The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 8, 1933, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ae ° i. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Be tishied Oy the Compron iy ae er ote rans cae eheete Ranier ot Ee e By Mail everywhere: One year, $6; six months, $3.50; 3 months, $2; 1 month, 7%e, ILY , Page Six 15th St,, New York City, N. ¥, ‘Telephone ALgonquin 4-7056, Cable “DALWORK.” a Se eae (JULY Saeee Address and mail checks to the Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th St., New York, N, ¥- cs yi er yy Mle Gene? abe eee A Banker Solves the Unemployment Problem By Burck APAN DEMANDS Notes Revolts Against Hitler ; | HEAVIER TANKS Cote agen : row in Storm Troops on the London Conference | LARGER GUNS best Fan G oe ee UCH has b little he ic Conf nee, but very - Nazi Rank and File Demands Carrying Out ually means for the Move to I nereaseArms | of Socialistic Promises; Thousands ers waa a ric situation ot} Follows Provocations | Mutiny in Frankort-am-Main the world a st few Against U.S.S.R. i years. | We can notice fi aa in’ world econo: Unrest in the ranks of the storm troops in a number of vitable outcome | z ly 7—In a written | Fi 4 fi Si A say, 1928 or t 35 y. This palley secretin to oe proposed disarm- places is assuming stormy proportions of revolt against the ing, so to sp symptor he n finance|ament agreement, Japan, already | leadership. Characteristic details on the disbandment of all present crisis nOnot is eae ements in deaperiellst war eee storm troops in Frankfurt-am-Main are brought to light. 5) eee d r war, There|Far East, and whose provocations : oo el ee: : ae for interna-|against the Soviet Union follow each Eighteen hundred members were expelled from the storm Shiai The London Con-|other daily, demands authorization troops. An Extraordinary Fascist Commissar (National-So- fi Pee wnole of the way of the/to build bigger guns and bigger | Tee . f ‘ foe foley ‘ nce. The imperialist |tanks than were provided for in the cialist) was appointed for the purpose 0 ‘forming. new storm aris proceed to a redivi-|original draft treaty. Instead of| troops”. The German® paper “Volksrecht” (Zuerich) writes <2-) Conseq rkets through war,|4.52 inch guns, she demands 6.20 falling off in @n_ immense of. goods. stocks in the as follows regarding this incident: HOSTILITY GREETS [alee Cook acrect nee coer FASCIST FLIGHT long anticipated|inch guns, and instead of 16 ton| Soviet Union. These|tanks, the Japanese are asking for | at we have to learn|20 ton tanks. | Roosevelt's economic! This move on the part of the war | war, and ultimately of} government of Japan follows its together with,|previous demand at Geneva for aj nestic policy/Mavy as large as that of either the | on for quite some time. In order to | put an end to the dissatisfaction and give it a different outlet, the leader- ship arranged an attack against the Stocks for w ing, and| United States or Great Britain. Corinne and SoolaieDenioeue Pi found. One on the workers, | Here again can be clearly seen} workers. However, these organized ee erid . the proper functions of the “dis He | attacks had the opposite effect, Quite Baice levels. a have ‘one ‘other. lessons to |ermanient soonferences” “of theme peice eas ard res aye stocks has $ the London Confer- |Petialists—the building of greater | os Rocher! * ane Math’ drastic gov see armaments — and in no clreum-| Authorities Prepare | tion between the members of the cutting the stances the reduction of armaments. | ‘ storm troops and the Communists, grain, under | Provocations to Stem | «tn the second haif of May a con- an limiting ‘|commodities as NANKING MOVES Protest Actions siderable section of the dissatisfied | storm troopers were sent to the Pfaltz, Stocks exist side nd socialism. The | u 8 . exist becau: joviet Commissar for | CHICAGO, July 7—The squadron, A section of the exiled storm troop of the ma: Maxi Litvinoff, TROOPS AGAINST ers returned to Frankfurt. On sthe |demonstrating Fascist Italy's air} Wages of the n e loyment, decreas- hy | strength, which is flying from Rome ie a ae pee oor Leas ake 3.) Unemp and the other cont ae ise . NN ye to Chicago, for the World Fair, has | ing ©! ie storm troopers at whic! to unheard of d vail through- ternational Labc world wnempic 000,000, so the. mal to than ¢h (4) Policies ot being pursued f great powers: Ir by all quotas, ecor r the em- Tt told of t ns capacity to absorb $1,000,000,000 worth of goods, it told of the economic peace policy of’ the Soviet Union, it told of rising pro-| duction, of the abolition of unemploy- | ment, of the victories of socialist | construction, of the continuous rise FENG IN CHAHAR. Nationalists Sign) Truce With Japan at Darien Tribute to One of the Bolshevik Old Guard---Comrade S. Gussev been forced to change its plans and will moor in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, and not, as previously intended, on the Chicago lake front. This change has been forced as a result of the great anti-Fascist senti- ment prevailing among the Chicago workers. A flood of letters received by the Italian Consul at Chicago, one of the leaders of the lower or- ganizations spoke and declared that the exile to the Pfaltz by the fascist leaders was done for the purpose of cleansing the ranks of ‘real social- ists: This speaker, who was widely applauded by the storm troopers, wound up his speech with the state- ment, ‘Where is the promised Social- , export : Some Mo ara °| SHANGHAI, July 7—The Nanking| Guiseppe Castruccio, testified to the| ist Four-Year Plan?” PPiestiic ana export. bounti RU SHORE anthane Nationalist government, which has| peeen aria strength of the hostility which the| "ai tnic meeting was also present others, surtaxes age : the | Just concluded a truce with the'The Historic Fight of ney, shipping subsidies, sidies, and a thousand ott ods of waging aggressiv war, are being multiplied all the capitalist world. e Soviet Union took the way out of the crisis. r lesson brought out the workers and farmers of the nited States by the London Con- Japanese imperialists, at the Dai-| ren conference, has ordered an army t@ be sent against the forces of Mar- shal Feng in Chahar. Feng-yu-siang, the Chahar war lord and ex-Christ- Gussev Against Lovestone His Fine Personality |Which Inspired Com- radesIs Keenly Missed workers feel for the bloody Fascist dictatorship of Mussolini. | Already stories are being circulated that “anti-Fascist groups’—no men- tion of who they are—have threaten- a senior leader of the storm troops, Fonjagov, who was unsuccessful in his attempt to stop the speech of the leader of the lower organization. The cael ed to “blow General Balbo and his|"@nk and file who were present at (S.) A race has begun among rence. ian general, has headquarters at Kal- By TOM BELL before reaching conclusions. . 24 seaplanes out of the lake” if they the meeting would not allow a and great. powers to who c - _ With the intensification of the cap-|gan. He heads the so-called Anti-|q peader of the British Communist Quietly, modestly and unobtrusively| come to Chicago. These stupid pro-| Fonjagov was finally a a Fie 5 their curren he most crisis, the capitalist countries | Japanese army, really an army, by| Party he came to Commission sessions, the accompaniment of hisses from the responding advant duction costs e moving ever more rapidly in the direction of war. A new division of the use of which as a bargaining in- strument, Feng hoped to get from the I had occasion to work in close collaboration with Comrade Gussev sometimes not deigning to say a word. At times he would put a question, vocations merit the ridicule they will get. What the authorities are really afraid of are the mass demonstra- assembled storm troopers, to leave the meeting. This meeting also voted st 1 a ageoer = | Si is| ‘ listening patiently to all the fu ork i hr | to adopt a telegram which was sent *f tageous ec ith r i a ee een eee Pa es cool of the sages focupence |e over eighteen months. In this ments for and iain until peal REDE REY nate at ee fae to Biter penal, foreicn trade, England left the gold | Sisy "a" tremendous srowtt ie ars | of Manchuria. ‘The Nationalists, many | Deriod Special | AbcuDes Wes dered whether this man was really| missaries. “The Frankfurt storm troopers des standard in the summer of 1931,/5°°_ gene Siete inst | times over the betrayers of the Chi-|8iven to the American | interested in the proceedings. Arrangements have been made for| mand the carrying out of the socials Japan has had an, Tontey stat ee Sateen acta an oeaati ese people to the Japanese imper- Party, then torn. by. fractional Sehis But it was Comrade Gussev’s way.| motorcycle police to guard the fliers be Mee) ‘ somo. time—he ency, the yen,|{he Soviet Union. At the London |i. want these pickings them-|i08. it was the time when Lovestone And when ‘finally it was necessary to|on their way from Lake Geneva to| ti, mogram and the fulfillment of is now 40 per Sent noe Led piidgeceeotis selves. General Pang-Ping-hsun has pele ciara ee reach conclusions no one could be| Chicago. Governor Schmedeman, of | ‘2@ Socialist Four-Year Plan. ” its origin: And now fascist Germany, r ica has abandoned Hugenberg Memorandum, offered it- been commanded to proceed: against Kalgan, where Feng is rapidly en-; methods. more clear, practical and firm in tak- ing decisions. He had thought it all the Wisconsin milk strike fame, is storm troopers demand an immedi- ate answer in a period of three days.” x again finding a use for his National SFEMhs Roosevelt pa self as an instrument for such inter- | icting troops for the war, not against |, The circumstances were particular- tik: /Eid iecislwate’ Gniioies end sleet Guaniiten, F eee of which |. “This ultimatarn calls for tneitine The doll today worth only about | vention war. The Hugenberg | the Japanese, but against a rival band |!¥ Painful for Sone Sue es ical, and there was no dubiety as tol/are to be stationed at Lake Geneva|bandment of all storm troops of three-fo of its gold value. Memorandum suggested that the of Chinese oppressors of the Chinese| fF several years be! bat i ; yriee where Comrade Gussev stood. Love-|to “protect” the fascists. One hun-|Frankfurt-am-Main. As the majors terri of the Soviet Union would | people. special attention to our Party in stone is now a renegade. dred special deputies, and land and|ity of the storm troopers are armed LL these facts are indications of be a “ ress nt age se egal e ee this paride he ene Comrade Gussev was an exemplary| water police have been drafted to|and they refuse to voluntarily tum the rowing of markets | nization. jis statement e | went to the Conference atmed. Great Britain had abandoned he gold nt consoli- empire kets with the cements, had introduced a system of protective tariffs at home. The United States time previous the hi fn the world. For she was armed as debt position and weapon. of the f of the dollar. F 29 per cont of her tot: armed herself addition se of all other capitalist “ways cut” of the crisis except those of blood and destruction, if we remem- ber the way out taken by the pro- letariat of the Soviet Union, the October Revolution and the ies of socialist construction won by the Soviet workers since the Revo- ion, if we remember these things, ve shall have learned some of ons the London Economic ce had to teach us. 160 at Lithuanian tion of 35 attended the conference, coming in a huge moving van. | The conference organized a Lithue anian Youth organization to work | with the Association of Lithuanian | Workers. The conference endorsed | |the Labor Sports Union and made | }plans for drawing in Lithuanian | Youth. The Youth Anti-War Con-)| ference to be held in Paris was en- | dorsed and money appropriated to- | ward sending a delegate. with the Comintern, Comrade Gussev unhesitatingly fought and exposed Lovestone. Such moments are always difficult for the Executive Committee of the Communist International. They call for the greatest care and patience, especially when honest workers are being deceived, as many American workers were, by petty bourgeois demagogy, of which Lovestone was a past master. |Lovestone was no longer in harmony | . ‘ Ss. L | st To resort to sharp organizational measures in such cases is a big temp- tation and, of course, the easiest method of dealing with such prob- lems, But that is not the way of Bolshevism, and on this question I can remember how carefully, and systematically, Comrade Gussev used to test every fragment of evidence GUSSEV comrade. The closer one got to him ment and war. For those reasons I hope the Comintern will give us more of the life of Comrade Gussev. From a study of the life and char- acter of these devoted sons of the oroletarian revolution our youth, the ‘uture leaders of Communism, will learn how to fulfill in practice the \ traditions and teachings of Bolshev- jism. It is their finest theoretical school, and the best memorial to the work of the old guard of which Com- rade Gussev was one of the best. VIENNA, July 7—The official gov- jernment newspaper Wiener Zeitung quotes the Austrian Minister of Jus- tice, Schuschnigg, as saying that evi- dence has been discovered that the Nazis have been issuing propaganda with the object of persuading the Many prospective suicides in Germany to combine death with terroristic acts, and thus pass out “heroically.” To such depths of degradation the fascist government of declining Ger- many has sunk, How the “New Deal” Prepares for Imperialist War the lake to take care of the planes. | over their arms, the fascist leadership has taken place. A great | Memorandum expresses aloud what | cree L ippeathat hes per the more his personality radiated that | organized police raids with the aim rl intense strugel r the x | building of a real Bolshevik organiza- es 5 re a (wong: An intense struggle for the | rr we remember the growth of the| NEW YORK.—One hundred aisty | pu! \ ‘ety the disciples of Lenin. com-| EHVen Suicides in [aid not succeed in finding the weap- Mee World memoria Corterence, [Cee ne wa, the growth of the/ delegates attended the Lithuanian But, during and after the Sixth! pate Gusev we can illatford to spare the New Germany ons. ; 5 has been an episode in that struggle | G@"8er of intervention against the | Young Workers’ conference held 4n | world Congress, when it became clear { in these days of revolutionary fer- Thus we see that the growing dis- fof markets. All the great powers|S0Vict Union, if we remember the| Brooklyn. A Chicago youth delega- | - satisfaction among certain strata of the storm troopers, who are begin~ ning to free themselves from fascist demagogy, is growing and assumes the proportions of real spontaneous revolts. It is no wonder then that in the last few weeks the Hitlerites have carried all through Germany a number of police raids in which they arrested those storm troopers who openly expressed their dissatisfaction with the fascist leadership, ‘LABOR MOVEMENT IN CAMDEN GROWS power to ir —e ® 7 R I: ti M ss to raise By BILL GEBERT | . 9 hg prepared and trained how to fight | LVEVO. ut lonary a opts sto ve mowat-wat sive oem-/ Demonstrate on Aug. Ist Against Roosevelt’s War Program :22%.2°%:,2% 22522) Organizations and C. atrengthened by her 60 t di ment, on a number of occasions, valuation of the yen ing attacks on the je di clarations that the United the National Guard “for policing the P. Push Activities tes stands for peace, for disarma- | AMERICAN preparations for war indication to what extent the Roose-|Michigan, sometime ago, declared: Workers’ Unemployment Insurance ite aking ae dan aie Bast, and by her pre ent, that only its imperialist rivals, marks the mobilization of all the] velt government proceeds with the| “Capitalism needs war to slaughter | Bill. meetings, picketing ‘of athe’ miners, (By a Worker Correspondent) jalist attacks on Great Britain and Japan are pre- | resources and man power and ex-| preparations for war. This goes to-| millions of unemployed.” This pro- | et ee ow » aianeen BUA. Silla maicaes "| CAMDEN, N. J.—Camden began China. G aring for war. But behind these | presses itself in the Industrial Re-| gether with the labor military camps|ceeds now at an even faster tempo|w7HILE we must point out the to move in front with left wing ac- Gonference with pacifist phrases there are tremend- | torium just declared on @mid public, long and st debts. pe most dramatic Conference was that on the ques- tion of stabilization. This question, Which hinges on the question of the Rodsevelt program of the cheap dol- Yar, has a special interest for us. It at the igsaid that devaluation of the dol-| Waris necessary because of the Roose. Welt. internal program of price rais- ing. In fact, the two things are part Of: the same policy- rice raising at home, dumping abroad. There is talk f two policies, one urged by Moley— ‘a policy of economic i other desired by Hull aaa co-operation In fact, elt’s domestic and foreign eco- nomic policies are one policy—price! raising and consequent ous undertakings and feverish pre- parations for war. “The Roosevelt government, like the Wilson government, precisely by means of pacifist talk, not only pre- ares for war in the future, but pre- pares for at a moment’s notice. Se of the Navy Swanson proclaimed an aggressive program of building up the navy “second to none,” to build airplanes “to the full complement.” This is the program which is carried out at a rapid tempo. In addition to $238,000,000 recent- y appropriated for the Navy and for the construction «f 32 new warships, President Roosevelt granted an ad- dit.onal $75,000,000 for the Navy from the $3,300,000,000 Public Works Con- struction Fund. | covery Act, which places the control | of the industries, conditions of work- ers in the hands of the war machin- ery, the same as the War Board dur- ing the World War. It was openly admitted by the dic- tator of the Industrial Recovery Act, General Hugh S. Johnson, in a Chi- cago speech, that: “We do not expect to haye to resort to the drastic steps taken during the war. But we have the same kind of a situation.” And the “Recovery Act” specifically pro- | vides for the building of “naval ves- sels, airplanes and mechanization or units as the President may desig- nate.” Under the cloak of public works, @ tremendous amount of money has been thrown in, in the form of sub- sidies, loans and orders for war ma- motorization of the army tactical | to which now, in addition to the young unemployed boys and men who have been drafted, ex-soldiers are | being recruited for these so-called | “reforestation camps.” | That the “reforestation army” is |@ part of the war preparation ma- chinery, was openly admitted by Rob- ert Fechner, director of the forced |1abor camps, who said: “The mobil- ization of the civilian conservation corps, with time as the essential ele- |ment, has been the most valuable | experience that the army has had | since the World War. It has tested the organization of the War Depart- ment and of the corps areas in re- sponding to a mission very similar | to mobilization for war.” + ioe oye MERICAN capitalists need war as the forceful way out of the crisis. than it proceeded on the eve of the World War. With the plans for con- scription of industry for war, in which workers will be placed on the same basis as soldiers, the same pay and military order, an industrial war plan had been worked out and pre- pared by the War Department. The whole country is subdivided into mil- itary odinance corps, with 17,000 fac- tories listed, ready in 24 hours’ no- tice, to be transformed into ammuni- tion plants. Struggle Against War The task confronting the working class is not only to expose this, but to energetically carry on a campaign against war preparations. The work- ers must demand that all funds ap- Propriated for military purposes be turned over immediately for cash re- sharpening of the contradictions between the rival imperialist powers, | United States and Great Britain, United States and Japan, and the aggressive role of American impe- rialism, in this connection it is neces- sary to point out that one of the main objectives of the imperialist powers, the United States included, is war against the Soviet Union. Recently, at a meeting of engin- eers in Chicago, A. N. Fleming, the engineer of the Metropolitan-Vickers | Co. of London, one of the engineers | who was sent by this company for | constructing plants in the Soviet Union, where his colleagues were caught by the workers’ government because they were engaged in sabo- tage and military spying, made a | speech pointing out the danger for In view of all this, this year’s prep- arations for anti-war day, August 1,| must be intensified and carried bet- ter than ever before. The basis for preparations for anti-war demonstra- tions on August 1 must be concen- trated im the sheps, trade unions, among the Negro masses, among young workers, among the unem- ployed and among the toiling farm- ers. We must, in connection with this, concentrate our attack and explain the treacherous role of the A. F, of L., of the Socialist Party, of all kinds of pacifists who are helping the capi- talists in preparing war. The Indus- trial Recovery Act has been hailed by the Executive Committees of the A. F. of L. as a “new page in the history of American labor,” and by Norman Thomas, of the Socialist Party, as the “road to Socialism.” In tivities. For. the last three months the International Labor Defense has made definite progress. They grew to a membership of 150. They took part in the May 1 United Front Dem- onstration. They participated in the Scottsboro march to Washington. They had numerous mass meetings. They have now a steady headquar- ters at Eighth and Walnut Sts., and hold regular weekly meetings on ‘Tuesdays. The Friends of the Soviet Union organized in March toox a strong toothold. They have a small mem- ership, but succeeded im organizing a conference of organizations for recognition of the Soviet Union. With the support of the local S. P. of Camden and the Workmen’s Circle they had four recognition mass meet~ ings. They gathered over 2,000 sig- natures. They are preparing now for the capitalist system in the progress short, a ag tt . ‘ | » & repetition of 1914! All these |a membership campaign to strengthen Beis and: agereasive bs ich rete Fred Reed, Washington correspon- | terial manufacturing, According to an | Professor White of the University of lief for unemployed and for the of industrialization and building of | +. only indications that all the forc- |the organization, attack on foreign rivals for wider| (mt of the Chicago Daily News,| Associated Press dispatch from Markets, leading ultimately to war,| road. ~in. 1929, the United States did 15.7 commenting on* the new appropri- ations for the Navy, declares: “The total the Navy will now re- Washington, the Army has asked for an additional $84,000,000 for “hous- ing projects” and ammunition. Ac- “LENIN ON WAR =, Socialism in the Soviet Union. Engineer Fleming declared: “Their aim (Soviet Union) is to storten the | werking hours of labor and raise the es of capitalism, including its faith- ful agents in the ranks of the work- ers, have been mobilized for huge war machinery. The Party Unit is very active. Tt succeeded in having a united front | with the S, P. local of Camden for May 1st demonstration and cele- ; cent of all the world’s trade. In| ceive from publie works administra- | cording to the same dispatch, more | standard of living for the workers. organization of the masses | P'ation. It brought them closer to p32, she aid only 124 per cent. Great | tion is $313,000,000, one of the larg- | than $1,800,000 has been set aside for} We are publishing below various, talist slavery.” Think what this means to the com- tn ae ee unemployed and by the rank and file of the 8. P, mem- Britain had passed her and taken! est peace-time sums appropriated | Scott Field, Rock Island Arsenal,| statements by Lenin, made during Bi a petitive (meaning capitalist) system bringing into activity and organiza= bership and weakened ‘the slander MMirst place. ‘This fact explains the| to this branch of the fighting ser- |Savannah Ordinance Depot, Chicago | the last impertalist world war, “Social chauvinism is adherence to|in the rest of the world.” Therefore, | -ion” of young workers, by building |‘@&t the Communist Party members aggressive policy of the Roosevelt vice for the construction of new ‘Depot, in the state of Illinois, etc.| With the imperialist powers pre- he declares further: government in the field of foreign trade. But an- aggressive policy abroad must be paid for. It can only be based on the most ruthless ex Ploitation of the working class and the farmers at home. Inflation cuts wages by exactly as much as it ra Prices. Already the prices of bread, milk, and other commodities of every Gay necessity, have gone up. Already, that is to say, wages have been cut @§.a result of the rise in the cost of living. The Industrial Recov Act. will lead to an even more tho: Oughgoing exploitation of the work- ers. And at the same time that the Roosevelt government leads a general ships and maintenance of those on the line.” | In Hartford, Connecticut, the Colt Patent Fire Arms Manufacturing The U. S. Navy, according to Sec- retary Swanson, is “to be built and maintained, a fleet of all classes of ting ships of maximum war effi- ciency.” | War Profits | For the capitalists, war is a profit- | able business, as was clearly shown curing the World War when millions tipon millions of dollars were made in profits out of the millions of work- | ers and farmers being killed on the | battlefields for the glory of bloody capita A French journalist, Julius Sauer- Company received a contract from the War Department for machine guns to the amount of $300,000. Since May 30, the Chicago Hawthorne Plant of the Western Electric, owned by the American Telephone and Tel- egraph Co., a Morgan concern, began | to manufacture machine guns “for U. S. air mail planes.” A dispatch from Frankfort, Kentucky ,reports that a fire at the Kentucky National Guard Arsenal endangered $500,000 worth of U. 8. government military stores where 82,000 rounds of rifle paring for war, workers should study Lenin’s teachings on war. “What is this war being rougint for? Why these unheard-of miseries it brings humanity? The government and the bourgeoisie of every belli- | gerent country are squandering mil- lions of rubles on books and papers blaming the opponent, arousing in the people a furious hatred for the en- emy, stopping before no lie whatever in order to picture themselves as the country that was unjustly attacked and is now “defending”. itself, In reality, this is a war between two groups of predatory great powers, and the idea of “defending the father- land” in the present war... . The {social chauvinists follow the bour- |geoisie in deceiving the people by saying that the war is conducted for the defense of the freedom and the existence of the nations, thus they put themselves on the side of the bourgeoisie against the proletariat.” “Turning the imperialist war into civil war is the only correct prole- tarian slogan. It is indicated by the experience of the Commune, it was outlined by the Basle resolution (1912) and it follows from all the conditions of an imperialist war “I think we chonld have a good deal closer inter- change and scientific knowledge among the capitalist countries.” Recognition and War The workers of the U. 8. must have of recognition cf the Soviet Union will mean the lessening of the dan- ger of war. There is no contradiction in this. Though the U. 8, government may recognize the Soviet government, they at the same time not only pre- pare, but carry more vigorous prepa- rations for war against the Soviet Union, its class enemy. Further, no illusions that en increase of talk | the Young Communist League into a mass organization, by constantly, daily exposing the war plans of the American government, explaining the role we are to play in the strug- | Sle against war today, and not on the day of declaration of war. A struggle must be started today if we are to carry effectively the struggle against war. The struggle against war cannot be separated from the daily struggles of the masses and in struggle against capitalism. There can be no struggle against war with- out a struggle against capitalism, The working class and the toiling are disturbers and trouble makers. It proved that we are for a real united front of struggle for the working class. They participated in the Anti-Hitler demonstration regardless of the protests of Rabbi Aronoff and has like. They are raising a fund to send as many workers as possible to the summer school of the Party to prepare them for leadership, and they expect that the sympathizets will help them all they can. Saturday. July 8, is set aside as Daily Worker Day. A list of three hundred sympathizers will be divided among the workers to solicit subscrip- tions to the Daily Worker, The agent for the Daily Worker ts one a i among highly developed bourgeois the war machinery is | masses, under the leadership of the of th ain hata law offénsive against the conditions of | ae tah declates that ae tine cas en. |it is fought for the division of col-|countries. However difficult, such| Prepared, not only against the So- | Communist Party, can be a factor in Voted workers tant oan te tound ane Ife of the working class, it also ex-| Wein, associate editor of the Paris | patch declares that the fire was en- onies, for the enslavement of other] transformation riay appear at one| Viet Union the imperialist rivals | postponing the outbreak of the war,| where, He is dail selling from 40 pends millions of dollars on a bigger | “Soir,” (previously on the editorial | dangering the entire city. nations, for advantages and privileges |time or another Socialists will Mmever | of the U. S.—Great Britain and Ja-|but wars under capitalism cannot be y ee aey;, on mechanization of the army, | staff of the New York Times), in a Just an Indication On. naval bases in the Pacific, on hundreds of new airplanes. Consideration of these facts brings speech in Chicago, declared: “Some | of these industries make immense | | profits out of preparations for war.” These few facts enumerated above and recorded in the capitalist press in the last three days, are just an in the world market. ‘This is a most reactionary war, a war of modern slaveholders fought for the purpose of retaining and strengthening capi- relinquish systematic, insistent, un- flinching preparatory work in this di- rection once the war has become a fact.” Pose bec olah Walaa! malls Pees Miinots, || abolished. Only with the overthrow of capitalism can wars be abolished. to 100 copies of the Daily Worker by putting in from 6 to 8 hours of his The Soviet Union peace policy shows this conclusively, time daily. « We will keep on moving in Cam- den to the Red Front, M. ISHA. |

Other pages from this issue: