed out the advisability of putting the best members of the Labor Brigades in- to backward factories and work- shops in order to make propaganda amongst the workers there and to show them by example how to in- crease the efficiency of their work, . * HARRISBURG, IIL, Dee. Two wings of the same organization met today when Frank H. Woods, president of the Ogara Coal Co., speaking before state and district war on the National Miners Union. “I believe in your union,” Woods told the gathering. Attempting to explain away the low wages and mis- erable conditions which caused the present strike, the coal operator blamed competition in Kentucky and other fields. New Yeazs’ Eve Dance for Strike Funds; costumes for the big Workers’ Cos- tume Ball on New Year’s Eve. The ball will be held at Rockland Palace, 155th St. and Eight Ave., and has School for the purpose of raising funds for the relief of the striking non Andradé’s Negro Orchestra. Tickets are only 75 cents if bought in advance and $1 at the door. Get them at the New York office of the W.LR., 799 Broadway, Room 221, or at the Workers School, 26 Union Square. garrison at Macao, the island owned by Portugal on the Chinese coast close to Canton, mutineed, and that “loyal” Portuguese troops bom- barded them with artillery and ma- chine guns. The mutineers held the fort until bombarded. Macao is the headquarters for opium traffic in the Far East, a well-known fact, blinked at the League of Nations, which has “commissions” and “cou the formation of a grain monopoly. Such a monopoly would be a heavy blow to Czechoslovakia and there- fore efforts are being made through the Little Entente to sabotage the negotiations. x Verd! Riccardo Strace Mad: Heh i of th . "7 iat ‘i 4 ig 4 a 7d ineh,. 750 Gioeonda! Barearolt —Feneater aifonda exe rested and held in Charlotte jail un- unable to deal with this rising Mon- |Prepare Working chiefs of the U.M.W.A., pledged his | ;, alssrdting 48 caer psetdiate Me ed pe peer e Aa . Thy Balt Now Lower pone jelli |)\der the guise of “giving them pro- ' god independence, or better said, lib- . “co-operation” to this company | \...; a s and are prepare o hasten aps ee \ ease arees eee tection.” Negro witnesses of the | eration movement. : Wemen Anti-War Meet union of the coal operators n alqion a ee Leia Wage reduc- arms.” ‘Tens and hundreds of thou- G-50170-D Pb peerage tial elt ee al lenime were threatened’ with death. | tions for the landworkers net year amounting to about 15 per cent. There is a ferment amongst the land- workers and a number of confer- ences have already decided to fight the rich agrarians under the leader- ship of the Communist Party and the red trade unions. There is no doubt that the social fascists will vlay a leading part in the “solution” of the agrarian crisis and their central organ “Pravo Lido” complains that the solution of the RUSSIAN: Vietor Chenkin with A, Bloch on the Piano: jaccording to witnesses, was in the | dustry without.one penny of wage|arm. They are ina struggle among| Hundreds of N York k problem is being left in the hands | cities on August 1, and again o1 10 inch, 75¢ Starrey Frak-Old Evening Dress Lob. oe Bel ho. fl d. th : ™ eer undreds of New York workers! (> tne agrari instead ‘of itt the Neg A) Bi n, Priznanie k lubyi Kavkagten (The Love Co: |mob 0’ ssmen who flogge ¢ | reductions. How Scullin understands |themselves for super-profits, and a Meh dpcien! sya hs November 7, in defense 20190F, of a Cauensinn (Comic Sone) \white workers and organizers, Wells, | eNEe have already’ begun’ planning | their hands of the government as a whole. . of ae % The social fascists will lead in this question as in all other questions against the workers. They will ‘ S 3 the miners and a considerable re-|tremendous development of. poicon|been arranged by the Workers In-| Statve the workers with the intro-| across the border and smashed at 4 ee Orch ; 1 : ler 4 t ged by the Workers In. : : ad thorks of tive Don, Cossnelg mpider. the aiteciion of. |{}fense that dares and performs it8 | duction of wages. ‘The miners have |gases. ‘These preparations are be-|ternational Relief and the Workers | duction of the grain monopoly, the|one blow the power of the tools of increase of the import duties on agrarian produce and the reduction of the landworkers wages. : Imperialism Imprisons. to all these maneuvers women are | Illinois miners. intrigues, “notes” and threats ef © eae A timovtnieMatwal Tiacratite Bare 1) openly states that the reeponsipl ty Bucharest, Rumianian, reports | being drawn more and more, Music until the early hours of the }. American and other imperialisms, Brevi Zmovini-Mutual Understanding (Part WM) ||| for this crime rests on the capital-’' Monday stated that 47 Communists morning will be provided by Ver-|German Jobless Army)was compelled to surrender and Ukrainian Orchestra of Michel Thomas: Swells to 2,000,000 BERLIN (By Mail).—According to official figures the number of unemployed workers receiving sup- port in Germany increased by no Polka of the Standardbearer declares that the lynching of Willie | Moscow” have been arrested at| socialist competitive. scheme, . in- a less than 100,000 in the week from|carried out strikes and demonstra- »~ Oberek-Dance of Hatchow (Orchestra) |}/MeDaniels is but a special part of | Philipopolis, being charged with!creasing production, decreasing) MUTINY IN MACAO, DOPE | the 2nd to the 7th December. The |tions against the attack on the So- ~ Baward Mika, the Violinist and His Merry Orch.: |{/ Southern capitalist class terrorism | “preparing a political upheaval” and | working costs and increasing the) | CENTER IN FAR EAST official number of unemployed} viet Union and against the white Oraey Poka (Orchestra) |{|@gainst the workers and poor farm-| with having a secret printshop. intensity of labor has now ended| Chinese sources report that the| Workers now receiving unemploy-|terror governments ot Mukden and ment insurance in Germany is now a million and a quarter. The large numbers of workers who have ex- hausted their unemployment pay are not included and the actual number of unemplyed is certainly well over two millions. Build Up the United Front of ‘the Working Class From the Bot- ‘tom Up—at the Enterprises! ferences” supposed to “fight” the drug traffic. The reports do not mention the cause of the mutiny, which may possibly be a reflection of the struggle between militarist clicues in the fascist government in Portugal, grad declared in assembly: “We are ready at any time, rifle in hand, to defend the October revolution.” The workers of Moscow factéries swept through the streets to meet- ings and resolved: sands demanded as their right to volunteer in the Red Army of the East—and among them thousands of working women, of youth of both sexes. Offers of their wages, of their products and of their lives were poured out by the workers to their government. if A World-Wide Battle. And abroad, under the banner of the Communist International the world proletariat fought the police in the streets of capitalism’s great viet Union. The Red Army of th Far East, took up the offensive. It pursued the murderous bands which had constantly invaded Soviet soil imperialism in Manchuria, The Mukden government, in spite of the agree to every term of the Soviet Power, It is a victory of thé world revo- lution, A victory for the starving, martyred, but heroic revolutionary workers and peasants of China, who even in the face of certain death ~ Nanking. The victory of the Red Army, as” Comrade Neumann states, is the signal of a new offensive for the new revolutionary movement in °° China. ‘But the attack which has i> been beaten off by the world revo- lution, will shortly be followed by fresh provocations and more impu- -» dent attacks on the Soviet Union,” «» says Neumann. And against’ that menace the American working class, 2 cheered by present victory, must polity its forces and be ever yigi-

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