The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 7, 1932, Page 5

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C.I. Points Way. for Fight on Hunger an 15 YEARS OF SOVIET RULE SHOWS WAY Moves Forward to a Classless Socialist Socialists “Betray the DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, Mié VOTE THE STRAIGHT COMMUNIST TICKET! For Jobless Insurance at the of the State and Employ Expense Against erst Hoover's Wage-Cutting Policy! Is Tied to the Capitalist Machin: NDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1932 Not a Vote to the Socialist Parly Which Page Five Unite Behind the Communist Ticket for Your Own Class Interests! bupierialies By Quirt | Against Wage Cut | | speech of Octob em.” War |. FORD WORKERS ‘DEFY VOTE ORDER | Will Vote Communist 6—A group of n the Ford Baton day issued a state. Ford’s orders nded Ford's 19 as a hodgee - nd lies, and dee Society intention of voting for | eens Foster and James W. Ford, NEW SOVIETS LOOM | i 2 candidates for president ‘or a workers’ nment and for the working class from it that the workers ' Patterson Winds Up Campaign AMERICANS IN A SOVIET TRACTOR PLANT GREET US Working Class MOSCOW, Novy..6. (By Ca- ble).—On the eve-..of the fif- teenth anniversary of the Noy- ember Revolution which freed the workers atid “peasants otf tories are still working k, while many aid off. “At Ford's. e we work, one housand used to be But now only about thousand are w ing here, and y a couple of days a week. ROOSEVELT HOPE. IN HOOVER EVILS \Silent on His Final Appeal By Worcors | for Huge Communist Vote Own | ae 5 Similar Program | > his speech, on the Soviet Union from capitalist rob- " | ¢ M4 ‘ a i th Q bery and oppression, the Bxecutive | Call for Defense of the YW ote Capitadalist.an ote os cted badges and Ty : | prs ON 4 pay from us, and closed his Committee of the Communist Inter-| TT GOR on 15th | NEW YORK —Roosevelt and_ Al ntan tue Gave wanes national issued thé following stirring iy et Smith spoke in Madison Square of the 19th, he rehired |den Saturday night, carefully ing much mention of the’ gram, and seeking to capitalize the notorious failure of the Re: lican administration to do anyt for the millions of jobless, the ruined farmers, \and the worker who saved for appeal to the wotkers of the whole world to rally against the capitalist hunger hunger offensive and for the new world November: Fifteen years ago a new epdch | opened—the epoelr of the proletarian revolution. Socialism, the dream of | the best and noblestminds of human- | ity is being realizedtoday in one-sixth | part of the globes The req banner, 's in order to have at least a little ground for his bluffs that he shouted over the radio to the workers of this country. “Ford loves us so much he cuts us from $8 to $6 a day at the beginning of 1932, then he loved us more by cutting us from $6- to $4 a day, by throwing us on the streets to starve Anniversary own pro- on By NATHANIEL BUCHWALD the Shoes Off Your Feet, oot wn. SAYS Southern Negro 3 Cable).—On the occassion of the 15th anniversary of the victorious work- ers’ ‘and farmers revolution in the | FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.—Remember, workers have a great problem | to accomplish, The only way the working class can accomplish it is by | : asia ta tar | Soviet Union, American workers em- 4 nile - and using his police and the police of suranioning | Cs iuaaidls, workers and | ployed at the great tractor plant in| Supporting the Communist Party. Remember, workers, the working class | Pave | ae Detroit to shoot us down when we enslaved peoples.in the colonial coun: Stalingrand sent. the following letter | Wants to make this 1932 election a history for the working class. The only }and los’ | protested, ‘tries to Socialism. has been waving | of greeting +5 the American working | Way to get the capitalist class to know what you mean is by voting for the | savings. | “Workers, we cajl on you to vote |for Foster and Ford, for freedom | and bread, for unemployment relief and socia linsurance.’ ’ proudly for fifteen -years. Russia Once the gendarme of Eu- rope, where the most brutal exploita- tion dominated, where the masses of | Roosevelt and Smith made a slashing attack on the Repub- lican _ policies, but avoided Communist Party, the worker's party, «= by which the workers can obtain | freedom. Workers must stand on guard a- gainst capitalism, which is a gavage system to enslaye workers and lynch workers. What is lynching, but a savage system, trying to chain-gang all the workers. | class; “We who in the past struggled with you in the sweatshops, mills and workers and peasants were impover-| Mines of America, are today celeb- ished, iterate and-subject to the vil-|Tating gigantic victories, hand in ist incitement were won| hand with the Russian proletariat. for Socialism within’a few days dur-| {Heré, where the White-guard gen- ing the bloodiest and. most terrible | erals, Krasnov and Denikin, soaked rialist war which destroyed mil- | th Chats with Our Worcorrs PROTEST LYNCH VERDICTS ROCK ISLAND, Ill—Negro and | white workers in a meeting here una- nimously adopted a resolution of pro- ROOSEVELT stating their own, very similar poli- ground with the blood of the With the close of the election cam- Say, workers, don’t } cies. In mentioning the loss of the te t t 5, - re ‘ Sl Sate sa iat i Pegi paign, the duties of the Worcorrs i S test against the Scottsboro lynch ver Teen tee ee ctanda the Cealiighad, Erastoe | cen aero Core are. Dy. no. means over, We- vant workers’ savings, Roosevelt very care- | dicts, sentencing seven innocent Ne- the swindle beta i in Chicago and the killing of workers | s+ories about election! day itself— fully failed to mention the Bank of gro youths to burn in the electric in Detroit at the Ford Plant, and’ the killing of miners in the different coal fields. bourgeois democracy and turned cs perialist war into civil war for C munism and peace .between peoples. 2 The workers’ and péasants’ Red Army | Czaritsin (former name of Stalin- | Communist victories, any terrorism at | polls, any trickery, etc. Most of all we like stories that link U. S. ang other banks which crashed | chair and holding two others in jail urfder his administration in New | for new “trials.” | York, and with his banking depart- s A Contrast of Old and New “After 300 years of its existence, fuoght heroically. for three years| grad) possessed 15 churches, 400 egainst counter-rcvolution and inter-| saloons, an alcohol plant and a water vention. The best.sons of the pro-| pumping station. Now, in the place letariat fell on the field of battle for| where Tzaritsin once stood, stands freecom. The workers, remember the | Stalingrad, having a great tractor| among all workers: Remember when you vote~for the capitalist parties, you are voting yourself out of a home. You are voting the shoes off lost matyrs of the,Ptoletarian Revo- | plant, giant steel mills, canning fact- | Your feet, and when a worker votes lution. | ories, mail and rivet mills, Following the civil war a great cre- | building plants. ative Socialist work developed against | the savage resistance of the last ves- | under the old regime, there are now | | starvation on his wife and children. the capitalist parties, you help sup- Workers must unite a solid mass | up with the National Hunger March. The stress placed on the unemploy- ment issue by the Communist Party, and its leadership in unemployed struggles, rallied the unemploed in great numbers to our standard. This ship- | for capitalist parties, he is voting | mobilization will have a tremendous | \effect in making the National Hun- “Instead of two high-schools, as| ,, Say, workers, if you will vote for|ger March a success. After reading over the directives (Picture by Film-Photo Leagitie.) William L. Patterson, Communist candidate for Mayor of New York City in appeal for huge Communist vote at one of the final rallies. {ment very much implicated in the | Roosevelt ’ e ver once brought up tl guilt for the loss of the workers’ | matter of his own state police ‘clu savings. | | bing the hunger marchers at‘Afbany. With all factions of Tammany | Both speeches were an ajsiéal for present to give support, Roosevelt | “The protest vote,” and steéred clear | took care not to mention the Tam-|of nearly everything but denuncia- many injunctions, and wage cut pro-| tion, e: to make, of thé“Repub- 'posals, When he spoke of hunger, | licans. tiges of the bourgeoisie,” Huge suc-| four universities, 16 technical schools, | Pot starvation. Remember, workers, cesses have been achieved, with un-|two institutes, a Communist univer- mployment completely abolished. | sity. There are workers’ clubs, nurs- Fifteen years of the crestive efforts of | eries, dispensaries. the proletariat. of free-Russia suf- “Comrades, these are only a few flced to change the-country beyond | of thé things accomplished in the recognition. 2 ~~ Past few years, Further buliding is} Towards a Claslets Society. {going on at a tremendous rate: in| Imperialist intervention failed to re- | Stalingrad, and throughout the U. S. | store capitalism and is failing to frus- ;¥-,<- { trate the tremendous Socialis con-| “Our plant has produced 150 tract- | sructive work. first Five Year rs daily, although now it produces Plan is fast azvrdacHing a successful | ly 115. The reason is the rapid | conclusion in four years, while the | €xPension and the necessity for en- | Second Five Year Plan opens up the | larging the Red October Steel mills. | vista to a classless Society. | When these enlargements are com- | The success of thé first Five Year| Pleted, as they will be soon, the | Plan greatly strengthened the strug- | tractor plant will further increase | gles of the world’s :wotkers for eman-| its output. E ag cipation. The Soviet: Union stands| “Workers and famers of America! | vote for Comrade Foster and Ford. Say workers, don’t mean nothing but Communist, stay.,Communist, for that is the only way out for the work- ing class. From a Negro worker. Steel Companies Press Workers to Vote for Hoover STEUBBENVILLE, O.—The steel magnates of the Wheeling Steel and Weirton Steel are for Hoover. In the Wheeling Steel Co. the bosses are calling the workers into the office and threatening them that they will for the march to Washington, I tried | to bring it to the attention of my/ fellow-workers. In just five minutes | talk the various questions hurled at) me convinced me that I have to read | the directives many times more ‘and | TUDENTS WIN study every detail carefully. Which {I did, and my answers to questions | Were more convincing. | This experience I found essential | to convey to Daily Worker readers and correspondents, who are eager to take active part in the organiza- tion of the hunger march. No one is able to convince some- body else in adopting something not And when he will take the next step in his activity for the hunger march, and distribute the program of action among the workers, he will do it quite clearly understood to himself. | HALL FOR FORD Communist Speaks at) | Fisk U. and College | NASHVILLE, Tenn., Nov. 6.—Stu-} |dents of Fisk University, a Negro | college here, protested in a body to |the president of the University and | forced him to give up his plan of al-| | lowing James W. Ford only a small} room for his meeting. They made the president open up the main as- sembly room, and Ford spoke to a students, as the impregnable fortress of world/Do not listen to the agents of the| pe discharged: unless they vote for peace against impérialism. Workers! Remember the false| of workers promises and the’.tygathery of the | Jeaders of the Socialist Parties during the Wofid War! Remejnber “the war to,end war’! The socialist leaders declared that socialism in Europe was | possible without dictatorship, with- out violence, but themselves used vio- Jence in the interests of the bour- geoisie in suppressing-the proletarian revolution in Germ: and other countries, murdering workers’ leaders, Liebknecht and Laxempurg. After- | wards the reformist"leaders agreed to capitalist rationalization, causing the dismissal of masses of worker. Which Path Is Correct? ‘Worker! Compare the resulis of Bolshevist leadership in the Soviet Union and of socialist leadership out- side of the S Dion! Which path is correct? Which: path cost less in sacrifices? The-Soviet Union shows the capacity of the proletariat when it takes administration of its country in its own-hands. Under the dictatorship of the proletariat in the Soviet Union, socialist industrial giants are springing up everywhere land labor becomes a matter of high yhonor. Socialist Leaders Continue Treachery. ‘The socialist leaders are today con- tinuing the policy of treachery and é@meption; during the World War they propagated the idea of class harmony whilst millions were being slaughtered they eee crs interventionist cal hunger-offensive and the brutal reaction of New Victories Await Toilers! Workers! Choose between Social- bosses slandering the first republic ang peasants. They do this with the intention of crushing the land of the toilers, the Soviet Union. We American workers and specialists, helping the Russian: pro- letariat attain new victories in the building of socialism, greet you on the fifteenth anniversary. We urge you to fight against unemployment, wage-cuts and starvation. “Long live the proletariat of the Soviet Union! Long live the prolet- arian solidarity of the entire world!” ‘The letter is signed: F. C. Honey, Christian Federson, Adrian C. Davis, Louis Gross, J. Smith. Greet’ Shock Workers MOSCOW, U. S. S. R—An impos- | ing testimonial meeting was held here in the Hall of Columns of the Trade Union House, to honor the best shock workers, engineers, ex- perts and bench workers contributing by inventions, efficiency, leadership and an increase in production to the building of socialism. The presiding committee included leaders of the Communist Party, of the trade unions, and of the govern- ment. Krupskaya, the widow of Comrade Lenin, spoke, and received a great ovation. Other speakers were General Budenny Schvernik of the trade union apparatus, and others. Krhizahnoysky, an old Bolshevik and a friend of Lenin, delivered the main address, on the subject: “Fifteen years of the revolution.” Workers In Holiday Mood Over two million workers are ex- pected to demonstrate in the Red Square. The entire toiling popula- tion is in a holiday mood. Every factory, plant, and other institutions is to have its own celehration fol- Jowing the demonstrations. The de- corations in the squares and streets are overwhelming, a poem of great achievements. One can fairly feel the quickened heartbeat of Moscow and of the Soviet Union, of the toil- ers of the whole world, on this fif- teenth anniversary of workers’ and peasants’ rule, All foreign workers’ delegations have now arrived, and are ting the city.. They are overwhelmed by the festive appearance and the spirit of welcom under th proletarian rule. are engaged in heroic fights in Eng- land, Japan, Belgium and other coun- ‘The workers and peasants of the Soviet Union and of the whole world regard you with pride. New victories await you. Raise higher your banner —the Lenin banner of the proletarian world revolution. Workers of the world unite! Defend the Soviet Un- jon, the Chinese Soviets, the oppressed. colonial peoples! Rally to victory in the new world November! | Hoover, The same is happening in. | the Weirton Steel Co. Any worker | who expresses himself in favor of the | Communist canddiates are being dis- | charged whenever the conversation | is overheard by the stools of the bos- | Ses. | The workers here are working only one or two days a week for very low wages and the exploitation is some- thing horrible. Roosevelt in his speech here did not mention social ‘surance or immediate relief for the unemployed. This shows that neither Hoover nor Roosevelt cares | anything about the workers. | . EDITOR’S NOTE:—The workers | should again be warned that no amount of intimidation should force them to vote for anyone but the Communists. A worker can not lose his job for voting contrary to his employer’s wishes, for the secret ballot makes it impossible for the employer to know the work- er’s vote, | Build % workers correspondence group tm your factory, shop or neighborhood. Send regular letters to the Daily Worker. ne jcrowded hall, including here cael Ree pees NU eae teachers and city people. i The students here are mostly chil- | gee Tear rare Plunge into BUN | aren of Negro professional men. The f university, like most of the southern | Negro colleges, has a very reactionary Worker Reports on administration, the controlling board | . fs «| being dominated by white businessmen | Hoover in Philadelphia anc ianaioras | — | Almost Revolt at College. | PHILADELPHIA, Pa. — Today I) Ford's speech at Fisk caused an un- |saw the Man Mr. Hoover, who took | Precedented situation to air: the | away my job and slice of bread out | nearby Tennessee State Co !of my mouth and table, and 15,000,- | Control is in the hands of Demo- | He takes away | cratic Administration of the state | 000 other workers, t | the equal right from all the working! ‘The Student Club sent in a demand le in U. S. A. and he has some) that Ford be allowed to speak there tears to look in the eye of those | ‘00, something that has never har - | hungry people and ask these hungry | Pened in the whole history of the | people to vote for him. | state college. They won their demand, | In the Evening Bulletin of Noy. 1,/ #04 Ford found a ready response to} Mr. Hover lied like this: “I do not | his strong speech at the state college. | wish to be misquoted or misunder-| The students at state collerge are | stood. I do not mean that our Gov- ernment is to part with one iota of its national resources, without com- plete protection to the public inter- est.” Is this what Mr. Hoover calls protection of public interest when the people lost their money in banks, lost their houses and farms and sheriffs’ sale, and starve themselves hungry? This is not protection of public interest, but this is protecting capitalist anq speculators’ interests. Heard Foster, Ford, Amter; “SYRACUSE, N, Y—Mr. Norman Thomas, the Socialist Presidential candidate, came to town. He was met at the Depot with a string of expensive cars by a large committee composed of preachers, college pro- fessors, teachers, and business men. Mr. Norman Thomas and Mr. Waldman, spoke at the Lincoln High School auditorium, which was refused by the Board of Education for the Foster meeting. The auditotium was filled with about 3,000 well dressed and well fed middle class business and professional men and students. Not one unemployed, partly employed or lower paid worker could be seen. Waldman shed crocodile tears for the poor home-owners and expressed great sympathy for Mr. Insull, the utility magnate, who he classed as @ sufferer from the capitalist system, and who was forced to become a fug- itive from justice, saying no word about the fraud and the ‘tole that Insull is still a multi-1 5 Mr. Thomas sounded very radical in his talk, coming out for recogni- tion of Soviet Russia, for Negro! csts. Then Waldman and Thomas; _ Now Will Vote Communist rights, and for the freeing of Tom Mooney, completely ignoring the un- derground sabotage the Socialist Party is carrying on at the same time ‘The crowd was so listless that at one time Mr. Thomas had to say: “If you are going to applaud, do it more heartily, so I'l know you are not asleep. And now, Comrade Editor, I wish to say I am a small shopkeeper, a reader of the Daily Worker and other Communist literature, and also of the Socialist press, I heard Com- rade Foster-Ford and Amter speak but after listening to Waldman and Thomas, who offered no program of organization and action, I am con- viced that my vote shall go to the Communist Party. Tt is time that we shall shopkeep- ers, who are daily becoming pauper- ized, and thrown out into the ranks of the unemployed, realized that our interests are with the workers and poor farmers, and the Communist Party alone represents bp a —S. R. | mostly children of farmers and work- | ers. James W. Ford is a Negro worker, former student at Fisk and now the! Communist candidate for Ngee dent of the United States. Ford in his speeches brought out} the fact that the capitalist crisis is| crumpling educational standards and! opportunities in the United States, many schools throughout he counry shortening their term, teachers going unemployed, and children, particularly in the South, too hungry and too ragged to attend classes. | He showeg too how the, capitalist | dominated schools teach servility to} the Negro youth. “Full Equality.” Ford also took up the Negro prob- | lem, assailed the lynch law and se: fa gregation policies of both Republi: Democratic and Socialist Parties contrastec. that with the declaration of he Communist Party for equal rights for Negroes and self-determina- ation in the Black Belt. ! WORKER CORRESPONDETS MEET The New York Worker Correspond- | ence Group, a group’ of workers and | intellectuals interested in the devel- opment of both worker correspond- j;ene: and newspaper reporting will }meet Monday, November 7, at 8) o’clack, at the P. &. H. headquarters, 114 West 21st Street. At this meet-| ing short talks will be given on vari-} ous aspects of worker correspondence, | besides making regular reports and assignmnets. OHIO STUDENTS HEAR FORD ELYRIA, Ohio—James W. Ford, | Communist candidate for Vice-Presi. | dent, spoke in the afternoon of Nov. | 2nd before a large and interested j audience in Stewarts Hall Oberlin | College, Oberlin, Ohio, under the aus- pices of the Students Liberal Club. A mixed audience of Negroes, Japanese, attended, students’ faculty and outside listener: ‘| Unable to Operate Industries,” Says Foster ° (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) 1 phrases, ‘s it any wonder, then, that the capitalist s all over the land, including the South, has a a reliable catch-basin to hold the workers who revolt from the open capitalist par- ties, away from the Communist Party, the only tionary party of class struggle? Is it any wonder that, an authoratative spokesman of Wall Street should sum up his praise of Norman Thomas with the words: ‘If, through some cata- clysm, he should become president, he would behave in the White House like the well-born, well-bred aristocrat that he is’? “Truly, the Socialist Party has well-earned the title of ‘third party of capitalism.” The Wall Street bankers, through their press, radio, churches, etc., are consciously building up the Soc Party, as they have taken over the A. F. of L., as their most reliable weapon inst the revolutionary movement of the mas- ses led by the Communist Party. The Party of the Toiling Masses. “Only the Communist Party puts forward a platform of fundamental solution of the prob- lems of life or death that face the workers and fi rs, Negro and white, of America. An out- nding feature of this campaign is tremend- ous increase in the mass support to the Commu- nist Party by workers, farmers, Negroes and intellectuals. “It is no; possible to maintain any more that hoary old lié that the industries cannot be run without the capitalists. Life itself has com- pletely expolded that old falsehood. Today it is clear that dt is the capitalists who are entirely incapable of running the mills, mines, railroads. Yes, they are even unable to keep their banks open. Ameri the giant of capitalism, the model for captailsts all over the world, is sink- ing into a chaos which is destroying the life of millions of men, women and children. Cap- italism can no longer feed the. peaple. “Fifteon years after the Russian Reyolution, capitalism lies in ruins, while the victorious Rus- sian workingclass successfully finishes its first, Five-Year Plan in four years. For the future, capitalism cannot even promise jobs at starva- tion wages to its workers, as Hoover admitted in this very hall last Monday night. But the Soviet Union is today launching its second Five- Year Plan, which will complete the construction of a classless society based up socialist industri- alization and collective agriculture. Which Road? “On November 8, by your vote you will chose between the road of Hoover-Roosevelt-Thomas, or the road marked out by Lenin and the vic- torious Russian working class, “The road of Lenin, the revolutionary way out of the crisis, is the road of the fundamental re- organization of society on the basis of socialism, the first stage of Communism. “This requires the unconditional rejection of the policy of Norman Thomas, as the Russian workers rejected Kerensky. It requires the over- throw of the capitalist state machinery, the smashing of the bloody, oppressive rule of the capitalist class. It requires the establishment of a new state of the toiling masses, of the work- ers and farmers, It requires a government of Workers’ Councils, a Soviet Government. “History has shown that the masses of Amer- ica, when faced with a fundamental crisis, are not afraid of a revolutionary solution, The United States was born in bloody revolution Even the publican Party was born in a minor reyolutionary change, the abolition of chattel! slavery, which cost four years of Civil War. “The crisis of 1932 is much more far-reaching, more fundamental, than the crises of 1776 and 1861. Already this crisis has cut away two-thirds of the means of life of the workers and farmers. RRR ABER IO OE MRR! Ra RE In the coming winter the crisis will deepen still more. Millions will be faced with death from cold and starvation. “Just as the American workers and farmers did not shrink from the reg@olutionary solution of those former crises of 1776 and 1861, still less they will draw back from the revolutionary path today. The poison of pacifism has never gone deep into the blood of the American workers and farmers. They will fight. And when they be- gin to fight, they will go through to the revolu- tionary end, Struggle For Bread “All great revolutionary changes arise from the struggle of the masses for bread “That why the platform of the Communist Party puts in the first place, as the first step on the revolutionary way out of the crisis, the struggle for Unemployment Insurance at the ex- pense of the Government and employers. That is why we fight against wage-cuts, for emer- gency relief for the impoverished farmers, for equal rights for the Negroes and self-determin- ation for the Black Belt, for all workers’ rights and against the capitalist\terror. “The revolutionary solution begins with every struggle of the oppressed, the fight for milk for the children, of the war veterans for the bonus, the fight against evictions, against reductions of relief—all those fights which are organized and led by the Communist Party. It begins with the struggle for the unconditional release of Tom Mooney, and of the Scottsboro boys. “Above all, the Communist Party points out that the sharpening crisis is pushing the cap= italist world into a new imperialist slaughter, The waz already under way in the Far East ds only the prelude to the world war for which all imperialist nations, including the United States, are feverishly preparing. The imperialists are striving wii might and main to direct this war into the channels of imperialist war of inter- vention against the Soviet Union and for the of Soviet China, for the dismemberment of the Chinese nation. The workers must organize and fight to stop the transport of munitions to Japan; they must organize the struggle which will transform the imperialist war into a civil war of the oppressz:d against the oppressors, of the workers against the capitalists. The Come munist Party calls upon the workers on Novem- ber 8, to vote against imperialist war, for the defense of the Soviet Union and of the Chinese people. “Vote the Communist ticket straight, for the national ticket, for the State ticket headed by Israel Amter and for William Patterson for Mayor, i One Part of Struggle “This fight does not begin nor end with the election campaign, Voting on November 8, for the revolutionary way out of the crisis, is only one part of the struggle. It continues next day. and every day. It continues in the hunger marches and demonstrations, culminating in the great National Hunger March to Washington on December 5th. It continues in the bonus march of the veterans. It continues in the gathering of farmers’ delegates in Washington for the Farm- ers' National Relief Conference. It cohtinues in the organization of the masses in Neighbor- hood Committees and Block Committees, in Un- employment Councils, in trade unions, which are laying the firm foundations for the future workingelass opwer, while fighting today for bread. The tremendous mass discontent is bee ginning to pass over into revolutionary struggle. In gvery city ar J neighborhood there is a rising tide of struggle against starvation. This elec- tion will express the movement of the masses through the support given to the Communist Party. “Vote Against the Three Capitalist “Build the Communist Party! “Vote Communist on November 8th! “Forward in the Struggle Against Starvation: “Forward to a Soyiet America! ~ Parties!

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