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: _ building service workers. Page 6 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1934 tae Daily .<QWorker CUNTRAL ORGAN COMMUWIST PARTY U.S.A. (SECTION OF COMMUN/ST INTERMATIONAL) “America’s Only Working Class Daily Newspaper” FOUNDED 1924 PUBLISHED DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAY, BY THE | COMPRODAILY PUBLISHING CO., INC. 5¢ E. 13th | Street, New York, N. ¥. | Telephone: ALgonquin 4-795 4. Cable A Daiwo! New York, N. ¥ National Press Building, Telephone: National 7910. Room 705, Chicago, Tl Subscription Rates: | FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1934 End the Delay | For United Front | IHOUSANDS of Spanish Socialists, from | their prison cells, have sent an appeal to the Executive Committee of the Social- ist International for immediate action on the united front proposals of the Commu- nist International. Unable to account for delay any longer, the Socialist leaders, now meeting in Paris | But indications al- | are to issue their answer on Friday. ready show that every diplomatic maneuver will be used to stave off real united action in behalf of the Spanish workers. In leaders, particularly and Holland, are bringing pressure to break united front already established in France. the Saar and Spain. fact, some of the Socialist | in the Scandinavian countries the Italy, | Others, instead of making the main issue a fight against fascism, are utilizing the attacks of the im- perialists against the Soviet Union, asking for am- nésty of avowed enemies of the workers’ fatherland. The proposals of the Communist International | were clear and of the greatest importance to the working class of the whole world—immediate, united action in support of the Spanish workers, Socialists, Communists, Syndicalists. When the pressure of the workers everywhere becomes so great that the Socialist leaders can no | longer re silent on the united front, some of them use every means to avoid the actual step of joint act:on by the trickery they learnt in the capi- talist parliaments and in the diplomatic service of imperialism | he Ceniral Committee of the Communist Party yesterday again directed an appeal to the Socialist Party for immediate united actions for the freedom of the 60,000 Socialists and Communists in Spanish fascist prisons, and in sup- port of the revolutionary struggles of the Spanish | workers against fascism. | Certainly there should be no further delay. The Communist Party is ready and eager to enter into | negotiations immediately for the arrangement of joint mass meetings and demonstrations in support | of the Spanish workers throughout the United States. | In the meantime, while we wait for an answer from the National Executive Committee of the So- | cialist Party, certainly there should be no delay in | local, state and city organizations of the Socialist Party meeting with the Communist Party organiza- tions and arranging for joint demonstrations in support of the heroic Spanish workers. Building Service Workers, Strike Now! HE strike of the building service em- ployes has again been postponed by the officials of the Building Service Employes International Union, Local 32-B, A. F. of L. For days there have been continuous posipcnements of the strike by these officials. But while the strike is being postponed time after time, the Realty Board has been making all Strikebreaking preparations. They have hired the notorious Bergoff, the Pinkerton, O’Toole, Flynn and other detective agencies, who have employed ten thousand “guards” ready for strong-arm work against pickets. Continued postponements are giv- ing the employers t'me to organize their strike- breaking forces. The Realty Board, determined to crush the union, is presenting a united front of all building construction employers against the building service workers, They are making use of the N. R. A. Re- g-onal Labor Board, and of “arbitration,” to try to prevent the strike and at the same time keep the workers from winning their demands. The employ- ers do not want to cut into their profits, and are using the double weapon of “arbitration” and hiring of sirikebreakers and “guards,” and avoid giving in to the workers’ demands. The b ing workers won nothing during the weeks of negotiation and “arbitration” with the Regional Labor Board preceding their strike in the garment center. They saw after the strike that “arbitration” engineered by La Guardia meant a no-strike agreement which bound their hands and hindered them from winning all their demands. These demands could have been won if the strike hhad been continued. The employers want arbitra- tion because it gives them time to prepare their strikebreaking forces and because “impartial” arbi- tration boards rule in favor of the employers and save their profits. The workers cannot win their demands through arbitration. IN ORDER to unify the ranks of the workers, in the face of the unified attack of the bosses, the Independent Building Service Employes Union has repeatedly proposed joint strike action of both unions. The independent union proposes the mer- ger of bot unions, so as to present a united front for their demands and establish one union in the industry. The officials of Local 32-B have made no answer as yet to these unity proposals. The struggle of the building service workers has reached the stage where important lessons can now be drawn by these workers. 1) A continuance of the Policy so far followed by the officials of Local 32-B of constantly postponing strike action while the bosses are preparing, is harmful to the fight of the 2) Arbitration binds the workers and hinders them from winning their de- mands. 3) The employers have complete unity and the workers, to wage an effective fight, must also have complete unity, with one united union in the inductry. 4) Immediate ike action, with the broadest partic'pation of the rank and file in the Tsadership of the strike, is the road whereby the building service workers will win the comands, 4 Defeat the Terror Against the Dyers HE New Jersey textile dye employers, unable to defeat the strike of the 30,000 dye workers through N. R. A. “ar- bitration,” have begun strikebreaking ter- ror against the picket lines. The police fired at the mass picket lines at the Warren Piece Dye Works in Union City on Wednesday. Police have been mobilized throughout New Jersey with machine guns, tear gas and fire- arms prepared. Open threats to murder strikers on the picket lines have been made. The police an- nounced the picket line at the Warren plant “for- bidden” from now on. The employers are mobilizing their armed forces to carry through the same bloody terror as was used last year against the dye strikers. Last year picket es were fired into by police and a score badly wounded. In answer to a continuance of terror against the dye strikers, the workers in every local should take up the question, and take steps to support the dye strikers and to prepare to spread the strike to all industries in Paterson. Every working class organization, especially all A. F. of L. local unions in New Jersey, must protest against the attack on the Warren Co. picket line and demand withdrawal of all armed forces from the strike area. Every working class organization throughout the country should rally to the support of the dye strikers and pass resolutions of protest against the police terror. In this connection it is essential for the Paterson dye workers’ local to call a UNITED LABOR CON- FERENCE of all labor organizations to map out a preazram of support for the dye strikers. Defend the right of the dye strikers to picket and to organize! Demand the immediate withdrawal of all armed forces from the picket lines! Support and spread the strike of the dye workers! Block the LaGuardia Maneuvers 'WO factors in the proposed three-point relief tax plan for financing unemploy- ment relief in New York City stand out above all others—the obvious inadequacy of the tax measures to meet relief ex- penditures even at the present levels; and endless legal entanglements which will end with their being disqualified by the courts. Very obviously such taxation as was proposed by the Board of Aldermen are of a class nature. And it is equally obvious that no such program of taxa- tion will be undertaken by the Fusion-Tammany regime at City Hall. Briefly, the taxes thus far projected are as follows: (1) increasing the present 1% per cent tax on public utilities to 3 per cent; (2) a tax on bond Sales of 60 cents on each thousand-dollar bond; and (3) a city tax on inheritances above $2,000, On the first proposal, the present utilities tax of 112 per cent is now in process of litigation, and the utilities are deducting it from their realty taxes. It is not intended for ultimate passage, and all three taxes are simply maneuvers. Under such schemes the bankers hold the purse strings; future relief under such a set-up can only be on the basis of borrowing from the banks. The workers must be on their guard. Tied up with endless legal red tape, faced with the inipos- sibility of collection, LaGuardia will pose an artifi- cial dilemma to the working population—either sub- mit to wage, sales and transit taxation or the job- less will go hungry. Every force must be mobilized behind the tax Program put forward by the Communist Party— scrap the Bankers’ Agreement, end the 180 million dollar payments on the debt service, levy stéeply graduated taxes on all incomes above $5,000 a year, tax the large realty holdings and factory and busi- ness sites. On the basis of such a tax program the Commu- nist Party demands union wages and conditions on all relief jobs and substantial increases in relief to meet the rising cost of living. Complete I Drive Quotas By December 1 LTHOUGH not much time is left to carry out the decision of the Central Committee that all quotas in the $60,000 drive be filled by Dec. 1, the districts are still not sufficiently accelerating their ac- tivity. New York still is below two-thirds of its quota. Chicago, a main concentration point, has only raised about 50 per cent, and Pittsburgh has not dene much better. It is in centers that have been the scenes of some of the greatest class battles in the history of the American labor movement that the drive is lag- ging most. California, where the great general strike took place last summer, has raised less than 40 per cent of its quota. This is not due to lack of interest on the part of workers. Their 80,000 Com- munist votes show that they are intensely interested in the Communist movement, and follow its leader- ship. When the capitalist class howled for the breaking of the strike, it was only the “Daily” that told the truth and exposed the strikebreaking ac- "3 of Merriam, Rossi and the A. F. of L. lead- ership. in Minneapolis there is the same shameful situ- ation, with the section having raised only a little over 30 per cent of its quota. Minneapolis was the scene of the strikes of the truck drivers. Again it was the “Daily” which exposed the strikebreaking activities of Governor Olson, who warned the strik- ers of the sellout that was being engineered by the Trotskyite misleaders. Or take Milwaukee. Here only 50 per cent of the quota has been raised. And yet the “Daily” has played a large role in exposing the maneuvers of the Socialist administration, in showing the work- ers h he.r interests are betrayed. In all these centers of important class struggles the “Da has played an important role. To let the “Daily” down in this moment of need is to act ageinst the best interests of the working class. The comrades in the lagging sections and dis- tricts must raise the question of the “Daily” very sharply. They must show that it is an important weapon in the hands of the workers, which, if b) 1, would greatly damage the welfare of all workers. All together in a final spurt that will put the drive over the top by Dec. 1! tivis Join the Communist Party 35 EAST 12TH STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y. Please send me more information on the Com- munist Party. ADDRESS... FE Res | Party Life New Members Class urs Recruiting Drive of Party ECTION SIX, Brooklyn, has con- ducted a new members group for nine weeks. Certain lessgns can al- ready be drawn from this procedure of new members groups. 1, Out of some 43 recruits in the first six weeks, most of them are today in the Party. More than ten. are unit functionaries, speakers, etc. 2. It is now possible for the mem- bership director and instructor to become acquainted with every new member and to make the strictest check-up on the units in the han- dling of recruits. The problems and | questions of the new members can |be given proper attention and their difficulties can be dealt with. 3. During the course of the three | weeks’ discussions, it is possible to judge the comrade’s abilities and weaknesses, so that the comrade |can be placed in the work for which |he or she is best fitted. At times it | will be found that new members be- j}long to as many as three or four | mass organizations. It will be nec- essary for the organization depart- |ment to release the comrade from | all but the one where he or she is best fitted in order to carry out basic Party activity. At other times new members belong to A. F. jof L. or independent unions, | while at the same time are not active, or belonging to the rank and file groups in these unions are taken up with activity in some lo- {cal club, These comrades. by all |means should be.released from all | other work and their major activity turned towards the trade union. _ 4. Under the old procedure a new member going to a unit meeting became swamped with all sorts of activities that he accepted without | knowing how or why these assign- | ments are to be carried out. Many | mew members immediately lost all |connection with their former friends, on the other hand making | no acquaintances in the Party, be- |came isolated and easily discour- |aged. Today the newcomer to the Party has the opportunity to get a | fundamental idea of what the Party is, its aims and the functions of a member. Each new member he- |comes acquainted with the other |mew members, the membership di- rector and the instructor and is encouraged not only to keep old ac- quaintances, bi, also to bring the | best of them irivo the Party. 5. Now, as a rule and not the ex- | ception, new applicants are directly | connected up with the Party. In \this way, the careless handling of application cards, long waiting, loss of cards and many new members has been eliminated. The general feeling for the new members group is a healthy one. The comrades are glad to take ad- vantage of this method of clearing themselves up on many points, and in this way gain a stronger foot- hold inside the Party. In answer to the question, “Why did you join the Communist Party”, | serious reruiting problems were raised. It was brought out for ex- ample, that many of these new members have been militant and |active members of long standing in | trade unions, where Party members | belong, and where fractions exist, yet most of these recruits were not brought into the Party directly by the fractions or Communists in the trade union. This fact alone is enough to raise the whole question |of recruiting sharply before the {Communists in the trade unions. In two weeks two new members each brought in another new mem- ber. One brought a worker from his shop, thus laying the basis for @ nucleus there in an A. F. of L. union shop. This bringing up the whole question of pepping up the reruiting drive by showing some of the old units what this new mem- bers group can do inside of three weeks, nesses in owr conduct of the new is the question of group activity for the new comrades. This has not been solved, and there is a ten- dency that the group takes on the outlook of a class or a parole group. We have to work out a method of assigning small tasks for the new group, and after each activity a discussion on the carrying out of the assignment should be held. The second difficulty is begause of | lack of instructors, the group is continuous, with new members com- ing in each week. These do not get the full benefit of the three weeks’ course, as they would if they were in a definite group. Up to now, the instructors of these section groups have had no meetings where experiences could be exchanged. Since this inter- change of experience is valuable, the instructors should utilize this column as their medium. J. R., Section Six, Brooklyn. Town Council Asks Release of Thaelmann LONDON, Nov. 14.—People going to work this morning discovered that during the night slogans: “Re- lease Thaelmann” had been indel- ibly etched on the windows of the offices of the German State Rail- ways in Piccadilly, and on the win- dows of Schmidt's restaurant, a notorious Nazi resort. On the motion of a Communist Councillor, the Blyth (Northumber- lJand) Town Council has passed a resolution protesting against the imprisonment of Thaelmann and other anti-fascists in Germany, and demanding their release. This reso- lution has been forwarded to the | German Embassy. Among the large number of addi- tional resolutions from Trade Coun- cils, trade union branches, co- operatives, etc. are two from the crews of British ships, the Olapos and Sheaf Crest, demanding the | release of Thaelmann, OFFICIALLY APPROVED! UTILIZES HOBBY TO RAISE FUNDS A. McKean, who recently contributed $15 to this feature (and $10 to Mike Gold), found a unique way to raise $25. “I make a hobby of painting in oils,” he confided. “Some of my landscapes. excited the admiration of many of my fellow workers, most of whom expressed a desire to own one; so I sug- gested a 50-cent raffle, and within a few days had by Burck STRIKEBREAKER Gorck wall give the original d:awing of his cartoon te the highest contributor each day towards his quoty of $1,000, fifty paid entries. The $25 left me out one picture, and the drive in twenty-five bucks.” Artists: how about it? Rochester Section $ 21.67 Fineman . : 1,00 Previously received 350.13 Total ++ $372.80 Quota—$1,000, There are at present some weak-' members group. The principal one | By A. L. t VER 1,000 hectares of the former landlord’s estate are occupied by the plough land of the Commune. The old methods of cultivation have been abandoned. The black earth is intensified here by the new fea- ture—large scale collective farming, scientific rotation of crops, super- early sowing, tractors and compli- cated mechanized seed drills. Every- thing is mechanized. The agronomists proudly point out the symbolic picture of a Law- son tractor which was brought by the ré-immigrants from America, but it was scrapped in 1930, while here stands a column of machines of Soviet . manufacture, including the 60 horse power “Stalinets” binsk. A certain English tourist who could not find anything here to blame the Soviet system with, de- spite all his efforts, later wrote in the London press “Yes, the people live well in this Commune, but this is explained by the fact that the Commune works brought from America.” We did not get far with American ma- chines, laugh the members of the Commune. Look how many ma- chines are working now. i > Bard 35 ia e8 g> 3 MRE Of & Tractors, 15/27 hp...— 5 5 a 60 h. p. 1 1 & 10/20 BP... — 1 1 Self binders .... ... a tes Seed drills 1 4 5 Mowing machines sma eae Horse rakes TY ete nf 4-share tractor ploughs— 5 5 COMMS © scsssisssssesssisiad 1 1 Compound threshers .— 3 3 Potato setters . oe Caller ee) | Potato lifters 2 i. 3 | Simple arithmetic shows that this tourist, to speak plainly, was lying. had been brought from America, while the basic mass of them were 49 machines of Soviet construction obtained by the Commune in the last few years. pier aaa ee big socialist economy of the Commune. gives good income to its owners—the ex-farm laborers. Year by year this income is increas- ing. Even in 1926 the total income was 28,000 roubles, but in 1933 it had far exceeded a million. The milk farm alone brought 232,444 roubles in 1933, the pig farm gave 167,853 roubles and the bee hives Gave 23,232 roubles, etc. The Com- mune sold 1,300 pigs at the collec- tive farm market. When the Commune began to de- velop, its property was valued at 41,000 roubles. It was difficult to carry on work on a large scale with such capital. But the proletarian state helped, giving credit. This credit has now been paid off in full. “We are out of debt,” say the mem- bers of the Commune. The property of the Commune is now valued at more than two mil- lion roubles. The Commune has oe roubles in its account at the bank. eS ce QaNS remains from the for- mer village life and conditions. Good, airy houses, some of them of the cottage type. The rooms con- tain durable oak furniture, mirrors, clean bed clothing. A peasant working for the land- | lord could not dream of anything beautiful, They have now begun to caterpillar tractors from Chelia- | with machines | ‘Only eight less important machines ; Where the Taadiasds Once Ruled understand artistic and aesthetic matters since they have become the masters. This can be felt in any room of the collective farmers. | When you go into the cook house \of the Commune, you understand | why the members look so healthy. | There is abundance of white bread, | milk, butter, honey. The common | dining room is well organized, in- | cluding even special dietetic menus | for those needing it. Commune | members in white overalls look efter everything. The members spend their free time and rest days in sport. There are bicycles, boats. Finally the Commune has a park with an ex- cellent avenue of birch trees. Pies siiss HERE is not a single illiterate person in the commune. Not a single child died during the last year. The commune has its own The dispensary also caters for col- lective farmers from the surround- ing villages. The commune library has over 2,000 volumes, but the members are not satisfied with this number. They have voted a further 2,000 tion. quently held in the library, and hundred and thirty newspapers and 98 magazines are subscribed for in the commune. Ska oe children’s nursery hangs a card with the words: “Children are the flowers of life.” This is fully justi- fied. The children in the commune are really looked after like fiowers. little ones, and a skilled nurse sees When the games are over in the been eaten, the children are taken home. Children between 3 and 8 years of age go to the kindergarten. Here again are snow-white beds, perfect order and excellent care. At the time of our visit, the children were preparing to go to the club. The supper was over, the chil- dren marched out in a regular col- umn into the hall. At the piano | Was a former waif, but now their i teacher, Elizabeth Romanova. She jis lovingly attentive to her young friends. The children take note of the slightest hint from her as they march. We hear the voices of the chil- dren singing a song, “We are not Slaves, nor are we lords, all our peo- ple are communards.” It is impossible to look on these healthy and joyous children un- |moved. This is how the emanci- pated children look in a_ free country. Cea Teer 'HERE are two schools in the @ broad road for the youth to col- jleges and universities. They are growing and advancing. Here are some of the youngsters who came from the Lenin Com- mune: G. M. Polosukhin—agricul- ‘tural scientist, now professor of horticultural science in Voronezh Agricultural Institute. 2 V. G, Bondarchuk — graduate of the Agricultural Institute, an agronomist. Andrushuk—engineer, electro- technician. Velemozhin—formerly farm labor- er, now graduate of the Faculty of | Electricity and research student. Yashudi—director of a state farm. Kavenko — director of a state farm, etc. dispensary and maternity quarters. | chess tournaments in the club. Two, commune, and beyond them lies: This year, the commune has again sent 9 of its members to study in the Agricultural Institute. We know a great deal of the his- tory of the life of the bourgeois young men. But few people realize the story of the young people of collective farms before whom open out tremendous possibilities created for the toilers of the Soviet Union. pes r saa T night under the full moon ri- valling the electric lamps of the commune, throwing silver bands of light on the roads of the village, the smell of pine shavings spreads around with special strength. Piles of boards and bricks, heaps of loose earth, the outline of a half-finished building rises in the darkness in a phantastic silhouette and it seems that the primeval forest is being destroyed. The commune has not enough room in the old landlord’s park. It is carving its way into the sur- rounding forest, putting up its buildings further and further into it, spreading over the hills. And j the tremendous cleared space pro- duced among the trees looks: like another edition of Dnieprostroi. | Here is a third new two-story roubles. for the purhase of good fic- building looking through the leaves | cialist Parties, eqaiicis eesapee ~ fre- with the brilliant white of freshly-|wegian and cut lumber. And there is a fourth dwelling house with 44 flats, the commune will finish its construc- tion this year. In a pine wood at the center of the commune is a radio station. It but also has its own radio studio. pee tien, \f walked here in their bark shoes IRMERLY semi-starved peasants books about this “impoverished re- , because of this. But the present completely different. ° There is no return to the old sys- tem. These people have finished with bark shoes, with beggary and uncultured life. The Soviet Power has created a new and better life, it is gradually destroying the cen- jtury-old contradiction between town and village. (The End) Starving Farm) Men of Japan Sell Daughters TOKIO, Nov. 15,—The bleeding of ; the Japanese population by addi- ‘tional profits wrung by the world’s Jowest wages and a 46 per cent al- lotment of the national revenue for the building up of a huge war ma- chine for the country’s imperialists had caused the cropping up again of the horrible custom of starving farmers selling their daughters into prostitution and slavery. The sale ef 30,000 girls a year, is ‘reported by a wireless dispatch from Akita. Of the total number of girls in this district alone, the dispatch says that “nearly 13,000 girls have gone into what the Japanese call the ‘shameful professions’ and more than 17,000 into factories. saleable age range from the ages jof 16 to 23 years, and prices for them go from $3 to $300.” The writer points out that the complete indifference of the au- thorities to any farm relief what- soever has sunk the rural popula- 'tion into a state of perpetual star- Girls of ; World Front —— By HARRY GANNES -——| Socialist Int’l Meets To Answer Communist United Front Proposal iN |MVHE outstanding issue be- fore the whole world labor movement is the united front, and especially the united front in defense of the heroic Spanish workers. Sixty thou- sand of our Spanish brothers, Socialists, Communists and Syndi« calists are in fascist dungeons. Today or tomorrow the Executive Committee of the Socialist Inter- national, now meeting in Paris, will pudlish its resolution in answer to the Communist International's ape peal for a united front. In the very midst of the fighting in Spain, when the cannons and ma- |chine guns of the Lerroux-Robles regime were spitting their deadly fire against the Asturias workers, the Communist International, on October 12, issued an appeal to the Socialist International for “imme- diate joint action!” IN October 15, Marcel Cachin and | Louis Thorez, designated by the Communist International as official | representatives, went to Belgium and met with Emile Vandervelde |and Friedrich Adler, president and | secretary of the Labor and Socialist | International. The answer of the Socialist leaders at that time, when | bombing planes, cannons, machine |guns, were reigning death on 3,000 | Spanish workers, was typical. Vandervelde and Adler declared in part: “The letter and telegrams |in which you informed us that the | Communist International had in<« structed you to get in touch with us did not reach us until October 11. The great majority of our bu- reau immediately agreed to accept- ing the proposal for this interview, ;for purposes of information, al- _though the suddennness of your | step gave rise to doubts on the part of certain of its members.” (New | Leader, Nov. 3, 1934.) ee | We was the situation? In Spain Socialists and Communists were uniting not “for purposes of in- formation,” but for armed. struggle against fascism, They were being harassed by superior armed forces, despite one of the most heroic struggles in all revolutionary his- tory. World action was needed im- mediately to arouse the workers in their defense. Yet the Socialist leaders declare their surprise be- cause of “the suddenness of your step.” However, later news seems more | hopeful for the achievement of the united front in defense of the Span- ish proletariat. On November 13, jthe Executive of the Socialist In- | ternational met in Paris, the main question before them being the pro posal of the Communist Interna- ; tional for joint action in defense of |the Spanish workers. Emile Van- |dervelde first called attention to | Socialist. Parties everywhere that in France, Italy, the Saar and Spain the united front between Socialists and Communists had already been |achieved and that these pacts, and }pacts yet to be concluded, should be respected by all Socialist Parties. a A, ne INDICATIONS were that some pronouncement would be made in favor of the united front. Opposed to any agreement on united action in behalf of the Spanish workers were the Socialist leaders of Hol- jJand, Czechoslovakia and the Scan« dinavian countries. The British Labor Party representatives, as Ha- vas put it, “were on the fence.” All jother Socialist Party representa- | tives present were for the united front. The action of each of these pare j ties on this question is not difficult to explain. The Scandinavian So- especially the Nor- Danish, work very closely with their capitalist govern- ; ments. The Dutch Sgcialist leaders, as well as the Scandinavian Social- ist press, berated the Socialist work- ers of Spain for ever taking up arms against fascism. The British Labor IN ONE of the white rooms of the works from morning till late in the |Party leaders feel the mighty left- evening. It relays powerful stations ward sweep of the British workers, especially against fascism. Fur- thermore, British imperialism \Stands behind the Lerroux-Robles government. With the passage of There is a special kitchen for the'and the liberals wrote touching, the Sedition Bill in England, it is difficult for the British Labor Party . to the preparation of healthy food. 'gion.” The region did not change | leaders to come before the masses , against the united front of Social- evening and the tasty supper has owners arrived, and life became ists and Communists. Hence, the usual hypocritical attitude of sit- , ting on the fence. SEES Sea Ac other Socialist Parties which hhave had experience with the united front with the Communist Parties are for the extension of this united front, especially on the issue of Spain. What is to happen now? Havas cables as follows: “The committee adjourned with the majority in- tending to draw up the text of a resolution providing for limited ac- |cord between the two internation- als. In all I'kelinood the motion ;may be passed tomorrow (Nov. 14). or the next day.” ~ Here in the United States we can lose no time in realizing joint ac- tions between Socialists and Com- munists everywhere in a mighty movement for the defense of the Spanish workers. ~ RESCUE “WORLD FRONT!” Are the readers who enjoy Com- rade Gannes’ column for its inter= est and significance going to- allow him to continue to drazalong after Burck. Gold and the Medical Board? Less than $200 raised—not even 40 per cent of his $500 quota. We vut it to you, World Fronters! t = vation. If a pretense of an allot- ment of funds for the sufferers of the recont Osaka typhoon is being writer says, “that disaster is far more spectacular than the slow starvaton of these people, which been going on for years.” — eg made, it is only because, as the ._ ese. oe