The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 5, 1931, Page 6

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Address and mail all checks to the Daily Worker, 60 Eaet T Published by the Comprodally Publishing Co. 18th Strest, New York C Ine., Y. Telephone Algo: quin 71-7956, Cabl ally except Sunday, at 80 Bast th Street, N DAIWORK.” w York, N. f. Dai Central Ong. “Socialist” D efenders o y,. <Worker’ P tha ED Rmynist Porty U.S.A sCBSCRIPTION RATES: Foreign: ons yéar, By mal. everywhere: One year, $6; six months, $3; two months, $1; excepting Boroughs of Manhattan and Bronx, New York City. $8; six months, $4.50. By HARRISON GEORGE HE Vienna correspondent of the N. Y. Post, M. W. Fodor, published in that paper of September 1, some comments on the character of the world congress of the Second “Socialist” International recently held there. It was a gathering of important socialist leaders,” he remarks, but what was most noticeable to this capitalist journalist was: . the dying of the revolutionary spirit in a. movement which only a decade ago was the terrifying bogey of all good bourgeois people. It was amazing to see the change of tem- per in the socialist movement. ... This meet- ing seemed so timid, so cautious. ... The rev- olution now constitutes a bogey to the socialists themselves.” If this were but the opinion of one capitalist journalis s who still have a vague— but mista notion that the so-called “so- s onsesed to capitalism, might But there are plenty of lots of testimony to the Y. Times editorially re- 28) concerning the pre- they stand for the mony. fe and ne N same ef. that t capita ism list practice, however, has, as a rule, fleparted widely from class war doctrine. . . . The World War brought overwhelming proof. Everyw the great majority of socialists stood with their bourgeois countrymen for the national (that is to say “capitalist’—Editor Daily Worker) welfare. Only a few months ago the spokesmen for the Reichstag social- ists justified their cooperation with the Bruen- ing government and their acceptance of sacri- fices for the working class.” « the reader to keep in mind that last ance of sacrifices for the * a couple of minutes. liberal” capitalist press, we find an editorial in the New Republic, N. Y., issue of August 19, on “Socialists as Conserve- tives”, which opens with the following line: “It is a dramatie event when followers of <arl Marx turn out to be the chief bulwark against European revolution.” . the New Republic seriously E @ the “socialists” as “followers of Marx.” No one who understands Marxism thus slander Marx. But what the New correctly calling attention to was revolutionary actions of the German which has “even permitted a vould Republic, of course, being a half organ does not clearly see or say dictatorship which the Ger- support—under the pretense ng fascists who are not controlling the support the fascist dictator- government. The New at, they ere not protecting a socialist state.” attempt to alibi themselves out of the ‘ican “socialist” party, ‘ew Leader” of August 22, of irrelevant joshing, irm out of the charge by dwelling on erd “republic”; the German “social- port the “republic”, they cry—as though d me: anything without an exami- what class holds power in a “repub- . for “example, the United States of ica, which is called a “republic”, while we » also the Union of Socialist Soviet Repub- he is a daring fool who will try to tell that there is no difference in the ter of the two. But the “socialist” and goes on in “answer” to the New Republic charge that German “social- ists” supported. capitalism he assumption is that the working class has no stake in a republic because capitalism still survives. Fighting for freedom of organ- ization, of the press, of elections, of demon- strations, may mean nothing to the liberal but measureless sacrifices have been made by workers to win them.” Speaking about. “assumptions’—one must con- clude that the American “socialists” write as above under the impression that they can get away with brass-faced lies about what is going on in Germany, because it is across the Atlantic: ‘They assume that American workers will swal- low the lie that German “socialists” support the Bruening “republic” because it allows ‘‘freedom of organization, of the press, of elections, of demonstrations.” Tell us, you “socialist” scoundrels, who for- bade the workers’ demonstrations in practically every German city against war on August 1, this year, not three weeks before your editorial was written? Dare you deny that—under the Bruening “re- public’—the Police President of Berlin, one of your own “socialist” tribe, Herr Grzesinski, pro- hibited demonstrations in Berlin? And who led the workers in the fight for the right to dem- onstrate? The Berlin capitalist paper, the “Bor- senszeitung” told us in their headline: “Com- munists Break Demonstration Prohibition.” The German workers have, indeed, made “measureless sacrifices” for the right to dem- onstrate, but what sacrifices more bloody than that of May First, 1929, when the then Police President of Berlin, Zoergibiel—again one of your “socialists”, had 30 workers murdered in carrying out his orders against demonstrations! “Freedom of organization” under your pre- cious “republic”? With the workers’ organiza- tion “Red Front” outlawed and the Communist Party offices occupied by the police! “Freedom of the press” under your “republic”? With 80 per cent of the Communist press throughout Germany suppressed and your “so- cialist” cabinet in the Prussian state command- ing all papers of whatever politics to print in specified sized type on their front pages the elec< tion propaganda of the government in support of itself! Perhaps this is your “free elections”, too! : But what does your darling “republic” really stand for if it prohibits all these “freedoms” you lie about? Let us make a list of definite amounts of what the N. Y. Times, in the quotation noted above, correctly called “sacrifices for the work- ing class’ to which the German “socialists” agreed: Marks Wage cut for government workers .. 308,000,000 Cut in pensions . 85,000,000 Cancellation of wage tax refunds..... 60,000,000 Cut in unemployment relief .......... 270,000,000 Tax on the workers, called “The Cri- IB TAR hc cn ss tuasn assent + teeees 385,000,000 Wage cut by part time for office WOCKETS once sch s ero ssisesscseenss 120,000,000 Reduced education and health ex- Po RS aha Cuda a, 120,000,000 Cut in relief for seasonal workers .... 35,000,000 Abolition of special relief for tobacco WOTKETS ...2.--.seseeseeeee secceeeee 25,000,000 ‘There are plenty more, such as the cut in real wages by way of increased cost of living through higher tariffs and taxes on food, and higher street car fares, etc. Also, the beloved “repub- lie” helped the capitalists by reducing their taxes, loading them on the workers. But these concrete items of what the German “socialists” support, would be missing something if we did not add that the Bruening “Emergency Decree” also abolishes the right to strike! And establishes Forced Labor against the unemployed for any relief given! The American “socialist” effort to lie about Germany fails! And quite correctly even the purblind “liberal” New Republic comments on such “socialist” defense of capitalism:—When disaster (to capitalism) is feared it means pro- tecting the system against anyone who wants to overturn it.” In short, it means counter- revolution and fascism under a fog of words about “the republic” and “social interests”, it means social-fascism. Jugoslav Workers! Help to Save the “Radnik”! It is the oniy Jugoslav daily newspaper that fights for the interests of the workers. In this crisis, great unemployment, general wage cuts, persecution and deportation of foreign born workers, the daily “Radnik” is of the tre- mendous importance. UGOSLAV workers! Today when you are faced with starvation and misery, either from nent or low wages working under’ ex- eed up, you can not fight against all of this without your daily paper, a paper that stands for you. Whether you are working in foal mine, steel mill, on the farm or on rail- foads or in the building trade; whether you be- Jong to the Croatian Fraternal Union, Servian National Federation or any organization, you are xploitation and mistreatment by the fascist and social fascist, and you need “Radnik” to be the daily fighter against your enemies. All other Jugoslav papers in the best sense or very little about the real life of and their conditions. Still less do leavor to improve the workers’ condi- tions or to show the way how to fight the em- ployers who. are worsening conditions. Some of ther, pretending to be workers’ friends, propose fake means to improve their conditions. “Rad- nik” is the only paper that tells the truth and proposes the real means of improving condi- tions by fighting against the wage cut, speed-up, evictions, for social insurance and immediate relief for unemployed workers and their fami- Hes. Wherever the workers are fighting against’ the bosses attack the “Radnik” is with them and showing them how to fight successfully against the criminal attack of the employers. ‘The miners are on strike and they need food and clothing, “Radnik” is doing everything pos- * sible every day to help them. The steel workers are preparing to fight against wage cuts, “Rad- nik” is helping them and is lighting the torch in their struggle. ‘The militant working class membership in the Croatian Fraternal Union and the Servian Na- tional Federation are fighting against the fas- cists, who are doing everything possible to make these organizations serve the bosses and the dic- tatorship of Jugoslavia, “Radnik” is in the front ranks exposing and fighting against them to Preserve these organizations for the workers and their interests. : ‘The bosses and their government conducting the campaign of persecution and deportation of all militant foreign born workers, finger-printing them like criminals, “Radnik” is the workers pa- pers that fights against this bosses’ terror of the foreign born workers, it leads the fight every day among the Jugoslav workers for their pro- tection and political asylum. The bosses and their government are prepar- ing a new bloody war, especially war against the Soviet Union, the first workers’ and farmers’ republic, to crush the fortress of the revolu- tionary movement of all the world to enslave and exploit the working class of every country, “Radnik” is fighting against the bosses’ war and defends the Soviet Union, defends the lives of Jugoslav workers who are to be slaughtered in the war for the bosses’ interest. Jugoslav workers! The Central Committee of the Communist Party of the U.S.A. appeals to you to rush funds, get subscriptions and collect donations to save the “Radnik”! Workers! You are in the class struggle every day, you need your language daily paper to help you and to lead you in your struggles. “Radnik” is your paper, it talks your language, it fights your battles. “Radnik” is today in a grave crisis, you must save your “Radnik”. Many subscribers are receiving the paper every day, who are not working and unable to renew their subs. Now “Radnik” is hardly existing on two pages, and it can not get help from any other sources except from the workers, We propose to you the following: 1. Intensify the campaign of collecting new and renewed expired subs. This must be done at once and followed up regularly. 2. Workers’ clubs should organize their mem- bership to get new subs and distribute “Radnik”; collect donations and renew expired subs. 3. In all lodges of C.F.U. where there are sympathizers of “Radnik” and where there is an organized Left Wing, an apparatus should be organized to sell the “Radnik” at lodge meet- ings and collect subs and donations. 4, Workers’ clubs and fractions must organize regular daily routes for selling and distributing “Radnik”; get new subs on short terms. Your slogan must be: TO SAVE “RADNIK” AS A DAILY. EVERY SUBSCRIBER SHOULD GET ONE NEW SUBSCRIBER FOR “RADNIK.” c Capitalism ee Room 205, Pittsburgh, Pa. By MAXIM GORKY From the “Pravda,” Moscow. bbs capitalists and their faithful servants— the social-democrats and fascists, the Church- ills and Kautskys—demented with fear of a so- cial catastrophy, the old and young tricksters who want to be big parasites, “the scoundrels of the pen and the bandits of the press,” all the putridity in human form which is created by the capitalist system, all the human reptiles without which capitalism cannot exist, all of them accuse the “Bolsheviks” of the Soviet Un- jon that they wish to “destroy culture.” The bosses of the bourgeois press have given it a slogan: “Fight against the Bolsheviks, against Communism, fight for culture!” Naturally, capitalism has something to fight for. Its “culture” consists of a series of in- stitutions which act with perfect freedom for the purpose of defending and justifying the ab- solutely unlimited power of a parasitic minority over the working majority, over the workers, peasants and petty-bourgeoisie who live by trif- ling services for the big bourgeoisie. Its culture consists of lying schools, lying churches, lying parliaments, a lying and slanderous press; its culture is the police, which is given the right to beat up the workers and murder them. Its cul- ture has developed to incredible heights—it has grown into an unceasing daily fight against the workers who do not want to be plundered, do not want to be beggars, do not want their wives to become prematurely infirm and to be old women at the age fo 30, do not want their chil- dren to die of starvation or their daughters to become prostitutes for the sake of a piece of bread, do not wish crime to grow on the basis of unemployment among the honest working people, ‘The actual and overwhelming features of the cultural life of the bourgeois countries consist of street fighting between the police and the workers, the growth of suicides from starvation, the development of petty thieving as the result of unemployment, the growth of prostitution. This is not an exaggeration. The news columns of all the bourgeois papers are filled with such facts. The “cultured” capitalist world is in a state of unceasing war with the working class, @ war which grows more bloody every day. The minority are fighting for the right to plunder the majority without retribution—this is the main feature of the cultured life of all the world out- side the boundaries of the Soviet Union. The war of the rich and well-fed against the hungry and the poar is carried on by weakening the working class which is striving towards a deter- mined fight throughout the world, by seizing the most active people from its midst, imprisoning them or murdering them, and at the same time by attempts to terrorize the masses of workers, condemning innocent persons to death as in the case of the murder of Sacco and Vanzetti. ‘Terrorizing of Negro Masses in the U. S. At the present time in the town of Scottsboro in America, a drama is being unfolded which re- calls the case of the two Italians who, after be- ing sentenced to death, were held for seven years in jail waiting for the day when they would be taken to the electric chair. Humanitarians from all over Europe protested against this mur- der of innocent people. The working clas also protested, but protests failed to make the slight- est impresion on the impenet le heads of the American millionaires. In Scottsboro, eight young Negroes have been sentenced to death. They are also innocent. They were seized by the police haphazardly, they did not know each other, but nevertheless they were sentenced to death. This was done to scare the other Negroes. This murder {s a “preventive measure.” It is being done because the Negro masses are more and more being drawn into the revolutionary movement, are showing their solidarity with the white working masses. They are taking an ac- tive part in the struggle against American im- perialism. The bourgeoisie are terrified at the spread of the spirit of revolt among fifteen mil- lion Negroes—workers and peasants—and are making every effort to crush the growing mili- tancy of the Negro masses, using their weapon of the white terror against them. This can clearly be seen from the bloody events at Camp Hill, Alabama, This case in- COULD FIGHT BETTER IF WE HAD SOMETHING UNDER OUR BELTS” creased the campaign of: the working class of the who’.world against lynching and in defense | of the Negro workers of the United States, and emphasized its importance. ‘The Negro share-croppers in Tallapoosie Coun- ty, Alabama, this year formed an organization. It has a militant character, and actively parti- cipated in the Scottsboro campaign. Two weeks ago, it called a meeting of its members in a church to protest against the Scottsbero trial. The landlords mobilized 400 police and armed fascists, and attacked the church. During the attack, the leader of the organization, Ralph Gray, was severely wounded, and his comrades carried him home. When the fascist band found out that Gray was still alive, they surrounded his house, burst in and shot him in bed at the very moment when a doctor was examining his wounds. While hunting for the responsible work- ers of this organization, the fascists looted many Negro cabins. Four Negroes were taken into the forest and lynched. 55 Negroes were arrested on a cnarge of murder. Five responsible workers were charged with attempted murder. Sheriff Young, the head of the fascist gang, was severely wounded when the heroic Negroes were defend- ing themselves. Yerror Against Mine Strikers Take the prison in Harlan, Kentucky, at the very centre of the East Kentucky coal field, which is the source of the wealth of the biggest corporations in the country, and which brings starvation, poverty, death to the miners, their families and children. About 100 miners have been thrown into the dark cells of this prison. Some of them are charged with murder and are threatened with the electric chair. Many are charged with criminal syndicalism because they spoke at meetings. Three months ago the min- ers declared a strike for the purpose of im- proving their beggary conditions. Governor Sampson sent the police against them, the mine owners sent bands of armed fascists, sheriffs and police against the strikers. They were in- structed to crush the strike, and for this purpose they used bombs and machine guns. As the result, 31 persons were killed—18 miners and 13 soldiers and fascists. The miners captured six machine guns with ammunition and looted the provision store of the company, seizing the food for their starving families. Eighteen miners are threatened with death and fifty with long prison terms. Sixteen miners’ homes have been burned. The eviction of min- ers’ families from their houses is continuing till the present time. In Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Ohio, where 40,000 miners are on strike, the Negroes form the majority. Among the 600 miners who were arrested on July 6, the majority are Ne- groes. When arrested they were beaten up and tortured, Scottsboro Issue Made International ‘The American section of the I. L. D. has made the Scottsboro trial into an international mat- ter. For the first time since the American civil war, the merciless exploitation of the Negroes by the ruling classes of the U. S. A. has been described and discussed on an international scale. The demand for a new trial which was put for- ward by the American section of the I. L. D, was supported by a storm of protest from all over the world. From the U.S.S.R., Great Brit- ain, France, Australia Cuba, Austria, Germany and many other countries, thousands of resolu- tions were sent demanding the liberation of the eight Negro boys at Scottsboro. The American Embassy in Germany end Cuba weve besieged by thousands of worker demonstrators. Well-known scientists and writers—Theodor Dreiser, Ein- stein, etc., tcok part in this campaign. The eight Negro youths are lying in the pri- son at Scottsboro, faced with the electric chair and daily receiving reminders from the guards that they will soon go to the chair, World Wide Fight for Negro Rights “The campaign throughout the world must be increased. Not a meeting, not a demonstration must take place, not a single leaflet or I. L. D. paper must be issued without a call to the masses to act against the white terror which is being used by the American imperialists to crush the growing indignation of the Negro. masses in the U. 8,.A.”-(From the appeal:of’ By BURCK Rush food, clothing, money to Penn-Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky Striking Miners Relief Committee, 611 Penn Ave., Capitalist Terror Against Negro Workers in U.S.A. the C. C. of the I. L.D. to all sections and organ- izations of the IL. D.) The proletariat of all countries protest against the murder of their brothers, not, of course, be- cause they expect to convince the capitalists that they should not kill! A capitalist cannot be “humanitariar®” All that is human, except the brutal in mankind, is foreign to him. If he donates to a university the dollars which he has squeezed out of the workers, he does it in order to strengthen his power. In his universities, the teachings of Marx and Lenin are not studied. Any one who tried to give a lecture to the stu- dents on dialectic materialism would be immé- diately fired. The proletariat must protest against murders, but they must know that mur- derers cannot help murdering, and that they will kill the best people. The capitalists are de- fending their dollars, and for them dollars are more valuable than any man, whoever he may be. The proletariat must know that Rosa Lux- emburg and Karl Liebknecht were not killed by soldiers but by capitalists, and that Lenin was not shot by a half-witted woman but by the me- chanical weapon of a certain type of thought— the weapon of base, inhgman, middle class ideas. No Truce With Capitalist Murderers ‘The proletariat must know that no agreement, compromise or truce can be reached between them and the capitalists. It is time for the pro- letariat to know this. They must firmly remem- ber in addition that in 1914 the proletariat of Europe and Amerida were betrayed to the cap- italists. by the social democrats, and that this cost 30,000,000 workers’ lives. They must not for- get the “bloody dog,” Noske, also a social dem- ocrat, and in general they should not forget the crimes committed against the working class by its various enemies, traitors, scoundrels. All this should, be remembered so that the bloody foul- ness éf the past should not be repated in the future. It is easy to remember all this. It only requires that we carefully watch the despicable activity of the socialists of the Second Interna- tional and all that is done by the capitalists of Europe against the Union of Socialist Soviets. Must Oppose Imperialist Wars ‘The workers of Europe and America must un- derstand that when they work in the military industries, they are making guns, machine guns and artillery to be used against themselves. The capitalists will not go personally to fight the Soviet Union. If they make up their minds to fight, they will-Send their workers and peasants to the fleld of death against the workers and peasants who have destroyed capitalism in their own country. Every capitalist war is suicide for the working class. The working class of Europe and America must protest against single murders of workers by capitalists. It must protest because this edu- }- cates it in the feelings of internatoinal class solidarity—and the working class of Europe and America greatly needs to develop and deepen thsi feeling. But the protests must be still more firm and decisive and stormy against any at- tempt of the capitalists to organize once more a slaughter of workers and peasants. ‘The best, the most reliable and easiest at- tainable form of preventing this slaughter is for the masses of socialist workers to join the Communist Party. The Third International is the real leader of the workers because it is a workers’ international. It will not betray them. It recognizes the inevitability of only one war— the proletarians of all countries against the in- ternational band of capitalists, against the peo- ple who live on the labor of others. FIGHT STEADILY FOR RELIEF! Organize Unemployed Councils to Fight for Unemployment Relief. Organize the Employed Workers Into Fighting Unions. Mobilize the Employed and Unemployed for Common Strug- gles Under the Leadership of __. ‘the Trade Union UnityLeague By JORGE eae The Legal-Ilegal Pact : The ponderous wisdom of the International Court at the Hague, the congealed juridical quintessence of capitalist law, has rendered its solemn decision on the Austro-German Customs Pact. And this, according to the N. Y. Post of Aug. 31, is what it decided. ™ “The decision of the Hague Court grants the right to Germany to form a custom union with Austria, but denies the right to Austria.” Now what do you straight-thinking workers think of that for the world’s best brains”? Just as a bit of sauce added to the meat of this joke, the N. Y. Times of Sept. 1, tells us that this decision was held back till Sept. 2 officially, while Austria was kicked violently on the shins, and: “In consideration of these facts, Chancellor Schober of Austria is expected to announce Aus- tria’s voluntary renunciation of the project in advance of formal publication of the court’s decision.” That is nice and “voluntary,” isn’t it? The Militarization of Sports By JAY ANYON 'HROUGHOUT the world, there has been an intensification of the class line in sports. In Italy, Jugoslavia, Poland, Hungary, a. sys- tem has been established in sports, known as pre-military training of young workers, “to pro- pagate the ideas of the State and defense amongst the broadest strata of the nation, to combat anti-state elements and to educate proud and devoted citizens into good soldiers.” This system is adopted by the school sport organi- zations and those that are under bosses and fascist leadership. Officers in the army are used as instructors for these sport organizations. The Sokols, German Gymnast League and other sec- tions of the Lucerne (Socialist) Sport Interna- tional are part of this system. The Greek Parliament passed a bill whereby a soldier gets a 3-month reduction in military service if he attains a certain. degree of skill in a certain field of sports. It is reported that Dr. Kilinger, Deputy Gymnastic superintendent of the Sokols, was appointed as head of the Physical Culture in the 5th department of the Czechoslovakian General Army staff, thereby closely interlocking sports with the bourgeois army. An English commander of an infantry dis« covered that soldiers dislike drilling with gas masks, so a football game (rugby) was arranged between two teams with gas masks on. The military periodical states that this had a favor- able effect on the men. In Germany a bourge- ois sport event in Berlin an obstacle race was run with heavy machine guns, gas masks and smoke bombs. This sport event resembled more of a battlefront. This is the methods that are being used in order to involve to workers and the youth on the sport field into the military maneuvers of the bosses. In the United States, the watchword of the bosses sport organizatioris is “sport for sport sake.” Without any political or social attach- ments. We find outstanding ones being the YM CA, AAU, American Legion, and many indus- »trial and company sport organizations for both boys and girls. The Amateur Athletic Union reighs supreme on the’sport field and is a power= ful ‘organizational force for the bosses. Its lead- ership is composed of some of the biggest ex- ploiters, as for instance, Avery Brundage, big contractor in Chicago, Major General Douglas Arthur, Col. J. O'Neil, Major Julius Peyser and Col. Theo, Roosevelt. These army men closely connected with financial interests guide the destiny of sport. activities in the United States. Here is a quotation from the Athletic Hand- book of 1930: “The governments of the largest countries realize the importance of this work and are waking-up to the realization that the physical uplift of their ctiizens is a safer pro- tection for the nations than the large armies. ‘The World War proved it and even the Central Powers praises the work of the athletic asso- ciations.”. What does the American Legion handbook say about junior sports, “The obj-ct of these tournaments is to teach the boys ci ihe country to be better Americans i:iu lessons which the great playing of the game affords.” Over a quarter million boys are under their leadership yearly. In the Boy Scouts, the National Guards and CMTC, the sport issue is played up to attract the syoung workers and to camouflage its war character. The YMCA has demonstrated its ac- tions of approving war expenditures in its recent World Congress, at the same time using hypo- critical phrases about peace and mobilizing the youth against-the Soviet Union. Recently the mask of pacifism was blasted in the Y, when Mr. A, D. Rugh wrote an article condemning the CMTC;~The “Y¥” held a special conference and decided on a special issue of the “Y,” or- gan to print an apology to the army forces of the U. S. government. ‘The 1932 bourgeois Olympics are being feat- ured now- with a lot of publicity to stars and individuals-in the Sport realm, The outstande ing thing is that every country was invited to send athletes except the Soviet Union. The bos- ses would hate to see athletes from the workers “fatherland come here and represent real worke ers sports that are being widely developed in the Soviet Union. This is another step in pre paring war against the Soviet Union, by fosters ing prejudice against the Soviet sportsmen, This whole machine of the bosses right froma the school, the press and radio right up to brime stone and fire is being used very clevorly, at the present time, Its object is first to keep the workers and especially young workers from the struggle, make them forget about unemploy= ment, their lowering standard of. living and te make them real loyal to the boss class. On International Youth Day we must answer the ‘war mongers and expose the use of sports as a preparation.for another slaughter, an attack on Soviet Russia, j ‘The Labor Sports Union calls on all workers sportsmen, whether they be in any sport or- ganization, to come out on International Youth Day, Tuesday, Sept. 8, to demonstrate against war and militarism and for unemployed relief. The leadership of these sport organiza- tions work hand in glove with the boss, The conscious workers sportsmen must answer on this glorious day of struggle against war, bw \

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