The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 2, 1933, Page 8

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Ries * ing Class Daiby FOUNDED 1924 Comaperodssiity Pafbtitebsitny a ae 3 Mb an: ay : (azeops Manksttan and Srozx), ¥ year, once Geronths, 98.50; 8 months, $2.00; } month, 78 cents. Mswhstte=, SBromz, Foreign snd Can L your, 90.60; € months, $5.00; § months $3.00. By Carrier: Weekly, 18 cents; monthly, 7S cents. TURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1938 ss We Cannot Fail Our Heroic German Comrades ING the bidding of fascist brute, Hitler, tory of modern Ge yard as = fascist heroic German w ef the fascist bu ‘Ten more have way. From Antwerp e Murder in Berlin of a Com @ burning coal down h “*The streets of Germa tHe tramp of fa: of the German wor and even children of the revo’ tng class, for mass round-ups for tation camps, where many a Ger hero meets his death at the hands of the Nazi savages. * All this renewed fascist savagery in preparation %er the coming verdict in the Leipzig Reichstag frame- Wp trial of the four heroic Communists. It is preparation for the execution of Dimitrofy, ‘Torgler, Popoff and Tanev, that the fascist rulers are Wow letting loose their bloody hangmen. Every lie every perjury, every flimsy shred of this notorious frame-up has been torn to pieces by the glorious and unconquerable fight of Dimitroff and the other defendants against his fascist accusers. So completely has Dimiliroff shattered the frame. up’ testimony, that even his fascist accusers no longer Gare assert his guilt in the Reichstag fire. Now they plot his execution on the grounds of “political guilt.” The sadist and pervert, Goering, openly lusts for the blood of Dimitroff, who ripped the mask from his. face and exposed the fascist degenerate under- Death. Goering howls for Dimitroff’s head. Goering gloats at the prospect of getting Dimitroff and his tomrades into the hands of his torturers! Can we forget for one moment that the leader of the German working class, Comrade Thaelmann 1s tow in the dungeons of the fascist beasts? forget that he is in the hands of the fascist torturers? HY® we expressed sufficiently our solidarity with 4 these international proletarian heroes? Have we } of General Motors, ‘DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1933 7, are having s fight over division of patronage and office holding. Smith ¢ the impression that he Js the leader novement against Roosevelt. But both of Wall Street. Both agree on all funda- ee on forcing the workers to bear all in the economic crisis—both are ers from carrying the cost of ’s godfather, Raskob, is @ Morgan man, head Smit immediate boss, the Em- pire State Corporation, are Rockefeller interests, Roose- It is tied to ths same crowd. Both are obedient ser- vants to Wall Street. * e (MITH, underneath his catch words and wer ries, indorses the same program as Roosevelt. “Delay and red tape,” he says, “are holding back and bede- ing the real public works program.” When thieves fall out a glimmer of the truth is revealed. Smith emphasizes some of the glaring surface ills of the Roosevelt government—the gigantis bureauctatic ma- chine of innumerable offices and departments and off- lals, the red tape and delay in carrying through the program. But with the program itself he has no quarrel. This is made clear in the article of I. Am-~- ter in this issue of the Daily Worker. The Unemployed Councils demand public works of a kind which Smith and Roosevelt speak of but do not try to put into effect. The unemployed work- ers "di a public works not for war preparations, ot for ai 1g the large corporations to buy materials, ut works which will benefit the workers—hospitals, nools, living quarters, playgrounds, for the free use of the workers. t e ee Vee unemployed and part time workers cannot rely on Wall Street demagogs to represent them. The | use of all war funds for the unemployed, the tax on je h, for the purposes of securing funds for un- n ent insurance and adequate relief at the ex- pense of the bosses and the government—this is the only program which will benefit the starving unem- ployed. The workers themselves must carry through this program, To this end, the national unemployed convention in Washington, D. C., on January 13, 14 and 15 must be made ¢ living rallying point in the struggle for the demands of the unemployed workers. Work in the A. F. of L. Bears Fruit INMISTAKABLE evidence of a seething revolt among the members of the A. F. of L. against ithe policies of the corrupt, boss-controlled officialdom is being reported daily. Even where there is no or- ganized group within the unions to direct the move. ment, spontaneous outbursts of resentment have oc- | curred which have taken the form of mass opposition | to the bureaucracy. The hatred of the A. F. of L. workers is directed | especially against the ruthless treatment of the unem- Can we | ‘really given of our full strength for the support of | immorial revolutionars fighters? Gan let the Maniacal threats of Goering against our Comrade Dimitrof go unanswered? The German working class fa torture and brutality of the fasci We here flinch in our profound international solidarity with our heroic German brothers? Renewed action and vigilance for we unflinchingly the ¢ blood hounds! Can the Reichstag defendants! Meetings, demonstrations, protests ev Where! In every factory, union 4 hood, household, the working class of America must take renewed ants must not fall un To the defense of Dimi Tanev! Save mann! ets of the Germ When Thieves Fall Ont German defend- fascist butchers! gler, Popoff, and y with our broth- ve that the heroic 1a) LFRED =. SMITH, in the pithy phrasing of his ®-“attack” of yesterday on the Civil Works program @f-President Roosevelt, seeks to give the impression ig & crusade against the unemployment But that he is leadi Platform of Ro evelt. beneath the demagogic that Smith and position regarding ion and denial of lly the decree Unemployment relief and ins} ;Roosevelt is opposed to gra Sugance to the work velt says it is “mentally bad” for the unemployed. Smith also, is opposed to ‘ Upemployment insurance. Smith says that government f causes men to “loaf,” and discourages “private initiative.” g unemployment in- ployed who are being expelled in union after union for inability to pay dues, against the brazen and in- solent theft of union funds and property, of workers’ wages and other forms of racketeering coupled with terrorism and murder practiced against the member- ship by the offictaldom. So great has this revolt become that William Green has been compelled to circulate a letter to the unions through the officials guilty of these acts to take steps to stop racketeering in the unions, although Green’s support rests on this rotten foundation. Furthermore every report of the existence of racketeering, submitted | by delegates at the last convention, damning evidence branding the whole corrupt machine, has been ex- punged from the official records of the A. F. of L. convention. That organized struggle of the rank and file around these burning issues, led by the A. F. of L. Committee for Unemployment Insurance and Relief, is beginning to bear fruit is seen in recent successful actions of the workers in the A. F. of L, unions. ae Mae ee A ORGANIZED renk and file movement in gangster- ridden Local 3 of the Electrical Workers succeeded in defeating the attempt of the officials to liquidate the unemployment fund of the union. At the same time the rank and file overwhelmingly voted down. a proposal to mortgage union property to the extent of $70,000. The rank and file defeated the proposals, | although every militant member was in danger of loss of life or injury by the gangster henchmen of the officials and at least one rank and file leader had been murdered and countless others beaten. For the first time this week, workers in 17 Carpen- ters’ locals in New York City demonstrated their in- tention of wiping out the Hutchinson Hansen gang, which has preyed on the membership for. years, and has perpetuated itself in office by strong-arm methods. Similarly the web pressmen in New York’s biggest | newspaper plants are organizing to deal a death blow Roosevelt's Public and Civil Works program has | i Many millions of dollars for war preparations— f the army, the navy, forts, coast defense, etc. This ig one of the essential features of the Public and Civil ‘ks program. Smith in his bombast regarding pub- works, makes not a single objection to funds going to war preparations—Smith is in favor of it. Smith @nd Roosevelt are agreed on forced labor for the job- Yes at non-union conditions. _— , Smith's statement, printed in the New Outlook, a the failure of the government’s Public Works “Program, admits that it has failed to decrease on- employment. But Smith ss well as Roosevelt agrees to a “real” public works program, which gives money te bankers and industrialists, and goes for war prep- for equipment, and material and loans, and hi oe salaries, and does not reduce unem- “Smith. and Roovereit, members of the same ruling to the machine of George L. Berry, member of the National Labor Board and notorious strikebreaker. The painters of New York have succeeded in win- ning the membership of four locals in the union, to stop a weekly tribute of $2.50 to the Zausner treasury, which goes towards supporting gangsters to continue his rule. All of these examples point to the importance of action directed by an organized rank and file meme bership in each local union. The A. F. of L. officialdom is not concerned with racketeering alone. It has harnessed the membership to the bosses and hag turned the unfons into instru- | ments for wage cutting and for the complete destruc- tion of union standards won after years of struggle. It joins with the bosses in the obpectsve of annihilat- ing the militant industrial unions. A strong rank and file movement in every local, united through an opposition center and with a com. mon program will succeed in smashing the control and domination of the official machine and instead establish rank and file leadership and trade union democracy. It will help the unions to become weapons ior winning improved conditions on the job: and for warding off the onslaughts of the bosses union standards, . ema a Soviet Worker lent and the grip began to run Soviet Youth Tells of Struggles to Master. Technique | Correspond: ESSA, USSR—Walking about port I came across s huge structure. It was black, all with coal dust, with bold letters painted om the board, ." So this was the pride of the port's Komsomols (as members the -Young Communist League motorman, ‘Shoura Afanasyev, was the secretary. Inm-intervals between work he told me: “Titan’s” story. _ For two years the proud English ire had stayed in the Lenin- port. Far in the sky it stretched meter long tower, which from away looked like iron lace. No~ ty understood the proud foreigner. five bold white letters “T-i-t- on his board spoke about some- strange, incomprehensible. At “Titan” was brought over to Life seemed to be poured his veins. Winches started to driven by jolly singing motors alongthe rope from the. jub. to the bunker. Black gold began to pour from “Titan’s” silent tube. Coal from the Donetz Basin, from Krivoy Rog. What happened? Stalin, or- : “You have to master tech- nique.” But how to master’ it? ‘The foreign guest came without: schemes, or a technical passport. But, “There are no fortresses that cannot be taken by Bolsheviks.” ‘This fort- ress was taken, too. It was not an easy struggle. But old ‘workers to- gether with Komsomols, set out to taster the machine. Now everything is cleaned up. “Titan” obeys orders now. Four tons of coal he takes with his giant hand, and carries it through the blue air to the dusty coal bunker. From there the black diamonds are carried by transporters and poured through a big pipe into the bunkers of barges and ships eagerly awaiting their share. The time is recalled when only ope f busily | “Titen”"—Kolya who ‘together with the chief-of the coal, district, Dobrovolsky, the old mechanic, Konovalov, and e! Kochiov, poured life blood into “Ti- tan’s” dead body. Shoura sat days and nights study- ing the design of- the complicated machine. The old shock worker now chief of mechanisms — Flaksienko — gave all his knowledge -to the. Kom- somols, “helping them -to. master the machine. He -received a silver watch as a gift from the Komsomols. “Titan is in our hands. He is tak- en fortress .now,” concludes Shoura Afanasyev. proudly. ae . 3. | ye 9 THE KNIGHT IN WHITE ARMOR SPAR VARA Helping the Daily Worker through bidding for the | original drawings of Burck’s cartoons: Unit 2, Section 1, Young Communist League, New | York, wins Thursday's drawing with a bid of $3.05. | Mrs. Koke Euhe wins yesterday's drawing with a bid | of $6. Other bids, Leon Elder, $3. | —By Burck | | | | | } | } i Tetal to date, $351.29, Milwaukee S. P. ‘Leaders Ban County Youth Group Growing Ferment of | League in Milwaukee, and to suspend ment in its ranks, The ostensible reason given out by the national office of the YPSL is “lack of activity.” The actual reason, of course, is an entirely different one, and is closely con- nected up with the recent Anti- Fascist demonstration against Hans Luther in Milwaukee. The socialisi adiministration of Milwaukee was hospitable to the/| Fascist Luther, and protected him from the wrath of the Milwaukee workers by smashing their Anti- Fascist demonstration, and arresting scores of militant workers. While | the Socialist Party pretended that it | did not wish prosecute them, nevertheless the workers received heavy jail sentences. Resentment ran high amongst the rank-and-file socialists and Yipsets, Dissolve Central Committee of YPSL, Fearing’ Youth Rank and File | By 8. LARKS \ MILWAUKEE, Wis.—A further step in the Socialist Party leadership's | | campaign to crush out all militant opposition is seen in their recent decision ister, yesterday agreed to add an | to dissolve the county central committee of the Young Peoples Socialist |®dditional 89,000,000 yen ($27,590,000 all circle charters. This action, taken | in one of the strongholds of the Socialist Party, is indicative of the Socialist jeads | Party’s fear of the growing fer- « as-@ result of which a motion was introduced in. the YPSL county cen- tral committee, “That the YPSL co- operate with the ILD in def-nse of | the Anti-Fascist prisoners.” After | a stormy debate for over two hours, this motion was defeated by only 14*to 13. Nevertheless, many rank- and-file Yipsels aided the ILD in mass protest against the. frame-ups perpetrated by the Socialist Party. | The “socialist administration of the city, placed in a dangerous light | by this, revolt in its own ranks| against its Fascist. policy, at. once | determined to head off this resent- | ment and sentiment for unity with the ILD by smashing the whole YP-| SL organization. ‘The dissolution of | the central committee and circle | charters are the first steps in this direction, | yen. Tokyo Cabinet Faces | Crisis on Military Demands, FarmUnrest TOKIO, Dec. 1—The Japanese Cabinet, meeting today for a final tussle with the budget, is faced with a crisis as a result of a sharp drop in the price of raw silk, increasing the unrest among the impoverished farmers, and the government's. in- ability to meet the demands of Navy and Army heads Viscount Takahashi, Finance Min- at the current rate) to-the Treas- ury’s draft budget, but the Navy are demanding 130,000,000 Faced with widespread discontent among the farmers, often finding expression in armed clashes with the. landlords. and the police, the Agriculture Department is asking an increase in the appropriation for farm relief this winter. Mexican Farmers Demand Relief; Troops Kill 11 MEXICO CITY, Dec. 1—Eleven were killed and a number wounded in a battle between government troops and farmers near Yurecuaro, in Michoacan State, yesterday. Impoverished farmers, demanding relief, have clashed with troops in |battle in the Gran» Chaco as the| | U. S..delegation to the Pan-Amer- | cementing “peace” and “good-will” | ut the |gest factories is growing steadily, re-» Increased Nazi Terrorismt|* NAZIS UNLEASH NEW MASS EXECUTIONS | | | } to Pave Way for Reichstag | Trial Frame-Up Verdict Workers in Big Factories Distribute Leaflets Protesting Comrades’ Workers Released Arrest; BERLIN, Dec. 1.--Faced with the growing resistance of the Germaa workers to fascism, and unable to solve the crisis which grows worse all the time, the Hitler fascist government is launching 2 new wave of terrorism against the German workers. The execution yesterday of six German revolutionary workers by behead~} Clash Threatens ‘at Pan-American Meet | Over Debts. Bolivian Socialists Join New War Ministry BULLETIN LA PAZ, Dec, 1—The Bolivian Socialist Party continued its open support of the Chaco war, with the acceptance today by Senor Juan Manuel Sainz, Socialist leader, of the position of Minister of Instruc- tion in the new “National Union” Cabinet formed to prosecute the war against Paraguay. All political parties are represented in the Cab- inet, with the exception of the Communists who are the only ones leading the growing mass resistance _ to the war. i o 8 MONTEVIDEO, Dec. 1.—The crim- inal results of Anglo-American in- trigues for control of South American markets and resources Were written in| blood and iron yesterday in a fierce} ican Conference, Headed by Secretary | of State Hull, arranged the stage for! the opening of the conference, called under the hypocritical slogans of} throughout the two Americas. Bolivian and Paraguayan troops fighting the battles of the rival Am- erican and British imperialists were hurled into an inferno of cannon and machine gun fire in the Fort Arce sector as their commanders took ad- vantage of a torrential rain to launch @ sudden surprise attack. Both sides suffered heavy losses in dead and wounded. In privates. discussions yesterday between ‘members of -the-South Am- erican delegations and Secretary of State Hull, the former expressed sharp resistance to Roosevelt’s ban on the inclusion of the debts question on the agenda of the conference. They demanded a downward revision of the debts owed by Mexico and South American governments to Am- erican financiers on the basis of the diminished capacity of the govern- ments to pay. Secretary Hull op- posed discussion or any decisive ac- tion on the debts by the conference on the pretext that the obligation is in private hands, although the Wall Street government does not hesitate to send warships to enforce col- lections, < The Mexican delegation issued an appeal for a truce in the Gran Chaco war during the Conference, and intimated that the two year war puts. to shame the “peace” and “good will” pretensions, of the conference. eo ee «@ NEW YORK.—William W. White, Paraguay’s Consul General in New York yesterday charged U. S. finan- ciers with financing Bolivia’s war.on Paraguay by le-ns to the former country. In sup #: of his charge, he pointed to the revelations made be- fore the Senate Investigating Com~- mittee that Dillon, Read & Co had floated Bolivian loans in this country several Mexican’ states since the opening of hostilities. |“swallowing a glow @ing, the sentencing of ten more te {the same fate, and the renewed mass |roundup of all workers suspected of janti-Fascist sentiments are only the | beginning of a new fascist terror | drive. A young girl of 19 was sentenced the other day to nine months’ im- prisonment in a concentration camp for describing in a letter to a friend the actual conditions in her neigh- | borhood. | The High Court of Stuttgart has |just sentenced the former Commu- nist Town Councillor, Friedrich Wan- j}del, to four and one-half years im- |prisonment, and four other workers of the same place to long sentences jfor taking part in what the Nazis jcail the “Mossinger Insurrection,” a | working class demonstration against | fascism in January, 1933. i Te Murder Seamen Organizers ANTWERP, Dec. 1—Uneble to force any confession from him, the Nazis at Berlin murdered Hermann |Renker, Communist organizer among |the seamen who was brutally mur- |dered by having a fiery coal forced | down his throat, it was learned here. The Nazis have spread a rumor that Renker committed suicide by ving coal.” The three other functionaries who were arrested with him have not been heard from, and it is very likely they too will be murdered. All these organizers of the Union of Seamen and Dockers were arrested by the Nazis while smuggling Com- munist papers into Germany. Workers Win in Factory BERLIN, Dec. 1—The organized resistance of the workers in the big-, ports reveal. A leaflet analyying the economic and political situation and protest- ing against the working conditions in the factory of Butzke and Joseph Co. of Berlin was recently distributed. Several of the workers were threat ened with imprisonment in the cone centration camps. The next day, however, another ‘eaflet appeared. Three workers at- rested. The very next day the entire factory was painted with revolu- tionary slogans, and slogans demand- ing the release of the a ers. Leaflets began to appear in all parts of the factory. So great was the indignation of the workers, that the three a workers were finally released. Soon a leaflet ap- peared celebrating the victory, and, explaining how to go ahead to further? successes. Sponsor Victims of Nazis in Thuringia PhiladelphiaMass Meet Votes Support ; PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 1.—Spon- sorship) by the Communist Party and the Young Communist League over Thuringia, a textile center in the central part of Germany, was unanimously adopted at a mass meeting here. Philadelphia, like ‘Thuringia, is likewise a textile center. A collection was taken up to aid the 13,500 victims of German Fas- cism in that area who are imprisoned in concentration camps, Workers’ “This Is a Meeting of the Best of Our Friends,” Says Kalinin! By VERN SMITH (Special Correspondent of the Daily Worker) MOSCOW, U.S.S.R., Nov. 12 (By Mail).—“In what other country in the world would the president of 165,~ 000,000 people come down to meet a crowd of foreign workers, ordinary workers?” said one American delegate to another in the Hall of Columns, Moscow, last night. The occasion was the annual meeting of the Society of Old Bolsheviks, with the visiting workers’ delegations from 18 coun- tries as honored guests. “It is with great happiness that every proletarian, every peasant here meets the foreign workers’ delega- tions,” said Kalinin, speaking from a tribune on which sat a presidium made up of such leaders of the So- viet workers as Yaroslavsky and Lo- sovsky. Yaroslavsky Is chairman of the Old Bolsheviks, and also secretary of the Central Control Commission of the Communist Party. And Losovsky is secretary of the International of Labor Unions. And, right on the same presidium sat a representative from each workers’ delegation—Jones of the Marine Workers Industrial }Onion representing America. “Our Best Friends” “We understand very well,” said Kalinin, “that this is a meeting of the best of our friends, of those who fight and are compelled to fight for ‘}the protection of. the Soviet Union, because its interests are the inter- ests of the workers the world over, “Every year the situation becomes Delegations From 18 Countries Hear Kalinin en the dictatorship of the proletariat and with its strengthening is also strengthened the material position and the cultural growth of the work- ing class and peasantry. This also is becoming clear to the outside world. “There too it is. beginning to be understood that the only leader. of the proletariat is the Communist Party. You see this particularly where the workers’ struggle takes on sharpest forms, where it is necessary to say, ‘either fight or get out of the way for those who will fight.’ And those who want to fight have no other possibility to really fight but under the banner of the Communist Party. This is getting clearer now, and not only in our country, for the working class is educated only in struggle. Role of Coramunist Party “Once the working class of the West was our teacher. But history does not develop on straight lines, and some-| times teachers become pupils, and pupils become teachers. Now we do not doubt that the working class of the whole world will learn from our experiences.” Kalinin then repeated the invita- tion given by all who have spoken to the foreign workers’ delegations, to travel freely about the vast extent of the Soviet Union, to see and to report back to those who sent them what they see. Representatives of the foreign workers spoke pledging to make honest and unbiased investiga- tion, and expressing much satisfaction with what they had seen so far. Kalinin’s speech came at a high point in a long program signalized by the welcoming address of one after another of the Old Bolsheviks, the heroic fighters who struggled through \by the Communist Party, and “that. Greets Delegates | MIKHAIL KALININ daily, and demonstrated that the workers can overthrow capitalism. ‘Yaroslavsky particularly roused en- thusiasm of the foreign delegates with his dramatic recital of the liftingof, the banner of revolution 16 years ago banner has never fallen from our hands since, but instead we have carried it from victory to victory,” he declared. “We were weak at first, and there were others claiming to be the real workers’ party, but -we alone of all others never fell under the spell of chauvinism,” said “Yaro- slavsky. “We thought with Lenin, ‘Better to be with one Liebknecht than with thousands of Scheidemanns,’ he said, turning to Pieck, of the Ger- man Communist Party Central Com- mittee, who sat at the table back of Jong years of Czarist terror, suffered olearer. Every year here we strength- ’ in prisons and exile, risked their lives nim. ‘| way led to’ the October -rcvolution, between the two roads, one proposed by Social Democrats and only by the Communists: The Socialists said that there. could be no talk of violent revo- lution, that socialism could be at~ tained by peaceful elections, by par- ticipatiig in the cabinets of bourgeois governments. And the Socialists in Germany and England and elsewhere did place their ministers in office, where they all carried out the pro- gram of the bourgeoisie. In Germany they helped the fascists to take power by suppressing the movement. of the On the other hand, the Communist then defeated ‘the: ‘prophesies: of all Social Democrats by rallying millions for the rebuilding, of the. country and. the building of Socialism. Defending the Workets’\Fatherland © “Old Russia. was.a country of mil: lions of smal’ impoverished -hou: holds,” said Yaroslavsky, “Every ten. years or so it was scourged by famine, and whole districts died out.. It. had a backward manufacturing technique. It the many national min- orities; in fact it. was calied ‘The Pris- on House’ of Peoples.’ “But. now under the leadership of the Communist Party, our workers and peasants have made it a foremost industrial country. See our new fac- tories built under Soviet power. Eighty-four per cent of the’ tilled ground is now in the Socialist sector of agriculture. This year 45 per cent of the land was tilled by tractors. Only a few years ago We Weté com~ pelled to import all our machinery, now we can make any machine, how- ever complicated. (Great applause). “This. construction assures the de- fense~ of our country,” Yaroslavsky continued. “We knew and we know Yaroslavsky, Old Bol- shevik Tells of Role of Communist Party of the crisis by war. We would be betrayers of the working class if we did not assure the socialist father= land with the means of defense. “Workers and working women, we call on you. You saw on the Red Square on Nov. 7, the 16th anni- versary.of the Bolshevik Revolution, a part of. our Red Army. We ai) proud to be able to create the fir } army in the world of the proletari¢ ‘revolution. ‘Tell those who sent you about the only country in the world | where the. soldier is the aon of the toiling people and educated to de- fend the interests of ?1e world pro- letariat.- We tell you ted Army men that the French, the Polish, the Ger- man‘and all other workers and peas- atits are not theiz enemies but their class brothers tnd. whom ‘the Red Army men should defend with arms in hands and if necessary give his life for them, . “Wed not calt on you for solemn promises or loud declarations, We Old- Bolsheviks. are. businoss-like peo- 'ple, but when war comes, we look to you to defend the Interests of the workers’ fatherland. Our man, hope is for the World Union of So- cialist Soyict Republics. Throughout the. world the day will yet°come when, the red flag will fly over Commune.” ~ and foreign workers’ delegates, fre- ternizing and singing congs together until 2 a, m., after a meeting that ‘Yarosiavsky then drew a pafallel ‘that capitalism “looks for a way out started at 6 p. m, the day before. | the World

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