The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 10, 1933, Page 4

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r SUBSCRIPTION BATES; Oc DEA | By Mail everywhere: One rear, $6; six months, $3.50; 8 months, $2: 1 month, 78, excepting Borough ef Manhattan and Gronx, New York City. Foreign and j f Bubtished br the Comprodaily Publishing Go., Mme. datty sxcopt Sunday, af AC 7 J . J Page Fear {8th BL, New York City, N.Y. Telephone ALgonquin 4-7956:. Cable “DAIWORK.” Address and mall cheeks io the Daily Worker, 50 E.. 18th St., New. York, M. YT. = Coerdreed Perty USA. Canada: One year, $9; 6 months, $5; 8 months, $3. it~ ee ee { {1 mer Seen Seamen Rip Nazi noone ARMY MAKES JULY 10, 1933 || Allentown Groups _ | Organize Against “War Breeding” at | ae e Fascism a Jar » London Conference. : —by Burck | “Dent ery, baby, nice policeman will take you on a picnic!” OLYMPIA, Wash.-Sailors from ALLENTOWN, Pa.—Fight or- eh the U. 8S. frigate “Constitution,” ganizations of Allentown united in an Anti-Pascist Front at a the American merchant ship! | b > conference July 5, called by the | “Lewis Luckenback” and the | | €c U mI ts Allentown branch’ of the Nature Danish motorship “Amerika”! | Friends. The delegates resolved | jjoined with workers of Olympia! unanimously to retain the unity in hauling down the Nazi swas-! | | Sere gest of the Anti-Fascist Front, to| | bev flag aon ee ee of the} | —— i ok, thar S r Q nu of | | |German ship “Portland,” docked jag] y, | Battle for Markets Sharpens As Powers Seek) | “ocganations into ihe. | in Olympia, on sune ain tre || Missionaries Flee As Soviets Take Pachow in Szechuan | [Sailors and workers were led by |members of the Marine Workers | | [International Union, and the I.} | S.H. (the international organiza- | tion of sea and harbor Roars) to which it is affiliated. So great was the militancy of the seamen | and Olympia workers that the| | (“ j + “Portland” did not raise its flag| | Conflicts of War Lords Front, and to prepare for a large demonstration on August 1. Reso- lutions demanding the immediate release of all political prisoners and the return of all confiscated Nature Friends camps in Ger- many wpre also adopte™. Face-Saving End of Gathering LONDON, July 9 Secretary of en the struggle against their main State Hull, head of the Americanjrival by laying the ground for a low- delegation to the London Economic/ering of the value of the pound in Conference, is forced to administer|relation to the dollar. The dollar repeated doses of statements promis-|dropped to a new low of 70 cents ing later action, in order to give the’) based on its former gold value, and |RED TERRITORIES GROW gathering even an appearance of life.| the British in order to keep the dol- After the breakdown on the leading| questions of currency stabilization and tariffs, following which a sharp- er war for world markets will break out among the imperialists. the main 12,000 ATTEND CHICAGO RALLY lar from dropping: «tll further in re- lation to their currency will begin operations to lower the pound, The result will be further inflation in the United States, and a battle for great- again while it remained in port. Austrians Arrest Intense; 3 Ships Desert SHANGHAI, July 9.—New ad- | vances of the Red Army in the 5o- ‘ . : object of MacDonald and Hull is/er advantage through ‘inflation AG AINST W AR 926 Nazis: Order [viet districts in the northeastern gracefully to bury the remains of the) qt is clearer than ever that the i ’ paler As Becny nn sa conference with an ceteig main task of the conference, agreed = Jail With t Trial tens ab Sctate Michow ene meaningless statement in order to|to by all of the delegates, is to find Thi te, Ot g . Keep the toiling masses from realiz-|some face-saving formulations be- Negro, WhiteWorkers, captured by the Red Army under ing the danger of intensified imperi- alist antagonisms While the conflicts grow sharper Jeading to greater war preparations. Hull, like the Dicken’s character, Mr. Sopkins Strikers, at Pienie-Rally hind which the real battle will go on more heightened than ever. Boy Scouts Replace : CHICAGO. — More than 12,000 Drive to Please West- ern Imperialists Sharpen Anti-German: the command of Ho Lung. The missionaries declared that the Soviets are rapidly extending their rule and the peasants and workers are joining the Red Army. } " ; FS Mickawber, promises that “something Colle Me c san ‘Ne- The Soviet di n Szechwan will turn up.” ll ge ae Nssag eA Gel car Rt ate MARA os were established last year when The secretary of state issued a World Fair Guides sroes with their families, and several BERLIN.--Viennese police have ar- Chiang Kai Shek, after an inten~ statement in which he said that the conference could go ahead on such credit pol- hundred of the victorious Sipkins (By 2 Worker Correspondent) Dress strikers, attended the annual rested $66 Austrian Nazis in a series of night raids. at the rate of 300 to sive mobilization, was able to force Ho Lung out of the Red Lake area. The Red Army, under the command questions as price levels, credit pol-| CHICAGO.—As one result of “a Communist Party anti-war rally and Ss iggevery "wight cascorlite) Yo ane) st tig abe neniee te aa Aa Berk, \Grittices war breeding wae etree Gore nlaate er oes picnic of District 8 at Birutes Grove, NEWS ITEM:—The New York police department has started taking groupe of East Side jewscaper Nachtausgabe. Jail sen-| port of revolting peasants was practices.” and flunkeys at the Century of Prog-| July 4. workers’ children on its annual outings. |tences of three to six months with- a a fier in aatreal which a ” t bi EP SSM: 5 A. Feseie eapaaichtinds a J iby Eira SRE aon a tidlalanidin aecenplatie: . . oviet. district in v But he overlooked the complete ress Exhibition. They ame easy to! Mrs. Janie Patterson, mother of = jout trial have been decreed by the hos been growing ever since, far break on the main “war breeding” questions around which ihe sharp- est. struggles revolved. Hull, like the rest of the delegates, know they are talking for popular consumption when they issue statements on the possibility of agreements on such matters when the question of infla- tion which undermines all agreements at the start is definitely out of con- sideration The French delegates are not even present, being in Paris building up hire at starvation wages, because there is no other work to be had There would be work for two or three hundred more, but for the fact that the fair managers have brought Boy Scouts from all over the country to do this work for nothing. These boys are made to think that this is a way of doing a “good deed” ever —One of the College Men Workers Haywood Patterson, one of the Scotts- boro boys, and Bill Gebert, organizer of District 8 of the Communist Party, were the main speakers. The massed thousands cheered almost continu- ously as Bill Gebert reported the tri- umphant outcome of the St. Louis Nut Pickers strike and the Sopkins Dress workers’ strike in Chicago. A “Workers Century of Progress | Exhibition” was a feature of the pic- nic, which attracted the largest at- Mass AMesral Plasined ra ‘New Deal Raises Zetkin, Gussev, and Stokes Money Changers * The Communist Party of the New York District will hold a memorial |mass meeting in honor of the re- ples he carried ow militantly and ‘unswervingly te the day of his death. i Rose Pastor Stokes was one of the Austrian cabinet for persons charged with “preparing for terroristic activi- ties.” Radio owners of Salzburg have ) been forbidden by the police to tune in on German stations. The Dolifuss government of Austria is ruthless in its dictatorship over the workers, but is forced by the big im- Share $4,000,000, Frage. perialist powers, England, France and NEW YORK.—The money chang- jtaly, on -which it depends for finan- ers whom Roosevelt was to “drive cial support, to oppose the union of exceeding in extent and population the former Soviet district. At the same time, Chiang Kai Shek is launching the sixth anti- Communist drive against the Cen- tral Soviet districts in Kiangsi. Des- pite ferocious battles, the Centra! Soviet district is defeating the new campaign as it did the five others. The internal difficulties of - the Chiang Kai Shek government due to the extending catastrophic crisis jand the mass disillusionment with a bloc of the gold countries, prepar- (endantnenan j cently deceased veteran fighters for.| 5 t ; m4 Austria with Germany, which is the rae dt be 5 . | y picnic in District 8. : 5 founders of the Communist Party | out of the temples,” claim to be rich- ys the Nanking government as well as ing for. the sharper siteer around Workers Poisoned | thousand’ saw a collection of shells, te international proletarian revo-|of the United States of America. us is eauicot he new deat by the inner conflicts among the various financial domination. At the sami ee ‘jution, Comrades Clara ZetKin, Ser-|She gave her life to the revolu-| : - 3 Tarde: Sate time, they will take measures to keep! - gas masks, and other war materials POUND RIDGE, N. J.—Many of i ti a | PAMPHLETS OF VITAL landlord-bourgeois war 1 ibi a a i 't {tionary struggles of the American} rowing ' ‘Wall Street from edging in on their exhibited by the Workers’ Ex-Service-|gei I. Gussev, and Rose Pastor | 25 a i : 2 the 164 workers in the Civilian! men’ 4 i Ne | ‘4 workers and with her zeal and de-| ‘The inflation policy which is driv- , 7 > The line-up of forces in the mil- markets, and if possible still further n’s League; an exhibit of revolu-| Stokes, At this memorial meeting, | (ction, dheough thirty yoaul. Gf 90> pit! sc ae INTEREST TO WORKERS | «..034 wars Pap the, Northern war ee marrowing the markets which Roose- Corps in the Pound Ridge Reserva- tion of the Westchester County | Club, a “Century of Defense of the | tionary paintings by the John Reed | jat the New Star Casino, 107th St. at Park Avenue, Wednesday even- | tivity gained a place in the hearts ing prices and living costs higher for |lords (supported by Japan), and the j velt will seek to snateh through his) 5,14 Commission are sufferin lof the toilers througi | the masses has increased specula- vorkers’ Li Publish : i ri 7 | ig froin | work . | ki t|° e toilers throughout the land. | Workers’ ibrary Publishers |Cantonese butchers, aided by Brit- @pastion and lower wage Policy S| Soison ivy, it was revealed today. See coe Seer ee See ae a mani Pury ane of mass jcomrade Stokes died in Germany |tion and gambling and raised the, 4 has announced that they now |ish imperialism was further per- 4 ca ‘: to sharp-| N° protection has been arranged | ynion exhibit ¢ | organisations; will speak on the life [after a long illness induced by a|value of stocks and bonds on the have the complete series of pam- | fected by the mutiny of three more a q e British are preparing to sh@rp-\ toy these workers, many who come| 4 aml work of the three great revolu- {Policeman's blow in an anti-imper-|New York Stock Exchanges by phlets on the Twelfth Plenum of | warships from the Nanking nev. t {as —|from the city and do not know how| Negro, white and Méxican workers | ti onaries whose death is a loss to | ialist rally. Her ashes are due 10 | $4,000,000,000. the Executive Committee of the | The Chinese war vessels, Yung « Stu Dollf to recognize poison ivy, poison oak, | of the Workers Cultural Federation |tne workers the world over. arrive here shortly. | ‘ Communist Internctional. These |Hsiang, Chu Yu and Hai-Hou. Litvinov, uss or other noxfous plants. The lack | put on a pageant, beginning with a | : — | On June 1, when the money. include “Capitalist Stabilization |which had been anchored off Takue Talk in Avwstria 0f adequate iedical care also aids|Nat Turner scene showing the re-|, Clara Zetkin, for fifty years =| Given Month in Jail changers were supposed to leave their. Has Ended’—Thesis and Resolu- |harbor, thirty miles from Tientsin, a 7 the spread of these skin infections | yoit of Negro cotton pickers a cen- | fighter in the ranks of the working | m temples in ragged coats, the value of tions, 10c; “Prepare for Power"— | disappeared today apparently bound Planned This Week in the camps. tury go, and closing with a demon- | “lass, ® co-worker of Frederich’ Eng- for Scottsboro Talk 2! stock listed on the exchange Report of Kuusinen, 15c; “The War |for south China to join four other s Sanaa pe stration jin honor of & worker killed |@l®, the ilveagebents Bramaty cag ptreity | amounted to $82,473,000,000. By July In the Far Bast"—Report of Okano, | vessels which had previously de- INA. July 9.—F Minister in an eviction struggle, com i | See ee © LOUISVILLE, Ky.—: i 1, through the Roosevelt inrlation Japan, 5c; “The Sovist Union and |tached themselves from the Chiang ated toed covet Guibh can: Ger man Boy cott Beg un ing the events of pee at ¢: ioet, ta | Communist Party and of the hess oy aect ‘i rently Kee ie program, through wage cuts, and the the World’s Workers’—Report by |Kai Shek navy. ‘ pected to arrive here early in the by Jewish Merchants chicago »'? Communist International, and at|there was mo free speech om the conerai attack against the workers, Manuilsky, 5¢; “The Work of the | pea week to confer regarding Austrian : ri SEAS wie bd ae acai flee siseaiee Ok ane | epee ot ley Polce Judge Siatk the valiie of the same stock rose to Communist Parties of Francs and | “The working men have no coun- i ae ‘ i imed - 5 rab the Executives Com- sentenced Israel Waxman to 30 days $26,348,747,000. Germany and the Tacks of the | try. We cannot take from them. ee ectna are ey ae LONDON A Mew, COPS SENEE |. «NORE, ON SCORRORAL SAMS. ives. Of she. Coniniiniay Sibngs a the workhouse and a $25 fine for. The average increase of each Communisis in the Trade Union | what they have not got. Since the General Julius Goemboes, Presi- ** complete boycott of German .oods! ‘The concluding installment ay ea Goede and Chatemast ee caathe on a street cerner abont Share of stock held by the exploit- Movement'—Report by Piatnitsky, | proletariat muet fif$t of all acanire dent of Hungary, wes due to arrive has been undertaken by Jewish irad- “Corporal Sam,” a short story by) internatiol 4 ers rose from $25.10 to 28.20. | 50; “The Next Step In Britain, | politicel supremacy) must rise to be “i here today for a conference with ers throughout Great Britain. Emery Balint which began on Satur-|/" the ECCT. the Scottsboro case and aitempting | poe abn rast oetinkiees | America and Ireland’—Speeches by | the leading class of the nation, Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss on Au- Over 4,700 applications have al-|day’s feature page of the Daily! Sergei I. Gussev was an old Bol- |to collect funds for the Interna- | Have you approached your fel- | Gusev, Pollitt, Troy and Pringle, | must constitute itself the nation, strian-Hungarian relations before the ready been received for window cards | Worker, will be published in tomor- | shevik, one of the founders of the |téonal Labor Defense. The case| lew worker im your shop with a | 5c; and “Guide to the Twelfth it is so far, itself national, though , 1 talk scheduled between Dollfuss and|showing that merchants refuse to sell | row’s issue. Lack of space made it| Russian Bolshevik Party, and close |has heen appealed to the Criminal copy of the ‘Daily?’ Wf not, de so | Plenum’—Handbook for Propa- not in the bourgeois sense of the ‘ Litvinov German goods. impossible to publish it today. \co-worker of Lenin, whose princi- Conrt. TODAY! gandists,” 15¢, word... +. j i pe a ° 3 font : ALTE CAGtD pase fteciconn desktrac ae | ; y . ~: ” Roosevelt, Johnson Try to Crawl Out of Their Hunger and War—the New Deal | - and art our"basinees at » living rate again « “Daily Worker Analyzed “Upturn” Correctly : ; “Om that idea, the first part of the act proposes to owr industry : : * Promises of Immediate Employment for Cee en eee etoe te nn uitee of wen tek AS Leading to Overproduction, from Inflation Millions This Summer; Push War thelr regular jobs this summer.” and Speculation; Leads to Greater Moves As Way Out W let us recall what Norman ‘Thomas, the socialist, said that the Mass Suffering icc nsnincinineimnliesarettsing workers may expect from the Roosevelt regime, and let us particu- “I shudder to think what would happen if we had larly note the lawyer-like, the smooth phrases with which he decks out duction. But they hit against this obstacle, caused by exploitation a second collapse in this country, and that is what’s his emphasis of the hope of a return to prosperity under capitalism. of the lack of profitable markets, due to the poverty of the masses. ij is i id: dition of overproduction which will ahea roduction ahead of pur- Writing in the New York Times on June 18th, Norman Thomas said They rush into a further con oad seat wpleatinte oe ipemar rh i. “My own prediction is that it (the recovery act) may suffice to bring throw still more out of work. They try to solve this crisis by filling chasing power. US. COUNTY COR ROP Sr Ore tern us owt of this particular depression, but it cannot bring us real pros- the warehouses with sti more goods, which the impoverished masses collapse.”—General Hugh S. Johnson—Administra- perity or deal adequately with the threat of war.” (Our emphasis.) are unable to buy. tor, Industrial Recovery Act. And then again, as late as July 3, in the Milwaukee Leader: “Over 60 years ago, Karl Marx characterised overproduction . . * * “Though millions still walk the sireets vainly looking for jobs, there are under capitalism as follows: INFIRMATION of the Daily Worker’s Marxist-Leninist analysis of the some signs of improvement in economic conditions. Those signs are not oat ta teak w taint nk tho many necessities of life are produced contradictions of the present phase of the upturn within the growing common to America bat are evident in other nations, notably Great | in proportion to the existing population. The re is trne. Not crisis of American capitalism is now contained in the latest startling Britain. | enough is prod to satisfy the wamts of the ertat a tly ; vt and the A. F. of L. : j much-advertised and glorified rise in production in certain industries was | turn in order to keep the workers from struggling in a class Conscious | “It fs not a fact that too much means of production (factories jeading to further crisis and suffering for the toiling masses. We pointed | | way against the present efforts of the exploiters to reach their goal thru and the like) are produced to employ the able-bodied of the popa- out that the very uptum, resulting from inflation, price and stock gamb- | | a smashing attack against the workers. Thomas preaches the hope of ‘ation. The reverse is the case.” “Jing, and greatly stimulated production for war materials was based on | prosperity while he and the rest of the socialist leader& help the A. F. of | “Overproduced, or under capitalism, means that goods have > the further impoverishment of the workers and did not and would not | L. or act independently to keep the workers’ within the scope of the in- piled up and a market cannot be found in which it is profitable for | dustrial slavery act and the forced class collaboration of the Roosevelt the hosses to sell their commodities. In other words, the bosses ‘ _ lead to any broad movement of re-employment or a rise out of the crisis On the contrary, we pointed out that it would lead to overproduction and greater unemployment : oO duly 7th, as a result of 2 hurried and disturbed conference, called by President, Roosevelt, in the White House of cabinet members and ad- ministrators of the industrial ‘recovery’ act, statements were made plainly | | showing that American capitalism faced a new economic collapse. The + “mew deal” was rushing head on to greater contradictions and conflicts, ‘~e greater unemployment, to greater starvation ~The New York Herald Tribune of June Ath, reporting this presi- _ dential conference, declared: “President Roosevelt was aroused today by reports of vartons government agencies that, in anticipation of restrictions under the industrial and agricultural control experiements, industries were stepping up activities at a rate which threatened overproduction and another economic collapse. “The president has before him federal reserve charts which showed that increased production was far outrunning re-employment and tending to pile up depressing surpluses before industrial codes and agricultural processing taxes could be carried into effect.” HAT is the real significance of Roosevelt's admissions? cannot sell their goods because the people have ne money which to buy them.” : . t . . . | regime, It is interesting and instructive to compate the latest shudders and | fears of Roosevelt and the other capitalists, with the accurate Marxist~ Leninist analysis of the present phase of the crisis made by the Drily Worker. On July 8, the New York Herald Tribune reported that In the feers of a new collapse, “an augury of the crash in 1929 was seen in the fact that production outran employment in that boom year, just as today.” On July 5, the Daily Worker declared: “It (the upturn) conteins all of the factors (despite the four years of crisis) that led to the stock market crash of 1929.” . William F. Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, who had been repeatedly telling the werkers of the marvelous expecta- f them, each in his own particular way. in his own particular fashion of | supporting tottering capitalism, held out the illusion of the end of unem- ness Upturn Intensifies Economic Crisis.” and on June 28, an article ployment and starvation, | entitled: “Why Roosevelt's Program will lead to a sharper crisis.” It was only one month ago that Green said | In these articles the following was stated: “This proposed legislation marks a very definite step forward “An examination of the facts “and figures of the presen} uptern in industrial stabilization, rationalization and economic planning. yelping will show that the capitalists are increasing the basic elements tions of the “new deal”, of the “forwatd looking” steps of the industrial “The bill is appropriately termed an industrial recovery measure. of the crisis, leading to greater and greater lack of stabilization, and to hi siete The’ gett ct ae isin, | ae ye y nabee ae drags after his imperialist masters and now declares dangers and forward-looking legislation designed to promote economic re- “In expectation of higher prices, on the basis of the Roosevelt pro- | . . . . covery that thus far has been proposed.” gram, without any demand in steel at all, buyers are stocking up to \NLY the Daily Worker and the Communist Party have clearly analyzed avold higher prices.” { the crisis and the new dani 1 ig " | gers of the “new deal” for, the workers. ‘In short, the figures that Green and Roosevelt want the workers to | When every agency of capitalism was crying “returning prosperity”, believe represent, oncoming prosperity are ho accurate gauge at all to | 41.0, Green was telling the workers to stop struggling because Roosevelt consumption, but represent overproduction. Wotse still, the future will would raise their living standards, when Norman Thomas was predicting show @ greater disparity between production and consumption. The rate | th. end of the crisis and a return to prosperity, the Daily Worker was of overproduction will increase and the decline following will be greater.” | tounge the truth about the crisis, urging the workers to a correct program 1 bgt Waonaye lang Uaricaamesd rstac cAhseraee out of the crisis, | of struggle. I succeeds in laying the basis for greater unemployment and misery But what will be the next step of the Roosevelt regime after its ade for the workers. By piling up stocks now, so that they can later benefit | mission of the dangers of deeper crisis? It will advance still farther by higher prices and profits, the textile bosses are producing more than with its program of trustification and of inflation which has already { the market can absorb. They are not producing because the workers , added $4,000,000,000 to the values of the stocks and bonds of the pera- need. clothing or are in.a better position to buy today than yesterday. sites, He will attempt to bludge on the workers still more: Food prices They are producing for stock; they are speculating on higher prices.” will go higher, wages lower. Relief for the unemployed which has stop- | “The spread between the cost of living and the wages received by | ped entirely in New York and other cities will be cut for other unem- | the workers will grow greater intensifying the crisis. The new phase of ployed. At-the same time war preparations will go on at a feverish pace, | overproduction, which is now heralded as the end of the crisis, will lead Against this program, on every front, the workers should mobilize | to further unemployment and misery for the workers.” . their forces for struggle. There should be wider and more active prep- The Naily Worker on June 28 explained the meaning of “overpro- | agations in the shops and factories against, wage cuts, for higher wages, | duction” a@ the cause of capitalist crisis and its significance in the, present agrinst the higher cost of living. The struggle for unemployment, relief _upturn. and unemployment insurance must be pushed with greater energy to draw in greater masses against the hunger and war program of the Reosevelt regime. ‘ 1 HE DAILY WORKER on June 26 published an article entitled: “Busi- o ~ IN this Green was just aping the voice of his masters. He was repeat- ing the phrases of Roosevelt and General Jolson behind which was developing the sharp attack against the toiling masses. With the price of bread now 20 to 30 percent higher in every city of the United States, with the cost of living shooting skyward, and now with the admission of Green, Johnson and Roosevelt that the consuming power of the masses is falling far behirid production, let us recall the honeyed words of General Johnson's first speech over the radio on June 26th. Referring to Roosevelt's promises, General Johnson stated: “He (Roosevelt) said he was going to see what would happen to this depression if, instead of high falutin’ theories that nobody could understand, and this, and that, we would just try to give every man back a sufficient share of what he himself produced to enable him to buy a reasonable share of what all the rest of us produce.” It means ot that the economic crisis faces a deeper turn downward; that the poverty of the masses is growing greater; that speeded up production, which did not employ any great-section of the milions of unemployed ‘was based on speculation, gambling on profits, on the impending rise in prices; that the Roosevelt program of price rises leads to crushing costs of living for the masses out of which the rich speculators coin fortunes, that it was leading to new financial and stock market collapses. Roosevelt and the bosses are now trying to crawl out from under their lurid promises of prosperity. They see the narrowing base for the capitalist way out of the crisis. They are shifting from the extreme predictions of «n early return to “good times” to warnings of deeper crisis, The warnings of Roosevelt about the new impending collapse of capitalist economy will be used to intensify the attacks om the workers and to speed up the already hightened armament race to seek war as a wey ont of the crisis. OOSEVELT, Bill Green, Norman Thomas, must think that the work- | a Seve 2 densh pemey tedesd. & wae net 2 lone age thet af ef t , “N ' MEMBER, workers, Roosevelt's own glowing promises when he signed | the act. and you can see why the capitalists now are preparing their | excuses for the new phase of crisis, for the failiire to employ workers; for cutting down relief and spending billions for war. Roosevelt, held cnt this bait “The Inw I have fast signed was passed to pat people hack ta | "THIS ‘(orisis and overproduction) has heen going on for nearly e

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