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_DAILY WORKER, _NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1932 Spoke of Alliance Secret Documents for American Capitalists Show German-French-Polish War Plot German Chancellor Ready to 4 to History” and “Extirpate Bolshevism” Accordi iin, Chancellor @eny that French de: Conference o' curity, he re “Perhaps France would not feel se- cure until she has a military alliance with Germ no offer; it was under- tion of armed forces.’ st Soviet Union Being Prepared. The letter as quoted by the Daily Worker further states that “there is even Berlin talk of a Franco-German ™" war against Russia to be waged once the later is engaged on her eastern frontiers by Japan. Furthermore the letter recalls that: “The Berliner Volkzeitung” pub- lishes a circumstantial account of the proceeding at a session of the Deutsche Herrenklub, held February 2ith, 1931. This is a club of German ard Papen tell of the results of a visit to Pa to get into relations w French clericals. According to this recital, Papen stated that the Frdnco-German “understanding” had ~ been considered at Paris and had foundrsupport in “wider circles” than those actually encountered. It had been agreed, Papan announced’ to the Kinb, that a complete standing could only be established by means of 2 France-German-P ish ce. Under this arange: _Germany would be obliged to aban- don.al claim to her eastern frontiers (the Corzidor and the Polish Upper =», Silesia) . Poland to Be Drawn Into Alliance. ‘Throwing more light upon the pro- ceedings of this meeting at the Deutsche Herrenklub, the letter con- tinues significantly: “The cbjective of su a three- “eornered combination would be: (1) a strict econemic alliance against REALIZATION OF THE RUSSIAN 1 ECONOMIC PROGRAM and (2) the); re-arming of Germany. Some mem- bers of the Klub objected to aban- donment of Germany's eastern fron- tier claims. Pzpan is quoted as hav "ing replied: “The urgent pr: Europe must be solved by Germany and France jcintly. f As the price f such cooperation France Necessary to roi Up All Local Issues and Use Them in Election Dear Comrad As to local i should apply to the Wor! or Unemployed Councils neighborhool and arm with all the facts, names and ad- dresses of workers who have been refused relief, evictions and cases of starvation. Explain these cases and ask what have th «done to stop these evictions and what help have they given to get relief to the starvation cases. Also to study the candidates who were in office last year and who are running this year. Look up their previous plat- form and present platform. And on in dses faces. This will be the chance to show the difference between the Democrats, Republicans and Social- ists as to their fake promises and to} clearly show the stand of the C. P., “which fights for the workers, with “the workers and by the workers. Also more attention should be paid to the question of the soldier's toifbstone bonus, because many ‘fakers will rally the ex-soldiers on this issue, so we must arm ourselves with more facts and figures on this | 4 question. e-All workers must intensify their ' sbactivity in their shop, because we @were always talking about turning our face to the shops, so here is our opportunity to acccomplish this task. In our section, one of the most serious shortcomings will be that no Negro worker has been nominated as }m candidate. Although there are two * Negro populated sections, one on) Moore Street and vicinity and the | other around the Socialist Party ing to get the Negro workers to our side, but up to now we have not had any reat results. But now, in this election, with a Negro candidate, we would be able to rally the Negro workers to our side. This shortcom- “felection so we would not have to it as a shortcoming after the st campaign. STEVEN STEFFEN. ry un-|{ 1 of aj’ biems of | S|ation and log carried out by Foster, in accepting) representatives | i these bases expose their fake prom-) and tear the masks off their) stronghold on Myrtle Avenue, here | ‘would be our opportunity to expose _ the 8. P. on their stand as to the |) Negro question, We have been try- i} ing should be looked into before the | and. Therefore the question of the eastern frontiers must be left for the future to deal with, The three- cornered alliance mrst be realized in order to extirpate Bolshevism.” Election Keynote Pamphlets By VERN SMITH. Four pamphlets are already out for} Party election cam- the platform adopted Com One i e delegates at the Na- ition called by the Com- 2 platform is the Com- Central Committee's e situation which makes tral demands in the elec- tion c& paige real live issues now. The Keynote—“The Fight for Bread” There are now published the key- note speech made at the first ses- sion of the convention, “The Fight for Bread, by Earl Browder, sellin for one cent away, Commu director, ni time in hi election campaign ig for the first tory a Negro worker for of the United States, peared in pamphlet form, “Who Are the Friends of the Negro People,” also for one cent. Then there is a pe + containing the accept-| ance fh of the Negro worker, James W. Ford, and also the accept- ance speech of the comrade nomin- ated for the presidency of the United States by thes> 1,200 delegates—Wil- liam Z. Foster, general secretary of the Trade Unity League. This pamph ‘Foster and Ford for Food and Freedom is for two cents. Certainly hundreds of thousands of copies of ¢ pamphlets can be sold this Communist election cam- paign. Browder's speech points to the main | issue: “TI ver known “Hooverville Prosperity” greatest economic crisis During this crisis the Republican | “For three | has been in power. Browder, “Hoover prom- ised prosperity in 60 days. This pros- perity takes the form of cities of un- employed, hom outcast millions in cellars, un- Hundreds of paid y of the Great Engin- ‘hits House by adopting ‘Hooverville’ The very and farmers.” ot Ballots Alone full of informa- ment and this nomination. 60 Per Cent Worse ig the past two years the liv- ards of the American work- ing s has been cut by at least 60 per cent,” Foster announces. “The 2 farmers has been cut ion dollars in 1929 to 7 million in 1931. The farmers, like the workers are starving, and are being stripped of their meagre possessions.” Foster cites Henry Ford’s 80 per cent unemp! d and “when his work- ers demand break, he slaughters them with machine guns.” Slaughter As Way Out | Foster goes deeply into the starva- | tion and industrial collapse, and em- | Phasizes that the capitalists look to a spreading of the war, already going Jon in China, as a way out of the crisis, a way to destroy the Soviet | Union, the country they dread be- | cause it points to the workers a work- | ers’ way out | Foster |the Republican and Democratic Par- | ties will fight, and the sham battle against capitalism the Socialist Party “Durin, ing sta | puts up. |“Who Are the Friends of the Negro | People” Hathaway, nominating James W. | Ford, Negro worker, for vice-presi- | dent, describes the horrors of Jim | Crowiamn, of lynching, of tenant |slavery in the South and discrimina- tion in the factories of the North. Nation of Outcasts Ford, in accepting the nomination, | gives a detailed though brief account |of the discriminations practised on | the Negro toiler, of the life of a ‘“so- cial-outcast nation” of toilers. He analyzed, too, the Republican, | the Negroes, and exposes the treach- jerous role of the Negro capitalists, | the, misleaders, the National Associa- | tion for the Advancement of Colored People Who can describe these speeches? They are compact, full of informa- tion, full of explanations and argu- ments. Get them and read them; put them in the hands of the voters —0f all the workers. “Leave Corridor | The speech of C. Hath-| s all over the country, have | homage to the| become a sym-} describes the sham battle| Democratic and Socialist Party dis-| | crimination against and oppression of | | | , the keynote of the conven- | I, AMTER, Communist candidate for governor of New York state. Amter has been for some time Dis- trict Organizer of the Communist Party, District 2. Before that he was District Organizer in Cleveland. He has been a tireless fighter for the working class. RAYMOND HANSBOROUGH, candidate for U. 8S. Hansbor- ough is a Negro worker, like Ford, Communist Senator from Wisconsin, who campaigns under the Com- munist banner for vice president. The Communist Party stands for full social, economic and political equality of Negro and white work- ers, and writes this plank into its platform. JOHN BALLAM, Communist candidate for Governor of Massa- chusetts. He leads the struggle against starvation in the state of the Lawrence sirike. ROBERT TURNER, Negro worker, Communist candidate for Secretary of State, Minnesota. THE Soviet newspaper “Pravda,, points out the election campaign in the United States is occurring on the background of the terrific deepening of the crisis which is continuing to strangle the economy of the United Stat in its death grip. The pride of the American econ- omy—the metal industry—is work- ing only 22 to 25 per*ce! Other leading branches of eco! , Prav- da points out, are even in a worse Situation, the automobile industry included. The crisis has thrown into bankruptcy over 2,500 sr county banks. It reached the main powerful fortresses of finance car ital, s as the Bank of the Un: ted States with a principal of $250, 000,000; the Trans-American Corp., which has lost $800,000,000; sull Co., which is one of the trusts with a capital of $1,200,000,- 000. The most substantial newspaper of the German heavy industr. “Deutsche Bergwerk Zeitting,” as serts that the banking house of Morgan is virtually on the brink of bankruptcy. Rumors have spread on the world exchanges that the business of the National City Bank is likewise poor. The exchanges are losing their confidence in the dol- lar. The withdrawal of gold from the United States continu The gold reserves of the Federal Bank are falling down. In the Urn States they speak ever more fre- quently about the necessity of in- flation. ae Poison in Secial Life to the or- The crisis is eating | ganism of capitalist to ions, graft | poisoni ng the entire soc: the United States. various groups of capita: robbing the tremendous state re- sources in the shape: of credits, tar- iff and subsidies. Taxes are state budget is not balanced and the deepening crisis is increa: the deficit. A so-called “Rec: struction Corporation” created Hoover, has as its aim to save and enrich the individual groups of the financial oligarchy. The Recon- struction Corporation gave the pos- sibility to individual representatives of finance capital to seize from the state treasury over two billion dol- lars for their salvation and strengthening. It is in such a situation of a deepening economic crisis that the pre-election struggle is taking place. The manouvers of the old bourgeois parties—the Republican and Democrats—begin, which are calculated upon the deception of the masses. Repeal Fight Through the combined efforts of both parties of the bourgeoisie, the struggle of the “wets” and “drys” becomes almost a central problem of the pre-election campaign, whereby a number of bootleggers, smugglers, speculators and bandits who derive tremendous profits from trading in alcohol, are conducting 2) desperate struggle against the re- peal of the “dry” law which has brought them such large benefits. Another problem which is troub- ling the bourgeois minds consists in how to better organise the further robbery of the state resources by the largest banks and trusts under the guise of the struggle with the crisis, under the subterfuge of the struggle against unemployment. The Republicans, with Hoover at their head, are putting forward a pre-election program which for- sees: the balancing of the bu by means of the lowering of é penses and increased taxation: the ceasing of the emission of tressugy notes; the broadening of the credit to the Federal Reserve B bien ga the introduction of public wort: which do not require en emt‘ssio: of new state loans; the financing of individual enterprises; the introduc- increasing, but the | the Workers The Pravda Analyses the Conditions Facing / in the U.S. tion of a 5-day week for federal em- | ployees together with the stagger | plan and wage euts; the extension of funds for the Reconstruction Corp. up to three billion dollars for the carrying out of the work which “give income”— to the capitalisis, of course. Relief to Banks The essence of the Hoover pro- gram consists in that the “Federal ik System” and the State budget are subject to risk; the stability of the dollar becomes questionable. large banks and trusts are g three million dollars more of “relief” and tremendous cred- its. All this is being carried out under the guise of a “struggle with the crisis and unemployment.” The Democrats, as the New York The receiv! Times expresses it, “over-Hoover- ized” Hoover himself. They have introduced a bill to furnish at once one and half billion dollars to the Reconstruction Corp. for financing large trusts and banks. In capitalist circles there is as yet no ser*ious tendency for the creation of a third party. The discontent of the farmers of the agriculltural states is as yet seized upon by individual “insurgents” of the old parties. The Conference for Progressive Labor Action, with Muste at its head, is attempting to crystallize itself into an embryo of a “labor” party along the type of the British. This group puts forward a program of a labor government, of planned economy, etc. It is a reformist ism” by Jos. Stalin, International Publishers, price, 40c.) By SAM DON eyes of the toiling.masses are turning towards the Soviet Union. | of the first 5-Year abol of classes nd 5-Year Plan, ex- fluence on the! the capitalist Soviet Union is the bodiment of the revolution- out of the crisis. ! The succes the e ay The | tremendous secial fascists, fearing the | influence exercised by the success of Socialist construction jin the Soviet Union, are performing jleft manouvers. What is the nature |of some of these left manouvers? It is to separate the dictatorship of the proletariat which carried through the revolutionary way out, of the isis, which is building Socialism in the Soviet Union, from the obvious economic advantages of the Soviet system, over the dying and decaying capitalist system. Note for instance what Mr. Norman Thomas said in one of the recent issues of the New Leader: “All of us want to see the ruth- lersness of the Russian dictator- ship ended, but in my judgment we must face the fact that the ECONOMIC success of the Russian experiment is an asset” (his em- phasis). But the economic success of the “Russian experiment” is precisely due to the ruthlessness of the proletarian dictators s the capitalist parties, the inter- ventionists, etc. And precisely bs- cause, of’ the firmness and the de- cisiveness that the dictatorship of proletariat has displayed, and ts displaying against the mensheviks, Russian members of the 2nd So- t Internaticnal. victories and successes of the Soviet Union are inseparable from achings of Leninism. It is in n that we must look for an snation of the invincibility of the 5-Year Plan. Without the teachings |of Lenin, the existence and growth lef the Soviet Union is inconceivable. |No wonder then, that as the workers begin to look towards the Soviet Un- ion, the social fascists declare that the Soviet system is peculiarly (!) | Russian, but cannot be applied to the \“oivilized” capitalist co-:iries. For example let us take Norman Thomas’ brother in cloth, the Rev. Muste, the left social fascist. He said: ip against the open enemies | “The problem of method in ach- foying scci2l change in nations Laninien Is inkuendlienat and Not Peculiarly Russian ication of the “Found- | where political democracy has been achieved, as contrasted with na tions like Czarist Russia in an eatlier period of political evolution.” (Labor Age, April 1931). In the August 1931 Issue of the Labor Age, Mr. Muste still further developed his point when he said, “The Communist Party in the U. S. today, suffers from a mechanical dic. |tation from outside which severely handicaps it in its dealing with the American situation. Its roots are not primarily in the American soil.” The} aim here of the social fascists of all) shades and colors is to rob Leninism of its main feature, its international feature, which is that Leninism is not merely rooted in the Russian soil, but rooted in the international soil of the class struggle. Comrade Stalin in his “Founda- tions of Leninism” clearly states: “Leninism is an international pheno- mena, it is rooted in international- ism and is not solely Russian.” The international feature of Leninism is very clearly expressed in comrade Stalin’s formulation dealing with the relation of Leninism to Marxism, when he says: “Leninism is the Marxism of the epech of imperialism and of the proletarian revolution. To be more precise, Leninism is the theory and tactic of the proletarian revolution in general, and the theory and tac- tic of the dictatorship of the pro- letariat in particular.” For our Party which struggles in the leading imperialist country ‘1 the world, which country is at the present time hardest hit by the economic cri. sis, the absornvtion of the teachings of Leninism is fundamental for the suc. cess of the Party in establishing it- self es the vanguard of the toiling masses. The tendency in theory or practice to underestimate the immediate ne- cessity of applying Leninism in solv- ing the burning prcblems facing the Party at the present time must be traced back to their class source, namely, the influence of social fas- cism on the Party. Our Party membership is largely new. To assimilate the new Party membership means to imbue it with the spirit and teachings of Lenin. The publication of the “Foundations of Leninism” by Stalin is very time- ly. The greatest use must be made of Stalin’s book in all of our studies. More than that, we must particularly take it as a manual and guide for revolutionary practice, In our next article we shall deal with the various important sections in’ Stalin's “Foundations of Lenin- ism,” On the Eve of the United States Presidential Elections group which is strenuously cover- ing itself with left phrases, at- tempting thus to utilize the revolu- tionary sentiment of the masses, Along with the necessity of ex- posing the Socialist Party and its left groups, the Communist Party of the U.S. A., says Pravda, is con- fronted with the task of unmasking the Muste group, which attempts by means of demagogy to capture the workers who are moving towards Communism. It is necessary, however, to ac- knowledge the fact that the polit- working ‘masses from the bourgeois parties is not by far accomplisshed as yet. The Communist Party counter- poises to the bourgeois program of the capitalist way out of the crisis, the proletarian program of the rev- olutionary way out of the crisis, leading the struggle against the capitalists and the bourgeois agen- cies within the working class, util- izing the election campaign for the mobilization and organization of the masses against the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie and against a new imperialist war, for the dic- tatorship of the proletariat, Fascism ‘The entire pre-election struggle in the United States is proceeding under conditions of the rapid de- eaying of bourgeois “democracy.” A fascist tendency is being born within the frame-work of the old reactionary chauvinist and black hundred organizations of the bour- geoisie. The problem of the foreign pol- icy of the American imperialism plays in the pre-election campaign a@ comparatively minor role. The financial oligarchy which deter- mines the policy of the United States prefers not to carry the serious questions of war and peace | into the noisy pre-election arena. Meanwhile dollar imperialism is being confronted with every sub- stantial problems. In the Far East Japanese impe- rialism has put pointedly the ques- tion of the partition of China. The Washington treaty between the United States, Japan and England has been blown up, The letter of Stimson to Borah signifies ine open threat of American imperial- ism to strengthen its armaments. The concentration of the military fleet of the United States and its maneuvers in theh Pacific Ocean, the extension and strengthening of air and navy bases of the United States in the Pacific Ocean, serves to foreshadow the growing war danger, they foreshadow the strengthening of the Japanese- American contradictions. This does not prevent certain imperialist circles in America from furnishing ammunition and war matezials, and military equipment to its future antagonist, Japanese imperialism. This policy is being carrried out in connection with the attempt to incite Japan into war with the Soviet Union in the hope that the war of Japan against the Soviet Union will weaken Japan and give the possibility for Amer- ican imperialism to warm its hands. Simultaneously the economic crisis has led to the crashing of the Young Plan. The reparation payment and together with that the agreements in regard to the Inter-Allied debts are hanging in mid-air. France continues its attacks against the gold reserves of the United States. The financial oli- garchy of the United States would readily agree to decrease military expenses of other lands in order to weaken its rivals and secure the payment by them of their debts, Stimson, however, has left Geneva without attaining, as is known, any results in this respect. In the same manner the collapse of the Lau- sanne conference is assured so far as the actual solution of the rep- Argentine. Packing Houses Are Struck 15,000 Out, Joined by 3,000 Telephone Workers and Struggle Spreading to Uruguay, Brazil Fight Is Against Foreign Imperiaiists Who Run Meat Business; Call for So! The strike movement of idarity apaene workers of Arrant con- tinues to expand. Already the four most important meat pac ig houses are involved, Anglo, Armour, Wilson and La Blanca, The strikers make up about 15,000 including also 3,000 telephone workers. ‘The 27 of May there was a meeting of these strikers in Euenos Aires Labor Sports WILL THE SOVIET ATHLETES BE PERMITTED INTO THE UNITED STATES? By Si Gerson [ANY WORKERS are already familiar with the fact that there are two athletic meets going on in the United States in the month of duly. One is the Olympic Games in Los Angeles; the other is the International Workers Athletic Meet at Stagg Field, Chicago on July 28, 29 and 30. The Olympic Games are supposed to be examples of ‘international friendship.” However, the army officers and millionaires who run those games, have not seen fit to invite the Soviet Union, one-sixth of the earth’s surface. The Na~- tional Counter Olympic Committee, however, composed of representa- tives of workers’ organizations, on the contrary, invited the Soviet Union to take part in the Inter- national Athletic Meet. Refuse Free Visas! ‘HE Natinal Counter Olympic Committee wrote to the State Department in Washington, asking that the athletes coming to the I. W. A. M. be permitted to come on the same basis as the Olympic athletes, that is, without the usual formality of visa fee. The State Department refused in a letter dated June 3rd, where they stated that the Olympic athletes are being permitted to come in on the basis of free visas by a special resolution of Congress. (Congress, of course, has not seen fit to pass any special resolution asking for the Soviet athletes to enter, free visa or no free visa!) The National Counter Olympic Committee thereupon, wrote the State Department that they are suggesting to the Soviet athletes that “they proceed to the nearest country in which there is an Am- erican Consulate and there arrange to obtain visas at the usual fee. Now it is no longer a question of free visas. Now it is an open and shut question: Will the State De- partment permit the Soviet athletes to enter thts country and competi- tion with American and Canadian athletes? These developments must be watched. very closely. However, it is not enough for every worker or workers’ organization to watch de- velopments; it is necessary that every workers’ organization insists that the State Department permit the Soviet athletes to enter. Demand Entrance USSR Athletes cannot be content with silence from the State Department. We | must insist upon a definite answer. Every workers’ organization should adopt resolutions demanding that the Soviet athletes be permitted to come and compete at the I. W. A. M., July 28, 29 and 30, at Stagg Field, Chicago. These resolutions and telegrams should be forwarded to the Secretary of State, Washing- ton, ‘D.C., and copies sent to the National Counter, Olympic Commit- tee, 799 Broadway, Room 229, New York City. JOBLESS REPULSE SOCIALIST PARTY NEW YORK, June 30—A united front of socialists, landlords and po- licemen sprung up at a meeting in Boro Park when some unemployed workers attemptéd to denounce the vote-catching schemes of the Social- ist Party, a worker correspondent re- Ports, ‘The meeting was called by the So- cialist Party on June 28 for the os- tensible purpose of organizing the unemployed workers of Boro Park. Its real purpose however was to keep|’ the workers away from the Boro Park| Unemployed Council, which led a|’ number of victorious fights in the neighborhood against evictions and for immediate relief. When workers accused the Socialist Party of attempting to keep the job- less from struggling for relief, Chas. Solomon, the speaker, tried to defend his party. Some of the workers pre- sent recalled how the Socialist Par- ty through Norman Thomas, its standard bearer, backed up the “block did” scheme of Morgan. arations problems is concerned. A certain part of the bourgeois circles is seeking a way out of the difficult situation of American im- perialism by means of inciting a war, first of all, against the USSR. These adventurisy attempts of the bloody inciters of war will meeet a determined opposition on the part of the broadest masses of the workers and toilers of the United States. « | Contreras was arrested, together v at which the secretary of the Latin American Confederation Unions, Miguel of Trade Contreras, spoke. A |'the secretary of the meat workers’ union and a group of strikers. On the 28th of May the Executive Committee of the Latin American Confederation demanded the release of Contreras from the Argentinian government. The fascist censorship of the Justo regime in Argentina sup- pressed the protest telegrams and ini- tiated a most extreme wave of reac- tion against the Argentinian working class. Hundreds Arrested. Hundreds upon hundreds have been arrested, several comrades as- sasinated, hundreds of striking oil! workers have been evicted, thrown! out into the streets with their fami- liés at the point of bayonets. The ‘sttike of the meat packing workers has also extended to the Anglo in Fray Bentos, Uruguay, and is ex- pected soon to embrace the packing houses in Cerro, Montevideo. “The special significance of this struggle lies in the fact that the meat packing houses and the oil industry} in South America are essential to the war plans of the imperialist robbers of the United States and Great Brit- ain, to the carrying out of the im- perialist massacre now going on against the Chinese people and the; impending attack on the Soviet’ ‘Union. Strike Against Imperialists. ‘The strikes take place in imperial- ist.enterprises and all the forces of reaction, the lackey governments, their paid press and reformist agents are mobilized to break the workers’ united front of struggle which has taken an international character. * As’ the strikes spread rapidly in Argentina, Uruguay, and Brazil all the forces of reaction strive to crush) in~blood the militant struggles that are under the leadership of the revo- jlutionary Latin American Confedera- tion°of Trade Unions and to illegal- ize the latter, which is becoming a PoWerful weapon of the working class of. the whole continent in resistance to the attacks of the imperialist and native exploiters. Call for Solidarity. -This situation calls for solidarity actions on the part of the workers of the United States fighting against the same exploiters. Demand the im- mediate release of the secretary of the--Latin American Confederation ef:frade Unions, Miguel Contreras, and, of all the victims of the terror of.the servile Latin American lack- eys of Yankee and Br! nperiale ism—Getulio Vargas of Brazil, Juste of Argentina and Terra in Us; ay. Personal Contact and Friendly Discussion Makes Communists “Daily Worker:—One morning a few days ago I had a discussion with fie. worker on the street car and ‘ext to us was an elderly worker with his married daughter. I was ‘discussing the election campaien and the importance of voting for the “Reds.” The whole car was listening in and smiling in our direction. I pointed out the difference between the So- cialist and the Communist parties in relation to the everyday struggles and linked it up with the election cam- paign. The workers around us ad- mitted that there was only one party really fighting for the workers and that was the “Reds.” One worker in the subway told me that he had been getting $16 a week driving a truck for a larre concern and’ that his salary had been cut 'to'$14 a week and he has to pay fifty cents a week for “is uniform. When I told him that 1 > American capitalists are bringing down the wages.to those of the Chinese coolies, he" admitted that I was right. “phie’ lesson of all these experiences is that everyone’ of us should con- tinue this kind of propaganda and agitational work and end with taking the names and addresses of the work- ers to whom we talk, Send them the Deily Worker and appropriate pam-= phlets and if possible pay them a per- sonal call, Try to draw them closer to..cur movement and get them to \! at Igast join a mass organization. Lotiad Spongin. ‘FOSTER’S BOOK AVAILABLE ‘Toward Soviet America,” Wil- lam Z. Foster's new book, which ‘was’ temporarily out of stock at the ‘Workers’ Bookshop, 60 E. 13th St., is now again avcilable, it is an- nounced. Copies of the book were obtained from other bookshops | Pending the appearance of the sec- “ond edition, which will be off the press in a few drys, »