The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 9, 1933, Page 4

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Published by the Comprodaily Publishing Co. 13th St, Address and mail checks to the Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th St. Page Four New York City, N.Y. Telephone ALgoi Ine. daily except Sunday, at 50 nquin 4-7956. Cable “DAIWORK.” New York, N. Xs Daily, SOCIALIST PARTY LOCALS SUPPORT U orker’ Porty US.A. By Mail everywhere: One year, $6; excepting Borough SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ix months, $3.50; 3 months, $2; of Manhattan and Bronx, New York City. Canada: One year, $9; 6 months, $5; 3 months, $3. Foreign and 1 month, 75e, AUGUST 9, 1933 RACINE UNEMPLOYED WIN | STREETS FOR AUG. 1 BY BROAD MASS STRUGGLE 3,000 Steel Workers in Anti-War Meet At! McKees Rocks—Claremont, N. H. Has Its First Anti-War RAGINE, Wis. — Thousands of Racine workers packed August 1 to hear Mother Bloor, veteran revo- | lutionary fighter, after two weeks of developing mass strug- | gle for a permit to hold the anti- The workers utili a broad 1 of t ed the me protest a by alist) the from which the U Council was to be exclud & committee of 100 to mayor, after speakers despite the opposition of the alists, John Vasey, a Y.C.L. speaker was arrested when he addr the crowd in front of the City Hall | after the delegation had gon was later released, packed with workers, for of evidence. Mass pressure finally won .-* mit from the mayor on the morn: of August 1 desvite the opposition of the police chief. The nolice drove dozens of cars through the crowd during the de onstration, but did not succeed breaking it up. JOHNSTOWN, of this Bet: a victory mass pres: getting a permit for the Aug demonstration, the first @ meeting under Commu pices ever granted here. 500 turned - McKEES ROCKS, Pi ‘More 3,000 workers in this city, one of the largest steel centers of Allegheny County, took part in an anti-war Gemonstration on August 1. Reso- lutions against war, and demandi: that Governor Pinchot the militia from the st Western Pennsylvania w * * First Anti-War Meeting in Claremont CLAREMONT, N. H. — The first August 1 anti-war r ever held in this town of employment was a thorough sui S despite many attempts at provoca- tion by the authorities, and by a Socialist heckler who exerted him- | s self to disrupt the meeting from its | beginning to its end. | As the workers gathered in Browd Street Park, a band struck up, at- tempting to drown out the speakers | and divert the attention of the au ence, and loud-sneakers were used to order the workers to le: park. A group of Boy Scout also sent in to disturb the meeti As the speakers put forward militant program of struggle agains war, Ell Bourdon, a Socialist problems of the workers, and ask- | ing questions without giving the Speakers time to answer. ce Anti-War Meeting Wins Pay Raise | NEW BRITAIN, Conn.—About 500 took part in an August 1 anti-war meeting here, which was addressed | by Isaac Abraham, who is out on bond for his part in the Tariffville tobacco strike. The meeting came | one week after a preparatory meet- | ing in front of the Corbin Ser Factory, held by the Metal Wo Industrial Union, which resulted in a 15 per cent wage increase the next day. ei ee ate ABERDEEN, Wash. — Over 1,000 workers took part in the August 1 anti-war demonstration here. The D. & R. Theatre sent a sound truck which stopped on the corner op- Posite the demonstration and played the Star Spangled Banner, in an at- tempt to disrupt the meeting. A committee elected to carry a protest to the welfare board against relief cuts found the doors locked when they arrived. The next day the county relief commissioner declared he had orders from the State relief commissioner, and could do nothing. The workers of Aberdeen are or- ig @ mass meeting for strug- gle for relief. . BALTIMORE, Md.—At least 2,000 Workers took part in the main Aug. 1 anti-war. demonstration here, which was the most successful in the history of Baltimore It was preceded by three preparatory meet- ings, one at the water front, one in a section inhabited by Negro steel workers, and one in another section among Bethlehem Steel Company workers. The main meeting, in the evening, was on the waterfront, in- stead of in City Hall plaza as usual, and was attended by many workers in the key war industries, steel and marine transportation. ae a CHAPPELL, Neb.—Farmers of the Nebraska Holiday Association held an anti-war demonstration, and Passed a resolution pledging them- selves to “drop any and all respon- sibilities in order to rally all the People against the declaration of an- other war for Profit.” : . HAMILTON, O. — Five hundred workers greeted an exposure of the N.LR.A. with thunderous applause at an August 1 anti-war demonstration here. Two members of the State Legislature attempted to interrupt, but were prevented by the workers, and were forced to run away. * . . PORTLAND, Me.-~ Five hundred took part in an, epen-air August 1st anti-war demonstration in Lincoln Park here, followed bv an indoor Demonstration r parade and meeting. | etings of unemployed to build | DEAD BODIES OF | WORKERS FOUND DAILY IN BERLIN Courts Give Harsh Sentences to the Anti-Nazis Aug. BERLIN, 8.—The following dead bodies have been found here in the la ew days Near the Iron Bridge, Kupfergrab- the body of a man about 50 years/ in Mugglesee dam, near Hirsch- , the body of an unknown man; | Speer, a tailo. ear a firearms te: iz ow the body of Clara E T-old stenographer. Werner Rese, hi 21 years old, has been sent x months imprisonment fc ing a multi- opy of at: “Rote Fahne.” ns have been arrested in zed with “prep- the is for high treason,” two for distributing illegal leafle' two for selling ohibited “Hamburger 05 persons were ar- ed with “intention S leaflets.” teacher, has year and six rawing up elec- the Communist World War Deserters of Dual Empire Pian) to Meet in Congress VIPNNA, Aug. 8.— (O- laviin, and Czechoslovakian ex- | icemen who deserted from the Austro-Hungarian armies during the war and went over to the enemy | will hold a congress in Cluj on Aug. | 15. i umanian, Jugo- | Little Entente as tration against the tore the Hungarian ill be accompanied s, and culminate in naia and Constanza. ex-servicemen are to turn the den clearer object to turn against | of war. Goering Dissolves Auxiliary Police Aug. "8.—The Prussian police, composed of 30,000 a BERLIN Storm Troopers with a few Steel Helmets, has been ordered dissolved by Premier Hermann Goering today. The Disarmament Conference held that this force, which was maintain- | ed by the state, was semi-military. | The armed Storm Trosp detachments, @ much large force which, however, | is not maintained directly by the| state, are not affected by this order. | Italian Fascist Court Holds Secret Sessions ROME, Aug. 8.—More secrecy than ever before surrounds the proceed- ings of the Fascist special courts in Italy, in order to give the impres- | sion that everything is going well | with the Fascist government. | No publication is made of the in- creasingly frequent arrests for anti- fascist actions, and weeks or months after some worker has disappeared, his relatives are curtly informed that he has been sentericed to so many years of penal servitude or to deportation. Military Law Im posed in Dutch East Indies | AMSTERDAM, Aug. 8 —Military law, with suppression of the liberty of the press and of the right of as- sembly, has been imposed in Surinam, and Curacao, Dutch East Indies, and in the districts of Sibolga and Pa- dang, in East Sumatra, as a result of Communist activities there. A large number of Communists have been arrested in Tandjong Balei, Sumatra, chiefly young natives, but including some Chinese. Negro worker and writer, has been expelled from Surinam as a “danger- ous Communist.” Pre-censorship has been imposed on the press of Curacao, In Sumatra no native is allowed to leave his town or village without military permission. A three per cent wage cut has been imposed on all native workers in the plantations of Deli. These are chiefly tobacco workers, meeting attended by over 100, at the Workers Center. The speakers’ ex- posure of the New Deal was met with an enthusiastic response. A state-wide attendance is expect- ed at a workers’ vicnic which is to be held Sunday, Aug. 13, at Liming- ton, Me, f De Kom, | NEW DEAL FOR CUBA —By Burck. Workers in Many Ports in Strikes Against Nazi Flag | NEW YORK, Aug. 8—News of dockers’ strikes against the Nazi swastika flag continue to come from many ports, where the dock work- ers refuse to unload ships until the | flag is pulled down. At Nyborg, Denmark, 40 stevedores | struck when a German ship flew the Nazi flag. | At Ghent, Belgium, the ship | “Carsten Russ” was foced to haul) down its flag. At Loctudy, France, the same happened with the ship Grammertorf.” The German ship “Bayern” was | met with immense painted slogans, | “Down with Hitler,” “Long Soviet Germany” in many Norweg- | ian ports. HITLER REJECTS FRENCH, ENGLIS | executive yuan (council), mouthpiece NOTE ON AUSTRIA gee 4 | sevelt regime is being used to fight Rebukes Intervention |the communist forces in China. in AntiDollfuss Actions BERLIN, Aug. 8—Germany has sharply rejected the notes of protest . of Great Britain and France against Nazi propaganda activities in Austria, despite the fact that the notes were delayed and considerably toned down before being presented to the German Foreign Office yesterday. The Nazis declared that “mixing in the German-Austrian impasse is inadmissible,” and declared that its actions against Chancellor Dollfus of Austria do not infringe on the Four- Power Pact. Italy refused to join France and England in the rebuke, and merely made an informal verbal admonition. eens 1 LONDON, Aug. 8—Great Britain looks on the German response to its | note regarding Austria as a defiance, | it is reported here. | The English newspapers reflect this view, and call Germany's actions a | serious threat to peace. | | ‘Live haairsmed and gunboats to Amoy. |be invading the Northwest regions |of Kiangsi | Railway. |reply to charges by the Japanese |that the American loan was a war | would be used in an effort to crush | with over $500,000 monthly to co- | of the whole of China. Red Arm y of 50,000 in China Makes Advances Wang Ching Wei Admits Wall St. $50,000,000 Loan Being Used M. ainly to Attempt to Wipe Out Chinese Soviet Gov't SHANGHAI, Aug. 8—A Red Army, 50,000 strong, under the leader- ship of Mao Tse Tung, having defeated the forces of General Tai Tsing | unemployed. Kai, commander of the 19th Koute Army at Lunkyen, Fukien province, | Chi-ia, is now invading the southwestern portion of the province. All American missionaries in the neighborhood are fieein; “Clare |on the seacoast, fearing that the > {Red Army will invade the leading cities of the provinces. U. S. naval authorities in China have ordered Another Red Army is reported to province, where it is threatening the Wuchang Changsha $50,000,000 for Anti-Red Drive. Wang Ching Wei, president of the for General Chiang Kai Shek issued a statement today admitting that the $50,000,000 loan given to the Nanking government by the Roo- Wang’s statement was made in threat against Japan, and was being used to buy arms for fighting Jap- n. Wang said that the whole sum the Soviet territories in China. The Nanking government is sup- plying the Cantonese government operate with it in the anti-Soviet drive. Most Ferocious Battle. The present war against the So- viet territories, the most ferocious yet undertaken in the four-year his- tory of the Chinese Soviets, is an attempt to wipe out the revolution- ary forces as a preliminary to the imperialist battle for the division The existence of the Soviets in China has been the geatest obstacle to the Manking govenment in its Poley of slicing up China fo Jap- anese, British and American im- ig to Amoy greater masses facing starvation. The struggle between the war lords, reflecting imperialist conflicts, is growing sharper. At the same time, the Red Army and the Soviet dis- tricts had been able to defeat the Past five anti-Soviet drives. Reports from Fukien province ad- mits that the main body of the Red Army, operating from Juikin, Kiang- si province was able to give a smashing defeat to the 19th Route Army, thus opening the way for the invasion of Fukien province. Previously, the Soviets held a small fringe of the western part of Fukien province. Now they have taken the important city of Lung- yen, and are pushing back the 19th Route Army. The 19th Route Army dominate Fukien. It is the most efficient and best equipped army of Kuomintang China, but its ranks are filled with workers and peas- ants who do not support the anti- Communist policy of the leaders of the army. Dissatisfaction in 19th Route Army. The 19th Route Army put up a} heroio fight against the Japanese in Shanghai in the spring of 1931. Many of the soldiers at that time came into contact with Communists in Shanghai and were won over. When the 19th Route Army returned to Fukien, many of the lower offi- cers were against an anti-Soviet war. When ordered into such a battle they refused. General Tsai Ting Kai, commander of the army ordered over 150 of them shot. They were encircled by machine guns and butchered. Over 500 of the rank and file were shipped back to Shanghai to be disbanded. In Shanghai they came in conflict with perialism. The economic crisis in China is growing steadily with the police, were arrested and sey- eral executed, To Buy War Planes | STOCKHOLM, Aug. 8.—The So- cial Democratic government of Sweden has appropriated 380,000 heron from the fund for relief of |the unemployed voted by parlia- |ment, and used it to buy war planes. |The excuse given by the Socialist | government was that the orders for |war planes will give work to the WARNS THAT U.S. IS LOSING VAST MARKET IN USSR Soviet Union Never Defaulted on a Cent, Ex-Sen. Points Out WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 8— | Warning the United States that Eu- { ropean countries are competing fe- verishly for the trade orders of the | Soviet Union, former Senator Brook- hart, now of the Agricultural Adjust- | ment Administration, said today that this country is facing the loss of tre- mendous markets in the Soviet Union. Me said, “My investigation proves that the Soviet Union is a good risk. Since coming ipto power they have imported $4,200,000,000 worth of for- eign goods and exported $3,650,000,000 of their own. And they have never defaulted one cent. Right now TI could sell them 1,000,000 bales of cot- | ton if I could give them the credit | the Europeans are giving them. With- | | | | given normal credit we could easily | sell them $300,000,000 of our products, | and this is a lot of money in times like these.” Brookhart’s reniarks were occas- stoned by the expected arrival of 40 Soviet experts in this country to sur- vey the market for cotton, industrial equipment, automobiles, and railroad supplies, Do YOUR part to establish the six-page “Daily” and keep it going! Get a subscription from your shop- mate or neighbor. Where By MILTON HOWARD. A slim report has just been issued by the Women’s Bureau at Washing- ton, D. C. port, full of forbidding looking sta- | tistics. Just looking at it you wouldn’t think much of it. Yet tucked away in iis pages is a startling fact. The report says that | survey just completed shows that | there are thousands of jobless, home- less, penniless women roving throngh- out the United States. The govern- |ment report says with the insane preciseness of a bureaucratic gov- ernment office trying to defend cap- italism that there are now 9,769 homeless women in the United States. They went around all the dumps, into the Hoovervillés, and around the | Tailroad freight yards counting them, | many times ten thousand homeless | Women roaming over the United States, The crisis has stashed the homes of hundreds of thousands of working class families. It has revealed to the women and girls of the working class what is behind the capitalist hypo- crisy of the “sanctity of the family.” If you can’t produce profit for the capitalist class you are nothing, junk, 2 tramp, a hobo, worthless. Even when you are a woman. The founder of the First Interna- tional and the father of Scientific Socialism, Karl Marx, ripped to Pieces the fraud and hypocrisy of the capitalist drivel about the “sai | It is a dry technical re-j | But the truth is that there are! Government Report Shows Economic Crisis Forcing Thousands of Working Class Women Onto the Roads of the home.” He showed that under capitalism the workers’ home is noth- ing but a breeding place for the com- modity—labor power. In the Communist Manifesto, Marx and Engels wrote: “The capitalist class, wherever it it has got the upper hand, has put an end to all feudal, patriarchal, idyllic, relations. ... It has resolved | Personal worth into exchange value.” Further on in the same immortal Manifesto, they wrote: “The proletarian is without prop- erty; his relation to his family has no longer anything in common with bourgeois family relations,” And finally, Marx and Engels, with superb truth and force, declare: “The bourgeois claptrap about the family and education, about the hallowed relations between the par- ent and child, become all the more disgusting, the more by the zction of modern industry, all family t'es among the workers are torn asun- der, and their children transformed into simple articles of commerce.” An article of commerce and an in- strument of production—this is the capitalism. And at the same time that this statistical report comes from Wash- ington, comes the news from Ger- many that Hitler is making a drive to get all women “back into the home.” * Says the Fascist Hitler, We must put women back into the home and men back on the land. We do not want women workers.” This is the voice of Hitler, repre- sentative of a capitalism that is dy- ing and has become reactionary and rotten. Capitalism exploits women in the factories even more ruthlessly than it does men workers. But when, capitalism, strangling in its contra- dictions, cannot use all the produc- tive forces, then it tries to go back to the ignorance and backwardness of the Middle Ages. It tries to fasten upon the women of the working class the slavery of the kitchen. It tries to thwart the development of women as human beings, seeing in working class women only household drudges and breeders of workers and soldiers. Against the hypocrisy of the cap- italist sanctity of the home which does not exist under capitalism, and inctity| status of working class women under against the kitchen slavery of working Is the “Sanctity of the Home”? class women, we must enscribe on our banners these words of Lenin: “The women’s labor movement has the task of struzgling for the economic and social equality of women, and not only formally, To draw women into social productive work, to tear her away from the household slavery, to liberate her frem subordination to the dulling and despised work of the kitchen, of the nursery and the etcrnal sur- round! of the kitchen—this is the main task.” been accomplished. the working class are no longer de- spised slaves of the kitchen. They Share equally with men the work, the responsibilities of building socialism, in the factories, on the ferms, in the schools, For the first time in history, the| working class woman has reached her | full stature as a human being with) full and equal rights, Social equality, maternity insur- ance, full opportunity to develop all the potentialities for achievement) and growth, this is the position of) the woman in the land of the Pro- letarian Dictatcrship. Meanwhile, thousands of workers’ families are wrecked by the crisis. And ten thousand working class, homeless women roam the country in the United States, land of capitalist hypocrisy about the “sanctity of the women and the home.” H for an anti-Fascist week yet, the com- Swedish Government | mittee “aatd: Akron, Pyounestowns Uses Relief Funds || 22!timore, washington, Rochester, | in the next five years I estimate that, | In the Soviet Union, this task has ‘The women of Mass. Con Congress mittee of the U. S. Congress Against “~@ | ANTL-FASCIST PROGRAMS LAG IN MANY CITIES ‘Committee Calls for More Intense Activity NEW YORK—An active anti-Fas- ‘ist drive is now under way in El | Paso, Texas, the National Committee to Aid Victims of German Fascism reported today. Most smaller cities in the East, however, have not reported any plans i} and many other cities have not re- ported any activity. The LL.D. and W.LR. of Phila- delphia have ordered a shipment of | collection boxes and material. In | Milwaukee, where three separate | anti-Fascist united fronts are in ex- istence, August 12 and 13 have been set aside as tag days. | | The Chicago collection week is Aug. 7 to 14. No funds have yet reached the National Committee from Chi- cago. | | Collections will be made in oin-| |cinnati August 13, St. Louis August 12, Minneapolis August 14 to 21. The San Francisco - anti-Fascist united | front has been called by the secretary | of the LL.D. to organize a collection | week in that city. * ie | NEWARK, N. J.—All preparations have been made for a week of collec- tion ‘for the defense and relief of vic- tims of German Fascism in Newark, August 14 to 21. Any organization which has not yet joined the united front is asked to address Al Edwards, secretary, 52 West St. Newark. ee ioe CHICAGO.—The Chicago Sparta- cus League has called a mass me: ing to create a united front for anti- | Fascist struggle, especially against | Fascism in Italy and in the Italian | colonies. This meeting will be held | August 18, at 8 p. m,, in the head- | quarters of the Spartacus League. | 1645 West Polk St. * | * . NEW YORK.—The New York Com- mittee to Aid Victims of Germen Fascism issued an appeal today to workers and workers’ organizations in | New York, asking that every one of | the 3,500 collection boxes and 2,000 collection lists which have been dis- tributed during anti-Fascist week con- tain contributions when they are re- turned. “Not a single box or list should be returned empty,” the ap- peal said. An audience of 400 at an anti-Fas- cist concert and demonstration in Sea Gate Saturday contributed near- ly $150. Swedish Socialist Bans Aug. 1 Meeting STOCKHOLM, Aug. 8—The So- cial-Democratic magistrate of Bor- os, one of the largest centers of the Swedish textile industry, issued an order forbidding any anti-war dem- onstration on August 1. Swiss Anti-War Meetings Banned ZURICH, Aug. 8—The government of Switzerland, traditional center of pecifist activities, prohibited all Aug. 1st anti-war demonstrations. The Communist daily of Basle, “Basler Vorwaertz,” was confiscated for ap- pealing for indoor anti-war meetings. In Schaffhausen a duplicating mach- ine was confiscated after leaflets hed been distributec calling for an anti- war demonstration. Arrest 79 Workers in Seville, Spain SEVILLE, Spain, Aug. 8—Seventy- nine workers have been arrested in wholesale raids on Communist head- quarters here. One worker was seri- ously injured. U.S. Ship Crew Strikes for 25 Per Cent Raise SANTIAGO, Chile, Aug. 8—All the vrews on the ships cf the South Am- erican Steamship Company went on strike here today demanding a 25 per cent rise in wages, | ' Write to the Daily Worker about every event of interest to workers which occurs in your factory, trade union, workers’ organization or lo- cality, BECOME A WORKER COR- RESPONDENT’ _§. ANTI-WAR CONGRESS tinental Endorses Anti-War Meei Big California Delegation ie. Campaign for Congress Along the Way—Massachusetts \ Continental Cong: ress Joins Fight NEW YORK.—Disregarding the national leadership of the Socialist Party, which withdrew its representatives from the arrangements com- War, to be held in New York Sept. 2, 3, and 4, Sccialist locals and organizations in the East and West are going on record in support of the Congress, The Massachusetts section of the Socialist-led Ocatinental Congéess, mecting Sunday in Springfield, Mass., unanimously voted to endorse the Anti-War Congress and elected dele- gates, The Socialist Party local of Green- field, Mass., has sent a resolution to the State Committee of the party urging it to participate in the Con- gress. Despite a decision of the Los An- geles County Committee of the Soci- alist Party to boycott the Congress as a “Communist plot”, two Los An- geles locals elected delegates, of whom two are serving on the cen- tral committee of the Anti-War ference of Southern California. Delegates representing 20,000 work~ ers of Southern California will leave Los Angeles about August 15, in a bus, and campaign for the Congress all the way to New York. They are carrying an anti-war exhibit pre- pared by the Workers Film and Photo League, and will hold meet- ings in many cities along their way. The Pacific coast responded en- thusiastically to the call for the Con- gress, sent out by the Congress com- mittee, the Anti-War Conference of Southern California, fhe Youth Anti-War Conference, the Los An- geles City Committee for Struggle Against War, and ihe People’s Con- ference Against Hitler Atrocities, which is a workers’ snlit-off from the Jewish Anti-Fascist Conference. Regional conferences and meetings were held in Los Angeles, Hollywood, Pasadena, Senta Monica, Ocean Park, Venice, Long Beach, San Pedro, Wilmington, and San Diego. Make Poison Gas and Steel Scrap in Many Factories Three Chemical Plants Being Erected in N. J. (From a Worker Correspondent) BOUND BROOK, N. J.—In spite of the general depression in all lines of business the plants manufactur- ing war supplies are expanding. In Bound Brook, the Calci Chemi- cal Company, manufacturing poison- ous gases during the World War, has recently become very active and is erecting three new plants of about 150 x 10. WorkingNight,Day on Machine Gun Bullets (By a Worker Correspondent) CINCINNATI, O. The King Powder Company is turning out mil- lions of rounds of 30-calibre mach- ine gun bullets.’ They are working 24 hours a day, 3 eight-hour shifts. I know this ammunition is not for rabbits. ‘ { Japan Gets Scrap Iron Regularly fromChester (By a Worker Correspondent) CHESTER, Pa, — Japanese ships are coming into Chester ports with surprising regularity. There is an- other docked et the Sun Ship Yard dock loading scrap, iron for the War Lerds of Japan. There have been a great number of Government Ships scrapped here in the last twelve months, and prac- tically all of the Iron taken from these Ships has been sold to, and shipped to the Japanese Govern ment. August ‘Communist’— Enlarged Edition The August “Communist,” which will be off the press tomorrow, is an enlarged edition It will con- tain, under the title “Why the Open — Letter to the Party Membership,” the address delivered by ‘Earl Browder at the Extraordinary Conference y the Communist Party held it month. The article is a thorough analysis of the tasks and conditions facing the Party today, dealing with every phese of activity. It points out in the sharpest manner the re- quisites for the Party’s growth and turn to the basic masses, Other featuros ere: “Lessons from Recent Strike Struggles” by Jack Stachel, pointing out our weakness- es and how to overcome them; “The National Industrial Recovery Act” by Harry Gennes, an analysis of the NIRA, and. the organization of struggle against it; “Building the United Front in Dearborn” by M, Salzman, an account of organizae tional activities in that Ford. = trolled city; “Strikes of the ie Louis Nutpickers and the Chicago! Needle Workers” by Gebert, examin- ing the lessons of our tactics in these victories; “Our Tasks among Foreign-Bern Workers” by F. your “The Onen Letter and the Y.C.L? by Gil Green; “From Opportunism to Counter-Revolution” by V. J. Jerome, dealing with the distortions of Marxism by Kautsky and the Second International. ‘

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