The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 7, 1930, Page 3

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\ Machine gun companies on nearby .many Hall will be performed. Mr. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1930 : Page Three SB EES RS ore coms =-_ Ee ay rs SHO YP Ss 4 diss ‘xX Ea EE Layoffs and Long Hours Go Hand in Hand in San Jose San Jose, Cal. Daily Worker: Dear Comrades: In the Garden City as San Jose is commonly called here the workers in the canneries are working six- teen hours a day and some days even more. One of our comrades from the I. D. L. was discharged for not com- ing back for more after one of these long days. He was allowed to go for a lunch} and did not know he was supposed to report back. The slave driver said there were plenty of men to take his place. So he could get his | princely salary of 35 cents per hour and go. Conditions are nothing better than rotten here. One of the big Electric Corpora- tions laid off 400 men in this dis- trict a few days ago. : —J. D. BRIBE TO VOTE FOR BULWINKLE But Textile Workers Will Vote Communist | Charlotte, N. C. I am working in the Louise mill in Charlotte where the stretchout has been increased to a point where we mill folks can stand it no longer. Last week my wages amounted to a little over $5 and this is about all we mill folks get for our hard work. The mill only runs every other week and lots of us are being laid off. Now the union is in and we are go- ing to join it and stick to it. Last week the superintendent of- fered to give some of us $2 apiece if we would vote for Bulwinkle. Lots of the folks took the $2, but none of us are going to vote for the murderer of Ella May. We are ali going to stand behind the Com- munist Party and vote for Dewey Martin, the organizer of the Na- tional Textile Workers for Senate, and J. A. Rogers and W. G. Binkley for Congress, Judge Crater Alive; Disappeared to Avoid Probe of Million-Dollar Hotel Libby Steal This is the twelfth instalment of the series of exposures of Tammany Hall. * * . By ALLAN JOHNSON. Not all the acts in the five-ring judicial circus now’ playing in Tam- Tuttle and Mr. Norman Thomas and Gov. Roosevelt and the capital- ist newspapers will see to that. The juggling acts will go on, as will some of the acrobats, but the magi- cians, those who were to pull evi- dence of judicial graft out of hidden safety deposit boxes, have suddenly lost their skill or have “disap- peared.” It has been decided by the “59” who rule America that nothing of real importance shall be divulged about the method of buying judge- ships. America is passing through the worst depression in its history and the working class is in what the bosses call a “dangerous mood.” The Communist-led demonstration in Cleveland against Hoover and for “Bread or Work” is proof of that. There, for the first time in Amer- ican history, a president was escorted out of a meeting hall by Yoldiers with fixed bayonets, while roofs were given order to sweep the surrounding streets with bullets if the starving workers approached too close to the president. Newspapers Protect Tammany. The importance of this incident was hidden by every capitalist news- paper in teh land, without excep- tion, just as the New York news- papers are trying desperately to put the kuietus on news of corrup- tion in Tammany. It has been de- cided by the capitalist powers that be that only enourh graft charges shall be hurled in Tammany’s teeth to allow Tuttle to make a “respec- table” showing against Roosevent in the coming election. \ They realize well that if all the Tammany beans are spilled, the working class might get an insicht into the barbarous system that en- slaves them to a few thousand mil- lionaires, and bring nearer the day when workers will destroy the whole kit and kiboodle of capitalism along with its three parties, republican, democratic and false “socialist.” The kid gloves with which the “disappearance” of Judge Crater is handled is proof in point. On Aug. 6, Justice Crater, of the Supreme Court, disappeared the day before he was about to be questioned in re- gard to the purchase of his job by Magistrate Ewald, It is no accident, moreover, that. Judge Crater withdrew $22,500 from FOSTER, AMTER, RAYMOND GREET WORCORS MEET Need for Organized Correspondents Seen October 1, 1930. New York City and Vicinity, Workers Correspondents Conference Dear Comrades: Reading today about the Workers Correspondents Conference which is to be held, and recognizing its great importance at this period of the class struggle, we feel impelled to write you a few lines. The world situation is rapidly sharpening. The stupendous growth of socialism in the Soviet Union, the deepening antagonisms in all cap- italist and colonial countries, the re- volutionization of the workers and peasants in Germany, China and In- dia, the radicalization of the masses the world over, with the interna- tional conflicts becoming more acute so that the imperialist war danger becomes more imminent, make the revolutionary working class press of ever greater importance. Heart of Workers Press. The very foundation of the revo- lutionary working class press, its heart and soul, are the workers cor- respondents operating among the masses of the workers in the indus- tries. They help most effectively to root the revolutionary papers among the masses and to draw them close to the revolutionary organizations. This makes it imperative to build up corps of workers correspondents in all industries, in all sections of the country, In view of these facts, among the important tasks con- fronting the conference, we would like to mention the following: 1. Establish workers corres- pondents in every important shop. 2. Establish them in every loc- ality. 3. Establish them in every local union (also A. F. of L.) and Un- employed Council. 4. Form local organizations of the Worker Correspondents and take steps to train ever more mil- time. Twenty-two thousand five hundred dollars was Crater’s salary ,for one year, and that is exactly what he paid as a first installment for his posmition on the Supreme Court bench. JUDGE CRATER IS ALIVE. It might just as well be men- tioned here as any other place- that Justice Crater is not dead, and did not disappear because he wanted to avoid questioning in the Ewald ‘case. He has disap- peared from his old haunts be- cause he is afraid that he is to be put on the carpet for his part in Ewald’s buying of a judgeship, it may be inadvertently discovered by the grand jury that he made $850,000 by acting as receiver in the crooked Libby Hotel bank- ruptcy. Some of the Libby Hotel graft has found its way right into City Hall, and if Crater is found dead of unnatural causes within teh next few months it will be be- because Tammany ordered his death, Judge Crater has been officially listed as missing by the police de- partment. On the police blotter next to his name a clerk has written “confidential” in red ink. A brief resume of the Libby Hotel case may explain this extremely unusual notation. In 1920 Max Bernstein, a religious Jew with a goo edye for business, had a vision’ The vision was noth- ing more or less than a gigantic hotel where no one who was not of Jewish parentage would be encour- aged to enter. Red plush and thou- sands of yards of gold trimming would soothe the feeling of inferi- ority of fat sweatshop owners who felt uncomfortable in the nordic environment of the up-town hotels. The dietary laws were to be strict-' ly observed the president’s suite was to be reserved for none other than the Chief Rabbi of Poland himself, whether he wanted it or not. \ Religious Businessman. To this end, the religious Mr. Bernstein proceeded to hornswaggle 2,500 Jewish pushcart peddlers and street, vendors into “investing” $10 and $20 bills in the project that was to redound to the glory of the Jew- ish god and ultimately to Judge Crater’s bank account. But no matter how much the re- ligious pushcart peddlers csraped and saved, they couldn't » collect quite enough to pay for the entire cost of the hotel. They were put in touch with a Christian mortgage house only too anxious to cement the relations between Jew and Gen- tile—ad a price, The bankers of- fered to lend Mr, Bernstein and his Estimate 70,000 Are Jobless in S. Bend as Plants Shut Down South Bend, Ind. Dear Comrades: People are about dying. No work anywhere in South Bend. Studebaker Corporation is about to close up. Their wood shop, that is the main branch, where a worker can make his living is moving to the southern part of the country. The machine shop and assem- bly, ete, are planning to work only two days a week for the month of October and then they are closing the plant entirely. My estimation of people in South Bend without work must be around 70,000. We hope to establish Unem- ployed Councils within two weeks. —P. D. and J. B. itant workers journalism. In face of the serious and grow- ing unemployment and the wage cutting campaign which will become more drastic, the Workers Corres- pondents must make it their special task to report on unemployment, evictions, wage cuts, speed-up, con- ditions of the young, Negro, and women workers. The Workers Correspondents, however, have not completed their task by writing for the revolution- ary paper. They must try to or- ganize for mass distribution and sale of the paper at their shop which contains their articles. In fact, the Workers Correspondent must become a booster for the re- volutionary paper in his shop, union, ete., as well as participate in all the struggles. These are but a few of the tasks that the conference, in our opinion, must undertake to solve. The im- provement of our revolutionary press, its spreading among the masses, its depicture of the growing struggle, are tasks of tremendous importance and the conference in New York must be the beginning of a series of conferences to be held in all industrial centers. Best wishes for the success of your conference! . Fraternally, Wm. Z. Foster, Harry Raymond, L Amter. in revolutionary inventosr were to be told that it was a million and a half dollar loan’, The insiders, including Mr. Bernstein, knew that actually only $975,000 was to be delivered for the con- struction of the hotel. The remain- der of the loan, $525,000, was to be kept by the mortgage company as a bonus for its magnanimity in dealing with lowly pushcart pedd- lars. Hotel Failure from Start The hotel was confpleted in 1926 and was a failure from the start. Things went from bad to much worse until last year, when the trus- tees filed suit to foreclose and asked for the appointment of a receiver. Joseph Force Crater, later to be ap- pointed to the supreme court bench and now taking a forced rest cure, was appointed receiver by Justice Levy, who is usually called in by Tammany when really dirty work is to be done. It was about this time that talk of the Christie-Forsythe St. widen- ing project began to be taken seri- ously. If these strets were act- ually to be widened, it would mean that the value of nearby houses the Hotel Libby included. Consequently the lawyer for the hotel asked Justice Mullen to stay the sale. He argued, correctly, that the American Bond and Mortgage Co., the “philanthropic” bankers who demanded and got $525,000 for a $1,500,000 loan, would be able to buy the property for $93,304.54 and reap a huge profit when the city would condemn the hotel for the street-widening project. Judge Mullan denied the stay, and. the next day the hotel was sold to the American Bond and Mortgage Co. for $75,000, Although the hotel was assessed at $1,330,000 by the city’s tax experts. Referee Quillinan, law partner of Senator Wagner, went so far as to walve the cash deposit of 10 per cent usually demanded of the successful bidder. “Feforming” Judge Involved The city formally took title to the hotel on August 8, 1929 and condemnation proceedings were started immediately. The condemn- ation proceedings were held before Judge McCook, who declared to the Extraordinary Grand Jury only a few weeks ago that he wants It “to go to the botfom” of the judge- buying system in New York. Judge McCook awarded $2,850,000 for the hotel which had been bought at auction for $75,000. It is the dif- ference between this sum and §$2,- 850,000—minus some incidental ex- penses—that is responsible for the disappearance of Justice Crater. As for the well-meaning but not his many bank stcounts about that! colleagues $1,500,000, That is, the! quite bright Jewish pushcart ped- ‘ ANSWER TO HERB President Lauds AFL! Treachery to Labor (Continued from Page 1) against wage-cuts, build the unem- | ployed councils and fight for shorter hours and™more wages, fight for | immediate relief for the unem-| ployed,” will be the slogans of the | workers’ mass demonstration. “Chief Foe of Communism.” Before Hoover spoke, the conven- tion, drenched with American flags and booze and band music, heard democratic party Mayor James M. Curley and republican Governor Frank G. Allen vie with each other in verbal bouquets to the A. F. of L. and attacks on the Communists. Allen declared: “The A. F. of L. has for 50 years been one of the staunchest bulwarks in defense of American institutions.” Curley attacked teh demonstra- tion of the starving unemployed in Cleveland, who demanded unem- ployment insurance when Hoover spoke to the bankers’ convention there. He told the A. F. of L. it was the principal fighter against Communism, and said: “To stem the possible tide of Communism and possible tide of unrest, you are go- ing to havfie a lot of help. He en- dorsed President Green’s stand against unemployment insurance and presented Green with the keys of the city and with a special cane. Hoover-Green Plot. In the open A. F. L. convention Hoover addressed the assembled $10,000-and-up officials as “You Working Men.” His remark (in- cluded in the printed copy of his speech sent to newspapers days be- fore it was delivered) mentioning Green’s introductory remark laud- ing Hoover as “interested in estab- lishing an American basis of wage” is clear proof that Hoover and Green plotted beforehand as to how best to fool the workers reading his speech. The A. F. L. delegates didn’t have to be fooled. Hoover was able to compliment them openly on their treachery to the exploited workers and jobless. He praised the A. F. L. aid in making these starving men bear the whole burden of the crisis as follows: “For the first time in more than a century of these recurring depressions we have been practically free of bitter indus- trial conflict.” Statistics of Treason. Later Hoover mentioned that in ‘dlers and small merchants who in- vested $350 000 in the monument to Jewish magnificence on New York’s East Side, they have been thrown organize in class unions to strike } the last crisis Labor Department figures showed 2,000 major con- flicts, while this crisis had shown only 300, mostly minor.” Hoover complimented the fat boys on their ability to make the workers displaced by machinery take the loss of their jobs with good grace and make those remaining work all the harder for the few jobs left, with| no provision whatever displaced. He lied when he said that since . » labor gives its full and un- restricted effort to reduce costs by the use of these machines and meth- ods, the saving from these reduced costs shall be shared between labor employer and consumer.” The lie was a stupid one, for his own as- sistant secretary of commerce has just published the fact that labor saving devices have since 1925 caused an increase in production of 36 per cent, and during the same period (before the present wage cuts) wages increased only 8 per cent. He lied further when he said that 2,000,000 workers displaced by ma- chinery according to Labor Depart- ment figures during the last ten years were, “someway, somehow + « reestablished in new industry and new services,” For Coal Monopoly. Hoover came out for a coal mon- opoly, to “reduce destructive com- petition ” and for “part time work instead of an unemployment dole.” Hoover lied again when he~said the unemployment crisis was “far less than one-half in proportion to our workers than in either England or Germany.” And Hoover lied again when he said that “in the large sense our manufacturing companies, railways, utilities and business houses have been able to maintain the estab- lished wages. Employers have spread their employment system- atically.” His own Labor Depart- ment admits 37,000 railroad work- ers fired in two months. In the face of all these lies, the sold-out international union rack- eteer officials cheered him. Another Fake Remedy. Just before Hoover’s speech the legislative council of the A. F. L. reported to the convention in the luxurious Statler Hotel that its plan for reducing unemployment was “funding of buying power” and pro- posed nine points for more fascis- ization of government through na- tional economic councils, etc., more public works, more vocational train- ing and “investigation.” All workers were barred from the Hoover speech. Special tickets were issued only to delegates and invited guests. It is significant that in this crisis and pre-war period, comes the first presidential address to an A. F. L. convention since Wilson’s war speech in 1917. With Boston wide open for the two big fascist conventions, and boozejoints, brothels and gambling dives doing a sizzling trade, the po- lice arrested Anna Brown, unem- ployed worker, distributing leaflets for the Oct. 9 mass meeting. FORM MARINE INTERNATIONAL for those a bone in the form of $9,000—to be divided among the 3,500 of them. (Tomorrow’s article will discuss Judge Bertini, former bootlegger.) Hoover Stresses the Fascist Role of Legion (Continued from Page 1) country has never stood more as- sured than at this moment,” and, with his tongue in cheek at the masses, further declared that the fascist, chauvinist American Legion, with its constant agitation for in- creased arming, was “the greatest guarantee of its continuance.” And, | for fear that hise meaning would not get across to some of the Legion pin-heads, he added: “The main- tenance of respect requires that we sustain a preparedness for defense that is impregnable.” Cabinet Makers Back Social Insurance Bill MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 6.—Cabinet Makers and Millmen, Local 1865 | A. F. of L., voted here tonight | unanimously to endorse the Work- ers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill and contributed financially for this campaign. Following the presentation of the bill by George Powers, secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, and Nick Maki, representing the Unem- | ployed Council and the Trade Union | Unity League, a lively discussion of | the membership took place. A large number of the members | are unemployed and the “Interna- tional” Union is only interested to | demand more assessments and other fees from the local, side-stepping completely the growing question of unemployment. FRENCH MINERS STRIKE. PARIS, Oct. 6.—A protest strike lasting 24 hours, and involving the whole of the coal mining industry of France, today voiced the ind‘g- nation of the mines, against the pre-arranged failure of the operat- ors in securing vacations with pay. The strike was almost 100 percent throughout the country. Register Today! Vote Communist! World Congress of Seamen Soon (Special Radiogram.) HAMBURG Germany, Oct. 6.— Thirty-eight delegates from class unions of the marine workers in 26 countries have organized the Mar- ine Workers’ International here. George Hardy is chairman, Walter is secretary, and George Mink.is on the executive ureau. There will be a world seamen’s congress within ten months. ~ Leer NEW YORK.—The convention to organize a marine workers interna- tional was called by the Red Inter- national of Labor Unions. Many marine worker delegates (including those from U. S.) to the Fifth World Congress of the R. I. L. U. went instructed by their member- ship to raise in the congress the question of calling such a conven- tion. VOTE COMMUNIST! MOSCOW.—In a leading article entitled, “The Development of the Revolutionary Crisis in Germany,” the “Pravda” deals with the Ger-| man election results as follows: “The elections in Germany are of | historic importance. They represent | the balance at the end of the first| stage of the world economic crisis | in a great capitalist country. They will operate as a further factor for | the unbalancing of the capitalist | CIVIL WAR IN BRAZIL LOOMS (Continued from Page 1) president, and Julio Prestes, “elect- ed” in the recent general elections, have been voted $12,000,000 by their | puppet parliament to conduct major | military operations against the strongly entrenched rebels. Wall Street Donates. The “revolt” is under the leader- president, Getulio Vargas, who was gas was given donations by Wall Street bankers, but the Luiz-Prestes outfit were more strongly trenched and received more support from the many British-controlled banks in Brazil. A cable from George Mayor, spe- cial United Press correspondent in Montevideo, Urugusy, which bor- ders the revolting Brazilian states, declares: “Dispatches reaching the city of Rivera, on the Brazil-Uruguay border, said most of the federal garrisons in the state of Rio Grande do Sul had joined the rev- olution. Revolt leaders said tehre was great unrest in the states of Parahyba, Rio Grande do Norte, Ceara and Piahuy—a tier lying along the northern coast just above Pernambuco. Sympathizers were increasing there, they claimed.” U. S. Steel Vargas, the leader of the insur- gent forces is president of the state of Minas Geraes, in which the United States Steel Corporation was grant- ed heavy concessions and promised to invest $250,000,000. Reports from Buenos Ayres state that President Uriburu, who is closely alligned with American im- perialism, has declared his sym- pathy with the Vargas uprising, and will aid it. Anglo-American Rivalries. From present aspects, terrific fighting looms in Brazil. The civil | war now threatening throughout Brazil in reality is a stage in the} onrushing war between Great Brit-| ain and the United States for dom- ination in Latin America. No word has come from Washington to date as to the attitude of the Hoover regime toward the civil war in Bra-| zil. However, there is little doubt that the Wall Street government is rapidly maneuvering its forces to aid Vargas, while British imperial-| ism is strongdy bolstering up the Luiz-Prestes outfit. | Communists Active. With the crisis in Brazil excep- tionally severe, there is widespread mass discontent throughout the en- tire country. The Vargas group is exploiting this discontent and rad- icalization to the full, putting up the hypocritical slogans of fighting against “imperialism”, i norder to utilize the mass uprising in the in- terets of American imperialism. The Communist Party of Brazil, which faces grave dangers, due to the martial law clamped down by the Luiz-Prestes government, is mobilizing the workers to fight in their own interests, and against the tools of both imperialist powers. READY FOR CIRCULATION the following new pamphlets from the International Pamphlet Series ‘ No. 6—SPEEDING UP THE WORKERS BY JAMES BARNETT The Speed-up and Rationalization in Industry..sesseeeeesss No. 7.—YANKEE COLONIES By HARRY GANNES A Study of the Philippines, Hawaii, Porto Rico and other American Possessions No. 8—THE FRAME-UP SYSTEM By VERN SMITH The developmnt of the frame-u: the class war, told against the cases .... oe No. 9—STEVE KATOVIS: The Life and Death of a Worker By A. B. MAGIL and JOSEPH NORTH No. 10.—THE HERETAGE OF GENE DEBS By ALEXANDER TRACHTENBERG The story of the development of this famous workin; leader and his role inthe labor movement . SPECIAL DISCOUNT ON QUANTITY ORDERS Rush orders for these pamphle mee: WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 48-50 East 13th Street, New York as an employers’ weapon in ack.gro,,nd of famous labor Seem er eerersereseeeessesesseasees 10¢ for use in election campaign 6 to ship of the “liberal” candidate for | en- | stabilization in Europe. They mark | the new and unexpectedly swift de- velopment of the revolutionary class } struggle and the radicalization of | the working masses in Germany. “Over four and a half million votes for the Communist Party} means about 4 million industrial | workers behind the Communist Par- | ty in the struggle for a Soviet Ger- | many. Almosk a million more votes than the Communist Party received | in 1924 at a time of post-war crisis. | 85 per cent more than at the last} elections. The splendid victories of the Communist Party in the indus- |trial areas demonstrate the speedy | revolutionization of the masses. | “The fascists have made tremen- dous gains and these gains have a/ double significance. First of all they| show that temporarily the German} bourgeoisie has succeeded in holding } back a large section of the radical} masses from communism. On the other hand, however, millions of land workers, small tradesmen, | clerks, unemployed workers and| even factory workers, particularly | the youthful section, have voted for | the anti-capitalist slogans of the| fascists. They voted for the fascists defeated in the last elections. va becanse they believed them to be} fighters for the social emancipation of the masses and against the Ver- sailles Treaty and the Young Plan. The millions who have voted for the fascists are millions who are no longer willing to live on in the old fashion and are seeking for a new path. The tremendous success of the fascists is a striking proof of the decomposition of the bourgeois order in Germany. “The social democrats have lost about 700,000 votes despite the fact that the total poll has increased by millions. This means that the so- cialists have lost the support of about a million workers. In Berlin, in the Ruhr district, in Upper Sile- sia, in Halle and in other industrial areas the social democrats are weaker than the communists. The result of the elections shows that the industrial workers are turning away from the social democracy. “The decay of the old bourgeois parts is obvious. “The magnificent victory of the Communist Party, -the*millions of fascist voters who reject the Young Plan, the severe defeat of the social democracy, the decay of the bour- geois parties, that is the balance of a year of the economic world crisis. This crisis will be intensified in the near future and particularly in Ger- many. Winter with 5 million un- employed workers (according to bourgeois statistics) is coming. Further wage reductions for broad masses of the workers are coming. “Our successes must not rise to our heads. We must mercilessly expose the deficiencies of our strug- gle against national and social fas- cism. The whole party and all its members must learn the lessons of the elections. “The elections clearly show the approaching sharper class struggle. Thé bourgeoisie will attempt to stem INTERNATIONAL NEWS “PRAVDA” POINTS OUT IMPORTANCE Cen. Excropean OF GERMAN COMMUNIST ADVANCES | War Danger Is Growing Great PRAGUE, Oct. 5.—More fuel has been added to the fires of the war danger in Central Europe by the interview of President Masaryk of Czechoslovakia stating that he would consider a revision of the Czech- Hungarian frontier. The Hungarian and Polish ministers have become het up about it. Recently the Czech army was put through full-time war maneuvers. Much modern equipment has been added to the Hungarian army. YUGOSLAV ARMAMENTS ARE BEING INCREASED BELGRADE (LP.S.)—The first Yugoslavian aeroplane carrier, the “Zmay,” entered the Dalmatian port of Tibar a few days ago, The new war ship was built at a Hamburg shipyard. It is the first unit of the Yugoslavian war navy. The ship is fitted with every up-to-date war equipment. Zagreb reports that a secret trial commenced in Sarajevo on 11 Sep- tember, of 25 persons charged with offences against the Fascist law for the protection of the state. The names of the accused, and the de- tails of the trial, are not allowed to be published by the Yugoslavian press. The heroic strike of 1,600 workers of the wood working workshops of Teslitsch, commenced on 28 August, had to be broken off on 12 Septem- ber. These workers, existing in the utmost poverty, have been simply starved into surrender by the em- ployers, aided by the social fascist trade unions. The cause of the strike was the proposed reduction of the wages of the unskilled work- ers by 25 per cent. The social fas- cist trade union leaders agreed to accept a wage cut of 8 per cent, the workers to pay their own social in- surance. Upon this the workers went on strike, and have only suc- cumber to the combined forces of the employers, the social fascists, and state power. That this strike could take place at all in the blood- iest and most reactionary dictator- ship of Europe is a proof of the growing revolutionary spirit of the proletariat of Yugoslavia. the tide with the fascist dictator- ship. Undoubtedly the development of the social democracy towards fas- cism will proceed at an ever increas- ing pace. The Communist Party must mobilize and organize the mas- ses of the toilers for a counter- offensive. The ten years of revolu- tionary experience and the bolshe« vist firmness of the German Com munist Party give us the guaranted that it will carry out its role as the historic leader of the German proletariat. Long live the Commun- ist Party of Germany, the fighting advance guard of the German pro- letariat! Long live the proletarian revolution in Germany! NOT TOO LATE! FOR WITNESSING THE NOVEMBER CELEBRATION IN U.S. You can still join one S. R. of the groups leaving for the Five-Year-Plan-Tour across the Soviet Union. Celebration in They will witness the November MOSCOW, LENINGRAD SPECIAL PRICES Hurry—Sailing October 15, S.S. Mauretania, and October 25, S.S. Europa. Ask for Particulars WORLD TOURISTS, Inc. 175 Fifth Ave. New York Algonquin 6656 Tickets to All Parts of the World

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