The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 7, 1934, Page 8

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‘age g Daily <QWorker IEWTRAL ORGAM COMMUNIST PARTY U.S.A. (SECTION OF COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL) Working Class Daily Newspaper” FOUNDED 1924 PUBLISHED DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAY, BY THE SOMPRODAILY PUBLISHING CO., INC., 50 E. 13th street, New York, N. Y. Telephone: ALgonquin 4-795 4. Cable Ad New York Washingt 4th and F St., Midwest Bureau “America’s Only is: “Daiwork,” Telephone: Dearbor By Mail: (except ots eat, $890 Mmonths, $3.50; 3 75. cents. serene 1 year, $8.00; 75 cents. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1934 Gorman’s Proposals Mean | Wage Cuts HE New York Times of yesterday, shows in its editorial columns, a full understanding of the meaning of the statement of Francis Gorman, leader of the United Textile Union, to the cotton textile manufacturers. Gorman offered to George Sloan, chairman of the Cotton Textile Institute, create joint employer-union machinery for the j t iescien and extension of the textile market.’ The New York Times, spokesman for the mill owners, declares that “this invitation is cheering.” The Times correctly points out that Gorman’s “invitation” means a readiness on the part of Gor- man to accept wage cuts for the one million textile workers. “The best wage level,” concludes the Times, “is that which permits the fullest production in all lines with the largest possible total of wage pay- ments.” The whole line of the editorial is an argument for lower wages-to the textile workers. The Times complains that wages of building trades workers are too high, and should be reduced, and infers that similar action should be taken in the textile industry. As the Daily Worker pointed out in its editorial columns yesterday, the textile mill owners have cause to rejoice at Gorman’s offer to work in their interests. Gorman's proposals, to aid the mill own- ers to compete with Japan and other foreign textile producers employers, means that Gorman has placed his services at the disposal of the em- ployers to lower the whole standard of living of the textile workers, and to aid the imperialist war aims of the American employers, in order to in- crease mill owners’ profits. The Times rejoices that Gorman has rejected “the Marxist doctrine” of class struggle and is lining up with the employers to “increase sales.” The Times editorial rings in lying slanders against the Soviet Union, rehashing the old lies of dis- Satisfaction of the peasants. The “cheer” of the employers, as evidenced in the Times editorial, is furthered by the fact that Gorman’s statement attempts to divide up and split the workers on the basis of nationality and the conflicts between the employers of ‘one industry witty those of another. What have the leaders of the Socialist party and the Lovestoneites within the U.T.W. to say Tegarding the latest treachery of Gorman? The Sccialist party leaders recently had Gorman as an honored guest at a Rand School meeting. The Socialist party leaders (both the Thomas and Wald- Man factions) support Gorman’s sellout of the gen- eral textile strike. One Socialist leader, Emil Rieve, endorsed and signed the seliout terms, which gave the workers none of their demands. What has Eli Keller, leader of the Paterson silk union (U.T.W.) to say regarding the proposals which Mean another step toward turning the U.T.W. into @ company union? What does Anthony Ammirato, dye strike leader and member of the National Executive Council of the U.T.W. have to say regarding these proposals to help increase the bosses’ profits at the expense ‘Of hte textile workers? The rank and file have a right to know where every U.T.W. official stands on these proposals. ‘The rank and file inside the U.T.W. must reject this surrender to the wage-cutting drive of the textile employers aided by Roosevelt's boards. ‘The rank and file must control their own union, @nd prepare struggles to defeat the drive on their living standards. Election Contacts NE of the immediate jobs now, after the elections, is to make sure that we do not lose any of the thousands of new contacts that we have made with workers and sympathizers during the past weeks of the election campaign. Among these new friends that we have made through our election campaign, there are literally thousands of workers who are the finest material for the Communist Party. It depends on the way We continue to strengthen our personal relations with these workers that will determine whether we can win them as recruits into the Party,. where they alone can wage the most effective fight against capitalism and starvation. Comrade William Z. Foster, in his letter in yesterday's “Daily,” spoke of the election as a “milestone in the struggle of the American working class for Socialism ... a high point in our mobili- zation of the workers in the unions and in the shops for a united struggle against war and fas- It is in this spirit, and in the way pointed out in the special recruiting letter sent out by the Central Committee, that every member of the Party should devote himself to wining those who are * closest to him for the Party. Recruit into the Communist Party! Develop personal contacts with the best candidates for the Party! Let there be no slackening in our work among the masses! Fascist Propaganda NDICATIVE of the growth of fascist tendencies in the United States is the new and more vicious red-baiting cam- paign launched by the Hearst press. It shrieks for the immediate deportation of all militant foreign-born workers who fight for better conditions, and the imprisonment of Amer- ican-born workers who are members cf Communist and Socialist organizations. Hearst’s plea for a more open fascist terror against the working class is in line with the anti- Communist stand of such fraternal organizations Ss the Elks. It is part of the drive against Com- # ' DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1934 munists in the A. F. of L. that is being pushed by Green, Woll and other reactionary officials. It also is part of the whole New Deal onslaught aga i class. From the start of the New Dea pitalist class and its various age have eased their terroristic actions in an effort to break the militant wave of workers’ struggles. Only on Monday, Daniel J. MacCormack, Comm of Immigration, told a delegation protesting the Roosevelt-Per- kins deportation drive, that “You'd better tell those ign-born workers not to engage in any activi- ties that could be interpreted as Communist . . . There is no question but that when the next Con- gress meets, more stringent deportation laws will be enacted.” Back of all these moves is the fear of the capi- talists that the workers who. are in action against the New Deal will go left to the Communists. To prevent this leftward move, the capitalists attack the vanguard first. Just as the first move toward breaking the San Francisco general strike was the vigilante attack against the Communist Party, so.the movement to smash all working class actions begins with an assault against the Communists, But the experiences of Germany and San Fran- cisco have shown that the attack against the Com- munists is followed by attacks against the Socialist workers and even liberal organizations. Already the Hearst specialist on Reds, Richard Washburn Child, Mussolini's apologist in this country, urges of Socialists along with Communists : “The Red may pin on any label—Com- Socialist or any other label. He is still Distinctions be hanged!” munist, a Red, The only effective answer to the fascist menace which grows daily, is the formation of a mighty united front of all workers and toilers. They are already united in their hatred of fascism. To let these fascist developments go unchal- lenged will only increase the tempo of the terror drive. To let the Communists bear the brunt of the atack alctne is to encourage further attacks against the whole of the working class. Defeat the plans of the Red-baiters by forging the united front of the whole working class. Milk Monopoly HE Supreme Court of the United States has just handed down a decision con- firming the right of the New York State milk board to cooperate with the milk monopolies in maintaining high milk prices. If the smal!, non-monopoly milk producer who has been able to exist because he has undersold the big milk trusts, must go under, then so much the worse for the non-monopoly producer, states the decision which was written by the “liberal” Judge Cardozo. Thus the Supreme Court takes its piace in the machinery of the Roosevelt “New Deal,” all of which is geared toward one main purpose—to tighten the grip of the Wall Street monopolies on the life of the country, to protect and increase monopoly profits at the expense of the masses. This Roosevelt milk program crushes not only the consumers in the cities. It impoverishes the small dairy farmers in the country as well. Under the Roosevelt A.A.A. milk program the difference between what the small dairy farmers get and what the consumers pay in the cities ranges from 300 to 500 per cent. The Milk Trust gets the difference. Roosevelt’s milk program sees to that. The only program for the relief of the im- poverished farmers and the city consumers, both of whom are robbed by the Wall Street milk monopolies under the A.A.A. program, is outlined in the Farmers Emergency Relief Bill, which de- clares for higher prices to the farmer and lower prices for the consumer, with the monopoly profits of the middleman drastically reduced. ‘The Supreme Court milk decision is just another piece of evidence as to the ruthless monopoly drive of the Roosevelt government. It is necessary for the workers and the impoverished farmers to attack the Roosevelt farm program from both sides, against the monopoly exploitation which plunders them both. | Green‘Rewards His Friends’ HE seal was fittingly set on the formal entrance of the Socialist party offi- cialdom into the select official family of William Green at a banquet Sunday to honor the election of David Dubinsky as @ member of the Executive Council of the A. F. of L, Matthew Woll, Green's leading red-baiter and exponent of fascism, made the principle speech welcoming the Socialist leader as a fellow vice- president of the A. F. of L. Dubinsky, in reply, showed that he will cooperate with the executive council and will give the Green bureaucracy no trouble. Other speakers were Frank Morrison, secretary of the A. F. of L., and Sidney Hillman, member of the new National Industrial Recovery Board. The unity of the Socialist leaders with the A. F. of L. Green officialdom has been repeatedly demon- strated of late. The New Leader, hailed the recent A. F. of L. convention as a “step forward” and as “progressive”, in spite of the fact that all rank and file proposals were stified and that Green and his fellow officials dominated the convention poli- cies and votes, from start to finish. The fact that the Socialist leaders are a part of the A. F. of L. Green machine was also demon- strated in the textile industry, when the Socialist, Emil Rieve, signed, together with Gorman, the sell-out of the general textile strike, which robber the textile workers of every one of their demandé. The Socialist leaders, from Waldman to Thomas, praised and supported this betrayal of Gormen. The Socialists recently honored Gorman at a meet- ing in the Rand School. The Socialist leaders have long followed out Green’s policies in the trade unions. Dubinsky, new A. F. of L. vice-president, elected with Green's support, has prevented the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, of which he is president, from endorsing the Workers Unemployment and Social Insurance Bill (H.R. 7598), Dubinsky and his Lovestoneite vice-president, C. Zimmerman, advocave installation of the unit system in the dress industry, a system which means more speed- up @h= a vicious efficiency scheme for the needle workers, The Socialist leaders have been rewarded by Green for good and faithful service to his strike- breaking policies. Join the Communist Party 35 EAST 12TH STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y. Please send me more information on the Com- munist Party, NAME ADDRESS Party Life Party Bulletins On Organization And Party Work UR Seventh National Convention recorded the need for establish- ling district org. bulletins. At pres- ent, summarizing the achievements in this direction, we see first of all, that many of our important districts have as yet not carried out this decision. Such districts as 1, 3, 8 and 9 have not at this date issued |any bulletin. Nevertheless, there has accumulated a considerable amount of experience which we |should place at the disposal of all comrades | The first question that arises is what should a district bulletin be? The district bulletin must, above all, popularize and develop methods of |work and leadership in the light of the tasks of our Convention, in- stead of “mirroring” events. This means to organize our work in such |a way that our decisions no longer | remain on paper. With this in mind, | we insist that a stop be put to the long, political articles which do not contain a single reference to actual experience. Also, we do not need the heavy barrage of “musts” that clutter some of the bulletins. It is advisable that the leading article of a paper deals with some im- portant strike, or other struggle, tasks, A part of the paper should | | this or that task set by the district In looking over the Jersey bul. letin, “Pace Setter,” No. 3, the ar-/ ticle entitled “Unit in RCA Saf guards Workers, Wins Influence, simplest experiences and lessons, which other comrades in search of} |lofty phrases usually neglect. We| find more than half of this paper| | devoted to dealing with strike ex- | periences; experiences in the circu-/} |lation of the Young Worker, etc. A/ very important feature that all’ papers should have is to regularly review some phase of the work of some one shop unit, its recruiting, how it safeguards its members. _ | | We should take the greatest pains} \to constantly give guidance to our} |shop papers and neighborhood | papers (Young Worker supple-| ments), in the bulletin. | | The bulletin, if it is to carry out | its purpose, should do more than command. It must help in making | popular and in controlling decisions. For instance, if, at a particular point our we is unsatisfactory, raise a broad discussion around this, | working to discover the cause; call |for a special group of voluntecrs to |improve the work, organize competi- tion. | The district bulletin can play a | very decisive role in order to ac- !complish an important task by de- | voting, if necessary, an entire issue \to it. For instance, the second is- sue of the Jersey bulletin dealt al- |most entirely with the Young | Worker. It not only described its importance but gave experiences of how the Young Worker can be sold and above all, how some units and groups of comrades have sold it. . * 8 |]T IS of extreme importance that| our district bulletins pay atten- tion to preparing the League for il- legality. We all admit the need for this and no one would consciously work against this. However, it is very important to note that not one of our bulletins gives specific directives, experiences or any ex- | planatory material at all as to how jwe are to prepare for illegality, as | well what we must do to remain « legal. There are many positive features of the district bulletins. In Jooking over the Jersey bulletin we have to praise some features, such as the page of material headed “Facts,” ‘which give information about the social, economic and political condi- tions of the youth primarily in Jer- sey in a snappy style, very useful for writing and speaking. A regular |review of books and pamphlets is ‘another good feature of the paper. |The general type of article in the | first and second issues of this paper \is well written, has a live heading and in general deals with concrete experiences, . | | WEE question arises, since so many important tasks exist, what should determine the contents of a bulletin? To this we can say, as | already indicated, that work in the | shops, concentration, work in the | bourgeoisie-controlled organizations, ‘should be given special attention. ‘In other words we do not wish the bulletin to be divorced from the basic problems of the League. In this connection we must I~ able to |grasp that which is new and im- | portant in struggles of the worker | today, utilize and make this knowl- |edge the property of all. The bulletin, in its role as organ- lizer, should pay close attention to |the problems of outlying sections jand units, which are at a distance | from the district center. The Mich- igan paper shows some initial steps |in this direction. The suggestions included in this article are doubly valuable for such sections and units, | who would suffer even more from formal methods of work than those who receive regularly more personal guidance. |, There would be much added to | the bulletin if we regularly include | material on organization of classes, study circles, schools, telling our comrades how to study and what to read. On this again the Jersey paper has struck this path already and contains much material along these lines. One final word about language. The language of the bulletins should be plain enough for every youth to un- derstand. It is for everyone to see that ovr average member is only a short step removed from the young worker or student not in the League. Many articles, in a sincere effort | to explain some involved question of | theory, manage to further mystify the comrades who read it. In gen- |eral, it would be better if we used quotations from leading comrades |to give additional meaning and depth to an article, It would be very advisable to deal | with principles of organization as formulated by Lenin and Stalin, | which throw a brilliant light upon | our daily problems, analyzing it and paying particular | attention to its lessons and aibure | |deal with simple explanations and) directives as to how to carry out the comrades bring out even the | SEVENTEEN YEARS AGO TODAY! | | ae | for $60,000. QUOTA—$1,000. F. W. . Sec. 3 Unit 5 .... LW.O. Roumanian-Cleve. By A. LOZOVSKY (Conclusion) But after the establishment of the dictatorship of the proletariat, | |they will have to reorganize their | trade unions in order to fulfill the | specific tasks, determined by the | size and social-economic structure |in their countries, they will have to adopt the trade unions to the tasks which will be confronting the eco- nomics of each country, The re- organization should be different for | the economy of Germany, England, India, China, Japan, Poland, Bel- gium, Sweden. This is why I be- lieve that the conclusion which we must arrive at along the lines of |the R. I. L. U. is as follows: How |should the masses be brought to- gether, first of all in order to help the Communist Party overthrow the bourgeoisie and estal the dictatorship of the proletariat, how} can the principle of building and the methods and forms of struggle applied by the Soviet trade unions be introduced in a capitalist coun- try in order to smash the class en- emy and to rid the working class of the influence of reformism- This } is the main and most essential question at present confronting every representative of the revyolu- tionary trade union movement in a@ capitalist and colonial country. And as to the question of how you are going to reorganize your trade unions after the victory of the pro- letariat, you will decide it after this victory is achieved, because you will have to decide it in the specific conditions of the national economy you will interit from your bour- geoisie, in the specific conditions of the territory at your disposal and in accordance with the distribution of the economic centers and with the peuliarities to be found in every country. Were we to act otherwise we would have, not a dialectic, not a Bolshevik, but a schematic ap- proach to the solution of a most im- portant political question, eh * E reorganization of the trade unions in the U. S. S. R. is not Contributions received to the credit of Burck in his Socialist competition with Mike Gannes, “del,” the Medical Advisory Board, Ann Barton, David Ramscy, in the Daily The Reorganization of In the Socialist Soviet Republics ® only an organizational issue. It is (Continued from Page 1) Gold, Herry Worker drive J. 5. D. Hyman Hirschorn Previously received sere $ 4,00 15.31 Total t Rechester Womens Council by Burck Burck will give the original drawing of his cartoon to the highest contributor each day towards his quota of $1,000, C. 8. Keeler ..... World Front i—_—By HARRY GANNES —— An Italian Dimitrov Adele Bei, Communist The Saar War Draws Near HE heroism of Adele Bei, a woman worker tortured after her arrest by the Mus- solini government, and later | sentenced to 18 years impris- onment, is shown by the re- port of her trial published by “Soccorso Rosso,” organ of the Red Aid of Italy. “Soccorso Rosso” was able to ob- tain excerpts of Comrade Bei’s tes- timony before the fascist special tribunal, where she'\was charged with having carried on Communist activity in Italy. A mother of two children, Adele Bei, faced her ac- cusers like Georgi Dimitroff, proud- ly proclaiming her membership in the Communist Party. We quote from the record: Judge: Why did you leave Italy and go abroad with your family? Defendant: Because my children had no bread. My husband and I were not fascists and this is suffi- cient to be denied work. Judge; How. have abroad? Defendant: Working. I am a worker and I always worked for a living. Judge: What were your political activities abroad? Defendant: I have always been interested in the labor movement, that is, the working class to which I belong. Judge: You declared, when you were questioned, that you were a Communist. Do you affirm that to- day? Defendant: Yes. A worker cannot be anything else. Judge: Why did you return to Italy? What tasks did you intend to carry out in Italy? Defendant: The tasks which rest upon eyery member of ine Commu- nist Party, that is, to be at the head of the workers in tne struggic which they carry on every day. Judge: Did you not think that by you lived vee 5.0L so doing you were neglecting your 2.00 duties as a mother, inasmuch as 7.50 that would lead you to abandon Lirentaet 5.00 your children? . 1.00 Defendant: Aiming at carrying 107.07 forward the proletarian struggles ia ‘ against fascism, with my experience ante: cS 28 aba ag as a revolutionist and a Commu. the Unions a deep political question, it is a question connected with the forms and methods of the most rapid ad- vance to and upbuilding of the classless society, it is a question connected with the forms and methods of how best to serve the | masses, it is a question connected with the best and most proper services to those 19,000,000 people whom we haye drawn into our trade unions, with making every trade union member a real fighter for Socialist construction. This is the question of how to.draw in the 22 per cent of the working class not yet organized in our trade unions, how to raise the political level of the 19,000,000 and of the entire working class. Tremendous polit- ical tasks are confronting the work- | ing class, the trade union moye- ment of our country. And proceed- ing from these great political tasks we are carrying through reor- ganization. It is only with such an approach to the problem of the re- organization of the trade unions that we shall be able to place or- ganizational tasks on a_ political foundation. It is only by proceed- ing from the general political tasks of the working class that the ques- tion will become clear why we set up district trade unions, why we are transferring a whole series of trade union leading centers from Moscow to the Ukraine, to Lenin- grad, to Sverdlovsk, to Donbas, etc. It is only by bearing in mind the vast area of our country, the rapid fulfillment of the Second Five- | Year Plan, the rapid progress in the eradication of the remnants of capitalist ideology in the conscious- ness of the people, it is only by proceeding from these prerequisites that we shall be able to grasp the real political meaning of the rad- ical reorganization we have carried out. And it is not accidental that Comrade Stalin, the leader and or- ganizer of Socialist victories, was the initiator of this reorganization. It is not accidental because the building up of a Socialist society, Toiling Masses of World Inspired by Victorious Proletariat Ruling Over One-Sixth of Globe An Editorial ; the advance to a classless society, | imposes on every organization, cov- ered by our trade union, on every | cog in our huge mechanism, which is building socialism, the duty of a better and more rapid fulfillment | of the specific tasks of every or- ganization, including the trade | unions, under the dictatorship of ; the proletariat, The dialectics of | the development consist in the fact | that the abolition of classes is tak- | ing Place in a fierce class struggle. | The dialectics of development are | that in the course of Socialist con- | struction we deny old organizational | forms, bringing forward new, better | forms, which are more suitable to | the given concrete tasks confront- ing the working class of our coun- try. | Will such forms of reorganiza- | | tion be necessary after the dic- jtatorship of the proletariat has been established in other countries? | They will be necessary in some and unnecessary in others. In such a country as China, for instance, it will be necessary to build the trade | unions on the territorial basis, etc. This is a vast country with specific ; economies, with various systems, a country where certain localities are situated at a distance of thousands ,of kilometers from each other. It will be necessary for Brazil, per- haps. But most of the capitalist | countries which have small terri- tories and a concentrated industry will not require a reorganization of | the type carried out in our country. This is why I believe that our for- eign comrades should pay main at- tention to and utilize the experi- ence of the Soviet trade union} movement, not along the line of the reorganization which we are now carrying through, but along the line of studying how we organized | for our victory over the bourgeoisie. Only then will you be able to utilize in a revolutionary and . Bolshevik | manner the great and rich experi- ences the Soviet trade union move- ment gives to the international labor movement. ( united action in the struggle against war and ‘pushed aside. Speed of the special tribunal, this ;Woman worker of Cantiano | Tole. nist, I was also fullfilling my duties as a mother, s:nce the task of my party is to give, through the prole- tarian revolution, a better life for the workers and greater security for the children of tte proletarians now dying of hunger. Judge: Who are the ones whom you. approached in your work? Defendant: The elements who make. up the toiling masses; my function is not that of specifying who among them. Judge: Did you know that with your activities you were commit- ting a crime against your country ‘and fascism, which has given Itaiy ‘and the Italian people security and well-being? Defendant: I knew and know that the work of a Communist is not against the workers, but against those who explo:t them. I knew, and I know that my activities were jhelping to break the regime of op- ;pression and hunger that fascism forced upon the workers, the peas- ants, the small business men, and all toilers. I know—— Judge: Enough! I forbid you to speak! Comrade. Adele Bei then was With the customary (Pe- Saro) was sentenced to 18 years in the worst dungeon of Italian fas- cism. « nm ‘HE war plans of Hitler for seizure of the Saar have gone so far that the leading capitalist newspa- Pers of Europe speak frankly on the question. That the future of the Hitler regime rests to a large part on its plans for armed seizure of the Saar is admitted by the Neue Zuericher Zeitung, of Zurich, Swit- zerland, which a few days ago, edi- torialized as follows: “The Nazi regime and its politi- cal prestige are so bound up with the question of the Saar and the problem of economic reserves so deeply inset therein that violent military struggles are automatically drawing near. “When the workings of all indi- vidual modes of procedure of the regime are considered and when their inevitable consequences so completely overshadow everything else, one is left with the frightful impression that National Socialism is carefully reckoning on the come ing explosion and regards it as un- avoidable. Danger in the Saar is a matter of hourly contingency and Germany considers it worthless to hide her preparations any longer, feeling that the final decision must rest with the nation using the most extreme measures and is preparing herself accordingly. “During the months of October and November these preparations must play an obviously important This new twist to the Saar question, that is, the demonstrative publicity which France has given to her military preparations, has af- forded the Nazi regime the oppor- tunity to redouble her own efforts. “Hopes that the open exertions for the attainment of the esiab- Jution, “stirs more strongly in the consciousness of the masses.” . . . “TRUE to its historical mission—the preparation of the masses for the scizure of state power by the proletariat—the Communist International calls with greater imprecsiveness on every worker to place himself in the ranks of the united front, for the organizing of united action against fascism and war preparations; it calls on the workers of all countries to unite under the red banner of Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin, uder the banner of the Comintern, for the overthrow of the power of the bourgeoisie.” The Communist Party, U.S.A., section of the Communist International, calls cn the American workers, struggling against capitalism, to join its ranks, to become fighters for a Soviet America, for the united front against fascism. In the ranks of the Socialist Party a desire for fascism, for tne defense of the Soviet Union, has broken the bounds of the reactionary leadership. The enemies of the Soviet Union, in the ranks of the Socialist Party, are fighting viciously ageinst their own followers, against the revolutionary ex- pressions of their own members, against the united front. But the united front in France, Austria and Spain, whore Socialists and Communists stand shoulder to shoulder against the bloody attacks of the fascists, will inspire us to the greatest efforts to overcome all obstacles thrown in our path by these reactionary leaders. The united front against war end fascism, for the defense of the workers’ fatherland, will te established. Hail the Seventecnth Anniversary of the glorious Russian Revolution! Defend the workers’ father- land! Forward to a united front of the American workers against war and fascism! Long live the fortress of the World Revolution, the U.S.S.R.! Long live the proletarian world revolution! $y lished goal of efficiency on the part of the Nazi state will be as great as the likewise public preparations of the French administration are both based on the apparent psycholost- cal ground that these proofs of a common determination must no longer be overlooked, and that when fair moral forces end, Ger- many will spentl and has spent a great deal to assure herself power- ful material reserves. Her inten- tions for the future to spend to the utmost must not be underesti- mated, Contributions recetved to the credit of Harry Garnes in kis So- cialist competition with del, Mike Gold, the Medical Advisory Board, Ann Barton, Jacob Burck and David Ramsey, in the Daily Worker drive for $60,000. Quota—s500. omic Ct ue | | =>

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