The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 30, 1930, Page 4

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~ “fer implements of slaughter. ‘Shy "4 sd Page Four _ DAILY WORKER, W YORK, WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1930 “Be Prepared Against imperialist War aoe. by ited States fought congress United The ; job is bi very impor burning have to be taken care of by the to prepare “public senti- ment” for the war against the So- Union, and s rground the Communist Party, eader of the s le against mperialist wa: Manufactured War Sentiment. Whalen’s stup mis gation one ‘thing wi 3 bare before the workers: the! merican capitalists are freightened hut the saccess of the Five-Year Lovestone’s “power. country out of the markets t is the reason for the seemingly dden but well prepared attack against the American trading organ- vation (Amtorg) the Soviet Union. That is the reason for the one campaign a: st Soviet vroduct To reach this aim they use every method to stimulate public senti- ment fo: the final act. Today they “discover” smugglers the Soviet government.” they will fine spies in the Washing- ton governinent. Then a bomb will xplode ‘vith the trade mark of the Scviet government” on the svl'nters They are working overtirie w plaa| the frame uns which can be used as} weapons against the Soviet govern- ment. The war is on our threshold. We workers cannot close our eyes. We have to remember the horrible | nassacre of the 12 million workers n the last war. Workers Must Act at Once. Every worker must see that the capitalists in the United States on the front are preparing a war against the real fatherland of the workers, the Soviet Union, and at| the same time against each other. Every worker in the factories must se the organizer of the anti-war committees. Morgan when ” in the cond, to drive un-| Workers in the DuPont plan nd very poeyie Otis a band of Swiss watch | “directly connected with | Tomorrow | } The war on the Soviet Union or must be s and unist fight is led by the Co Morgan and Co The rm will hing possible to find some “legal” basis to drive the Party un- i/derground. But the Party will fight uncompromisingly against this at- tempt of the bourgeoisie. In this Two | very bitter fight the working masses problems | must be with the Communist P: which fights in their interests. Turn the Factories Against the War. We have to organize our force: first of all in the war industr Western Electric, the Blis: American Can, the navy yard, genthaler, R. Hoe, Wright Aero | plane, Singer, Johnson and Johnson, et Tro- mills in Clifton, 's, Brooklyn, New York, must ee in mind when they get th ir few dollars after a we hat the factory in which they work be turned over in one or two ys to a war factory, and then they will make the guns, munitions, can- nons, poison gas, aeroplanes, etc., to kill the workers of the Soviet Union, to kill the workers of other coun- Hlevator, Ford Motor, the of Pas textile Lodi, letarians Ms tries. The workers must organize in the |factories ready to fight the real enemy of the workers—the capital- ist elass of this country. Prepare the sentiment to stop the production or unloading of ammunition for war at the necessary moment. Train the the struggle of the workers for bet- ter conditions. Party in Forefront. The Communist Party will always be in the forefront. The Commu- nists will lead this struggle against imperialist war with organized forces. The Communist Party wil lead the working class against the capitalist c 5 On August 1st the anniversary of the declaration of the last war, we will demonstrate against the coming imperialist war and for the defense of the Soviet Union. We demand surance. The mobilization on Aug. 1st is only the beginning. We must continue to organize anti-war com- mittees in the shops. It enough to give out this slogan. We know | | Party, workers to support with all means| | where workers are. fight unflinchingly for the interests at every penny of the war fund} all be used for unemployment in- | j have to learn how to do it. Every reader of this paper must be an or- genizer. You must immediately get in touch with the Communist Party in the neighborhood where the fac- tory is located and the Party will} help you to k out a plan for | building up tnis committee in the hop. Speak to your fellow workers ring working hours, lunch time and after work. Convince them that they are helping the bosses if they | do not join your committee. Explain |to them through the daily problems} in the factories that we must or- ganize and fight for better condi- tions through xevolutionary shop ommitte2s and unions. » Organize and Fight on All Fronts. You who belong to any sport or- nization of the capitalists, bear in| nind that this organization is a military training school of the capi- alists and do your utmost to make the young workers understand thi. Make them leave this organization and join the Labor Sports Unior, the sports organization of the work ng cl Workers in the army must under- | stand that they are nothing else but tools in the hands of Morgan and and they want to use you against your own cla: Work among them, get connection with the Communist give ‘eaflets and literature to the soldiers and sailors; Organ- ize them. Have in mind the important role women have in the industries, espe ially in war time . Speak to them eur shop and outside of the r- Win them for the working class. All Hell Can’t Stop Us. It is certain that the capitalist in \class will attempt to declare the Communist Party illegal, but this will not mean that the Communist Party will disappear from the fore- front of the class struggle. The Party will be there in your shop, in your organization and every place The Party will of the working class, for the defense of the Soviet Union, against imper. ialist war into a civil war which has as its aim to take over the power for the working class, Strike Against Wage-Cuts! | Demand Unemployment Insurance! is not} Demonstrate August Ist! They Will Deisonetvate Again ee 1 a ipetuise of the U.S.S.R.' VOTE COMMUNIST! by the Communist Party and revo-|In the shops, in addition to carr lutionary Trade Unions, the central | | ing out all the phases of the electi | task has been to attempt to give or-| campaign activities the Vote Com- ganizational form to the influence | munist Gonmmitiecs shall have an established among large masses of | additional task of being the organiz- workers, on one particular e or | ing force for a shop committee, link. another. This was especially glar- Jed up with the Trade Union Un ing in the instance of the unem-/| League. ployment campaign, campaign for! Many tasks can be assigned to |May First, our campaign of last | these Vote Communist Clubs and year for August Ist, ete. This prob-| Committees, among which are par- lem is even more striking when we! ticipations in the signature drive, consider the question of the coming | helping to mobilize the workers in election campaign. Numerous meet-|the neighborhood and factories for ings, rallies have been and will be! the election campaign program and organized by the Communist Party candidates for the Communist Par and the variou: campaign commit: ty, to help to distribute campaign tees in support of the Communist Jeaflets issued by the Communist Party candidates and election pre- Party and its various auxiliary gram. Hundreds of thousands campaign committees, to help give signatures will be collected in vari-| th: widest distribution to the elec- ous parts of the country, many of | tion campaign program, to help in | whom express sympathy with the | the raising of campaign funds for program of the Communist Party.|the Communist Party. They can The program is to give organiza | also aid in the holding of open air tional form to this influence among} and factory gate rallies in which this great mass of workers. This | |the workers in the neighborhoods can be done by the formation of a| and shops are being mobilized to series of “Vote Communist Clubs” | carry; to organize a systematic dis- based on the various working class | tribution of the Central Organ of neighborhoods in various sections of | the Communist Party, the Daily the city. In the shops, we should | Worker. They should also make sys- organize Vote Communist Commit-| tematic canvasses of the workers of tees. all sections of the city to register The Vote Communist Clubs are | @nd vote Communist. organized in order to establish a| These clubs, which are organized broad movement in support of work-|on a neighborhood should be subdi- ers in all the activities of the elec-| vided on the basis of streets if too tion campaign. These clubs must! large. Application and membership be utilized as a recruiting ground for members of the Communist Par- ty, the auxiliaries and the revolu- tionary trade unions. The contacts for the formation of these clubs, the Party on the ballot, contacts gotten through the Daily Worker and other drives of the Party, ducted which are organized in a very loose | form are to be gotten from the sig- | natures collected in order to place) ecards should be issued with no dues} payments in order to make the or- ganization as broad as possible and give it organizational form. The officers of these clubs should be the organizer and secretary. The carrying through of the or- ganization of these Vote Communist Clubs and the Vote Communist Committees will really help the Par- ty to establish its influence in the through open air and shop gate | various districts of the city and give meetings and through agitation con- | organizational form to the influence throughout the campaign |of the Party an denable us to roll up such as leaflets, election platforms |a large vote in the coming elections. To Train New| NEW BRUNSWICK WORKERS DEFEAT FASCISTS ATT! Functionarics| in New York The 4 weeks, f school for functionar organized by th v York district of the : Commu Party will open in the middle of August. Many applica- tions have already come in from} |Party units. In accordance with | In all the campaigns ficonducted fand ivand ctlietss sale of the Daily Worker. | | veloping elements, out of the struggle, for | of the Distr be: the instructions Agit-prop, applicants are their activity and capability of | carefully selected on the basis of | developing into functionaries in the} party and revolutionary unions. he postpenment of the opening date to the middle of August af- fords an opportunity to all party units and revolutionary unions who ikave not selected their students to do so at once. The school committee particularly | | invites and urges the revolutionary unions to take advantage of this | school for the purpose of training unions into mass organs of struggle. to organize the unorganized, and for building the revolutionary unions into mass organs of strug gle. Never before was the lack of | sufficient functionaries cadres felt more seriously in the Party and revolutionary unions than in this | period. The extension, and renew- ing of leading cadres, and the de- of militant proletarian leading positions, is a pre-requisite for the party and revolutionary unions being able to take the fullest advantage of the growing radicali- | zation of the masses, for initiat- ing and leading mass offensive struggles against imperialism. The acuteness of the war danger, and of an imperialist attack against the Soviet Union, the deepening crisis, and consequent fresh bur- dents forced upon the working | masses, the new wave of wage cuts, mass lay offs growing unemploy- ment, and fascist terror of the bosses government, make the task of developing new cadres of functionaries for the growing and looming mass struggles, of decisive and immediate importance to the entire revolutionary movement. The school courses will include: 1. The Program of the Communist International, to be led by Com- rades Chaunt and Dunping. 2. Or- ganization principles and tasks of the Communist Party and revolu- tionary unions, which will be given by comrades Baker, Johnstone and Siskind. Due to the nature and concen- time training | Hooligans Receive Wallops F From Enra Workers—Police Help Thugs By SI GERSON. Johnson and Johnson, famous ma- | nufacturers of medical supplies who make their w kers work long hours t low wages, had to use some of th ty products on some cf their own thugs who came to break up the: Communist elec!ion campaign rally Saturday night in New Brunswick. | Fully four thousand workers crowd- | | | | scheduled there were over 3,000 on ed the street corner where the meet- ing was taking place while more than three thousand, unable to pack | the corner where the meeting was taking place, line’ the opposite side- walks, roofs .nd windows, This was the third attempt to| hold a Com meeting in New} Brunswick. Twice before the well- | orga ‘eis : had proven their loyalty to the constitution and their suppert of the inalienable rights of free speech, free assemblage, ete., | with black-jacks, fists and bottl This time the workers were deter- | mined to go through with the meet- ing. Leaf! ‘s ~-cre printed before-| hand. An hc:r before the time the various corners about the place. When the meeting started the workers packed themselves solidly about the speaker’s chair. Small group of the Workers Defense Corps—which the werkers began to build in preparation for the attack —stationed themselves at strategic points in the crowd. The few re- marks that were made by fascists were soon silenced. They saw the temper of the \orkers and the evi- dent sympathy of the huge mass for the Party which led the struggle against unemployment, wage-cuts, long hours, bosses’ wars, ete. The meeting proceeded for about an hour and a quarter, five speakers taking the floor, despite all the fum- ing and blowine of the fascists and trated form of the training school, the number of students will be limited to about 30. All party units and T.U.U.L. unions are urged to rush the selection of their appli- cants. The school committee will select the best material out of the registrations, All working class or- ganizations are urged to send their contributions and help support the school, which will supply the needs of the revolutionary movement, hooligans. Once the fire truc charging into the street. shrieking and bells clangi all’ to no avail. The worke their ground firmly and p with the meeting. Finally, i ration, the thugs organized ; on the speaker’s stand w last speaker, a gassed war was speaking. Then the showed their determination let their speakers be beater to defend their meeting. Bodygua’ds were formed the speakers and they were ed. The leading hooligans ~ ceived with a barrage of from the enraged worke groups fought together for part and permitted no on isolated, A number of highly si features remain. First, the was the first Communist campaign meeting where fiv ers took the floor, No ot lasted that long. Secondly, t! of workers was to a man side of the Party. Not worker was seen to act in manner. On the contrary, them (not in defense groups were seen to take an active defending “ie meeting. Thi New Brunswick city gov again showed that they w: the tools of Johnson and As expected, not a single p was around to protect the of free speech—rights that bosses have, but the fire dep was there to try to break meeting, regardless of the f their absence from duty constituted criminal neglige might have resulted in the lives in the event of a fire. All this should only steel terminatoin of the workers Brunswick to demonstrate ii es on August First, to defer meetings against attacks, build a Workers Defense Cor knowledge and experience g: the last three struggles w fascists should be utilize placed at the disposal of thc ers. The New Brunswick \ must fight back and fight bac else they face a prospect of s worsening conditions. Demonstrate August 1s All War Funds to the Unemployed! By SAM NESIN. JGUST FIRST, 1930, is the sixteenth anni- A perialist war. As the result of that war the capitalist class of the United States became the richest and most powerful in the world. The workers’ share was ten million killed, six and a half million severely wounded and four- teen million otherwise wounded; prisoners or versary of the beginning of the last im- | | missing six million; blown to pieces three mil- | lion. A total of dead of 13 million and two million more disabled for life. To this we have | yet to add the civilian dead during and imme- diately after that butchery—ten million dead from influenza, four million dead from famine and 200,000 civilian lives lost at sea. A total of 14,200,000 more. Today capitalism finds itself in a world eco- nomic crisis. A crisis brought about by the development of the productive forces to a point where the bosses are unable to dispose aé a profit the wealth which they robbed from their respective working class. Shifting the Burden. In the United States as well as other cap- italist countries the bosses are doing their ut- most to shift the burden of this crisis upon the shoulders of the working class by means of speed-up, wage-cuts, lengthening of the working hours and the throwing of millions of | workers out of employment. Adding to the | contradiction in which capitalism finds itself is the existence of the Soviet Union which is shut off to capitalist exploitation. A country in which the workers and peasants overthrew he bosses’ government and established their own rule. In the Soviet Union Socialism is be- ing built with the aid of the Five-Year Plan of industrialization. The Soviet Union is the only country today in which unemployment is being ‘liminated and the living standards of the work- ers are advancing steadily. The great progress which is being made by the Soviet Union in vuilding industry and the organization of agri- culture on a collective basis is an inspiring ‘xample to the workers of the whole world. How is capitalism solving its difficulties? To the militant resistance which the workers are offering to the attacks upon their living » standards, the reply of the bosses is the mur- lering of workers, such as Ella May, Steve Katovis, Carlo Mazola, Alfred Levy, Gonza. tonzales and others. They conduct a campaig of lynching and race discrimination against thr Negroes and laws of persecution against th ative and foreign born workers. The bosses’ reply to demands of the millic f unemployed for work or wages, unemploy. nent insurance, against evictions and the other demands of the unemployed is police brutalii is witnessed in the demonstrations on Marc ith, the railroading of Foster, Minor, Amt¢ ind Raymond, the leaders of the unemployc three years prison for the “serious crime f leading the workers in a struggle again ,gtarvation. Fascist Methods, ‘his campaign of terror against the worker the fascist methods that are being perfecte is part and parcel of the war preparatior whieh the capitalist class of the United State is making against its imperialist rival—Great Britain—and for an attack against the Sovie Union as a means for solving the present crisis at-the expense of the lives of the working es. "Eikteen years after the beginning of tho ! blood bath we find the same ruling class + * the guise of peace pacts and limit» a _ maments conferences, building tre mements and appropriating billis Aidi conspiracy against the lives of the working masses are the social-fascists of the socialist party and the fascist A. F. of L. The impudence and the total disregard for the interests of the workers by the boss class and their government is well expressed by the following facts. While eight million unemployed are. starving and this army is increasing daily by the lay- offs announced by such corporations as the General Motors, Ford, National Cash Register, the New York Central and others, here in New York, we find more than 1,700 evictions being handled by the courts every week which is 600 more per week than in the same period of last year. We see them dumping 250,000 tons of food stuffs into the river in New York in order to keep up the prices of food. We see the Tammany Hall bosses govern- ment appropriating 550,000 dollars a year as an increase in salary for the government de- partment heads. In Washington we witness the spectacle of a $163,000,000 refund to large corporations as having been “overpaid” by these too honest people, and last but not least, the additional appropriation of a billion dollars for new cruis- ers. All this is taking place while millions of unemployed workers are starving. The Fish Committee. Now comes the Fish committee which is supposed to be investigating whether the Amer- ican working class isn’t being bribed by the Soviet Union to fight against these damnable conditions, We know well that the Fish Committee has been created for laying the basis for more laws of persecution and for an attack against the Soviet Union, the only fatherland of the whole working class. What must be the reply of workers to this ‘lass of exploiting parasites? We must organize and fight. We must build ‘he Communist Party, the revolutionary leader of the working class. We must build the Trade Union Unity League nd its militant industrial unions. We must uild the unemployed councils affiliated with he T.U.U.L. that will tur this army of the unemployed which the bosses are using as a “ub over the heads of the employed into an organization of struggle uniting the employed aid the unemployed. August First has been accepted by the in- srnational working class as a Jay for demon- 3 ration against imperialist war. In New York City we will gather by the thousands in Union Square on August First with our banners and ogans. We will unite in a tremendous dem- isivation Negro end white, native aad foreign orn. employed and unemployed in a demon- sivation of worl ng class solidarity ageinst im- list war, fcr the defense of the, Soviet Union, for work or wages and unemployment insurance, for the seven-hour day and five dey week, against wage cuts and speed-up, against e ictions of the unemployed, for the release of F ster, Minor, Amter and Raymond. Let our slogan be on August First: Not One nt for Imperialist War, All Funds to the »ployed! March from factories, shops and mines directly after work on August Ist to the demonstrations against war and unemployment. Rally your shop mates under the slogan: “Not one cent for arma- ments: all funds for the unem- ployed!” ‘ “of the unemployed in the United States. Dogs of War x ye An anti-air craft gun squad of the National Guard in training for war. mean air warfare. means intensified misery for the And anti-air craft guns Bosses war masses. For the revolutionary overthrow of the mass murder sys- tem! Out on August Ist! a “Disarmament” Intensive anti-air craft gun training is now being pushed in all military units. Imperialist war against the Soviet Union— the toilers fatherland—now threat- ens the working class of the world. The streets of the capital- ist world will shake to the tread of the millions determined to de- fend the land of their class. Fish, War and the Elections By JACK PERILLA. 0% the eve of August First the campaign to create the ground for declaring the Com- munist Party illegal is in full swing. This is being done with the help of the Fish commit- tee, the American Civic Federation and all the enemies of the Soviet Union (Russian mon- archists, socialists, the A. F. of L. leadership and the renegades to the Communist move ment). The move is not accidental if we con sider the growth of influence of the Commu- nist Party among the American working class and the tremendous steps forward being taken in the Soviet Union in the building of a social- ist economy. The Communist Party, the only Party of the working class, is the obstacle in the way of the boss class, to carry on an offensive against the working class coupled up with an attack against the Soviet Union. The Fish commit- tee is making very serious efforts to find out whether the Communist Party is stirring up the workers against the bosses. No investiga- tion is necessary to ascertain these facts. The activities of the Communist Party are known to the entire working class of the United States. In every battle of the workers, in no matter what industry, the Communist Party, the revolutionary trade unions and its mem- bers can be found in the forefront of every struggle for the improvement of their condi- tions. The organized might of the American working class will stop them in their attempt to stifle the Communist Party. The wholesale arrests of Communists and revolutionary workers in all sections of the country are indicative of their plan of sup- pression, The leadership of the .unemployed movement, Comrades Foster, Minor, Amter and Raymond, are today serving a three-year sen- tence for fighting for the relief of the millions The answer of the workers of New York state to their imprisonment was to nominate Comrade W. Z, Foster for Governor and Comrades Minor and Amter for congressional offices in the coming elections. The committee which was elected by the New York State Nominating Jonvention and approved by 13,000 workers in Madison Square Garden to notify our im- orisoned leaders of their nomination for office | vas asked to go back to the workers in New York and create a tremendous mass move- nent in support of the election program of he Communist Party, a program based on the lemands of the working class. The election program aims at a struggle against war and in defense of the Soviet Union, demanding to turn the war budget into relief for the unem- ployed, for a struggle against wage-cuts and speed-up, and not on the fake issues of the capitalist parties and socialists. This will be the answer to the imprisonment of our com- rades, Foster, Minor, Amter and Raymond, and all the political prisoners and against the enemies of the working class. The socialist party—the third capitalist party” has donned the cloak of respectability. It has now undertaken to “reform” capital- ism; to make it more palatable for the Amer- ican working class. The nightsticks and pails of the socialists are no different to the work- | ers from those of the other capitalist parties | (Milwaukee, Reading, Pa., etc.). In Schenec- tady, N. Y., one of the worst open-shop cities in the countty, they openly co-operate with the trustified General Electric Co. The socialist party must be exposed in its true role—as the worst betrayers of the American working class, All militant and revolutionary workers must not only register and vote Communist, but he!p to place the Party on the ballot in co-opera- tion with the sections of the Communist Party. We must rally all the workers in the trade unions and mass organizations in the support of tos eution program of the Communist and Link This Up...” By HARRISON GEORGE. Wee the Communist Party begins a campign, a shower of instructions, at least’ it seems to be a shower, or something still heavier, rains upon the lower sections and are passed on to the memberhship. In reality, the “shower” isn’t so heavy as it appears. But it seems that way to the ranks of the Party because around the cam- paign our members are told—‘“and link this up with”. . . and there follows a dozen or so aims, all desirable. And the comrades feel ap- palled. Actually, the “linking up” is not such a ter- rific job as it sounds. Why? In the first place, the higher leading committees, having in view not only a part, but all the varied activities of the different organizations, all the so-to-speak molecular action of each Party member among the masses, is merely reiter- ating the necessity of regarding all these dis- tinct tasks and actions as such, in itself, a con- tributing part of the great movement forward toward revolution which the Party leads. Each basic unit of the Party, and each mem- ber in it, has specified tasks. The leading com- mittees cannot, of course, write a separate in- struction to each member, and must comprise in its instructions that which will set all pnits, fractions and so on, into aetivity, the execu- tive of all such basic bodies assigning each member tasks according to the capacity and field of action of the individual. “An Approach.” The question then resolves into one of what is known as “approach,” the way each in- dividual member or nucleus group approaches the worker or body of workers to be; first, interesten; then, convinced; and then organ- ized into the action contemplated. There is too much stupidity, nothing less, in “approach.” Our Party does not “command” the workers, but convinces them that the ac- tion it proposes is necessary. A worker may be approached by a Party member. The work- er does not know that there is any connection between, let us say, the threatened war on : the Soviet Union, the “Naval Treaty,” the Chinese revolution, the Fish Committee, the unemployment he is either aware of or victim of, and the wage cuts and speed-up and long hours he directly suffers from. If the Party member does not himself under. stand the connection between all these seem- inly separate things, then, of course, he is lacking in the qualities of a Communist and seriously needs an elementary education. Wrong Methods. If he knows the connection, he is a very bad Communist, indeed, if he, when he approaches the non-Party worker, leaps over all things in which the worker feels a direct interest and tackles the subject of the Fish Committee, let us say, and asks in a peremptory way that the worker support the Communist Party by marching in the anti-war demonstration called by the Party for August 1. Only a very bad Communist does such sort of things, and it is still worse when, if the worker, as is natural, rejects the proposal, is treated with hostility or snobbishness as “no Party and all phases of the campaign. August 1—International Red Day against | imperialist war, must be the beginning of this movement in every city and hamlet in the state of New York in support of the election program of the Communist Party and to rally the workers against the imperialist war. ; near Graz. good.” <A lot of comrades get the ide the workers around them are “not rea “backward,” from these comrades’ ow takes in approaching their fellow worke Correct Methods. There are as many different ways proaching workers as there are w though the basic rule always applies of ing them that you are interested in they are thinking about that even i don’t say so at the first word they ce are interested in their wages and con and by showing your concern, the re: cern of our Party and the T.U.U.L., is 1 better those conditions, your interest i» aspirations gradually—sometimes qui sometimes slowly—but surely, will leac to be interested in your aspirations, C nist aims and the revolutionary goal class struggle. I have said that this development som is quick. Lut often Communists who work in a shop think that it ought speeded up and the first day then go ir job they think it is “real Bolshevik” everybody in sight that they are “reds whole history of the Russian Revolutior 1905 until date, what’s what about T: Lovestone, et. al., and ask all hands to for the big works that—to them—soun an appeal for armed insurrection befo whistle blows. No Methods—No Communist Some Communists do just such fool : though the great big evil and the wors the right danger in our Party, is those members—they are not Communists at who will and do work in a shop ten yea not a soul in the place would ever drear they are Communists. The only peopl “know it” ig the Party, and it is mis They only are in the way of our Part don’t belong in a Communist Party of Incidentally, some of the comrades wt ishly “rush things” and bring down dis and victimization on themselves and w around them, furnish the excuse for man right elements who point to such abu cover their evasion of work. There are thousands of splendid con in our Party, and their task is to see tha these deviations in practice are correctec each member understands how to ap} those workers with whom he comes in ec And in the carrying out of the work, to up” that work with the cleansing of our from dead timber, to “link up” practical with the fight against the right danger. In another article, the writer will ta some other aspects of this question of “1 up” what appears to be “separate” task: a single unit, the mass work of our Part Fascists Attack Workei (Wireless by Inprecorr) ( VIENNA, July 29—On Sunday, eigh loads of Fascists passed through Pur They have just returnec operations, Minor collisions “with W Cyclist Club outing group developed i pitched battle. Over a thousand shots fired and many persons from both side suffered serious injury were taken to hospitals, _ * &* LINZ, July 29—On Saturday, Fascists bed two workers very seriously.

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