The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 11, 1933, Page 4

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ihe Lives of Lnaetmann and Uther Victims of Nazis Are in Danger / ¢ Strengthen the Anti-Fascist Front Against the Hitler Dictatorship! Published by the Comprodaily Pablishing Ge., Inc., dally except Sunday, at 58K, Page Four Address and mail checks to the Daity Worker, 18th St, New York City, N.Y. Telephone ALgeng 4-795. Cable “DAIWO! 50K. 18th S4., New York, MN, ¥. Dail orker’ Party USA. By Mail overywhere: One year, $6; six months, $3.54; 3 months, $2; 1 month, 780, excepting Borough of Manhattan an@ Bronx, New York City. Foreign and C One $9; 6 months, $5; 7 months, $8, Rockefeller, Hitler Against Worker, Soldier and Negro CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) By ROBERT MINOR —so also must American ruling class destroy in this period of dying cap- italism, any cultural effort that shows— A white worker, a Negro, and a soldier, with their hands being joined together by Lenin. The same Rockefeller who employed the artist to paint @ecoration, sent the uniformed guards to seize, pay off the artist before he could finish the job. the mural and discharge IX years ago when the late Dwight W. Morrow, partner of the inter- national banking firm of J. P. Morgan & Cormipany, became United States Ambassador to Mexico, he was sent there as a special agent of cor- ruption. It was a critical situation. The whole drive of the American ruling class to secure the colonial conquest of Mexico hung in thé balance. ‘The astute partner of the Morgan-Wall Street firm was a specialist in that highest art of corruption which appears in the guise of “broad- minded sympathy” with the cause that is to be destroyed. Morrow was the most noted agent in the wholesale bribing of the biggest section of the bureaucracy of the Mexican government and army in the effort to convert that government into a sub-department of the Department of State of Yankee imperialism at Washington. And among all of the foul jobs that was done by Morrow, it is known that his proudest boast was his success in breaking down the morale of a certain world-famous artist who was then a revolutionary leader of workers and peasants and of the Communist Party of Mexico. “Honors” and admittedly large commis- sions were heaped upon the once-outcast revolutionary artist. Diego Rivera thus became Morgan’s artist, Rockefeller’s artist, Ford's artist, where once he had been the Mexican workers’ and peasants’ artist Rivera became head of the National School of Fine Arts of the govern- ment of Mexico, which was at the same time the government of Mor- row, Morgan’s ambassador. The terror was turned loose against the masses of Mexico, Workers and peasants were hanged by thousands. And Diego Rivera, member of the government, did not protest. ITHIN the “cultural” centers of the big Yankee cities, Diego Hivera became the political symbol of the “new relationship” between the United States and Mexico—the symbol of “understanding” behind which the corruption and strangling of the national resistance of Mexico against the imperialist conquest by Wall Street is concealed. The talented Mex- ican artist became the “rage” of the American high bourgeois circles... But Diego Rivera had only one thing to sell to Mr. Rockefeller: his talent, his love and his hate—learned in the class struggles of Mexico—a love and a hate and a talent that began to take sick and die on the plaster walls of the great buildings of the Fords and the Rockefellers. A *TER Hoover era,” during which all roads of triumphal march had led to Washington, came the crash. Great masses of hungry and ragged men thronged the roads to Washington. On May Days, a mil- lion workers marched and red flags flew. American ex-soldiers were shot down by Hoover. Vast millions of Negroes moved in their slavery and thousands fought on the streets, shoulder to shoulder to white workers, to save nine Negro boys: framed up and condemned to death. Giant columns after columns of unemployed workers, ragged soldiers, expro- priated farmers, enslaved Negroes, captured freight trains, occupied gov- ernment buildings, invaded state houses, put ropes around the necks of judges. The great seething mass of Latin-America and the Philippines | began to ‘boil with revolt against enslavement by the Yankee Wall Street | of the North. The capitalist world began to shatter, to crack, and in places to fall. The irreconcilable class divisions of the human race were more and more exposed. The decay of the capitalist slave system stood out against the brilliant dawn of living Socialism in the Union of So- cialist Soviet Republics, successfully built on the plan of Lenin. As the chasm widened, war flamed on the horizon—imperialist war—all forms of capitalist war—class war—impending imperialist invasion of the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics. The Communist International, vastly strengthened, nearly doubling in membership within a year, the Communist Party of Mexico, the Com- munist Party of the United States, grew and strengthened and began more than ever to consolidate those forces which will destroy capitalism. ‘The Communist Parties began for the first time to weld together those social forces, the proletarian slave, the colonial slave and the soldier slave in uniform. The Party of Lenin, the Communist Party alone could do it. These became the greatest reality of the world today. And, if you do not know it, reality is all there is for an artist to paint. Diego Rivera, painting for Rockefeller, had deserted the Communist Party; Diego Rivera was no longer a revolutionist. But he had nothing | to sell to Mr. Rockefeller but his talent, and the cadaver of his old love | and hate. Rockefeller, like Morrow, had promised him that his freedom to picture reality as he saw it would be given him along with the Yankee dollars. And there was nothing else to paint;—so on the walls of Rocke- feller Temple, under the brush of Diego Rivera, appeared a worker, a Negro and a soldier—their hands being united by the symbol of the re- | volutionary world Communist Party—Lenin. | ‘There is always trouble in buying the talents and the dreams of men. | ‘The corruption of culture is a delicate thing—there must remain the sem- | blance of the real, a semblance of the love of life and truth: otherwise | the bargain is not delivered. But the worker, the soldier and the Negro— | the | | | ON THE Al /PARS OF THE NAZIS! —By Burck. Workers Delegation Finds British Spies Not Mistreated in USSR Prison By R. BISHOP Special Cable to the Daily Worker MOSCOW, May 9.—The British workers’ delegation yesterday visited the Sokolniki House of Correction, where Thornton and MacDonald, the Metropolitan-Vickers engineers con- victed of sabotage and espionage, are detained. They naturally expressed a desire to see for themselves the conditions under which the Englishmen are held. The commandant declared his com- plete willingness, provided the men themselves did not object, saying: “We cannot force them to give inter- views against their wishes.” A messenger sent to them returned with word that they were willing to| receive three or four members of the delegation but no more, The deputation chosen consisted of | | Beaumont of the Metropolitan-Vick- ers plant, Lickriah of Glasgow, Wil- son of Wales, and Annie Swart of Kilmarnock. The British engineers were found in a medium-sized room with two | beds, a bookcase, a cupboard, and two | chairs. Both appeared to be in perfect health, although Thornton was ex- tremely uneasy and nervous. Mac- Donald seemed to be perfectly self-| composed. After the deputation had intro- duced themselves, Thornton asked them if they would like English cig- arettes, producing a package of | Players. This was the first sign of | the alleged “privations in Russian | prisons.” | Beaumont asked them how they were treated in comparison wtih the treatment meted out to prisoners jailed in England for serious crimes. Thornton answered that he would rather not discuss their crimes, and never having been inside an English prison he couldn’t comment on the comparison. When asked how they were treated, they replied that everyone was cour- teous to them. They were supplied with special English food, as well they were entitled to buy cigarettes and liquor with their own money. Never Locked in Cells Like all prisoners in Soviet Houses of Correction, the Englishmen were never locked in their cells. The doors remain open day and night. They wear their own clothes and when they start working they earn wages equiv- alent to wages outside, allowing for maintenance, Reform Not Punishment Thornton and MacDonald declared | that they were being treated as well as could possibly be expected for de-| tained men. This statement is per- fectly true of all Soviet penal institu- tions, which aim to turn originally anti-social elements into good citi- zens, rather than at vindictive pun- | ishment, English technical magazines, while’ the deduction of the cost of their! \ In the whole vast construction pro- gram of the Five-Year Plan, the only | buildings not erected by the Bolshe- ; viks are prisons and churches. | In conclusion, Thornton said that | any statements by British politicians, | Dewspapers, or others that they are | badly treated are wholly unjustified. He asked the Metropolitan-Vickers | delegate to convey greetings to certain | of his friends in the plant and to tell | them that he was wéll-fed, kept in | clean, sanitary conditions, and not maltreated. “Got Off Very Lightly” Beaumont later reported to the members of the British and other | | ing Sokolniki. He said: “I was very much interested in seeing the condi- tions in which Thornton and Mac- Donald are detained, particularly in press that Soviet prisons are living tombs, incarceration in which would mean the death of any Englishmen. Having seen their conditions, my only feeling is that both of them: have| | gotten off very lightly indeed.” In their visit to Sokolniki, the | whole delegation was impressed by| the striking contrast between it and | Soviet or foreign, is treated as a | human being in a Self-governing com- mune. The only restriction imposed | is their not leaving the grounds. Even | this is frequently allowed under p: to all prisoners of good conduct. workers’ delegations who were visit-| view of the suggestions in the British | arole | SPARKS| OOSEVELT and MacDonald are pretending to be simply wild with | | joy at their new “economic truce.” |’ | Britain will not tax products from the | United States which the United | States does not produce, and Roose- | velt will not tax British goods which | | Britain does not produce. Thus they) | leave the present trade war exactly | as it was in the beginning. This reminds us the story of the | hot-dog stand and the bank. | | “Will you lend me half a dollar,” | | says the friend of the hot-dog stand j owner whose stand 4s in front of a} | bank. | “I can't lend you any money,” re-| | plied the hot-dog salesman. I have | | | entered into an economic truce with |the bank, We have agreed not to disturb one another's business. They have agreed not to sell hot-dogs if I do not lend any money.” | | pila | | (APITALIST bouquets are continu- | ing to fly in Rooseyelt’s direction for the speech he made over the ra- | dio. The latest is from Thomas J./ | Watson, president of the Internation- | al Business Machines Corp., one of | | the most brutal and slave-driving | corporations in the country. And that | is saying a whole lot. | Says Thomas, “We are deeply ap- | preciative of and very thankful for} the constructive work which you are | doing in our interest.” | Thomas is certainly not a doubting | Thomas when it comes to Roosevelt's | pro-capitalist policies. 'HE fundamental difference between production under capitalism and production under the dictatorship of | the workers is that in the latter case, | there is no exploitation of the work- | ers by any class which owns the | means of production. The workers and farmers own the means of pro- | duction themselves, | _ But does each individual worker get | back “the full value of his labor?” | | As Marx points out, in the Critique |of the Gotha Program, the workers Ree get the full value of their | labor. * Marx shows how the society as a whole must set aside reserves for the | depreciation of the plants, for the expansion of industry, for research and experimentation. He shows how deductions must be made for the expenses’ of management, social in- surance, for those who cannot work because of physical disability, etc. In the Soviet Union, which is now going through the transition to Com- munism, each individual factory must | Pay its own way in the general eco- nomy. That is, it must be able to contribute to the common reserve which the country as a whole is us- ing to build up its industries, to) build adequate defense against im- perialist intervention, to build new houses, hospitals, schools, etc. Each industry and factory must show a “profit.” But this is entirely different from the profit which the Common Soldiers Fight Japan Army Bitterly; Mongol Princes Betray Japan Plans New Slave State in Mongolia on Borders of People’s Republic SHANGHAI, May 10.—The Japanese armies crossed the Lwan Rives, north of Lwanchow, today in their advance on Peiping and Tientsm Jap- anese planes bombed the city of Miyun, only thirty-five miles north of Peiping. Bitter hand-to-hand fighting was going on ai Changli and Yungping, on the Yellow Sea coast. While the Japanese were driving towards the two giant cities of North China, planning to erect another Puppet state, Japanese agents have! sould mean that Japanese annexa- been bribing Mongol princes in the) tion would extend to the thtee Man- pigs Siogianee: to: the ee churian provinces, Jehol and Chahar. ol The proposed North Chinese state iss | would then serve as a buffer state The Silingol and Chahar Mongols,| between Ghina and Japanese-control- totalling over one million strong, are| led Manchukuo. to form the nucleus of an autonom- | ous Mongol state, according to the | latest Japanese plans. The seizure of Chahar Province SOCIALIST HEADS OF GERMAN UNIONS SLAVISHLY SURRENDER TO HITLER AND ARE KICKED QUT AS A REWARD BERLIN, April 30.—The Executive | of the German Federation of Labor, | all of whose leaders are German So-) cial Democrats on April 19, publicly | surrendered May First to the Fas- cists in the following resolutions: “The Executive of the German General Federation of Labor (A.D. the community of people. “In cordial comradeship with all of you, we send you thie day our union greetings. “Berlin, April 15, 1983. (Signed) Executive of the Ger- the German | | GB.) welcomes May 1, 1933 as a | legal holiday of national labor and calls upon the members of all trade unions to take part everywhere in the celebration arranged by the government, fully conscious of their pioneer work for the May First idea to honor creative labor, and for the incorporation of the work- ers into the state on a footing of equality.” Another manifesto reads: “To the members of the trade unions! “We welcome the action of the Reich government in declaring this day of ours as a legal holiday of national labor, as the German people’s holiday. “On this day the German worker is to occupy the center of thé ceéle- bration, according to the official announcement. On May First the German worker should demonstrate conscious of his trade; he should man General Federation of Labor. sxe the BERLIN, May 10—The Hitler Government today confiscated all the property, buildings, and news- papers, of the Social Democratic Party throughout the country. Among the 135 papers taken over was the Berlin Vorwaerts. The pro- perty of the dissolved Reichsbanner was also seized. 8 WT Now that their betrayal of the German working class was complete, the Fascists fired the Socialist lead- ers and took over the paralyzed trade unions themselves. Such is the in- evitable course of Socfalist betrayal of the class-struggle. What a pity that the very day after the Socialist trade union lead- ets of Germany officially had their union members take part in the shameful Hitler celebrations, which stole May Day from the class-con- scious working-class, the Nazis should have kicked out these willing serv- become a fully equal member of ants of Fascism? capitalist class makes, since the) “profit” in the Soviet Union is not| based on exploitation of the working | class. It belongs to the working class | as a whole. NEW POLISH CABINET j English prisons. Here every prisoner, | | WARSAW, May 10. — President | Moscicki today commissioned Janusz | Jendrzejewicz, Minister of Education, |to form a new Cabinet to succeed that of Premier Alexander Prystor, which resigned yesterday. : Prosperity Ballyhoo of Roosevelt By MILTON HOWARD. It is entirely typical of the Roose- velt administration that at the same moment that Roosevelt is disclaim- ing any attempts to ballyhoo the country out of the depression, that the capitalist press is engaged in a directed and organized attempt to do just that. ‘The capitalist press is now letting loose another barrage of “prosperity” propaganda. An analysis will show that the eco- is not based on any real improvement in the purchasing power of the mas- ses. It is made up of three factors— the seasonal increase in automobile buying, the speculative buying in an- ticipation of further inflation, and some buying which was deferred dur- ing the bank moratorium. And noth- ing more. The real secret of the sudden sharp advance in steel production, upon which all the prosperity ballyhoo is orders for the steel industry, an ex- cellent indicator of the future trend in steel production. This index has not shown the slightest interruption in its long decline since last October when there was a slight upturn. The capitalist press is making much ado about an anticipated increase in this index for the coming week! But it is not so widely stated that this anti- cent over last year. gain! Another accurate indicator of re- turning business is the amount of electric current consumed. This is still below last year, One billion four hundred twenty-eight million | kilowatt hours having been con- | sum last available figure) against 1,545 A tremendous ed the last week in April (the | UNEMPLOYMENT WORSE UNDER NAZI DROP IN EXPORTS RULE; CONTINUED DROP BERLIN, May 10.—The official unemployment statistics issued by the Fascist government are wholly useless, for they are deliberately falsified. The Fascist rulers for- get, however, to “correct” other statistics which give a real picture of the labor market, especially those on social insurance. The latter show that under Fa- scist rule the total number of workers employed has reached the lowest level since the beginning of the world crisis, with the exception of the end of January. On March 1, 1933, the total number employed was 11,533,000, compared to 11,- 928,000 on March 1 1982. | _ The seasonal decrease in unem- | ployment between April 1 and April 15 was only 69,000 this year as against a drop of 100,000 during | the same period last year. 50 per cent in April, although the Dye Trust does most of its trade in a fairly stable market that has been much less affected by the crisis than other industries. «8 { LONDON, May 10.—The Spring fur sale at Beaver Hall, the London Fur Exchange, revealed that about $30,000,000 of trade is being diverted from , Leipzig, German center, where an international fur trading boycott is said to be 100 per cent effective. * CHICAGO, May 10.—Ex-Gover- nor Phil LaFollette of Wisconsin told an audience in the Palmer House here last week that a mil- lion and a half people or more than | one-third of Berlin’s total popula- | tion, were living in dugouts and | tinean shacks on the outskirts of Berlin, like the American Hoover- cipated increase is dependent upon | million for last year. | Foreign trade statistics show aj villes and Roosevelt Roosts. an abnormally lafge order from the | nomic crisis is actually becoming in- Golden State Bridge now being built | ce; Business failures are now ten per volved in ever-greater contradictions i | sharp drop in German exports. The This is the ‘paradise on earth” and Lenin (the Communist Party)—are a combination which spells death based, is given away by the trade nt higher than they were a year | eeptet i to capitalism. The paymaster of the artist shuddered at the sight. 'HE stopping of the production of T in the stormy skies of the present feller Center is a political incident. the mural decoration at the Rocke- It is one of the lightning flashes decline of capitalism. It shows the tangled snarl of contradictions between the foul system of capitalist wage slavery and prostitution of all arts and culture, on the one hand, which constitute the capitalist relations of production, with the high development of the material base pf production, This flash of lightning shows the picture of a prostitute civilization which cannot longer live j without debauching all of life and all of culture, without a regime of Hitler's murder and Rockefeller's vandalism, and indeed the class violence and murder of the American bourgeoisie which rival the bloodiest crimes | | and difficulties, that the way is be- | ing prepared for another and more | devastating ‘financial and economic crash than has yet been witnessed. | What is happening now? Has there taken place any real change in the conditions of the economic crisis which herald the end of the four- year crisis? Compare Business with 19th Century.| The capitalist class is hailing with joy the fact that some of the eco- nomic indexes are not dropping as fast as they did last year. They are | dation. needs of the auto industry, which is the largest consumer of steel, have | magazine, “Steel”, which states that “Automobile manufacturers have cov- as far ahead as the third quarter. And out of this activity, the operating rate rose.” Thus, the whole advance in steel production is based on a rotten foun- The whole year's buying already been bought up. What will happen from now on? What will happen when the anticipated buying of automobiles does not materialize? ered their finished steel requirements | at San Francisco. It is not gen- erally stated that this order will ex- haust the steel needs of this bridge for the next two years. The index for unfilled orders indicates that the crisis has not been lessened one | ago at the same period. | Another Crash Being Prepared | Thus, the facts are that the large exports of I. G. Farbenindustrie, the German Dye Trust, declined promised by Hitler for his Third Reich. | strata of the population are not buy- | ing and cannot buy more goods, The struggles of the Iowa farmers are’ iota, leloquent testimony of this. With inevitable force. the pres-| Whatever buying may develop ‘in ent rise in steel production is | the coming months will be a result Preparing the ground for the | of the efforts of the more well-to: | mext overwhelming crash in the|do sections of the petty-bourgeoi: Stee] industry. We can asser, that masses to convert, their savings the next collapse of the steel pro- | (when they can get them out of the duction will carry the steel index | banks) into commodities, because of into even lower depths than it has of the German fascist N= too long after the German masses will hang the butcher Hitler, Many men of the class and role of Rockefeller will face a revolu- tionary tribunal of American workers, soldiers and Negroes. It may be in the same great hall at the Rockefeller Center, Patel Scores Gandhi’s Non-Resistance to the British; Wants Action VIENNA, May 10.—V. J. Patel, for- mer president of the All-India Con- tress, and S. ©. Bose, ex-Mayor of Dalcutta, denounced Gandhi's tactics of non-resistance as a failure in a itatement issued yesterday from the Vienna sanitarium where Patel is now ander treatment. “We are convinced that as a polit- cal leader Mahatma Gandhi has ailed. The time therefore has come or a radical reorganization of the \ll-India Congress on a new principle nd with a new method. Non-coop- ‘ration cannot be abandoned, but the orm of non-cooperation must be hanged into a more militant one and . freedom fight waged on all fronts.” | holdi Gandhi's pacifist policy, whieh hes ctrayed the Indian memes snd. nem | tially disrupted the nationalist move- ment in India, is now so thoroughly bankrupt that nationalist leaders like Patel and Bose must admit that civil disobedience has failed to free India from British imperialist rule. Patel | voted for the resolution for struggle against imperialism at the World Anti-War Congress. BOMBAY, May 10.—Gandhi today the care of a physician in a luxurious mansion in Poona, India, He is suffer- ing severe pains. | NEW YORK, May 10.—Immigration | officials, aided by New York City de- | tectives, today arrested Arthur Israel | Kraus, former instructor at the Col- lege of the City of New York, who Went on a hunger strike a few months ago as a protest against the treat- ment of Jewish students in Poland, him at Ellis Island on a of vinieting the immigration | Pointing to the advances in other in- | dexes as final proof that at last the four years world erisis is over. The excitement of the capitalist press over any stight increases in pro- duction is really comical when one considers that these increases are measured against industrial levels which can only be compared with Production of the mid-nineteenth century. The chart of capitalist pro- duction since 1929 has been one long steep decline which touched bottom only a short time ago. Now, as a re- sult of certain seasonal factors, there is an infinitesimal change in the steady drop of capitalist industrial indexes, and lo! and behold, the crisis is over, according to the capitalist began the third day of his fast under | Press. The fact ts that the N. Y. Times business index ts still 44 percent be- | low the estimated “normal”. False Steel Rise. ‘The rise in steel production from the crisis low of 11 per cent capacity a few weeks ago, to over 30 per cent capacity this week is given the widest publicity as proof of retwming pros- | perity. When we examine the actual | situation, it turns out that this fev- | erish rise in production means exaci- ly the opposite of a retum to pros- pemity, The easwe for the resent rise in as There is no doubt that the index for steel production will drop with tremendous speed either to the crisis lows or probably to a new low. Upon how false a bottom, and how temporary is the advance in steel production, is further proved by the condition of the next basic consumer of steel, the building and construc- tion industry. The index of build- ing contracts is considered one of the most sensitive and significant in estimating business conditions. Building Makes New Low. So great is the crisis in this fun- damental business, that not only has the index for building construction been declining without interruption month after month, but the index for building construction docs not even show the usual seas- onal improvement. Even last year, in the third year of the crisis, this in- dex showed a slight improvement during the spring month: of the year. But this year, the index for Jow for the crisis. Last year, the in- dex for building construction went from 20 to 40 during the spring months. This year, it went from 20 in January to about 10 in April, where it now is. building contracts has sunk to a new | yet reached, ‘There can be no real upturn in Production without an actual in- crease in the effective purchasing power of the masses. The Roose- velt. ballyhoo about returning pros- perity is in violent contradiction to the cold facts, which indicate that manufactured goods are not getting into the hands of the peopie through retail purchase. The index of chain-store sales for the first four months of this year are 12 per cent lower than last year. Sales for the month of April are five per cent below last year. The latest report of the Dept. of Commerce on retail sales shows that at the end of 1932, retail ‘sales were running at 23 per cent below 1931, with no change of trend in sight. Another significant index by which we can measure the move- ment of manufactured goods is the index of merchandise carloadings, year, but its decline is even sharper than the decline in total carloadings, which are also still below the same period last year, The total car load- able, , This index is not only far below last | | inflation fears. The poverty-stricken | workers cannot share in this buying movement. The workers have to pay for the price-Hse by further restrict- ing their meagre purchases. The present “return of prosperity” is therefore nothing but an artifically stimulated boom in prices, and a temporary, unhealthy expansion in steel production, which in turn is based upon nothing more than the seasonal attempt of the prostrate automobile industry to resume pro- duction, while retail sales continue to drop. In addition, the present fling in activity in some of the industries, is nothing but the coincidence of sea- sonal factors with inflationary press- ure, The fundamental fact remains that no advance is being made in getting manufactured goods into the hands of the masses. With wage cuts, unem- ployment, &nd inflation prices making ever deeper inroads into the purchas- ing power of the people, whatever /increase in carloadings or manufac- turing indexes may materialize (they haven't yet), will merely represent | business movements within the con- fines of the capitalist class, with mer- chandise moving from manafactorer to ‘FASCISTS BURNT THESE BOOKS! But Works of Marxism-Leninism Remain the Fuel of Revolutionary Movement. ‘The following books are among those which held the place of honor |in the bon fires lit by Hitler and his brown shirts throughout Germany. | But the works of Marxism-Leninism cannot be so easily done away with. Workers, answer Hitler by reading and studying these books so that you can more effectively build the revolutionary movement. Tip following | important works of Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin have aleady been issued in English by International Publishers. MARX AND ENGELS Manifesto of the Communist Party, by Karl Marx and Friedrich 1 | Wage-Labor and Capital, by Karl Marx .. 10 The Civil War in France, by Karl Marx ......... B The Critique of the Gotha Programme, by Karl Marx. HH The Fourteenth of March, 1883. Engels on the Death of Marx. Capital, Vol. I, by Karl Marx . Selected Essays, by Karl Marx . The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, by Karl Marx. The Peasant War in Germany, ae Enge's .......5 NIN Towards the Seizure of Power, 2 volumes ‘These include: Toward the Seizure of Power (2 books) ‘Tho Revolution of 1917 (2 books) The Teachings State and Revolution . What Is To Be Done? . Letters From Afar .. . saa a Will the Bolsheviks Retain State Power? (10 other titles in the Little Foundations of Leninism

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