The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 23, 1932, Page 4

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wage Four Leading Editorial in Moscow “Pravada” of Jan. 30 socialistic advance in a Bolshevist manne the whole front, the mighty and constant elerated tempo of the Five Year Pls 1e tremendous growth of productive for ally changing the face of the U. S. S. R. under our very eyes, A period of five years assumes the significance forical epoch. And the Five Year Plar z accomplished in four years, he foundations of the socialist economy the Soviet Union were completed in three year of the first Five Year Plan. The second Five Year Plan will be the period of abolition o: asses, the period of the construction of a Se list Society. “The basic political task of the second Five y Plan is the final liquidation of capitalist d of classes in general, the comp! rmination of causes which tend to create ass distinctions and exploitation, and the con quest of the remnants of capitalism in the economy and in the consciousness of the people nation of the whole toiling popula- country into conscious and active a classless socialist society.” (From t port: Comrades Molotov and Kuybishey) e soc! { industry, that leading power and of the construction of Socialism, is mar i ward with gigantic strides. Under it mighty influence, the age old structure of thc petty and of the pettiest dismembered peasant omy is rapidly crumbling. Collectivization wing at a rapid pace. During the second Five Year Plan, the last remnants of capitalist elements in our economy, will be liquidated. The deepest roots of cap- italism will be torn out to the end and forever “The Communists can express their theory in one premise:—Abolition of private property,” wes the ‘an tion of building of the stated by Marx and Engels in the “Communist the ‘The Manifesto. that fiery document of international proletarian revolution. fforts of the working- under the he Unio party of le and soci ng this theory into a victorious In our country, the private ownership are tr reality. 1€ of production is retreating irrepar- into storic. past. material bases of the second Five Year proble: mez re—the completion of the whole of ical reconstruction its econor id the tr fer of all the branche: of its economy to a base of the newest tech- nique. Tn a maximum of ten years we must traverse that distance, which sep: us from the mos: advanced capitalist countr is the main task put forward by Comrade Stalin. This problem can only be ed by an application of Bol shevist tempos in the socialist industrialization and by a resolute struggle for the mastery of the m advanced technical knowledge. The second Five Year Plan must give a deci- sive success along this line Machine construction, which plays a leading role in the completion of the technical re tion of our national economy is to be d 3 to 3 1-2 times. To produce 100 billion kilowatt-hours of elec trical energy against 17 billion in the last year of the first Five Year Plan, 22 millions of tons of cast iron: to mine 250 millions of tons of coal against 90 millions as in 1392; to construct 25-30 thousand kilometers of new railways. Such are some of the outstanding milestones of the bol tempo in the second Five Year Plan of socia construction. ‘The technical level of the R. will surpass that of the most ad- vanced capitalist countries, thus securing for the Soviet Union the first place in Europe. Having forever dispensed with the technical backwardness of the country, the U. S. 5. R. will finally be transformed from an importer of machines into an independent and extensive producer The unheard of speed of the growth of pro- ductive forces of the reconstructed industry d agriculture create a base for the decisive fccelleration of the betterment of living condi tions of the toiling masses). THE SUPPLY OF THE POPULATION WITH CONSUMERS’ GOODS WILL BE INCREASED TWO TO THREE TIMES COMPARED WITH THE LEVEL oF This becomes particularly important when compared with the shocking growth of pauperization of the toiling masses in the lands of the “much praised” capitalist civilization, ec under the blows of the crisis, tens of llions of workers are thrown out on the streets, shev doomed to a death of starvation, and where tens of millions of small farmers are at the deadline of poverty and want The second Five Year Plan will completely change the face of the Land of Soviets. The full technical reconstruction of the agri- cultural economy; the basic accomplishment of full collectivization and liquidation of Kulaks at the very beginning of the second Five Year Plan; the growth of large scale agricultural undertakings, armed with the newest technical knowledge will transform agricultural labor into a form of industrial labor and will obliterate the differences created by capitalism between city and country. "The perspectives of the second Five Year Plan are grandiose. Its tasks—enormous and majes- tic. And the proletariat of the U. S. S. R. is in possession of absolutely all the possibilities, all the power, all the means and all the resources for the victorious fulfillment of this gigantic plan of construction of a socialist society in that period. But it would be a grave opportunistic error to think that victory in the second Five Year Plan | will come of itself without efforts and without struggle and that the socialistic society will somehow find itself in our midst. ‘THE ROAD TO A CLASSLESS SOCIETY 18 THROUGH A BITTER CLASS STRUGGLE. Not without reason did Lenin constantly stress that the dictatorship of the proletariat 1s a PORM OF CLASS STRUGGLE, which in many r ets becomes more bitter. “Between the ritalist. and the Communist society is the period of the revolutionary transformation of the former into the latter, and the corresponding political ‘transition period inf whch the State can be nly THE REVOLUTIONARY DICTATOR- SH? OF THE PROLETARIAT.” (Marx). opportunist heroes of the by the Comprodaily Publishing Coe, Inc, dally excep! Sunday, at 60 Hast New York City. N. ¥. es8 and mail all checks to the Daily Worker, 60 East 13th Street, New York, N.Y. Telephone ALgonquin 4-7956. Cable "DAIWORK.* Dail Yorker SUBSCRIPTION RATES: New York City. Foreign: une year, Ey mall everywhere: One year, $6; six months, $3; two months, $1; excepting Boroughs of Manhattan and Bronx, $8; six months, $4.50. Porty US.A. | struggle, the working-class is being transformed | | grasping us with thousands of hands.” | achieved | millions of ton: sorles of | (Lenin) Hi ae fi a harmonious “ingrowth” of the kulak into so- cialism can speak about the “slackening” of the class struggle during the proletarian dictator- ship. In reality, the formula of Comrade Lenin is:—“The destruction of classes to be accom- | plished through a fierce class struggle” (Stalin)., | Forms of class struggle will remain with the Proletarian State for a long period:—The pitiless suppression of the remaining capitalist elements, the determined fight with expressions of petty bourgeois tendences, the fight for the socialist t sformaton of the poor and middle peasantry, | for a socialistic re-education of tens of millions of members of kolkhozes. (Collectives). Another form of class struggle in a Proletarian Dictator- shp is the socialistic upbringing of the backward strata of the workers and the strengthening of the labor discipline. By socialism in a building revolutionary | and is remaking itself. Lenin always empha- sized that “the past is holding us and is And he continuously spoke about the necessity of a de- termined fight against the powers and the tradi- tions of the old order, against all manifestations of looseness of labor dscipline, against the strength of the “habits of millions,” for the conquest of which, the iron determination and perserverance of the working-class, organized into the State Power, is absolutely necessary, “Accounting and control are the main re- quisites for the proper organization and for the proper functioning of the first phase of the Communist Society. All citizens become em- ee WE WILL BUILD SOCIALISM IN THE SECOND FIVE YEAR PLAN “REMEMBER, BROTHER, NOT MORE THAN YOUR SHARE!” wag #«- U.S. DOLLAR CO.m< ployees of the State—that is, of the armed working-class.” Thus did Comrade Lenin des- | scribe the socialist society, the first phase of communism. The class struggle will not be extinguished nor liquidated. in the second Five Year Plan. We will then continue the most determined fight against the right opportunism, as our main danger, with the left opportunism and with the counter-revolutionary tro’ it tendencies. The Party and the working-class of the U. S. S. R. will attack in a determined manner all manifestations of rotten liberalism, of “gentle- mannerisms” and adaptability. The Party | and the working-class of the U. S. S, R. have | victories of world renown and of | greatest historical value. On the Leninist road they will also achieve decisive victories in their | fight for the second Five Year Plan. | BUT THE FIRST AND MOST IMPORTANT | STEP IN THIS STRUGGLE IS THE COMPLE- | TION OF THE FIRST FIE YEAVR PLAN AND | THE FULFILLMENT OF THE PLAN OF 1932. ‘The socialist industry is the main lever in the | recol uction of the whole economy of the | country. Upon the work of our industry de- | pends in a decisive measure the plan of the whole econmy of our country in the completing year of the first Five Year Plan Industrial production must be increased by 36° without fail; production of cast iron must amount to 10 millions of tons and of coal to 90 production of machinery must. be increased bq 6.77 billions of rubles—such are the most important, fighting tasks of the current year. But the quantitative achievements themselves | become valueless if they are not combined with the exact fulfillment of all the QUALITATIVE INDEXES. A bolshevist struggle for the raising of the quality of labor and production, for a 7 per cent lowering of costs and for a 22 per cent raising of the productivity of labor—are the most important elements of the plan and the conditions of its fulfillment. The current year must be a year of broaden- ing and deepening of the socialist industrializa- tion of the Land of Soviets and of the strength- ening of its technical and economical independ- ence from the capitalist world. More fearlessly and more determinedly to march to the goal of the mastery of the newest technical knowledge and production. There must be no machine which could not be produced in the Soviet factories if the task is approached with a Bolshevist deter- mination. The struggle for the accomplishment of this slogan must be a matter of honor for all advanced workers, for all economists, for all scientific, engineering and technical workers. ‘The six conditions of Comrade Stalin show us clearly the true road to victory. We must see that they become a reality in the shortest pos- ible period of time, not in words but in deeds; that the methods of work and of management on all sectors of construction of the national econo- my are reconstructed on the basis of these con- ditions ‘The Party marches forward along the whole front, achieving new victories and developing new tasks. ‘These victories are of major international importance, judging by the comments of the cap- italist press on the theses of the second Five Year Plan. The first Five Year Plan was greeted with mocking and derisons and with slandering. But somehow the obstinate facts of achievements and overachievements, have compelled a change of tone here and there. Regarding the second Five Year Plan some pa- pers (Berliner Boersen Courier) continue their dull inculcation about the impossibility of realiz- ation of the fantastic alms of the Soviets. But through the core of malicious lies and poisonous slanders and hatred a new tone is making its way. “The Five Year Plan is # new colossus,” admits the Neue Freie Presse of Vienna. “The astronomical figures are breath taking. The new Five Year Plan wants to acclimate a new region three times the size of Europe without the U.S.S.R.” Even the Paris Temps, the mouthpiece of the French reaction, is compelled to admit that the Soviet Union achieved a victory in the first stage of industrialization without a foreign loan, The international bourgeoisie, which is pre- paring a war against the U. 8. & R. watches our successes with a fierce hatred. But every one of our victories is an inspiration and cheer for the International proletariat and foe all oppressed of the world. We now see very clearly that “our main tinfin- ence on the world revolution we exert through our economical policies. The eyes of the toilers. the world over, without exception and without exaggeration, are cast on the Russian Soviet Re- public, That much is achieved, The capitalists cannot hide our achievements, nor can they pass them up in sflence, therefore, they are playing up and magnifying our errors and weaknesses.” sis aa 1 By BURCK LOVE-TAPPING THE COPS BOOK REVIEW “Our Lawless Police—by Ernest Jerome Hop- Cte ei Yy. JEROME oe a title held out as bait to the gullible, a liberal-fascist has here produced a “crit- icism” of police methods which, in essence and underlying motives, is as clear an apology for cop and cossack as any that might be offered (perhaps without the Liberal’s hedging hypo- erisy) by Commissioner Mulrooney himself. In this period of intensifying government tcr- ror against the growing militancy of the workers, | the bosses have need for the particular brand of Liberal-fascist, who, with a gesture of paint- | ing the devil black, will proceed to washing him white. Such a retainer is Ernest Jerome Hopkins, and such whitewashing is his “sensational book writ- ten. with fearless frarikness and honesty,” to cite from the jacket. To begin with, the author proceeds from the theory that police tyranny and violence “mis- represent our national scheme of justice.” Cap- italist justice, that is, must, according to him, be kept out of the mess, exonerated at the out- set from complicity in police violence and cor- ruption, A piece of brazen charlatanry by which we are asked to acquit the master that sicked the bull-dog on us! And since “our justice,” which is so spotless, needs enforcement, the police (our brave critic of brutality leads us on) are at bottom pursuers of justice, workers in the cause of righteousness. What better example could we have of the Liberal-fascist method of action?—calling us to @ meeting against police brutality and then dop- ing us with reverence for brute boss justice and for the brutes that seek to enforce it! “Unlawful police work,” he warns, “is the most dangerous means of stirring that fire (of rebel- lion) into a blaze.” Yet, on its critical side, the book contains re- velations of police atrocity that should make the Spanish Inquisitors turn in their graves with envy. Here are tales of horror; of “confessions” forced through the unspeakably bestial and sad- istic Third Degree; of false arrests, to keep the quota high, or made as business drummings for fee-splitting shyster lawyers and bondsmen. Significant in this connection are the accounts of police victimization of Negroes. Police break into Negro homes especially without warrants, insult the inhabitants, beat them, and arrest them on trumped-up charges or on no charges at all, knowing that the black worker has no chance in court. Most flagrant of all is the case of the Texan policeman who lured two Ne- groes into a bank and shot them dead so as to get the reward of $5,000 offered by the local bankers’ association for the killing of any bank robber. ‘Through it all, however, with the scoundrelly double-dealing of the Liberal, the author at- tempts to create an atmosphere of “understand- ing” for the policeman, He seeks to explain away the brutalities a8 a vestige, a necessary and natural remainder from an earlier stage when “we were a disorderly people.” Or he lifts the guilt from the police by having them share in the “popular prejudices,” whatever that may mean. “The police are human and, forgetting their duty, they, too, take sides.” Through such chicanery he actually apologizes for police brut~ ality to Negroes on the grounds of “popular ne EISEN ‘Then let us in a bolshevist manner strengthen the might of the Land of Soviets, that invincible bulwark and mighty motive power of the World Revolution, Let us, under the banner of Comrade Lenin and under the guidance of the Leninist Central Committee with Comrade Stalin at the head, ac- complish the first Five Year Plan in four years and let us build socialism in the second Five ‘Year Plan. “The main thing at present is to set to work on the erection ef that structure, the plan of which has been long drafted, the ground for which had been energetically and lastingly con- quered and for whose construction, materials have been gathered in sufficient quantities; and now, having surrounded that structure with scaf- folding and having donned overalls, not fearing to soil them in the auxiliary materials and strictly adhering to the directives of our guiding per- sons, we must build and build and build that structure.” (Lenind sea S28 at , i a Sanction,” calling the double standard towards Negroes “no worse than lynching,” which he takes as a matter of course. Elsewhere he sets the policeman up as a fine, stout-hearted, sports- manlike fellow with a “love of the fray.” (“Seat- tle liked its pugilistie police.”) And as a final | appeal, he tells us how humane and sentimental | and charitable the policeman is at heart, and that his bestiality springs from his high moral | concern for safeguarding righteousness. Read him and weep: “Prevailingly the policeman is something of a moralist. He réeflects much upon right and wrong, sorting people into the two great classes... | vagrants! As for the class struggle, Hopkins pretends never to have heard of it. In fact, such a divi- sion of people into exploiters and exploited, would run counter to ‘%s blissful “national scheme of justice.” To him the bludgeoned, the jailed, the deported, the tortured, the lynched, belong to a vast class of fated unfortunates, of pitiable derelicts, whom he lumps together as “mere indigens and morons and vagrants and unemployed men and migratories and drug ad- dicts and immigrants and illiterates...” Yes, sir, that’s what they are! Morons and Innate criminals, mentally and mor- Sub-human, anti-social by their very make-up. Immigrants, morons and: unemployed —12 million of ‘em! Atta-boys! Treat ‘em rough! Give ’em the works! Come on, lc! t Oh-cr-er excuse me, I m-m-meant, Don't be | lawless, officers. ally! HE lessons of te last world imperialist war must be mede known to the toiling masses of the country. Particularly to the younger generation *War to stimulate trade”, “War to bring back prosperity”, are some of the key notes of Amer- ican imperialism in its ideological mobilization of the masses for war, We must actually and con- yineingly expose the imperialist aims and effects of war. The main concern of American imperiallam today is war against the Soviet Union, against Soviet China. We must particularly expose the lying campaign of bourgeois press to cover up the great Socialist achievements of the first Five- Year Plan, and the establishment of a classless society through the Second Five Year Plan. The figures of the huge expenditures on armaments by the imperialist powers, should be contrasted with the figures of the peaceful policy of the So- viet Union in the building of Socialism. Also with the refusal to grant unemployment insurance, while billions are spent on war. Losses in the World War, 1914-18, For all armies in the imperialist war of 1914-18, the reported number of dead soldiers was 9,998,- 7711. But that is only part of the story. Ne: 6,000,000 other soldiers were reported as s oners or missing” and at least half of these were dead. Seriously wounded numbered over 6,000,000, and “otherwise wounded” about 14,000,000. Besides the dead soldiers, at least as many civilians died, either killed in air raids or dead from war dis- eases, starvation and exposure. War widows in all countries numbered 5,000,- 000, These women are left to earn a living as best, they can, under post-war capitalism, and the small widow's pension is never enough to live on. About 9,000,000 children were left fatherless by the war, it is admitted by capitalist writers. And at least 10,000,000 men, women, and children lost their homes and wandered as homeless refugees over the land. So we have this list of what bour- geois writers call “the human cost of the great world war”—the cost born mostly of course by the working class: 10,000,000 known dead 3,000,000 prisoners soldiers 9,000,000 war orphans 3,000,000 probably dead 5,000,000 war widows soldiers. 10,000,000 refugees 13,000,000 dead civilians 20,000,000 wounded soldiers In the American army about 110,000 soldiers died in the war. Over 40,000 were seriously wounded and nearly 150,000 were “otherwise wounded.” Wa: Preparations, Every capitalist nation is prepared for war even to the last belt buckle. The United States heads the list of 60 nations in armaments and spends more than any other country for the army and navy—$707,425,000 in the one year, 1930-31. (League of Nations; Armaments Year Book.) And that vast sum {s only for direct military and naval expenditures. taxes to the federal government goes for war, past, present or future, and not one cent goes for uner-ntoy ment insurance to take care of job- less workers. The whole amount spent for war by the U, S. government each year now in “peace- time” is nearly $3,000,000,000, Public health gets only $22,496,000 this year (ending June 30, 1932) —less than the cost of one superdreadnaught. ‘The U. S. battleship Indiana cost $5,800,000 . ome years ago, enough to build a great univer- - Facts on War for Agitators | Seventy cents out of every dollar you pay in sity or half a dozen large hospitals. And now the latest superdreadnaughts in the U. S. Navy eost | over $40,000,000 apiece. Cost of the World War, 1914-18 Grand total, $186,405,851,222. | United States, $32,080,266,968. (From Direct and Indirect Costs of the Great World War, by Ernest L, Bogart, p. 267.) The average daily cost of the war was more than 215 millions, or 9 millions per hour. Workers’ Enemies Exposed Joseph Smythe, of Denver, Colo., has been ex- pelled from the Communist Party as an unre- liable and shady element, who disappeared upon | being accused of connections with the police. He has been in Seattle, Wash., and may turn up now in California. Bert Hall, of Denver, Colo., has been expelled from the Communist Party as an irresponsible, disruptive and white-chauvinistic element, who peddled slanders against le ading Party members, | tried to line up workers against the Party’s pro- | gram for organizing Negro workers, and who had previously been found guilty of misappropriating funds in the Unemployed Council. ee Geo. D. Glazebrook, of Denver, Colé., has been expelled from the Communist Party as an unre- liable, disruptive and suspicious element, who has spread malicious charges against leading Party members, and who has associated himself with stool-pigeons (Doty and Linde) and with other disruptive elements in the holding of anti-Party meetings and in vicious efforts to break up the Unemployed Council. He has been also charged with having served on the police force of Kansas City, and he is a member of the American Legion. Description — about 6 feet tall, 180 lbs. in weight,, blond hair, blue eyes. eB Muha Chas. Lea, of Denver, Colo., has been expelled from the Communist Party as an unreliable and disruptive element, who closely associated with Glazebrook in the crimes against the Party and against the Unemployed Council, and who also is a member of the American Legion. Description — 38 years, 5 feet Tin., slim, black hair and eyes, sharp face, . 8 Jesse Younger, of Denver, Colo., non-Party, has been expelled and denounced by the Unem- ployed Council as an unreliable, disruptive and suspicious element, who associated closely with known stool-pigeons (Doty and Linde), and who turned to the police in his efforts to break up the Unemployed Council. Description — about 30 years, 5ft. 10 in., 150 Ibs. ico arr ang * Clarence Linde, of Denver, Colo., non-Party, has been expelled and denounced by the Unem- ployed Council as a stool-pigeon, who has been traced several times in his visits to the police, Description — about 50 years, 5ft. 5in., 130 lbs., blue eyes. Claims to be a quartz miner. ME Tate Charles Linde, of Denver, Colo., non-Party, has been expelled and denounced by the Unemployed QGouncil as a close associate of stool-pigeons, who ' econ The Fourth Note & When the drive to “Americanize Europe” start- ed a few years ago, we met even in the Soviet Union among the more backward workers there with the lie so industriously cultivated by Amer- ican capitalists, that “In America, every worker has an automobile and a radio.” Indeed, “them wuz the daze” when the right wing in our own movement was fascinated by the “strength” of American imperialism and talked about it being “red-cheeked and young.” Now look at it! And look at the Right Wing, too! We were reminded of this by the dispatch of the International News Service of Feb. 15, tell- ing of fsuicide of Ray Hayes, a San Franeisco | musician—one of the aristocratic trades—who, out of a job, took poison and then jumped out of a seventh storey window of a Frisco hotel. Hayes left four letters behind. One to his wite who ‘expects to become a mother. One to his mother. One to the capitalist press, saying in part: “I cannot get work and there is no one I can ask for help.” But the fourth note, says the press: “Was in the form of a will. It be- Ggueathed his automobile, 4 piano, a radio and three saxanphones to his widow.” Really, Hayes should have bequeathed his “rugged individualism” also, but possibly to Pre- sident Hoover. However, what we want to call attention to is the fact that thi led worker, though he had all that the lying propaganda of American imocriali said he should have as an American worker, an automobile and a radio, still he had NO SECURITY. How much better off, therefore, zre the work- ers of the Soviet Union who, building a socialist seciety on the basis of their own government ese tablished by revolutionary ovethrowal of the cap- | italists and Jandlords, began by securing a living to all who are ning further autos and system. The morel of this nn is not, of course, that Amervican workers should not have autos and radios, but that they should have sense enough illing to work and now ere wine security cven in the enjoyment of radios by building up a_ socialist | not to commit suicide, but should overthrow capitalism and gain security, Learning from Mulrooney One thing the N. Y. Times circulation ma can boasi cf is that Herndon EF Kentue' ‘imes”. Any- how, the ancient alibis of Mulrooney are being edopted in Pineville. We refer to the “explana- tion” by Evans, that he and his gang did not beat up Allan Taub and Waldo Frank, no siree, Evans says Taub and Frank were “fighting with each other to give the appearance of being attacked” just to make trouble for the kind-hearted Ken- tucky fascists. Mulrooney’s men have always contended that workers in demonstrations “throw themselves against the pavement” so hard as to sustain frac- tured skulls, just to give an excuse to charge the kind-hearted eops vith beating them up. Of course, Communists are supposed to be funny people, and might do some such thing, but, gee whiz, the disease seems to be spreading to lawyers and well known novelists! Anyhow, the novelists and dramatists that are on that com~- mittee will have some right smart material for their next novel or play. » 2 8 Try This One on Stimson: “Perhaps, Mr. Stimson, you could pull yourself away from the trans-Atlantic telephone long enough to ex- plain how come that for the last many months you have been making funny noises which you claimed were ‘peace efforts’ concerning China, all of them politely based on the gtneral’ {dea that you were ‘supporting the efforts of the League of Nations’; and now you come out with the broad inference that you don’t agree with the French proposal for a League of Nations’ police force because ‘France controls the League.’ So it seems that, as regards imperialist plans in the Far East, you were playing around with Mlle. La Belle France, one of the prize Soviet haters of the world, who ‘also protested’ at Japan’s action in Shanghai—and sent an- other note along to Tokio saying: ‘Pay no at- tention to our protest!’ Now, Mr. Stimson, please don’t say there aren’t any secret treaties, We've got a cracked lip.” Res. ah. 3 It seems to us: That Ex-Secretary of State Frank B. Kellogg, who is joy-riding around Southern California in a sixteen-cylinder Ca- dillac, and although a republican is perfectly at home with that freebooter of the democrats, Wm. Randolph Hearst; it seems to us, as we started out to say, that this imbecile old swind- ler who is co-author with Briand of the “Kel- logg Pact,” for which he got a cash prize (what was it? $40,000?) from the Nobel (dynamite) Peace Foundation, should be compelled to re- turn that money or be indicted for obtaining it under false pretenses. i Uncover Starvation and Misery Visit the homes of the unemployed workers. Lin. all cases of starvation, undernourishment, inade- quate relief. Carry on a sustained and steady struggle for unemployment relief for the starving families from the city government, the large corporations and employers, Hiave large delegations of unemyoyed | workers present pt every mentin= -# the _elty council to fight for adequate ree a Hef for all cases of starving and undernourished workers’ families, — ee participated in their efforts to break up the Un- employed Council. Description — about 55 yrs., 5 ft, 8 in., 200 Ibs,, gray hair, blue eyes, . 4 The revolutionary movement in Denver is ting rid of these rats and disrupters who infested it for some time, and who have resorted to open alliance with the police in efforts to break up the Unemployed Council, hold meetings for organized efforts to break the Unemployed Council, who hold meetings organized efforts to disrupt the movement, spread all kinds of unfounded charges leading members, ete. A sharp fight has also been started against disruptive elements, factional groupings and per- sonal cliques within the Party and the sympa thetic workers organizations in Denver, which have kept them in constant internal turmoil and blocked their growth and mass activities, , CENTRAL CONTROL COMMISSION 3 ; ifnatll | | | | |

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