The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 22, 1933, Page 6

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# btiadncte grag AUGUST 22, 1938 _ By Mall everywhere: One year, $6; six months, $3.50; $ months, 32; 1 month, 75e, excepting Borough of Manhattan and Grenx, New York City. Foreign and Canada: One year, months, $5; 3 months, $3. asm | Maternity Relief i a aa ; | Bast | Added to Workers ee : Relief Ordinance: | Demand Will Be for Ordinance to Have Firs Claim on City Appropriations Published by the Comprodatiy Publishing Oo., Inc., dafiy except Sundar, at M4 FE. 18th St. New York City, N. ¥. Telophone ALgonquin 4-7955. Cable “DAIWORK.” Address and mail chacks to the Dally Worker, 50 E. 13th St., New York, N. ¥. GERMAN ECONOMY NEAR | COLLAPSE; HUNGER AND | WANT WINTER PROSPECT Coal, Textile, Retail Sales Fall Off; Tourists Shun Germany; Forced Loans in Prospect As Nazi Employment Schemes Fail SPECIAL TO THE DAILY WORKER. BERLIN, Aug. 21.—Signs of an impending collapse of German economy appear in the market surveys, which show a constant drop in some of the niain lines of industry and trade. The sale of Ruhr coal has dropped from 188,000 tons daily mn June te 173,000 tons. The June returns of department stores were 22.2 percent lower | —By Burek a ee dt aucusr RBI LE ma | NEW YORK.—Maiternity relief of $3a week for two months soak ) 2 months following childbirth, was included in the final draft of thst" ers’ Relief Ordinance completed by delegates at the Conference St Evictions and Relief Cuts. Demands will be made to the Board of Ty@\ that the Ordinance have first claim onthe city’s revenues. . Ks © The basic -rate for unemp.) jcouples was increased from $1°) | industry German Socialist | and 18; $3 for children between New York Double ss: :2 ss # volte te"sts | 18 | No residence qualifications will 1 Tavlor Reports. sccsar to receive the benents \ . |the Ordinance. The Ordinance | to be applied immediately. after ir = Workers Join Reds Wages Go Down. ter has recently decreased have been cut sands have been labor for wages nd thi Forced Loans Predicted. NEW YORK, Aug. 21.—The com- plete failure of the Nazis to stem the breakdown of German economy un- to Fight Fascists United Front Grows as| Socialist Leaders Desert front between the Communists and y|the Social Democratic workers, de- spite the Nazi terrorism, is report- ed from all parts of Germany. In Berlin-Neukoeln, 100 Social- ists and 100 Communists are work- |Food Vouchers Are Stopped Despite Need of Workers 1932, according to a semi-annual re- | port made by Frank Taylor, Commis- sioner of Public Welfare. This report follows the statement made Saturday by the Welfare Council that the Relief Bureaus are stopping food vouchers where there is the slightest suspicion of any income | | vestigation. | -In addition to this cash relief fi unemployed workers, the Ordinanc states, the city is to provide shelte clothing, light, heat, to the familir of the unemployed. NEW YORK.—Twice as many | ‘Other changes included in the fin: se nae families were compelled by the | draft are, for single workers $10 nest reliet | i sharpening crisis to accept relief dur- | week. increased $3; work relief wher nly reflects} SAARBRUCK.—The rapid ing the first 6 months ee 1933 e no union scale prevails to be $5 the fact that and JeWs/ growth of the anti-Fascist united comparison to the last half year o: day, Ban on Fascists in Ireland Is Weapoi | 2: ia in the family. The statement. added t Hit At Worke 4 der the crisis is reported in a special | ing together in close contact. They | : * Butlee pan eee jateecl ore ean aarp 0 Ti rs article by Frederick T. Birchall to|have just issued the first number ployed imperative, @ a the New York Times today. r jof the “Roter Vorwaertz.” The od Taylor's present report gives the Safety ‘Act Invokec fat is openly predicted that there| —- bination of the word “red” must be recourse to forced loans to | carry out even to a modest extent the grandiose employment projects | t forth to tide the popu- the winter,” he writes. “The for winter is far from with the traditional name of So. cial Democratic publications indi- cates the spirit of the formerly So- |cialist workers. to Anti-War Meet SP. Member Elected Havana Port Strikers Reported Near Victory Czech 5. P. Minister Rallies Workers to lie to his previous statement that re- lief needs are decreasing as shown to him by a decline in the number of relief applications received. Work- ers are being kept from the Bureaus As “Blue Shirts” Parade “DUBLIN, Aug. 21. — The blue on one pretext or another. When F r - os < In Hamburg, several Social they do manage to fill out_an appli- | shirted, nner Sn aresea y seasonal improvement |Democratie groups, deserted by | cation it is conveniently “lost” when | Guard”, ° in in July did not occur this | ys. He adds that while | hsbank’s gold coverage on is up to 104 per cent) t 7.75 per cent in June, it is due the partial suspension of in- payments on dollar bonds, “Both tax and customs receipts after falling to what was believed to be the lowest level possible, are still falling”, he writes. “There is a cry that the industrial terest their leaders, have joined with the Communists, issuing leaflets and carrying out anti-Fascist activities, A group of Reichsbanner members meet regularly with the Commu- nists- Another group of Reichs- banner men from two block com- mittees near the waterside, have joined the Communist Party. Else- where, 18 Reichsbanner function- aries have organized a course of ‘Despite S. P. Chiefs Detroit Votes to Send} Ten Delegates to Congress LOS ANGELES—J. N. Laskey, a Socalist Party member from Lyn- wood, Calif., will be one of the Cali- Government, Facing Heavy Losses, May Order | Ship Owners to Recognize Revolutionary | Industrial Union HAVANA, Aug. 21.—Keports that the Cuban workers would win another | | Partial victory by forcing the new government of President de Cespedes to | order the shipowners to recognize the of Labor of Cuba were made today as nine revolutionary National Confederation | ships stood in Havana harbor, Vice-Premier Tells Rail Men to Prepare for War PRAGUE, Czecnosiovakia. — The Social Democratic vice premier, Bechyne, minister of railways, began | the worker returns two weeks later ‘Ample Funds in inquiring about the delay. Huge surpluses are being collected at the Relief Bureaus through can- cellation of food vouchers, the money to be used for Tammany purposes. Since there has been no basic change in the job situation; Taylor's report proves that starvation is on the in- crease. ident Eamonn de Valera announce( yesterday, as the fascists held par ades in almost every city of th: Inish Free State. ='To do so, de Valera would invoke the Public Safety Act, passed by former president William Cosgrave and bitterly fought by de Valera. 1 gives the government power of “lif: and death” over all “enemies of tift state”, and can be invoked again!) the revolutionary organizations an the- Communist Party whether o centers 2 over-populated, that | 75 ctioe 4 pcre b [fornia delegates to the United States unable to unload, and the government was reported to have lost $2,000,000 to organize a “front in defense of not-it.is actually used against the people must get back to the land,” a Ce = ae m5 y TASER = 0. Congress Against War, September 29 | > ‘ in port revenues sincé the beginning | the fatherland” at. the August 10th | faslste, ~ fag ea nd the land cannot ab- |'2¢ Communist Party. and 30, and October 1, despite the | Sixty MexicanWorkers of the strike. Congress of the Czech Social Demo- The attitude of de Valera toward sor n | The chea fes and beer halls are still fairly filled, but the better hotels and restaurants are in the doldrums, | he says. Tourists are not coming, and those establishments that de- | pend on tourists are in despair. | Workers, Lawyers in Amsterdam for | organization have In the Riehl district of Cologne, in the Rhineland, the members of the Reichsbanner have expelled their leaders, who opposed united action with the Communists, and elected new ones. The Communist Party and the Socialist fighting been holding frequent meetings for joint action |in Cologne North. Hold Anti-War Meet fact that the state executive commit- | tee of the Socialist Party had tabled a motion to support the anti-war congress. He was elected at a meeting of the United Committee .for Struggle | Against War, August 17, in Los An- geles. A motion to send a letter of protest to the Socialist executive’com- mittee’ was carried unanimously. Laskey told the conference that if the motion to support the congress had been voted by the Socialist exec- Face Penal Colony for Solidarity With Cubans MEXICO CITY, Aug. 21.—Depor- tation to the notorious Islas Marias penal colony faces 60 workers, intel- lectuals and students, arrested here | August 16 when police attacked a) demonstration of solidarity with the revolutionary workers of Cuba. The sixty were badly beaten after being arrested. The strike of street car and railway workers and bakers in Santiago con- | tinued solid, as did the strike of Ha- | vana port workers. Former President Mario Menccal, leader of the Conservative Party, made his bid for leadership of the capitalist-landlord governing group on his arrival yesterday by calling fer & general election, and criticizing the de Cespedes regime for its “vacillat- ing policy.” Meanwhile the cabinet turned from discussing methods of raising funds cratic railwaymen’s union. In the political address at the con- gress, he declared that bécause of Fascist Germany “it is our duty to gather together, and. organize all elements true to the state, to give them oné common direction, and t> prepare ourselves for any emergency.” While calling on the railway work- ers to rally for military defense of the capitalist. state, he added that they must rally to defend the state against the “inner enemy,” thé re- volutionary workers who fight against Relief Bureaus Cancelled Food Check Funds Piling Up NEW YORK—Ample funds for ordinary relief purposes lay idle in the Department of Public Welfare coffers, it was revealed yesterday. The supervisor of the Home Re- lief Bureau at Spring and Bliza- the. revolutionary workers and farnt- ers, was Clearly shown in a speech at Thurles yesterday in which he ex- plained his intention of banning the fascists by saying, “If one section of the people are going to secure con- trol by force, another section will dc it”. A-ctowd attacked a Blue Shirt’ at OQ’Connell Bridge, in Dublin, and in Cork a party of Irish Republican Army men tore a Free State flag from the window of a National Guard headquarters. A fight fol- D f Board St hi utive, 10 out of 25 would have voted! Protests against this attack, and|‘ Te Se erioas oes to perester the capitalist state. et ane Miner aRne Bee aa se lowed. ei | | eae punishment of demonstrators who efenseof Torgler | on Board Steamship | tor i. [the plan to send the demonstrators) Punishment, of ‘demonstrators ‘who British Trade Union Delegates Join Committee LONDON, Aug. 21.—A party of Brit- {sh trade union delegates left Satur- day for Amsterdam, to attend the sessions of the international commit- NEW YORK.—Word was received erday of an August 1 demon- ration organized on board the S. S. Gripsholm, at sea on the way to Sweden, Finland and the Soviet Union, organized by New York workers on board. Joseph H. Shipman Sylvia Pan- tilla and Anna Sendrowitz were DETROIT.—Detroit workers will send ten delegates to the U. S. Con-| gress Against War, it was decided at a conference of representatives of workers’ organizations on August 14. Three delegates were elected from the | conference. The others are to be) elected by mass organizations. The |conference adopted a resolution, which was sent to President Roose- velt and to President de Cespedes of to the Islas Marias, have been asked by the International Labor Defense of Mexico, to be sent to the Mexican Ambassador at Washington, Mexican consulates in every city, and to Presi- dent Rodriguez of Mexico, Mexico| City, D. F., Mexico. Puerto Ricans Assail Regime | of Gov. Gore | body of Antonio Ainciart, Machado's | killed himself. Police chief who shot himself Satur- day. After killing Jose Squirre Leon, an ABC member, Juan Sampol, Ain- ciart's personal bodyguard, shot and In Santiago a mob of 3,000 killed Julio. Heredia, one of Machado’s paid killers, and dragged his body through the streets, Japan Claims Chinese Islands France Seized TOKIO, Aug. 21—A sharp protest against. France’s seizure of nine is- Jands in the South China Sea, be- tween French Indo-China and the Philippines, a few weeks ago, has been made in Paris by the Japanese envoy. fore the end of the week.” This sum represents food tickets for a 14-day period for about 100 fami- lies. Similar surpluses were an- nounced in other precincts in va- rious parts of the city. The surpluses amassed in the Department of Public Welfare treasury at the expense of hungry “clients” during the past three Italian Training | Ships Dock Here 272 Naval Cadets on Board Two Boats 7 The French have already made ar-|weeks were further corroborated NEW YORK, Aug. 21.— The tee for the defense of the Communists speakers, in English and Finnish, | Cuba, protesting against the terror ‘Tens of thousands attended the fu- rangements to deport the Chinese | yest < ein p . charged with set the Reichstag | 4 collection was made for the Ka. | ®gainst Cuban workers SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, Aug. 21—|neral at Atares of the remains of popniatien Sethe unas A iinoeree yesterday by the statements of Ttalian naval training ships Ameri- They will demand admission to Germany to attend the trial, but| will probably be refused. The com-| mittee is meeting especially to ar-| Yange for a People’s Trial of the | Nazis at the Hague simultaneously | with the trial at Leipzig | Among the members of the inter- | national committee are the follow- | ing lawyers, according to the Inter- national Red Aid, parent body of | the International Labor Defense: | Leo Gallagher and David Levinson, | from the United States; Campinchi, | Moro-Giafferi, Torres and Adolf Jaegle, from France; Eugene Soudan, Pierre Graux, and Prof. Louis Braf- for, of Belgium; Neil Lawson and N. Pritt, from England, Van t’hoff- Stolk, Holland, and St. Detcheff. Arthur Garfield Hays, and Samuel Leibowitz, chief trial counsel for the I. L. D. in the Scottsboro case at Decatur, Ala, may also go to Eu- Tope to aid in the defense. Powers Threaten Force to Check Nazis in Austria VIENNA, Aug. 21.—Military inter- | vention has been promised by Great Britain, France and Italy if German or Austrian Nazis attempt to over- throw Chancellor Dollfuss’ govern- ment, it was reported here today. Simultaneously, a political and economic bloc of Austria, Italy and Hungary to further isolate Germany and strengthen Austria was concluded during a visit of Dollfuss to Premier Mussolini at Rimini over the week- end. ‘The three countries will invite Ger- tnany to join on condition that Hitler tives up all attempts to win Austria for a Nazi alliance. Premier Gom- poes of Hungary agreed to this bloc m 2 recent visit to Rome. These maneuvers, while expressing fhe sharp antagonism of the powers jo any strengthening of Germany through closer relations with Austria, ire slowly closing the door to all relia Society of New York, an or- ganization sending Finnish work- ers from the United States and Canada to the Finnish colony in Soviet Karelia. By MAGYAR MOSCOW, U.S. S. R., Aug. 21— In the Soviet Union we shall have this year not only a good, but an ex- traordinarily good, a magnificent har- vest. It is, perhaps, no exaggeration to designate this fact as one of the most important, if not the most im- portant fact in world politics, this year. ‘The Soviet Power, the dictatorship of the proletariat, has won a fresh and tremendous victory in the sphere of the socialist transformation of agriculture; and this victory is being realised in the good harvest. The old peasants declare that there has never been such a good harvest since the year 1834. In the Soviet Ukraine, in North Caucasus, in the Volga district and also in the German Volga So- viet Republic, the harvest yield is in many places twice or two and a half times as big as It was last year. Result of Collectivisation Tt would be a great mistake to at- tribute this exceedingly big achieve- ment of socialist transformation of agriculture solely to the climatic con-. ditions, which have been favorable on the whole. The good harvest in the Soviet Union is the result of the collectivisation of agriculture, the result of the gigantic work of the Party in consolidating and Bolshevis- ing the collective farms; and the good harvest will in turn beecome the cause of a further strengthening of the collective farms, 9 | Downtown Y. M. C. A., -Witherell and Adams Streets. All organizations in Detroit have been invited to’ send delegates. Protest against the seven weeks-old regime of Governor Robert H. Gore was cabled to President Roosevelt yesterday by liberals of the Puerto Rican House and Senate. four victims of Machado, which were found in a stable at Atares castle. failed to live up to his promise of ‘They declared Gore had completely efficiency and impartiality, and acted in a highly autocratic manner. cel islands, to the west. The Japa- nese claim they have operated guano and phosphate mines there. The islands form a strategic air and naval base, and French authorities reported the islands had been seized food voucher writers in several bureaus that “far more families were cut off from relief than was necessary to make the saving dur- ing August which Commissioner Taylor ordered.” Soviet Farmers Prosper Unprecedented Harvest Is Fruit of Bélshevik| Policy; Peasant Masses Realize Collective Farming Is Only Way to Prosperity -- of the collectivised peasants is about to take place, and it is clear that the collective peasant will draw the only Possible conclusion from.the improve- ment in his material situation, namely that the collective form of agriculture is the victorious socialist form of agricultural production. * Victorious Struggle Against Kulaks The good harvest is the result of the victorious class struggle against the remnants of the kulak class. In this struggle against the kulaks the proletarian dictatorship, with the sup- Port of the collective peasanits;. has won a new big victory. We should not have been able to achieve this tremendous success on the field of agricultural production in the Soviet Union if we had hot received the support of our socialist industry and the magnificent results of the First Five-Year Plan in agri- culture, Without the tractors, with- out the combines, without the other agricultural machinery, without. the tremendous growth in the. productive forces of socialist agriculture,- with: out the assistance of the chemical industry, we should not have such an excellent harvest this year. * Socialist industry has the Jead in the Soviet economic system, s0- cialist industry has now led -Soviet agriculture along the straight- road which leads to success. We shall still experience difficulties. Néw problems will continue to arise and we. shall the socialist proletariat which helped the collective peasants to the victory of a good harvest. Without the poli- tical departments attached to the tractor and machinery stations, with- out the tremendous efforts of the Soviet power to organize he sowing campaign, without the tremendous work of the Communist Party under the leadership of its Central Com- mittee, with Comrade Stalin at the head, without Comrade Stalin’s daily work in the fight which he organized and led, we should not have a good harvest this year. The socialist en- thusiasm, the shock brigade methods which were adopted under the leader- ship of the Party, under the leader- ship of the new bulwarks of the in the village, the political depart- ments of the tractor and machinery stations, and on the Soviet farms have won this victory. Contrast to Capitalist Agriculture Socialism has won a new world historical victory on the field of agri- culture. But what is the situation on the agricultural field in the coun- tries of capitalism? The tilled area for wheat, sugar and rice in the ca- pitalist world has diminished still further. Everywhere the fields are being less fertilized, whilst a great part of the available tractors and agricultural machinery is not being utilized. In the United States and in Canada there is a worse wheat har- vest than the capitalist world has ex-| t perienced for about forty years, And still the stores are very big, so that the world demand for wheat could be satisfied with these stores for the space of a year. The pro- gramme of Roosevelt in the United States consists in further reducing Party| and ruin, these are the basic tenden- ploughed in. And, despite the in- crease of customs duties, despite all the efforts of the governments to maintain prices, the prices of agri- cultural goods are falling in almost all capitalist countries, with the ex- ception of Germany and, more re- cently, the ones States. Agrarian C: Under Capitalism It has not been possible to hold up this fall of agricultural prices, al- though the speed of the drop has been diminished. The agrarian crisis is intensifying more and more, and under the ruins of capitalist agricul- ture millions and millions of peasants and small farmers are being buried and ruined. Crisis, impoverishment cies of agricultural development in the capitalist countries. The feverish attempts made in the United States to overcome the agrarian crisis have led only to further convulsions of the crisis. In France also the agra- rian crisis is deepening. In Germany fascism is desperately attempting to Stave off the crisis of the junker and kulak farms at the ‘expense of the tollers in town and country. In the east and in the south-east of Europe, in the overseas countries and in the colonial countries the agrarian crisis is deepening. There is only one country in the world today in which everything pos- sible is being done to sow more and O reap more. There is only one country in the world today which is not experiencing an economic crisis. And that country is the country of the proletarian dictatorship. Only Capitalist War Industries lourish Fi It'is quite clear that the growth While Capitalism Driv s Its Farmers to Ruin > In Japan also a sudden diminution of the boom has taken place. In Ger- many the crisis is steadily deepening. The expected development of the crisis into the stage of depression is not taking place; on the contrary, the end of one convulsion of the crisis means the beginning of the next and Perhaps still sharper. - ‘ Results of First Five-Year Plan Parallel with this development in the capitalist countries we see in the Soviet Union a steady and uninter- rupted growth of production on all fields. The results of the First Five- Year Plan placed the Soviet Union: First in the world in the produc- tion of tractors. First in the world in the production of agricultural machinery. First in the world in the production of combines. First in Europe in the production of engineering machinery. First in Europe in the production of pig-iron. Third in the world in the produc- tion of electrical energy. First place in Europe and second in the world in the production of petroleum. ‘First in the world in the production of peat. Fourth in the world in the produc- tion of coal, and Fourth in the world in the pro- | ductions of the chemical industry. The results of the first half-year Mass Impoverishment of Farmers, Destruction of Crops Under Capitalism Points Contrast of Two World Systems, Socialism and Capitalism half-year of the Second Five-Year plan show that the Communist Party, the Soviet Power, and the working class of the Soviet Union, under the firm leadership of Comrade Stalin, have taken the way pointed out to bind Lenin, the path of socialist vic- The tremendous results and the tremendous victories were won in a constant struggle against the “Right” and “Left-Wing” opportunists against the “Right” and “Left-Wing” rene- gades. The Communist Party and the working class of the Soviet Union are rallying still more closely around the Leninist Central Committee of the Party and around its leader, Comrade Stalin, who secured these victories by the correct Leninist policy. Balance Favors Socialism These tremendous results, these tremendous victories could never have been won without the steel-like unity, without the steel-like Bolshe- vist discipline of the Party. The Party is now conducting an internal cleansing campaign; it is cleansing itself from the weak and vacillating elements in order that the sharpest weapon of the proletarian dictator- ship, the Bolshevist Party, shall be- come still sharper and still stronger. The Bolshevist Party has led the working class of the Soviet Union on to new victories, and now, on the basis of these victories, it is cleansing go Vespucci, flagship, and the Cfistoforo Colombo docked at New York yesterday, with 272 cadets on board. A salute of 21 guns in honor of Admiral Romeo Bernotti chief of the Italian Naval Academy, was fired as the ships passed Governors Island. "The ships are berthed at the foot of W. 46th St. They will remain here-12 days. In. Baltimore recently revolu- tionary waterfront workers, led by the Communist Party, greeted the éadéts of these two ships with a friendly demonstration and éeaf- lete exposing the Fascist regime in Ttaly. nies NICE, France.—Kour members of ‘the French Young Communist League have been arrested for dis- tributing anti-Fascist leaflets in Ttalian among seamen of the Ital- jan. squadron. The leaflets called for..struggle against Fascism, and for defense of the Soviet Union. Moroccans Hold Out Against French Arm | BARAT, Morocco, Aug. 21.— 8]! | Moroccan tribes are still holding ov, fighting fiercely against a French force of 25,000 with all modern equips ment of war, in the Atlas mountains, | after.25 years of French endeavors to subdue this corner ui their Africam colonies, ‘Although the French have claimed for-several weeks tnat the Moroccan tribesmen were about to be defeated, a report from the battle area yester- day said that the fighting now is the | fiercest of the whole long Pa } One» Berber chief, Cherif Moulay Absselmen, who has been fighting the French since 1912, was reported to have surrendered. ~The Berbers constantly harass the | French with lightning raids which cause the imperialist invaders heavy | Ree the tilled area for wheat by from 15] of industrial production in a number| of the Second Five-Year Plan show | its own ranks in order to become still) “Volunteer Addressers Needed Sermany’s expansionist ambitions} We have a good harvest this year| have to deal with tram, ‘but the de-| to 20 per cent. Although the army | of leading capitalist countries is based | how poverty-striken, how counter-| More = a still| -3 “YoRK.—Th Aiasinan, ting the road to the Bast, thru | because the great mass of the peas-| cisive victory has al been. won,| of the hungry milions is daily swell- exclusively on inflation and specula-| revolutionary, how anti-proletarian,| 8Teater fighting ppwer, and st ‘ — The attack on the Soviet Union. antry realize that the collective farm Mussolini emphasized this fact in 4 statement on the Italian-Danubian floc, which he said was designed te urther the “broader aims of the ‘power pact”, between Great 4s, in fact, the only correct way to prosperity. This conviction again will also serve further to promote the de- velopment of the collective farms. A tremendous advance towards a . France, Germany and Italy, thanks to the successesof sotialist industry and thanks to the victories of the First Five-Year Plan. Proletariat Helped Peasants But it was not only socialist in- dustry which led the collective farms ing, the United States government pays 30 cents for every bushel of wheat that is destroyed, 4.5 cents for every pound of cotton which is de- stroyed in this fashion. The cotton farther improvement in the situation on the way to victory. It was also tion and on the increased demands of the war industries, and that fur- ther, this increase is taking place how. anti-socialist was the criticism of the Party policy indulged in by Trotzkyism. These results show how at the expénse of the weaker capital- ist countries. In the United States harvest over an area of ten million areas is to be destroyed by being! we can already witness the new con- vulsions of the crisis on this basis, poverty-stricken, how anti-proletarian, how anti-socialist, how opportunist was the criticism of the “Right Wing” greater capacity for action and man- euvring in new struggles for new victories on the path to socialism. init for Struggle Against War | Peed an appeal yesterday for vol- iuteer help to address notices of the The balance of this first half-year of the second Five-Year Plan is very opportunists, ‘The results of the first favorable to socialism in the struggle between capitalism and socialism. change in the date of the U. 8. Con- gress Against War. They are asked me to 104 Fifth Avenue, d A

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