The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 9, 1930, Page 3

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. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1930 Page Three HOOVER GIVES OIL TRUST $40,000,000 GRAFT! 5,000 CLEVELAND JOBLESS WHO ASK BREAD ARE GIVEN CLUB- BINGS AT HOOVERS’ ORDERS. VOTE COMMUNIST! Big Growth of Jobless; Crisis Getting Worse (Continued from Page 1) swer is they show such drastic in- creases in the jobless army that the bosses do not want the work- ers to know the truth, especially in view of the approaching elec- tions. The Daily Worker several months ago definitely proved that the bosses’ “hope” for a seasonal im- provement in the fall was based on a whole tissue of lies, The truth is now being let out in dribbles. Instead of the usual seasonal iIn- erease—which comes even in the worst crisis years—this time the drift was sharply downward. Jobless Army Grows. TTheTreT is a tremendous in- crease in unemployment, From Detroit we get the news that the employment index of the industrial department of the Detroit Board of Commerce on Sept. 30 was 74.8, compared with 80.8 on Sept. 15, sand 83 at the end of August—a drop in one month of nearly eight points! What has become of Ford’s boasting that the auto in- dustry would be running at full blast at the end of September? Ford especially has cut his produc- tion more than half. They Admit It. From Washington comes the re- port that Senator Wagner, Tam- many tool, and one responsible for clubbing and jailing of the New York unemployed, admits unem- ployment “has increased steadily instead of declining.” We have better facts than Wag- ner gives us. The basic industries are now entering a sharper down- turn than ever before. Steel ingot production for September was 227,315 tons less in September than in August, and 1,659,909, or 33 per cent below the same period in September of 1929—and in Sep- tember, 1929, the crisis was already being felt! Worse still the out- look for the steel industry is blacker than these figures show. The New York Times becomes very gloomy about eptember steel pro- duction figures, and writes: “The monthly figures of the AmericaSn Iron and Steel Insti- tute, issued late yesterday after- noon, showed that steel ingot production of the entire country declined during eSptember to a new low level for the year. The figures were disappointing to many who ‘had ‘been expecting that September would show an increase in steel operations.” Freight Loadings Drop. One of the most accurate guides of the advance of the crisis, one which the bosses themselves watch very carefully, namely, freight car loadings, shows a decline to the lowest point in the present crisis. The N. Y. Times adjusted index for.car loadings dropped again for ‘the “week ending Sept. 27 to 80.4. This is the lowest point yet Saad ‘ pee =E- Fe «cry se SHOPS EK’ =a —E_ BOSS POLITICIANS ROBBING AID IN DYING EX-SOLDIER (By a Worker DAYTON, 0.— Correspondent) Here is a letter from an ex-serviceman now confined to bed in the Soldier’ served with the First Division during the world war. He He is 's Home at Dayton, Ohio. badly gassed and erippled. He has only a few months longer to live as he is 100 percent disabled. Being completely disabled he is entitled to $100 compensation and $57.50 war risk insur- ance. In other words, $157 e: ach month since 1919. This is still due him. At the present time the Veterans’ Bureau is trying to pass him off as insane; in order to appoint a guardian for him and place him in the asylum. The robbing Veterans’ reached, and comparatively is worse than at. any time in the terrific crisis of 1921-22. Vote Communist! The bosses know this winter will be hell for the workers, and they likewise know that the workers will not starve. There will be plenty of fighting this winter, with the bosses girding for struggle against the demands of the unem- ployed. Hoover’s attack against Bol- shevism shows the bosses know who the vanguard of the workers are. It shows the bosses realize that the workers are joining the struggle for unemployment insur- ance, under the leadership of the revolutionary unions and the Com- munist Party. Against the increas- ing attacks of the bosses, the work- ers must strengthen their ranks. November 4 will be a concentra- tion point for the class struggle. Vote Communist and strengthen thefight for unemployment insur- ance. Murphy Starts “Free” Job Office Detroit, Mich. Editor Daily Worker: Enclosed two clippings of De- troit News of Oct. 4. Will see in them some more bluff about hir- ing 500 jobless daily by the city, by notifying them by mail that they are registered. (The 500 who were notified by mail are to apply at the same type of wage-cutting employment bureau that the boss- es epened in New York.—Editor). A let of the workers will be starving to death waiting to be notified for non-existent jobs. This is only another trick to quiet the suffering thousands of jobless here this winter. PF, 8. “®Bureau will then confiscate all that is due this veteran as they have done to many ‘others.—Note R. C. Chel Diy S Dear Editor:— When you can find space in your paper will you please print this jarticle. My name can be used and I also will stand back of anything I write. Railroad Vet. In 1919 I put in for an examina- tion from the United States Vet- erans’ Bureau. In August, 1930, Frank T. Hines, director of |the bureau, granted me an examination in the Veterans’ Bureau on 1015 Vine St., Cincinnati, Ohio. I was examined by their professional doc- tors; X-rayed and had a general ex- amination, Now to beat me out of what rightfully belongs to me, Dr. R, A. Anderson of the bureau, with his assistant and manager, wants. to Send me to the insane hospital at Chillicothe, Ohio. For what reason I do not know and cannot find out. I am under the impression it is to do me out of what is due me. I have taken my case up with Senator Simon D. Fess, republican, of Ohio; Sen- ator David I. Walsh of Massa- chusetts, Senator Robert Wagner of New York state, Congressman Roy G. Fitzgerald of Ohio, Con- gressman William J. |Granfield and the Speaker of the House, Nicholas Longworth, but cannot get one of these politicians to go to the front for me. I know that there are no professidnal politi cians who are honest; they are all deceivers, camouflagers, preten- ders and posers, because they rep- resent the parasites. They cannot possibly be honest with themselves and get anywhere in their chosen professiop. They are obliged to serve their masters and let the people go hang. Vote Communist in November for the Workers’ Social Insurance Bill. 2c HR, SOUP BOSS LEAVES ESTATE ~ OF $150 08600 Terrible Conditions In Campbell Soup Co. (By a Worker Correspondent) CAMDEN, N. J.—The daily news- papers of Camden and its big broth- ers across the river, Philadelphia, are full of soup. The above line is not meant as a joke. Sprawled all over the dailies of these two cities are the pictures of the “prince” and “princess” of Soup—Campbell’s Soup Co., to be ex- act. From Workers’ Sweat’ | “Dr.” John T. Dorrance, president and owner of the Campbell Soup Co, died on Sept. 21, 1980. “Dr.” Dorrance was no ordinary exploiter. No indeed. In fact, judging from his will probated today he leaves an estate of 150,000,000, second only to the late Payne Whitney's estate of $194,000,000. He was one of the greatest of all America’s parasites. The Campbell Soup Co. employs 5,000 workers, dreadfully exploited. In fact, prior to death, Dorrance suc- ceeded in reducing the pitiful wages from 83 cents to 28 cents an hour. This means a net saving of 50 cents a day, $3 a week upon each worker for the new industrial prince, John Dorrance, Jr., eleven years of age and his sister princesses. Cut Wages The will is an ironcladed one, so worded that the control of Camp- bell’s cannot pass out of the hands of the family. Not one cent for the underpaid workers and $150,000,000 to a hand- ful of parasites. And though wages are coming | down in Campbell’s the price of soup \in restaurants or in cans at the cor- ner grocery remains substantially the same. . “Dr.” Dorrance had a number of homes, including one at Radnor, Pa., worth $1,000,000. Vote Communist! Register Today! We don’t want their lousy pensions, which they rob and steal from us. We want $25 a week when unem- ployed. EDWIN DUNER, Judge Macrery Killed for Refusing to The Daily Worker exposures of Tammany graft finally forced the capitalist press to lift the lid a trifle yesterday. After the Daily Worker came out on Tuesday, re- vealing for the first time what the capitalist press already knew —but was hiding—that Judge Crater disappeared because of being involved in the crooked bankruptcy proceedings of the Hotel Libby, in which Crater and the other Tammanyites in on the deal cleaned up over $1,500,000. At once there was a scurrying ‘around and Walker immediately called a “conference” on the sub- ject. And the capitalist press, which had sat upon the story for months, for the fixst time began some cautious admissions about Crater’s mix-up in the Hotel Libby steal. i This is the th article in the series of Tammany exposures. Read them first in the Daily Worker! * * bd F By ALLAN JOHNSON. Although Tammany will occasion- ally accept substitutes for cash when it sells a udgeship, once “it reaches an agreement with a buyer it relentlessly insists the full price be paid. There are innumerable example, but that of Judge Mac- rery’s case is most revealing of all. About a year ago Magistrate Macrery was called to the office of Andrew Keating in the Chanin Building. Keating is the leader of the 18th Assembly District and as such is,empowered (by Tammany) to sell a specified number of judge- ships. One of these, a magistracy, he sold to Macrery, who found the job so pleasant and profitable that he paid $30,000 for a reappvint- dent. iy Refused to Pay $10,000. Macrery has been called to Keat- ing’s office to pay the last $10,000 installment on the price of his judgeship. Macrery refused. Hither he considered the original price of his job too high or his finances wer tied up, but in any event he couldn’t meet the demand for the $10,000. Macrery, never a robust individ- ual, was given a sound thrashing for his refusal. His assailant must for Macrery collapsed and appeared to be at the point of death. Keat- ing rushed him to the office of Dr. Max Greenwald, 39 W. 69th St., where he died, “Heart disease,” the doctor and the city medical exam- iner called it. Brother Admits Killing But Retracts, Keating was then and continues to be in the midst of a bitter fight with Patrick Dowd for the control of the booty in the 18th District. A few weeks after Macrery was killed, Edward Broderick, Dowd’s chief lieutenant, declared publicly that Macrery’s brother, Wallace Macrery, told him that the judge had been killed because of his re fusal to pay the full price of his judgeship. Judge Macrery’s brother later de- nied this, after political pressure had been brought to bear on him, and District Attorney Banton, in- stead of investigating Broderick’s charge, tried twice to have him in- dicted for perjury, although the Grand Jury refused each time to find a true bill, The case was forgotten by every- one but Macrery’s relatives until the present election campaign, when the charges were reiterated, but this time more quietly, by ating’s enemies. In a magnificent display of righteousness, Keating demanded that Macrery’s body, which had never been subjected to an autopsy, be exhumed. This was about a year after Macrery had been buried. Judge Follows Orders. As per schedule, Supreme Court Justice Hammer was asked for an order permitting the body to be exhumed, And also as per schedule, Justice Hammer refused. Attorney General Ward, a republican, now took a hand and promised to inves- tigate the charges. Evidently the trail grew too hot, for soon after he announced that after a confer- ence with the presidents of the two bar associations he “had decided for the ‘present not to widen the scope of the Ewald investigation to cover oh costs of office buying in New Ward’s implication that investi- gations of capitalists by themsel¥es do uncover important sometimes ~ have regretted his act immediately,|facts is belied by the fact that he the New York bench, Only a republican, is working night and day to keep democratic corruption hidden, and that another republi- can, Assistant Attorney General Todd, appointed J. Edward Lum- bard, a member of the law firm whose senior partner is Tammany leader Curry’s best friend, to in- vestigate Tammany corruption! All that would be necessary to complete a perfect fiasco would b to appoint Morris Hillquit, leading a Tammany Hall, the Real Capitol of New York State “socialist,” banker and defender of labor gunmen, to investigate both republican and democratic corrup- tion. In such an eventuality, Hil that as a result of his investigation he had collected evidence which de- ™manded the immediate overthrow of the wicked Bolsheviks of the Soviet Union by the United States govern- ment. And he would almost cer- tainly recommend, in addition, that a couple of “socialist” generals be appointed te put the finishing touches to the job. ‘ The large sums paid by those who want capitalist judgeships is the price they pay for the right to graft in some “outside activity.” These outside activities may range from running a half dozen speakeasies to floating stock in non-existant com- panies. Ewald, about whose proved office-buying something may—and then again may not—be done before an American attack on Soviet Russia relegate his case to the limb of the unimportant, was known as one of the most merciless men ° on one Pay Last Installment on Judgeship thing could temper his secerity. And that was for a litigant to buy stock in the company in which Ewald was “interested.” It was not an unusual thing for Ewald to call a defendant into his private cham- ber, sell him some stock in his com- pany, and then discharge the case or hand, down a suspended sentence. No politician, no matter how high his office, is averse to becoming a “director” in a company which sells stock to the public despite the fact that its assets may be confined to | the imagination of the company’s | sponsors. Gov, Roosevelt waited un- til he was elected governor to re- ign from the board of directors of the Consolidated Automobile Mer- andising Co., through whose fraud- . ulent sale of stock investors have | lost millions. (Tomorrow’s article will deal wtih Judge Martin, super salesman of ‘ worthles stock.) GREEN AND LEWIS PLAN TED HEALY COMEDY , Zelma O'Neal, who was last seen here’ in “Follow Thru,” was signed by Morris Green and Lewis E. Gensler for an important role in support of Ted Healy in their new and as yet untitled musical comedy by Russell Crouse and Stanley quit could be expected to announce/ Rauh, wu) Gensler, it is stated, will write the music for the new show, and the lyrics will be provided by Owen Murphy and Robert A. Simon. Gen- sler, it will be recalled, wrote the music for “Queen of Hearts,” “Queen High.” Mare Connelly will stage the play. Kidney an Bladder trues Santal Midy has been Lrsderig ier Rape Ra vo pond aches, should not a Com tol got tention Santal Midy ‘DEMAND MINOR | Four Acute Attacks of Appendic tis (Continued from Page 1) Hospital on Welfare Island), and finally that all the doctors agreed that Minor should be operated on} immediately, within 24 hburs or} less.” | The I. L. D. statement points out that Minor’s release from his six | months’ sentence given him as a delegate of the 110,000 is only a matter of ten or twelve days, but that holding him that long endan- gers his life. Suffers For Leadership. Minor was taken from the prison hospital on Welfare Island and placed at hard labor on prison fare as revenge for the exposure of | graft, mistreatment of worker pris- Ongrs and luxury for millionaire politicians. This transfer caused murder him now as further re- venge on a workers’ leader. Preparations are being rushed, Communist Party units and union locals and workers’ fraternal groups participating in a mass sale of tick- ets for the Red Rally Oct, 21 at 7:30 p. m. in Madison Square Gar- den. This mass meeting is to rat- ify the Communist candidates and start their election tour. Though some are already on the way, Fos- ter, candidate for Governor; Minor and Amter, candidates for Con- gress, will only be released from prison on that date unless the work- lers’ protest against killing Minor in jail gets him out earlier. Foster and Amter will be principal speak- ers at the rally. PROTEST AFL. WAR PLOTTING Demonstration Before Convention Hall (Continued from Page 1) Union Hall, Berkeley and Apple- ton Sts., Thursday, at 8 p, m., which mobilizes for the demonstration Tuesday and exposes the menace to the workers and unemployed, particularly the foreign-born, in the double fascist convention here of the A. F. of L. and Legion. Speak- ers will be among others: ‘ohn Schmies of the national office of the Trade Union Unity League, calling the meeting; and Nat Kap- | INTERNATIONAL TELUS OF SOVIET STRUGGLE AGAINST BRIEFS FROM ALL LANDS KULAKS AND COUNTER-REVOLUTION ®: Role of Menshevists and Former Czarist | Lackeys Brought to Light by OGPU | MOSCOW. — “Pravda” publishes an e by Comrade Popov en- titled, “In the Decisive Stage of the Struggle for the liquidation of the| K ” The author analyzes in il those elements which support| aks and declares: i ‘These elements are composed al-| ost exclusively of persons who fo belonged to the ruling classes or were its lackeys. As is | revolv ry groupings. One of |these groups was under the leader- Iship of the typical Kulak ideologis |Professor Kondratyev. Kondratyev and his friends Professor Makarov) ada and former commander of the | American Legion, spoke, so did | Mary Anderson, head of the} women’s bureau of the U. S. De- ‘partment of Laboor, and Anna Fitzgerald of the Women’s Union | Label League. A representative of | the white guard “Veterans of For-) eign Wars” praised the A. F. of L. for its attacks on Communism. John P. Frey, head of the Metal Trades Department of the A. F. of L., opened the session with a speech on the yellow dog contract, in which he applauded the justices of the U. S. Supreme Court and republican and democratic politicians and, making no call to the workers to defend the right to organize, urged upon them only legalistic and lobby- ing measures. Where Haines Gets His. A leaflet was distributed to all the tables announcing that’ Harry Haines, vice-president of the Phila- delphia branch of the Full Fash-/ |me lan, district organizer of the Com- munist Party. Hurley this morning was escorted to his place on the platform by Berry. Hurley praised the jingo- ism and war preparation of the A. F. of L. and its war on the work- ers’ standards of living. eH said: “There is not in the world a labor organization at nationalistic as the A, F, of L.” He “looks to the A. F. of L- as a bulwark against un- rest and foreign influence.” He stated: “We are. receiving most hearty co-operation in the national defense program from the A. F. of L.,” and he echoed other big bosses, “The A. F. of L. kept its promise to prevent strikes.” Hur- ley likewise repeated the lie of Hoover that the bosses had kept. their promise not to cut wages. Jack McNeider, minister to Can- Granite Jobless Thousands Reject Fake Relief (Continued from Page 1) and then keep them satisfied with fake charity relief. All the factories here are cutting wages. The Commonwealth has cut wages in many departments and will continue cutting, we may be sure of that. Their poisonous paper, the Commonwealther, no longer dares to come out with statements that everything will be all right soon, Of course the boss paper says that it hopes to have something better to report shortly, but the workers are no longer so easily fooled by the snaky Commonwealther. It is known now by the workers that we are in for a tough, terrible winter, and they will fight like hell with the unemployed council. The American Federation of Labor continues double-crossing the workers here as everywhere. The A.F.L. has about five locals in the rolling mills here and permits four locals to work while the fifth is _out on strike. Scabs are working with the other union hands, but the double-crossing American Federation of Labor doesn’t seem to mind. ‘The workers here all know what the A.F.L. is and are plenty hot about it. They know that the A.F.L. sold them out in the Stamping Works, | the Commonwealth, Coke plant and now rolling mill is next. The A.F.L. here, of course, is doing nothing for the unemployed. They can’t pay dues so that Mr. Bill Green and Co. can have a good time with the big | bosses! The unemployed council here will keep on exposing the traitor- | ous sell-out unions of the A.F.L. I'll send more news about conditions here later. joned Hosiery Workers of the United | Textile Workers, was in Boston as salesman for the products of Nick- els and Lauber Co., “Modern Maid Mill.” Muste, a forlorn‘visitor at the A. F. of L. convention (from which workers are barred) held a meet- ing last ight which was a bib flop. About 70 Y. P. S. L’s, school teach- erSs and liberal ladies came. Muste spoke, criticizing the A, F. of L. convention for not endorsing Smith for president and urging “public works” gs a cure for unemployment, A certain Elmer A, Carter, in- troduced as a Harvard graduate, spoke, but made no mention of A. F. of L. Jimerowism, nor of lynch- ing. There is no afternoon session to- day, the delegates all going on a bus ride. Major Fighting Is on in Brazil; (Continued from Page 1) volt is the same as the one which took place in Argentina, when the Uriburu clique took power away from the pro-British Irigoyen. The first Wall Street expression on the Brazil revolt is printed in the Wall Street Journal (Sept, 8), It takes a very mild, and confident stand toward the Brazilian uprising and tells the American imperialism to “walt until it is in danger before it runs away. That fact has not yet been demonstrated. . . . The revolution may be regarded as sim- ilar to a presidential election in the United States, where an adminis- tration may be changed, but the government remains unchanged.” What a different tone towards a “revolution,” backed by American im- Perialism than is used by this bankers’ sheet when referring to mass uprisings in Haiti, Nicaragua, Cuba or elsewhere against Wall Street- controlled puppets, ' Yet the American imperialists fear the danger of the revolution developing into a real mass uprising against all imperialist and capi- nd Professor Sa who were en- aged in the agricultural coopera- jovement, were working above t all for a capitalist development of our economic tem and in par- ticularly of agriculture. The d and strengthening of the Ku- laks was intended to play the deci-| sive role for the success of their aims and the complete restoration of agricultural and industrial private | thepresent danger. The workers de-| known, the State Political Adminis-| PPoPerty. \c n mand that the Tammany prison de- |tration (OGPU) has recently dis-| “In addition to the Kondratyev)menced before the Belgrade Special partment shall not be allowed to | covered in Moscow two new counter-| group there was the group of intel-| Court. Kerschovani is a well known lectuals, chanov, Gromann, Basarov, etc, who leaned tov m. This group of the “left- est’ eft wing” menshevi many of whom are themselves not formally members of the menshevist | organization as a result of their! “Jeftness” set as its aim the demo-| cratization of the Soviet power and were compelled to support them- selves on the Kulaks. The carrying out of the liquidation of the Kulaks as a class by the Soviet power flung the Suchanov-Gromann group, which | did not believe in the possibility of building up socialism in the Soviet | | Union, into the arms of the Kondrat-| yev group. The close contact of these | two groups, of course on the basis of the Kulak platform, was crowned by their connection with the sabot- agers organization led by Palchin- ski which was liquidated last year. The aim of the Suchanoy-Kondraty groups was to set up a bourgeois government in the place of the So- viet power. Their work in the econ. omic and state organs of the Soviet} power was directed always towards strengthening the capitalist ele- ments, particularly the Kulaks upon} whom they chiefly based their hopes. “The two groups had no connec- tions with the working class, the poor and middle peasantry and the intellectuals of the Soviet Unio Amongst these masses who worl loyally with the Soviet power and| desire to build up socialism, these groups represent a little company of outsiders. They were unable to establish any connections beyond) those with the professional experts engaged in the Soviet apparatus (and particularly in the agricultural or- gans and the agricultural coopera- tives), are czarist officials and the Kulaks. In their work, howeve: they sought connections, sometimes with success,.with the right wing elements in the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, as they regarded these elements, not without reason, as forces making for a capitalist restoration, Is there any clearer proof necessary than this in support of the decision of the XVI Congress of the €. P. which declared the right wing ele- ments as the agents of the Kulaks in the C. P. and their opinions as irreconcilable with membership of the Party? Kondratyev and his group on the one hand and the Suchanov group on the other were the principal_originators of all the theories of the right wing oppor-| tunists against the general policy of the Party. The counter-revolution- ary nature of these two groups shows clearly in what direction the theories borrowed by the right wing- ers from Kondratyev and Suchanov lead. “The Kondratyev-Suchanov groups which reckoned with the victory of the right wingers in the C, P. of the Soviet Union which they considered would be the natural first stage on the way to a capitalist restoration, also used the Trotskyists for their counter-revolutionary aims. The |the party and of the Soviet Union| MacDonald has ex- incere regret” at the imperialism of the R-101, which was on its way to India to terrorize the Indian masses who are struggling against the British masters. t * * BERL x hundred workers the Ber! affic Co, were dis- arged. This is the first part of discharge announced by the ist management of the Berlin ffic Co, The discharged work- at once held a meeting, and con- ed with the representatives of the revolutionary trade union oppo- sition, who had been invited, on the next tasks of the struggle. of NA.—Recently the trial of Otto Kerschovani com- Communist editor. His arrest was kept a secret and the trial is be- hind closed doors. The police have s,| threatened to murder Comrade Ker- schovani. +e BUDAPEST.—Four hundred sol- diers are now on trial for participat- ing in the August Ist anti-war dem- onstration. Cire me WARSAW.—The police attacked a conference of union tailors, arrest- ing 80 delegates. The office was locked up and sealed. * The Red Aid of Spain reports about the last six months: Within the last six months the police killed in Madrid two students and one working girl; in Seville one woman and one child; in Bilboa two workers, One of them died in prison and the police announced that “he had com- mitted suicide.” Many persons have been injured in clashes during this time. The arrests reached the number of 500, most of them took place in Bil- bao, Sevilla, San Sebastian, Malaga, Barcelona, Granada and Madrid. At present there are 250 political pris- oners in Spain, most of them Com- munis The greatest part of them is not sentenced but under “invest- igation,” but the trials have been ostponed indefinitely. The Red Aid, the Communist Party and the Communist Youth movement are forced to work illegal- ly. All revolutionary organs are forbidden, merely one anarchist or- gan is permitted. aim of these two groups was to unite all the forces fighting against the working class rom open counter-revolutionaries and sabotagers like Palchinski to | Suchanov who termed himself a rev- |olutionary socialist of the Third In- |ternational, with the Kulaks as a basis. One of the chief methods of | their work was the utilization of the | right wing elements in the ranks of |the C. P. of the Soviet Union as an |instrument to shake and decompose the proletarian dictatorship. The liquidation of both groups coincided with the decisive successes of the work for the construction of social- ism, with the development of the forces of the Party to overcome the great difficulties in the way of this work, with the rallying of the Party masses on the basis of the general policy of the Party, and the destrue- tion of right wing opportunism. The liquidation of the Kulaks as a class jon the basis of solid collectivization |and on the basis of the radical so- cialist construction of industry and the rooting out of all the capitalist elements, must be followed by the liquidation of the agents of the Ku- jlaks in the state apparatus. Our | Socialist offensive will mercilessly root out and destroy all those ele- ments which attempt to utilize poli- | tically the resistance of the Kulaks. | There is no power which is able to |hold up this offensive. READY FOR CIRCULATION the following new pamphlets from the International Pamphlet Series No. 6.—SPEEDING UP THE WORK BY JAMES BARD The Speed-up and Ration: ERS ey ation in Industry No. 7.—YANKEE COLONIES By HARK A Study of the Philippines, American Possessions ¥ No. 8.—THE FRAME-UP SYSTEM By VER ‘The developmnt of the frame-up a the class war, told against the b a Worker N SMITH an employers’ weapon in roy;nd of famous labor By A. B. MAGIL and JOSEPH NORTH 10,—THE HERETAGE OF GENE DEBS By ALEXANDER TRACHTENBERG: The story of the development of this famous working oles | leader and his role in the labor movement SPECIAL DISCOUNT ON QUANTITY ORDERS . Hush orders for these pamphlets for use in election campaign meetings to talist domination, which would further ‘increase the world crisis of ecnriyagh Ri only setarbing [rant is toe possibility of ‘ military struggle would further embarrass country’s finance,” says the Wall Street Journal, - " WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 48-50 East 13th Street, New York

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