The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 8, 1933, Page 4

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‘ Published by the Comprodaily Publishing Co., Inc., daily exeept Sunday, at 50 B. Page Four 13th St Address and mail checks to the Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th St., New York City, N. Y. Telephone ALgoni Cable “DAIWORK.” lew York, N. Ye quin 4-7056, Anti-War Congress Urges S. P. Locals © to Join Arrangements Committ Executives Urging Withdrawal from Congress | NEW YORK.—Following the withdrawal of the representatives of the Struggle eee | ee Also Wires Socialist Reconsideration of “GO BACK!” By Mall everywhere: One year, $6; six months, $3.50; 3 months, $2; 1 month, 7e, excepting Borough Ca —By Burck. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: of Manhattan and Bronx, New York City. One year, $9; 6 months, $5; 3 months, AUGUST 8, 1938 Foreign and 2,000 ILLINOIS MINERS IN ANTI-WAR MEET ARE ATTACKED BY DEPUTIES Police Break Up Meeti ng in Davenport—S, P Leaders Withdraw in Dayton—Large Meeting in S ocialist Town i\ ST. LOUIS, Mo., Aug. 7—Two hundred deputies and American legion aires attacked an anti-war demonstration of 2,000 coal miners at Gillesps Southern Illinois, Saturday night. Sara Kling and Mike Filipon were ai rested. National Executive Committee of the Socialist Party from the arrangements committee of the U. S. Congress Against War, the arrangements committee c has sent a letter to all participating organizations urging them to use all : their efforts to enlist Socialist Party members and local branches in the eee struggle against war. “This action (the withdrawal of) the S. P. leaders) makes even more imperative the continuing and de- termined activity of all elements in the Congress to carry on our wor without let-up,” the letter says, “ order to ensure the success of this first nation-wide effort to bring to-| gether all elements In a common struggle. ‘D.C. SOCIALISTS | BACK ANTI-WAR CONGRESS IN N.Y. Twenty well-known members of the Progressive Miners of Americ. 2 WORKERS GET DEATH SENTENCES IN BERLIN COURT were among those deputized t smash the meeting. The attack was arranged by P.M.A. leaders. Last Wednesday, the miners pas- sed a resolution demanding that the union leadership reopen wage nego- tiations make changes in the agreement, and call for an increas ir wages to meet the rising prices | The attack on the anti-war meet- cee: sf i ‘ ing, which was postponed from Aug eres ra ee res Lee Cantera Gen. Ff Jobn L.Lewig | Year and a Half for|! mse harsorm,wat'an at effort to enlist all those members and aa Dt ‘tc branches of the Socialist Party who gress Body to Send Johnson Distributing the abandoning their demands. Th» lo- rey a “4 ce Bo | er cal kranch of the Socialist Party ieee wong to lend thet aid to ih Delegates \ Rote Fahne joined with the Communist Part) eels pian darters | ret ‘and the Progressive Miners. local anc b hg ie Sergey san ie elect- | NEW YORK. Support of the BERLIN, August 7—Two revolu-| Women’s auxiliary in organizing the no postpol eariaiie full deste aritad Btatas. Canoracs tionary workers, Paul Tolz and F.| anti-war meeting. ) ing delegates and in organizing iull| forthcoming United States gress | we ( 5 : * suppcst.” Against War and Fascism at Madis- | Szezody have been sentenced to death} Mass indignation against the re- " puppert wa“ geae: lon vequare:Glanlen, New. ook, ext , | at the Berlin assizes on the allega-|formist leaders is rising, and a , eee eeted bys Eo ait manths te attend ‘wich Henri. 3 tion that they raided a public house| protect meeting is being organized thews, Socialist, of the Fellowship of | a ai thee of “Onder ire frequented by Nazis. * « Reconciliation, and chairman of the| busse, famous au 5 5 BulEte : : e Arrangements Committee, by Annie] is coming over from Paris to be one | In accordance with Premier Her-| DAVENPORT, Ia.—Despite the ®. Gray, of the Women’s Peace So-| of the principal speakers, is pledged mann Goering’s recent decree, the'fact that permit had been given, ciety, Ra basurer, and Donald Henderr| by the District of Columbia Local baie LEMME Ch S UES prcencos to be carried out by ae acting chiet of pele eas @ . 5 i i Be a 2 heading them with an axe. {the August Ist anti-war meeting fon, secretary of the arrangements| Committee of Action of the Con. \ eommittee. 7d tinental Congress, according to a ry . . Sixty-eight Communists will comé eae agree poke se e esterday i y ol en oe ee oe ee ee lS PA RK S inese Re rmies in |FINNS USE NAZI |p ie.teat Reenter, ten]ittaney of tne meas pore a telegram sent by a slags ce ts or ‘i -~/until the last speaker had almost ments Committee to the National} U. S. Congress Against War. At a ercises of the Red Front Fighters’ [anisned, iali vs i fol- league. re Becretary of the Socialist Party, and| meeting of the committee the Y | ; mer ean f signed by J. B. Matthews, Annie E.| lowing resolution was passed: BRAND new contributor, Comrade vance ast an out PP sete Harvwig, & carpenter, has S. P. Leaders Withdraw Gray, Donald Henderson, and Roger} “The Local Committee of Action of S. of New York, sends us the , been sentenced to a year and a half 4 Baldwin, secretary of the Civil Tib- | the Contin&ntal Congress, District’ of | following paragraphs: _— 7 nee folie for cane the eran Corte eeaee ae erties Union. The telegram is as fol-| Columbia, hereby pledges its support The cleverest title for a newspaper + omm: ewspaper Rote Fai in r 2 | . be lows: | of the United States oe column we have ever heard wee the| Defeat 19th Route Army—American Gunboat — Berlin, gu oa hee A Gears bs “Arrangements Committee of U.| Against War, convening Sept. 8 | one, run by Charles Ashleigh, now Rushes to Amoy—Canton Orders 400 Hunger Strikers}. Pensink, a Communist function-| S20 Party ‘leatiogs seithiaies et 5. Congress Against War urges re-| and 4 in New York City, and will] of the Moscow News. It was during ° a ais : ary, has been sentenced to eight he Ish thoment, But a Sanaa tie! vonsideration of withdrawal of So-|send two delegates to the same to| the war and Ashleigh ran a column Bombing of Seized Cities Subjected to years penal servitude in Beuthen,| (ie fe. Gr tne 8. P. took the stand tialist Party from united front. We| show its willingness to carry on an|in the prison paper at Leavenworth, : Upper Silesia, for an infraction of | MO ae a rousing: pers Geplore withdrawal and making pub-) active fight against war. Kansas, where he was a poiitical HONG KONG, Aug. 7—The Red Armies in Kiangsi province, where Tortures the arms and explosives law. Pea erat tic this action without full opportun-| q; js further resolv prisoner. tty for Arrangements Committee to! adjust controversy. We base request for reconsideration on our assurance that congress will not be used as forum for inter-party attacks and on following provision unanimously adopted last night (Aug. 3): ‘That|} of this resolution be sent to the Na- | tional Continental Congress urging | it to go on record as supporting the | United States Congress Against War | and to notify its various local com- | mittees of action and to send del-| dustrial egates to the Congre The name of his column was “Guarded remarks.” bed workers have a new name for Roosevelt's watch dog of the In- Recovery Hueh Johnson. (Slavery) Act, the Central Soviet Government of advanees into Fukien province, to the cast, and southward toward Kwan- tung province. In an extremely sharp encounter ince, the Red Army defeated the 19th Cantonese Route Army, famous for its exploits in the war against the China is situated, are making rapid at Lienchen, in western Fukien Proy- - in a new direction. In the extreme North of China, STOCKHOLM, Aug. 7.—Details of the hunger strike of 400 Finnish Communists in Eianas and Tavaste- hus prisoners, which began July 14, have reached here from Finland, Although many of the prisoners were in a desperately weak condition Fifteen Communist fundtionaries have been arrested in the mining re- gions of Saxony, charged with hav- ing sent leaflets and Party dues stamps into the ore mountains. The police added that many secret Com- munist groups have been functioning in this region. BEMIDJI, Minn.—Three hundre? workers and farmers took part i the August 1 demonstration at Lib erty Park here. There was so larg. a demand for Daily Workers that the supply was insufficient. this arrangements committee takes| | . They call him Phew! Johnson, Japanese invasion of Shanghai. General Feng Yu Hsi tool. of | the last time word was received, they| In Wurtemburg, 67 Communis VIRDEN Ill.—About 200 workers +¢4 i ee 4 , he Jast me Ww s Te * mburg, tb and % the position that in developing the U. S. Cruiser Rushes to Amoy. Japanese imperialism, giving UP | have still been refused the medical social Demnbern tie weriata shine, baat of this historic battleground of the united front no organization which is ruil varrying out the purposes of this anti-war Congress should be attacked | by participating organizations on the| field of common work. That all par- ticipating organizations shall first Place before arrangements committee. or the sub-committee empowered to POWERS WAVER | ON NAZI NOTE Hold Britain, France, HE candidates for mayor in the coming election are: For Tammany: O’Brien. For Fusion: La Guardia. For Confusion: Charles Solomon, For the Workers: Bob Minor, rae 'OCIETY NOTES: Mrs. Astor is All the missionaries in the region are fleeing to Amoy on the seacoast. An American cruiser is rushing to Amoy, standing by to bombard the city if the Red Army gets near it, or if the workers in Amoy stage an up- rising in support of the Red Army. The Fulton is stationed at Foochow, all pretense of leading a “People’s Anti-Japanese Army.” He is resigning and turning over his forces to the Peiping National Government, which is also a Jananesé stipported group. NAPLES WORKERS attendance which was one of the things they went on strike for. When relatives of the prisoners at- tempted to speak to them on July 16, they were driven away by the prison authorities with the words, “No, you may not see them, but you will soon arrested in mass raids. Eight have also been arrested in Kornwestheim, seven in Gmund, two in Nagold, and others in Eoingen, Leonberg, and other places. Greek Workers Killed Illinois miners took part in an Au- gust 1 anti-war demonstration. The whole town is completely unem- ployed. The last mine was shut down last year. ERP oni ae) 150 Meet in Town of .1,000 act for it, any and all differences of capital @f Pukien’ province, in’ which get their bod . * and fifty workers, in this town of opinion between the participating or- Up Protest Pea eS CASA DS a ae Serine, (he seapore ts lovato’: When on July 21.2 women asked} at Anti-Fascist Meet} to00, too part in'an August 1 anti- ganizations relative to the U. S. Con- ae where she spends much of the time IN M ASS PROTEST, at the prison why Lehtinen, whose} pene! Sead ‘demomatrition ae: abe. Oty. ast gress Against War, before making] paRIS. Aug. 7—At the last mo-| the tennis courts. Second Defeat sentence had long since terminated,; ATHENS, Aug. 7—Thirty-six| park. There was a powerful response them public, It is understood, how-| ment, Great ‘Britain and France’ Mrs. Corrcioni is spending the sum-/ ‘This is the second time that the was not released, she was told, ever, that every organization shall be perfectly free to urge its own pro- gram with respect to the struggle against war.’ These assurances which the Arrangements Committee will} make effective and which are agreed | to by all participants including rep-| resertatives of the Communist Pa | should make fruitful cooperation pos sible. We cannot. emp! Strongly absolute nece: action by all elements in vie creasing American war preparation: Feel confident we can avoid futu unjustified conflicts between the pa’ ticipating org: to relay this telegram to secutive committee for prom: withheld their protest to Germany against the Nazi propaganda raids on Austria, it was learned here to- day. It Was said that the two countries could not agree on the methods .of making the protest. At the same | y, which was to join them! which is based on | Pact ecided y verbal representations, | instead of taking the same action | as the other two countries, to| French Air Maneuvers | On Franco-German | Line | mer in her tenement at Bleecker St., amusing herself at the washtub, and having a glorious time worrying about how to pay the rent. ue Keep it up, Comrade S. We want more. 'HE “liberal” weekly, the “Nation” has this week's prize for the pur- est specimen of flapdoodle. Writes the “Nation,” “We sincerely hope that Secretary Ickes will take a determined stand against the new naval construction program before it is too late.” ta ae hat is the “liberal” way of fight- ing the war.plans of Wall Street. With “hope!” Red Army has defeated the 19th Route Army in major encounters. The main reason for these defeats is not only the heroism of the Red Army, but because of the discontent of the rank and file of the 19th Route Army with the orders of their of- ficers to fight the revolutionary work- ers and peasants, In 1931, just before the 19th Route Army was sent to Shanghai, the Red Army had defeated it in Kiangsi. The latest defeat is of extreme im- portance, as it opens the way to further Soviet penetration of Fukien province, and for the extension of the Central Soviet district. Alarmed by the successes of the Red Army in the southern section of the Kiangsi province, and especially AT CONVICTIONS 40 Arrested In Fight Against Sentences For 152 Reds NAPLES, Aug. 7—A tremendous wave of mass protests in Naples has forced a retrial for 152 Communists recently devorted by the Fascist gov- ernment to the island of Ponza, in the Mediterranean. Leaflets were circulated through- out the city, and in many factories. At Salerno, the railwey station and dozens of railway carriages were “Most likely you'll get his skeleton soon.” Many mass demonstrations have been organized in suppcrt of the strikers, and delegations visit the government offices every day, and are driven away. The Social Demo- cratic press takes part in the govern- ment offensive by ridiculing the dem- onstrating workers in their press. REPORT ORLOFF TO BE DEPORTED BERLIN, Aug. 7.—Walter Orloff, workers have been sentenced to a total of 16% years in prison for taking part in a memorial demon- straton for an Athenan worker named Thomopulos, murdered by Fascists recently during an ‘anti- Fascist demonstration. The police attacked the memorial demonstra- tion, injuring many workers, A second worker, named Tam- putis, who was wounded by the Fascists at the first demonstration, has now died. Immediately 1,000 workers demonstrated in the streets of Piraeus, A baker named Missizlis died from injuries received from cavalry sab- ers when a demonstration in Salon- iki was attacked. All three murdered men were sec- to the Communist speakers from the: Socialist Party and Y¥.P.S.L. mem bers, who voted in a Socialist ad ministration at the last election Many of them declared they felu afr place is in the Communist Party. ROCHESTER, Minn.—A_ resolu- tion protesting against U. S. war preparations and against the NRA was wired to President Roosevelt by workers of Rochester at an anti-war demonstration in Mayo Park, July 54, tler Dissolves Retailers’ Group Organized by Him lyn, medi- ‘ : The £0. “list Party gave as its ex-| eons because of the taking of the cities painted with a hammer and sickle | Of 1982 74th Stroct. Brooklyn, meti-) tiv buried by the police and no| BERLIN, Aug. 7-—The small re- cuse for withdrawing that the Daily| PARIS, Aug. 7—France has cho-} And meanwhile Secretary Ickes|of Anuyan and Kwanmunling, Gen-|and the words “Communism Lives!” hela by the Nazis on a charge of ,one was allowed to attend the fu-| tailers’ protective association, , with Worker had published cles crit-|sen the Metz region, right at the | gives Navy the first and biggest help-|eral Chen Chi Tang of Canton, pup-| The stationmaster and several high ‘coum based on alleged Com- | eral. 20,000 members, which Adolf Hitler jeizing its stand on war, although|German border, for its military air | ings of the $238,000,000 “public works” | pet of British imperialism. has ozder- | Persons were arrested. In Naples, | 8 y 2 Because the results of the election | organized late in 1932, as part of his she U. S. Congress Against War is a breed united front organizations b Party. In a statement published last Sat- urday the Communist Party demon- strated that the Socialist Party had Prepared its withdrawal at least three weeks before it carried it out,| and before the articles in the Daily Worker which it used as its excuse had been published. It showed th: for three weeks the Sccialist Party had held back the calls to the con- ference which it had agveed to send out to all its branches, while meking statements in the Arrangements Committee which gave the impres- sion it had sent them out. The Com-} wrunist Party also published a letter| which the New York Socialist Party organization had sent to the, National Committee on July 22, urging it to withdraw from the Congress, and claring that to have joined it contrary to the instructions of t Labor anti “Socialist International, including many s the Communist | French army |man territory for many miles. |Anti-War Conference maneuvers, which began August 1 and will continue until August 17. An immense fleet of bombing and pursuit planes are taking part in day and night exercises, as well as sev- eral anti-aircraft batteries. At night the powerful searchlights of the can be seen from Ger- Called in Brooklyn BROOKLYN, N. Y.—A local call! to cover 1 organizations in Wil- liamsburg, calling for a united front fainst war, was issued by the Pro- visional Committee for a United Front Conference Against War. The Conference will take place Wednes- | day, Aug. 9, at the YMHA, B’way, and Rodney St., at 7:30 p.m. Prof. Oakley Johnson, formerly of City College, will analyze and expose the war danger. Delegates will also be fund, * « 6 And the Secretary of Labor Per- kins, belgved of the liberals, has just granted her approval to the Army for an added appropriation of $6,- ped to make bullets for rifle prac- ice, eh fe) aie Nice peaceful lady, Miss Perkins. eh ele ND talking about the great fas- cist “hero,” Balbo, who is still hugging the shores of Newfoundland waiting for the least traces of fog and rain to clear before he ventures into the air, listen to this from George Seldes in the Nation: “Someone in the parade fired a shot at Mussolini, Buonaccorsi, one of the nobility in the front rank, fired, slit the throat of the would-be assassin, another stabbed him several times, and as the quivering body was hanged, Balbo fired two shots into it.” ed an aerial bombardment of these two cities in an effort to dislodge the Red Army. Red Army Drives Ahead Despite heavy troon mobilization to the North at Nanchang, under the leadership of Generalissimo Chiang Kai Shek. and the present drives of the 19th Route Army in Fukien, and the concentration of General Chen Chi Tang to the South, the Red Army is driving ahead, The Wer Lords of Nanking and Canton are preparing for a war against each other to support the maneuvers of their respective sup- porters American and British im- perialism, and find their way blocked by the Soviet territories. In spite of four years of war against the Chinese Soviets, the Red Army, supported by the workers and peasants throughout Kiangsi, Fukien, and other provinces, has repeatedly defeated the anti-Communist drives, and is now extending its territories 40 persons, including many intellect- uals and students, were arrested for organizing the protest against the sentence of the 152 Communists ‘They were rushed to Rome for trial before a special court. Ferri, the lawyer defending one of the Communists, was attacked by the Ovra, the, Fascist secret police, who tried to make him give up the defense by threats. Canton Seamen Tie Up Docks in Strike CANTON, China, Aug. 7—A boy- cott of the British-owned China Na- vigation Company, biggest shipping firm in China, by striking seamen of Canton has completely tied up the company’s docks. Picketing in so successful that the company’s ships are not calling at Canton. Over $2,000,000 worth of goods is deter- iorating in the warehouses. munist activity, is to be deported, according to an unconfirmed report here today. He was brought to Berlin on Aug. 3 for hearing, after George Messer- smith, United States consul general, had made a belated investigation of his arrest on July 1, Balbo to Shift Course. STOAL HARBOR, N. F., Aug. 9.— Italo Balbo, the fascist aviatowfs- sassin, who was hailed in the Unit- ed States as a flying ace, is still stranded with his squadron of 24 airships and his 90 men. He has waited for ten days for reports of clear weather in the hope of taking off for Italy by way of Ireland. Now he has abandoned that route and plans to go by way of the Azores, but reports of fog on thet route have caused him to postpone the next lap of his return trip until next Wednesday, when it is hoped there will be no fog. in Saloniki were so unfavorable to. the government, all other municipal elections have been postponed by the government. For the first time in its history, the Communist Party of Greece has its own candidates in al- most every city. Letters from Our Readers ON THE 6 PAGE ‘DAILY’ As soon as the Daily Worker be- comes a six-page paper, I tfink it most important that at least one, and perhaps two columns be devoted to special women’s problems. No deep, involved, theoretical questions—but, for example, daily listings of in- creases in food and clothing prices demagogic business, has been ordered dissolved by the Hitler government. In line with the Nazi policy now it is in power, to give all its sup- port to the biggest capitalists, this organization which was ostensibly to fight against organized big busi- ness, especially foreign business and Jewish department stores, is now Genlered. to have “fulfilled its miss sion.” Axstria Forces Nazis to Serape Swastika Cross from Cliffside INNSBRUCK, Aug. 7.—An ims mense swastika cross painted on a \cliff here is being scraped off by 27 Nazis who were arrested here yes- terday and forced to. march to the cliff, 6,000 feet up. fe This action was takem under ® ‘TAYLOR SPRINGS.—One hundred ~ campaign against big* up. elected to the Nati 3 which affect all women, even if they |recent decision to make all Nazi » eo ais ae ee Work in shops. Also statistical flg-| in’ Austria. responsible for ‘the acy! BRITAIN PLANS All organizations in Williamsburg H 1 br. he 4 * ures, Pecan Bib ete on health 23 of any unknown Nazi, i ; 4 s ( P, women in industry, wage rates 2 who may not have received the call Ow to (4 (4 ate t arty Anniversary throughout the country, and of are urged to send 2 delegates to the MORE WARSHIPS To Enter Race With U. S. and Japan LONDON, Aug. 7—Great Britain 4s preparing to enter the naval race in which the United States and Japan have made plans for unpre- cedented increases in their naval forces. Several cruisers, destroyers, and Submerines are included in the Ad- murality’s next budget, it was re- ported here yesterday. No data is available yet as to the details: or cost of the new program. In preparation for this program, however, “Navy Week” opened yes- Conference. welcome. This Provisional Committe has been initiated by the Progressive Workers Culture Club, 169 Sumner Ave., Brooklyn. Polish Seamen Win All Strike Demands NEW YORK, Aug. 6.—A cable from the International Seamen’s and Har- bor Workers’ Union yesterday, an- nouncing that Polish seamen had gone out on strike and calling on the Marine Workers’ Industrial Union to stop all Polish liners in port, was followed by a cable story announcing that the strikers had won all de- All other visitors are pens the first half of September the workers of the United States will celebrate the Fourteenth Anniversary of the founding of the Com- munist Party of the United States. On September Ist and 2nd, 1919, the left wing which split from. the American Socialist Party, formed the Communist Party. During the same period other elements which had broken away from the 8. P. established the Communist Labor Party. These groups as a result of the Palmer raids conducted by the Federal government, were driven underground. With the aid of the Communist International both groups later united in 1920 into one Party. ernment, from that period on, to The Party continued, despite the attacks upon it by the gov- crystallize its revolutionary program and consolidate its organization, striving to build the American Party on the basis of the program of the Communist International, * * * | te period up to the Party Anniversary should be utilized by all Party organizations, by all workers’ organizations, as a period to carry to the role and history of our Party. building up the new socialist society, * * nist International which binds in revolutionary international solidarity the struggles of the world proletariat against world capitalism. Organize mass meetings—discussions in the units—in ‘the mass or- ganizations, among the workers in your shop and neighborhood on the workers what Communism stands for, exposing the misery of the workers under capitalism. As a concrete example of what Commu- nism strives to achieve point to the tremendous advances made by the workers and peasants in the Soviet Union who are marching ahead 'TRENGTHEN the work of the Party during this period by creating greater political understanding of the revolutionary traditions of our Party, of the necessity for a closer tie between theory and prac- tice, for an improvement in our approach to the basic sections of the Spread leaflets everywhere telling * course, correspondence from women should be encouraged. Also, “How to Organize a Bread Strike,” “Re- sist an Eviction,” etc. Even dress patterns and helpful household hints should be printed? also medi- cal advice, HELEN MARCY, Reading the Daily I often feel that the English of the Daily is not the language that we use in our every day life. Especially bad and confus- ing is the sentence structure. Very seldom does one find the simple sen- tence form. And yet it is the clear- est and most effective. I clipped a few sentences in the Daily which are only a few illustra- tfeas of our alien English. I also clipped the editorial, “Bread and the Nazis Organising in - Lost German Colonies NAIROBI, East Africa, Aug.’ T— German settlers in Tangan; woich was formerly German Africa, one of the colonies Germany lost after the war, are organizing Nazi groups. man colonial minister, and now vice president of the German colonial movement has just completed a tour of all Germany’s former African possessions, He has been arousing the Gerr settlers, in line with the Nazi gram of attempting to recap’ Germany’s colonies, ‘ Dr. von Lindequiet, former Gere \ Ameri letari Stock Market,” as an illustration of * i terday. with Admiral ‘feilieoe’ as | nds and gone back to work, the masses of workers the role of the Communist Party as the un- lean proletariat. the clarity and force of simple short Communist Ecapes Ee chief ‘of ceremonies, ‘The British| ‘The I. S. H., which is working|| flinching, devoted and courageous fighter of the American proletariat | Above all, the Party anniversary can best be celebrated by carry- H) oot ences, from Fascist Camp navy is largely concentrated in| illegally in Poland, has succeeded against capitalism. Show to the messes of workers how the Patty is | ing out the line and decisions of the Open Letter, laying a firm founda- Portsmouth, Plymouth, and Chath- am, where a week of “cmtertain- ment” is arranged. The. public is inyited to visit the warships, at a shilling a head, and a great cam- paign of navy publicity has been started. 4 through leading a series of militant strikes in isolating the strike-break- ing reformists and building demo- eratically elected rank and file com- mittees among the Polish seamen, which have carried through many successful struggles, firmly welding the fighting capacity and solidarity of the workers to give the smashing blow which will destroy capitalism and finally em-| ancipate the American working class and oppressed toilers from capi- talist exploitation, unemployment, starvation and Imperialist War. In this campaign bring forward the role and leadership of the Commu- , tion among the, decisive strata of the on the role of the Party, its task in freedom, Send in your questions on any problems which are still not clear in your mind, or in the minds of the workers you are working With, American working class. leading the American workers to Our paper takes up the problems of workers, Why not use workers’ language? We would surely gain by it. Get your unit, union local, or mass preep in relsing mabe fro “7 MUNICH, August 7.—Alfred Fruth, Communist egitor and functionary, has escaped irom the Nazi concen= tration camp at Dachau. The Bas varian po itical police has offered organization to challenge anether| reward of 500 marks for his recape. be

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