The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 16, 1934, Page 6

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¢ Page Six Daily QWorker | PANTRAL ORGAN COMMUNIST PARTY LSA (SECTION OF COMMUNIST UTTAREATIONALS, “America’s Only Working Class Daily Newspaper” FOUNDED 1924 EXCEPT SUNDAY, BY THE PUBLISHED DAILY, COMPRODAILY PUBLISHING CO., INC., 50 E. 15th Street, New York, N. ¥. Telephone Algonquin 4-7954. “Fair” Profiteering T IS no longer denied even by the Roose- velt government that the struggle of every worker’s family to get food will be- come desperate in the coming weeks and months. Food prices are rising rapidly every- where. And the “peak is still some distance away,” grim- ly reports the United Press, It’s the fault of the drought, says Wallace, pre- paring the masses for an “inevitable” rise of “at | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, A Grain Pours! From USSR Collectives Odessa Deliverics Rise 300 Per Cent Above Last Year’s Record JGUST 16, 1934 * “WHAT’LL YOU HAVE, LADY?” By Burck On the World Front ji_--By HARRY GANNE: |N. Y. Times and Soviet Crop Hitler’s Election Tactics British Imperialism and War ET that paragon of truth, Hitler, spread the most vicious lies about starvation terete hexceps. Mar B 1 year, 36.00; | least 7 per oe ry. 3 MOSCOW, Aug. 15—Reports from in the Soviet Union, and the 6 months, $3.50; 3 » 0.78 cents. But is it? If Wallace and Roosevelt had not | the Odessa grain region, one of the New York Times plasters it Manhattan, Bron ada: 1 year, $9.00; | destroyed more than 30 per cent of the country’s largest in the Soviet Union, indicate t (uk wake See ea hy, Te obit wheat and corn crop last year would there now be | that current grain deliveries, de- on the front page. But when AUGUST 16, 1934 Fight For Unemployment Insurance Grows ITHIN the last week two national con- ventions of national unions affiliated to the American Federation of Labor have endorsed the Workers Unemployment In- a food shortage? And why is the price rise “inevitable” even now? Could not the government, if it wished to, fix an iron limit to all food prices no matter what this did to the profits of the food monopolies? Suppose the government were to lay down the order that there must not be one cent of price rise in any food necessity, no matter what the conditions? Who would be hurt? The profiteers—Wall Street. Who would benefit? The masses. But that is just what Roosevelt will not do. Be- ing a Wall Street agent, he would rather leave the workers and their children to the rigors of food shortage than reduce one penny of the monopoly spite all the difficulties of the drought, are now coming in at a rate 300 per cent above last year’s record high. The collective farms are sending @ veritable torrent of grains to the elevators and the greatest joy reigns among the whole city as well as farming population who together are celebrating the victory of the Soviets over the menace of crop destruction by drought. Already more than 33,500,000 more acres have been harvested than during the same period last year, as a result of the untiring ef- these lies are refuted by the Times’ own, well-paid Moscow cor- respondent, the story is published on page 15. There is a special technique bee ing developed in the famine stories on the Soviet Union. With famine threatening in every capitalist coun- try of the world, due to the crisis and the drought (and especially in (Fascist Germany), the old style | are too crude to pass. Hence, the “news” story is developed, wherein an imaginary case is built up for fairy stories about the Soviet Union / old valve-handle wheeze type of | surance Bill, introduced in the last session food profits. To Roosevelt it seems perfectly natural | forts of the government to provide some columns, and then at the very | ATS 4 ay as H.R. 7598 and just that if the capitalists have the food in | the farms with every available re- end, there is a P. S—“it isn’t true!” of Congress and known then as H.R. 7598. | theie hands that they should charge higher prices |source to fight the drought, from canoe. at Yesterday. the delegates of the United Textile Workers Union, meeting in New York, over- | for it. That is why Wallace has announced the cynical | special funds for new machinery and irrigation projects to the rec- ord-breaking building of dams and Kh Times story spreading Hit- ler's lies uses this method. Quite whel voted their support of the ill; last | policy of allegedly fighting only against, “unfair | rd-breaking building. lp ree a Sa gr week the convention of the International Mine, profits” in food hoarding by the companies. sl | press “asserts Ukraine is gripped by M and Smelter Workers Union registered its Food gouging will now go forward with merciless | endorsement. Two other national unions have endorsed the bill, the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Tin and Steel Workers and the American Federation of Full-Fashioned Hosiery Workers. The endorsement of the bill, in some cases over the opposition of old-line A. F. of L. leaders, shows the tremendous mass desire for unemployment in- surance among the workers and the pressure these | workers are exercising. The latest endorsement should be a stimulus to workers all over the country to organize further local actions of all kinds to compel Congress to pass the bill in its next Session. To the many honest rank and filers who will attend state con- greed and the Roosevelt government will fight it by “printing fair price lists’! Much that will bother the capitalist profiteers! It is now time that the city workers and the impoverished farmers get together for their own interests. Fight for the Farmers Emergency Relief Bill and for the Unemployment Insurance Bill, H.R. 7598, providing for cash relief, for protection against hunger and evictions, for the cancellation of all mortgage debts, and for government aid to all drought-stricken farmers. Warships and Drought Hold Meet For Rakosi In Barracks BUDAPEST, Aug. 15—With the greatest heroism, a group of work- ers organized a mass demonstra- tion for the release of Matthias Rakosi, imprisoned Communist leader, right in the courtyard of the barracks at 67 Praterstrat. The doors were guarded against acute famine while Moscow bars aid.’ The average reader, the Times editors know, gets about this far and leaves with the impression that there must be sometihng to it. Buried down below is the only qual- jified .evidence, but not one in a hundred of the Times readers ever gets down far enough in a story deliberately concocted to spread fables about famine in the U.S.ER, This reads: “Better harvést seen. “Indications are that this years crop will be better than in 1933, a Soviet official here asserted. “Professor H. J. Muiler of the University of Texas passed through Berlin today after an ex- | police, and the workers streamed |into the courtyard under the noses ‘of the military, who were taken by ventions of the A. F. of L., the action of the U.T.W. convention will be a help in their struggle to get tensive trip last month through MRE Navy, pride of Roosevelt, opens bids the Ukraine and the North Cau- Red Unions Are First complementary election to the min- | ers’ fund committee was held at the _ St. Michel mimes in Decazeville, Ou: | Of 288 voters, 145 voted for the Red | elected, with the exception of one, - ‘who lacked one single voie. factory council in the Pollack tex- the various meetings to endorse the bill. | surprise. seen any evidence of acute famine \ ; : 5 | surp! , ; At the national convention of the Aimerican cruisers, and six submarines. Two speeches were quickly deliv- seeens such as are reported in d 5 : a it; ‘ . i Ms 3 A e German press. Federation of Labor in San Francisco in October, This is an addition to the forty-five ne Picton eran cule ae By NEMO workers of Europe and America, in alliance with He ray ee er ean the endorsements of these national unions will be ships already in construction. the time. the police aetend ° (Continued) the colonial slaves of Asia, Africa and Australia, | also hit the Ukraine and other an aid in the fight to get that body to endorse The total Roosevelt budget for war | Rakosi, who has just finished en are aware of the path which leads out of fascis | sections of Russia, the outiook the bill, particularly if the militant elements in aii : eight and a half year sentence at XI. The Path. barbarism, capitalist exploitation and imperialist | favored a better crop than that of these unions fight also to send real fighters for the ‘Workers’ Bill as delegates. Thaelmann Against Hitler IHAELMANN against Hitler for Presi- dent of Germany. There is not a class-conscious worker whose blood will not leap in pride and ad- miration at the dauntless revolutionary heroism of our German Communist Party, which steps before the bayonets of the Storm Troopers and flings high its unsullied ban- ner of Marxism-Leninism, the banner of prole- tarian revolution! ‘Now even the fascist scan not dare to deny that Now even the fascists can not dare to deny that | tion of Germany from the yoke of fascism. The placing of Thaelmann at the head of the | German people is not only a tremendously. heroic act. It is above all a profoundly revolutionary poli- tical act For Thaelmann, the leader of the German Com- munist Party, represents the only program that can Save Germany from catastrophe, that can save the vast majority of the German people from ruin and starvation. The Communist Party alone can stop the head- Jong plunge to imperialist war toward which the Fascist cliques are leadnig the German people. . . . 5 Gam campaign for Thaelmann is the proclama- tion of the Communist Party of Germany that the question of the revolutionary way out of the crisis, the question of Soviet: Power, is now actually @ life and death question for the great majority of the German people, who feel the iron teeth of finance capital. The revolutionary crisis in Germany is maturing with extraordinary speed. And thus the fight for Thaelmann, for his re- lease from the hands of the Nazi torturers, is now, in the words of Dimitroff, truly a question of the honor of the world proletariat. All aid to our heroic class brothers in Germany! Let us add to their blows our own by demonstrating before the Fascist Consulates in the cities in this country! Flood the German Embassy at Washing- ton with telegrams and letters demanding Thael- mann’s release! Let the Fascists know that the working class of Germany is not alone in its fight! 0" tremendous meaning and inspiration is the news that thousands of Socialist workers are united with their Communist class brothers in bring- ing the name of Thaelmann to the German People. This means that in the very fires of class strug- gle is the unity of the working class being welded; that the dross of Social-Democracy is being wiped away in the heat of struggle. | The Socialist workers of Germany have paid bit- | terly for their leadership, that leadership which Plumbed infamy by choosing Hindenburg, the tool of Fascism, in preference to Thaelmann, son of the today for fourteen destroyers, four preparations in the last twelve months ap- proaches the $2,000,000,000 mark. Roosevelt talks of peace and “defense.” But he means business. Acting as the loyal tool of the Wall Street imperialists, he is getting ready to. defend J. P. Morgan’s investments in China, South America, and throughout the world. Think of what these billions would mean to the Jobless, to the drought-stricken farmers! Roosevelt will no doubt hurl the workers and farmers into an imperialist slaughter on the ground that they must “defend their country.” But meanwhile all his economic, measures are robbing the impoverished farmers and the proper- tyless workers of every shred of real ownership in the resources of the country. How can the toilers defend “their” country when nothing in the coun- try is really theirs, but belongs to the capitalist class? It will be one of the leading planks at the Second Congress Against War to be held in Chicago on September 28 that all war funds be turned over for the use of the jobléss and impoverished farmers. This must become a living demand in the coun- tryside, where the Roosevelt government is letting millions of drought-stricken families sink into pauperism and misery. Irish Farmers Revolt YOUNG farmer was shot to death and forty-two others were seriously wounded when more than 5,000 Irish farm- ers marched to Cork on Monday in pro- test against the sale of cattle which had been confiscated by the government be- cause they were unable to pay taxes. This undoubtedly is an accurate gauge of the temper—the rising rebellion and discontent— of the Irish peasantry, which Sean Murray, Irish Communist leader, described so well on his recent visit to the United States. Not only were the police called out to smash the farmers’ demonstration, but also the armed forces of the state. Soldiers wearing helmets and armed with bayonets are still patrolling the streets of Cork if fear of the smouldering unrest of the impoverished and militant peasants, This incident, coupled with other similar ones in other countries of Europe and with the plight of the large farm population of the United States, clearly indicates the rising tide of battle of the op- pressed masses throughout the world. The demonstration in Cork, Ireland, on Monday, is but one additional incident in a constantly-grow- ing series of battles against the ruling class of all lands, Join the Communist Party % EAST 12TH STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y. Please send me more inform1':~ hard labor for his leadership in the Hungarian Communist Party, now faces more charges and indictments which are intended by the Fascist Horthy government to kill’ him in jail. He has not been released, de- spife the fact that his term has expired. Rakosi, a brave and devoted Communist, faces death from tuber- culosis which the prison rigors are rapidly developing into a fatal af- fiction for him. Protests alone from the workers of the world, demonstrations be- fore Hungarian consulates, can save him, N azi Exports Drop Sharply In Six Months BERLIN, Aug. 15.—The growth of he economic crisis under the poli- cies of the Nazis is revealed by the startling drop in foreign trade which has caused a drop of more than $200,000,000 in trade in the last six months. The exports to the United States | alone dropped by more than 25 per cent in this period. This strangling of the economic life of the country by the Nazis is | steadily bringing the greatest poy- erty to the masses. A food shortage 1s implicitly ad- mitted by the Fascists in their \latest attempt to prevent imminent food struggles by abolishing the high tariffs on all incoming grains. The drought and the Nazi policies have brought the food supply to a low level. The intense poverty of the Ger- man masses is indicated by the latest order forbidding coal to be sold in paper bags, indicating that up to now coal has been sold to the workers in such small quantities that it could be carried in paper bags. Now even the paper bags are being conserved as the crisis and war preparations are dwindling the supply of goods for consumption, Unity in Spain Hits New Snag, But Talks Wil Be Continued MADRID, Aug. 15—The second consultation between the represen- tatives of the Young Communist and Young Socialist Leagues of Spain, for the purpose of organizing unity of action, has failed to lead to any definite result. The representatives of the Young From the First World War to the Second new world war is threatened. The imperialists needed the war as excellent business, and they need it today also for the same reason, Territory and colonies, markets and sources of raw material, exploitation and oppression of foreign peoples, war and mass murder—what toiler requires these things? For whose sake is he again to sacrifice his blood? What interest has the worker, the peasant, the em- ployee, the small official and small trader, the soldier and sailor, in this business of exploitation, when they are themselves exploited in their own country? What toiler can believe, after the ex- periences of the last two decades, that a better lot awaits him through imperialist war and imperialist peace? Who is there who still does not see that war is only excellent business for the possessing class, whlie the toiling people have to pay the ac- count? Listen how the capitalist hyenas are al- ready again scenting their prey, read with open eyes what the Deutsche Bergwerkszeitung wrote on the outbreak of the war events in the Far East (February 4, 1982): “The stock exchanges of the world encounter the events in the Far East not only with astonish- ing calm, but even in some cases with a kind of joyful hope which seems only to grow with the in- crease of the complications over Shanghai.” When men were falling by tens of thousands at Shanghai, the capitalist shares and profits went up. “With each new extension of the conflict we see new shares and raw material groups come into movement,” wrote the above paper with the greatest. satisfaction, And the Oslo Morgenbladet recorded: “Will it come to a war in the East? It may per- haps sound brutal, but for reasons of economic im- provement, a war would be very desirable. The world is today not different from what it was be- fore. A war will enlarge the need for shipping ton- nage, will increase the risks of commodity trans- port and also raise prices, and with them specula- tion would increase. . . But if it does not come to war, then the world will have to wait for a long time yet for a natural improvement, for this is still far off.” Once against the capitalists are hoping to be able to make money out of blood. A new war pros- perity is blossoming. The armament industries an- nounce doubling of turnover, trebled profits, in- creased share capital and mounting dividends. Not for nothing did four American armament firms put $250,000 in the pocket of Admiral Shearer when he’ embarked on the vessel which was taking the Amer- jean delegation to the Geneva Naval Disarmament negotiations... . Profiting from the bitter position of want of the unemployed, the capitalists wish to force the latter to carry out their armament orders, and they find the most energetic assistance among the reformist trade union leaders. But, whoever eats of the fruit of imperialism, dics from it! With really touching solicitude, the armament industrial- ists are concerning thenfselves with creating work in order, tomorrow, through the work created by them to poison, destroy and send to their death millions of people, " Chauvinism is flourishing, for no war business danger of war, and pursue this path, it will not be so again, There can be no repetition of 1914, be- cause world history is driving irrevocably towards the domination of the working class throughout the world, to Socialism, because the forces of social revolution have grown enormously compared with the forces of world reaction, compared with 1914. It will not be so again, if the toiling masses of the people in every countrry, unitedly follow the path of Lenin, the path of the Third Interna- tional, which has been forged in the fire of the World War and which has proved itself today to be the main strength of the international workers’ movement in the struggle against fascism and im- perialist war. The first steps of the Third International were directed against war and against the social-patrictic treachery of the Second International. With the slogan of “civil war against the imperialist war,” the founders of the Third International called for the ending of the war by the struggle against the enemy in one’s own country. Emphasizing the in- evitable connection between war and class struggle, they characterized the eradication of the rotten capitalist roots as the primary pre-condition for the abolition of war altozether. Already during the World War, Lenin wrote: “We will not ignore the sad possibility that in the worst case humanity wiil experience a sccond imperialist war, if the revolution is not born out of this war, in spite of the numerous outbreaks of mass fermentation and mass indignation and in spite of our efforts.” With the overthrow of capitalism on one-sixth of the world’s territory, the founders of the Third International showed that their words were not empty sounds, but were accompanied by the will and ability for revolutionary deeds. During the World War only the Bolsheviks, under the leader- ship of Lenin, and the Spartakus Bund, under Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg, held high the banner of proletarian internationalism. From the first day of its foundation, the Third International has fought for the program of the national and social emancipation of the toilers of the whole world. The Third International answered the conclusion of the Versailles Treaty on May 13, 1919, with a great appeal under the title: “Down with the Versailles Peace,” which declares among other things: “The Communist Parties of all countries con- Sider the Versailles peace conditions a blow to the whole international proletariat, a blow which can only be warded off through the united strength of the proletarians of all countries.” This manifesto recorded that the League of Na- tions was “exposed before the whole world as a robber league, which is crucifying many millions of the toiling masses of Europe.” As against the deceptive promises of the ruling class and its Social Democratic lackeys, the Third International at once exposed the disarmament swindle and pointed out the impossibility of peace- ful agreements between the imperialists and the im- possibility of disarmament and peace inside capi- casus region. He said he had not 1933.” Sear eas 4 Ba evidence of the professor from the drought state, Texas, where, with the help of the A. A. A. and the drought thousands of farmers face ruin, is that though there was drought trouble in the Soviet Union, Bolshevik leadership and Socialist economy was able to defeat it and produce a crop better than in 1933, when there were splendid natural conditions. This outstanding, his- torical fact is buried by the Times in preference to the vicious false- hoods of the Nazi butchers. ante sple F THE face of the forthcoming referendum, the results of which the Nazis have already tabulated in their propaganda bureau, Hitler sighs for another Reichstag to burn. Meanwhile, he burns up the Soviet crops in the fascist press, and starves” millions in the Ukraine. ‘We may be sure the desperate hangmen will not let election’ day come without some major criminal deed such as the Nazis always in- augurate at a critical preiod. Be- sides, the famine stories are timed | to ‘coincide with the Japanese im- perialisis’ provocations against the Soviet Union in Manchuria, Oe | ipetaets imperialism is up against the stone wall of the general crisis of world capitalism. The in- flationary stimulation of the home market is dying out, and the eco- nomic doctors say that another shot in the arm won't help much. They must have more world markets. Walter Runciman, president of the Board of Trade, recently de- clared: “We must rely on improvement in world trade for improvement in employment figures.” That's why the air force and the navy are being rushed, because the question of markets and colonies | Weighs heavy on the hearts of all the imperialist bandits. There isn’t hardly enough to go around, and the only way to try to get them is by war. wo Se wat Runciman is telling the British workers is to support the Labor Party program of aid to an- other imperialist war if they want jobs. The last imperialist war gained Mr. Runciman’s class a lot of colonies, but lost the British workers millions of lives and mil- lions of jobs. More than 30 years ago Frederick Engels pointed out that the world markets were too small for the capi- talist powers of England, Germany and the United States. He also added that while markets grow in an arithmetical proportion, the forces of production would grow in | geometric proportion, increasing the gap between markets and the ability to supply them under capitalism. + * < Commaue | ie flourishes without triotism. For the people, F Under present-day imperialism, German proletariat, in the electoins of 1932. | | mist Party. " "| Socialist League refused definitely Ateaotions to the pcpenrnn designated ae the talist society. Convinced of the inevitability of a | the avelne falenhien of the capi- But the Socialist workers of Germany re ‘find: Hl 2 to discuss: any) conérste: proposals most damnable crime, but for the rulers and own- new war, the Third International has for 15 years | talist powers are more likely to Ing the place that is rightfully thei i | : | for joint struggle for day to day sé t treachery to the fathert ig carried on a systematic, stubborn struggle, full of , travel on bombing planes and bat~ i! si Sli ae ssGRMEN ilo FEES ARE OP MAT YCPPIS EEE MG OU Ta | seen and laid down as prelim-} €™s Permanent treachery to the fatherland is ex- glory and sacrifice, fer the defense of the Soviet |tieships with their wares, because of the Communists in the common fight to smash | veeeeesvee| inary condition for any joint ac-| cellent business. Up to 1911, Krupp had cast 53,000 Clon: and fab eatecuac aia world peace along the | they arespeediex and the sales tal'ss, the capitalist dictatorship, for the establishment j | tion that the Young Communists| cannon, of which half were exported to 52 different ve S eee in th the bosses feel, are likely to be of the proletarian dictatorship, ADDRESS should join the “Workers’ Alli- path of the overthrow of the ruling class in the in Factory Elections rts 90 votes PARIS, Aug. 15.—On July 29 a . All the Red candidates were| SAN ANTONIO, The a the Part; PRAGUE—At the election to the | ously “inten ne" ,trade unions received 288 votes and four seats, the Czech social demo- 1 and one seat, the| German social democrats 266 and four seats, and the Czech so- | Cialists 79 yotes and one seat, |Communists in Jail Be Protest Against Terror PRAGUE, Aug. 15.—An effective | Communist demonstration against PECAN SHELLERS WIN STRIKE ‘he Persecution of the Czech Com- By a Worker Correspondent | munist Party was carried out in the | prison buildings of the district law- ‘Texas.—Since 1 court in Moravian Ostrau. When a | Wrote you the other day, the 8,000 | Tecently arrested Communist Party pecan shellers won their strike and functionary was taken kefore the Unless Every Section and Unit in| prisoned comrades and against the Its Forces Vigor- ously Into the Circulation Drive, the Daily .Werker Remains Un-| | persecution of the Czech Commu- nist Party. The prison warders were ances.” [Spurious “united front” or- ganized by the Socialists to sabo- tage actual united action—Ed.] The endeavors to form a united action front need not, however, be regarder as a failure. The Y. P.S L. declares in a communique that the bourgeoisie need not rejoice, for although a united front of ac- tion has not been formed for the moment, still the friendly discussion has brought about a rapprochement, and negotiations will be resumed. Fyen more significant is the dec- eration made by the secretary of the Y. P. S. L. of Santiago, Car- by the representatives of the Y, P. S. L. at the consultation forms no obstacle against recommending ihe ““heroes at the front.” “fatherlands,” A British wershin was biown into the ‘air in the Dardanelles by a British mine which had been sold to Turkey. British sailors were drowned in order that English capitalists could live. Even during the World War, the industrialists of all countries delivered war materials to the powers opposing them at the time through neutral coun- tries, well aware that: these materials would the next day be put into operation against their own The shamelessness of the internationally-linked armament industry was never so blatant as today. The whole bourgeois press is. at their service in order to make the toiling masses of the people emenable to pay in for cver new armament orders, gether and have faith in their power and their in- evitable victory, it will not be so again. If the toilers draw the correct lessons from the last 20 i capitalist countries. Fifteen years of “peace,” fifteen years of the Third International, were fifteen years of united revolutionary struggle, of world Communism against the imperialist war. However, the struggle of the Communists against war was never based on the shallow foundation of pacifism, but always on the granite foundation of the Marxist-Leninist doctrine of the class struggle. The war of imperialism was and is a war for safeguarding the rule of finance capital, for the salvation of the outlived bourgeois secicty of exploiters, for the oppression of the small and week nations and for the overthrow of the only standpoint of histcrical progress and of the prole- tarian class struggle. This, and only this concep- tion determines the irreconcilable attitude of world more convincing. Workers Escape Jail _ | by Digging Through Spanish Prison Wall MADRID, Aug. 15—Two prole- tarian political prisoners have es- caped from the prison at Cordoba, by means of making a hole in the wall. There can be no doubt that the escape was made possible by ‘the aid of revolutionary workers ‘outside. The escaped men had | workers’ state in the world. Hence, all wars of the jpeon centencdd to hoavy terms of peiet st, 2 of ie coondential got all their demands, aa magistrate, the workers | rillo, in the leading newspaper of Must and will it be again as in 1914? No! zg | imperialists are reactionary and unjust, and the |imrrisonment by a court martial, agents of! ie employers, received cf |Sathered in the corridors demon-/|the Communist Par.y of Spain, to 1 ; et ely imperialists are always the aggressors from the (for having taken part in the anar- 137 votes. : u strated for the release of the im- | the effect that the attitude adopted the toiling masses of all countries stand united to- 3 5 chist putsch in December of last ryear. | This is the fourth escape of poli- secti vi Fi i, Communism to the imperialist war, tical prisoners from Spanish prisons tile mill at Wildenschwert, the Red | km Powerless against the demonstra-| sections to form a united front of| Years and march forward in united struggle against in the second half of the month b ie Red known to Ltn of Workers, aed | action ex wart not be 18 in, cf | i zi in ||

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