The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 5, 1930, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW W_YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1930 Page fae ‘Startling News ot Growing War Plots Against Soviets! Smash Bosses’ War Moves! ILLINOIS MINERS IN BITTER WANT Lewis Gang Exacts Its Usual Tribute (By a Worker Correspondent) WEST FRANKFORT, Il—The The mines here are in desperate straits. Many mines have closed down never to reopen, and with the crisis developing to a greater extent, the situation in the mines is proportion- ately becoming worse. The attitude of the miners toward capitalism and this situation in par- ticular was not enhanced by the speech of the McCormack lady who spoke here recently, She, waving her arms wildly, told the miners, some of whom have not had steady work for ten years, to quit thinking, quit talk- Ing, and go to work. She tells this to miners who aver- age six days pay every three months, miners who are living on credit which can be cut off at any moment, who are in debt up to $500 to the petty bourgeois storekeepers , There are very few miners that are yeing deluded by people such as she. People who tell the workers who are dn the verge of starvation and who are starving that things will soon pick up. The majority are seething with discontent, and are ready to support the militant left wing unions. Not only the miners; but even the farmers in this section have made appeals for charity. The poor far- mers whose farms are mortgaged to the last penny, are also at the end of their resources, are also ready for revolutionary leadership. It is our task to go into this ter- ritory and give our revolutionary lead- ership to these miners and poor far- DEMAND RELIEF Bread Line Victims Cheer Demands (Workers Correspondence) SEATTLE, Dec. 1—Under the slo- gans of “Fight or Starve,” “Work or Wages,” “On to Washington,” sev- eral hundred workers demonstrated here today under the leadership of the Seattle Unemployed Council. A meeting was first held on the skid road to mobilize workers for the dem- onstration that was later held in front of the city employment office. The hundreds of hungry workers that were waiting in the breadlines that assemble in front of the City Employment Office were joined by the scores of workers. who marched down from the Skid Road. The dem- onstrators were addressed by Com- rades Susken, Laurie and Johnson. All speakers were being continually interrupted as the workers applauded the demands made by the speakers for the relief of the unemployed. The workers were called upon to attend a mass meeting to elect dele- gates to the coming city conference on Dec. 14th. The Unemployed Council has also called upon all A. F, of L. and Independent Unions and fraternal organizations to send dele- gates to this conference. —Wnm. H. Brady, Worcor. Tries to Stop Daily Newsman ~in Boston, Mass. BOSTON.—I was selling the Daily Worker on the corner of. Dover and Washington Sts. the other night, when a man said to me: “It is not the worker but the red flag you want.” I replied we will have that here too some day. Instantly he turned round, gave me a most dirty look and then sought a policeman. The policeman went to the opposite corner where another comrade was also selling Daily Workers and after eyeing and listening to him awhile asked for his permit to sell papers on the street. After inspecting the permit he came around to my corner, stood listening to the news slogans I shouted such as “United States get- ting ready for war”; “bosses fight un- employed”; “the Daily Worker is the only worker's paper,” etc. He walked Christmas Dinner Is “Relief” Officers Say Is for Veterans (By a Worker Correspondent.) OAKLAND, Calif—R. E. Brewer, commander of the East Bay chapter of the Diisabled American Veterans of the World War, stated tcday that “the organization would act for the relief of ex-servicemen out of work. The veterans will stage a Christmas benefit and provide dinners Christ- mas for the unemployed vets.” Many ex-servicemen have shown militancy in the demonstrations of the unemployed. Ex-servicemen’s league is being organized and the war vets are anxious to struggie. So in order to draw away atten- stion all of a sudden a talk of relief is going on—relief for one dinner at a future time. Ex-servicemen are not going to stand being fooled any longer by fake committees and a promise of dinner. They want better living conditions and are fighting for the Communist Party's Social Insurance Bill. —A. HUNTS JOB, WIFE KILEED BY HUNGER Many Families Facing Winter With No Food (By a Worker Correspondent.) COLORADO SPRINGS, Colorado.— An unemployed worker of Colorado Springs, summer playground of the rich, left home a few weeks ago in search of a job. On his return, he found that his wife had died of! starvation and that his five children were close to death. There are thousands of unemployed workers in Colorado searching for jobs, and with the cold winter coming on, they and their families will face cold as well as hunger. In spite of the election of Costigan, “friend of labor,” the Colorado unem- ployed cannot look for relief from the state or city government. The yellow press is doing its best to cover the facts, but condtions are steadily get- ting worse. —MS. :|Real Relief Is What Is |72-100 apples in a box. sf|and I'm through with it. JOBLESS LOSE IN SELLING APPLES Needed (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—In the first days of | the apple vending scheme for the unemployed I became an apple mer- chant. The first day I took out a box of apples costing $1.75 for 88 apples. I happened to pick a poor spot. And I was lucky to get my $1.75 back and to take home the balance of the apples. Undaunted by this I con- tinued in the apple business. About a week after selling my first box the price was raised to $2 a box from It was fairly easy to sell my box in three or four hours using the two lunch hours from 12-2. A few days later the price was raised to $2.25 a box. Also about this time the people were getting sick of eating apples and it became difficult to sell the apples unless they were large 64-72-80 in a box for $2.25, In the week just passed in 2 days I was not only unable to get back my $2.25 plus carfare and cost of bags but I lost money on the apples. The end came on Friday, Nov. 21. had a box of 88s and I stood at the| spot from 11 a. m. to 7 p. m. unable to sell them. I only succeeded in selling them by offering them for 10 for 25 cents, actually losing money on them. And I really was in a pretty good location. There are others who must have suffered much more thru getting poor locations and getting poor green and bruised apples. ‘The apple racket is about dead now —‘“An ex-apple merchant” BERLIN.—The police have sup- pressed the Communist daily news- | paper in Cologne, “The Socialist Re- public,” for ten days. The reason is that the newspaper printed a part of the statement made by Grzesinski to justify the suppression of the “Rote Fahne.” Get a 1931 Daily Worker free with subscription or re- calendar six months’ a newal. for 3rd Week’s week, according to reports at the last 27 E. Fourth St. were 3,100, the second week 4,076. Prize winners, with the number of papers they sold during the week, were: Shoholm, 550; Stevens, 399; Barnes, 310; Niel- son, 308; Eggers, 265; Stien, 240; Reese, 218: Ma- rino, 204; Hollow- chuck, 200; Sab- bath, 200. Next week the prizes will be pic- tures of Marx, Engels and Stalin. * Plans are under- way for a giant Hot Dog Jamboree next Sunday. Scores of jobless workers will be in- vited. It is planned to greatly increase the membership of the club to boost the N. Y. circu- lation. M 9, Red Builder, Comrade says: “I sell 3 Daily Workers while the man next to me sells 1 apple. That's not apple sauce.” RED SUNDAY IN N. Y. BOOSTS SALES ..Red Sundays for the Daily Worker are becoming lively in New York. “In one place they will tay to throw you out,” said one comrade. “In the next they ask you to sit down and eat dinner.” Another comrade checked up on his day's work “y saying he ob- tained 10 weekty subscriptions and 10 glasses of wine. away without saying a word to me. The one hundred per center was out of sight but how he must have gnashed his teeth in rage at seeing me unmolested. Rich Leer at Starving Worker DENVER, Col. e starvation of unemployed workers is nothing to the fatbellies except a big joke. As Jong as their bellies are full of good food the workers can starve to death. Someone had dumped a jar of Spoiled beets on the sidewalk in front of the Manhattan, a high-priced res- taurant. The muddy shoes of people walking along the sidewalk reduced the beets to a messy pulp. A starv- ing unemployed worker, seeing the beets on the sidewalk, dropped tc his hands and kn¢es and siarted to eat hunerily. The well-fed “diners” in the restaurant lined up at the plate- banust window and laughed at the man on the sidewalk. “Workers! We have been humili- master class! eh ty he wages! Don't r —M. G. In Section 4, Harlem, 20 comrades turned out. One hundred papers were sold and 57 new weekly subs were obtained. + Section 2, in the first Red Sunday, obtained 18 new subs. Last Sunday the section obtained 36 new subs. Section 1 obtained 18 new subs. Section 2 plans free distribution of the paper before the next Red Sun- day, Dec. 7. “WAKE UP SECTION 10!” SAYS ELIZABETH UNIT N. Feld, organizer in writes: Z, Zurov, carpenter, who joined the Party in 1929, was assigned by the Elizabeth Bureau as Daily Worker representative 4 weeks. ago. “Up to that time the Daily~ Worker was entirely neglected. About 1.500 Dailies were accumu- Elizabeth, Red Builders Pass 5000 Mark Red Sunday in N. Y. Dec. 7 The forty members of the Red Builders News Club sold a total of 5,076 Daily Workers on streets, in subways and from house to house in their third Sales the first week #—— lated, No one worried much. Fin- ally Comrade Zurey jumped up. ‘T_ am going to be the Daily Worker rep.’ Within two weeks time, through his ability, the Party in Elizabeth secured 45 subs, this week three more, total 48. This is only. a beginning. Our aim is 100 Sales; Another’ Hot Dog Jamboree, Sunday night, at ‘he Party in Elizabeth is the only unit in Section 10 which has done something for our Daily agitator. “We, the Elizabeth Unit in Section 10, are challenging the entire section. There are five units: Newark, Perth Amboy, Jersey City, Union City and New Brunswick. “We, the Elizabeth Unit, dare you to beat us, and we will prove to you that you are unable, because you are sleeping. Hey, Section 10, it is time to wake up.” “Increase bundl> to 75 immedi- ately. Drive started.”"—Harry Ha- ley, Stockton, Cal. Finances Election Drive With Daily John A. Rehm, Red Army Com- mander of Springfield, Ohio, financed his Congress campaign for sheriff on the money he made from the Daily Worker. He received 280 votes, against 24 Communist votes in the Jast election. Here is a clipping he sends us from a capitalist paper: “John A. Rehm, Communist can- didate for sheriff of Clark County, and treasurer of the Communist Party in Clark County, filed an ex- pense account with the board of elections in the county Saturday. Mr. Rehm showed receipts totaling $21, for sale of the Daily Worker, Communist paper, at a cost of $7). and with a balance of profit of $14. The treasurer shows $14.50 spent during the campaign, leaving that party 50 cents ‘in the hole’ on the campaign.” Lively Suggestions From Detroit Unit Some good ideas on Daily Worker 60,000 circulation campaign are re- ceived from Unit A6, Detroit. Here is the letter: “We have elected a committee to put bulletin boards around the halls. We have arranged a dance to be held December 13th to raise funds for the paper and get subs. We have three newsstands. We have increased our readers from zero to 38. “A can has been put into use in Unit A6 which is showing results. Our agent at Ferry Hall has turned in $4. We suggest making mimeograph strips with the price of the paper pasted around the can. It should be left in the read-" er’s house in order to help him save his pennies, The Young Lib- They Are Planning A War of Annihilation Against the Workers Soviet Fatherland! (Special Cable to the Daily Worker) MOSCOW. Dec. 4.—In a hugely packed hall Krylenko begins his ela- borate prosecution speech. “Ten short days of the trial’s existence have exposed some unusual circumstances. Millions of toilers in the Soviet Union and in the whole world have followed with the closeset attention each word. The bourgoesie in its press, and in the speeches showered upon the public have given out some of the most idiotic lies, at at the same time endeavoring to detract the attention from the great- est fear seized the bourgeosie for fear of the revelations that might and were made at this trial. The attention of the entire world was turned upon the uncovering of the wreckers trial in the Soviet state, gigantic wreckers work in all branches ot industry. We unhesitatingly un- covered them in spite of our enemies hoping to learn things they might use against us. A complete revelation will only inspire the creative en- thusiasm of millions of proletarian masses, and the whole world will intensify the struggle for socialism. Two years ago I was here at the Shakhte trial. The preesnt trial represents the enlarged reproduction of thia trial with a full scope. We had then only wreckers of the coal industry. Now all the leading branches of not only industry but even down to argriculture are in this wreckers trial. Then abroad only individual emigres were linked with the wreckers, now the wreckers are linked with an outspoken political class organization, Torgprom, Then only individual emigres Industrialists were figured, now the leading circles of the foreign bourgeoisie including leading statesmen, like Poincare. Then there was a mere hint of the intervention idea, now there is parc- tically elaborated detailed plans for intervention with fixed date. Then the connections of the wreckers with agents were with individual states, now there is a bloc of enemyg states based on military agreement. Then there was a small group of individual wreckers, now there is a solid bloc of two organizations: the Industrial Party and the Peasants Party. Then the individual emigrants had differ- ent political coloring, now there is a counter-revolutionary united front from monarchists to democrats and socialists. Then a few engineers were involved, now engineers, bookkeepers, traders, architects, economists, in short the upper stratum of the old technical intelligentsia headed by professors, and scientists are in- volved. Then the wreckers work was mostly of individual wrecking acts, now it is concentrated wrecking work with planned organs with greatly extended worst counter- revolutionary methods: wrecking acts according to a great uniform plan aiming to the preparation of the intervention; extensive espionage linked with operative tasks; initial work creation of military organiza- tion of worst crime: war treason; practical preparation of gates for intruding enemy armies [with pre- pared bases; the picture as a whole shows a consolidation of all counter- revolutionary forces for the overthrow of the Soviet Union. In his speech at 16th Party congress Stalin drew a strong picture of the sharpening of the imperialist con- tradictions aggravated by the world crisis which Poincare confirms and deplores in recent articles. Stalin drew the conclusion that from this there grows the danger of a war, and the particularly main danger is counter-revolutionary wars, in inter- vention against the Soviet Union. While Stalin said this Ramsin was preparing a trip to Berlin in order finally to prove to his masters the necessity of staking all forces ex- clusively on the military overthrow from abroad. Our counter-revolu- tionary mortal enemies were caught red handed and are therefore howl- ing. The lie aout the fall of the five year plan is completely denied by the facts. The Soviet Umiun pur- sued and continues to pursut 4 Policy of peace. The imperialists are pre- paring the terrible crime of a world war against the Soviet Union. It is from this standpoint that we es- timate and judge the’ real scope of the defendants crime, the real dan- ger that they represented to the Soviet Union. My duty is to unroll the whole pic- ture of the defendants’ criminal ac- tivity based upon the investigation and testimony and establish the measure for their social harm. Ex- amining the many particulars of the ramified activities of the wreckers we must always keep one thing in mind: we fight for the entire secur- ity of the Soviet land, for the possi- bility to continue socialist construc- tion. This possibility was endan- gered. This danger we must remove. The development of the wreckers’ work confronting us is understand- able only when it is considered not as an isolated factor but as a method of class struggle of the bourgeoisie against socialism. The entire history of the wreckers’ acts revealed here shows that their beginnings date far back. In transport, in the war in- dustry, in textile, oil, mining, and fr- rigation the wreckers began their ac- tivity as early as 1925-26. The Cen- tral Committee of the Industrial Party was not the founder but the condensor. We find the same indi- viduals in the early stages of the wreckers’ work as well as in the founding of the Industrial Party: Rabinovich, Palchinsky, and Khren- ikov. From initiators in individual fields, they, with others, became lead- ers who centralized the entire work. This leading role especially deter- mines the measure of th dangr of the present defendants for the Soviet Union. This history and the conse- quent development into factors of the preparation of military intervention under French leadership determined the organizational structure, program and methods of the Industrial Party. The Party was characterized by conspiratorial organization work branching out in all industrial fields under a single skilled leadership. Issuing orders, their realization and control (chain-like construction) of the Industrial Party. The head of this organization was established in the administration of Soviet eco- nomy, in the state planning com- mission. It was therefore very neces- sary to win such leading persons as Ossadchi (vice president of the State Planning Commission). In the in- dustrialization of Soviet economy, engineers represented the fittest cadres for French preparers to over- throw the Soviet power. The Soviet power still lacks its own reliable cadres of Proletarian Red Engineers, therefore, they need the old engin- eers, mdiums of tchnical knowledge of the highly developed capitalist economy. For the Interventionists, two thousand engineers were organ- ized into the Industrial Party in central positions who represent much greater power than the alleged two hundred thousand toiling Peasants Party. The engineers evolved a theory that the engineers’ mission was to lead the state and their al- leged aim was to secure the engin- eers in the rule, their “future state, was revealed by the trial not only as political hypocrisy but political swin- dle. Defendants themselves were compelled to admit that they knew well, practically meaning, it was planned military dictatorship. Ram- sin said, “first pacification then order.” Political ideas and alms blabbered | out by Paris emigres at their festivals with French generals. Industrialists show the true contents: first the ter- ror, mountains of corpses, and bloody orgies, then (to Ramsin): Moor did his duty, Moor can go! When Ramsin says: Riabushinsky accepted his plans of state capital- ism, we ask: Who was a fool here? Practical results for the realization of the dark plans of the Industrial Party under the leadership of most of the reactionary emigres, com- bined with the French General Staff is beyond doubt. Defendants revealed here causes why the engineers center became the political party represent- ing the interests of great industry. The creation of a political party was needed because the chief hope was for intervention, and because it was necessary to carry on political nego- tiations with political cixcles abroad. It was necessary to secure a hege- mony of great industry against the competition appearing in “the toiling Peasants Party.” Here, too, initia- tive belonged to Palchinsky and Rab- inovitch, first ideologist, founders of the Industrial Party and most con- nected with’ the foreign bourgeoisie.” tonight WRITERS, ARTISTS AND COLOR TWO HALLS TWO ORCHESTRAS DANCING UNTIL 3 A. M. tonight LD MIS STON : IN ADV. on iis ay van auanavar care ACCEPTED BY PHONE AT AD- VANCE PRICE, $1.50 PHONE ALG. 4445 NEW MASSES 119 EAST 19TH 6T. tonight “PRAVDA” AND “IZVESTIA” SAY WORKERS SMASHED WRECKERS’ PLOT Mensheviks Worker With Imperialists to Start War Against Results of First Two Years Shows Workers Counter-Plan Won (Special Cable to the Daily Worker.) MOSCOW, Dec. 4.—The leading article in “Pravda” today tells of the role of the Mensheviks in the inter- vention preparations. Between the three counter-revolutionary organ- izations, namely, Ramsin’s “indus- trial party,” Kondratiev'’s “peasant party” and the Menshevik organiza- tion of Groman and Sukhanov, there existed close contact and a division of labor. According to the evidence of Yu- rovski, one of the witnesses at the trial and one of the leaders of the “peasants’ party,” the question was discussed of the formation of a cen- tral leadership of the three organ- | izations. The Menshevik Groman, working in the State Planning Commission, reported the situation to the central committee of the “industrial party” and proved that 1930 was a favorable year for intervention. Groman, through the industrial party, sent material to the French general staff and Sukhanov admits contact with the “peasants’ party,” adding, “This contact may be ‘described as a bloc.” Groman also gives details of the personal composition of the group. “This counter-revolutionary organ- ization,” he says, “outwardly enjoy- ing scientific authority, namely, ‘Groman’s school,’ consisted mostly of my supporters, Mensheviks work- ing in the State Planning Commis- sion, and in the Statistical Board of the U. S. S. R., namely, Bazarov, Vissnevsky, Suba, Pistrak, Gukhman, Broyman and Zelenger—all Menshe- viks and specialists.” In the struggle for a political coup Soviet Union | of Five-Year Plan | and for the overturning of the Bol- sheviks’ organizations, they relied chiefily on the rich kulaks, which is| the only politically and economically active section. “Izvestia,’ in an article on “The| Wreckers’ Plans and Successes of Soviet Energy in Production,” raises the question of why, despite the dev- ilish work of the wreckers, Socialist | construction and development of in- | dustry goes ahead at a rapid tempo The answer to this question is the in- | creased production by the class-con- scious masses under the lead ip of the Communist Party of the Sov- iet Union. “Izvestia” writes: “The counter-industrial plans promoted by | the working masses in the struggle for fulfilling the general Party line| neutralized the poisoned weapons of | the wreckers. “This explains why in 1929 and 1930 we obtained 17,000,000 tons of coal, more than in 1913, during the two | years of the Five-Year Plan, pro- | gressing from the seventh coal pro- ducing country to the fourth; pro- duction of electrical power inoreased | two-thirds in two years; production of peat increased six to seven times, compared to 1913; oil is constantly | increasing every year now, far ahead of the pre-war, by about 60 per cent Hence, we can now indicate that the production of fuel in 1932-33 will | equal 180,000,000 of compensated fuel | instead of 80,000,000 in 1929-30, and 95,000,000 in the first variant of the Five-Year Plan. Doubling the task of the Five-Year Plan is the work- | ers’ answer by their counter-plan to the wrecking acts by the treacherous hirelings of the engineer leaders.” Menace of War Upon U.S. 8. R. Is Growing; Mobilize Against It! (Continued from Page One) tendance of 900, vocational classes have an attendance of 1,200 workers. Active Treason. The court where the sabotagers are on trial. went into a closed ses- sion yesterday afternoon until the evening of today. when the prosecu- tion will begin to sum up. The evening session of December 2, and the morning session of Decem- ber 3 disclosed further the most ex- tensive preparation for military pre- parations by the wreckers for inter- vention which Ramsin and Company held back from the court until today when he was forced to admit his previous knowledge of participation by testimony brought forward by witnesses for the prosecution. = Railroad engineer Krassovsky, an active member of the Wreckers Transport Organization, testified to the systematic activities which kept a larger number of locomotives in a sick condition, especially along the frontier railways, diverting from them highly needed rolling stock, prepar- ing railway mobilization plans, ad- vocating superlarge new railway con- struction, demanding billion dollar investments. Factories Misplaced. Another witness, Serotzinsky, ar- chitect, member of the wreckers con- struction group, testified that the intervention preparations consisting of the erection of factories along the sea shore where they would be easily exposed to sea bombardment, erection of special platforms for artillery bases to be used by interventionist armies, erection of lumber yard warehouses, easily transformed into hangars, and many mere acts of a similar nature. Michalenko, hydrotechnician, mem- ber of the wreckers’ marine group, testified to the extensive drainage operations in the swamp territories | near the frontiers faciliating the passage of interventionist armies. Confronted with such testimony, Ramsin and Larichev finally admit- ted the above activities originally discussed with the French Agent of the,.General Staff Mr. R, and ex- ecuted under the direction of thé Central Committee of the counter revolutionary party. The menace of intervention is looming higher and higher, The im- mediate mobilization of all the fight- ing resources of the American Prole- tariat is our most urgent duty. ow oS (Special Cable to the Daily Worker) MOSCOW, Dec. 4.—The open ses- sion of the court trying the im- perialist war agents began at 6 p. m. After a short supplementary cross examination, the court decided tc ter- minate the examination and proceed with the speechers of the represen- tatives of the prosecution and of the defense. Preceding this there was a short cross examination which threw more characteristic light on the de- fendants’ personalities. When ques- tioned individually whether and how much blood money was received from Torgprom Ramsin, Larichev, Kalini- kov, Charnovsky, denied the recep- tion of money for personal use. Ku- prianov admitted the reception of 19,500 roubles. Sytnin admitted re- ceiving 12,000 roubles, Fyedotov likewise admitted the reception of money for personal use, but avoided mentioning the amount. Krylenko asked whether they thought it prob- able that the other members of the Central Committee received nothing for themselves. Sytnin and Kupri- anov stated that they assumed the leading members of the Central Com- mittees in other groups received money just as Fyedotov of the Textile Branch received personal PROLETPEN ( ale THE AFFAIR OF THE YEAR at the ROCKLAND PALACE 155TH STREET AND 8TH AVENUE Saturday Evening, December 13th ELABORATE PROGRAM Artef Players Jazz Band (A novelty feature) “THE RED ROOSTER”—A humerous satirical journal specially’ published on this occassion and distributed to visitors. The Harlemite Negro Orchestra will play AUSPICES: PROLETPEN (PRODETARIAN WRITERS) ‘Tickets: $1.00 at the Morning Frethelt Office 35 East 12th Street MASQUE BALL list of provocations organi | of the Reds in France Ait. Imperialist War Plottings PARIS.—“Humanite”, French Com- publishes a lead- munist newspaper, | ing article signed by its chief editor, Comrade Florimond Bonte dealing with the revelations concerning the anti-Soviet plans of French the | bourgeoisie. The article describes the activities of the Industrial Party and the sup- port accorded it by the French Gen= eral Staff. It exposes the weak pre- varications of Briand and the denials of Poincare and enumerates the long ized against the Soviet Union by the French government; the demand of Foch and Cleménceau that the allies should occiipy Leningrad and Mos- cow; the ‘cordon sanitaire’ organized by the French bourgeoisie against the Soviet Union; the latest attac’ French government on Soviet export trade; the comings and goings of officers of the general staff to the capitals of the western neigh- bors of the Soviet Union; the support and toleration ac®orded to the white | Suardis and their activities in | France, ete. In conclusion the article declares that the “rench w ig Masses are on the watch and will never permit an attack on the Soviet Union. Their “shting slogan is: “Hands ke the Soviet Union!” Fight Denortation | of Italian Workers PARIS.—The Communist P; of France and Italy have issued a joint manifesto to the French and Italian working masses, pointing out that @ reactionary offensive has be- gun against the Italian immigrant workers. Hundreds of workers have been persecuted, driven out of their employment, arrested and expelled from France. All this under various pretexts, the real reason being that this persecution is an integral part of the price French imperialism is prepared to pay Mussolini in order to secure his alliance in a war against the Soviet Union. This per- secution is a sign of the growing fascist danger for the workers and peasants of Europe. The manifesto appeals to the workers to form anti- fascist groups in all factories and to fight for the rights of the immi- grant foreign-born workers. t amounts. Fyedotov says: “I fell so low that I thought it doubtless that the other members of the Central Committee received money for pere sonal use.” Ochkin denied having received a share from the 80,000 roubles given to the institute by Ramsin. Krylenko proposed the ace ceptance of the various documents for court records of the Torgprom particularly important was one ap- pearing in two issues of the Paris paper “Vozrozhdenie” of June 13th and 15th of this year, Both issues contain Deterdings letter and speech; both announce the “Emancipation of Russia in a few months.” Besides this Kryenko submitted to the court two original documents complying the demand made on him at the close of the session, The court ruled to ac- cept the documents avoiding the publication of the same. The cross examination was then declared to be ended. After the intermission Kry- lenko began his speech. CAMP AND HOTEL NITGEDATGET PROLETARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere $17 A WEEK CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N.Y, PHONE 731 FIRST ANNUAL DAILY WORKER CALENDAR FOR 1931 Seven striking half-tone pictures of the class struggle never be- fore published, including: An unpublished picture of Lenin addressing Moscow workers, Views of the bigest strikes and demonstrations in the U. 8. Five, smashing cartoons ef the Historical of the class struggle, Important _ quotations Marx, Engels, Lenin, ete. 12 pages—one for each month— printed in two colors on bh Ye x 14. N Tndespensiblo "in every worker's home, with every six month's subs tion or renewal, Get your fel- low worker to subscribe. You get ® calendar, he gets one too. Without subscriptions price 500 (Only one calendar to each worker. DAILY WORKER 50 EAST 13fH STREBT, N. ¥, ©. a on the big events from By Mail: 80 conte 9 month, outside Mom- ttan and’ Bronx. Meshatian and Bronx, one month Teor 2, month, S151 # month, months, $4.50; 2 year,

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