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Page Six Daily QWorker eraaanomens GaBTRAL ORGAN CONNUNIST PARTY BSA (SECTION OF COMMUNIST “America’s Only Working Class Daily Newspaper” FOUNDED 1924 PUBLISHED DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAY, BY THE COMPRODAILY PUBLISHING CO., ING., 4 E. 18th Street, New York, N. ¥. Telephone: ALgonquin 4 - 7 Ceble Adcres: ‘ Washington B sth and F St Midwest Bureau: 101 Dearborn nal Press Building, ephone National 7910. Room 705, Cheago, Ml. Telephone. Subscription Rates: By Mail: (except Manhattan and Bronx 6 months, $3.50; 3 mo: $2.00; 1 month Manhattan, Bronx, Fo Canada, , $5.00; 3m Weekly, nts; monthly, 75 cents. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1934 ——_—_—_——————— General Johnson Weeps in a speech de- at Carnegie Hall, New York, d at heart over the lg L JOHNSON liv red Mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters and shop mates of the 12 dead textile strikers are mourning their loss. In the hospitals there are hundreds of textile strikers bayonetted, clubbed, gassed, wounded. Hundreds of thousands of textile workers, suffer- ting against the ing the pangs of hunger, are f terrible conditions in the textile milis. But over whom is General Johnson shedding his crocodile tears? We have his own word for it that this hard-boiled general is actually weeping. “When I think of George Sloan,” he declared, “my heart weeps.” This Man Friday of the Roosevelt government is not in the least moved by the starv- ing hundreds of thousands of textile workers. He weeps for Sloan. His heart melts into tears when he thinks of the millionaire textile bosser ‘EXTILE workers, here is a man foremost in the councils of the Roosevelt government, the man who is charged with the most important task of the Roosevelt regime, putting over the N. R. A. When textile workers go out on strike, his only thought is tears for the profit-grabbing bosses. That is the real sentiment of the Roosevelt government, which through its tears is ready to send Federal troops against you. Johnson and Roosevelt tell you to trust this government. They aff: that it is a neutral government. it ask yourselves: How many textile workers have been killed? Then, how many textile bosses have been killed? How many of Mr. Sloan’s pals, for whom General Johnson’s tears flow so copi- , are hungry, or are facing the guns of the ? ) Nat The militia, the armed thugs, the capitalist state is on the side of the class covered by General Johnson's tears. To console Mr. Sloan and the other textile mill owners, the government is using the militia to protect the strikebreakers. One more point of General Johnson’s tear- stained speech. He bemoans the fact that Tom MacMahon, and other “labor leaders” were unable to stop the strike. General Johnson declared that the N. R. A. code was put over with the help of MacMahon & Co., who “sat in on their arbitra- tions and agree-i with the results.” ES, these men did agree to the code and bear the responsibility for the starvation results. General Johnson said: “We reached an agreement and on that agreement the strike was called off. The present strike is an absolute violation of that understanding.” The MacMahons, who sold out the workers, could not deliver the goods because the rank and file forced the strike sgainst the rotten conditions. The MacMahons are not “organized labor.” as Johnson states. They are the organized fakers, working hand and glove with the bosses. They try to misuse organized labor, and as Johnson— now so bitterly bewails, they failed. 1eral Johnson may well weep for Sloan and ber n MacMahon’s inability to stop the strike. The workers are pushing forward, and by con- tinuing their actions to close the mills, to keep their ranks solid and united, carrying on their fighting spirit, the strike will be won, and Johnson and Sloan can have more cause to weep. We Ask You, i. Goalie RANCIS J. GORMAN, chairman of the textile strike committee, taking his cue from General Johnson and Governor Green of Rhode Island, made another vi- cious attack against the Communists. Every textile worker should inquire into the basis for these onslaughts. How does its come about that Gorman can be in full agreement with Governor Green, whose troops shoot textile strikers, and with General Johnson, who weeps for Mr. Sloan, when it comes to Com- munists? The Communist Party bent on helping the textile workers win their Strike demands. In order to achieve this, the strikebreakers must be driven from the mills. Mr. Gorman, we ask, why do you attack the Communists for this when you know if the mills are not shut down, the strike will be lost? Do you want the strike to be lost? Don’t you know that the attack on the Communists is the main weapon of the bosses in the attack against the textile Strikers? That is because the Communists are the most militant fighters in the ranks of the entire working class. Why do you attack us because we tell the workers to continue mass picketing, to keep up the flying picket squadrons, to force all the mills to close down; to safeguard every guarantee for the victcry of the strike? with all its forces is © YOU think General Johnson, who “weeps for Sloan,” or Governor Green, himself interested in textile mills, will close the mills for the workers? These men are using the armed forces of the capitalists, the militia, the state police, as well as private gunmen, to keep the mills open. The Com- munists are fighting to shut them down? When you attack the Communists, whether consciously or unconsciously, you help the employ- ers and their strikebreakers, Mr, Gorman, you say the Communists want to destroy the unions. Is it destroying the unions Wher we fight in the ranks of the workers to close the mills so that the strike will be won? To win the strike means to build the union, to help the unions win recognition and better conditions. Do you know any better way of building the union, Mr. Gorman? u say you don't like the philosophy of the Cosimunists. That is exactly the opinion of every mill owner in the country, But the first point in the philosophy of the 4 ‘ Communists is to win the textile strike. Do you dislike this, Mr. Gorman? To win the strike, the Communist philosophy says that labor must fight without hesitation against capital and its govern- ment. whose militia shoots down strikers. OES the philosophy of General Johnson appeal to you more? The general who weeps for Sioan, has a great liking for you too. He said in his Carnegie speech: “I know young Gorman. I doubt if there is a more conscientious patriot and sincere man in the country than he.” Are you sincere or “patriotic” to labor when, with your cry against the Communis organize the defeat of the textile work erately aiding the employers and their government? With this you do only damage to the strike, you help discourage and disunite labor, If General Johnson can single you out as a con- spicuous patriot of the bosses’ government which shoots down textile strikers, which through the N. R. A. brought worse starvation to the textile workers, then we can understand your attack on the Communists, whose sole devotion, whose al- legiance is on the side of the working class. We, the Communists, are fighting with might and main to win the textile strike, and to win it in the shortest possible time. We are fighting for a real trade union movement, strengthened these fires of struggle. That is why we fight nh peonls as you, who through your taking up the mill cry against the Communists help to disunite the strikers, to disorganize their union and fighting ranks. — The U.S.S.R. and the League NOTHER victory for the peace policy of the Soviet Union is recorded by the League of Nations’ invitation offering the workers’ fatherland a seat on the Council of the League. What is the situation which has brought about this change? In 1917 and 1928 the League of Nations tried to organize the united armed intervention of the capitalist powers against the Soviet Union. It failed. Today 30 nations sign the invitation to the Soviet Union to join the League of Nations. The main reason for this changed relationship is the effectiveness of the peace policy of the Soviet Union, which is winning victory after victory in a world torn by the strife and conflict of the im- perialist powers. The world economic crisis has heightened the antagonisms among the bourgeois states, has in- tensified the unevenness of their drive to war, is causing a constant reshifting and upsetting of their war alliances. The capitalist governments are forced to recog- nize the Soviet Union, which in the eyes of the world’s toiling population has become the corner- stone of peace. The U. S. S. R., the land of the victorious proletarian revolution, the land that is rapidly building Socialism, has become such a pow- erful factor for peace that the leading imperialist powers are forced to treat and deal with it. The bourgeois states were not able to utilize the League of Nations for their pet scheme of inter- vention. The growing imperialist conflicts created a rupture in the League, with Fascist. Germany and imperialist Japan leaving the League in their con- flicts with the other powers. This opened a wedge in the imperialist front which the Soviet Union is driving in still further in the cause of world peace, in the cause of the victorious proletarian revolution. The Soviet Union will utilize its seat on the Council as a revolutionary power of the proletariat, as a proletarian dictatorship, working with might and main against every war move of the imperial- ists, to stave off the day of a new imperialist world slaughter, It will utilize the League of Nations as a great forum, as a sounding board, to speak to the toiling mass throughout the world, to stress and keep before them its revolutionary policy of peace and struggle against the war plans of the imperial- ist. masters. The Soviet Union enters the League of Nations without the slightest shred of illusions regarding the aims of the capitalist powers in the League. The toiling masses throughout the world will greet this step as a continuation of the successful peace policy of the Soviet Union, as a carrying still further the efforts to expose and to block as far as possible every maneuvre of the capitalists in their attempts to explode the world into a new imperialist slaughter. , ; | thirt i | For Speedy United Action! =i auront powder fo Hitler "Rea, r SATURDAY’S Daily Worker there was published the complete text of the reply of the Central Committee of the Communist Party to the letter of the Na- tional Executive Committee of the Social- ist Party postponing consideration of united action between the two parties. “Desvite our disappointment,” says the letter of the C. C. of the C. P., “we are by no means pre- pared to slacken our efforts to achieve united action.” The letter, which goes on to explain in detail the position of the Communist Party on the united front, concludes with the hope that the workers of both parties wil! yet “fight unitedly and thus march forward to victory.” The Communist Party, which will never abandon the fight for unity, welcomes every effort at united action, no matter on how small a scale it may be. The letter of the Central Committee emphasizes this, when it declares: “The final paragraph in your letter opens up the possibilities of local w: actions, particular- ly in defense of workers’ rights. We will do everything possible to stimulate such local actions.” Today, in scores of textile towns there is the greatest need for such united actions to defend the right of the workers to organize, to strike and to picket. We urge the immediate formation of local united front bodies, local united actions, demon- Strations, parades, without delay. The tremendous united front general one day strike in Hazleton, Pa., in support of the striking textile workers is a model in this respect. Right in New York City there is the most burn- ing necessity for immediate united action between Socialist and Communist workers and followers of both parties. Over one million jobless people will receive no further cash relief! Certainly, if ever there was need for unity on an immediete problem —the right of the New York jobless to live—it is now. Cannot every Socialist worker see that on this issue the two parties can organize such a rousing movement, can get literally hundreds of thousands of New York workers into the streets in angry pro- test, that La Guardia and the bankers will be com- pelled without delay to rescind their infamous de- cision? Surely this is possible. Certainly this is necessary. There is no time to lose! To delay on such a vital matter is to trifle with the life-and-death needs of the working masses! Forward to speedy united action! ~ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1934 \ pienso Se THE ALTAR OF CAPITALISM ; Soviets Lead) °N All Countries In Agriculture Sarr | Capitalist Nations Can’t Follow USSR Method, Says U. S. Scientist (Special to the Daily Worker) | MOSCOW, Sept. 16 (By Wireless) —Professor Meller of Texas, special- ist in genetics, with two other out- | standing specialists in agriculture. | Dr. Osserman, of Argentina, and Dr. | Kostov, of Bulgaria, have just re- turned to Moscow from a two-week journey through the Soviet Urkaine |the North Caucasus, Armenia and Georgia. These scientists visited numerou: collective farms and state farms tc ecquaint themselves with matters of organization, agriculture and scien tific institutions. Professor Melle gave the following impressions of ais observations. “In the course of this journey I s able to become fully convinced of the power of the socialist form of agriculture. Even in its ear) ransitional periods, socialist a; vulture has succeeded in organ: remendous and really scientific di- i and development in it “Although I have read much abou. the U.S.S.R., nevertheless my ey was not prepared to see the tre- mendous and radical reconstruction in agriculture which has taken placc since my last visit to the Soviet Union in 1932, In the extensive grain regions, numerous agricultural machines, working the wide spacer under cultivation, are giving a sat- sfactory and even a good harves despite the unusually dry spring this year, all of which further proves the progress of the socialist system. Mv visit to the state farms leaves no doubt in my mind that their work is becoming ever more effective.” Emphasizing the exceptionally in- teresting work of agricultural and scientific research institutions in the Ukraine and the Caucasus, and their connections with collective farms and state farms, Professor Meller stated that: | “In the science of vegetation and allied spheres, the scientific research institutions of the U.S.S.R. already occupy first place, and lay down) patterns for the other countries of | the world. I may mention, more- | over, that in the majority of cases, | other countries are unable to fol- | low the footsteps of the Soviet Union because they hold to an obso- | lete system of economy. “The U.S.S.R. no longer feels the burden of the competition of private enterprises nor the spectre of crises, and has systematically organized the utilization of the world’s resources and vegetations for the economic | | development of each separate region | and the entire country as a whole. “The combination of properties to} obtain any variety, and most im-| portant, the systematic hybridiza-| tion of various plants with the aid| |of physiological methods of ac- climatizing individual plants, as widely used in this country, are the chief and characteristic features of | ‘the work which puts the Soviet | Union in first place in the theory} and the practice of scientific vege- tation,” Data on U.S. Aid To Nazis Is Held | (Continued from Page 1) | | denied it in Shanghai—which proves | nothing. | Af its last session the committee | | showed that the American du Ponts | | engaged a professional international | |spy who boasts of having served public.” The first contract signed | with this fellow, a straightaway | contract making no reference to | the treaty it obviously violated, was |destroyed, and the duPonts nego- tiated another saying their powder was to he sold if and when Ger-| many obtained “redress” from the treaty. In connection with this, an’ officer of Hitler’s general staff re- | cently visited one of the duPonts. Later they destroyed the second contract—and paid the spy $25,000! to be rid of it. |, Also in the record is evidence | that American machine guns and revolvers—the sale of which sup- ;Posedly is carefully supervised to prevent gangsters from obtaining | them in this country—are smugglec jinto Nazi hands in a big bootleg | traffic. | _ Repercussions from the scandalous disclosures thus far are piling in | upon Washington, and today’s capi- | talist newspapers significantly shoved the story way inside. This jTeflects the extent of pressure that , being exerted to channel the in- | estigation into “safe” lines, Jobless Body Acts for N.Y. Relief (Continued from Poge 1) { \ | other way out but to borrow from the bankers,” he can arrange a loan. On Saturday, vigorous protests | against the starvation and relief cutting plans of LaGuardia began to pour into City Hall. The Unem- ployment Councils of Greater New York, in a telegram to LaGuardia, demanded immediate provision of funds as provided in the tax plans which it has submitted. These plans demand an end to the pay- ments to the banks, income and in- heritance taxes on the higher brackets, utility, corporation taxes and taxation on large realty hold- ings and tax-exempt church prop- erty. The Association of Office and Professional Emergency Employes, | citing LaGuardia’s demagogic promises that “no one shall starve,” damanded also an immediate end to the payments to the bankers and annulment of the order to stop re- | lief payments, Grant Strikers’ Demands and Stop Killings! (Continued from Page 1) urge the workers to return to work in an organized manner, prepared to hold the gains they have won. The Hearst press repeatedly states that: “Com- munists want to keep the strike going; they don’t want it settled on any terms.” This we have branded as a lie, We repeat: Grant the workers’ demands, and the Communists will advise them to return to the mills, . . . Bet the bosses will never willingly grant even these modest demands of the textile workers un- less they are literally forced to do so by a deter- mined working class, with ranks so solid that they cannot be broken by the bosses or their armed forces. In the first place there is the greed of the textile bosses for ever greater’ profits for themselves at the expense of the workers. They will not agree to improved conditions. Their aim is worsened son- ditions, more misery, more poverty, more speed-up. Their aim is ever mounting profits, increased wealth and luxury. An unnamed wealthy spokesman for the bosses gave out an interview to the Associated Press yes- day in Washington which shows their position on the present strike, “We know,” he said, “that there is more at stake than the welfare of the textile industry. If we give in there will be a wave of strikes in all industries; it is a case of determining here and now whether or not organized labor is all-powerful.” There the issue is put squarely. Can the or- ganized workers determine the conditions under which they live and work? Or must the workers continue to bow before organized power of the bosses, a power used to force them into a position of greater and greater degradation and slavery? From this state it is clear that the textile bosses are fighting with the solid backing of the capitalist class as a whole. This is why all the armed forces of the capitalist government, local, state, and na- tional, are at their beck and call, That is why the textile workers, while themselves fighting more determinedly than ever, must have -An Editoria: the support of the entire working class. That is why the strike must be spread; that is why there Regal solidarity within the ranks of the textile workers, and real solidarity actions by the entire working class and the demands of the workers can be won. The Communist Party urges all workers to rally to the support of the textile workers, Demand a halt to the killing of strikers. Fight for the work- ers’ right to strike and picket. Support the strike with substantial and immediate relief collections. In all ways rally to defense of the strike knowing, as the spokesman for the bosses admits, that the textile workers are in the front line trenches fight- ing a battle for the workers as a whole. As for the question of “revolution,” of “insurrec- tion,” the Communist Party has stated, and repeats, that that is not the issue in this strike. The issue is the workers’ demands, That is what we are fighting for. J At the same time the Communist Party states to the workers: We are the Party of proletarian revo- lution; our aim is the winning of the working class for the seizure of power, for the establishment of a workers’ government, a Soviet Government in the United States. Don’t you realize, fellow workers, as a result of your experiences in this strike that our revolution- ary goal must be reached by the workers. We be- lieve it is becoming clear to you, the workers of the country, that a capitalist class which, murders workers in cold blood, which starves workers, their wives and children, which uses the military forces of the government to prevent you from winning even the smallest demands, must be driven out of power. When the bosses become hysterical about the Conimunists, and against your strike, they know what they are doing. They see the workers begin- ning to fight. They know that today you fight for little things, but in these fights you gain under- standing and a consciousness of power. They know that from these little demands will grow the demand for a workers’ government, for a Soviet Government. We urge you to think of these problems, Join the Communist Party! ‘Turn the Searchlight on Munitions and Mass Murder! MHE timid and limited investigation and disclosures of the methods and rami- fications of the munitions industry by the Nye Committee have shaken the state and war offices of all imperialist nations and their puppet governments. The indignant denials and furious pro- tests flooding Washington are caused, however, not so much by what has been revealed to date as by what the war mongers fear may be revealed. It is a matter of gravest concern to the ruling class of the entire capitalist world in the fifth year of the crisis, with the class struggle—especially in the United States where it involves literally new contingents composed of millions of workers in basic industries—reaching new high levels, to have even @ superficial exposure of the interlocking of govern- ments, the peddlers of the machinery for mass murder, and the fabulous profits into which rivers of toilers’ blood are converted by the black magic of capitalism, Two tactical lines are to be observed in the procedure of the Nye committee: One is to put for- ward the chimera of “government control’ of the munitions industry as the remedy for the murderous intrigue, debauching of “public servants,” and “fomenting” of wars. The other approach—made by some of the important witnesses—is to identify frankly the munitions industry as an inseparable part of capitalist production and conclude, there- fore, that nothing can be done about it, Communists reject both these jesuitical con- clusions. In most countries the munitions indus- tries, because they are after all the heavy and decisive industries, are linked either officially or unofficially with the government—like the Comite des Forges in France, Metropolitan-Vickers in Great Britain—so closely that their interests transcend those of the big parties of capitalism. (Witness the strenuous efforts of Secretary of State Hull to con- ceal from newspaper correspondents all really dam- aging documents relating to the foreign and domes- tic intrigues of the Dupont de Nemours family and firm—a family and firm whose colossal fortune and gigantic business has been built by worldwide traffic i) in the instruments of mass murder for profit. And this is done in spite of the fact that the de Nemours family’s “Liberty League” is in conflict with the Roosevelt administration on the question as to how best to continue the attack on the working class and its organizations.) Before the tribunal of a workers’ government these bloodstained wretches would be sentenced to death and their bloated fortune confiscated. This is the only way to draw their poison fangs. Under the present system they are respected citizens. Their tender sensibilities are protected by no less a person than Roosevelts secretary of stat@ They have a lot of money, don’t you see, and as the French say, “money has no smell.’”? The Daily Worker calls upon all workers and other opponents of imperialist war to demand from the Roosevelt administration that the munitions investigation be earried on without any limitations and without concealment, Demand that the hearings be broadcast over all radio systems, Let’s find out where the money goes that is appropriated by the Congress for “defense of all the people” of this country. Let’s find out who gets the enormous sums of money spent for the munitions used to massacre striking workers and break strikes, Demand the outright levy of a 100 per cent tax on profits of all munitions companies—the money to be used for unemployment relief and insurance. Demand an embargo on all shipments of arms, munitions and raw materials for munitions, to fas- cist Germany and Japan for war on the Soviet Union. Demand the cessation of all support to avd protection of all instigators of such a war—includ- ing the National Civic Federation, Ralph Eas!cy, its secretary, and Matthew Woll, its acting president, who uses his position as a vice-president of the American Federation of Labor to sabotage the boy- cott of Nazi Germany and conspire to secure the rupture of diplomatic: relations between the United States and the Soviet Union. Support the Second Congress Against Wa: and Fascism which convenes in Chicago, Sept. 28. See to it that the union, fraternal society or cultural organization to which you belong sends its full quota of delegates, By Burck ‘Trade Unions In USSR Given Vital Tasks Vast Growth in Soviets | Economy Brings New | Work to Unions | (Special to the Daily Worker) | MOSCOW, Sept. 16 (By wireless} | Commenting on the reorganizae tion of Soviet trade unions, | “Pravda,” central organ of the Com- munist Party, has stated that the | gigantic growth of all branches of |national economy in the U.S.S.R, | has set the trade unions exceptions ally responsible tasks. In an article devoted to the ree cent decisions of the Fourth Plenum |of the All-Union Trade Unions, Pravda says: “New gigantic industrial entere prises have grown up, and old face |tories and works have been reco! | structed. The U.S.S.R. has becom a country foremost in technique, country foremost in Socialist agri culture. Millions of young working-| men and working women have been | surging into industry and Socialist | farming. “In the course of three years, from 1930 to 1933, the number of workers and office employes in- creased seven and a half million, In ferrous metallurgy, 32.4 percent of the total are young workers, |Yanging in ages from 18 to 23; in | transport and machine building, the percentage is 30.6; in the electro- technical industry, 35.4, and so forth, “The number of women engaged in all branches of national economy | has increased since 1928 by 5,000,000, These figures suffice to point to tha tremendous tasks set before the | trade unions of the U.S.S.R. They | have had to organize and educate | millions of working men and women |who for the first time entered industry without knowing capitalist hard labor, | “It is through the trade unions | that millions of working men and | women learn consciously to par- | ticipate in Socialist construction |and to master the high culture of advanced technique. Millions of shock workers of Socialist labor show examples of industrial en- thusiasm and devotion to the cause of the workingclass.” | Dwelling further on the factors | which caused the re-organization |of the trade unions, “Payda” re- marks that experience in the di- vision of the trade unions into | smaller units, which took place in | 1931, gave positive results, Since then the trade unions have grown, uniting the vast majority of al workers and office employes (22 Percent of all workers and office jemployes are not yet members of the trade unions). To this fact must be added that the trade unions are scattered over the tremendous ter- ritory of the U.S.S.R. swelled the extremely variegated cultural and | every-day life, with different condi- tions in different districts. Emphasizing that the basic re- organization of the trade unions will make it possible for each trade union organization to pay more at- tention to serving the cultural and every-day life of all groups of workers and to the improvement of the work organs, social insurance, labor inspection, etc, “Pravda” says: “The Soviet trade unions have unbounded prospects. In conditions of the victorious dictatorship of the proletariat the trade unions, led by the Party of Lenin and Stalin, organize the activities, the initiative and the militant power of scores of millions of toilers around the task of Socialist construction. “The successes of the trade unions | in the U.S.S.R, are strikingly in con- trast with the dislocation and de- generation of the trade unions in capitalist countries. ‘Labor lieu- | tenants of the capitalists,’ as Lenin called the leaders of the reformist | trade union movement, do their ut- most to weaken the militant power |of the working class and facilitate |the offensive of the bourgeoisie againg the working class, P “They assisted in every way the advent of the Fascists to power, the destruction of the workingclass or- ganizations which were created in the course of many decades by painstaking efforts of several gen- erations, “On the advent of Hitler in Ger- many and the destruction of the workers’ organizations, the British trade union leaders, led by the re- formist trade union official, Citrin, |hypocritically exclaimed: ‘I rely upon God that we shall never be placed in such a situation. ..’” The prostituted leaders of the re- formist trade unions are prepared \for any baseness just to preserve the good-will of the cruelest Fas- cism hangmen orf the workingclass. “The endless, abominable treach- ery of the Leiparts, Citrins, and all the bankrupt reformist lackeys of the bousgeoisie is significant! “The trade union movement in the U.S.S.R. by its whole history of progress stands as a towering his- torical example. The Soviet trade | unions are an example for millions of revolutionary proletarians who are throwing off the chains of re- formism. The successes of the Soviet trade unions inspire all hon- est, all revolutionary elements of the world proletariat, to struggle for the proletarian revolution, “The bolshevist reconstruction of the tzade unions will strengthen tenfold the forces of the most pow- erful, the foremost revolutionary de- tachment of the world proletariat!” — |Sam Darcey to Speak Over KMTR Wednesday | a LOS ANGELES, Sept. 16.—Sam Darcy, Communist candidate for ;governcr, will speak Wednesday night, Sept. 19, over Radio Station KMTR, from 8:30 to 8:45 p.m. This will be the first of a series of weekly campaign broadcasts at which the leading state and local candidates will speak,