The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 2, 1930, Page 4

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y Publishing Co. Tne, daily @ unday Bi % SUBSCRIPTION RATES: t “¥. Telephone Stuyvesant 16 Cabl Dorker By Mall (in.New York City only): $8.00 a year; $4.50 six months; $2.50 three months 1 checks to the Daily Worker, 26-28 Union Square, N By Mall (outside of New York City): $6.00 a year; $3.50 six months: 2.00 three months Cential Organ of the Communist Party ci 8S. A. ae ~ 4 es: ” le . LOVESTONE AND MARCH 6] 2 "it Wee Bae * Fst ET's GT TMPSES OF THE SOCIALIST : | « Workers Learned More of Renegade Group V I] : WAGE ‘ i —-— Woman” | “a - HE gigantic dc as accuses the Party of: “ anelinel with] IT Am No Longer An Old oman sarworkers- or their worn ey seek to make it hard for | nloyment and the capit the police homas. memployment is of Lovestone goes a step further, he even says | By E. KONONENKO. } “She can already read and write,” proudly SOR tl he Communist Party because of its “ad- | nes a, ‘ | bos Ni significance. Over oa - ; “ nger An Old Woman. | answers Nina. AGHERMAN aroukers 2 venturistic” course is itself trying to force the | ee Saat ee a lek 3 A Pace Ieiatkerhennit eben ta, phoblenia, elecdiee | hasCaminhist Patty capitalist state to declare the Party illegal | yy features may be old. But don’t look at | ot Hndaratand wiuch.: Baul teach hewevery, } AiigtehGionbmnic ¢ and drive it underground. | them, My heart is young. I am no | erie : ] slogans of our Part in the prep- “Today we have the tragic fact that the | | longer an old woman. lam a Young Commu-. cue euening ikwe headee aniouts Rea ae aul arations for ] course of official leadership of the Communist Party | | nist.” F ; ie scan se a jemonst y made certain appears te WELCOME the forcing of the | ‘With truly youthful heat the old peasant | a young one—are bent over the copy book, he d Pp is S r h h n i i i Yaw Al ira Versunina, (dus exclaimed | The child is teaching her old mother arithmetic. mistakes. 2 very sharply Party into an underground existence and is BA ae cael oa ted nae onmade| sy Seas the Old Church. pointed o accompanying this by isolating the Party, in greeting the Putilov workers who had | You'd Never Know the Old Church. F | <riush collective farm. Ho! lo! Moscow calling. Comintern mittee destroying its influence and carrying on ac- | come to the Kriush collective farm. Hello! Hello! ‘0s i. : t was held in the church to | station, wave f March 6th « tivities and issuing statements which open | _An entertainment was he hurch to | station,, wave . : irgdeh the § the door of the Party for spies and agents | | bind together the peasant communards 0 That is how you are met in the church. American workers } provocateurs.” | Kriush and the workers of the Red Putilov | What had happened? On a certain Septem- arn the class char What counter-revolution! True, the Party | Cae ee ang ee the | ber evening in 1929 a meeting of poor far- h a a 1a count olution! ue, arty ani re were stretched si acards | - A * role of the A. F id the social fas- | had a state witness not only in its ranks but | aay proche seretehec sme oP mers decided: Site) eae st character of the s Through | even in the leadership, but we got rid of him. j Fed) cloth: gs ade : “We will close the church . ,. What do we March 6th, however, t Whalen too is using the old capitalist trick | Through the big collective farm to so want it for anyhow? And we could fix up a } ieee ciolism.” Tab Gander? opportunity to learn some of tryir to create the impre: n that the | 2 fe club in it.’ : “The rich need god to enslave the | ; ; gade Loves Part idden with spies and provocateurs tay | A general meeting of peasants decided that the demonstratic in order to scare workers from joining the | vornere st thing which a visitor to Kriush | the church must be closed. statement t Party, because of the danger of their being , sa ade ferimabent flag lonethek dois yct)thé On the first day after the closing of the led by the Communist Party and exposed in the factories and in order to throw | sees 18 a crimson tlag x ug : ogee LITE a « ” J ated the P. ; ; ae | church and, next to it, a radio antenna. church there was a “red wedding.” A young Bee ene aes Fee Ge ee ee eee ee The Pulse of LifeBeats Strongly. collective farmer was married. There were | The Comintern adopts a POU, (ORSel stu: Leda ate alt et paar Two years ago, there was no poorer vil- | speeches on the new life, There was a string Gap ofthe suet ampociatt “problems facing | IE eee DStee OL waa : lage than Kriush’ in the Balashovsk district. | orchestra, songs, dances. The walls themselves | the Parties (unemployment) which are not Finally Lovestone comes to the gonclusion Sixty per cent of the inhabitants were poor | were overjoyed—they were fed up with the only ultra-left, but which are actually Putch- | that as a result of March 6th and all the ac- j farmers or farm hands. Poverty, ignorance, | hypocritical whining of “lord have mercy upon ist.” (Revolutionary Age, Feb. 15th.) tivities of the Party since it got rid of Love- dirt. In September, 1928, the first change | us.” | Have the results of March 6th shown stone, the Party is being smashed, its influ | deoeinince’ int Ketuau; SHlalteo ther tiema tre 15 hs dedates caved fle aninicle: (nvanceee: the unemployment struggle of the Party a ence destroyed, etc. It amuses one to read: | ganized a company for working the land in | at 11 o'clock in the evening a fire suddenly ( Be ee eee ane sae eee ee + “Never since 1922 has the Party found it- common. This was the first harbinger of | broke out at the brick factory. But the “wolves” of employed and unemployed workers even self in such isolated condition and never collectivization in the Lower, Volga. In No- | could not break up the festivities. There was being recognized apitalist ess and before in its history has the Party been so vember, 1929, all the 302 poor and mildle | no panic, The fire was quickly put out. And all our open enemies. T! of the | discredited and lacked so much influence farms of the villages formed an artel. And | in the “church” everything went on according masses to struggle was demonstra d by the among the masse by December 31, 1929, Kriush accepted the | to plan, the concertinas merrily played and the heroic battles of the workers with the state This is how the Party looks to Lovestone rules of a commune. young people danced to their heart’s content. and its agents. To Lovestone all this, how- But these are words and hopes of a Every day the collective farm grows strong- TaD cearabenihs Neasante cemented etieaneh: : ee ony a “puteh brass ee ventar Vs credited group of leaders without an army, | er, and its material situation improves. |” ofthe amifiéant atheist society: A’ hundeed col F ganized by the Communist Party, without any | whom life itself destroyed and exposed be- | Here are some figures. They speak for them- | jective farmer joined it. 35 per cent of them P due regard to the concrete conditions and the | fore the entire working class, and who are | selves. The ha’ in 1927-28 outside the | \ere women, ’ response of the masses. making a desperate fight to maintain their collective farm: rye, 2,030 centners; wheat, | ee i On the day after the demonstration, how- | few followers. The course of Lovestone, how- 768 centners; oats, 230 centners. But in 192 : be s : ever, Lovestone had the courage to come out — ever, leads directly to the camp of our ene- | 1929 in the collective farm it was: rye, 2,902 | he eed Leen bene of saat They ‘ with the statement my—capitalism. { wheat 5,575 centners; oats, 2,626 | spread abroad all kinds of disgusting rumors, ‘ “ feat is c 7 affere , . they dissemenate throughout the district the The official leaders of the Party refuse What a difference for one year! 1 throughot i to mobilize against the onslaught of the Fy And the saleable surplus increased by five | mee, tapeienl eal ae ees F capitalist forces of reaction. Instead of try- Build the Central School of times in a year. ae PE ee ge Re ena e ing to rally the masses, the Party leaders \ The pulse of life beats strongly. he people | 5 ag odd é Es are today replacing the class action of the the Party | of Kriush are building a good big school. | And oe eae agnt Eoae eee pid : workers against the capitalists by the action By A. MARKOFF | | They are completing the construction of a | Passes from house to fone. snd im ulege qi of a small handful of Party members.” Sh tara se a seca cattle yard, they are building a brick factory. ; t0 Village. She shows her rags and, face cov- ; (Revolutionary Age, March 15th.) ee recent events in the United States in | In spring they will build two large houses as | Sree eae relates a story something like Only a handful of* Communists were in ac- connection with the March 6 unemployment common living quarters. They have already | he Rue we pr eran RPA demonstrations, where over a million workers | | thought over the plans of a new socialist vil- | “I was in the Kriush collective farm, my u tion on March 6th! The fight of March 6th— ; | oe P | i ' 1,250,000 workers demonstrating in every in- | TesPonded, to the call of the Party, prove two lage. They have built a grain dryer. They have | dear. And I was almost driven out of my ti dustrial city in the U. S., is a handful. Over | thimes: acquired fifty hives of bees. They have put | mind .. .” ir 6,000 new members joining the Communist 1. That the radicalization of the masses is down an orchard cores 15 pee a | But the slander of the kulaks bursts like n° Party during the membership drive is also a | becoming widespread. There is a tractor column at Kriush for | a soap bubble. Every day, delegations of poor zs handful! It is today clear for every worker, That the influence of the Party among — — three villages. It has 79 tractors, 84 tractor | and middle peasants arrive at Kriush, look 1] b that the reason why the Party was success- masses of workers in the United States is os ta 370 eons -, drills. | around the commune and study it. Foreigners fi ful in the mobilization of such large masses | gYowing from day to day. . . The young people study in tractor courses. | also come. re is because it came to the masses, it estab- This fact places before the Party a very im A it an Proletariat | urns A children’s creche was organized in the In conclusion let us return to Alexander tt lished connection with the masses, it began to | portant and urgent task, that of strengthen- e mer C eee during the summer am la Sop st Versunina. Here is what she says: i build the united front with the masses in the | ing its organization apparatus, developing ‘or thirty young comrades, There 1s a public “ ‘ ia nr bd ops and the unemployed on, the Great greater cadres of trained functionaries who - bake house, and in the fields, during work time, all eee aie ies ail he Lad is and the mass organizations, It is now our | Will be in a position to give leadership to the OWar e evolu lonary a there is common board. : eae nape pe task to consolidate and still further broaden | struggling masses. The gap between Sur or- : _The commune is growing, strengthenin~, | t6 this united front with the working masses. | ganizational weakness and the political influ- ripening like a good apple. And there is. more | il 5 é of However, Lovestone and Cannon think that | ence of the Party must be narrowed. oe to follbe. ‘Only a 7eRt au ane have mane ‘Dai 'y Worker Mass Circulation m there can be no united front unless the Party A ber ticle i aily Worker ; _ a oe lustry does not expand any | Since the birth of the collective farm, as . pu 1 the work i EN ee nee ee REESE ; on their head. Industry does not expand any | sareely had time to get on its feet and make Campaign Quotas for Each C and the workers unite with them. In this { have dealt with this problem. It has been | aqngpERNATION in the camp of the boure- | the height of prosperity, 3t.[ 2223 ; ree case, however, it would be to sell out the | correctly pointed out that the actual participa- sa ae gi ania ue 80 per cent of capacity but | #8 first few steps. Party District Nic workers, to destroy the unemployment move- | tion in the class struggle is the surest way of Obie Danie BIND Aeey ene octeecs my hugeness permits of far superior | , ANd what will it be when the people of — ment and against the interest of the working | developing the rank and file of the Party mem. | this was the aftermath of March 0 in the USA | io Tei sind aaformation, and speed-up | Stiush are able to manage their collective | Due to faulty printing the quota table did te class. The united front does not mean a united | pers. But we would be poor Leninists if we | The American proletariat considered so “sane” | ii en a Guntry, because the industry | £4°W according to all the principles of agti- | not show clearly in yesterday's Daily Worker 2 front with the renegades, with those who at- | disregarded or underestimated the importance | #"4 “orderly” by the bourgeoisie and its labor BP OR i ils cecaih ‘bing hundreds | Cultural science, when they exert their creative | Cut out ‘this table ani attach it to th : sp tack the Seu We : 3 « eee te eee je Importance | ieutenants had with a powerful voice an- | ead of by its growth bing hundreds | sores to the full, when they organize labor | és s : attach it to the cam- ‘ack the Soviet Union, with those who fight | of the theoretical training of our members and fi me} ands of new workers yearly throws : 2 ‘ : paign program which appeared in yesterday’s of the Communist International, it does mean a ; pana side of the Party | Rownced the fact that the old bourgeois re- | hs el in. | and life as they ought to be organized, when | ana. united front with the millions of workers in | worn Of Workers outside of the Party | formist tomfoolery will go no more, March 6 | and this on as big a seale as the in- | they acquire the necessary knowleige. Brera i the shops, with those workers who are still | ane : Wet she eee ae hand | sas the historie day on which the American oes eI Bey Learning to Read. | OBJECTIVES OF THE CAMPAIGN. ms under the influence of the fascist A. F.of L. | no ee ene ‘ proletariat made the turn from its past and | The effect of this superior industry upon | Jn Kriush there used to be 70 per cent of | 10,000 new mail subscribers, ES and the capitalist class. Such a united front | , 1% 8 number of districts, this question has | joined the ranks of the international revolu- iculture (there is no more free land) is to | iNliterates. A terrible figure. It is only re- 20,000 additional copies per day in bun- | ‘A the Party is developi stablishi been partly solved by the existence of the Work- | tionary proletariat. The vastness of the move- ! | farmer ona truly Amer- | cently that the people of Kriush havé been | dle orders. boot eloping and establishing. | pani ow: - Soar Sithoni e f e “ D: Lovestone bases his attack on the Party be. | “re; sst00h Ia New York the Workers School | ment was a revelation ‘even to those: who. at | ic : ne about that even be- | able to learn to read. In the collective farm $15,000 in contributions for developing cause he thinks that the present Party miicy, | TBistered sreat achievements. The phenomena! | the time of the VI Congress predicted that a | fore the crisis about four million were divorced | there are five points where adults are instruct- | mass circulation in new fields. a Dee oe the peau arty ee | growth of the school—60 students registered | break in the upward development of American | from the’ ns of making a living, these | eq, and 330 people are learning to read. Half 2 ihe Gattitas Gettres ew ie APP yey | 2.1924, to our 1,500 students registered in the | imperialism was about to take place; 1,000,006 | four million, of course, did not lie down and | of them are women. They study by shifts, a «16g Matric ake Sixics slay Texte exist in the United | Fali of 1929 is an indication of the urgent | workers actively participated in the street dem- | die, they went about ani displaced others for | willingly and stubbornly. District Subs Orders Support P nee es pOveeone, Wakes: oe need of this instrument in the class struggle. | onstrations and at least another 500,000 turned | less pay, thus all in all it came about that Nina, the Pioneer, a little fair-haired girl, {| 1+ Boston .« + 600 1,000 700 The Party... . has been pursuing a | y ii i i as en ; ‘ 4 suicidal sectarian course absolutely forza | M&nv district functionaries have been trained, | out to witness it. Never in the history of the | eight million or more really were'part em- | relates the following about her fifty year old | 2 New York . 1,500 7,000 4,000 ib aba actual coudiiiens caatite mine coe and hundreds of workers from the shops and did anything like it take place. It was | ployed. mother ‘who’ is leatnlig to'réad and writes - |°Sa<Phitatelpht ee Hs iy. sn iW tha paukw of ike wane clas « factories have received instructions in Com- | a day that shook the world. The result of all tt the “Well, how is she getting on2” 4. Buffalo 400 600 500 cours ; o Wee ate ia as “Naas i “ In order to understand the new turn in the | the proletariat wer millions who ions = “sented ine bagi be succeeded in com e schools in Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, | yg’, and the perspective arising therefrom | fort f Font ety -businieds ; ; 5. Pittsburgh ..... 500 1,000 650 is the ewuaine SSE ae elphia, Boston and others, while much | jt’ ig necessary to mention the main but the opportunit continually | the Communist Party is rapidly becoming the | 6. Cleveland 909° 1,200 800 the of the United Bien Mat? gene. Wormers, ler ae eo ae York ae deisiig-the Awevinn =r Ueiatas toms kept on decreasi we have now whole- ae ae spokesman of the American 7. Detroit . 1,400 1,800 1,600 Lovestone further writes: on educational work among the masses. But on | revolutionary path, that it the economic causes le expropr stead of growth of the sie : 8. Chica 1,500 3 75 i MH Barty Wee, Tae itself the | Rational basis, very little has been done. The | the effects of which have now been registered | petty-bourgeoisie, Thus, it came about that the | To understand this rapid development of | 9. Mi me Li ; mie ae a Ps tocche thes et upon the | activities of these schools have not been co- ‘i » aekeen war ws majority of the workers and their families | the American workers along the revolutionary De acapella rst LeU 800 850 bs actual conditions confronting the working - by the action of the workers on Ma i : . Resatini " ‘ . * anc ne Rhy High wor idea tl adeno ordinated, each d: ct school depending on The rapid growth of bourgeois economy in |. were destitute even when the c broke out. path, it is necessary to point out certain simi- | 10. Kansas City ... 200 400 300 b done in the unemployment demonstrations, | itS.0WM Yesources. This is a serious shorteom- | tne U.S.A, given its rich natural | The hundreds of thousands of immigration who | larities of Russian revolutionary movements of | 11, Agricultural 120 200 180 re Peer een aempaners Hone ing. The educational work of our Party must artifal itaminrath : still keep on coming in spite of all restrictions, | the pre-vevolutionary days and the U. 8. A. | qo al ¥ by y yased pi still keep on ming in spite of all restrictions, 2, oy 5 slogans which are untimely, it and plentiful immigration was based y P 7 ; | 12. Seattle 80 560 340 wit Sot hale ae dennust not use | he centralized under the guidance and direction : ii nmigrants who formerly fructified rich | The American workers, like the Russian, have | |~ . the tactics which do not help to develop and or- 5 : tad 4 upon the growth of the agrarian petty-bourg- . Be eeinely sa roe tna tue, och vate Bananas eal i 13. California 700 1,000 1,850 hi wanilén the swavement’? of the Central School. poisio, tho-farmer, whe constantly: natural resources of the U. §. A. and supplied | Never been in the grip of a strong social-dem- 2 ows , Fi thai Daves tune: hae Hecshesuntastita comm cat Many towns and smaller cities and particu: | territory under cultivation and improving the | the indust with plentiful skilled and un- | °¢ratic organization, they followed the bour- | 15. Connecticut .... 500 640 » 380 use and state what were the wrong slogans used, | lly. the South have no educational facilities, | oid, provided an ever expanding inner market, | skilled labor, are now so much more additional | 8@0isie through the A.'F. of L. which made no | 16. South ......... 100 200 150 thay nor what the wrong tacties were. However, | 2" the Party work suffers accordingly. The millions of immigrants streaming in from | dynamite under the bourgeois social structure. (ete See whatsoever. But now kee oné can easily understand what Lovestone It is therefore imperative for the Workers | Europe and South America supplied the huge | Relief for these completely destitute millions, sh 1 fe turn has come they do nob. go first to Total ........ 10,000 20,000 $15,000 re means by this. Lovestone does not believe | School to begin immediately to function on a | industries that developed on the basis of these | the American bourgeoisie who is accustomed | Social -democracy, as Pepper thought, but go oi ow! the American workers are ready to fight, that | "tional scale. vast inner markets with sufficient and relative- | only to take but not to give, has not provided, | Tight straight to the Communists. They are Districts should assign quotas to the re- oo the time is not ripe to rai political ap Aa‘ | ‘The program of action should be as follows: ly cheap labor power. | the American workers are forced into the de- | driven to fight hence they willingly, without | spective sections and cities; sections should whi iin the/,workura; Gunnch’ wos, already eoce 1. A special department to be established | “Under such conditions, the petty-bourgeoisie | graded position of begging for charity, hence | @8Y “reformist bridges” follow the revolution- | assign quotas to the units. Districts, sec- honest than Lovestone in coming out’ openly | 2% the school which will have under its jutis- | was having a furious growth, that is hundreds | Tow that the crisis has broken out, these mil- | ty tactics of the Comintern, x tions and units must enter into revolutionary ahd stating: ¥ | diction the guidance and supervision of all | of thousands of workers yearly could “emanei- | lions of workers completely destitute have only e The traditional brutality of the American | competition and issue challenges within the “<. . at the present stage of develop. | Cxisting district schools. This department | pate” themselves by becoming petty-bourgeois, | one choice that is to fight, as no one wants to pala Aly against the workers was always a | next week. ment, to hurry the essential and concrere | Should send comrades experienced in educa- | hy going into farming or opening a store in | die for the glory of Wall Street. The economic | Severe lesson to the American proletariat but living demands, which really move the work. | {inal work in the Party to visit the district | the city. Hence the workers had not a class | basis, for the petty-bourgeois ideal of “going | 88 iene as a was as yet sufficient to live ers, under a long list of so-called ‘politicar | School for the purpose of aiding them in over- | ideal but a petty-bourgeois ideal of saving up | into business” has ¢ ed even before the they noted the terrorism but the mass of The Holl 2 demands which the workers do not under. ©™ing some of their defects and shortcomings. | their wages and going into business, The motts | ctisis, now the American proletariat is begin- | them were not affected, hence did not respond @ Hollowness of Austro stand and are not prepared to fight for.” 2 |The Central School is to aid the districts | was: “Me first and devil take the hindmost;” | ning under the pressure of theverisis also to'| 85% clase, Rence it appeared that: the bour Marxism yet for the revolutionary program of the Par. | 4 Not exist. A school in the South must be | a relatively peaceful labor situation which was And Bread Lines! that the focth is becoming quite clear to them TEMA uch i ty in its ‘struggle against. unemployment, the fist on the program, In places where for | a potent factor in its economie development. Hunger lines of eight to twelve thousand | ernment ie Get ee ar | TheslinbaEy vot. the oe Ee par ese Lovestone comes to the conclusion that the ck of resident instructors it is not possible % fe craebeis + in a line waiting for a miserable plate of Hi vnaneey ¥ seh back Al ta ise rei Aras action of the state, the jailing and ait to establish a school, circuit courses are to ale oe toa tinned soup or coffee and a piece of bread. | rraterial interests. Now that they turn against | introduced by the bourgeois parties, which is ot workers; ts HOE bebavse Conlin ioe. | bé organfeed, Toanh austenston inet be aantened All the factors which formerly made for the | ;nneu Soup oF coflee Weenie the | tte bouregoisie, they realize that bourgeois | actually an anti-trade-union faw on some- iaeninit Gy ethaah the eet fs aise Be: a certain territory which he or she is to cover | ¢¢Onomic superiority of the U. S. A. now stand eeaeae: ST at gine i a, og ; democracy is empty talk, they see clearly the | What similar lines to that of the British anti- < rowing resistance o: y i s is a Is with their 3 r ve street, | mailed fist of their class enemy, and alth trade-union bill, demonstrate: in th the workers, but because the Communists are | '¢&ularly. The question of expenses can be | -————_—_—____-— - | machine guns, armored cars and tear gas | ; y ; y, and although i s once aggin the ; aus 3 ists a berttg Hr Al eit ite! 7 n 8; 8) 5 veae inexperienced in the hollowness of the Austro- i i - purposely interested to provoke the aalies we: ae eneBE iy eae lees hee Party has also adopted this method and the pase up against the hungry, this is the | ple, thy take thete in facia ‘from thay mouthed resistance ont ees Hoy the Fac ck on the workers e Party. Love- enuras SCHOO! :2 ype: sults id. new U. S. A. es . a ake ; n ; ste ‘ites: Beiter errs one classes to be established in thg circuit course, results ‘are-aplient taki vi Lae "8 fighting class brothers in Europe, hence the | alternative is: fight in earnest or capitulate. one writes: y ; Ne Sodan i G : This is a difficult undertaking, but with a | The American workers have not much of a | battle is similar to Russia right from the start | And then they capitulate with monotonous reg- The irresponsible phrase-mongering, the |“ ae sina course for new members, and | little perseverence on our part, it can he carried | tradition of strect demonstrations, their com-' | not in parliament but in the street. ularity. total contempt for actual objective condi- ee aah ans teers i anal gun Neg : thru successfully. ing out by the hundreds of thousands in re- " Today’s session of the Austrian trades coun- Fa tions, the irresponsible boasting offers a | . > nea does hot en Wes the sek The above program deserves the fullest sup- | sponse to the call of the Communist Party is Fresh to the Battle. cils in which social democratic, christian and lying very fertile field for the police activities and | tO dagen cadhphe Meare of even those workers | port of every comrade. The success of this therefore of so much greater ségnificance. The American proletariat is not a beaten | nationalist trad i i Amer make it fe h who attend our schools. We must reach the i ci $ i ‘ . . fat it i i < le unions are represented pre- eney | SOE “tiem “to: “attack: and tp) many. htndéeds aad thotbeene Gem SP Bees be insured by the making the $10,009 | Particularly in view of the fact that these proletariat; it is entering fresh into the strug- | sented a picture of touching unity. A resolu- Greer smash the Communist Party. : eh nunc'reds and thousands who are unable | -drive of the Workers School a 100 per cent | were not “police permit” demonstrations but | gle; it is now 32 million strong and these mil- | tion was adopted calling on the government to This is also the same slander which James | for one sce another to attend classes. | suecess. The response to the drive must be | exactly the contrary, they took place as pro- | lions, together with their dependents, repre- | submit the draft of the anti-trade union bill Apes O'Neal repeated in the “New Leader” of March | This can be accomplished by a home study | immediate. The preparatory work must com- | hibited demonstrations in spite and against the | Sent the great majority of the population. To it, to the trades councils before its adoption. The es Ofna Le sata, | course, mence at once. Therefore | police, and the militancy displayed by. the | 8 an ally must now be added the great mass | only reason for this is thet the utery could malate “They (the Communists) were not inter- vce ,. CoFrespondence Courses. A $10,000 fund by April 19th | masses against the police was not lagging be- , of the farm population who are now being | “make suggestions.” Nothing remains of all deca ¢ : In every This is one of the most effective means of For a Workers School in every listrict. hind Europe, it was at par with, if not even driven to the wall by monopoly capital. In this | the demagogic threats of the social democrats ba 7 ke instance they did their best to provoke a ing Communist education to thousands For a Home Study Cours: better, than in Germany. ‘The demonstrations vast revolutionary reservoir now being aroused nothing. The conciliant speeches of the social is Gre disturbance.” f of homes. In the Soviet Union today, the C.P. Send funds to Workers School Dvive Com- | have given the lie to all the reformists about , lies the base for surprisingly rapid and large | democratic representatives showed clearly that off th The slander of Lovestone is the same which jot 8 U. is making tremendous progress thrn | mittee, Alexander Trachtenberg, treasurer, 26 | the backwardness and fossilized reformism of | revolutionary development. ; With unimportant alterations they are pre- Wage the entire capitalist press and Norman Thom- these home study courses. Our German Sister Union Square, N. Y, C the American workers and have shown that {To be continued, ‘ + Pared to swallow the bill without a word

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