The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 3, 1933, Page 4

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY MAY 2, 1935 The present circulation of the Daily Worker is far below its growing influence. One of the main reasons for the low circulation of the Daily is the lack of organization in making the “Daily” available to workers who know of the Daily and to the hundreds of thousands of workers who are looking for a paper which will mirror their lives and conditions and show them a way out of the present cri: The Central Committee decided to organize a special campaign to increase the circulation of the Daily. Begin- ning with this month of May, up to September, the whole Party must be put behind this circulation drive. To build a popular mass Daily is to help break the sectarian isolation of the Party. The circulation drive of the Daily must be taken up by the entire Party as a major mass campaign. One of the main reasons why the circula- tion of the Daily is so low is because the Party does not pay daily attention to the circulation of the Daily; because the Party is not intimately connected with the problems of the Daily. THE WORKERS DEFEND THEIR PAPER The last financial drive of the Daily Worker was suc- cessful. The workers rushed to the defense of their paper. The workers willingly endured privation and added sacri- fice, in order that their paper might live. Thousands of workers gave their last few pennies, thousands more en- dured hunger, that the Daily might not die. The last drive of the Daily drove home how deeply felt is the loyalty of the toiling masses for their own fighting newspaper. THE MASSES NEED THE DAILY The circulation of the Daily is still far behind its in- fluence. The influence of the Daily is felt in places where it hardly ever reaches. The Negro croppers in the South, farm workers and farmers who are now in open conflict with the police force of the state, the miners in Pennsyl- vania, Kentucky and Ohio, all look instinctively to the Daily Worker as their paper. They know the Daily even though some of them never see it. They know it is the paper of the working class, they know it is the paper that tells the truth about their lives and their struggles. Throughout the crisis, which grows deeper day by day, the Daily Worker has been the only paper that has told the truth about the living conditions of the working class. + 10500 CELEBRATE MAY DAY sS AT TWO NEW YORK.—Nine thousand, BROOKLYN—Celebrating the suc- workers after hours of marching in| cessful May Day demonstration, 1,500 the greatest May Day celebration| workers attended the mass meet~ | ever held in this city, came to the|ing May First night in Arcadia Hall,| Bronx Coliseum Monday night to! Brooklyn. continue the obzservance of May Day| James W. Ford, speaking for the | unde ‘s of the Communist ;Communist Party, painted a fervid| Pariy word picture of the decaying capi-| Carl Winter, chairman, opened the talist system in contrast to the grow-| mesting with announcements of the|ing healthy Soviet Union. Ford,| March that made the audience a|Henry Shepard, chairman of the! roaring Niagara. He stated that a' meeting and Nancy Carrol of the! City Hall. Every effort of the police | great many members of the Young/ Young People’s Socialist League and of the Socialist Party and val trade union locals under their leadership had marched with the United Front demonstration in defiance of the or- ders of their leaders. William Z. Foster's message to the masses demonstrating on May Day was read. The message contained one Communist League were| greeted with the ‘Internationale.’ | Red flags were on each side of the platform, held by two uniformed members of the Red Front. | Calling for unity of Negro and white, Ford said: “Karl Marx said ‘Labor in the | white skin cannot emancipate it- | The Daily Worker was the fi rst to tell the truth about the number of unemployed. The Daily Worker was the first to tell the truth about the wage cuts of Hoover. The Daily is the only paper that now tells the truth about the Roose- velt hunger drive. The Daily is the only paper that tells the truth about the struggles of the Negro masses against lynch tergor and Jim-Crow degradation. The Daily is the only paper that now tells the truth about Tom Mooney and the Scottsboro boys. The Daily is the only paper which gives the real news about the Socialist Construction in the | 10,000 PARABE EVENOING MEETINGS IN NEW ORLEANS Demonstrate Against Wage Cuts, for Relief NEW ORLEANS, La., May 2.—May First was turned into a tremendous demonstration against wage cuts on relief jobs. Even the official estimate given by the capitalist press is that over 10,000 were in the parade to the to break up the march failed. Renee eet NEW ORLEANS, La., May 1—A Sweeping wage-cut has been an- nounced recently to the Welfare Workers (the methods of giving re-| lief here), of 50 cents a day, bringing their wages down to $1.50 a day. Thi: wage-cut is to take effect on May ‘World Wide M ay 1 Demonstrations; | Workers Fight for the Streets VIENNA, May 2.-—Austrian Hitler- ites attacked a building in which | Communists were holding a May Day | ; meeting in Altheim, bombarding the windows with rocks and beer glasses. | The Communists resisted the Hitl | ite attack, killing one of the Nazis. | Four others were injured, The clash in Altheim, which is near Braunau, Hitler’s birth place in Upper Austria, was seized as the oc~ casion for the announced suppres- | sion of the Communist Workers De- |fense Corps and the International Red Aid throughout Austria. To | cloak the anti-Communist move of | the government, Chancellor Dollfuss | also stated that the Nazi storm troops and special guards would also sentence that will gladden the heart of every revolutionary worker: “I feel however, (referring to his health) that the time is not far off when I will be back among you, struggling together with you on all working class fronts.” With one voice the workers at the Coliseum stamped their approval to telegrams expressing their militant) Solidarity, to be sent to Haywood | self so long as labor in the black skin is branded. This revolution- ary tradition has been handed down to the workers of today, and the Communist Party is carryinz forward this tradition by fighting for equal rights and self-determi- nation for the Black Belt. Th's can | be carried through only on a basis | of unity of black and white work- ers.” | The Artef put on a dance panto-| |do everything within his power to First. This is the second wage-cut in two months, the first one put over being about two months before of the same amount. Porcein, so-called leader, who is; working with the welfare racket,| promised the workers that he will be liquidated CEIaee Tighe MEXICO CITY, May thousand workers mar the streets } in a giant May Day demons! ion. All business ceased. The police jaile1 17 Commu- |nists during the May Day demon- | Stration, 2.—Twenty ned through avert the cut. This was to lull them to sleep and the wage-cut was put over. * * * LONDON, May 2.—Thousands of Burch _ FOR 20 THOUSAND NEW READERS OF THE DAILY WORK CENTRAL COMMITTEE STATEMENT ON CIRCULATION DRIVE OF THE DAILY WORKER. BRING THE DAILY WORKER T0 THE MASSES! —By BURCK| Soviet Union and mobilizes masses for the defense of the | Soviet Union. The Daily is the paper that sounded the rid-alarm which execution. kept t The Daily Worker has been the paper which has led | the fight for unemployment insurance. from | he Scottsboro boys This means that the Daily Worker is the organizer of the struggles of the masses. Therefore, the Daily must grow. | It must be said that the Party has not given sufficient support to the Daily Worker. It must be said that the Party is not imbued enough with devotion and loyalty to the Daily Worker. There is not a ct that feeling of profound inti- macy between the w < and struggles of the Party and * the Daily Worker. The devotion which the masses feel for the Daily Worker must become the devotion of the Party to the Daily. STRENGTHEN THE PARTY BY BUILDING THE DAILY The Daily Worker is the only instrument which can strengthen the roots of the Ps among the masses, who look to it as the Jeader of their struggles. An increase in the circulation of the Daily means more of readers. It means a pow- nt in the fighting efficiency of the Daily than an increase in the number erful improvem Worker. It means to give a powe ship of the Parity among the mas: The Daily is seriously hampered by technical limita- l impetus to the leader- S. tions, by limitations in funds, by limitations in the mechan- ics of the disiribution. An increase in the circulation of the Daily would do much to add power to the Daily Worker. Today more than ever is the opportunity rich for an in- crease in circulation. Millions of starving American work- ers are beginning to question the promises of Roosevelt's new deal. We must help them to discover that the Roose- velt program is a continuation and intensification of Hoo- ver’s prozram. They do not find the truth of their struggles in the capitalist papers. Eagerly-they seek in the press for the truth about their struggles and their lives; and once they find the Daily, they seize upon it a& their own paper. But the Daily cannot get to these masses with its pres- ent equipment. The Daily will be unable to come to these masses, will be unable to mirror their struggles; will be unable to give them leadership, if it does not grow. There- fore, the fight for the every day needs of the masses. the fight against the Roosevelt hunger and war drive, must have as one ofits major phases a powerful fight to bring the Daily Worker in hundreds of thousands of copies to the masses. FOR TWENTY THOUSAND NEW READERS OF THE “DAILY.” FOR A MASS “DAILY WORKER.” Central Committee, Communist Party, U.S. A. _— << Fascism. denouncing Hitler and Sree GLASGOW May 2.—Two thousand unemployed workers took part in the May Day parade in Glasgow, clashing | with the police at several points when the latter tried to break up the par- ade. The demonstration on Glasgow Green voted resolutions calling for the release of the Meerut prisoners in India and for the abolition of the anti-Soviet embargo. ere Le | COPENHAGEN, May 2.—One hun- dred thousand workers marched yes- terday in the May Day parade in Copenhagen. Communist marchers hauled down Swastika flags flying over German consulates in three Danish towns, Esbjerg, Kolding, and Horsens. The police were able to arrest only one cf the Communists. | ose at bie OSLO, Norway, May 2.—Workers’ | May Day parades throughout Norway yesterday were marked by demon- strations against the Nazi Swastika flag. The workers hauled down and tore this fascist flag in Narvik as well as in Hungestund, where one the Communists yesterday in the May Day demonstration, holding their own parade in which Socialist banners called for support of Jap- anese imperialism in Manchuria. The Communist parade carried banners denouncing “imperialist war,” which were seized by the police after violent fighting with the marchers. One hundred and sixty were arrested by the police, including Communists distributing leaflets denouncing Jap- anese militarism. Puen WARSAW, Poland, May 2.—In connection with May Day demon- strations throughout Poland, the po-| 2500 AT BIRMINGHAM MAY 1 MEET; DEPUTIZED THUGS ATTACK WORKERS Show Solidarity of Negro and White; Defend Speakers at Ingram Park; Three Arrested BIRMINGHAM, Ala, May 2.—TIwenty-five hundred Negro and white workers gathered in Ingram Park for the May Day demonstration. The entire city and cevnty police force was mobilized. Deputized thugs ter- rorized the workers, Before the meeting started, forged leaflets were dis- tributed that the demonstration was called off. But all of these manou- vres had no effect. Negro and white workers waiting in the park were insulted and searched by the thugs. When Jane Speed, young white southern girl got up to speak, she was immediately arrested. A mili- tant pursued in which Negro workers Demonstration in Copper Trust Town HANCOCK, Mich., May 2.—In this copper trust owned town, six hundred workers marched on the streets on) May Day. The demonstration in Condon Park was attended by one thousand. lice are everywhere raiding workers’| Were beaten. Two of them were ar- houses and arresting hundreds of workers. In Przemysl, the police claim to have discovered a secret printing press where illegal papers, pamphlets and other literature have been printed. Be Bede LONDON, England, May 2. — A) crowd of about 7,000 workers last night surrounded and beat up a band Pattersyn, Tom Mooney; to Gov. Mil-| mime depicting the rallying of work- | ler of {)labama demanding a change ers for May Day. of ventie for the Scottsboro boys and =e to Gov. Rolph demanding trial for! tral Committee of the Communist | Mooney on the remaining indictment.) Party, spoke and stated: “May Day Colonel Hubert Julian, the Negro| belongs not to the Socialists, not to Pilet who flew above the marchers | the Hitler regime, but to the Com- then encircled the square in greet-|munist International. Only the Com- ings tc) the United May Day Demon- |Mmunist International continues and stratio), received a great ovation} marches forward in the traditions of when presented. He stood proudly | this great day of labor that origi-| with right hand upraised fist/nated in the working class struggles clenched while the workers sang:/ of the United States. | “Hold the Fort.” Moissaye Olgi: editor of the} Amid a cheering bedlam. Julian Morning Freiheit, received an ovation! made a dramatic announcement. “I/as he walked down the aisle of the ‘Yant to say that we will have one, arena. The audience cheered when he fay many Red aviators. I hope and |stated: “Even the capitalist press want to fly a plane from the Negro|cannot conceal the fact that May People and workers of this country to| Day has been led throughout the the Soviet Union as a symbol of our| world by the Communist Party. unity.” The audience cheered for over | The Slovak International Workers three minutes. | Order contributed a check for $125 Jack Stachel, representing the Cen-|in the collection. WORKERS FORM UNITED FRONT IN EUROPEAN CITIES ON MAY FIRST April|slovak Socialist Party, which is a PRAGUE, Czecho-Slovakia, The present cut is given under the |double threat of the inability of the Communists and Independent Labor | Party workers joined in a big dem- | | worker hauling down the flag was |0f young fascists who had been at- arrested. The workers then marehed | tacking Jews in Picadilly Circus. ae Golice. Staion. demas eo hig| The Lendon police rescued the rested for defending the from the police attacks. The workers in this southern steel center are mobilizing their forces. This will be a fight for the rieht of organizing in the South. It will be a strugle against starvation. Protests should be sent mayor of Birmingham. speakers| Resolutions were adopted for the freedom of Mooney and the Scotts- boro boys, Kuusisto, Roine and Lei- viska spoke. |Arrest 18 in Toronto May 1 Demonstration TORONTO, Ont., May 2.—A May | First demonstration took place before | the Parliament buildings and Univere Monument | sity Grounds. Over 2,000 participated, to the 4,090 IN RACINE RACINE, Wis., May 2.—¥our tinou- sand demonstrated at ‘they will cut off all relief work. jonstration in Hyde Park. Columns | of workers marched to the park from | all districts of London. Hundreds |of students from Oxford and other universities marched in the parade shouting: “We will not fight for King or country,” and carrying banners welfare to withdraw their money from the banks. The big club in their hands though is the threat that if the workers do not accept this cut, The Unemployed Council issued a bulletin dealing with the wage-cut release, after which they and demonstrated in force in front of the German Consulate, eek mee TOKIO, May 2.—Japanese Social- ists refused to march together with and the response is very good. One worker was fired on account of agi- tating against the wage-cut. The bullgtin issued by, the Welfare Committee of the Unemployed Coun- cil calls upon the workers to protest against the cut on the job. To or- ganize committees of action to de-| feat it. On some gangs the workers have already protested against bad treatment. BIG MILWAUKEE — DEMONSTRATION: 8. P. Calls Off May 1, ‘Anthracite Meet Broke! Terror; 2,060 There, Many UMW Members WILKES-BARRE, Pa., May 2— | Two thousand workers participated jin the first open-air demonstration held here. The meeting on May | First at Kirby Park was under the auspices of the United Front Free Mooney Committee. Ann Barton was chairman. The speakers in- cluded Carl Reeve, Bill Coniglio, an elected delegate of the Maltby Local of the United Mine Workers; P. Win- ters for the Socialist Party and Dan JAM PUBLIC SQ. IN CLEVELAND 1,500Workers inAkron May Demonstration | CLEVELAND, O., May 2—Fifteen thousand workers jammed Public Sq. in one of the largest demonstrations since 1919. Long before the scheduled arrival of the march thousands of workers were already in the square. Three columns from different parts 23.—An anti-fascist meeting took} Place in Tuermitz, jointly arranged by the Communist and Socialist Par- ties. The Socialist speaker declared against a joint demonstration on May Day, but the meeting unani- mously passed a resolution demand- ing a joint demonstration. Workers | meetings in Mistek, Friedek and| Nymburk also voted ‘resolutions de- | part of the coalition government, they protested strongly. The meet- ing voted to hold a joint demonstra- tion on May First. onstration in Red Arrow Park. Prior!” Telegrams were sent endorsing the prominent in the parade and dem- rpm 12 He cone demonstration a may Chicago Conaress, also greetings | onstration. PARIS, France, April 20.—A joint ne of preliminary meetings too | Were sent to Tom Mooney. Resolu-| Following the demonstvaiion all meeting of functionaries of the Com- | Place. tions were adopted demanding the columns marched from Public Sq. to munist and Socialist Parties in Le Havre, biggest French port, decided to form the United Front to fight for a number of proletarian demands, | manding a joint demonstration on May Day. |including a determined fight against In Eichwald, near Teplitz, a joint| fascism. The secretary of the local meeting of Communist and Socialist | Socialist organization was elected as workers was held. When the work-/|delegate to the European Anti-Fas- ers heard the Socialist speaker refuse | cist Congress in Copenhagen, meet- to insert a paragraph into a joint reso-|ing June 5th. A number of other| lution for the release of all political | delegates are being elected in the lo-| prisoners, at the orders of the Czecho- cal factories. 5,000 at Baltimore Meet, Unite With Socialist Workers | Many Join Party at Indianapolis Meeting INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., May 2.—A | thousand workers were in the May Ist MILWAUKEE, Wis., May 2.—Close to 10,000 were in the May Day dem- Meetings were held in Kosciuzko Park, Southside, Central Park, West Allis, Also in the Northside where a vicious propaganda was carried on by bourgeois and Polish fascist press. Even threatening to shoot. Some marched for seven miles, Down Wisconsin Ave. a sea of red | banners could be seen, as the workers | marched to the large auditorium keeping closed ranks despite down- «| Slinger. of the city comprising 4,500 workers Meet Because of Rain) ; were in the line of march. | Local unions of the United Mine} The demonstration in Public &q. | Workers of America, Unemployed|lasted an hour and a half. It en- Councils and fraternal organizations dorsed the relief march to Columbus participated in the meeting. on May 23. Youth and children were |release of Mooney and the Scotis- \E. 55th St. and Woodland Ave. This | boro boys, |is through the most populated Negro | section of the city. A large number of Negro workers participated. The \home owners marched under their | own placards. From the suburbs noer (Cleveland large numbers of workez marched f i ime, NEW HAVEN, Conn., May 2.—Fit-| idipesceh erin ree |New Haven May 1 Par- ade and Demonstration | Broadway. { | young fascists from the indignani| Squ2re on May First. The socialist |The police were called out to break Growd, arresting seven members of| demonstration in the morning had’ the demonstration. Eighteen workers the Young Fascist Organization. only a few hundred. were arrested. May Day in New Voter A Wang Tide of Proletarian Solidarity By ROBERT HAMILTON On the First of May, 1933, the big- gest city in America bore the stamp of the hammer and sickle, the im- print of the rising tide of proletarian solidarity demanding—and enforcing —the United Front. From midtown, New York, and from the battery, 75,000 marchers converged on Union Square, turning the huge area between Broadway and Fourth Avenue into a human sea out of which projected, like flaming chal- lenges of revolt, the red banner of the proletarian revolution and the incisive slogans of the working class. Union Square was so tightly packed that tens of thousands of marching workers were unable to get into it, but were drawn up in solid ranks! along Fourth Avenue, 14th Street and | And all along the route, along lower Broadway as well as in the siree-s of the garment district, the sidewalks were cyowded with hundreds of thou- sands of spectators impressed by the biggest and most imposing May Day demonstration in the history of the United States. Norman Thomas and other Social- ist leadevs had refused, on behalf of comrades and appealed to those within hearing to stand fast. A cen- tral and militant leadership was necessary, and at that instant it came. “Remain At the Square” Up to the speaker's platform, hur- riedly cleared by the Socialist leaders, who feared “trouble,” a brown-suited figure stepped to the microphone. ‘The loud speaker carried his voice’ to the far corners of the Square. “Hold your places in the Square!” A great cheer went up. Like a tidal wave, the workers stopped short and swung in the directions of the cops. The police were startled. “I gree! was “tamed” by the impact of te 75,000 marching workers, surging along, confident in the strength of the masses. Traffic was disrupted all through New York, as the endless columns of marchers swept through the streets. Innumerable banners demanded the release of Comrade Ernst Thaelmann and called for solidarity with the heroic German working class, for the release of the Scottsboro boys and Tom Mooney. Hundreds of placards called for mass struggle to achieve unemployment insurance and to pre= vent wage cuts! One delegation care ried a large hoop with dozens of evic- tion orders tacked to it and sure rounding a placard with the words, “Landlords’ Noose—Eviction Notices— We fight them! Downtown Unem- ployed Council.” The workers of the La Primadora cige> factory marched in the parade ‘with a placard announcing that they were out on strike against A. F. of L. racketeers. this gathering in the name of the United Front May Day Committee,” continued the speaker. It was Carl Winter, Secretary of the New Yor Unemployed Councils. “The United Fronts May Day Com- miitee does noi want any of the police here,” he continued, and thou- sands braced themselves against the police and their horses. The police |teen hundred workers were at the| AKRON, O., May 2.—With banners, | *2¢ Socialist Party, to join in a united |May Day demonstration on Central Green. Three hundred marched | through the Negro section. Then} Circle and Socialist Party members| they passed the County jail, | where | participated in the united front dem-!H, Kaplan, L. Martin and R, Kling | onstration. | pouring of rain. ~ Whole branches of the Workmen's | some of them demanding “Freedom, for Mooney and the Scoitsboro Boys” and “Against Forced Labor,” 1,500 workers gathered in Perkins Sa. Sev- en hundred marched through the are serving terms for fighting evic-| The Socialist demonstration sched- uled for Sunday was not held. In this city controlled by the Socialists, the May First demonstration was post- /Mmain streets fo: locks race tions and demanded their release. Park led by a noe Ey cane Speakers at the demonstration were |, While passing Church St. a detec- I. Wofsey, District Organizer of the | tive tried to provoke trouble. He BALTIMORE, Md., May 2.—Over five thousand workers transformed the Plaza into a sea of red flags and oanners in one of the most impres- sive demonstrations ever held here. ‘The attempts of the Socialist lead- s was balked to use the police to seep the workers off the Plaza. Over aalf of the three hundred who at- ended the Socialist meeting joined he united front meeting despite the tolica blockade The last minute they cut the time to one hour for the use of the hall. demonstration. Three hundred of them participated in the parade. The evening meeting had an enthu- siastic response of 800 in Tomlison Hall. Many of them joined the Com- munist Party. The management of the hall was forced to yield it for use of the meeting because of mass pressure. Communist Party; M. Jacobson of the Young Communist League and Wil- {liam Taylor of the I. L. D. The (chairman was H, Bloxman, poned for two weeks. PROVIDENCE MAY FIRST PROVIDENCE, R. 1., May 2.—The May Day demonstration was held be- | fore the City Hall. Four hundred 2,000 AT OSHKOSH MEET kicked some one, his foot was caught and he fell. He pulled his gun and Was stopped. In the rear of the march the motorcycle police tried to use gas. probably from the exhaust, but met with failure, as the workers were in ® militant spirit. workers participated, | OSHKOSH, Wis., May 2—Police Anna Bloch was chairman. Speak- e jarrested Jeske, workers’ leader, early | ers were Nat Kaplan, organizer of the | Monday morning, to break the dem- National Textile Workers Union, and |onstration. Nevertheless, two thou- ! D. Glass for the Young Communist | cand demonstrated through the heart | Leasue, of the city 1,000 IN KENOSHA, WIS. KENOSHA, Wis., May 2. — One thousand were in the demonstration bere on May First, despite provocation of hoodlums and police May Day demonstration with the United Front May Day Committee. But the will of the Socialist workers for wi ng class unity was stronger than their leaders’ efforts to keep them away from the revolutionary workers, After the conclusion of the Social- ist meeting in Union Square, the mounted police drove into the mass of the Socialist workers, carrying out the orders of the Socialist leaders and Police Commissioner Bolan to clear Union Square before the United Fron demonstrators marched in. But the Socialist workers wished to remain, wished to join in the United Front May Day demonstration, and gave way but slowly before the police). attack. Two militant Negro yorkers were bewildered and began to edge out of the Square, with ten thousand throats booing them, Working Ciass Unity Then began the magnificent march into the Square of the batsalions of the working clas:, Rank after rank they came, banner after banner, with placards and effigies born aloft. Iv was a trie United iront, with ban- ners of the LW.‘v., an_ Italian branch of the Republican Party of Italy, the Anarchist Youth Section, the left wing of the Italian Socialis’ Lower and lower sank the sun in the west, and still the thousands of |marchérs kept pouring into the Square, but tens of thousands had to | line the streets surrounding the Square, as there was physically no voom at all in front of and around the speakers’ platform, “"* ; As the demonstrators left the Squave, after 6:30, they eagerly snatched at copies of Tuesday’s Daily Worker, which hd come out already with news of the demonstration, As the Daily went to press, it appeared that 100,000 were in the United Front Party, locals of the Amalgamated Clothing workers of America, and locals 9 and 38 of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, the Conference for Progressive Labor Acsion, alongside these of the Inter- national Workers Order, the Needls Trades Workers Inductri2l Uaion, lo- cal orgenizations of the Communisi Party and workers’ clubs. Even the police were visibly im- demonstration. It later was evident that this figure was far too low, and seme observers estimated the number cf demonstrators as nearly 150,000, The worxers 0? New York will not soon forget this magnificent demon- stration e7 ¢las3 solidarity, nor will the traccrnicacion of Socialist and Communist workers in Union Square remain without effect for the success- ful building of a working-class unit’ climbed on the shoulders of their pressed by the hundred thousend marchers, Their customary brutality! front 4

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