The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 25, 1934, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

“Ammeriea’s Only Working Class Daily Mewspeper” FOUNDED 1924 PUBLISHED DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAY, BY THE COMPRODAILY PUBLISHING 0@., INC., 50 E. 18th Street, New York, N. ¥. Telephone: ALgonquin 4-79 54. Gable Address: “Daiwork,” New York, N. ¥ : Washington Bureau: Room 94, National heres 14th ars, W ington, D. 9. Tel: 1 Midwest Bureau 1 South Wells St., Room 786, OChcago, m. Telephone: Dearborn 3931. Subscription Rates: Manhattan and Bronx), 1 yeer, $6.00; il: (exeept $3.50 1 month, 0.78 sents. Canada: 1 year, 3. months. 99.00; 76 cents. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1984 Prepare Marine Strike! REPARATIONS for a powerful marine ke are being made in all the major strik eastern ports. The marine workers, longshoremen and seamen are ready to strike a blow for better conditions, for better wages But at the same time, the top officials of the International Longshoremen’s Association and the International Sea on are already busy scheming to ditch the s' into the most harmless channels—harmless, that is, for the shipowners. The marine strike can be won. It can bring real material advantages to the seamen and longshore- men, real victory But if one lesson stands out like a lighthouse from the experiences of the ‘Frisco strike and the textile strike, it is that one of the basic jobs in preparing for the strike, is to expose in advance and consistently the purposes and tricky man- euverings of the top A. F. of L. officials of the 1S.U. and the LL.A. This immediate warning of the seamen and the Joheshoremen of the certain treacheries of the top officials in the I.S.U. and the I.L.A. is 9 vital part of the strike preparations. Tt was the failure to do this with sufficient speed and thoroughness that permitted the A. P, of L. bureaucrats to stab the ‘Prisco strike im the back. ‘This was aided by the failure of the Communist Party to develop rank and file opposition move- ments against these treacheries. * * ‘SPECIALLY important now in the strife prepara- ms is the building of rank and file groups in ocals of the I.L.A. and 1.9.U., and the reeruit- ing into the Marine Workers Industrial Union. With this should go the energetic building of the united front of all seamen and longshoremen re- gardless of union affiliation. The M.W.I.U. has al- jy issued an official call for unity. Che A. F. of L. officials will attempt typical strixebreaking—to divide the men by all kinds of tricks, warning them against “Reds,” and “radical minorities,” and so forth. This only helps the em- ployers—and these A. F. of L. bureaucrats know it. The answer to these strikebreaking policies must be the most determined efforts to form United Front strike committees on the docks and on the ships For the unity of all dockmen and seamen! In every local of the I.S.U. and the LL.A. this demand should be made at once, he marine struggles now loom as major class battles The Communist Party in every Hastern port should concentrate its attention on the waterfront. All waterfront sections and unite should now be en the closest organizational and political guidance by all leading bodies of the Party. Par- ticularly it is necessary to stress the circulation of the Daily Worker on the waterfront. ee At City Hall Today IGHTEEN groups of representatives of big business will appear at the public hearing at City Hall today to demand a tax on street car, bus, subway and ele- vated fares, a tax that will fall enttrely upon the backs of the workers. Included in these groups, whieh will present this tax plan, a tax that will lf an average of $15 a year from the pockets of all who ride the subways, are the Fifth Avenue Association, the New York State Chamber of Commeree, the Forty- Second Street Property Owners, etc. Representatives of the United Action Gonfer- ence, the organized voice of New York’s unem- ployed and relief workers, who oppose the La- Guardia tax schemes as well as those sponsored directty by big business groups will demand: (1) Heavy taxation for adequate relief, but tax- ation which falls on hitherto untouched fields— on big business, the giant department and chain stores, on corporations and utilities, on stook trans- fers and large incomes, (2) The serapping of the Bankers’ Agreement by whioh Wati Street has a death hold on the job- less and smal taxpayers, and a moratorium on the payments to the bankers, These last two alone will release $135,000,000 a year for relief. The United Action Conference calls upon the workers of New York to mass at City Hall at 10 a. m. today to back up their demands and defeat both the LaGuardia schemes and the big merchants’ plan to loot the pockets of the working population. tl Continue Communist Work in Textile Areas ITHOUT a moment’s delay every Com- munist Party committee and unit in the textile areas should meet and give serious and thorough consideration to the problems growing out of the criminal be- trayal of the textile strike by the U. T. W. leaders. Party activity under no circumstances can be diminished; on the contrary it must be increased. During the strike Communist influence has grown. ‘We have won the workers’ respect and confidence. ‘We can hold it only if we prove our ability to guide the workers now, after their betrayal, as we guided them during the strike This means, in the first place, building the Party, recruiting the best fighters. It means set- ting up Communist Party units within the textile mills. It means establishing functioning Party fractions in the U. T. W. Above all it means the most carefully and consistent supervision by lead- DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1934 held up as near as possible to the level reached during the stetke. Subscriptions should be sollotted systematically among the textile workers. Danaily sales should be organized at the mii gates. Regular Dally Worker agents should be selected in every textile town. Carry forward consistent Communist work! Votes and Fascism URING the textile strike, the employ- ers’ government, state and federal, did not hesitate for a moment to use the most terroristic methods of Hitler in an attempt to break the strike. In the San Francisco strike it was the Vigilantes, the spawn of the Fascist armed bands, They were given official approval by the regular oppressive organs of the capitalists, the police and the courts, In the textile strike it is the concen- tration camps, the militia, the gunmen and armed thugs of the employers; the threat of the use of Federal troops against the strikers. This is how fascism grows and is developed amid the dirty rags of the vatnted “democracy.” The fight against advancing fascist terror is one of the main planks in the Communist Party election program. As the only political party of the work- ing-class, fighting for the every day interests of the workers and for the overthrow of decaying capitalism, which breeds fascism, the Communist Party puts forward its slogans of struggle against fascism. . . . VOTE for the Communist Party is a vote re- corded not only on election day for the strug- gle against fascism, but is a voice for the day-to-day continuation of the battle to defeat fascism. The Communist Party election program on fascism says the following: “Against capitalist terror and the growing trend toward fascism; against deportations and oppression of the foreign-born; against com- puisory arbitration and company unions; against the use of troops in strikes; for the workers’ right to join unions of their own choice, to strike, to picket, to demonstrate without restrictions for the maintenance of all the civ# and political rights of the masses.” The capitalists know that behind a Communist vote there stands a worker ready to carry on the fight against fascism, and for the overthrow of capitalism which breeds fascist terror. The greater the Communist vote in the present elections, when the issue of fascist terror is para- mount, the greater will be the force driving for- ward to united action of the entire working-class in the struggle against fascism. Vote for the Party in the forefront in the battle against fascism. Vote for the Party ceaslessly striving for the united front of the American workers in the battle to defeat all fascist efforts. Vote Communist! Zimmerman’s Phrases 1) YEN the most reactionary capitalist press can no longer ignore the tre- mendous upsurge of revolt that is now taking place in the ranks of the rank and file A.F. of L. members against the strike- breaking treacheries of the top leadership. In every phase of the textile strike, # was the powerful and steadily increasing militancy of the rank and file workers that filled the Gormans and the Greens with fear. Their greatest worry was that the militancy of the workers would get out of their control, and that the rank and file would Sweep aside their rotten class collaboration policies and repiace them with class struggle policies. Tm this situation of rapidiy rising revolt in the A. F. of L., the Greens and Gormans fight in two ways. They seek to choke this rank and file ofpo- sitton by direct attacks, expulsions, “red baiting” and gangsterism. But also they attack indirectly. They make use of “left” demagogues, who attempt to head the rank and file revolt, so that they can, when the time comes, behead the movement. Such is the meaning of the latest move of Charles Zimmerman, Lovestoneite bureaucrat, in Local 22 of the International Ladies’ Garment Workers, one of the largest locals in the A. F. of L. * . . ENSING the powerful groundswell of rank and file resentment against the Greens and Gormans, Zimmerman rushes forward with the proposal to Green that they call for “nation-wide strikes,” and that they “break with the old parties.” Zimmerman hasn’t the slightest intention of fighting the vicious, class-collaboration leadership of the A. F. of L. He talks militantly only that he may keep the workers still under the leadership of this bureaucracy. He is the fig-leaf for this bureaucracy, always appealing to it to “reform” itself! Im his own local, while skilfully using “left” phrases, he has invariably backed down at the cru- cial moments of the struggle, and taken his place with the reactionary officialdom. His Lovestoneite colleague, Keller, in Paterson cunningly held back the Paterson dye workers for more than two weeks, while they were straining to join the textile strike. Yesterday he made critical remarks against the Gorman textile sell-out, but he urged the workers to accept it. Keller, like his Lovestoneite colleague, Zimmer- main, speaks “radical.” But he ACTS in the inter- ests of the Greens and Gormans—and the em- ployers, It is only the Rank and File Committee of the A. F. of L. that means business in its fight against the class collaboration bureaucrats of the top lead- ership in the A. F. of L. It is around these Rank and File oppositions in the locals that real strug- gle against the top officials is being organized. It is this committee which has prepared the vital, fighting program of class struggle for the A. F. of L. convention. Zimmerman is only the lightning rod to catch the anger of the rank and file and make it harm- less. The Greens and Gormans do not fear him. They understand just what he is doing. And they appreciate it. This is shown by Dubinsky’s endorse- ment of Zimmerman for re-election as dictator of Local 22. Preparations for real class struggle against the employers for better wages, for union conditions, for social insurance, etc., can come only under Rank and File leadership. } 38 EAST 12TH STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y. | Picase send me more information on the Commu- | | nist Party, capitalist | ; . Join the Communist Party Industrial Plan Is Surpassed By the USSR | | Heavy Industry Leaders | Reveal Huge °34 Gains Made by Seviets (Special to the Daily Worker) | MOSCOW, Sept. 24 (By Wireless). | -The managers of the Soviet Union’s heavy industries, following | {a recent conference, have made | | public the advances made by | | 6,000,000 engineers, technicians and | workers during the first cight months of their 1934 plan. | The report states that during these months, the yearly plan was fulfftied to 64.3 per cent, as against 56.8 per cent for the same period | in 1983. | The total production value of heavy industry in the first eight monthe of 1934 amounted to 12,816,- | 000 million roubles, or 28.4 per cent | more than was achieved by the Plan | at this time last year. | During the first seven months of | 1934, the cost of production was re- | duced 5 per cent. The productivity of labor rose 11.8 per cent. | Thirty-two billion roubles were | jinvested in heavy industry during the course of the first Five-Year | Plan and the first eighteen months | of the Second Five-Year Plan. | During the past six months, new enterprises valued at 21,700,099,000| roubles were put into operation. | Individual plants in different | branches of heavy industry have | fulfilled their plans considerably in excess of 100 per cent. | The advance of the pig iron in- dustry during the first eight months of 1934 amounts to 51.2 per cent, steel 44.5 per cent, rolled metal 36.7 per cent over their production dur- | ing the same period in 1933, | The conference played an im- portant role in providing opportuni- ties for the exchanging of experi- ence among individual enterprises. Less advanced branches of indus- try were able to profit by the ex- periences of leading enterprises, and the Soviets’ industrial world was able to mobilize and co-ordinate it- self for the tasks of the third year of the Second Five-Year Plan, ! i! Many Harvest | Quotas Filled | “Inthe USSR Soviets” Didivery Plan 100% Completed On Most Collectives (Special to the Daily Worker) MOSCOW, Sept. 2% (By Wire- less).—The harvesting of the So- viet Union's grain crops is almost | finished. | By Sept. 15, more than 192,000,000 acres had been harvested. Larger jand larger volumes of grain flow |daily into the bins at state and co-operative purchasing points. | The annual State plan for grain | deliveries was fulfilled 74.7 per cent |on Sept. 15. A number of Republics and regions, including the Kiev dis- trict in the Ukraine, Crimea, Georgia and other Caucasian re- publics of White Russia, Moscow, | and various western regions have | already completely fulfilled their |annual plan for grain deliveries. Co-operative societies are ener- getically purchasing newly - har- vested grain from collective farm- ers and individual farmers, in ad- (dition to the State plan of grain | deliveries, | | Providing for the collective farm- era’ demands for manufactured | | goods, which have greatly increased | lately in connection with the com-| pletion of the harvest, Centrosoyuz | (the Central Co-operative Society) | jevery day sends into the country- | | side large quantities of cloth, boots, ;Sugar, agricultural machines, iron, | (cement, glass, timber, sewing ma- \chines, victroias and every other | kind of household article and build- |ing material. | The demand for all these sup- |plies has greatly increased. Every- | where the collective farms are con- | structing new barns, stables, farm | buildings, etc. The collective farms are develop- | ing cattle farms with great in- tensity. During the first seven | months of this year, collective farms in the U. S. S. R. organized 2,980 new cattle farms, of which 2,530 were developed in July alone. By August 1, the number of cattle farms and collective farms in the . 8. S. R. already exceeded 135,000. | | These farms have about 20,000,000 head of cattle, |. During the first half of 1934,| horned cattle on the collective farms increased 16 pcr cent, hogs 18 | per cent and sheep 37.7 per cent, |Rumanian Jail-Rule Trying io Terrorize All Militant Workers BUCHAREST, Sept. 24.— The court-martial meeting at Hotin has | declared six workers guilty “propaganda for the Soviet Union.” One was sentenced to 15 years at |hard labor, three to five years in prison, and one to three years. | Enna Poleac, 16 years old, and | Friedenberg, 1), were tried and sen- tenced in Lapusna for being found in possession of a red flag. The Jassy court-mar‘ial has con- demned six workers who opposed the jail-rule regime in Galata to prison terms. All preparations have been made for the execution of the political prisoners in Doftana. Francise Pantor, victim of this miserable | prison, is dead. The physician's re- | port states he had tuberculosis and died of undernourishment, following 'U. S. Plane Mechanies Hail U.S.S.R. Aviation; GORMAN’S VICTORY ALFRED The Most Burning Question--- Unity of Action By BELA KUN Member of the Presidiam of the Communist International (Thirteenth instalment) 'HE unity of action of the Communist Parties with the Social-Democratic Parties is not possible at any given moment. We Communists do not, under any circumstances, favor a united front only from above, a collaboration of the “party chiefs” behind the backs of the masses. We are always and under aH circumstances in favor of common struggle of the Social-Democratic and Communist workers, of the united front from below, and, when this is possible, we favor collaboration with the Social- Democratic Parties on the basis of a concrete pro- gram against the bourgeoisie. Vandervelde knows this very well. He knows the difficulties which arise for the Second International, too, from such a situation, and that is why he could not make the best of the “bad job” which the Prench Socialists did. In his article he writes: “It must at any rate not be kept a secret that before the executive of the Socialist and Labor International things will doubtless not go so smoothly as in the National Council of the Socialist Party of France.” Vandervelde has good grounds for fearing the discussions in the Second International over the question of unity of action, Cites Austrian Unity Action It will be very difficult to arrive at a united opinion within the Second International on the unity of action between the Communist Party of Austria and the Austrian revolutionary socialists. The common struggle of the Communists and reyo- lutionary Socialists, which came about against the will of the leaders of the former Social-Democratic Party, is being conducted under the slogan of the revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat. The Social-Democratic Parties represented in the Second International are such parties as have seats in bourgeois governments, as for example in Sweden and Denmark, or such as are just preparing to take over the ship of state from the bourgeoisie, as for example the British Labor Party. All these Social-Democratic Parties and others as well are opposed in principle to the dictatorship of the pro- letariat; they make no difference between prole- tarian dictatorship and the fascist dictatorship of the bourgeoisie. Will such parties as these be able to tolerate the unity of action of the Social-Democratic Parties with the Communist Parties in France, in the Saar region, and of the revolutionary Socialists with the Communists in Austria? The answer to this will be given in the near future, but we are of the opinion that they will not. They will not tolerate it even if Vandervelde and other leaders of the Second International discover a formula for diplo- matic reconciliation. But whatever the Second In- ternational may decide, the Communists stand fast by their program; they will carry on the struggle for the unity of action sf the proletariat against the bourgeoisie. In these struggles the splitting of the working class will be overcome and the unity of the labor movement achieved! IM. FOR THE UNITY OF THE LABOR MOVEMENT What stood and still stands in the way of estab- lishing the unity of action of the workers? What. directly or indirectly has kept many Social-Demo- cratic workers from grasping the honestly offered hand of the Communist Parties in order to fight together shoulder to shoulder with their Commu- nist class comrades against the common enemy? 1, LEON BLUM AS WITNESS We produce a witness of whom no one can allege that he sympathizes with the Communists. This witness is the most acknowledged leader of French Social-Democracy and of the Second Inter- national—Leon Blum. In the Populaire of July 11 he mad the following admission in regard to this question: “For years on end, when unity of action was spoken of, we always thought and declared: ‘No, not unity of action but organizational unity’ (‘unite organique), and we have tried to evade and defer all contact aimed at partial or occa- sional unity till the day when complete and per- fect unity is considered possible. I, myself, was also of this opinion and have spoken in this sense. I have a feeling that today this view is no longer justified and that one cannot extricate oneself from the difficulty by this simple act of evasion.” May we not say that this confession of Leon Blum’s is a confession of a system of prolonged sabotage against the unity of action of the working class against the attacks of the class enemy, of the fascist and semi-fascist bourgeoisie? Can we not say that our united front tactics have always been seriously and honestly intended, as the program of the Communist International says, “as a means toward achieving success in the struggle against capital, toward the class mobilization of the masses, and the exposure and silation of the reformist leaders,” who prevent the class mobilization of the masses, the successful struggle against capital and victory over capitalism? Were the proposals of the Communist Party of Germany to the German Gen- eral Confederation of Trade Unions and the Social- Democratic Party of Germany in July, 1932 and January, 1933, the proposals to call a general strike in order to prevent Hitler’s advent to power, Com- munist maneuvers? Was the pronosal of the Com- munist Party of Austria to the Social-Democratic Party of Austria of March, 1933 for the prevention of the Dollfuss dictatorship, a Communist maneuver? Was the appeal of the Communist International of March 5, 1933, “for the establishment of the united front of struggle with the Social-Democratie work- ing masses through the medium of the Social- Democratic Parties” a Communist maneuver? Leon Blum informs us how these proposals were “evaded” when he declares now, after the victory of fascism in Germany and Austria: “It seems impossible to me today to put for- ward organizational unity as a method of evading unity of action.” “Today”! The confession comes late, but not too late. There is still time to prevent the victory of fascism in many countries. If one does not “evade” the question of unity of action. The unity of action of the French proletariat on the basis of the offer made by the C. P. of France, which was finally accepted and not evaded by French Social-Democracy, is a sign that the French bour- geoisie will not be able to introduce concentration camps on the fascist model for the French prole- tariat. (To Be Continued) the progress of Soviet aviation, At | the Moscow sporting airdrome we | Mass Rally realized the difference between the training of aviators here in the U. Are Amazed by Moscow's. §. 8. and in other countries. In on Friday Will Protest Murder Of 3 Filipinos in Strike (Special to the Daily Worker) MOSCOW, Sept. 24 (By Wireless). —Lavery and Armistead, American aviation mechanics who were awarded the Order of Lenin for their participation in the rescue of the Chelyuskini‘es, recently gave their impressions of Moscow to a. “Prayda’ ‘reporter. “From what we Moscow in America, we thought it would be a big city, and nothing | heard about | Not describe our feelings. They = your country, every worker can ob- tain an education in aviation, and "| this is taught free of charge,” the two aviation mechanics remarked. “This does not exist abroad. Else-~ where you have to pay to learn aviation,” they declared. “Each of us experienced tremen- dous pleasure on receiving the Or- | We naturally can- ust the mechanics der of Lenin. be . experienced,” added, NEW YORK—In protest against the slaughter of three Filipino cigar strikess in Manila recently, a mass meeting will be held Friday night, at 151 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn, under the auspices of the Filipino Anti-Imperialist League. A cable has been sent by the League to the 5,000 striking cigar makers in Manila protesting the murders and arrests of strikers. “Express working-class solidarity else. We never expected to see} World Eront Red Army and Missionaries Mr. Whang Complains | E scarcity of news of tha | * Chinese Soviets is made up jtoday by two roundabout sources. The first source ig | his holiness, the pope himself, jand the second, the China | Weekly Review. From Shang« | hai his holiness received a cable | that the wicked Red Armies in |Anhwei Province have gone and | Seized most of the southern portion of the territory, and with it there | fell into the hands of the workers? |and peasants’ armies various |chureh buildings. The Catholie | missionaries fled with the retreat |ing butcher armies of Chiang Kaie | shek, where they felt more safe, pte hae |MATHOLIC missions in China, very closely associated with the | feudal landlord bourgeois and yil- |lage gentry, are of great help to | Chiang Kai-shek against the So- | Viets. When territory is seized where these agents of the oppres- sion of the Chinese masses happen to have built their churches, these are naturally taken over by the So« viets and transformed into schools, hospitals and other centers for the | Welfare of the Chinese masses, ee eee I REMEMBER one instance of the capture of missionaries at a sum- mer resort. There were four Amer- ican missionaries with their wives and children present. The Red Army soldiers rigged up sedan chairs and carried the women and children on their backs, Because the task of feeding the children was too difficult, they finally trans- ported them back, at the risk of the lives of Red Army men, and turned them loose where they could make contact with their friends, When foreign correspondents tried to get anti-Communist state- ments from these missionaries, they |refused, stating they had never | been treated better in their lives, Dials ea dBi latest issue of the China Weekly Review which we re- ceived shows Chiang Kai-shek’s sixth anti-Communist drive is not going so well. In fact, in Szechuan | Province it is meeting with utter disaster. In Anwhei, Kweichow, end Fukien Province, the Red Armies are making constant ad- vances, Gen. Liu Hsiang, Commander-in« Chief of the Szechuan anti-Com- |munist armies, suddenly resigned his post. He left his military head- quarters at Chengtu for Shanghai, “As a result of Gen. Liu’s de- parture,” comments the China Weekly Review, “military operationa against the Communists have been temporarily suspended.” The China Weekly, however. {s all balled up on cause and effect. The reason for the suspension of the anti-Communist war is not General Liu’s departure. Quite the contrary. The victories of the Red Army in Szechuan forced the sus- pension of the anti-Soviet war and forced Gen. Liu’s resignation. “It appears,” continues the China. Weekly Review, “that on August 23, Gen. Liu received reports about serious reverses on the part of the provincial forces at the hands of) |Communists at Wanyuan. Realizing | that the provisional leaders cannot | present a united front against their! common enemy and that the anti-| Red campaign has failed to bring) about the desired effect, General Liu left Chengtu secretly that day and proceeded to Chungking, etner aeceih 3 r KWEICHOW, the Red Army under the leadership of Comrade Ho Lung. has made sweeping gains. The Red Army captured Yenho, taking the Kuomintang troops com= pletely by surprise and inflicting heavy casualties on them. Yenho is a city on the west bank of the Wu- Kiang River not far from the Hunan border, and a very strategic point for further advances for the Red Army in Kweichow. Sei Late 'HINESE writers, in view of the conflicting reports of victory! against the Red Army issued by Chiang Kai-Shek, and subsequent authenticated reports of Soviet ad- vances, are beginning to complain. For example, Paul K, Whang of Shanghai. e faithful supporter of the anti-Soviet drive, writes: “The exact situation concerning the Red-banditry [this is the same term the Trotzkyites use] in China has never been clearly understood by the public because of the vigi- Jance exercised by the government officials in suppressing authentic news and their readiness to release biased reports for domestic cons sumption. What we have read in the vernacular press have been nothing but encouraging reports, as for example that the govern- ment forces have the situation well in hand, that the military phase of bandit-suppression will soon come to an end, or that the downfall of Soviet China is only a matter of days. Once in a great while, small items of news have escaped the axes of news censors and these have betrayed that the situation as a whole is not as encouraging as the government officials would have the uninformed public believe. The ubiquitous presence of Red< bandits coupled with their swift movements and surprise attacks upon government positions speale eloquently of the continuous prese sence of a very serious menace, for the eradication of which the gov- ernment has already spent millions of dollars and years of military campaigns.” ¥cu shouldn’t forget. Mr. Whang, the millions spent by Japanese; British, French and American im< perialism for the same purpose and with the same ts. =— ing comrades of all political problems arising in | .| inhuman treatment. with striking cigar makers,” reads such enormous construction-work | Our Readers Must Spread the ; ion {| New arrests are mi y day. i the cable. “Condemn killings and the textile situation, and the taking of eftecti NAME .sssssssseseionesierscesseseeseecessecesseee ln duly 30, shateon young weekers [and such animation. We are aston=|. 4 Mea Builder on every. busy | (or ei oN anton gent’ tol Day Worker Anions the emir organizational steps to guarantee the carrying were apprehended in Klausenburg ished at everything we have seen,” | street corner in the country means | Governor General Murphy, protest-| of All Mass and Fraternal Organ« fe. through of decisions reached. ; ADDRESS (Transylvania) and severely beaten, | ‘he Americans said. a tremendous step toward the ing. Protest meeting being held.| izations As a Political Task of First y Finally, the Daily Worker circulation must be | They face court-martial “We are specially surprised at| dictatorship of the proletariat! Continue your fight.” Importance! meet <s A ie iets ess \ é

Other pages from this issue: